Santa Barbara Independent, 04/14/16

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Insert Earth Day Festival Guide ¬

apr. 14-21, 2016 VOL. 30 ■ NO. 535

Earth h o o r a y f o r t h e

Four Visionary Companies Make the World Greener by Tyler Hayden, Matt Kettmann, and Nick Welsh

• Where Do You Doughnut? • G-Eazy, The 1975 Kick Off Bowl Season • Miles, Chet, and Hank Make the Movies

É


MUST SEE

AT LEAST ONCE in YOUR LIFETIME

ALL-NEW 2016 SHOW WITH LIVE ORCHESTRA

I’ve reviewed over 3,000 shows. None can compare to what I saw tonight.” —Richard Connema, renowned Broadway critic

“Absolutely the No.1 show in the world. No other company or of any style can match this!” — Kenn Wells, former lead dancer of the English National Ballet

“Absolutely the greatest of the great!

It must be experienced.” —Christine Walevska, “goddess of the cello”, watched Shen Yun 4 times

“This is the highest and best of what humans can produce.” —Oleva Brown-Klahn, singer and musician

“Awe-Inspiring Sensation!”

“A MUST-SEE!”

— Broadway world

“Go see it to believe it,, because otherwise, you are going to miss the most important thing in your life.” life —Joe Heard, former White House photographer, watched Shen Yun 5 times

ER ! APR 29 - 30, 2016 D OR DAY The Granada Theatre TO 1214 State St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101

2

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aPrIl 14, 2016

Apr 29, Fri 8:00pm Apr 30, Sat 2:00pm Apr 30, Sat 7:30pm

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Tickets: 800-880-0188 ShenYun.com/LA Prices: $60- $150

MAR 19- APR 30

Thousand Oaks Northridge Downtown LA

Long Beach Claremont Bakersfield


We Are Friends Of Chumash The IBEW represents thousands of active members who work in a wide variety of fields. It is among the largest American unions in the AFL-CIO, with members in many skilled occupations. The Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians understands the value of a skilled workforce. The tribe has been a partner with the building trades for years and has been one of the best employers in the state for trades and apprenticeships. That’s why I stand with the many in our community who say… “we are friends of Chumash.” Chuck Huddleston

©2016 Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians

President, IBEW Local 413

Building a United Community. Learn more at FriendsOfChumash.com.



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aPrIl 14, 2016

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Editor in Chief Marianne Partridge Executive Editor Nick Welsh; Senior Editors Michelle Drown, Matt Kettmann; Editor at Large Ethan Stewart; Photography Editor Paul Wellman News Editor Tyler Hayden; News Reporters Kelsey Brugger, Brandon Fastman, Keith Hamm; Assistant News Editor Léna Garcia; Columnists Barney Brantingham, Roger Durling, Jerry Roberts, Starshine Roshell; Opinions Editor Jean Yamamura; Videographers Phyllis de Picciotto, Stan Roden Executive Arts Editor Charles Donelan; Assistant Editor Richie DeMaria; Arts Writers Tom Jacobs, D.J. Palladino; Calendar Editor Terry Ortega; Calendar Assistants Ginny Chung, Alexandra Nicholson Copy Chief Jackson Friedman; Copy Editors Diane Mooshoolzadeh, Amy Smith

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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 2016 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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This Modern World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17

Barney Brantingham’s On the Beat . . . . .  18

Voices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19

the week.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 living.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Living Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Food & Drink . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Cover STORY

Hooray for the Earth Four Visionary Companies Make the World Greener

(Tyler Hayden, Matt Kettmann, and Nick Welsh) ON THE COVER: Mark and Kira the Queensland heeler at Figueroa Mountain (#kirathecowdog). Photo by Turner + Fitch.

Dining Out Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43

a&e. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Arts Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Theater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47

Pop, Rock and Jazz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50

Angry Poodle Barbecue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   15

Arts & Entertainment Listings . . . . . . . . . . 52

Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17

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film & tv. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55

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s.B. QUestionnaire

Roger Durling subjects chocolate queen Jessica Foster in weekly rundown.

Feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Movie Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55

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polls

Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

oUtdoors

Classifieds.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61

. . . . . . . . . . . . . independent.com/outdoors

Rob Brezsny’s Free Will Astrology . . . . . . . 59

online now at

U.S and China talk pollution; students push ethnic studies courses; S.B. Mission showcases recent renovations; and more.

Positively State Street . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

news.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 odds & ends. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

opinions.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

Previewing an entirely different sort of summer camp, Barney Brantingham found himself taking a faux Renaissance art tour at the Venetian hotel in Las Vegas recently. He compared our Summer Camp cover to the Venetian’s reproductions, and, happily, he says The Indy’s issue artists, Ben Ciccati and Caitlin Fitch, held their own. During his rambles avoiding the gambling halls, Barney had a fine view of Trump Tower, reflecting the sunset and the fading dreams of would-be winners at the tables. But, strangely, gambling isn’t bringing in the dollars it used to. For more, read On the Beat on page 18. richie d e maria

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The Restaurant Guy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

gold and glitz

wendy arellanes

volume 30, number 535, Apr. 14-21, 2016 turner + Fitch

Contents

Richie DeMaria hikes east Camino Cielo to agua Caliente Canyon.

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$15 an hour? Helps working poor: 43% Means less hours/higher prices: 56% 211 votes ���������������������

independent.com/polls

“ When you look at the experience, resumes, and training of our Cancer Center physicians, it’s quite extraordinary. They could practice anywhere and they have chosen to serve our community.” — hugh boss

vice chair, cancer foundation of santa barbara

Focused on Cancer. Centered on You. The Cancer Center of Santa Barbara delivers integrated, multi-disciplinary methods of screening, prevention, diagnosis, treatment and supportive care of cancer. And we do all this right here, close to your home, family and friends.

(805) 682-7300 • CCSB.org

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News of the Week

April 7-14, 2016

by KELSEY BR Rugg uggER ER @kelseybrugger, @kelseybrugger, LÉNA gARCIA @lenamgarcia,, KEIT EITh h hA hAmm mm,, TYLER hAYDEN @TylerHayden1, and NICK WELSh, with Independent STAff

news briefs

cou rtesy

pau l wellm an f i le photo

LAW & DISORDER

A Line 11 MTD driver, whose route began around 6 a.m., saw an apparently deceased person lying at the covered Chapala-Anapamu bus stop on 4/8. He called his supervisor, who determined the person was dead before calling police at 7:33 a.m. Authorities said the elderly homeless man, 70-year-old Ghassem Hosseinian, may have spent the night at the stop and that his death did not seem suspicious. sb pd

cou rtesy

county

ROUGH RIFFING: Sheriff Bill Brown (center) managed to quote Roman philosopher Cicero (right) and American poet T.S. Eliot (left) while presenting a sneak preview for his budget.

Whumped Again

Supes Grill Sheriff over Spiraling Costs, Recruitment Woes, Morale Crisis

B

by N i c k W e l s h

ill Brown has to be the only sheriff in all 58 California counties to quote Roman philosopher Marcus Tullius Cicero and American modernist poet T.S. Eliot in the same breath after having been scorched two hours straight by all five county supervisors, as he was this Monday. Brown clearly scored major style points as he wondered out loud whether Eliot’s “April is the cruelest month” was a more apt conclusion to his first budget preview this year than Cicero’s “Not for ourselves alone are we born.” Given what little headway Brown made with the supervisors — who peppered him with questions and made no effort to disguise their impatience — he might better have quoted comedian Rodney “I don’t get no respect” Dangerfield. Brown got massively whammied last Thursday when the three bids for the proposed new North County jail turned out to be at least $11 million more than county experts had estimated. The proposed new jail—376 beds— was estimated to cost $96 million, making it the most expensive public works project in county history. Of that, 90 percent would be paid for by a state grant Brown secured; the county’s general fund would cover the rest. For Brown, the supervisors, and county administrators, the extra $11 million has induced a profound case of sticker shock. Although no one is pretending to know exactly what made the bids come in so much higher, Brown is insisting the need for the new jail remains just as dire as ever. The South County Jail has been deemed overcrowded and unsafe for more than 20 years. Last November, the supervisors affirmed their commitment to the project by a 4-1 vote, but those numbers overstate the support Brown and his jail plans enjoy with

them. In that same hearing, the supervisors rejected a 228-bed transitional wing of the new jail that Brown had championed, walking away from a state grant for $38.9 million to build the thing. That vote gave Brown and his aides high anxiety over future support for the jail project. And that was before the bids were open. Though this $11 million question was only alluded to during Monday’s budget presentation by Brown — and only in passing—it nonetheless remained the 800-pound gorilla in the room. In this context, Brown’s request for $5.2 million above and beyond what county administrators had hoped for proved a big pill for the supervisors to swallow. Those funds would allow him to hire 10 sheriff service technicians—a new, cheaper, and easier-to-fill position — who don’t carry weapons, but who can issue parking tickets and help out in the jail. By putting 10 in the jail, he would free up custodial officers to walk the floors. Likewise, he’d hire three for patrol work, thus liberating three sworn officers from parking enforcement duties. In addition, Brown asked for extra money to hire new jailers for the North County jail, and nearly $1 million to keep the Santa Maria booking jail open. Without this funding, Brown said, he’d be forced to close the Santa Maria booking jail, which costs $951,000 a year to operate. Closing it, Brown said, would be the least terrible of many terrible options. Supervisor Steve Lavagnino, who represents Santa Maria, strongly disagreed. “This is just not an option,” he said. “I would not be doing my job if I allowed this.” Santa Maria Police Chief Ralph Martin urged the supervisors to keep the jail open. Santa Maria arrested 6,034 people this past year, and if the Santa Maria jail—where there were 2,200 bookings last year— year were closed, that would be roughly seven prisoners a day law enforcement officers

would have to escort to the South County Jail. Each of those trips — there and back— back would keep one of his officers off patrol. Santa Maria, he reminded the supervisors, has experienced 20 homicides this past year and has been the focus of an intense battle between law enforcement and the international MS-13 street gang. Brown said the 13 new service technicians he sought would help him address serious problems retaining existing employees and hiring new ones. Retirements and transfers to other departments have reached new heights. Brown blamed relentlessly negative media attention to the behavior of a few rogue cops for turning off the spigot of new recruits. County supervisors Salud Carbajal and Peter Adams—who rarely see eye to eye —expressed agreement the Sheriff’s department was in the throes of a full-fledged “crisis,” which, they added, seriously undermined morale of the troops. What, they repeatedly demanded of Brown, was his plan to turn things around? Brown answered he would cast his net “farther and wider.” Adam shot back Brown needed “to put some bait in it.” Carbajal joined in, “There has to be some strategy to our madness.” When Brown said he started as sheriff nine and a half years ago, the department had 708 employees. During the recession it hit as low as 617. Even with some of those cuts restored, he said he was forced to declare mandatory overtime to keep staffing levels at the bare minimum required. Twice last month, he closed the Santa Maria jail because staffing levels fell below that minimum. He acknowledged this imposed a hardship on deputies, who, he also noted, hadn’t had a raise since 2011 and were without a contract for the past year. Union spokesperson Sergeant Matt McFarlin said because of the shortage, deputies getting off a 12-hour shift will find themselves asked to cont’d page 11 

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aPrIl 14, 2016

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Julie Cromer (pictured), 48, a fugitive convicted of financial elder abuse in Santa Barbara County, was arrested 4/6 at a home in Massachusetts. She had met the 77-year-old female victim at a 2007 pug rescue event. The two developed a relationship, and the victim funded Cromer’s visits to S.B. However, Cromer opened another account for personal travel expenses, which a banker reported. Cromer missed sentencing last October, and a warrant was issued for her arrest.

City firefighters responded at 1:30 a.m. on 4/9 to a structure fire in the 2648 State Street Los Encinos apartment complex. There were no injuries, and firefighters contained the blaze within a single downstairs unit. A resident of the burning unit who obstructed police officers was tasered and taken into custody. An investigator said the accidental fire, which started in the master bedroom, appeared to be smoking related. Three other units suffered smoke and heat damage. Preliminary loss is estimated at $800,000.

CITY As a sixth year of drought looms on the horizon, City of Santa Barbara water rates are set to increase yet again, this time by 21 percent. Pending a public hearing and final approval from the council, the change will go into effect July 1. The spike would have been 50 percent if the city didn’t decide to use $5 million in reserves to soften the blow, Mayor Helene Schneider explained this week. Low water users can expect an average $3.77 bump in their bills, moderate users $30.53, and high users $80.01.


fiNd us oNliNe At independent.com, fAcebook, ANd tWitter

shooting threat handled right?

During sixth period on Monday, April 11, at Goleta Valley Junior High School, a female student in teacher James Gallen’s Honors English class was called to the school’s administration office; on her way out the classroom door, she said out loud, “I’m gonna shoot up this school,” according to Gallen. “If I have to do another RA, I’m gonna shoot up this school.” The 8th grader, who Gallen said has been suspended before for fighting, was referring to Santa Barbara Unified School District’s Restorative Approach, a conflict-resolution technique that focuses on mediation over punishment. “I was concerned about the safety of everyone,” Gallen said, and he immediately reported the student’s comments to school administrators. Fifteen minutes later, she was back in class apologizing for her comments. According to Gallen, school administrators did not report the incident to the district office or to law enforcement. “Administration failed faculty, staff, and students, putting everybody at risk by not taking the threat more seriously,” he said. Around 5:45 that afternoon, the student repeated the threat on social media. A parent saw the post and called law enforcement, according to a district press release sent out 24 hours later, on Tuesday evening. “[The Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office] responded immediately by contacting the student at home,” the statement said. The student was not at school on Tuesday, Gallen said. He was told she had been suspended for five days. Goleta Valley Principal Veronica Rogers said, “We have resolved it,” without providing further information. By deadline Wednesday, the Sheriff’s Office had not responded to requests for more information, nor had Barbara Keyani, the district’s communications coordi— Keith Hamm nator.

California’s State Assembly approved a package of anti-tobacco bills, including one to raise the legal smoking age from 18 to 21. The bills need the State Senate’s approval before reaching Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk. “Honestly, [the bill] would shut me down,” said Isla Vista Vapor co-owner Donavan Christianson. “I think the big tobacco companies will probably block it from passing,” Keg N Bottle employee Tim Ward said. “I feel like too many kids are smoking here anyway. Who knows? It might help.” Two weeks after Venoco declared bankruptcy, it filed on 4/6 a $12.4 million lawsuit against Plains All American Pipeline for past, present, and future lost earnings and prof profits. Venoco claims that since Plains’ pipeline

han case crawls Haobsh Denied Access to Public Defender

P

ruptured — causing the May 19 Refugio Oil Spill — it has been unable to produce crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids from Platform Holly (pictured) because it has no way to otherwise move or store the product.

COuNTY On 4/6, Sheriff Bill Brown was named first vice president of the nonprofit California State Sheriffs’ Association by Gov. Jerry Brown. The sheriff, who previously served as second vice president, was first elected to the organization’s sergeant-at-arms officer position four years ago. “I look forward to helping advance public safety by participating in national and state conversations about challenges facing law enforcement and corrections today,” said Brown.

WAITING: Suspect Pierre Haobsh sits for his arraignment, which was again postponed.

pau l wellm an fi l e photo

Old Mission Santa Barbara on 4/7 showcased its six-year-long, $1.3 million restoration. On a media tour, Tina Foss, mission museum director and cultural resources manager, illustrated the renovated crypt, solstice window, walls, and four holy water fonts. The projects were funded by a National Park Service conservation grant of the Save America’s Treasures program, the Pearl Chase Society, area foundations, and private donors.

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crime

EDuCATION In a push to make ethnic studies mandatory at S.B. Unified high schools, more than 50 people gathered 4/9 for a block party by grassroots coalition Ethnic Studies Now. La Casa de la Raza hosted the student-activistled workshop, show, and fundraiser, which featured work by area artists and food sold out of La Casa’s own kitchen. Bands including Aztlan Underground, Sin Quince, and Salvajes performed for more than 100 audience members. The weekend Santa Barbara celebrates Earth Day is being marked at UCSB by a conference that brings together scholars from the U.S. and China to discuss the eco-issues of the day. Organized by the university’s Confucius Institute and Bren School, the 4/15-4/16 talkfest features keynote talks by Michigan State University’s Rachel Carson Chair in Sustainability, Jianguo “Jack” Liu, and New York University’s founding director of Environmental Studies, Dale Jamieson. n

by l É N A G A r c i A an inmate booked at a county jail,” said Voss. ierre Haobsh, 26, appeared Tues- “Judge Herman’s order merely granted that day behind the protective glass of lawful access.” Neither Haobsh nor his famJudge Raimundo Montes De Oca’s ily requested a public defender, according to courtroom much as he did two court papers filed March 29 by County Counweeks prior. The Oceanside resident kept a sel Michael Ghizzoni and Deputy County blank face despite facing three counts of first- Counsel Michelle Montez. “In fact, Mr. Haodegree murder for the gruesome shooting bsh waived his rights to silence and counsel,” deaths of esteemed herbalist Dr. Weidong they said. However, the declarations included “Henry” Han,, 57; his wife, Huijie “Jennie” Yu, in their legal filings didn’t quite substantiate 29; and their daughter daughter,, Emily Han, 5. In what that. Instead, Sheriff’s Office criminal invescould be a capital case, Haobsh’s arraignment tigator Jeffrey McDonald said, “Mr. Haobsh was once again postponed to May 5 in Judge did not request an attorney nor did any family member request counsel on his behalf.” Jean Dandona’s Department 6. On Wednesday, March 23, the Han family was ‘In my 20-plus years of experience, found wrapped in plastic and duct tape in the garage it is unprecedented to be of their 4640 Greenhill denied lawful access to an inmate Way home near Goleta. The Sheriff ’s-Coroner named booked at a county jail.’ “gunshot wounds to the — Christine Voss head” their official cause of death. On Friday, March 25, Debate on the matter— matter ruled moot TuesHaobsh — whom authorities call a “business acquaintance” of Dr. Han — was arrested at a day by Judge Montes De Oca—postponed Bonsall gas station, where he was found with Haobsh’s arraignment, as well as the fact that a 9mm gun and property belonging to one Voss and Deputy Public Defender Mindi of the Hans. Little is known of Haobsh, for Boulet only received “substantial discovery” whom no family members appeared Tues- the Friday before court. Typically, law enforceday in court. ment reports are provided to defense attorUpon Haobsh’s arrest, public defend- neys within a few days of arraignment—not ers immediately went to the Santa Barbara after a few weeks. Deputy District Attorneys County Jail to offer him counsel. “We were Hilary Dozer and Benjamin Ladinig did not turned away by multiple levels of Sheriff’s respond to questions about when they thempersonnel and not allowed to even notify Mr. selves received the reports. Haobsh that we were available to represent In the absence of any real information him,” Senior Deputy Public Defender Chris- on the case, speculation has escalated. Many tine Voss told The Santa Barbara Independent observers have called attention to Internet via email. In what County Counsel and the reports that 25 alternative doctors across the District Attorney’s Office called “ex parte” and country died in the past year under mysteri“completely unprecedented,” public defend- ous circumstances. However, reports on those ers on Saturday, March 26, obtained court cases show the doctors belonged to dispaorders from Judge James Herman, granting rate fields—like chiropracty, dentistry, and them permission to speak with and represent autism; 10 died on the southern seaboard (eight in Florida). Many prescribed controHaobsh. “In my 20-plus years of experience, it is versial regimens. A handful were researching unprecedented to be denied lawful access to cancer treatments. n independent.com

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New baby bill

The ink was barely dry on State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson’s parental-leave job protection bill — SB 1166 — before the California Chamber of Commerce gave it the sobriquet “Job Killer.” Jackson’s new legislation would extend the state’s existing protected-leave law for new parents — within 12 months of birth or adoption — to smaller private companies of 5-50 employees. Companies with more than 50 workers are already required to allow 12 weeks of unpaid time off. Jackson introduced SB 1166 because many California workers, who might otherwise take advantage of the time off to tend to their newborn, do not for fear of losing their jobs. Jackson cosponsored a related bill — AB 908 — signed into law this week by Governor Jerry Brown, that sought to address another reason employees of larger private companies don’t take advantage of California’s 10-year-old parental-leave law: money. (In addition, many California workers remain in the dark that any paid parental-leave protections exist.) Under AB 908, low-wage workers will be entitled to receive a relatively greater percentage of their take-home pay than those earning more. Private employees statewide — not their employers — generate the revenues needed to make these payments via disability deductions taken from their paychecks every two weeks. Jackson reckons 40 percent of the state’s private workforce lacks the necessary job protection to avail themselves of such payments. Her bill goes before the Senate Labor Committee this week. Last year, Jackson pushed a similar bill, providing job protection for employees taking time off to tend to a sick and ailing relative. Although the legislature — Nick Welsh passed that bill, Gov. Brown vetoed it.

Mental central

The good news: Santa Barbara County’s department of Behavioral Wellness expects to need only seven in-patient psychiatric beds per day from the Aurora Vista del Mar psychiatric hospital in Ventura County. That’s down from the current 11. The bad news: Even with this reduction, mental-health administrators expect they will need $1.2 million more than their projected budget for the coming year allows — $2.2 million — to send Santa Barbara’s acutely mentally ill to out-of-county facilities. Alice Gleghorn Whether any of these expectations are realistic has yet to be seen. This current year, for example, Behavioral Wellness had to ask for $2 million on top of the $2 million it was budgeted for out-of-county hospitalizations because the demand was so intense. Nevertheless, administrators are hoping out-of-county inpatient demand will be significantly reduced because the department has opened — or is in the process of opening — three new psychiatric extended-stay, in-county “homes” with a total of 24 beds. In addition, the county recently opened a Crisis Stabilization Unit with eight recliner chairs — offering 23 hours of decompression and cool-down space — for people on the verge of psychiatric meltdowns. It’s worth noting the last time Santa Barbara shipped only seven psychiatric patients to Vista del Mar a day was in 2001. Meanwhile, the San Luis Obispo Board of Supervisors just unanimously approved plans to construct a 91-bed private psychiatric hospital, despite significant neighborhood opposition. The project will be one of the few private facilities going up anywhere and the first for Vizion Health LLC. When built, the new hospital — located 189 miles from Santa Barbara — will provide needed bed space for the seriously mentally ill on the South Coast. Also this week, county Behavioral Wellness czar Alice Gleghorn won a national award for her work responding to opioid addiction with the San Francisco Department of Public Health. There, she launched pioneering drug-overdose-response programs and pushed to equip first responders with nasal-spray rescue kits. Gleghorn will be given only limited time to enjoy the Nyswander/Dole Award — also known as the “Marie” — given out annually by the American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence. Next week, she is scheduled to unveil the first draft for a Laura’s Law pilot program, something she resisted. Laura’s Law — adopted by Ventura and San Luis Obispo counties — grants judges the authority to order service-resistant mentally ill persons into treatment. Though many area mental-health advocates enthusiastically support the program, it’s not without its controversy. Some critics say the results are more rhetorical than substantial and not worth the civil-liberty intrusions. Gleghorn has objected that starting a brand-new program will distract her from the more substantial reforms that multiple grand juries and two teams of consultants have concluded her —  Nick Welsh department sorely needs.

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work an extra six. “The word ‘crisis’ is supposed to be temporary, but this is the second time we’re being asked to work mandatory overtime,” he said. “We’re getting tired.” Cognitive dissonance hit its peak Monday when the supervisors expressed incredulity Brown was seeking budgetary authorization to create new positions while he currently has 56 vacant positions for which funding has been provided. Of those, twothirds are sworn officers, the rest civilian employees. The supervisors were especially miffed that the Chumash Casino — as well as the w ww contract cities for which the Sheriff’s department provides law enforcement— was getting exactly the number of ment officers stipulated by their contract while the rest of the unincorporated county had to absorb the staffing shortfall with slower response by tired and overworked deputies.“Maybe we should have a contract,” said Supervisor Janet Wolf. The supervisors were equally galled to learn that the money not spent because there were so many vacancies covered about $4 million of the $6 million annually spent on overtime.

Brown absorbed the questions, frequently answering, “I share your frustration.” The recruiting crisis, he told the board, was endemic to all law enforcement agencies. And despite all the problems, Brown expressed pride in the performance of his department, noting that his deputies made an arrest in the triple homicide of herbalist Henry Han, his wife, and their daughter within 32 hours of the bodies being discovered. Deltopia, he added, is no longer ground zero for Spring Break rages, and his department helped collect 30,000 pounds of old and expired prescription medications. Based on the selflessness and sense of purpose his deputies exhibited, Brown said, he’d select the Cicero quote, “Not for ourselves alone are we born.” In the meantime, he and the supervisors will convene a collective brain dump to solve the $11 million mystery of the North County jail bids on May 5. And this week’s Punch and Judy exhibition between Brown and the supervisors was just a preview of the long deliberative process that won’t conclude until early this n summer.

in i.V.’s hands

Isla Vista residents are officially poised to vote this November on whether or not to approve an 8 percent utility-users tax to fund the formation of a community services district. What was once considered an unorthodox political football that Assemblymember Das Williams threw long appears as though it could pass, capitalizing on the energy of the November election, when young, liberal I.V. voters turn out in droves. The county’s Local Agency Formation Commission — better known as LAFCO (pronounced laugh-co) — voted Thursday to place the creation of the special district on this fall’s ballot. In addition, there will be an election for five representatives (another two would be appointed) to sit on the district board. Also on the ballot will be an 8 percent utility-users tax — on trash, water, and other things — which would bring in an estimated half million dollars each year. Plus, UCSB pledged to chip in $200,000 for seven years. All that would fund additional amenities, including tenant-landlord mediation, additional police officers, building enforcement, and public works projects. The formation of the special district requires a majority vote; for it to have money to pay for services, two-thirds of Isla Vista voters need to approve the tax. The backstory is that LAFCO commissioners have for a year balked at the proposal, better known as AB 3, which Williams drafted, pushed through the State Legislature, and managed to secure Governor Jerry Brown’s signature on last October. Traditionally, per state law, LAFCO commissioners hold authority to form special districts through a lengthy application process. Attempts to use that process to establish special districts or full-blown cityhood in Isla Vista — widely reputed to be the most densely populated unincorporated area in the nation — have failed a number of times in past decades. In 2014, jumping on the momentum of coming together after a tumultuous year of gang rapes, riots, and mass murder, Williams and his supporters sought to circumvent the LAFCO pro—  Kelsey Brugger cess; so far, they have been successful.

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Naughty or Nice? Mixed Reviews of County Plan to Fence Santa Claus Lane Beach Crossing

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by k e i t h h A M M or decades, the beach that parallels Santa Claus Lane was a hidden gem, with free parking a short jaunt to the sea and, more recently, a handful of nearby eateries and other small shops. The nearly one-mile stretch — popular with families, surfers, and day-trippers from around the county and beyond—has long maintained a rural freedom of sorts, accentuated by the very real danger that rumbles to life every time a beachgoer crosses the railroad tracks via one of several trails through the low dunes and seawall riprap. Modern trains are fast and quiet, and as they round the bend near Santa Claus Lane, it’s not uncommon for them to sneak up on pedestrians. As the beach’s popularity has soared over the years — with an estimated 1,000 visitors on any given sunny summer day— Santa Barbara County land-use planners have slowly moved forward with long-held plans to revamp Santa Claus Lane with improved parking, bathrooms, and a safe crossing over the tracks to the sand. While there’s no debating that burgeoning crowds and speeding trains make for a deadly matchup — as in 2007, when Carpinteria’s Alan Shapiro and his dog, Sable, were killed there by a northbound passenger train—there’s been significant pushback on the county’s plan to develop one safe crossing and fence off all the rest. Currently along Santa Claus Lane, there are a dozen or so trails to the beach, all of them within a few hundred yards of where the road begins at Padaro Lane. These old, informal paths to the tracks and the beach beyond are the only public access points along the five-mile stretch of coastline between Summerland’s Loon Point parking lot (which is gated at night) and Carpinteria city limits near Ash Avenue. “The county’s plan is getting mixed reviews,” said Chris Keet, founder of Surf Happens surf camp, now in its 17th year at Santa Claus Beach. “Over the years, I’ve pulled at least 10 people off the tracks as the train was coming through. It can be danger-

ous. But there needs to be more than one crossing to the beach.” While the county plans to provide a dropoff spot—where beachgoers can leave their gear while tending to parking — the majority of the complaints fielded by planners in recent weeks lament the inevitable bottleneck created by multiple families, summer camps, and occasional wedding parties stacked up at a single crossing point. County officials contend that their plan’s entire scope — which includes more than 100 additional parking spots and beach access compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act —“will more than offset any potential inconvenience that having just one crossing may cause,” said Supervising Planner Allen Bell. He added that none of the existing crossings are technically legal; pedestrians on the tracks are trespassing on Union Pacific property.“The county’s goal is to provide a safe, legal crossing.” By several accounts, the county was lucky to secure even a single, authorized at-grade crossing. The California Public Utilities Commission (PUC) regulates such crossings, Bell explained, and its policy is to eliminate at-grade crossings. Initially, the PUC would only entertain a pedestrian tunnel or bridge at the location, the former deemed too expensive by the county while the latter got a thumbs-down from the California Coastal Commission. Further, to get the PUC’s blessing for Santa Claus Lane, the county had to identify and shut down an illegal crossing elsewhere in the county, which it did in an agricultural area near Lompoc, Bell said.“The PUC has been willing to support one at-grade crossing [at Santa Claus Lane], but a second or third crossing isn’t in the realm of possibility.” The PUC is also requiring the county to install four-foot-tall metal fencing on either side of the new crossing, ostensibly to keep pedestrians from using the old trails. Staffers in 1st District Supervisor Salud Carbajal’s office and county planners are meeting internally on April 14 to discuss the public’s concerns and organize community n forums as the plan progresses.

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Opinions

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The Dog that Didn’t Bark

SECOND THOUGHTS: It was more a shrug

than a statement. “It happens,” the voice said. The voice belonged to Marcia Morrissey, a 65-year-old Santa Monica lawyer who’s spent the past 30 years challenging death penalty convictions. I met Morrissey briefly this week over the phone. While we spoke, another phone in her office kept going off. There was no receptionist, and Morrissey needed to take someone to the hospital. Morrissey, I would find out, is the F. Lee Bailey/Johnnie Cochran most people never heard of. Back when Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr. still went by the name Snoop Doggy Dogg and was facing murder charges, it was Morrissey who got him off. In 2005, Morrissey inherited a death penalty appeal filed on behalf of Santa Barbara defendant George Herbert “Spider” Wharton, who in 1986 took a hammer to the head of his girlfriend Linda Smith and stuffed her

body, covered in blankets and plastic, into a large cardboard barrel. Smith’s body would be discovered by police two weeks later. There was no doubt Wharton did it; he confessed. The only issue was whether Wharton — a large, bearded, paranoid schizophrenic black man with severe rage and addiction issues — acted with premeditation. Wharton said he and Smith had been drinking and arguing. She threw a book at him. Then she was dead. A Santa Barbara jury would find otherwise. Only two weeks before the murder, jurors heard, Wharton told his psychiatrist he feared

he might kill Smith. He wanted help. This, the jury concluded, constituted premeditation. The jury also heard that in 1975 Wharton kicked a male UCSB professor to death who’d asked about his sexual availability. That same year, Wharton also raped a 61-year-old woman at knifepoint after she let him into her house so he could make a phone call. For that, he got seven years. In 1987 — after three days of deliberation — a Santa Barbara jury sentenced Wharton to death row, where he’s lived the past 29 years. A major issue was whether jurors should ever have heard what Wharton told his therapist. Such communications, by law, are privileged and confidential. An even bigger issue, it turned out, is what the jurors were never told about the sexual abuse Wharton experienced as a child. By any reckoning, it was a lot, and federal Judge Cormac Carney conceded as much. Even so, Carney found —in initial rulings early on in the case—this omission did not prejudice the jury’s decision. But late last November, Judge Carney changed his mind. He did so only after the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled he needed to re-examine the question. (In July 2014, Carney ruled the death penalty as practiced in California unconstitutional, a ruling overturned a year later.) Just three weeks ago, in the courtroom of Santa Barbara Judge Michael Carrozzo, George “Spider” Wharton was quietly re-sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. There was no fanfare, no

press releases issued. Neither the Santa Barbara District Attorney nor the California Attorney General objected. And Bill Duval, Wharton’s original defense attorney, wouldn’t hear what happened until three days later. It’s a big deal. Of the 748 inmates now on death row, 10 were sent there by Santa Barbara County prosecutors and juries. Now there are nine. No one can remember a Santa Barbara death sentence ever being reversed before. It’s a big deal. In 1986, defense attorney Duval hired investigator Craig Stewart to go to Wharton’s hometown in rural Louisiana to dredge up any details that might soften the jurors’ hearts. Wharton repeatedly told Stewart to talk to his older half-brother, Gerald Crawford. Crawford, Wharton stressed, knew the whole story. But for reasons still unknown, Stewart never did. Still, what he found out was plenty chilling. Stewart discovered Wharton’s step-grandfather, the 65 300-pound David Lee —aka “Big Daddy”—took an intense dislike to Wharton. Big Daddy, Stewart reported, would wrap Wharton in a burlap sack, tie it with a rope, and swing the rope over the branch of a tree. After hoisting his grandson aloft, Big Daddy would start a low-flamed fire underneath, effectively “smoking” the young Wharton for hours at a time. Had Stewart talked to Wharton’s halfbrother, he most certainly would have heard how Big Daddy sexually abused Wharton over a sustained period of time. He would

have heard Big Daddy also sexually abused two of Wharton’s sisters and also the family dog. When Wharton’s mother was a little girl, Big Daddy tried to abuse her, too. To get away, she moved out. She was 11 years old. In addition, Stewart would have heard Wharton’s biological father also abused him sexually. Over the years, Stewart testified numerous times he had no recollection of ever speaking with Crawford. On one occasion, however, he recalled speaking to Crawford on the phone but could not remember what was said. Stewart kept detailed notes of all his interviews. For Crawford, there was only a brief notation of Crawford’s name, no statements. Three months before a 2006 evidentiary hearing on just this issue, Stewart experienced an epiphany. He couldn’t say whether it came in a dream or “if it was whatever.” But he recalled having spoken with Crawford. Crawford, however, had no such recollection. And in multiple sworn statements dating back to 1993, his testimony never changed. If the jury heard about this sustained sexual abuse, would it have made a difference? Maybe. Maybe not. The point is they never had the evidence to weigh. Stewart never asked the right guy. In hindsight, Morrissey has no inclination to wax righteous about Stewart’s shortcomings. He’s dead, and as she said, “It happens.” As for death penalty reversals, Morrissey added, “That doesn’t happen very often.” In 30 years, Morrissey has had just three. With a quick apology, Morrissey cut our conversation short. “I have to take someone to the — Nick Welsh hospital,” she explained.

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obituaries

To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com

Agustin Vasquez Avila

Julianna Moreno

Agustin Vazquez Avila, born July 28, 1919, in Salvatierra, Guanajuato, Mexico, died March 25, 2016, at Serenity House Hospice after a brief illness. Agustin married Maria Maldonado in 1948 and immigrated to New Mexico 1960-1965. Maria followed in 1970 with their children, and they settled in Santa Barbara, California. He is survived by his 8 children (and spouses): Estela Arreguin of Tijuana, Mexico, Olivia (Rodolfo) Diaz of Santa Barbara, Alex (Jane) of Tucson, Arizona, Chela (Enrique) Barba of Santa Barbara, Agustin Jr. (Jennifer) of Santa Barbara, Marus (Leopoldo) Jimenez of Lompoc, Adriana (Armando) Ortega of Santa Barbara, and Bernardo (Patricia) of Santa Barbara. He also leaves 14 grand-children: Juan, Lupe, Estela, and Marin Arreguin, Rodolfo Jr. and Alberto Diaz, Enrique Jr. and Edgar Barba, Agustin Vazquez III, Oscar and Daniela Jimenez, Armando Jr., Alex, and Arianna Ortega; and 18 great-grandchildren. A memorial mass will be held at 10am for family and friends at Holy Cross Church on April 16, 2016, with a reception following.

In loving memory of Julianna aka "Jewels" Moreno, 1959-2016, a 56-year-old resident of Santa Barbara who for 25+ years lived a challenging but happy homeless life at 101 Bush Ave # 9, has passed away on Feb. 28, 2016. She had moved to Florida and resided there for about 8 yrs. She lived a wild and crazy life here in our beautiful paradise of Santa Barbara, Ca, and everybody knew "Jewels!" She definitely will be missed by many and especially by her daughters Dina Martinez Julianna Vera and son Joseph Delgado along with five wonderful grandchildren. Her sisters Debi, Denyse, Jeannie, Gina and brother Mark Moreno along with many nieces and nephews will truly miss her. A day of life celebration will be held on May 14, 2016, at Goleta Beach. Everybody is welcome, and it will be a potluck so please bring a dish to share and bring your own drinks! Meat will be provided :) I love you sis & I miss you soo much. Gina

07/28/19-03/25/16

1959-2016

in Santa Barbara, where their first son, Kirk, was born in 1961. D.C.’s profession as a deep-sea diver then took them to Alaska, where Karon gave birth to their second son, Kevin, in Anchorage in 1964. In 1969, the family was living in Morgan City, Louisiana, when tragedy struck and left Karon a young widow with two small boys. She returned to Santa Barbara to pick up the pieces of her life, and in April of 1973, she married Frank Butler. Five years later, she was blessed with her third son, Brett. Karon is survived by her three sons, Kirk (Margaret), Kevin (Debbie) and Brett and her four grandchildren, Brittney (Tyler), Tyler (Susie), Colby and Kayla. She is also survived by her older brother Dennis Williams and his three daughters, Christine, Denise, Dawn and their families. A celebration of Karon's life is being planned for a later date in Santa Barbara.

Elsie and Nicholas Kelemen had two daughters, Eve and Susan. In 1991, she and her husband moved to Santa Barbara, California, to be close to Eve and their granddaughters, Dawn and Lynn. Elsie was predeceased by her husband, Nicholas, and lived at Maravilla since 2005. Elsie was a wonderful, loving mother, grandmother and lady, who had a lot of friends. She loved to read and enjoyed classical music. She will be greatly missed. Elsie is survived by her daughters, Eve Kelemen of Santa Barbara, CA, and Susan Kelemen (James Smith) of Pittsboro, NC, and granddaughters, Dawn Kriss (Alex) of Brooklyn, NY and Lynn Lohnas of New York, NY. She is also survived by a loving nephew, Jeff, special friend, Sandy, and numerous other relatives and friends. The family requests that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to either Chabad of Santa Barbara at www.sb chabad.org or the Santa Barbara Library at www.friends-sblibrary.org.

Elsie Esther Kelemen 02/14/1916-03/26/16

Erline Dessie Goodell 10/10/39-03/30/16

Mary M. Nicholson

was the director of Head Start, Sunday school teacher, Hospice volunteer and a tutor. During these years she raised her three children, Wendy, Delene and Peter. She was a constant in their lives, creating a childhood filled with art, music, camp outs, backyard plays, summer days at the beach, and love. When her children began to establish their own lives, she went back to UCSB as a full-time student in the Religious Studies Department, where she earned her second BA and was awarded her Master's. Erline then kicked off a progressive career with classes on Feminist Theology, Midlife Crisis and Menopause, discussion forums called Midlife Zest, Comparative Mysticisms, the gospel of Judas and Santa Barbara City College Adult Ed class on the Da Vinci Code. Then she started writing poetry and published three collections and one book on her travels to mystical places in Europe. Erline was a lifelong learner and creative thinker. Erline had so many gifts. She loved each of her family members without hesitation, judgment or question. She took the time to fully understand each of her grandchildren's individuality. Dexter offered her a life of adventure and love. They traveled the world seeking out ancient and mystical sites with Erline setting the course and Dexter navigating. Erline’s memory lives on through her husband Dexter; their children Wendy (Bruce), Delene, Peter (Laura) and her 8 grandchildren: Tanner, Austin, Erin, Parker, Elise, Allison, Travis and Ames. “I’ve had all a women could dream for Loyalty, love, abundance and more, Dream of me if you wish, but grieve not Celebrate me with a hug and a kiss” -EDG Donations in Erline’s memory can be made to Santa Barbara Scholarship Foundation or Visiting Nurses HospiceSerenity House. A celebration of Erline’s life will take place at the Santa Barbara Yacht Club on Thursday, June 2, at 3pm.

Lola Mae Orsua Ortega (McKellips) 06/09/29-03/27/16

Karon Williams

06/06/41-03/29/16

Mary M. (Peggy) Nicholson, 73, passed away peacefully on March 17, 2016, after a struggle with cancer. She leaves behind a city full of longtime friends, clients and family who love and respect her for a lifetime of making a difference in this world. Peggy is survived by her granddaughters, Ashley Nicholson of Goleta and Alissa Nicholson of Marietta, GA, her daughter-in-law Cathy Nicholson of Marietta, her sister-in-law Sandy MacCulloch and husband Bill of Lincoln, CA, nephews Greg Erspamer of Eugene, OR, and Brad Erspamer of Castro Valley, CA, and their families, stepdaughter Debbie Gibson and stepson Rick Gibson of Canyon Country, CA, and by friend and former husband Stan Nicholson of Goleta. A celebration of Peggy’s life is planned for Friday, April 22, 2016, starting at 3pm in the Theatre of Valle Verde, located at 900 Calle de Los Amigos in Santa Barbara. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation in Peggy’s honor to Planned Parenthood or The National Park Foundation. 16

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On Tuesday, March 29, 2016, Karon Williams (Todd-Butler) formally of Santa Barbara passed away at her home in Rio Linda, California. Karon was born June 6, 1941, in Santa Monica, California, to George and Marva Williams. She grew up on the family ranch known as the Daniel Hill adobe in Goleta, California. Karon attended local schools and graduated from Santa Barbara High School in 1959. Later that year, she married Thurman “D.C.” Todd. They lived

aPrIl 14, 2016

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Elsie Kelemen passed away peacefully at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital on March 26 after complications from a stroke. She lived to enjoy her 100th Birthday Bash surrounded by family and friends. Elsie Esther Kelemen was born to John and Goldie Schreiber on February 14, 1916. She grew up in New York City and Brooklyn, NY, and worked as a secretary on Wall Street before marrying Dr. Nicholas Kelemen on November 21, 1940. She was a bright woman who brought joy to all her interactions. She and her husband lived in East Newark, NJ, where Elsie was an active member of her community, generously volunteering her time in a variety of organizations including the Welfare Assistance Board in East Newark, chairing the Hudson County Cultural Council, serving as vice president of the Women’s Auxiliary of West Hudson Hospital, vice president of the Kearny Safety Council, and as a member of the Steering Committee for the West Hudson Girl Scouts. She also served as president of the Board of Education for East Newark. In 1974, she was Local Municipal Chairman for the United Way for East Newark. She thoroughly enjoyed being an active volunteer with the Half Penny Playhouse in Kearny, NJ.

“Each day was a blessing and a gift for me - not one regret left standing” – EDG Our beautiful wife, mother and grandmother, Erline Goodell left this world on March 30 after a three-year journey through the complications of multiple strokes. Throughout these years her amazing husband, three children, son- and daughter-in-law, and eight grandchildren were by her side holding her hand and keeping the faith that she would recover. Erline began her life in Portland, Oregon, on October 10, 1939, as the daughter of Ted and Elizabeth Elkin. Her family moved around quite a bit when she was a child, and her older sister Joyce and younger brother Tom were a wonderful comfort to her. She attended UC Santa Barbara, where she met and fell in love with Dexter Goodell, her beloved husband of 56 years. She began her life-long passion for learning with her teaching credential and a job as a 3rd grade teacher. Throughout her life she touched so many lives through education. She

Lola passed away peacefully on Easter Sunday. She was born June 9, 1929, in Visalia, California, to parents Lorenzo and Katherine McKellips. Early in her childhood they relocated to Santa Barbara. In 1945, she married Robert P. Orsua, and together they had 6 sons. Lola was a homemaker during her children's upbringing. It was later in life that she entered the workforce, taking jobs at Applied Magnetics, Raytheon and Mentor. She had a fondness for owls, which was expressed with her extensive collection of figurines throughout her home. Lola was a natural-born storyteller, and devoted friend. She enjoyed engaging in conversa-

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Opinions

obituaries, cont’d

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tion and was a good listener. Her sons will always remember her big heart and cheerful smile. Her life was not always easy, but she remained a woman of admiral strength and poise; she was a gentle soul and always willing to help those in need. Lola is preceded in death by her parents and sons, Robert, Steve and Michael Orsua, as well as her brother, Maurice McKellips, and great-grandson Raymond Orsua Jr. She is survived by her sons Mark, David and Phillip Orsua and grandkids; Leana, Steve, Raymond and Charmaine Orsua, Melanie Hunter, Michelle Sanchez, Roberta Weighill, and her great-grandkids Monica, Anthony, Jade and Sky Orsua, Robert and Analisa Rojo, Robert, Nathan and Alalnuw Weighill, Charli Hunter, David Tovar as well as her great-great grandkids Alyssa, Cynthia, Elena and Vincent Unzueta. Services will be held on April 21 11am at Calvary Cemetery Mausoleum.

“Terri” Theresa Ann Olds 03/02/23-03/31/16

letters

The Big One

T

he entire California coastline lies along the Pacific Ring of Fire earthquake zone, which has become much more active in recent years. As the earth’s polar caps and glaciers melt at an ever-accelerating rate (2015 was the hottest year on record), the reduced weight on both the top and bottom of our planet is causing the Earth’s tectonic plates to shift. This increased movement is responsible for larger and more frequent earthquakes. Unfortunately, most of us have been lulled into a false sense of security. Scientists assure us that it is only a matter of time before our state experiences The Big One, a horrific natural disaster. According to recent studies, a magnitude 9.0 earthquake along the Cascadia Fault could potentially produce a tsunami so large that it would wash away coastal towns. The Diablo Cove Fault, which runs east to west directly under the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant’s Unit One Reactor and turbine building, is seismically linked to the Shoreline Fault, the Hosgri Fault, the San Andreas Fault, and the Cascadia Subduction Zone. In addition to these major faults, there are thousands of undiscovered collaterals. Collaterals are faults that branch off of major fault lines. The power stored in this combined network of fault systems can create an earthquake sufficient to exceed Diablo Canyon’s safeguards. The idea that nuclear power plants are durable enough to withstand strong earthquakes and other external shocks is a total myth. Why must we continue to live with this unnecessary danger? It is no longer rational for us to suffer the risks posed by the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. We need to remove this aging hazard from our coastline as soon as possible. — Harvey Sherback, Berkeley

Jail Costs Up, Need Down

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idn’t Santa Barbara County vote down the proposed jail in 2000 by 61 percent to 39 percent, and didn’t our county again in 2010 vote down the same proposed jail by again 61 percent to 39 percent?

Hasn’t Proposition 47 been shown to have decreased county jail populations in California by nearly 10 percent since it passed in November 2014? Aren’t we anticipating, with treatment centers, to decrease our existing S.B. County Jail population substantially? Don’t we now have proposals to significantly reduce bail costs so that many fewer awaiting trial will be jailed as is done currently? Can’t we bring down our recidivism rate, a disgrace at upward of 70 percent? At the very least we should once more query the voters of this county as to their will now concerning a proposed jail. We expect our supervisors to show wisdom and justice. — Joe Cain, S.B.

For the Record

¶ Last week’s massive Summer Camp Guide has a few corrections: • Earthlight Pictures’ video conference will be with a digital graphic artist, not a “star animator.” • The correct grades for Sew Much Fun are K-12. • California Learning Center runs June 16-August 22. • Montessori Center School is offering the camps Puppetry, America the Beautiful, Cook with Books, Art Exploration, Outdoor Adventure, Solstice Fun, Sports Skills, Tie Dye, and Vacation Adventures. • And we inadvertently missed adding Showstoppers theater camp; Earth & Sky Nature Camp; ACTION! Digital Movie-Making Camp; and PonyUp Santa Barbara. Full information for all camps can be found at independent.com/2016summercamp. ¶ A typo in our “Plight of the Raptors” piece last week gave the Ojai Raptor Center’s costs as $12,000 per day; it’s $10,000-$12,000 per month. 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.

Yellowstone, and Jedediah Smith State Park. Terri also spent many wonderful weekend days at the beaches of Santa Barbara County. In '69, Terri and Phil moved to Goleta. After retiring, Terri became a member of the Cathedral Oaks Tennis Club and competed in many tournaments. She and Phil also traveled to tennis tournaments including Palm Springs and the U.S. Open. Around this time, they purchased a lot in South Lake Tahoe and built a cabin. Terri spent many happy vacation moments there with family. Terri was an avid bridge player, and she and Phil spent many fun evenings playing with various bridge groups. Terri and family also belonged to the Old Mission, San Roque, and St. Raphael's parishes and attended masses over the years. Terri and Phil traveled to Europe, Greece, the Grand Canyon, and the Panama Canal. Terri lost her beloved Phil in November '99. In 2002, Terri took her 4 daughters to Italy where they met up with Rick in Rome; a wonderful time was had by all. "Arrivederci our dear Mom, God be with you 'til we meet again." A rosary will be held at Welch-RyceHaider, 450 Ward Dr., S.B. on Friday, April 15 at 7pm. A funeral mass will be held on Saturday, April 16 at 10 am at St. Raphael's Catholic Church, 5444 Hollister Ave., S.B. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Hospice of Santa Barbara or the Alzheimer's Association.

Dennis Phillips

09/17/50-02/12/16 Mom passed away peacefully in her home with her family by her side. She was blessed to live a full and wonderful life in her 93 years. She will be greatly missed by family and friends. Terri was born in Plainfield, New Jersey, to Mary and Joseph Luca, Italian immigrants. She graduated high school and attended business college there. In 1945, she met the love of her life, Phil Olds. They met on a bus going to New York City. Terri and her girlfriend were going to see "Annie get Your Gun."(Terri loved to recollect this story). By fate, they were riding on the same bus on the way back. Two years later, Terri and Phil were married in Plainfield. After honeymooning in Cuba, they moved to Summerland, CA, and resided with Phil's folks, Frank and Marjorie Olds. Terri worked in the post office in Summerland for a short time. They moved to an apartment in Santa Barbara shortly after their first child was born. The couple raised 5 children: Kristen Olds-Santiago of Santa Barbara; Kim Olds-Olson (Gary) of Kelseyville CA; Meg Olds-Beach (Stan) also of Kelseyville; Beth Waugh (Bruce) of Goleta; and Rick Olds of Goleta. She also had 6 grandchildren: Anna Padilla (Mike) of Goodyear, Arizona; Kellen Olson of Campbell, CA; Kaitlin Waugh of Scottsdale, Arizona; Natalie Waugh of Goleta; Parker Waugh of Goleta; and Jaden Olds of Goleta. Terri also had 3 great-grandchildren: Matteo, Cyrus, and Alania Padilla of Goodyear, Arizona. She is also survived by her niece Terri Ann Luca Razzano of Hudson, Florida. Terri worked as a legal secretary before being hired at Santa Barbara Savings and Loan. She worked for the Savings and Loan for 30 years as a loan officer. Enjoying traveling and the outdoors, Terri and Phil took their family to 2 World Fairs and camping in Yosemite, independent.com

Dennis was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on September 17, 1950, and moved with his family to Santa Barbara in 1961. As an avid surfer, Dennis enjoyed his teenage years in Southern California in the era of the emerging surf scene. He graduated from Dos Pueblos High School in 1969. In the summer and autumn seasons of his life, Dennis dabbled in different occupations, including abalone diving and construction work. His love and passion for the ocean were evident. His travels rarely carried him far from the ocean, traveling to Hawaii where he worked in construction on many of the islands and immersed himself in the surf scene. Many thanks to a longtime friend and neighbor, Cindy, for her caring and attention to Dennis in the last months of his life. Special thanks also to the VNA and Hospice nurses. Dennis is preceded in death by his mother, Lorraine Phillips. He is survived by his father Jerome Phillips, sister June Darby (Bob), daughter Carena, and son Nicholas. Dennis passed away on February 12, 2016 at Serenity House. Please make any donations in the name of Dennis Phillips to the Visiting Nurses Association or Serenity House.

aPrIl 14, 2016

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Opinions

cont’d

on the beat

SIN CITY: This is a town of big winners and

big, big losers.

LOSER: A 27-year-old Texan was having sex with a New York tourist on the High Roller Ferris wheel (100 feet higher than London’s Eye) in the glass-enclosed capsule while onlookers videoed them. Upon returning to earth, they were arrested. Then a TV series paid him $4,000 cash to appear. There’s more. Back home in Houston he flashed the greenbacks and was soon carjacked — and shot to death. His assailants were quickly arrested. WINNER: A Las Vegas woman dropped into

the L.V. airport, dropped some quarters in one of the handy slots last month, and won close to a million: $933,000. It’s a town where anything can happen. Last weekend the hotels were pelted by a heavy, cold downpour, clearing the pools due to thunder and lightning. Women in matching “Bride Tribe” T-shirts were celebrating the upcoming nuptials of a friend whose bridal veil sagged alarmingly, but they all laughed. Nearby, inside the Venetian’s lobby, an elevator burst open, disgorging a bunch of giggling women, out for fun. The slots were busy with geezer smokers, but basically this is a young Strip, which racked up a gross of $6.3 billion last

barney brantingham

Dateline: Las Vegas

Hotels, including the Venetian, where we dropped our bags, offered “European-style” sunbathing, meaning topless. You can swim up to play blackjack and not have a shirt to lose at some hotels, which are basically shopping malls where you can rent a room. The pools are now dubbed “day clubs,” where people seem to stand around and drink instead of old-fashioned swimLITTLE VENICE: Sheldon Adelson was nowhere to be found, but ming. At the Paris Las Vegas you gondolier Lina gave a tour of the Venetian’s replica Piazza San Marco. can swim in a two-acre rooftop pool beneath a 500-foot half-size year. Unbelievably, the gambling take is far Eiffel Tower and taste a buffet featuring dishes exceeded by the revenue from room rates, from five French regions. dining, drinks, shopping, shows, etc., and has But there’s fun galore to be had, even if you for years. don’t gamble. I had four quarters to blow but Speaking of shows, I’m here with daugh- never got around to it. These casinos are not ter Wendy, son Barclay, and his wife, Julie, philanthropic enterprises. The odds are with to see Cirque du Soleil’s phantasmagorical the house, more or less, depending on the show The Beatles: LOVE. My cell phone was game. barking flash-flood warnings, to add to the How do you think Venetian owner Shelpyrotechnics. don Adelson, a major donor to the GOP, got to “Nevada Is a Secret Business Haven” head- be worth $29 billion? He also owns gambling lined USA Today, referring to the Panama dens in Macau, China, and secretly bought the Papers exposé. The reviled Mossack Fonseca Las Vegas Review-Journal. He first denied it, Panamanian law firm, which seems to grow hiding behind secrecy barriers, but was outed. offshore tax shelters like peanuts, has an office Standing high, reflecting the sun, is the here, of course. 64-floor Trump Tower — tallest one here.

Barney Brantingham can be reached at barney@independent.com or 965-5205 x230. He writes online columns and a print column for Thursdays.

Our neighbor, the $1.8 billion Palazzo, is all suites, also owned by Adelson. I didn’t see him around, counting the take, but I heard that celeb chef Mario Batali, formerly at the Santa Barbara Biltmore, dropped in recently to chat up the staff at his B&B Ristorante, a pricey place at the Venetian, not to be confused with B&B Burger & Beer, which he also owns along with Otto Enoteca Pizzeria, specializing in Italian-style dinners, not to be confused with a nearby Italian eatery serving “American”-style Italian food. If you get bored, there’s the Mob Museum, harking back to the days when Vegas was run by gangsters and then reverted to a new “Family” face. When that failed, it built mega hotels with amusements for all and mega rewards for investors. A big hit at the Venetian are the indoor gondola rides, a pleasant drift past miles of high-end shops and piloted by real Italians, such as the sweetly singing young Lina, from Positano by way of Seattle. Twenty dollars a person and for me one place where you get your money’s worth. We left Las Vegas in the rain, broke but happy. Here, LOVE is all you need. My Santa Barbara house is about the size of one of those luxury suites but comes with a cat, far from the 42 million people who hit Sin City every year, looking for fun and/or love in too   —  Barney Brantingham many places.

COME SEE HOW A N AC A PA B U I L D S THE BRIGHTEST MINDS. T H U R S D A Y, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 5:00-5:45pm: Hands-on interest stations run by students, parents and faculty 5:45-6:30pm: Headmaster greeting, alumni and student panel, and Q&A Why is Anacapa the first step to extraordinary?

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Anacapa School 8 1 4 SA N TA B A R B A R A ST R E E T SA N TA B A R B A R A , C A 93 1 0 1


Opinions

voices

Fighting Slavery in Our Community Human Trafficking Targets the Young and Vulnerable

A

by ASSemblymember DAS WilliAmS

my is 16 years old. She has

survived abuse at home and is being sex trafficked on the street in a nice suburban town in Ventura County. Like Amy (whose name has been changed to protect her), dozens of young girls and boys in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties are vulnerable to commercial sexual exploitation and are often recruited by their own peers for a pay bonus. Because of real cases like this, there is a growing awareness in the United States of human trafficking for labor and sexual exploitation. This is not simply a problem in other parts of the world, and it doesn’t just consist of individuals brought across international or state borders. The recruitment and exploitation goes on here in our own hometowns, and foster youth, homeless individuals, and survivors of domestic violence are particularly susceptible. We must remain committed to fight perpetrators who manipulate children for personal gain. Existing law offers judges very little flexibility when they determine the sentencing of these heinous criminals. This often results in inadequate sentences that are not sufficient deterrents against repeat criminal behavior, or sentences that are inadequate given the nature of the trafficking operation in question. That is why I have introduced AB 2513, a bill to provide judges with the discretion to consider the vulnerability of the victim as an aggravating factor when sentencing human-trafficking criminals. Proposition 35, the Californians Against Sexual Exploitation (CASE) Act initiative, was passed back in 2012 with 81 percent of the vote. The initiative increased prison terms for human traffickers, required convicted sex traffickers to register as sex offenders, directed criminal fines from convicted human traffickers into a fund for services to help victims, and mandated law enforcement training on human trafficking. Unfortunately, the CASE Act does not have a provision that protects victims who are especially easy to target. AB 2513 amends the CASE Act to specify that when sentencing an offender convicted of human trafficking, California judges have the discretion to consider as an aggravating factor the fact that the defendant recruited, enticed, or obtained the victim from a shelter or placement that is designed to serve runaway youth, foster children, homeless persons, or victims of human trafficking or domestic violence. The deliberate targeting of vulnerable groups of victims should be considered

an “aggravating factor” for at least two reasons. It reflects premeditation on the part of the convicted party to purposefully seek out a particularly vulnerable person as a victim. Additionally, it undermines the principle that society has a special responsibility to protect its most at-risk citizens. Several circumstances can increase a victim’s susceptibility, such as homelessness, belonging to a foster program, or being a victim of domestic violence. For these individuals who have already had their ties to society frayed, being trafficked can be particularly harmful. Victims targeted from their foster homes, for example, lose contact with their community and have their education and development impeded. According to the Human Rights Project for Girls, in 2013, 60 percent of the child sex-trafficking victims recovered as part of an FBI nationwide raid from more than 70 cities were children from foster care or group homes. This statistic reveals an unsettling fact: Criminals who engage in human trafficking keep watch on foster youth because they know they represent a vulnerable population. Foster youth in our community should not be entering a system where they fear being subjected to unsafe care. Foster youth should be placed in loving circumstances that will protect them from exploitation. It is vital to our public safety that we create stricter laws; otherwise, our youth and at-risk individuals will continue to be targeted for human trafficking. I believe AB 2513 can keep criminals from getting comfortable by targeting “easy prey” who they can utilize for their own financial gain. By not taking action today as a state, we are saying it is okay for criminal groups to continue to abuse foster youth. That is unacceptable! Should AB 2513 become law, California will continue to blaze a trail for the rest of the country to follow. Foster care is a positive and vital program that aims to protect children, not lead them further into a life of neglect and negativity. My goal is to relentlessly improve our valued foster care system despite the attempts of criminals to do otherwise. I ask the community to join with me in supporting AB 2513 to protect the members of our society from human trafficking, slave labor, and sexual exploitation. We can only fight these illicit behaviors by having laws on the books to thwart criminals from causing harm. By passing AB 2513, the children of our community will be safer. n

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earth day

Vision Quests

Santa Barbarans Are Saving the World, One Idea at a Time

I

t ain’t easy being green. And these days, with a barrage of news stories about melting glaciers, brimming landfills, and dying wildlife, it can be hard to stay hopeful enough to try. Luckily for us and the rest of the planet, Santa Barbara holds true to its environmen-

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tal roots, with eco-minded visionaries constantly sprouting up with new ideas to live within our means. Their creative energy and singular drive are the tip of the sustainability spear, and in anticipation of Earth Day, we highlight four of them in the arenas of food, water, energy, and transportation.

in refrigeration, there’s been very little work done on keeping oping nations, where his product can help improve overall to come are exploding out of James Rogers’s food fresh once it’s harvested. “People have been trying to do food security and bolster farming economies. The remaining mouth at a machine-gun pace. Printed on the this for a long time,” said Rogers.“Monks started waxing apples 5 percent is being spent on continuing R&D. Among other staircase wall of his Eastside offices is the motto in the Middle Ages to preserve them through the winter. But long-term goals, Rogers believes that Apeel’s discoveries could “Protecting plants as nature intended,” and that is there hasn’t been a lot of innovation in the last thousand years.” one day replace conventional pesticides. the gospel Rogers is excitedly preaching to me. “We’re using food to protect other foods by applyWith a refreshingly boyish glee, he’s explaining materials science in a thoughtful way,” said Roging how his company, Apeel, uses cutting-edge ers, whose naturally derived coatings essentially stop science to turn our country’s embarrassing water loss and oxidation, the main causes of rotting, amount of food waste into protective coatings but are completely flavorless, edible, and benign. “We’re not making something that nature has never that will make fruit, vegetables, and even flowseen before. We’re just moving it around.” ers stay fresh way longer. Recently, his team of scientists figured out how to better preserve cassava root, the staple ike many a well-meaning UCSB PhD materistarch crop for much of Africa, and he just als science student, Rogers was once workwon federal approval to sell Apeel’s product ing on flexible solar panel technology, which to American farmers. “I’m floating,” said Rogrequired frequent trips to Lawrence laboratory in How an Eastside Company Fights Food Waste Berkeley. One day while driving back to Santa Barers, a Michigan- and Washington State–raised, and Protects Produce Carnegie Mellon– and UCSB-trained materials bara through the agricultural sprawl of the Salinas scientist who founded Apeel in 2012 as part of Valley, Rogers wondered how in the world there by Matt Kettmann could be so much global hunger when the country UCSB’s new venture competition. Today, Apeel enjoys $2 million in grant support from, among grows so much. “It was a really naïve perspective,” others, the Bill & Melinda Gates and Rockefeller Rogers admitted. foundations, as well as $7 million in venture He did some research and found that, according capital. “We’re cranking around the clock,” said to the Natural Resources Defense Council, AmeriRogers.“Two years from now, I hope we’re makcans throw away 40 percent of their food, which ing tons and tons of this material and it’s getting equates to $165 billion a year. “Even if that is off by applied all over the planet.” half, the waste is just insane,” said Rogers.“Certainly,” He’d just returned from a month-long trip he thought, “someone must be doing something to Nigeria, London, Chile, Madrid, and Abu about this.” Dhabi, and he was about to take off for Kenya But no one was, so he started to figure out how to and South Africa. “Our business is inherently capture that trash—from grocery store throwaways international,” he said. “We have to go where and food scraps to farm clippings and used wine the harvest is to do the application. We’re at the grapes—and redirect it into something beneficial, which is essentially what materials scientists do.“We whim of the fruit.” Apeel’s headquarters are located in a twobridge the gap between what’s available and what’s story office building on Reddick Street, around useful,” said Rogers, who began extracting poten potentially protective compounds from the corner from the taquerías of Milpas Street. Here nearly 40 scientists from various backthe waste while simultaneously grounds—materials, like Rogers, but also bioproducing greater quantities James Rogers chem, mechanical engineering, and chemical of those chemicals for testing engineering, among others— swarm around purposes. the open-floor workplace on the second floor, Since then, he’s been patenting both the organic and synwhile downstairs, white-coated technians tinthetic processes and products ker in the various and evolving labs. Boxes full of scientific Currently, about 80 percent of Apeel’s work is focused (which are chemically identidevices arrive by the hour, yoga mats hang from the balcony, on the commercial produce market. Rogers’s first target cal) and testing them all on variand pale ale is on tap, yet still, no front desk exists. is the blueberry because it costs a lot and rots quickly, This is what active innovation looks like, and if Rogers’s among other factors. But he’s most fervent about the ous fruits, vegetables, and flowers. enthusiasm infers that he may be on the brink of changing the 15 percent of his company’s time that is dedicated to The Apeel offices have rooms filled with pineapples, avocados, strawberries, world, that’s because he is. Aside from 20th-century advances solving the problems of “post-harvest spoilage” in devel-

Apeel The Appeal of

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paul wellman photos

YOUR JOURNEY STARTS HERE

ST - 26, TH APRIL21 23 APRIL - 242015 , 2016

BERRY REVOLUTIONARY SCIENCE: Scientists turn food waste into protective coatings for produce at Apeel’s Reddick Street offices, where the team is targeting blueberries as its first American commercial market. Meanwhile, the company is also working with developing nations in Africa to protect staple crops such as cassava, as well as horticultural crops such as banana, mango, tomato, and pineapple.

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bananas, and roses where camera rigs take time-lapse photos showing of the effectiveness of the different coatings.“Every kind of produce needs different tweaking,” said Rogers, whose technology is making blueberries last four days longer and stretching avocados another 12 days, all without refrigeration. “They are onto something potentially big in the produce world,” said Jay Ruskey of Good Land Organics, a farm on the western edge of Goleta, where he’s tested the product on finger limes and found that it does halt spoilage. “This is done without really hard chemicals/ fungicides that are common today. They derive their ingredients naturally and, in a way, seem to mimic the produce’s natural defense but makes it much more robust,” said Ruskey. “It will be great to see where the company can go in the next 18 months.”

T

he science, while revolutionary, might be the easiest part of the Apeel equation. In the last three years, Rogers has endured crash courses in commercial farming and international food distribution, quickly determining that his most likely customers will be the grocery stores and processing plants that handle the produce. “They have the economic incentive to get this product to their suppliers,” said Rogers. That goes for American chains like Albertsons all the way down to the collectives in Kenya that move the cassava. Though not technically philanthropic, Apeel’s African projects are more focused on goodwill than the bottom line, which is why the Rockefeller Foundation (which is fighting post-harvest spoilage in horticultural crops such as mangos and tomatoes) and the Gates Foundation (which is focused on staples such as cassava) have thrown support behind the company.“The foundation’s agriculture strategy is focused on empowering smallholder farmers with a variety of knowledge, tools, and technologies, like this one being developed by Apeel, to improve their livelihoods and lift themselves and their families out of poverty,” said Rinn Self of the Gates Foundation. Meanwhile, Rogers will soon be enlisting his first American clients — three organic farms in the Santa Barbara area — to monitor how the product fares in the real world. He’ll even soon be building a sales room and, yes, a real front desk.“My objective is to be selling out of our stuff in the next six months,” said Rogers. Apeel’s current operation will be able to produce enough product to treat up to two metric tons of fruit per week. But Rogers is looking for a larger facility, even scoping greenhouses in Carpinteria for future R&D. The only opposition he may face would be from individual growers who do well in the current system of waste, but he’s not too concerned.“Frankly, we shouldn’t be growing berries that we’re throwing away anyway, so I don’t feel too bad about that,” he said. What he’s overjoyed about, though, is running a company that isn’t just about making money, and doing so surrounded by other scientists who feel the same.“We’re not making the next app to get you laid — we could actually move the needle here,” said Rogers, who’s proud to say that his 22 years of schooling have finally amounted to something.“We’ve had a lot of resources poured into us, and we’re applying our knowledge to benefit the greater good. What more could you want?” n See apeelsciences.com.


earth day paul wellman

SUNDAY!

Rhythmic CiRcus Feet Don’t Fail Me now!

“Soulful vocals, superb musicianship, Winner four tap dancers with boundless energy of the Edinburgh Fringe Festival’s and enthusiasm.” The List (U.K.) Spirit of the Fringe Award

Barbara Wishingrad of Sweetwater Collaborative

Water Wizards

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arbaraWishingrad and her crew of water

the San Fernando Valley in 1968 after her father, a wizards at the Sweetwater Collaborative doctor, died. Graduating high school at age 16, Wishare teaching Santa Barbara drought-weary ingrad moved to Santa Barbara two years later to be citizens that what is old is still new. Where with her then-boyfriend and work a gig teaching City Hall is now spending $60 million on a new-yet- arts and crafts for the city’s Parks & Rec Departironically-old desalination plant, members of the ment. Shortly thereafter, she bought a small herbal Sweetwater Collaborative are systematically redefin- healing shop located at Victoria Court, eventually ing “beautiful” in very-old-but-still-new water-wise selling it and going off to study and to travel. While terms. Exalting a landscape Wishingrad describes in Mexico, where she married, had two kids, and as “The American Riviera,” the collaborapracticed herbal healing, Wishingrad lived tive promotes native, drought-tolerwithout running water for a number of ant vegetation and water uses that years. “I have experience with water have evolved over the centuries supply that is different from most in semiarid environments. Americans,” she said. In 1998, “We’re talking about she moved back to Santa Barastonishingly beautiful garbara, and in 2007, it dawned ‘Solves’ Drought on her that water was about to dens without using so very One Garden at a Time become the new oil. She threw much of our water,” she said. “It’s not necessary to herself into sustainable wateruse 50 percent of our drinkshed management and perable water on our landscaping maculture water management and flush so much of it down techniques and soaked up what by Nick Welsh the toilet.” And Wishingrad isn’t she could learn at the Quail Springs just talking the talk. The Sweetwater Permaculture Farm and “learning oases” Collaborative offers hands-on, detailed in New Cuyama. instruction on how to use less water while doing more. She and five others formed the Sweetwater CollabTwice a month, Sweetwater runs 90-minute classes on orative shortly before the drought hit. “If there are so how to capture “run-on” water rather than “run-off,” many committed environmentalists in Santa Barbara, using simple, low-tech steps to redirect and store water how come our built environment didn’t reflect that that would otherwise race down gutters, and how to more?” she wondered. They set out to answer that reuse the gray water that flows from Santa Barbara question, borrowing ideas from successful permawashing machines daily. In addition, the collabora- culture water management programs, and eventutive leads in-depth workshops on how to reconfigure ally embracing the hands-on approach because it was Santa Barbara’s landscaped outdoor environment to more effective and fun. effectively store rainfall. Once a month, Sweetwater To date, city councils and water districts from Carhosts a workshop for landscape professionals. The pinteria to Goleta have contracted with Sweetwater whole intent, Wishingrad explained, is to capture to preach the gospel of rainwater management, landwater that would otherwise be wasted and “to slow it, scape solutions, and the ABCs of graywater converto spread it, and to sink it.” sion. For property owners seeking to transform their Even Sweetwater’s outreach campaign is old-fash- yards, Wishingrad estimated it could cost between ioned. On bigger projects — actual top-to-bottom $5,000 and $12,000, but as much as $2,800 is available backyard permaculture makeovers that can include in rebates. the creation of rain gardens, mulch basins, and down The Sweetwater methods also save the trees, spout diversions — the group uses “the barn-raising” many of which have died in the drought; far more approach. People still learning the methods can earn are stressed and vulnerable. By directing otherwise sweat-equity discounts for their own projects by wasted water to mulch basins, trees, whose roots help spending at least 20 hours transforming other back- keep soil permeable, can be kept alive, thus increasing yards. Not only is that the best way to learn, said Wish- the carrying capacity of the earth itself. ingrad, but it fosters a greater sense of community. In the long run, Wishingrad believes, properties In person, Wishingrad radiates the quiet, friendly that have made these adjustments will be better able formidability of someone accustomed to landing on to survive should the new “new normal” become proher feet. Born in Chicago 62 years ago, Wishingrad, longed drought. And, she noted, their property values n along with her mother and four siblings, moved to will be enhanced.

Sweetwater Collaborative

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SQUAD GOALS: Faculty advisor Tyler Susko (center) is flanked by UCSB Hyperloop team members (from left) Trevor Fritz, Jack Abram, Zachary Guilford, Lucas Dewey, and Viraj Khatri.

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ike many space junkies and budding engineers around the

globe, Trevor Fritz follows SpaceX very closely, so he watched in awe on April 8 as the company successfully landed a reusable rocket on a barge in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, a major milestone for interstellar exploration. Fritz, a UCSB mechanical engineering undergrad, hopes to be part of another SpaceX history-making venture. He is part of a university team competing to revolutionize travel here on Earth. SpaceX founder Elon Musk — the big-brained entrepreneur behind PayPal and Tesla Motors — announced a competition for college students to design levitating passenger pods for his proposed Hyerloop project, a new mode of solar-powered, high-speed travel that would hurtle riders through vacuum tubes at 700 mph. Musk had come up with the idea a couple UCSB of years ago while he sat in Los Hyperloop Team Angeles traffic but said he was Making Transport too busy with his electric car and private space companies to History pursue it. “Short of figuring out real teleportation, which would, of course, be awesome (someone by Tyler Hayden please do this), the only option for super fast travel is to build a tube over or under the ground that contains a special environment,” Musk wrote in his white paper on the subject. If the Hyperloop were built along Interstate 5 in California, he said, it would cut travel time between L.A. and San Francisco to 30 minutes, cost much less than a high-speed rail ($6-$10 billion compared to $60 billion), and boast a range of ecological benefits, like reduced gas consumption and car emissions and overall less energy per passenger. Musk termed it a “fifth mode” of transport — after cars, planes, trains, and boats. The response was huge. More than 1,200 teams entered the design contest, and after a few elimination rounds, including final judging at


earth day

This Saturday An Afternoon with

Conan O’Brien

WHAT COULD BE: Above is an artist’s rendering of the proposed Hyperloop system.

Hosted by TV Producer Dick Wolf

paul wellman

Texas A&M in January, only 30 remain. UCSB’s is one for the winners have not yet been announced, but the of them, alongside crews from MIT, Virginia Tech, UCSB crew agreed fame and bragging rights are what UC Berkeley, the Netherlands, and Germany. “It was they care about the most. definitely amazing,” agreed Fritz’s teammate Sarah As the spring quarter begins, the undergrads, who Conley. The UCSB group were certainly underdogs, are also carrying full class loads, are toiling long hours, with less funding, experience, and resources than breaking every once in a while for pizza and beer. many of the other schools. Now, they’re building their They’re hammering out final designs and beginning proof-of-concept pod, which will race this summer fabrication in a machine shop near the UCen. “There down a one-mile track being constructed by SpaceX are lots of meetings to keep everyone in the loop,” said Conley.“No pun intended.” Two SpaceX advisors near Hawthorne, California. The team is made up of around 30 students, divided speak with the team regularly, giving advice and into subcommittees that focus on aerodynamics, signing off on all designs.“SpaceX has been amazing,” levitation, structure, integration, and computer said teammate Celeste Bean. “They’ve given a bunch engineering. It’s overseen by faculty and graduate of 20-year-olds the opportunity to run a start-up, student advisors, who offer support but stay pretty because that’s basically what this has turned into.” hands-off. “My role is a facilitator,” said Faculty Advisor Tyler Susko. It’s up to the students to communicate and collaborate, like they’ll do out in the real world. “I’m trying to develop engineering leaders who will kick butt when they graduate.” During the trip to Texas A&M, the UCSB team quickly discovered that the design for their 14-foot, 500-pound pod is significantly simpler, lighter, and less expensive than those of their competitors. Most of the other pods will weigh more than 1,000 pounds and cost more than $100,000 to build. Some NUTS AND BOLTS: The team goes over its passenger pod design. feature elaborate passenger chambers and interior lighting. UCSB is working with a budget Bean said she’s planning on graduate school next of $50,000-$60,000. “We kept repeating three words fall for computer engineering with a focus on controls. to ourselves,” said Fritz: “Affordable, realistic, and “This project really pushed me in that direction,” robust,” and, of course, safety. “We don’t want to be she explained. Conley is weighing her options. She’s the team known for destroying the SpaceX track,” he interested in Engineers Without Borders and a possible internship with Northrop Grumman, and explained. Two students have been working on financing the also mused,“Tesla would be awesome.” Fritz is headed self-funded project, which is already sponsored by a to Vandenberg Air Force Base after graduation to help number of engineering and tech companies, including SpaceX retrofit its launch pad for a bigger rocket. Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, and Ingersoll Rand. Susko thought that perhaps the biggest motivation Recently they launched a crowdfunding page to help for the students has been to be part of a “‘Wright pay for some of the pod’s pricier items, such as six brothers’ moment, to come up with a completely new magnetic levitation engines that go for $5,000 a pop. mode of transportation.” A Hyperloop connecting The engines, powered by lithium polymer batteries, Slovakia to Vienna and Budapest is already under will levitate the steel and fiberglass pod 6mm above the discussion, so it’s only a matter of time before Musk’s aluminum base of the tube. It’ll be fitted with an array dream becomes reality. We will see pods moving of sensors, and the whole system will be controlled by passengers at the speed of sound to and from all the team’s self-made circuit board. corners of the world, Susko believes. “Then these Fritz grinned a little mischievously when he students can say, ‘I was one of the first people to work explained the team’s proof-of-concept pod is designed on it.’ How cool is that?” to reach speeds of 218 mph on the test track, faster than any other competitor. It’ll accelerate at 2 Gs (thrust forward at first by the track’s “pusher”) and stay at To help sponsor UCSB Hyperloop, top speed for only three seconds before hitting the see tilt.com/tilts/hyperloop-funding. brakes. Judges will score each pod based on velocity, aerodynamics, overall performance, and so on. Prizes

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THE

SANTA

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PRESENTS

of the l u o S e Th r l Guita a c i s s a l C Soloist: Pablo Sainz-Villegas

The Best of Classical Guitar with Orchestra May 14, 2016 8pm I May 15, 2016 3pm I The Granada Theatre I Nir Kabaretti, Conductor If you love Elmer Bernstein’s popular film scores such as The Ten Commandments and The Magnificent Seven you’ll love his Guitar Concerto - the best of classical guitar with the world famous Spanish classical guitarist Pablo Sainz-Villegas. We finish the program with Bruckner’s romantic Symphony No. 4. Student tickets $10 I Adults ages 20-29 $20 with ID

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Window into the

T

Future

he next time you walk by an office building or are inside

looking out, pay close attention to the windows. Chances are they’re heavily tinted to reduce computer glare and to absorb heat, helping the building to stay cooler. In fact, many windows block half the sunlight entering a room, reflecting the rest of the solar energy back into the world. Four years ago, Daniel Next Energy Emmett, an expert in energy Technologies efficiency and conservation with a background in commercial Turning Windows real estate, and Corey Hoven, a into Solar Panels recent PhD graduate from the Materials Department at UCSB, by Tyler Hayden teamed up with the simple yet groundbreaking idea to harness that extra power by turning windows into solar panels. They formed Next Energy Technologies, applied for federal grants, and settled into an office park behind Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital, where 14 chemists and engineers have toiled to create an entirely new generation of solar technology. Now, said Emmett and Hoven during a tour of their labs last Thursday, Next Energy is on the cusp of breaking into the market with a transparent solar cell ink that can be printed directly onto standard dual-pane windows. The challenge was finding a solution clear and cheap enough for architects and building owners to adopt. And it had to pass batteries of efficiency and durability tests.“It’s been a long road to TINY BUT MIGHTY: A small sample of Next Energy’s solar window powers the get here,” said Emmett. fan behind it. The small-molecule technology is based on organic semiconductors pioneered at UCSB under Alan Heeger, who won a Nobel Prize for his work in 2000. The window arrays will act just like a big solar field, connected in a grid attached to a power inverter. Some day down the line, the ink may be printed on flexible materials such as tents or awnings, or incorporated into roof materials. It may also be used for lightweight, portable generation in developing countries. Next Energy has succeeded where other developers failed, especially in cracking the code to make the product commercially viable. “We look better, generate more energy, and cost less,” Hoven summed up. “This is designed to be a no-brainer decision,” Emmett said. “Put in a normal window, or a normal window with this functionality.” They can also customize the ink’s color and transparency, which is applied when the window is manufactured. The active layer of the solar cells is only 100 nanometers thick — 1/100,000th of a centimeter. That contrasts with bulky silicon solar panels, which use expensive, rare earth minerals that need to be mined and purified. Next Energy will go to market with a 10 percent power conversion efficiency that will net 100 watts per meter squared. “That’s a meaningful amount of power, especially over the side of a building,” Emmett said, noting new buildings these days trend toward a higher window-to-wall ratio. He estimated the panel system would power around 20 percent of a structure’s energy needs; buildings consume 40-50 percent of our global energy. “This has the potential to have really meaningful reductions on the carbon footprint and power use of commercial structures,” he said.


paul wellman photos

earth day

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CLEAR VISION: Company cofounders Daniel Emmett (front) and Corey Hoven (back) peer through their product with their colleagues.

Though office spaces have done a lot to decrease their power demand in recent years, such as installing LEDs, incorporating smart heating and cooling software, and so on, there haven’t been any real options to produce on-site renewable energy.“We’d be the first to provide significant power,” said Hoven, which would allow business owners to save on their energy bills, especially during peak hours. Utility companies aren’t yet part of the conversation, said Emmett, though Next Energy has spoken with the California Public Utilities Commission about their project. If an architect is interested in the solar windows, Next Energy would analyze the proposed building’s location, orientation, and elevation, as well as the area’s utility rate and weather patterns. That will determine performance and payback. Emmett tells potential customers — which include some of the biggest window manufacturers in the U.S.—that the system can pay for itself in about a year. He expects his windows to be in buildings in around 18 months.

‘This is designed to be a no-brainer decision,’ Emmett said. ‘Put in a normal window, or a normal window with this functionality.’

As Hoven led a tour of the lab, he introduced chemist Braden Smith, a 2012 UCSB graduate who worked on similar technologies in school. Wearing safety goggles and an expression of deep concentration, Smith was hunkered over his laptop and workbench next to colored liquids steaming and swirling in glass beakers. Nearby were engineers Bruno Caputo, Rachel Harris, and Robert Manriquez, all UCSB graduates, as well, testing different solutions in enclosed solar boxes. Next Energy has also hired some of the best minds in the business from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. In 2012, Congressmember Lois Capps toured the facility and praised Santa Barbara–area start-ups for creating jobs and enticing investors. At the time, many other U.S. solar companies were struggling to keep up with their global competitors. Next Energy was able to stay relatively lean and mean by buying its equipment at auctions and getting by without any venture capital. Emmett takes great pride in forming a company that will soon “make buildings part of the solution, rather than part of the problem.” He never bought into the notion that there has to be a trade-off between good business and good practice. “Every time I see something that speaks to that, I get really excited. And this is it. This has the potential to be really n transformative.”

THU, APR 21 / 7:30 PM / UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $8 / $5 all students Event Sponsors: Lynda Weinman & Bruce Heavin

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week i n d e p e n d e n T Ca l e n da r

april

14-20

e h T

by Terry OrTega and alexandra nichOlsOn

Bill Dewey

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.

y T h u r s da

this American premiere of Sabina Berman’s laugh-out-loud comedy follows a Hollywood film crew as they arrive in a small border town in California to shoot a movie and wreak havoc on the fragile ecosystem. The internationally known Bichir brothers play all of the characters: starlet, director, and the locals on the set. Maya Burns’s combo will perform ranchero, corrido, and Mexican surfer rock pre-show and during intermission. The show runs through May 1; the April 19 show will be in Spanish. Thu.Fri.: 8pm; Sat., Tue.: 7pm; Sun.: 2pm; Wed.: 2 and 7pm. Rubicon Theatre, 1006 E. Main St., Ventura. $20-$150. Call 667-2900. Read more on p. 47. rubicontheatre.org

4/14: Awakening American Citizens to Nuclear Dangers Listen to three leading

thurSday 4/14 4/14-4/20: Ensemble Theatre Company Presents Bad Jews Daphne Feygenbaum swears she is the most devout Jew in her family, so when her lessobservant cousin arrives to claim a treasured family heirloom and religious symbol, a devastatingly hilarious battle between the holy and holier-than-thou ignites! There will be a pre-show talk at 7:15 p.m. on April 20. The show runs through May 1. Thu.-Sat., Wed.: 8pm; Sun.: 2 and 7pm; Tue.: 7pm. The New Vic, 33 W. Victoria St. $20-$55. Call 965-5400. ensembletheatre.com

4/14: Queensrÿche This American heavy metal band has sold more than 30 million albums and performed to sold-out audiences around the world. Come rock out to hits including the group’s No. 1 chart topper “Silent Lucidity” and more. Chumash Casino Resort, 3400 E. Hwy. 246, Santa Ynez. $30. Ages 21+. Call (800) 248-6274.

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4/14: Get It Done Today! The Alliance for Living and Dying Well and the S.B. Public Library will help the public complete their advance health care directive with professional facilitators, notaries, and trained bilingual volunteers. Appointments are required.10am-2pm. Faulkner Gallery, Santa

Barbara Public Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 845-5314.

allianceforlivinganddyingwell.org

4/14: Methane Seepage Along Faults in the Santa Barbara Coastal Area Did you know that the S.B. Channel has the second largest natural oil and gas seep in the world? Learn about the environmental disaster of methane gas seepage at this lecture by UCSB Earth Science professor James Boles, PhD. 7pm. S.B. Maritime Museum, 113 Harbor Wy. Free-$10. Call 456-8747.

tinyurl.com/NuclearAgeLecture

Friday 4/15 4/15: Convert Like Crazy: 10 Design and Copy Hacks You Can’t Afford to Miss If you own or work on websites with a conversion goal, such as a newsletter signup, a lead generation, or a sale, come learn about conversion and how to boost your conversion rate with graphics specialist Julia Sevin and conversion copywriter/ content strategist Lianna Patch. 6:30-8pm. Workzones, 351 Paseo Nuevo. Free-$25.

visational musical stylings of bluesy jazz electronic rock band Cubensis for a flashback to the Grateful Dead. Sharing the stage will be Moonalice, a Bay Area–based folk band. 9pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $12-$15. Ages 21+. Call 962-7776.

sohosb.com

4/15: No Indoor Voices: Comedy with Lesbians! Hilarity will ensue when returning host Heather Turman, Kentuckyborn comic and actress Sarah Hyland, straight woman Kimmie Dee, and Bravo TV’s own Julie Goldman from The People’s Couch bring their unique comedy voices together. 8-10pm. Brasil Arts Café, 1230 State St. $15$20. Call 845-7656.

noindoorvoices.nightout.com

4/15: Friday Night Live Featuring Shades of Soul Groove to the funky music of nine-piece Santa Barbara band Shades of Soul as they play ’70s cover songs by Curtis Mayfield, James Brown, The Spinners, Al Green, Santana, War, Sly & the Family Stone, and more. 9pm. Blind Tiger, 409 State St. $10. Ages 21+. Call 957-4111.

shadesofsoul.nightout.com

4/15: STEAMcraft Build your own robot or design and code your own video game. Led by educator Julianne Walsh, each week will focus on tackling a new tech project, including Lego builds, mini-robots, Scratch coding, 3D printing, and more. All supplies will be provided. 4-5pm. Island Rm., S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Ages 8+. Call 564-5663.

sbplibrary.org

4/15: Brady Harris Band Former frontman for the Replacements-inspired Solid Goldsteins, Brady Harris will perform Texan country rock pop from his solo albums, such as Next Door to Nowhere. 6-8pm. Barrel Rm., Carr Vineyards & Winery, 414 N. Salsipuedes St. Free. Call 965-7985.

carrwinery.com

4/15-4/17: S.B. Food & Wine Weekend This third annual event features chefs, seminars, dinners, and tastings galore and benefits the Julia Child Foundation. Various times and prices. Bacara Resort & Spa, 8301 Hollister Ave. Fri.-Sat.: ages 21+; Sun.: all ages. bacaraculinaryweekend.com

4/15: Midnight Mynx Dance the night away with to this all-woman rock band Midnight Mynx’s nonstop, upbeat covers of the Black Keys, Lady Gaga, Jet, Fitz and the Tantrums, Neon Trees, Elle King, The Fray, and others. 8pm. Wildcat Lounge, 15 W. Ortega St. Free. Ages 21+. Call 962-7970.

wildcatlounge.com

4/15: Bookjoy! Alegria en los Libros! Noted award-winning author and literacy advocate Pat Mora will speak on her more than three dozen books for young people that represent the Mexican-American experience. This event is free, but tickets are required. 7-8:30pm. Garvin Theatre, SBCC, 721 Cliff Dr. Free. Read more on p. 35.

tinyurl.com/MoraSBCC

Saturday 4/16 4/16: Seismic | Formations Artist Reception This artist reception will mark the first weekend of the exhibition Seismic | Formations, a collection of intense, earthy

tinyurl.com/convert-like-crazy

RogeR Milikan

4/14:

Reginald Johnson’s Contribution to Santa Barbara’s Identity This lecture by Professor of Architecture Lauren Weiss Bricker, architect Marc Appleton, and SBTHP Curator Rose Thomas will be in support of the exhibit Building Community: Reginald D. Johnson, Architect. Take a look at the Pasadena architect’s significance to the profession of architecture and his contribution to the S.B. Community. 7pm. Casa de la Guerra, 15 E. De la Guerra St. Free. Call 965-0093. sbthp.org

experts in a panel discussion on the dangers of nuclear weapons, political responsibility in the nuclear age, how nuclear weapons affect S.B., and the U.S. government’s plan to spend $1 trillion over the next three decades. 7-8:30pm. Faulkner Gallery, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 965-3443.

4/15: Cubensis, Moonalice (Grateful Dead Tribute) Experience the impro-

sbmm.org

4/14: MTD Community Meeting The S.B. Metropolitan Transit District (MTD) will hold a community meeting to discuss proposed changes and take suggestions for improvement to the bus system. 6pm. Goleta Valley Community Ctr., 5679 Hollister Ave., Goleta. Free. Call 963-3364.

sbmtd.gov

4/14-4/17: The Fringe This spring celebration of original work features Westmont students’ creativity as actors, dancers, directors, writers, designers, choreographers, and more. Various times and locations. $7-$15. Call 565-7140.

tinyurl.com/WestmontTheFringe

4/14-4/17, 4/19-4/20: eXtras Produced by Foro Shakespeare of Mexico City,

ay frid Killer Kaya

4/15:

Chad Smith’s Bombastic Meatbats, Killer Kaya, The Hypno Rings Listen to the funky jazz of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductee/Grammy-winning drummer Chad Smith (of the Red Hot Chili Peppers) and his Bombastic Meatbats! Goleta-based psychedelic funk rock band Killer Kaya will play its sultry hits, and also performing will be Isla Vista– based jazz fusion band The Hypno Rings. 8pm. Velvet Jones, 423 State St. $20-$25. Ages 21+. Call 965-8676. velvet-jones.com

/sbindependent independent.com

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tinyurl.com/nachle-deewane-tix 4/16: Springtime Salsa Fever Learn to salsa dance with special guest instructor Hector Sanchez as he leads a one-hour dance lesson followed by open dancing on the floor to spinning by DJ Prince and DJ Byron. 8pm-1:30am. Ayni Gallery, 216 State St. $5-$10. Call 669-7098.

yesyoucandancesalsa.com

4/16: Duets, Trios & Quartets: A Choral Tribute The Paradise Singers

4/16:

Roberto Devereux Enjoy Donizetti’s acclaimed tragic opera, streamed live from the Met on the big screen in high-definition! Watch as Queen Elizabeth I is forced to sign the death warrant of the nobleman she loves. 9:55am. Hahn Hall, Music Academy of the West, 1070 Fairway Rd. Free-$28. Call 969-8787. musicacademy.org selected works by Santa Monica sculptor Joshua Abarbanel and San Francisco– based artist China Adams. The exhibit shows through May 29. 5pm. Porch Gallery Ojai, 310 E. Matilija St., Ojai. Free. Call 620-7589. porchgalleryojai.com

4/16: 2016 Spirit of Fiesta Auditions Come enjoy the colorful beauty of the Spirit of Fiesta and the Junior Spirit of Fiesta auditions! Each ticket will include access to Las Artistas, the celebratory reception immediately following the auditions where the public can meet the audition finalists, the Junior Spirit of Fiesta, the Spirit of Fiesta, and past Spirits. Noon. La Cumbre Jr. High School, 2255 Modoc Rd. $25. Call 962-8101. sbfiesta.org

4/16: Storytime with Pat Mora Join this noted bicultural author and founder of El Día de los Niños/El Día de los Libros (Children’s Day/Book Day) for a special story time in English and Spanish. After story time, the day will continue in the Children’s Library with a children’s concert with Nathalia at noon, free book giveaways, face painting, crafts, and other activities. 11am-2pm. S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 564-5603. Read more on p. 35.

will present a dazzling afternoon of choral performance. All proceeds will benefit the Boys & Girls Club to nurture a love of music in children. 2pm. First Christian Church, 1915 Chapala St. $10-$15. Call 729-1159.

tinyurl.com/DuetsTrios-Quartets

4/16-4/20: 8th Annual RooseveltHamer Dinner Join the Democratic Party in reflecting on political accomplishments and discussing Democratic principles at its annual fundraising dinner. The keynote speaker will be Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León. 6pm. Carrillo Ballroom, 100 E. Carrillo St. $85. Call 965-8030.

tinyurl.com/roosevelt-hamer Snook the Sloth

4/16: An Afternoon with Authors Four diverse S.B. County authors will discuss their books and writing methods, accompanied by appetizers and wine. Proceeds will benefit The Friends of the Library of the Santa Ynez Valley. 3-5pm. Stacy Hall, St. Mark’s in-the-Valley Episcopal Church, 2901 Nojoqui Ave., Los Olivos. $10. Call 688-4565.

sbplibrary.org RogeR Milikan

tinyurl.com/AfternoonWithAuthors

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4/16: Live Roller Derby: Brawlin Betties vs. Chorizo and Eggs Cheer on the rolling commotion at this thrilling, action-packed coed roller derby! Big Joe’s Tacos and beer will be available, and there will be an after-party at High Sierra Bar and Grill. 5pm. Ben Page Youth Ctr., 4540 Hollister Ave. Free-$8.

tinyurl.com/rollerderby-brawlin

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4/16-4/17: 21st Annual Fish Derby There have been 10,000 pounds of trout planted in the Cachuma Lake for this annual fundraiser benefiting the Neal Nature Center. Catch multiple types of fish such as crappie, bass, catfish, and more for the chance to win cash and prizes. There will also be free arts and crafts activities for children. Derby fishing begins 6 a.m. on Saturday and ends noon on Sunday. Cachuma Lake, 2265 Hwy. 154, Santa Barbara. $10-$40. Ages 4+. Call 693-8381. troutderby.org

10 different shop locations and 10 wineries, benefiting the nonprofit Ojai Youth Entertainers Studio. Admission includes a wine glass, tour map, wine tasting tickets, and child care provided with reservations. 5-9pm. Ojai Youth Entertainers Studio Theatre, 316 E. Matilija St., Ojai. $45-$55. Ages 21+.

tinyurl.com/ojai-wine-walk

4/16: Nachle Deewane 2016 Celebrate South Asian culture at this BollywoodFusion and Bhangra dance competition hosted by UCSB Dhadkan, with a guest performance by music sensations Amar Sandhu and Pranna! All proceeds will benefit the India Literacy Project. 5-9pm. Lobero

4/16-4/17: S.B. Earth Day Festival 2016 Come celebrate the 2016 Vision: One World. One Climate. with two full days of live music, speakers, demonstrations, food court, EcoVillage, and Storytime with Snook the Sloth at 11 a.m. on both days on the amazing new stage in the Kids Corner. Highlights also include the biggest Green Car Show on the West Coast, and the presentation of the 2016 Environmental Hero Award. And stop by The Santa Barbara Independent’s booth to test your environIndependent mental knowledge, win goodies, and view kids’ colored-in doodles from our 2016 Summer Camp Guide on display. Sat.: 11am7pm; Sun.: 11am-6pm. Alameda Park, 1400 Santa Barbara St. sbearthday.org

4/16: Wheeler Gorge Nature Walk Learn about the riparian and chaparral ecological communities of Ojai’s Wheeler Gorge Nature Trail with plant guide Lanny Kaufer as he leads this hike as part of his 40th anniversary Herb Walks tour. 1-2:30pm. Wheeler Gorge, 17017 Maricopa Hwy., Ojai. Free-$15. Call 646-6281. herbwalks.com

Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events.


week

e

Th

film SCreeningS saT u r da y

MAKE A

LA PL AY

Star Wars VII: The Force Awakens

for an

4/14:

Script To Screen: Jaws Experience the terror of Steven Spielberg’s iconic monster movie on the big screen! The presentation of the film will be followed by a Q&A with screenwriter Carl Gottlieb and a Jaws-themed reception in the lobby. 7-10pm. Pollock Theater, UCSB. Free. Call 893-4637. carseywolf.ucsb.edu

4/15-4/18:

The Hateful Eight In the dead of winter in postCivil War Wyoming, a bounty hunter (Kurt Russell) and his fugitive prisoner (Jennifer Jason Leigh) find shelter in a cabin inhabited by a collection of nefarious characters. Fri.: 7 and 10pm, Mon.: 7pm. Isla Vista Theater, 960 Embarcadero del Norte. $4. Call 966-3652. tinyurl.com/ucsb-magiclantern

AUDI A5 FOUR AUDI A5 GIVEAWAYS ONE C A R GI V EN AWAY E V ERY SUNDAY IN A PRIL PL U S

FREE P L AY DR AW IN G S F R O M 7-10 P M

4/16:

Star Wars VII: The Force Awakens The seventh film in this epic series takes place 30 years after the defeat of the Galactic Empire, and the new threat is the evil Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) and the First Order. 7pm. Plaza Playhouse Theater, 4916 Carpinteria Ave., Carpinteria. $7. Call 684-6380. plazatheatercarpinteria.com

4/16:

In Search of Israeli Cuisine Premiere Enjoy a home-cooked Mediterranean tasting by Sababa Catering before watching a documentary about the spectacular multiculturalism of Israel through its food. 5-7pm. Bacara Resort & Spa, 8301 Hollister Ave. $10. tinyurl.com/insearch-cuisine

TO QUALIFY PLAY WITH YOUR CLUB CARD

4/17: Selena

Celebrating what would have been the 45th birthday of beloved Texas-born pop star Selena, this biopic tells the story of Selena Quintanilla-Perez (Jennifer Lopez) and the rise of her career resulting in her No. 1 U.S. album. 2pm. Plaza Playhouse Theater, 4916 Carpinteria Ave., Carpinteria. $7. Call 684-6380. plazatheatercarpinteria.com

4/19:

Gloomy Sunday A woman who loves two men (Joachim Król,

Stefano Dionisi) in World War II Germany inspires one to write a song that, mysteriously, drives some to suicide. The matinee will be followed by a Q&A discussion with Dr. David Bisno. 2-4pm. Jewish Federation, 524 Chapala St. Free. Call 957-1115.

4/20:

Piku A cab driver (Irrfan Khan) is caught between a quirky, dys-

functional father (Amitabh Bachchan) and successful architect daughter (Deepika Padukone) as he drives them to Calcutta. There will be a performance by Andaaz Bollywood Fusion prior to the screening. 6pm. MultiCultural Ctr. Theater, UCSB. Free. Call 893-8411. mcc.sa.ucsb.edu

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aPrIl 14, 2016

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Annual Student

EXHIBITION

independenT Calendar

april

14-20

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.

April 15 – May 6, 2016 Reception / Award Ceremony: Friday, April 15 | 5 – 7 p.m. | Juried by Maiza Hixson

Time-Based Art Showcase: Sunday, May 1 | 6 p.m. Sharp | Humanities Building

femmes fatales, dangerous broads, and some plain old bad girls! The ladies take center stage for a collection of sizzling stories of mystery, mayhem, and shenanigans. Sun.: 2pm; Mon.: 7:30pm. Center Stage Theater, 751 Paseo Nuevo. $18-$28. Call 963-0408.

s u n day

centerstagetheater.org

Monday 4/18

Photo credit: Ally Bortolazzo

| Humanities Building 202

(805) 897-3484 | http://gallery.sbcc.edu | facebook.com/AtkinsonGallery

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Puja and Piety: A Conversation Between Pratapaditya Pal and Stephen Huyler Explore the relationship between rituals and art in the living traditions of Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism. In a lecture and book-signing, Dr. Pratapaditya Pal and Dr. Stephen P. Huyler will discuss the ties between religion and visual culture as expressed by the objects in the current exhibition Puja and Piety: Hindu, Jain, and Buddhist Art from the Indian Subcontinent. 2:30pm. S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free-$10. Call 963-4364. sbma.net

Sunday 4/17 4/17: Snap! Drag Brunch This sassy Love & Heartbreak–themed brunch will have performances by Borgia Bloom, Deja Re, Miss Thing, Vivian Storm, Niobi, Valentina, and special guests Hummingbird Meadows and the popular Long Beach queen Ava Stone. Noon-2pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $15. Ages 18+. Call 962-7776. sohosb.com

4/17: Poetry & Natural History

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Join Museum Poet-in-Residence David Starkey and other poets for a nature poetry reading in the Maximus Gallery exhibit, Audubon’s Birds of America: The Whole Flock. 3-4pm. S.B. Museum of Natural History, 2559 Puesta del Sol. Free. Call 682-4711 x170. sbnature.org

young Japanese geisha who clings to the belief that her arrangement with a deceptive American naval officer is a loving and permanent marriage, has thrilled audiences since 1900. 2pm. Hahn Hall, Music Academy of the West, 1070 Fairway Rd. Free-$28. Call 965-6577. musicacademy.org

4/17: Magic on the Urban Wine Trail This fourth annual event focuses on urban tasting rooms and includes food served by students of the Teen Culinary Arts Program. Proceeds raise money to fund 60 summer camp scholarships for 2016 and support the city’s successful Teen Culinary Arts Program. 3-6pm. Carrillo Recreation Ctr., 100 E. Carrillo St. $45-$100. Ages 21+.

parcsb.org

4/17: Lewis deSoto: Paranirvana (Self-Portrait) This installation represents the artist’s most recent work in a series of oversize, inflatable sculptures based on the figure of the 12th-century Buddha at Gal Vihara in Sri Lanka. The exhibit shows through July 31. Thu.: 11am-8pm; Fri.-Sun., Tue.-Wed.: 11am-5pm. S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free-$10. Call 963-4364. sbma.net

4/17-4/18: Speaking of Stories: Madams of Mayhem Shady ladies,

sbbg.org 4/18: Auditioning and Playing with a Symphony Orchestra San Diego symphony hornist Douglas Hall will discuss his experiences in the classical music industry, both as a performer and as a manager who has run more than 60 national orchestral auditions. Noon-1pm. Karl Geiringer Hall, UCSB. Free. Call 893-3230.

music.ucsb.edu

4/18-4/19: The Allure of Bleu Cheese This bleu cheese tasting class will discuss the history and explore the dynamic flavors of bleu cheese from five different countries. 6:30pm. C’est Cheese, 825 Santa Barbara St. $20-$25. Call 965-0318.

cestcheese.com

4/18: Santa Barbara Reads: Bryan Stevenson The author of the nationally acclaimed book Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption will deliver a moving account of the innocent lives he has defended and make an inspiring argument for compassion in the pursuit of true justice. 8pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. Free. Call 893-3535.

artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu

couRtesy

4/17:

4/18: Free Seniors Day Wear your comfortable walking shoes, and bring a camera or a book. You can even bring paints, pencils, or crayons to create your own work of art with plein air landscape artist and teacher Chris Potter. 9am-6pm. S.B. Botanic Garden, 1212 Mission Canyon Rd. Free. Ages 60+. Call 682-4726 x161.

s u n day

4/17: Best Buddies Benefit Concert Have a blast supporting a good cause at this concert, featuring area music artists including Feral Vida, Shelby Gold, DJ Ability, Jessica Simon Experience, Rockability, and more! 3-9pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $15. Call 962-7776. sohosb.com

4/17: Madama Butterfly Enjoy Puccini’s timeless multicultural opera, streamed live from the Met on the big screen in high-definition! The tragically beautiful story of Madama Butterfly, a

4/17:

Rhythmic Circus Bring your family to the tap extravaganza of the Rhythmic Circus, winner of the Edinburgh Fringe Festival’s Spirit of the Fringe Award, in its exuberant parade show Feet Don’t Fail Me Now! 3pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. $12-$20. Call 893-3535. artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu

Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events. 32

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aPrIl 14, 2016

independent.com


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Walter H. Capps Center for the Study of Ethics, Religion, and Public Life at UCSB and The Santa Barbara Independent present

Martin E. Marty Lecture on Religion in American Life

An Evening With

Bill Moyers Wednesday, May 18 / 8:00 p.m. The Granada Theatre, 1214 State Street, Santa Barbara $12: General Public and $6: UCSB Students (Current ID required / Limited availability) Tickets may be purchased from the Box Office: (805) 899-2222 or www.granadasb.org

4/18:

Kenny Barron Trio The mesmerizing top jazz pianist Kenny Barron will take the stage to perform his elegant rhythms with Kiyoshi Kitagawa on the bass and Johnathan Blake on the drums. 8pm. Lobero Theatre, 33 E. Canon Perdido St. $39-$105. Call 963-0761. lobero.com

tueSday 4/19 4/19: Women Leaning In: A Discussion about Women in Business and Entrepreneurship Inspired by the powerful book Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead by Sheryl Sandberg, this networking event and panel discussion will cover business topics for women and will feature Pepperdine Center for Women in Leadership Director Bernice Ledbetter, Women’s Economic Ventures CEO Marsha Bailey, and The Joy Agency CEO Paige Kearin. 6pm. Impact Hub, 1117 State St. $15-$20.

tinyurl.com/women-lean-in

Mystery and Art of Living, in a conversation with acclaimed writer Pico Iyer at this lecture and book-signing. 7:30pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. $10-$15. Call 893-3535.

artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu

4/20: Thunder Rose Enjoy a blues night with versatile rock band Thunder Rose as they play covers of rock classics and contemporary hits. 7-10pm. Uptown Lounge, 3126 State St. Free. Call 845-8800.

farmers

markeT

4/19: Ines Roberts: Landscapes International photographer and 50-year member of the Channel City Camera Club, Ines Roberts will share her ethereal landscapes at this club meeting. 7:30-9pm. Farrand Hall, S.B. Museum of Natural History, 2559 Puesta del Sol. Free. Call 682-4711.

For almost half a century Bill Moyers has been one of the most prolific and influential figures in American journalism. For such ground-breaking PBS series as Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth, A World of Ideas, Healing and the Mind, Faith and Reason, The Language of Life, Fooling with Words, Now with Bill Moyers, Bill Moyers Journal, Moyers & Company, and scores of highly acclaimed investigative documentaries, Moyers has received 37 Emmy Awards, nine Peabody Awards, and the National Academy of Television’s Lifetime Achievement Award. Among his many best-selling books: Listening to America, Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth, Genesis, Language of Life, Healing and the Mind, Moyers on America, and Moyers on Democracy.

Schedule

couRtesy ucsB aRts & lectuRes

WedneSday 4/20

For further information or assistance in accommodating a disability, please call 893-2317. www.cappscenter.ucsb.edu www.facebook.com/CappsCenter

THURSDAY

Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, 3-6:30pm Carpinteria: 800 block of Linden Ave., 3-6:30pm

FRIDAY

Montecito: 1100 and 1200 blocks of Coast Village Rd., 8-11:15am

SATURDAY

e

4/20: Krista Tippett Creator and host of the Peabody Award–winning radio program On Being, Krista Tippett will explore some of life’s central questions: What does it mean to be human, and how do we want to live? Tippett will also discuss her newest book, Becoming Wise: An Inquiry into the

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

Introducing Wilderness Youth Project Forest Preschool for ages 3-5 in Fall 2016! Now accepting applications for Fall 2016 at wyp.org independent.com

aPrIl 14, 2016

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Scene in S.B.

living p. 35

Text and photo by Caitlin FitCh

Cheron rayne ryan

Kid Lit

Bee-ing helpFul

friendly

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ShareS Bilingual Bookjoy

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With the support of the Beekeepers Guild of Santa Barbara, 6th graders at Peabody Charter School have been diligently tending to the 250 sunflower seedlings that they will be exchanging for a small donation at this week weekend’s Earth Day Festival. The public-outreach project is part of a nationwide emphasis on planting sunflowers called The Great Sunflower Project, which aims to raise awareness to the plight of honeybees everywhere due to drought and insufficient amounts of pollen. “As honeybees are responsible for pollinating nearly a third of what we eat, it’s important that the kids understand their role,” said the guild’s John Ummel, who will also be giving away 2,000 sunflower seed packets donated by Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds. The guild is also working on a “bee friendly” sticker program in collaboration with nurseries so that customers can identify plants that bees are particularly attracted to.

B

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paul wellman

aniel Ruiz had already been cutting his own hair for several years before taking his shears to a few shaggy kids at Shoreline Community Church, where he was working part-time in the youth-group ministry. Around the same time, Ruiz befriended an unkempt older gentleman who avoided barber shops because Huntington’s Disease made him too shaky to sit still. Ruiz offered his services, and the old man agreed. Hank Hernandez (left) and Daniel Ruiz After that haircut and beard trim, Ruiz decided to turn his hobby into something more. In 2007, he moved to Anaheim and nearby courthouse and county administration buildenrolled at The Real Barber College. ing. Hernandez, a Carpinteria High School graduate Immediately after completing the yearlong certifi- who started barbering professionally 51 years ago, is cation program, Ruiz accepted an offer from Good- a former California state champion in men’s razorland Barber Shop, headed up by an old friend. After cutting, a seldom-seen technique during which a two years there, Ruiz, 29, made the move downtown, barber cuts with a straight razor instead of scissors. to La Arcada Barber Shop, which has been around “Razor-cutting is a technique I learned from since 1946, now run by 72-year-old Hank Hernandez, Hank,” Ruiz said. “Most barber schools don’t teach it its third owner. anymore. I enjoy it because you’re able to sculpt the “I had always wanted to work for somebody who’d hair in detail, cut in a way that causes stubborn areas been at it for a while,” Ruiz said. to lay down, remove bulk while still maintaining a full Tucked away in La Arcada Court, on State Street, look, and give people a unique experience. It’s a classic Hernandez’s shop — equipped with century-old technique for a classic shop.” — Keith Hamm chairs and plenty of museum-quality décor— décor draws a lot of professionals from upstairs offices and the 1114 State St. Unit 6; 966-4451

orn in the borderland between Texas and Mexico, Pat Mora has spent the last three decades carving out a larger space for bilingual children’s literature in libraries across the U.S. On April 15, the bicultural poet, nonfiction writer, and children’s author will travel from her Santa Fe home to Santa Barbara City College, where she will give the May Hill Arbuthnot Honor Lecture. Since 1969, the national honor— honor a tribute to the eponymous children’s literature scholar— scholar has been given each year by the Association for Library Service to Children to a pioneering youth lit advocate. The Santa Barbara Independent spoke with Mora, a writer strongly rooted in her Mexican-American heritage, about her S.B. visit and “¡Alegria en los libros!” (or “Bookjoy”), a phrase she created to describe the wonder of reading. “The private pleasure of sitting down with a good book,” bookjoy is one of the ways for us all to expand our emotional knowledge, said Mora. The ability to escape into another’s perspective through reading is key to Día de los Niños, Día de los Libros (Children’s Day, Book Day), an April 30 holiday Mora founded 20 years ago to encourage yearround reading in diverse families. On April 16, she’ll celebrate early with kids’ storytime in Spanish and English at the Central Library, where she also hopes to meet parents. “[We] need to honor home languages and the power of [parents’] experiences,” because, she says, they know a lot. “It doesn’t matter what the home language is.” “I think we need to realize as professionals that we need to try to engage all families as partners,” said Mora of educators’ occasional struggle to promote literacy. She worked as a middle and high school teacher, a university administrator, and a museum director before focusing on her writing. Mora says the way to get kids reading is to “coach parents,” “to teach the importance of chatting with kids, the importance of going to the library if you can’t purchase books.” Growing up a voracious reader in a bilingual home, Mora saw the disparity between her own face and the faces of her literary heroes. Her first published children’s book, Tómas and the Library Lady, follows the life of a child whose horizons widen when he discovers the library. “The books we see in bookstores are often chosen and published with a specific kind of reading market in mind,” she says, one which she is working to expand with her growing list of children’s book titles. — Léna Garcia

May Arbuthnot Honor Lecture takes place Friday, April 15, 7-8:30 p.m. at SBCC’s Garvin Theater. Reserve free tickets online at ala.orgalsc/20164arbuthnot-lecture. 1 1 The


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On April 21, at 7 p.m., please join Dick Jorgensen for a reading and book signing of his memoir: O Tomodachi (Friend). Refreshments will be served.

3321 State Street • Loreto PLaza 36

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paul wellman file photo

My Life

living cont’d FroM p. 35

Calder Quartet SAT, APR 23 / 7 PM (note special time) UCSB CAMPBELL HALL Tickets start at $25 / $10 UCSB students

“One of America’s most satisfying – and most enterprising – quartets.” Los Angeles Times

“Few string quartets can command the stage like the Calder Quartet… it remains a must-hear on the concert circuit.” The Washington Post

Musings on Our

Metropolis

I

saw a bald man on a new yellow bicycle. He rode down Milpas toward the ocean. His head and his bike were radiant in the sun at that hour. A woman with an umbrella is having a long conversation with a schnauzer while they both get wet. Across the street at the Villa Santa Barbara, men in wheelchairs smoke under an awning. At Jimmy’s Oriental Gardens, now the Pickle Room, the bar is full of pensioners for happy hour and jammed with hipsters when the sun goes down. Their very good fried rice, with egg à la mode, becomes “awesome,” “ridiculous,” and “fantastic” when the twenty-somethings arrive with their porkpie hats, dolphin tattoos, and cell phones. They’re talking football, college basketball, and Facebook. There are avocado egg rolls rising and falling from the invisible kitchen. At the library on Anapamu and Anacapa, the dispossessed shuffle into the day, tidying their carts, plugging in makeshift solar panels to charge cell phones, lining up for the bathroom, and judging the temperature of the day and the lay of the land. There are shopping carts laden like toosmall studio apartments, backpacks, dogs, and cigarettes. They’re reading Tom Clancy and eating from The Habit bags. There will be many arguments before nightfall, when everything changes. The most charming vista on the Eastside is best seen looking east from between the hooves of the metallic heifer statue on top of an apartment building or a home on Nopal, who is looking wistfully toward her concrete mother cow atop the old McConnell’s ice cream factory on Milpas. A midget passes me on State, but I have no time to think about that because overtaking me is a 67 Rastafarian with dreadnoughts down to his ankles. All exposed flesh is inked. He’s wearing very stylish shades. For some reason I follow him to Enterprise Fish House, but just before that, he takes a right. I stop in for some soup. He is very young. I fear banking or hedge fund management is very much in his future. I remember my ponytails, beards, tie-dyed shirts, work boots, and the clunky melody the bangles and bells of hippiedom made. In that annus mirabilis that was 1968, many of us got “clean for Gene” (McCarthy that is) or for Bobby Kennedy, and we ended up with Nixon, disco, and, ultimately, creatures like Dick Cheney, Donald Trump, and Lawrence Welk. Already, rock and roll was beginning to die. It was the Age of Aquarius, and I dressed for the occasion like an Elizabethan villain in a raucous London pub. It was our intent to shock, discomfort, and alert the previous generation that we had arrived and the times were about to fundamentally change. But that all went away, and we became bankers and stockbrokers and thoroughly befuddled soldiers in a vile and in-every-way-wrong war. We worked toward a BMW and away from whatever naïve dreams of Eden we had entertained or even cherished. I was depressed over my lobster bisque. Not for the first time, I rued not following the midget. — Ralph Lowe—

Program

Thomas Adès: The Four Quarters Benjamin Britten: String Quartet No. 2 in C Major, op. 36 Beethoven: String Quartet No. 12 in E-flat Major, op. 127 Media Sponsor:

Co-presented with the UCSB Department of Music

Yuja Wang, piano MON, MAY 2 / 7 PM (note special time) GRANADA THEATRE Tickets start at $35 / $15 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

“Yuja Wang is a wonder… She displayed degrees of speed, agility and strength that may have been in violation of gravity’s laws.” Los Angeles Times

“Superhuman keyboard technique with artistic eloquence that is second to none.” San Francisco Chronicle Program

Brahms: Ballades op. 10, nos. 1 and 2 Schumann: Kreisleriana, op. 16 Beethoven: Piano Sonata in B-flat Major, op. 106 (“Hammerklavier”)

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KICK OFF BASH Presented by Montecito Bank & Trust

Thursday, April 28, 5:30p.m. El Paseo Restaurant, Santa Barbara Say Olé to Old Friends in Historic Downtown Santa Barbara Start off the weekend with great friends at the El Paseo Restaurant on State Street. Meet Olé while mingling with fellow Gauchos over appetizers at a no-host bar.

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Celebrate Friendships. A Featured Event at the 10th All Gaucho Reunion Weekend Brought to you by the UC Santa Barbara Alumni Association

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Free Tax assisTance February 2nd, 2016 to april 15th, 2016 AARP TAx Aide SiTeS 2016 United Way of sB county

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AARP Foundation Tax-Aide is offered in conjunction with the IRS. D18157(812)

If you are interested in volunteering, call Richard Rosenkrans, District Coordinator, at 805-451-1682


living | Sports Paul Wellman

koBe’s lAst stAnD Saying Good-Bye to the laker Great; Plus Bertka’s tendon, Big Moves for ucSB Alumni, and More

I

t seems right to praise Kobe Bryant even though the Lak-

ers are buried. The final minutes of Bryant’s 20-year pro basketball career were to unfold Wednesday night at the end of the most dismal season in the history of a club that brought 11 NBA championships to Los Angeles. Bryant was the brightest star in five of those titles. He was the only star dimmed by injuries and age — in the Lakers’ last three seasons, each of them setting a new precedent in losing. Critics blame the decline partly on Kobe’s rich contract extension ($48.5 million for the last two years) that restricted the club’s ability to add proven players to the roster. Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak rebuffed that notion last month during an appearance at the Santa Barbara Athletic Round Table’s annual “March Madness” gathering. What Kupchak saw three years ago — April 12, 2013, the night Bryant ruptured his Achilles tendon — goes a long way to explain why the Lakers signed him up through the end of his second decade. “He walked off the court [with the tendon severed above his left heel],” Kupchak recalled. “He walked back on to shoot free throws, made them both, and walked off again.” Nowhere else could the GM find that kind of toughness. Longtime Lakers scout Bill Bertka remembers putting Bryant, a Pennsylvania high school phenom, through a workout at an Inglewood gym before the 1996 NBA draft. “So many of his traits were evident at that time,” Bertka said. “Jerry West [then the GM] recognized his gifts. We were very closed-mouth about it.” When the draft came around, West engineered a deal in which the Lakers exchanged veteran center Vlade Divac for Bryant, Charlotte’s No. 13 pick. It took some time for the flashy youngster to mature. He averaged 7.6 points a game in his rookie season. “People are knocking D’Angelo Russell,” Bertka said of the L.A.’s new rookie guard. “They might be surprised that he has better numbers than Kobe did.” Yet it is inconceivable that Russell or any other player will ever again persevere 20 years with the same team. And will Russell work hard to improve his game? “Early in his career, Kobe had a reputation of not being a good

by John

Zant

S.B. Athletic Round tABle:

eric foote Photos

Athletes of the Week

defensive player,” Bertka said. “Then he made the NBA’s All-Defensive team in 2000”— and 10 more times in the next 11 years. Bryant’s relentless approach to the game, earning him the sobriquet Black Mamba, made him a favorite of the millennial generation. My nephew Eric Anderson, who grew up watching the Lakers win championships, is a staunch fan of his. Eric wrote in a Facebook post: “Kobe is the last competitive assassin left after [Michael] Jordan.” With Bryant’s retirement, the Lakers will have the wherewithal to sign a couple of free agents to go along with a high draft pick. Their thinking might be different than it would have been a few years ago, because of the success of the Golden State Warriors. GAUCHOS ALTOS: UCSB’s Ryan Hardy (#20) leaps high to smash a set from Jonah Seif over “They’ve changed the game of basketStanford’s seven-foot middle blocker, Kevin Rakestraw. ball,” Bertka said.“You don’t see heavylegged, muscular post guys. They’re all greyhounds. They run, jump, block shots … and they all and extend its season in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federamake shots.” Sort of like Kobe Bryant in his prime, times five. tion play-offs, a springboard to the NCAA tournament. The Kupchak agreed. He described Golden State’s Steph Gauchos’ last appearance in May Madness was in 2011, when Curry as “a joy to watch” and noted, “There used to be one they finished runner-up to Ohio State. three-point shot a game. Now there’s 60.” It will be interesting to see what pieces go into the attempt to rebuild the Lak- BIG AL: Alan Williams was overlooked in the 2015 NBA ers. “We hope to make wise decisions,” said Kupchak, who draft after he led the nation in rebounding at UCSB. The 68 has the goodwill of a restless fandom riding on his choices. post player signed with the Qingdao DoubleStar of the Chinese Basketball Association, where he was a dominatSHADES OF KOBE: Bertka experienced sharp pain in his ing force on the boards. The NBA finally came calling last right heel a few weeks ago. He was diagnosed with a partially month when the Phoenix Suns signed Williams to a 10-day torn Achilles tendon. The 88-year-old basketball guru is contract. The Suns recently committed him to a multiyear confined to his Santa Barbara home with a boot on his foot. deal that will become effective if he makes their roster after “It’s my takeoff leg,” he said. “I can’t dunk.” He never stops training camp this fall. Jeri Williams may join her son in thinking about the game he loves, and here is one of his latest Phoenix, their hometown. After Big Al was recruited by inspirations: “We should put in a four-point shot. Put [the UCSB, his mother, an assistant chief in the Arizona city’s police force, was hired as Oxnard’s chief of police. Now she arc] halfway between the three-point line and midcourt.” is one of 10 candidates to become top cop in Phoenix. GAUCHO VOLLEYBALL: Jonah Seif, UCSB’s 68 All-American setter, stood tall SUDDEN BIG LEAGUER: Former UCSB pitcher Greg in his final home match at Robertson Gym. Mahle, a 15th-round selection (449th overall) by the Los Against No. 3-ranked Stanford, his distribu- Angeles Angels in the 2014 major-league draft, made a tion of 47 assists led the Gauchos to a four-set rapid rise through the professional baseball ranks. A week victory and a robust .360 hitting percent- into the season, the Angels have promoted the southpaw age. Another senior, Austin Kingi, had a to the Big Show. According to the L.A. Times, he is only the team-leading 14 kills. UCSB will try to upset eighth player from the 2014 draft to move up to the majors, Stanford again Saturday night in Palo Alto and the other seven were selected 55th or higher. n

John

ZAnt’s Jonah Seif, Addison Seale, UCSB volleyball SBCC swimming In his last homestand, the senior setter led The freshman won three events, set a new school record in the 200 breaststroke the Gauchos to four-set wins over Pepperdine (2:32.36), and took second and swam on five and third-ranked Stanford. He had 47 assists in each match and, with 10 digs against relay teams that scored in the top three at Stanford, his sixth double-double of the year. the Pasadena Invitational.

GAme of the Week

4/15: College Baseball: Cuesta at Santa Barbara City College: Who’s in first? Entering the week, mere percentage points separated the Vaqueros (11-5) and Cuesta (10-4) atop the Western State Conference North standings. Nic Bereaud, SBCC’s designated hitter, leads the division in home runs (7) and RBIs (30). Pitching and defense were the keys to the team’s recent four-game winning streak by scores of 5-3, 3-0, 2-1, and 2-0. The baseball showdown will follow a game on the adjacent softball diamond between SBCC and L.A. Pierce, a winless team that yielded 34 runs to the Vaquero women in two previous games. Softball: noon; baseball: 3pm. Pershing Park, SBCC. $3-$5 (each game). Call 730-4076.

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FRITTER FANTASTIC: The author dives into his favorite apple fritter at Spudnuts in Isla Vista.

classics

paul wellman

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I

Doughnut Go Gentle into that Good night

gnore the warnings from or sugared but always envelopmy doctor over its main ing stuff — even corn and clams, components — flour, sugar, for instance. In this town’s case, the and oil — they only make best apple fritters are at Spudnuts me yearn for doughnuts more. — huge and chew-pliable — though Eller’s Doughnuts offers a more Scoff if you will, upper-crust gourmand, but twice in my recent densely crunchy version. Crisp outer Around the World With shells are where the pleasure lies. life I have had near-mystical experiences partaking of fried dough New Orleans’ elegant beignet is also available at two places I know. A goodness. The first was on the sunrise fluffy version can be had at the Palbanks of the Mississippi at New ace Café during lunch service, three by D.J. PallaDino Orleans’ Café Du Monde, where or four in an order for $4.50. Chewier, a beignet and café au lait turns but quite satisfying, are the Cajun timid tourists into superheroes. More surprisingly, Kitchen version. You get a few more for a bit less. in San Francisco’s tiny, excellent Ton Kian dim sum Neither serves chicory coffee, alas. restaurant, a friend urged me to bite into a crispy The best savory doughnut in town hails from Isla globe of fried flour that yielded an unexpected air Vista’s sweet, small Italian restaurant, Sorriso Italburst of orange-tasting perfume. Maybe that level iano. Here, the accent is the stuffing inside, which is of exquisite sinker dining isn’t available in the Santa a bit of a shock, but the version basically throws the lowly calzone into the deep fryer, turning easy food Barbara area, but there are treasures to be found. What about “real” doughnuts, you might ask first? into a combo of my favorite things: meatball meets You know, the ones American law enforcement are doughnut — pure joy while you eat. Let regrets come alleged to devour. Cake doughnuts do have a certain later, like any fine sin. comfort-food genius, I admit: Chocolate-chocolate, My most transcendental doughnut-like comesglazed, and jelly-infused staples can satisfy hunger tible experience occurred in a Thai restaurant: deeply, though the rush is quick to collapse. Better the Mesa’s Meun Fan. Lots of Thai people own yet, they’re found everywhere, whether it’s a fine doughnut stores across this broad country; some chain like Krispy Kreme or a hometown mom also serve Thai food there, like the Eller’s on upper ’n’ pop. But my preferred ballpark is exotica drawn State Street. Meun Fan serves something simply from world cuisines: rural America’s fried dough, called Thai Donut. Piping-hot and finger-shaped, it’s Italy’s zeppole, Mexico’s churros, and even the Finn- crispy outside and dreamy soft inside, served with ish munkki. a bowl of reduced sweetened and condensed milk. My favorite American entry to that global fare Maybe my doctor don’t want me to eat it, but I is the apple fritter, perhaps because its ingredients think Buddha stretching in the restaurant’s corner include real fruit, mitigating my sense of guilt. Frit- would approve. Doughnuts, he might say, round out ters are beautiful lumpy confections, often glazed the journey of existence, and the traveler. n

Santa BarBara SinkerS

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espite distinct political differences, all exposed to high-caloric foods during state dinpresidents Bill Clinton and George W. ners, so when they ate by themselves, they wanted Bush agreed on one thing: Dutch-style to back off of all that and eat a little lighter. I tell pot pie from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, people I was their chef, but a lot of times I felt where doughy dumplings cooked in broth replace like their dietician.” It was steady — aside from the expected buttery pie crust. Upon first trying one time when Hillary Clinton made some eggs the dish during their for a sick Chelsea, respective terms, each Moeller never recalls president summoned the families cooking for themselves — and former White House creatively taxing, too, chef John Moeller to since dishes for official their table, looked up functions could not be over their eyeglasses, and said,“John, now this repeated. But Moeller is the kind of food I like.” found a few favorites “I kid you not — it that he would replay was the exact ditto,” for the First Famsaid the chef, who also ily every few weeks. cooked for George H.W. “I came up with a Bush during his 13 years pretty good chicken in the White House. enchilada recipe from “There’s mutual ground scratch that I still make today,” he said. to find there.” Such stories will be He even learned a bit, like the time he paired with a sevencourse, wine-enhanced was about to make meal that Moeller is fajitas for dinner and preparing with the help Laura Bush explained, “We’re from Texas, and of chef Michael Hutchings at a private home we don’t eat flour torin Montecito on April tillas. We only eat corn 21. The $500-per-plate tortillas, and we prefer affair — abalone, squab, them fresh-made.” She tenderloin, and 2005 Au assigned her Latina Bon Climat pinot noir housekeeper, who are just a few enticecame with the Bush PrePares exclusive Dinner ments — will benefit the family from Texas, to nonprofit Central Coast show Moeller what to to Benefit this summer’s buy and how to make Wine Classic, whose 31st central coast Wine classic incarnation goes down them. “A couple weeks later, you could’ve August 10-14 when it by Matt KettMann called me Juan,” said hits Santa Barbara for the first time. Moeller. “I don’t eat Raised in Lancaster, Moeller graduated from a fajitas with flour tortillas anymore, either.” After a change in kitchen staff in 2005, Moeller Rhode Island culinary school in 1981 and cooked in New England restaurants before working for saw it was time to move on and worked at an two years in famous kitchens of Burgundy, France. events center in Montgomery County before the After a brief stint in St. Croix, he stopped in Wash- recession ended that. In 2010, when his brother ington, D.C., on the way home to Pennsylvania died suddenly at age 50, Moeller moved back to and wound up finding a job on the first day. He fell Lancaster to be closer to his parents, eventually in with the city’s tight-knit community of French writing his book and starting a catering company. chefs over drinks at the Mayflower Hotel, and in “It’s a nice little enclave,” he says of his hometown 1992, one such chef, who’d started working at the between Philadelphia and Harrisburg.“I’m spoiled White House, said a job was opening there. “He as a chef — I have lots of Amish farmers to work thought there were too many French people in the with.” kitchen,” laughed Moeller, who endured a threeBut his memories of the White House remain lucid.“The most extraordinary day is inauguration month background check before being hired. “I was a commoner, and all of the sudden I was day,” he said.“What it takes to get one president in catapulted to the second floor of the White House and one out is incredible, and so is learning the on the inside of the circle of the Secret Service,” new repertoire of foods to work with.” said Moeller, who wrote a 2013 memoir meets recipe book about his experiences called Dining A few seats remain for the Central at the White House: From the President’s Table to Coast Wine Classic White House Yours. “I never lost sight of what it meant to be on Dinner on Thursday, April 21, at 6 p.m., so contact archie the second floor.” .wineclassic@gmail.com or call 878-3124. See central It was challenging work.“You’re the private chef; coastwineclassic.org and diningatthewhitehouse.com. you’re the banquet cook,” said Moeller.“They were

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The Independent Independent’s Dining Guide is a paid advertise‑ ment and is provided as a service to our readers. Restaurants are listed according to type of food served. Bon appétit!

Brazilian 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 coco‑ nut 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

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. Sat/Sun lunch 11:30‑2:30

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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! India House, 418 State St. Next to 99 Cent Store 805.962.5070. 7 days 11:30a‑ 3:30p ALL YOU CAN EAT Lunch Buffet $8.95. Dinner 5p‑9p. Tandori & North Indian Muglai specialties. World Class Indian Chefs at your service! Traditional floor seating. Indian & Draft Beers, Local Wines. www.indiahouseusa.com irish Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant, 18 E. Ortega St. (next to lot 10) SB, 568‑0702. $$. Open 7 days 11:30a‑Close (Food ‘til 10p, 11p on Sat/Sun). AE MC V Disc. Authentic Irish food & atmosphere in downtown SB. Specialties from Ireland include Seafood & Meat dishes. Informal, relaxed pub‑style atmosphere. Live music Thursday nights. Children welcome. Avail. for private parties. Pool & Darts. steak

Rodney’s Grill, 633 East Cabrillo Boulevard at The Fess Parker–A Doubletree by Hilton Resort 805‑564‑4333. Serving 5pm‑10pm Tuesday through Saturday. Rodney’s Grill 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. Wineries/ tasting rooms

Santa Barbara Winery, 202 Anacapa St. 963‑3633. Open Sun‑Thurs 10a‑6p & Fri‑Sat 10a‑7p, small charge for extensive tasting list. 2 blocks from both State St & the beach. This ven‑ erable winery is the county’s oldest‑est.1962, and offers many internationally acclaimed wines from their Lafond Vineyard in the Santa Rita Hills. Try some of Winemaker Bruce McGuire’s small production bottling.www.sbwinery.com

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email: arts@independent.com CHANGE OF HEART: The 1975’s sophomore album shows the band growing and expanding its sound, with singer Matty Healy’s lyrics demonstrating a changed and wiser man.

Page 45

The 1975

Latest RecoRd is confident and seLf-RefeRentiaL

W

hen my sister and I spoke with frontman Matthew Healy of The 1975 the day before his birthday, he was in Berlin, readying himself for a show. “Bowie lived here with Iggy Pop,” he mentioned. An amazing city, we agreed, an artful place. But more, it’s an apropos city from which a man such as Healy may speak: a famously creative and evolving city in cross-reference with its darker earlier years, a place steeped in music that straddles aesthetics and histories of pasts and futures both. The 1975’s newest album, I Like It When You Sleep, for You Are So Beautiful Yet So Unaware of It It, is both confidently new and knowingly self-referential to past works, both their own and the music that inspired it. “The new album almost makes jokes about the naiveté of the first album; there’s a wisdom or knowing about myself that replaces the naiveté,” he said.“The first album was about,‘When will I resolve myself?’ or ‘When will I better myself?’… This album is more about self-acceptance.” The world at large, too, is beginning to accept— accept and embrace and pine for and adore — what The 1975 brings to the table. From a narrow-minded, categorical PR standpoint, they’re slightly confounding and have been a lightning rod for criticisms and furrowed brows: Are they sincerely emotional, or imitatively? Are they reinvigorating and innovating the past, or thieving from it? Can they really be that talented and indie and famous and beautiful? “It annoys the fucking hell out of me,” Healy said of the somewhat sex-symbol status he and his bandmates have earned in some circles and the suspicions that have ensued. “When I started the band, I didn’t even think about what we looked like. I’m an anti-sex symbol; I’m definitely on the weird end of the spectrum.” Healy acknowledges the first album encapsulated the band’s most nascent years, with songs written over a 10-year period of time.

“You had songs like ‘Menswear’; ‘Sex’ is juvenile in a nice way— way I understand where the misconceptions came from,” he said of the early boy-band accusations. It was all about context, he explained. Healy described the new phase as being in conversation with the old, referencing past lyrics and motifs with new sounds and visuals.“It’s very conversational— conversational it’s a cultivation of our little world and who we are, and the essence of that is subtextual things. Self-awareness is so important to us and our music.” And in some ways, they’re back where they began. “It’s kind of like doing it again from the beginning— beginning and it’s kind of weird. I had the whole two years of touring and came to know the whole experience, and now it’s evolving again,” Healy said. As the band’s fame has expanded, the lead singer has gone further inward, and yet as the inner circle has closed, his musical mission has become more broad-minded and communal.“It’s a really weird phase. I’ve almost become more altruistic as I’ve become more insular.”While the first album was “very wrapped up in my desire for people to know who I was,” he is now more of a craftsman — focused on creating the best work he can. Healy hopes to connect with the fans on a deep level and speaks of music in a big-picture way as a uniting force. It’s not uncommon for him to ask fans at concerts to turn their cell phones off for a song— not in an aggressively Luddite way but as a reminder of why song they’re all there in the first place: to share the presence of music.“It’s about appreciating that we’re all in a room, not pretending that we’re not,” he said. — Richie DeMaria

4•1•1

The 1975 plays with The Japanese House on Thursday, April 21, at 7 p.m. at the S.B. Bowl (1122 N. Milpas St.). For tickets and more information, call 962-7411 or see sbbowl.com.

Weezer

Iggy PoP

Inspired by frontman Rivers Cuomo’s Santa Monica nabe, Weezer’s beach-y “White Album” aims to recapture their 1990s vibe, but too many moments resemble Beach Boys updates or spare parts from 2005’s disposable Make Believe. Sonically uneventful “King of the World” addresses Mrs. Cuomo’s anxieties. While the intriguing “Jacked Up” flaunts Cuomo’s falsetto across staccato reggae piano, nautical-themed “Wind in Our Sail” offers the poor man’s “Island in the Sun.” Weezer won’t be mistaken for that other “White Album.” After 2014’s ambitious, transcendent Everything Will Be Alright in the End End, the default Weezer formula here often disappoints. But the objective’s clear: a summery confection as insouciant as the lovebirds in “(Girl We Got a) Good Thing,” “driving to Ventura on the 101 / It sounds like fun to me.” — Michael Aushenke

The Iggster returns with a kick-ass album, ably backed by Queens of the Stone Age’s Josh Homme (doing double duty as co-collaborator and producer) and Dean Fertita, and Matt Helders of the Arctic Monkeys. As producer, Homme homages not only Iggy’s enduring “godfather of punk” legacy but also the late, eternal David Bowie’s producer contributions to seminal ’70s post-Stooges-depression Iggy solo albums The Idiot and Lust for Life. The “Stone Age Monkeys” lock into a simian groove behind Iggy as he rants like a troglodyte on “Paraguay.” Other highlights include The Doors-ish “Break Into Your Heart,” the jaded “American Valhalla,” and the seamy “Gardenia,” a lust-over-love counterpoint to Pop classic “Candy.” Post Pop Depression is easily the best Iggy Pop release since 1990’s Brick By Brick. — Sean Mageean

Weezer

Post PoP DePression

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l I f e

Tucker Bodine

What’s Up With playback RecoRding stUdio? Playback Recording Studio is back; in fact, it never left. Recent staff changeovers have led some in town wondering if the studio has shuttered its doors. The rumors aren’t true — quite the opposite. This year sees the venerable recording bastion expanding its services, offering a greater array of rooms, personnel, and equipment to serve an even greater set of entertainment needs. Hearsay has circulated recently that Playback was no longer doing business, but owner and head engineer Tucker Bodine figures that misperception was not only from staff switch-ups but also due to a slight shift in focus, as he worked with fewer area artists than in the past and directed more energies toward publishing. But Playback is very much here, and bigger than ever. So what’s new at Playback? Lots. Santa Barbara favorite Layovr now works as the house band, ready to bring its musicianship to any project that needs a band. “We have done this with many artists, and the results have been incredible,” Bodine said. There are also new rooms — a writer’s room called the Dragon’s Den, and Studio B, a place where artists can develop their sound with the assistance of in-house production team Undefeated, which consists of chief engineer DJ Overtone and Austin Sexton. Playback is expanding its publishing assistance, too, helping artists secure ASCAP licensing and offering recording rates for those with smaller budgets. “We have a lot of inroads for placement for artists,” Bodine said. Playback is also continuing to do more and more television and commercial work, with projects that include postproduction on Jeff Bridges’s The Giver and commercials for Geico and Burger King. The studio is reaching out, too, with community events in the works, including an industry mixer at UCSB. Yet with all these expansions, Bodine said one thing has remained unchanged: the atmosphere. “What makes Playback special and sets us apart is the vibe,” he said, citing the relaxed setting and the TEC Award–winning, acoustically tuned rooms by Chris Pelonis. So the studio’s not closed; it’s very much alive. “It’s been amazing to see how diverse the culture in town is, and it’s been an unbelievable experience to help others pursue their dreams,” Bodine said. “We’re grateful for everybody here in town who’s supported us over the years.” Here’s to many more years ahead. — RD

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LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC TUESDAYS AT 7

Blazing Saddles - MAY 24 Young Frankenstein - JUN 14 Spaceballs - JUN 28 High Anxiety - JUL 12 Robin Hood: Men in Tights - AUG 9 Dracula: Dead and Loving It - AUG 23

Shrek - MAY 25 Madagascar - JUN 15 Kung Fu Panda - JUN 29 Monsters vs. Aliens - AUG 10 How to Train Your Dragon - AUG 24

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By Joshua Harmon April 14 - May 1, 2016

ALL THE WORLD’S A STAGE: Brothers Bruno (left) and Odiseo Bichir lampoon Hollywood hierarchies in their bilingual sociopolitical comedy eXtras, which plays at the Rubicon Theatre.

Brothers on the Border B

runo Bichir — who, along with his brothers, Odiseo and Demián, belongs to one of the most internationally renowned acting families from Mexico — recalls a time on a movie set when a starlet looked down upon him and his fellow Latin American actors on set. “She treated us like lovely savages who don’t have education,” he said. “But it’s the whole opposite, and I was furious, because she thought it was that simple. My history — that she didn’t know at the time — was more complex.” It’s relegations like these that fuel the comedy of Bruno and Odiseo’s production of eXtras, a loving send-up of Hollywood and all its hierarchies playing at the Rubicon Theatre through May 1 in association with Foro Shakespeare, with a Spanish-language version on April 19 and May 1. The play, written by Sabina Berman, is a loose adaptation of Marie Jones’s Olivier Award–winning script Stones in His Pockets. Directed by Bruno and acted out entirely by both him and Odiseo — with more than 15 characters played between them — eXtras tells the tale of what happens when a Hollywood production set visits a California/Mexico border town for a film shoot and consequently disrupts the entire community. The Brothers Bichir, then with Demián, had first performed the play in Mexico more than 13 years ago, and the Rubicon recently reached out to them about staging it in Ventura. It will be the Bichirs’ U.S. stage debut. Opening the evening will be 17-year-old phenom Maya Burns, the young, bilingual Mexican-by-way-of-California composer who will also add transitional and background music for the play. eXtras, said Bruno, highlights immigration issues in its cultural critiques, with its main characters being two Mexican extras who hope, one day, to fulfill the American dream of being in the spotlight. “In a lot of the movies that Hollywood does about Latin America, they don’t have a lot of respect for mixing cultures. That’s why you have in an Indiana Jones movie a beautiful stone from

4•1•1

Bruno and odiseo Bichir direct, Perform eXtras by Richie DeMaria

“The best comedy of the season!” The New York Times etcsb.org | 805.965.5400 33 W. VICTORIA STREET

the Aztecs while Indiana Jones is in Peru, and they don’t care,” Bruno said. “We’re always consuming that history, and as they say, the history is written by the winner always. And we Mexican people and those two immigrants are the losers in the beginning of the story. They want to fit into this American dream of becoming stars, but they are nothing but extras in a movie about their Mexican history.” Bruno said the play lambasts, in a loving way, the hierarchies that Hollywood projects onto the world, in which some people are stars, and others villains — or props. “At the bottom is the extra, and nobody cares if he rests or if he’s out in the sun or if he’s thirsty,” he said. The play also pokes fun at Hollywood’s usual typecasting, particularly because two Mexican actors will be playing all the parts. “We as Mexicans, we’ve been hired for a movie as the stupid [person] or the robber or the drug addict or the terrorist … we’re never, like, the hero.” But the play, Odiseo insisted, is not vengeful or mean-spirited. Rather, it is a compassionate kind of comedy, one that recognizes shared humanity in all cultures and all roles big and small. “The media tell us about a world that is changing furiously, that is even more violent than we thought we would face,” he said. He noted Berman’s “tender and comprehensive and profound” characterizations and said the play treats all therein with respectfully good humor. “This is the kind of work that you really enjoy because … it is a unique moment to communicate with an audience and establish a celebration of life together as a community, no matter the culture of everyone in the audience, no matter the culture of the ones that are there on the stage.”

eXtras runs at the Rubicon Theatre (1006 E. Main St., Ventura) through May 1. For tickets and more information, call 667-2900 or visit rubicontheatre.org. independent.com

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presents an intimate conversation with

KATHLEEN TURNER Michael Douglas Visiting Artist

SUNDAY / APRIL 24 / 5 PM .

THU, APR 21 / 5 PM / UCSB HATLEN THEATER FREE - ticket reservation required online at www.theaterdance.ucsb.edu

.

.

LOTTE LEHMANN CONCERT HALL

SPECIAL GUESTS: ISABEL BAYRAKDARIAN, JENNIFER JOHNSON, CHRISTINA SANCHEZ

ADMISSION IS FREE • WWW.MUSIC.UCSB.EDU

presents

presents

by David Auburn directed by R. Michael Gros “…combines elements of mystery and surprise DIRECTED BY with old-fashioned R. MICHAEL GROS storytelling...” —NY Daily News

J

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“So fresh, insightful and true that it could have been WINNER OF THE 2001 PULITZER PRIZE written today.” AND TONY AWARD FOR BEST PLAY —Broadway World

APRIL 15–30, 2016 www.theatregroupsbcc.com Thank you to our season sponsor:

PREVIEWS APRIL 13 & 14 Contains adult language. NO LATE SEATING

805.965.5935 Sun. 4/17 LIVE CAPTIONING @ 2pm

JURKOWITZ THEATRE | SBCC WEST CAMPUS 48

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courtesy

a&e | THEATER PREVIEW

MONDAY!

UCSB / Santa Barbara Reads Author Event

FREE

Bryan Stevenson

Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption

MON, APR 18 / 8 PM UCSB CAMPBELL HALL / FREE

“Stevenson may, indeed, be America’s Mandela.”

DOUBLE TROUBLE: Dos Pueblos senior Sofia Ross plays both Gaby, the rebel, and Sophie, the princess, in the school’s upcoming production of Grand Duchy.

Trading Places

W

hen Dos Pueblos drama teacher Clark them, as the lead actress must play two roles. Sayre first met the Tony Award–win- In a new version of the old The Prince and ning playwright Robert Freedman, it the Pauper role switch, actor/singer extraorwas more than 30 years ago, and Sayre dinaire and Dos Pueblos senior Sofia Ross was an ambitious young actor delighted to be will play both Princess Sophie of the Grand cast as a prince in the first staged reading of Duchy of St. Demaine, and Gaby, the young Freedman’s musical Grand Duchy. firebrand who is hoping that a revolution will The run-through was a success, but the end monarchy in this tiny and fictitious Euroshow was not produced pean kingdom. When or published, and Freedthe two teenage charman, Sayre, and comacters exchange places, poser/pianist John Bayeach learns something less, who wrote the music new about the world in for the show, each went which they both live. their separate ways. BayFor writer Freedman, “it is a thrill to have less became a top-selling by Charles Donelan students working on solo recording artist and the show because high a concert pianist, Freedman conquered the highly competitive world school theater experiences are so important.” of screenwriting, and Sayre eventually took He told me that, while the play is by no means his now-longtime position as mentor of all a straight interpretation of Mark Twain’s The things theater at Dos Pueblos High School Prince and the Pauper, the two works share in Goleta. a common interest in exploring empathy. When these three members of the origi- “Empathy is a good word for it,” said Freednal Grand Duchy creative team reunited in man, “but this show deals with two teenage 2003, it was to world premiere the show in girls changing places rather than two young a relatively small black-box theater space at boys, and that means that they face a whole Dos Pueblos. Since then, several things both different set of challenges on the way to unexpected and monumental have hap- discovering themselves, including first love.” pened that will lend a whole new aura to the Ross said that she feels “very lucky to be production of Grand Duchy that opens at DP working on a show that has presented a new this Friday, April 15. Dos Pueblos, as many kind of challenge. It is definitely very drainof you know, has added a spectacular large ing—running up and down stairs, tripping theater in the new Elings Performing Arts over myself and falling to the ground, and Center to its facilities, making a more fully changing costumes between every scene, staged version of the musical possible. And sometimes even three times within one scene Robert Freedman, as even more of you are — but I have also learned so much about likely to be aware, has written a show called myself through portraying these two girls. A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder that As Sophie, I get to live every girl’s dream of earned him a Tony Award for Best Book of a being a princess who wears a tiara and loves to stuff food in her mouth; then as Gaby, I Musical in 2014. Like Freedman’s massive hit A Gentle- show the more rebellious and hopeful, someman’s Guide, which is currently playing at the times clumsy, side of myself.” Audiences will Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, Grand certainly enjoy witnessing the rebirth of what Duchy requires an extraordinary central may still become a big hit, both in Goleta, and performance, or rather more than two of who knows—possibly on Broadway.

Dos Pueblos HigH THeaTer PresenTs

grand duchy

4•1•1

Grand Duchy will be performed seven times, Friday, April 15, at 7 p.m.-Sunday, April 24, at 2 p.m. All performances are in the Elings Performing Arts Center at Dos Pueblos High School. Tickets are available at dptheatrecompany.org or by calling 968-2541 x4670 weekdays 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

– Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times Author of Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, Bryan Stevenson will deliver a moving account of the lives he has defended and make an inspiring argument for compassion in the pursuit of true justice.

Krista Tippett

In Conversation with Pico Iyer

Becoming Wise: An Inquiry into the Mystery and Art of Living WED, APR 20 / 7:30 PM (note special time) UCSB CAMPBELL HALL $15 / $10 all students Creator and host of the Peabody Awardwinning radio program On Being, Krista Tippett is celebrated for her exploration of life’s central questions: What does it mean to be human, and how do we want to live? Tippett’s newest book is Becoming Wise: An Inquiry into the Mystery and Art of Living.

Autism Self-advocate, Animal Scientist and Best-selling Author

Temple Grandin Different Kinds of Minds Contribute to Society

TUE, MAY 10 / 8 PM / GRANADA THEATRE Tickets start at $25 / $15 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

Perhaps the world’s most accomplished adult with autism, Temple Grandin, Ph.D., has been named one of Time magazine’s “100 Most Influential People in the World.”

Event Sponsors: Lynda Weinman & Bruce Heavin With support from our Community Partner the Orfalea Family

Books will be available for purchase and signing at each event

(805) 893-3535 / www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222 www.GranadaSB.org independent.com

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Aneil lutchmAn

a&e | PoP, Rock & jazz PREVIEW EAZY DOES IT: Defying expectations and limitations comes easily for G-Eazy, who opens this year’s Santa Barbara Bowl season.

Doing it in the Dark I For G-Eazy, History Happens at NIGht

t ought to be plenty dark out by the time that includes a sleazy motel and a strip club G-Eazy takes the stage at the Santa Bar- while spitting lyrics about sex, drugs, and bara Bowl on Tuesday, April 19, and that’s earning bank, there’s no mistaking G-Eazy for just the way this rapper from the Bay Area a former Disney star, even if he has captured likes it. From the beginning, when he started some of the same audience that thrilled to the making music as a young teen in Berkeley, Justins and Britneys as recently as a year ago. the world that matters to him has been the When I spoke to G-Eazy by phone last one that comes together at night. Whether week, he was sitting backstage in Milwauhe’s hanging with friends and getting hyphy kee, doing press while waiting to follow his or, as is more often the case in recent years, Dark Out openers Nef the Pharaoh, Marty he’s performing in front of sold-out crowds at Grimes, and Daghe. The impression he gave venues such as New York’s Terminal 5 along- was an interesting one, mixing the swagger side such rap idols as that’s a prerequisite Lil Wayne, A$AP Ferg, of the rap game with and DMX, G-Eazy’s notes of pride in his ambitions have conown determination Last year I was at sistently involved what and persistence that goes on when lights sounded more like the and this year go out. self-image of a hardworking entrepreneur The title of this tour, than that of a flaky When It’s Dark Out, is performer. “Touring also the title of his 2015 — G-Eazy album, which debuted all the time, you end at number two on the up living like a pirate,” iTunes pop chart when it dropped in Novem- he said in response to a question about his ber. With relatively little mainstream media lifestyle, adding that “there’s a dark side to it, attention, G-Eazy has nevertheless reached a but it also takes a high level of commitment huge audience, and it’s still growing. When he to make it work.” Asked about the dueling arrives at the Santa Barbara Bowl, he will be personas he portrays in the video of “I Mean in between performing at the two weekends It,” G-Eazy said “in that one, there’s me the of Coachella, and on his way to many more rapper and there’s also me the news anchor major dates in the United States and Europe. character. I’m a Gemini, so splitting myself His appearance is the first sign that G-Eazy in two is natural for me—I’ve been this way offers something that differs from the stan- my whole life.” dard hip-hop approach. The short, slickedAs we prepare to end the interview, back haircut that has become his signature is G-Eazy, between sips on his ever-present a big part of it, but so are the leather jacket and pre-concert bottle of Pedialyte, reflects on the white tee, along with an absence of visible how far he has come in just a few years. “Last tattoos. It adds up to an image of someone year I was at Coachella as a fan, and this year who’s not afraid to defy expectations, even as I’ll be onstage. The last time I was in Santa he studies the great rappers who have come Barbara was three years ago when we played before him for ideas and inspiration. At a Velvet Jones, and it wasn’t even sold out.” Now toned 64, and stomping around a stage set that’s progress.

The Parks & Recreation Community Foundation’s

by Charles Donelan

coachella as a fan, I’ll be onstage.

featuring … “Scenes of Santa Barbara” in the PARC Gallery work from 35 regional artists including members of the Oak Group and SCAPE Wine tasting and sales by 11 wineries from the Santa Barbara Urban Wine Trail Music by jazz trio L.A. Metro Jazz Combo and accordianist Michael Gutin Giant silent auction!

Benefitting Parks & Recreation programs for underserved youth and at-risk teens. Sponsored by: Armstrong Associates, Montecito Bank & Trust, Village Properties, Community Voice, Oren’s Automotive, Nancy Rapp, Rincon Broadcasting, City of Santa Barbara Parks & Recreation Department, BMW of Santa Barbara, Bryant & Sons Jewelers, Howard Hudson CPA, Intermezzo Bar + Cafe, NeoGov, Des Jardins & Haapala Attorneys at Law, and Mike Richardson Realtors.

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4•1•1

G-Eazy plays Tuesday, April 19, at 7 p.m. at the Santa Barbara Bowl. For tickets and information, see sbbowl.com.


a&e | POSITIVELY STATE STREET

BIG NAMES. SMALL ROOM.

APRIL

18

“One of the top jazz pianists in the world.” – The Los Angeles Times

DESTINATION UNKNOWN: Unknown Mortal Orchestra, which headlines a sold-out show at SOhO tonight, continues to expand its sound with its newest, Multi-Love.

Know Your ShowS

MONDAY!

by Richie DeMaria

INTO THE UNKNOWN: The day after this issue comes out is April 15, a day living in infamy: Tax Day, Titanic sinking. While we may memorialize the bad or taxing times, few mark the moments just prior. We commemorate the storm, not the calm, and forget how innocent or ignorant we were yesterday before the turning of today. Why not celebrate, for a second, our unknowing? It is under these vague terms that I announce the arrival of Unknown Mortal Orchestra, who plays tonight, Thursday, April 14, at an already-soldout SOhO show. Hailing from New Zealand and America both, the band, helmed by founder Ruban Nielson, likes to conjoin synthetic styles with R&B and soul grooves into new and unexpected formations. Their music has been described as “kaleidoscopic,” and their new music video, “MultiLove,” fits the label. With its rainbow colorations and lyrics about the polychromatic shifts in hearts and minds that fall together in multi-person love dynamics, it’s music of many hues. What better psychedelic headspace is there to get caught up in and, for once, forget about the unknowns of tomorrow than within the music of Unknown Mortal Orchestra today? WEST COAST, BEST COAST: Meanwhile, also tonight, the Funzone hosts a string of West Coasters, with a lineup nicely descending along the coast in north-to-south order. At the top of the poster is Eleanor Murray from Olympia, Washington; in the middle, Portland’s Johanna Warren; and at the graphical and geographic bottom, S.B.’s Cave Babies. Besides being all West Coasters, all three, more importantly, are linked by their craft for sensitive, honest, soul-searching acoustic folk. I hope they’re wearing long sleeves, because their openly heartfelt music is the definition thereof, and there’s a lot of heart within. Go, but maybe bring some tissues — your eyes may experience their own personal El Niño in this waning rain year. ROCK-SOLID ROCK: Back at SOhO, on Friday, April 15, Cubensis and Moonalice revive the Deadhead generation once again with Cubensis’ Grateful Dead tribute and Moonalice’s Dead-esque originals. You may remember Moonalice from its visit last year. The band’s countercultural rock is a throwback to bygone times, when concerts were free, hair was flowing, and love itself had its very own designated season and year. What a great way to celebrate our unknowing with these acts, who revive a past purity of culture and creation with the requisite reefer for good brain-clouding effect. IT’S A SNAP! On Sunday, April 17, at noon, SOhO hosts the most fabulous brunch in town: the Snap! Drag Revue Brunch, where you can enjoy fine foods with a side of gorgeous drag queens from across California. “We celebrate diversity and really showcase that no matter what, you can feel sexy confident and be anything you want to be,” says Snap’s producer, Borgia Bloom.“Who wouldn’t want to start their Sunday feeling beautiful, confident, and all with a plate of bacon?” SPEAKING OF REEFER: It’s that herbal green time of year again, and there are a few shows to pick from if you feel like leaving the couch you find yourself glued to. One such show of note is Solvang’s very own legendary ska act, The Mad Caddies, who play at Velvet Jones on Wednesday, April 20. The Caddies are an institution among the skanking set and yet another reason for 805ers to feel proud of what a lovely musical nest our area code holds. Watch them, and engage in a healthy manner of madness. TAX FREE: Speaking of unknowns: After all that anticipation, it turns out Tax Day has been temporarily moved to Monday the 18th, due to Emancipation Day in D.C. Who knew? n

KENNY BARRON TRIO

“The most lyrical piano player of our time.” – Jazz Weekly

APRIL

21 NEXT WEEK!

A Conversation with

LINDA RONSTADT

Arguably the most versatile vocalist of the modern era and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Linda Ronstadt will appear in a speaking engagement to recount her landmark career, her thoughts on music, and what it has meant in her life.

MAY

2

No one in the headlines is safe from the side-splitting satire of the Capitol Steps, the only group in Washington attempting to be funnier than Congress. LOBERO THEATRE ENDOWMENT FOR AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC

805.963.0761 or Lobero.com

SANTA BARBARA RAPE CRISIS CENTER

presents

Two oNe-ACT operAS By

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the GrANAdA THeATre

Saturday, May 14, 2016 4–7pm Rincon Beach Events 3805 Santa Claus Lane Carpinteria CA 93013

For more information 805.963.6832 www.chocolatedevine.org

Suor ANGeLICa GIANNI SCHICCHI frIdAy

SuNdAy

Apr

Apr

22 24 T I C k eT e T S + I N f o : 8 9 9 - 2 2 2 2 / o p e r AS b . o r G independent.com

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arts & entertainMent listinGs

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open 7 days a week @7aM We serve breakfast, lunch and dinner

best happy hour in town nightly specials: Monday’s: kids eat free! tuesday’s: taco night! wednesday’s: karaoke night! Friday’s and saturdays: live music! sunday’s: breakfast buffet; all you can eat beef rib dinner! 845.7030 | 521 Firestone Rd.

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PICTURE PERFECT: Glenn Rand’s “Point Lobos” is part of the Wildling Museum photography exhibit A Curator’s Eye: A Tribute to Karen Sinsheimer.

art exhibits MuseuMs

Local Heroes Wanted Each year in our Thanksgiving issue, The S.B. Independent honors our Local Heroes — Santa Barbarans who make our community a better place to live.

For our 31st Annual Local Heroes Celebration, we ask our readers to help us give thanks to those whose good works and deeds may otherwise go unsung. Please nominate a person you know who deserves such recognition. Send us his or her name and phone number and a brief summary of why you believe he or she is a Local Hero. Make sure to also include your name and phone number. All nominations are due by Tuesday, May 31, 2016.

30 Y E A R S

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Art, Design, & Architecture Museum – California 101: Art from the Collection; Lucile Lloyd: A Life in Murals; The Art of Colonial Latin America; and Stephen Westfall: Stars and Candy Wrappers, through May 1. UCSB, 893-2951. Elverhøj Museum – Joseph Knowles: The Evolving Pespective, through Apr. 17. 1624 Elverhoy Wy., Solvang. 686-1211. Karpeles Manuscript Library and Museum – John Herd: Photography and Computer Graphics, through Apr. 30; Ann Baldwin: Scriptopics, ongoing. 21 W. Anapamu St., 962-5322. Museum of Contemporary Art S.B. – Beyond 2˚, through July 24. 653 Paseo Nuevo, 966-5373. Rancho La Patera & Stow House – Multiple permanent exhibits. 304 N. Los Carneros Rd., Goleta, 681-7216. S.B. Historical Museum – Alexander Harmer: Th T e Museum Collection, through May 29; Beverly Jackson: Stars, Snapshots and Chanel and Hidden Treasures a asures , through Oct. 16; The Story of Santa Barbara, permanent exhibition. Free admission. 136 E. De la Guerra St., 966-1601. S.B. Maritime Museum – Tattoos & Scrimshaw: The Art of the Sailor Sailor, through Aug. 31. 113 Harbor Wy., 962-8404. S.B. Museum of Art – Puja and Piety: Hiindu, Hi ndu, Jain, and Bud Buddddhist hist Art from the Indian Subcontinent Subcontinent, Apr. 17-Aug. 28; Lewis deSoto: Paranirvana (Self-Portrait), Apr. 17July 31; 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 – Audubon’s Birds of America, through May 1; multiple permanent installations. 2559 Puesta del Sol, 682-4711. S.B. Museum of Natural History Sea Ctr. – Multiple permanent installations. 211 Stearns Wharf, 962-2526. Wildling Museum – A Curator’s Eye: A Tribute to Karen Sinsheimer Sinsheimer, Apr. 16-July 18;

California’s Wild Edge: The Coast in Prints, Poetry, and History History, through June 6. 1511-B Mission Dr., Solvang, 686-8315.

Galleries Allan Hancock College Library – Children’s book illustrations, ongoing. 800 S. College Dr., Santa Maria, 922-6966. Architectural Foundation Gallery – Meagan Stirling: Crack Shot Shot, through May 13. 229 E. Victoria St., 965-6307. Artamo Gallery–Ana Marini: Ladies & Horses, through May 1. 11W. Anapamu St., 568-1400. Cabana Home–Thayer Coggin: Mid-Century Modernism, through Apr. 15. 111 Santa Barbara St., 962-0200. Cancer Ctr. of S.B. – Art Heals, a permanent exhibit. 540 Pueblo St., Ste. A, 898-2204. Carpinteria Arts Ctr. – Pathways, through Apr. 18. 855 Linden Ave., Carpinteria, 684-7789. Casa de la Guerra – Reginald D. Johnson: Building Community Community, through Sep.18. 15 E. De la Guerra St., 966-1279. Cheadle Hall – Visual Pleasure, through June. UCSB, 893-3535. Divine Inspiration Gallery of Fine Art – Julie Smith, through May 26. 1528 State St., 570-2446. Distinctive Art Gallery – Ongoing show, though May 28. 1331 State St., 845-4833. Faulkner Gallery East –Abstract Abstract Open IIII, through Apr. 29. S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St., 962-7653. Flying Goat Cellars – Carol Kemp: Sacred Downloads: Arts as Communion, through Apr. 17. 1520-A E. Chestnut Ct., Lompoc, 736-9032. Gallery Los Olivos – Deborah Breedon and Kris Buck: The Pastels of Spring, through Apr. 30; Suzanne Huska, through May 4. 2920 Grand Ave., Los Olivos, 688-7517. The Good Life – Debbie Donley: Exploring and Lovign Art Art, through May. 31. 1672 Mission Dr., Solvang. Gray Space – Scott Gordon and David Reeser, through May 15. 219 Gray Ave., 886-0552. Lady McClintock Studios – Claudia Lash, through May. 1221 State St., Ste. 6, 845-0030.

To be considered for The Independent’s listings, please visit independent.com and click “Submit an event” or email listings@independent.com.


apr. 14-21 Leigh Block Gallery – Jim Hill, through Apr. 29. 2050 Alameda Padre Serra, Ste. 100, 563-8820. Los Olivos Café – John Card: Return of Potpourri, through May 5. 2870 Grand Ave., Los Olivos, 688-7265. Lucky Penny – Campbell Baker, ongoing. 127 Anacapa St., 284-0358. Marcia Burtt Studio – Peggi Kroll Roberts and Ray Roberts, through May 22. 517 Laguna St., 962-5588. Meisel Gallery of Art – Friends & Family, through May 13. Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital, 2415 De la Vina St., 687-7444. MichaelKate Interiors & Art Gallery – construct > deconstruct deconstruct, through Apr. 17. 132 Santa Barbara St., 963-1411. MultiCultural Ctr. –Vibiana AparicioChamberlin: Paz y Amor: Make Peace Peace, through June 10. UCSB, 893-7609. Oliver & Espig Gallery of Fine Arts–Tielle Monette and Sergey Fedotov, ongoing. 1108 State St., 962-8111. Pacifica Graduate Institute – Mythic Threads: Art, Healing and Magic in Bali Bali, ongoing. 801 Ladera Ln., 879-7103. Porch Gallery Ojai – Joshua Abarbanel and China Adams: Seismic | Formations, through May 29. 310 E. Matilija St., Ojai, 620-7589. El Presidio de Santa Bárbara State Historic Park – Nihonmachi Revisited: Santa Barbara’s Japanese American Community in Transition, 1900-1940 and Memorias y Facturas, ongoing. 123 E. Canon Perdido St., 965-0093. Royal Oak Winery – Mike Brady: Evolving Visions-Wall Sculpture, through Apr. 30. 1582 Mission Dr., Solvang, 688-1338. S.B. Artwalk – Arts & Craft Show, ongoing Sundays. Cabrillo Blvd. at State St. S.B. Tennis Club – John Haugse, through May 6. 2375 Foothill Rd., 682-4722. S.B. Zoo – Emeritus Edward “Ted” McToldridge: TED: Artwork by Edward “Ted” McToldridge, through May 5. 500 Niños Dr., 962-5339. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – Morrison Hotel Gallery, ongoing. 1221 State St., 962-7776. Sullivan Goss, An American Gallery – American Figurative and Nell Brooker Mayhem, through May 1. 7 E. Anapamu St., 730-1460. Sundial Studios – Carlos Cortes, through May. 715 Kimball St., 963-8332. Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum of Art – Primed: Westmont Senior Graduate Exhibition, through May 7. 955 La Paz Rd., 565-6162.

LIVE MUSIC CLaSSICaL

Art, Design, & Architecture Museum– Music in the Museum: Jill Felber and Robert Koenig. UCSB, 893-2951. wed: 5:30pm Faulkner Gallery East–S.B. Music Club Free Concert. S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St., 962-7653. sat: 3pm Trinity Episcopal Church–Bach to Beatles Concert. 1500 State St., 965-7419. sat: 7:30pm Trinity Evangelical Church–Monterey International and Monterey Strings Plugged Concert. 909 N. La Cumbre Rd., 687-1577. sun: 2pm

pop, roCk & jazz

Barrel Room – Carr Vineyards & Winery, 414 N. Salsipuedes St., 965-7985. fri: Brady Harris Band (6pm) Blind Tiger – 409 State St., 957-4111. thu: The Bryan Titus Trio (9pm) fri: Shades of Soul (9pm) Campbell Hall – UCSB, 893-3535. mon: Anoushka Shankar (8pm) Chumash Casino Resort – 3400 E. Hwy. 246, Santa Ynez, (800) 686-0855.

Queensrÿche (8pm) Family Stone (8pm) Cold Spring Tavern – 5995 Stagecoach Rd., 967-0066. fri: Sean Wiggins and Paul Houston (7-10pm) sat: Wally Barnick (2-5pm); Holdfast Riffle Company (6-9pm) sun: Tom Ball and Kenny Sultan (1:154pm); Tommy Quayle and Red Cloud (4:30-7:30pm) Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant – 18 E. Ortega St., 568-0702. sat: Live Music (10pm) tue: Karaoke (9pm) Eos Lounge – 500 Anacapa St., 564-2410. thu: Vanity Thursdays fri: Yacht Club Fridays sat: #ExpectGreatness Saturdays wed: Bailamos Salsa Night Figueroa Mountain Brewing Co. – 137 Anacapa St., 694-2255. wed: Acoustic Singer/Songwriter Showcase Wednesdays (6:30pm) Lobero Theatre – 33 E. Canon Perdido St., 963-0761. thu: Lord Huron (7:30pm) sat: Nachle Deewane (5:30pm) mon: Kenny Barron Trio (8pm) thu: In Conversation with Linda Ronstadt (8pm) Mercury Lounge – 5871 Hollister Ave, 967-0907. thu: Steep Ravine (9pm) S.B. Bowl – 1122 N. Milpas St. Call 962-7411. tue: G-Eazy (7pm) thu: The 1975 (7pm) SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – 1221 State St., 962-7776. thu: Unknown Mortal Orchestra (9pm) fri: Cubensis, Moonalice (9pm) sat: Earth Day with Cornerstone (9pm) sun: Snap! Drag Revue Brunch (noon); Best Buddies Fundraiser (3pm) tue: Kayt Mar, Christina Apostolopoulos, Conner Cherland (7pm) wed: Rüfüs Du Sol, Cassian (9pm) thu: Casey Abrams (7pm), Sam Feldt (9:30pm) Standing Sun Winery – 92 Second St., Unit D, Buellton, 904-8072. thu 4/21: Eric Taylor (7:30pm) Uptown Lounge – 3126 State St., 845-8800. wed: Thunder Rose Band (7pm) Velvet Jones – 423 State St., 965-8676. fri: Chad Smith’s Bombastic Meatbats, Killer Kaya, The Hypno Rings (8pm) sat: Superior Booking Presents: Springfest (5pm) wed: Mad Caddies (8pm) thu 4/14: thu 4/21:

ON SALE

SAATTU1R1ADMAY

THIS TUESDAY

theater Arlington Theatre – An Afternoon with Conan O’Brien. 1317 State St., 963-4408. sat: 4pm Brasil Arts Café – No Indoor Voices: Comedy with Lesbians. 1230 State St., 845-7656. fri: 8pm Campbell Hall – UCSB, 893-3535. sun: Rhythmic Circus (3pm) wed: Krista Tippett (7:30pm) Center Stage Theater – Madams of Mayhem. 751 Paseo Nuevo, 963-0408. sun: 2pm mon: 7:30pm Jurkowitz Theatre – Proof Proof. SBCC West Campus, 965-5935. thu:-sat: 7:30pm sun: 2pm wed: 7:30pm The New Vic – Bad Jews. 33 W. Victoria St., 965-5400. wed-sat: 8pm sun: 2 and 7pm tue: 7pm Pepperdine Graziado School of Business and Management – Journalism & Business: Then & Now with Marianne Partridge. 26 W. Anapamu St. thu: 6:30pm

JULY 16TH at 6:30pm G-EAZY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .APRIL 19 THE 1975 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .APRIL 21 CHRIS STAPLETON . . . . . . . . . . . . . .APRIL 26 PENTATONIX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . APRIL 30 ADAM SANDLER, DAVID SPADE, NICK SWARDSON, ROB SCHNEIDER . . MAY 22 WALK THE MOON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MAY 27 THE LUMINEERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MAY 28 IRATION, FITZ & THE TANTRUMS, WOLFMOTHER, THE STRUMBELLAS . . . . . JUNE 3

SLIGHTLY STOOPID / SOJA . . . . . . . JUNE 26 FLIGHT OF THE CONCHORDS . . . . . . JULY 1 LYLE LOVETT / EMMYLOU HARRIS . . . . . JULY 8 GOO GOO DOLLS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JULY 16 BONNIE RAITT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JULY 29 REBELUTION / THE GREEN / STICK FIGURE . . AUG 13 STEVE MARTIN / MARTIN SHORT . . . . . AUG 14 BEN HARPER & THE INNOCENT CRIMINALS . . AUG 20 JACKSON BROWNE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . AUG 27 RAY LAMONTAGNE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SEPT 10 VAN MORRISON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OCT 15

TICKETS AVAILABLE: SB BOWL OR AT AXS.COM / SBBOWL.COM / GOLDENVOICE.COM independent.com

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Thurs 4/14 8-10:30pm

Live Music Beer! Food! Fun! sbbrewhouse.com 229 W. Montecito St. 805-884-4664

Howard's blues nigHt Fri 4/15 9-11:30pm

tHe deltaz Sat 4/16 9-11:30pm

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Wed 4/20 8-10:30pm

VaugHn montgomery music mystery

4/14 - 9:00 WE THE BEAT PRESENTS:

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4/15 - 5:30-8:00

The $5 happy hour 9:00

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Shamakazi, king Zero 4/17 – 11:00–2:00

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cluB cloSEd 4/19 - 7:30 kAyT mAR, cHRiSTiNA APoSToloPouloS, coNNER cHERlANd

4/20 WE THE BEAT PRESENTS:

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casey aBrams 10:00 WE THE BEAT PRESENTS:

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For our Full lineup, please visiT

sohosB.com 1221 State Street • 962-7776 Santa Barbara Channelkeeper’s

Sixteenth Annual Blue Water Ball Saturday, April 16, 2016 Deckers Headquarters

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Recommendation Letter/ ID Card $100.00

The Independent is on

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Limited Seating • Tickets $200 Reservations Required For information & reservations call 805.563.3377 extension 2

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@sbindependent #sbindy #sceneinsb


a&e | film & TV

Hank, CHet, and Miles Hit tHe sCreen Hollywood’s Latest Love Affair with the Music-Legend Biopic

F

or better, worse, and middling, the lure of the music legend biopic is a refrain that won’t quit in Hollywood. Suddenly, as if in a conspiratorial rush, three recent films take on the lives—if in piecemeal, uneven fashion — of three undisputedly iconic American musical legends, with I Saw the Light (re: Hank Williams, true country hero), Born to Be Blue (jazz trumpeter/singer/heartthrob Chet Baker), and the daring, if partially wayward, Miles Ahead (the Miles Davis portrait from director/cowriter/star Don Cheadle). None of these films shy away from the substance-abusive subplots of these artists’ MOVE IT ON OVER: Tom Hiddleston (right) stars as country legend lives, and the more squalid, tabloid-y aspect Hank Williams in I Saw the Light, just one in the recent cavalcade of of the Hank, Chet, and Miles trilogy is also a musician-focused biopics. tale of booze, blow, and junk. Thankfully, the time tacks: Hank’s story loses some of its steam and films — each in its own way and with its own degree of integrity — deal with the essential artistic cohesion with its steady march through his meteoric and musical epiphanies, “hits,” and touchstones, and career (although that only lasted six years, before his recognize the role of their self-destructive biochemical death, at 29, in 1953); Miles Ahead hopscotches from habits in the fragile makeup and narrative of their the murky dark years of his late-’70s disappearing genius. act (with a disturbingly buffoonish stolen master Despite wavering qualities, all films are well worth tape angle) and flashbacks to his chameleonic career, seeing — and, importantly, hearing, given the care and restlessly morphing starting in the ’50s; and Born to Be love given to showcase the actual music these artists Blue — overall, the best of the three, especially due to implanted in our collective ear. With Hank, we get Ethan Hawke’s deep and necessarily hazy performance “Cold, Cold Heart,”“Hey, Good Lookin,”“Your Cheatin’ — wisely focuses on a transitional wannabe rehabbed Heart,” “I’m So Lonesome, I Could Cry,” and the gospel period, between his first burst of fame and dubious title song; with Miles, “So What,” “Nefertiti” (albeit achievement as “the world’s most famous junkie” and during a scene of domestic abuse in the Davis house), flinging himself into a blurry life in Europe. and respectful scenes with Gil Evans, of the album Miles These films contain pain, swagger, self-indulgence, Ahead fame; and with Chet, the hypnotic croonery moving music, and glimpses of the muse’s fickle silence of “Born to Be Blue,” “My Funny Valentine,” and “I’ve and occasional majesty. No doubt, the storied life of late country great Merle Haggard, as played by (insert your Never Been in Love Before.” A potential pitfall of biopics, music or otherwise, is suitable movie star here) will be gracing the multiplex the challenge of telling the tale without getting lost in screens before long. Hopefully, they will do the right the deals, the diffusive sprawl of years, and the drudgery thing, perhaps taking note of Born to Be Blue. of chronology. These examples take on different — Josef Woodard The Jungle Book (105 mins.; PG) Director Jon Favreau re-envisions Disney’s animated classic about a boy raised by animals in the jungle using live action and CGI.

Cécile McLorin Salvant 2016 Grammy Award Winner

“If anyone can extend the lineage of the Big Three – Billie Holiday, Sarah Vaughan, and Ella Fitzgerald – it is this 23-year-old virtuoso.” The New York Times “Ms. Salvant has it all… a playful sense of humor, a rich and varied tonal palette, a supple sense of swing.” The New York Times

Event Sponsors: Marcia & John Mike Cohen WED, APR 27 / 8 PM / UCSB CAMPBELL HALL Tickets start at $25 / $15 UCSB students

(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu

Camino Real (2D and 3D)/Fiesta 5 (2D and 3D)

SCREENiNGS

Movie Guide

10 Cloverfield Lane

PREmiERES

April and the Extraordinary World (105 mins.; PG) In this animated film, a young girl (Marion Cotillard) searches for her long-lost family in the streets of 1941 Paris, where she encounters a talking cat, cyborg rats, and government interlopers.

McConnell’s

on Mission

Wed., Apr. 20, 5 and 7:30pm, Plaza de Oro

Criminal (113 mins.; R) Convict Jericho Stewart (Kevin Costner) gets implanted with the memories and abilities of deceased CIA agent Bill Pope (Ryan Reynolds). Camino Real/Metro 4

Everybody Wants Some!! (117 mins., R) In this comedy written and directed by Richard Linklater (Dazed and Confused, the Before Sunrise trilogy), the year is 1980 in Texas, and a group of roller-skating, girl-ogling, college-aged men step into the uncharted waters of young adulthood. Paseo Nuevo

The Huntsman: Winter’s War (114 mins., PG-13) In this sequel to Snow White and the Huntsman, Eric (Chris Hemsworth) and Freya (Emily Blunt) unite forces to combat Freya’s wicked sister, Ravenna (Charlize Theron). Camino Real/Metro 4 (Opens Thu., Apr. 21)

NOW SHOWiNG 10 Cloverfield Lane (105 mins.; PG-13) It has a lot to live up to, this sequel to the brilliant, innovative and genuinely frightening Cloverfield. The personnel are beyond dream team; J.J. Abrams produced, brilliant directors Matt Reeves and Drew Goddard advised, and Damien (Whiplash) Chazelle worked the script over. And though it is subtly innovative, beginning with a mysterious abduction and morphing into phantasmagoria, the film is just mostly good. Mary Elizabeth Winstead and John Goodman star. (DJP) Fiesta 5 Barbershop: The Next Cut (112 mins.; PG-13)

Calvin and his crew are back, and changes abound. The barbershop is now coed, and the neighborhood has taken a turn for the worse. Once again it’s up to

ConT’d on p. 57 >>>

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Fri to Sun: 1:50, 7:00; H CRIMINAL E Fri to Sun: 11:30, Mon to Thu: 2:30, 7:50 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10; H EVERYBODY WANTS Mon to Thu: 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 SOME!! E Fri to Sun: 1:20, 4:00, 6:50, 9:35; Mon to Thu: 2:40, 5:20, 8:00 H THE JUNGLE BOOK IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D B 3:15, 5:45 EYE IN THE SKY E MY BIG FAT GREEK Fri to Sun: 1:40, 4:10, 6:40, 9:15; WEDDING 2 C Fri: 2:40, 5:15, Mon to Thu: 2:10, 5:00, 7:40 H THE JUNGLE BOOK B 7:45; Sat & Sun: 12:20, 2:40, 5:15, MY BIG FAT GREEK Fri: 11:10, 12:45, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 7:45; Mon to Thu: 2:40, 5:15, 7:45 8:15, 9:30; Sat & Sun: 10:15, 11:10, WEDDING 2 C Fri to Sun: 1:30, 3:50, 6:30, 8:50; 12:45, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 8:15, 9:30; ZOOTOPIA B Fri: 2:30, 5:00, Mon to Thu: 12:45, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, Mon to Thu: 2:20, 4:50, 7:30 7:30; Sat & Sun: 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, MIDNIGHT SPECIAL C 8:15, 9:30 7:30; Mon to Thu: 2:30, 5:00, 7:30 Fri to Sun: 4:20, 9:25; THE BOSS E 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, Mon to Thu: 5:10 PM RIVIERA 7:35, 10:00 ARLINGTON 2044 ALAMEDA PADRE SERRA, HARDCORE HENRY E SANTA BARBARA Fri to Wed: 4:30, 9:35; Thu: 4:30 PM

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BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE C Fri to Wed: 1:15, 3:00, 6:20, 9:25; Thu: 1:15, 3:00 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL C Fri to Wed: 12:25, 6:50; Thu: 12:25 PM

H THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR C H CRIMINAL E Fri to Sun: 1:20, Thu: 7:00, 8:30, 9:45 4:10, 7:00, 9:45; Mon to Thu: 2:20, 5:10, 7:50

newsletter

PASEO NUEVO

8 WEST DE LA GUERRA PLACE, SANTA BARBARA DEMOLITION E

H BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT C Fri: 2:50, 5:25, 8:00; Sat & Sun: 12:10, 2:50, 5:25, 8:00; Mon to Thu: 2:50, 5:25, 8:00

METRO 4

daily

H = NO PASSES

1317 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA

H THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: ROBERTO DEVEREUX I Sat: 9:55 AM BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE C Fri: 1:30, 4:45, 8:00; Sun to Thu: 1:30, 4:45, 8:00

FIESTA 5

916 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA

H BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT C Fri: 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:35; Sat & Sun: 11:00, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:35; Mon to Thu: 2:30, PLAZA DE ORO 5:10, 7:45 THE BOSS E Fri to Sun: 1:45, H THE JUNGLE BOOK IN 371 SOUTH HITCHCOCK WAY, 4:30, 7:10, 9:35; Mon to Thu: 2:45, DISNEY DIGITAL 3D B SANTA BARBARA 5:30, 8:00 Fri to Sun: 2:00, 4:40, 7:15; Mon to Thu: 3:00, 5:30 HARDCORE HENRY E H APRIL AND THE H THE JUNGLE BOOK B Fri to Sun: 1:10, 4:20, 6:50, 9:55; EXTRAORDINARY Fri: 12:10, 1:20, 2:45, 4:00, 5:20, Mon to Wed: 2:30, 5:20, 8:10; WORLD B Wed: 5:00, 7:30 6:40, 8:00, 9:10; Sat & Sun: 10:40, Thu: 2:30, 5:20 11:30, 12:10, 1:20, 2:45, 4:00, 5:20, KRISHA E 2:35 PM 6:40, 8:00, 9:10; Mon to Thu: 2:00, BATMAN V SUPERMAN: 4:00, 4:50, 6:40, 7:30 DAWN OF JUSTICE C MIRACLES FROM 10 CLOVERFIELD Fri to Sun: 12:45, 3:30, 6:40, 9:10; HEAVEN B Fri to Tue: 2:25, LANE C Fri to Sun: 9:45 PM; Mon to Wed: 2:00, 4:50, 7:40; 5:10, 7:45; Wed: 2:25, 7:45; Mon to Thu: 8:00 PM Thu: 2:00, 4:50 Thu: 2:25, 5:10, 7:45 ZOOTOPIA B Fri: 1:30, 4:10, H THE HUNTSMAN: EMBRACE OF THE 6:50, 9:20; Sat & Sun: 10:50, 1:30, WINTER’S WAR C SERPENT I Fri to Tue: 4:40, 4:10, 6:50, 9:20; Mon to Thu: 2:10, Thu: 7:25, 8:20 7:30; Wed: 4:40 PM; Thu: 4:40, 7:30 4:40, 7:15 CHECK OUT OUR NEW WEBSITE! www.metrotheatres.com 877-789-MOVIE


a&e | film & TV cONT’d fROM p. 55 family dynamics and the past demons that haunt them. Plaza de Oro Midnight Special (112 mins.; PG-13) Art film/thriller director Jeff Nichols (Take Shelter, Mud) returns with a film that feels more like a labor of love than a satisfying accomplishment. A troubled parent (Michael Shannon) and a former cop (Joel Edgerton) shuttle a young boy with strange powers across motel America by night, pursued by the FBI and a communal cult. The best performance in the stellar cast comes from Adam Driver as a slightly goofy federal agent, though everybody plays their part as if this bafflingly simple film was more than just a cross between Starman and Tomorrowland. Unfortunately it isn’t, though it has moments of eerie grace. (DJP) Camino Real/Paseo Nuevo

Midnight Special Calvin and his friends to save the community. Fiesta 5/Fairview Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice (151 mins.; PG-13) It’s hard to believe a film this stupid could have been produced by a studio that reviews products before release. Make no mistake, this is a product. Basically, it’s a half-assed reimagining of the DC heroes borrowed from Frank Miller’s 1980s Dark Knight comics, the beloved heroes turned into simpering, self-reflective, and violent dopes. The action scenes, when they finally occur, are murky and boring. Most pertinent of all, the plot hinges on the fact that both superheroes had mommies named Martha: superdumb. (DJP) Arlington (2D)/Camino Real (2D)/ Metro 4 (2D)

The Boss (99 mins.; R) After doing time for insider trading, formerly ultra-wealthy Michelle Darnell (Melissa McCarthy) tries to keep her chin (which is always partially sheathed in the glitziest of turtlenecks) up as she navigates life as a former felon with zero cash. In order to rise from the ashes, Darnell must depend upon her belabored former assistant, Claire (Kristen Bell), with whom she partners in a get-rich scheme involving getting a Girl Scout–esque troop to hustle baked goods. While McCarthy, brilliant comedian that she is, scores a few big laughs, The Boss is predictable and has a few too many physical gags that (literally) fall flat. (NC) Camino Real/Metro 4

from different eras blundering into cultural labyrinths. A cross between Heart of Darkness and 2001: A Space Odyssey, Guerra’s film is painstakingly gorgeous all the way through, but although art films are allowed to be slow and loose — this clocks in at two hours but feels longer — they still need to feel tightly woven with meanings. Be patient. His jungle demon dreams will infiltrate your own. (DJP) Plaza de Oro Eye in the Sky (102 mins.; R) Helen Mirren and the late Alan Rickman star in this film that addresses the moral, political, and personal dilemmas of drone warfare. Paseo Nuevo Hardcore Henry (96 mins.; R) Sharlto Copley and Tim Roth star in this action film shot in first-person format, with viewers seeing everything through the eyes of Henry, who is brought back from death as a cybernetic super-soldier. Camino Real/Metro 4 Hello, My Name Is Doris (95 mins.; R) Inspired by a motivational speaker, Doris (Sally Field) decides to pursue a May-December romance. Riviera Krisha (83 mins.; R) Based on the short film of the same name, this full-length dramady explores

Miracles from Heaven (109 mins.; PG) Based on Christy Beam’s memoir, this Christian-themed film tells the story of Beam’s young daughter, who has a neardeath experience and then fully recovers from a life-threatening illness. Plaza de Oro

My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 (94 mins.; PG-13)

Nia Vardalos and John Corbett reprise their roles as Toula and Ian, now parents to a daughter, Paris, who is about to go off to college. The big Greek family then discovers that Toula’s parents were never officially married. A big fat wedding gets underway. Fairview/Paseo Nuevo

O Zootopia

(108 mins.; PG)

A wildly vibrant, joyfully clever romp with a serious heart, this wonderful movie is as marvelous and mature as computer-animated menageries get. The youngest mammals among us will delight in the adorable characters, but elder beasts will see it for its potently politic and inclusive 2016 themes. Disney here is planting seeds in young minds in the hopes of a better tomorrow. This is more than a kids’ movie — this is a statement. (RD) Fairview (2D)/Fiesta 5 (2D)

“Brilliantly clever, inventive and funny.” The Guardian (U.K.) His laugh-out-loud satire and engrossing storytelling have won him an avid following worldwide. A must-see evening for humor fans! (Mature content) Books will be available for purchase and signing at the event

SUN, MAY 1 / 7 PM (note special time) ARLINGTON THEATRE Tickets start at $25 / $19 UCSB students An Arlington facility fee will be added to each ticket price

(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Arlington event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 963-4408

Demolition (100 mins.; R) After losing his wife, Davis Mitchell (Jake Gyllenhaal) struggles to return to normalcy after he realizes that what was once normal to him — his sleek home, his gig as an investment banker at his father-in-law’s firm, etc.— doesn’t make him feel alive. In order to feel something, Davis takes a sledgehammer to everything in his life: his refrigerator, his desktop computer, and his marriage to his late wife, among other things. While Demolition boasts a winning cast and some fascinating moments, its use of metaphor is a bit too heavy-handed. (NC) Paseo Nuevo

®

Roberto tto Devere rreux Donizetti

SAT A AT T T,, APR 16, 9:55 AM

M da Ma d ma Buttetterrffflfly ly Puccini

SUN, APR 17, 2 PM

O Embrace of the Serpent (125 mins.; NR)

Colombian director Ciro Guerra takes us on a slow, black-and-white tour of the Amazon River basin, sliding between tales of two white scientists

Demolition

The following films are playing in Santa Barbara FRIDAY, APRIL 15, through THURSDAY, APRIL 21. Descriptions followed by initials — DJP (D.J. Palladino), NC (Natalia Cohen), RD (Richie DeMaria) — have been taken from our critics’ reviews, which can be read in full at independent.com. The symbol O indicates the film is recommended.

THE MET: L

IVE AND UP-CLOSE ON THE

BIG SCREEN Sondra Radvanovsky as Queen Elizabeth I independent.com

HAHN HALL | 1070 Fairway Road

TICKETS | 969-8787 musicacademy.org/metlive

aPrIl 14, 2016

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S.B. County SuperviSorS

ForuM 2016 Hosted by

Santa Barbara vintners and The Santa Barbara Independent

Spirit ofAuditions Fiesta

Enjoy performances from some of the most talented young dancers in Santa Barbara as they compete to become the 2016 Spirit and Junior Spirit of Fiesta!

Saturday, April 16, 2016 12pm

WHA : WHAt A lively forum on agriculture, wine, tourism, and more.

La Cumbre Junior High School 2255 Modoc Rd, Santa Barbara

WHo: All candidates running for county supervisor have been invited; moderated by The Independent’s Kelsey Brugger and Matt Kettmann.

Tickets: $25 Tickets are available online at www.sbfiesta.org

WHen: Thursday, April 28, 6 p.m., with wine and networking reception to follow

WHere: Hotel Corque, 400 Alisal Road, Solvang

CoSt: Forum is free; reception is $25. rSvp: independent.com/forum2016 Co-Sponsored by: visit Santa ynez valley & Solvang Chamber of Commerce

www.sbfiesta.org • 805.962.8101 SANTA BARBARA VINTNERS

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a&e | Rob bRezsny’s fRee will astRology week of apRil 14 ARIES

CANCER

LIBRA

(Mar. 21-Apr. 19): “When I discover who I am, I’ll be free,” said novelist Ralph Ellison. Would you consider making that a paramount theme in the coming weeks? Will you keep it in the forefront of your mind and be vigilant for juicy clues that might show up in the experiences headed your way? In suggesting that you do, I’m not guaranteeing that you will gather numerous extravagant insights about your true identity and thereby achieve a blissful eruption of total liberation. But I suspect that at the very least you will understand previously hidden mysteries about your primal nature. And as they come into focus, you will indeed be led in the direction of cathartic emancipation.

(June 21-July 22): According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you are close to tapping into hidden powers, dormant talents, and future knowledge. Truths that have been off-limits are on the verge of catching your attention and revealing themselves. Secrets you have been concealing from yourself are ready to be plucked and transformed. And now I will tell you a trick you can use that will enable you to fully cash in on these pregnant possibilities: Don’t adopt a passive wait-and-see attitude. Don’t expect everything to happen on its own. Instead, be a willful magician who aggressively collects and activates the potential gifts.

(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Adyashanti is my favorite mindscrambling philosopher. One of his doses of crazy wisdom is just what you need to hear right now. “Whatever you resist you become,” he says. “If you resist anger, you are always angry. If you resist sadness, you are always sad. If you resist suffering, you are always suffering. If you resist confusion, you are always confused. We think that we resist certain states because they are there, but actually they are there because we resist them.” Can you wrap your imagination around Adyashanti’s counsel, Libra? I hope so, because the key to dissipating at least some of the dicey stuff that has been tweaking you lately is to STOP RESISTING IT!

TAURUS

LEO

SCORPIO

(Apr. 20-May 20): “We never know the wine we are becoming while we are being crushed like grapes,” said author Henri Nouwen. I don’t think that’s true in your case, Taurus. Any minute now, you could get a clear intuition about what wine you will ultimately turn into once the grape-crushing stage ends. So my advice is to expect that clear intuition. Once you’re in possession of it, I bet the crushing will begin to feel more like a massage — maybe even a series of strong but tender caresses.

(July 23-Aug. 22): This would be a perfect moment to give yourself a new nickname like “Sugar Pepper” or “Honey Chili” or “Itchy Sweet.” It’s also a favorable time to explore the joys of running in slow motion or getting a tattoo of a fierce howling bunny or having gentle sex standing up. This phase of your cycle is most likely to unfold with maximum effectiveness if you play along with its complicated, sometimes paradoxical twists and turns. The more willing you are to celebrate life’s riddles as blessings in disguise, the more likely you’ll be to use the riddles to your advantage.

(Oct. 23-Nov. 21): During every election season, media pundits exult in criticizing candidates who have altered their opinions about important issues. This puzzles me. In my understanding, an intelligent human is always learning new information about how the world works and is therefore constantly evolving his or her beliefs and ideas. I don’t trust people who stubbornly cling to all of their musty dogmas. I bring this to your attention, Scorpio, because the coming weeks will be an especially ripe time for you to change your mind about a few things, some of them rather important. Be alert for the cues and clues that will activate dormant aspects of your wisdom. Be eager to see further and deeper.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your sustaining mantra for the coming weeks comes from Swedish poet Tomas Tranströmer: “I am not empty; I am open.” Say that aloud whenever you’re inclined to feel lonely or lost. “I am not empty; I am open.” Whisper it to yourself as you wonder about the things that used to be important but no longer are.“I am not empty; I am open.” Allow it to loop through your imagination like a catchy song lyric whenever you’re tempted to feel melancholy about vanished certainties or unavailable stabilizers or missing fillers. “I am not empty; I am open.”

Homework: Let’s meet in dreams sometime soon. Describe to me the adventures you’d like us to have together. Freewillastrology .com.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Right about now you might be feeling a bit extreme, maybe even zealous or melodramatic. I wouldn’t be surprised if you were tempted to make outlandish expostulations similar to those that the poet Arthur Rimbaud articulated in one of his histrionic poems: “What beast must I worship? What sacred images should I destroy? What hearts shall I break? What lies am I supposed to believe?” I encourage you to articulate salty sentiments like these in the coming days — with the understanding that by venting your intensity you won’t need to actually act it all out in real life. In other words, allow your fantasy life and creative artistry to be boisterous outlets for emotions that shouldn’t necessarily get translated into literal behavior.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Friedrich Nietzsche published his first book, The Birth of Tragedy, in 1872, when he was 28 years old. In 1886, he put out a revised edition that included a preface entitled “An Attempt at Self-Criticism.” In this unprecedented essay, he said that he now found his text “clumsy and embarrassing, its images frenzied and confused, sentimental, uneven in pace, so sure of its convictions that it is above any need for proof.” And yet he also glorified The Birth of Tragedy, praising it for its powerful impact on the world, for its “strange knack of seeking out its fellow-revelers and

enticing them on to new secret paths and dancingplaces.” In accordance with the astrological omens, Sagittarius, I invite you to engage in an equally brave and celebratory re-evaluation of some of your earlier life and work.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Go back to where you started and learn to love it more.” So advised Thaddeus Golas in his book The Lazy Man’s Guide to Enlightenment. I think that’s exactly what you should do right now, Capricorn. To undertake such a quest would reap long-lasting benefits. Here’s what I propose: First, identify three dreams that are important for your future. Next, brainstorm about how you could return to the roots of your relationships with them. Finally, reinvigorate your love for those dreams. Supercharge your excitement about them.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “What am I doing here in mid-air?” asks Ted Hughes in his poem “Wodwo.” Right about now you might have an urge to wonder that yourself. The challenging part of your situation is that you’re unanchored, unable to find a firm footing. The fun part is that you have an unusual amount of leeway to improvise and experiment. Here’s a suggestion: Why not focus on the fun part for now? You just may find that doing so will minimize the unsettled feelings. I suspect that as a result you will also be able to accomplish some interesting and unexpected work.

PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): How many fireflies would you have to gather together in order to create a light as bright as the sun? Entomologist Cole Gilbert estimates the number to be 14,286,000,000. That’s probably beyond your ability to accomplish, Pisces, so I don’t recommend you attempt it. But I bet you could pull off a more modest feat with a similar theme: accumulating a lot of small influences that add up to a big effect. Now is an excellent time to capitalize on the power of gradual, incremental progress.

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.

18+ Onlyy

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Employment Accounting/ Bookkeeping

EXTRAMURAL FUNDS ACCOUN­TANT

BUSINESS & FINANCIAL SERVICES Reviews assigned new and continu‑ ing awards to be processed through the Extramural Funds (EMF) unit of the accounting office, for specific guidelines, reconciles indirect costs, and establishes new funds and account‑funds for sponsoring agen‑ cies. Prepares invoices for billing to sponsoring agencies on a monthly basis. Prepares quarterly and final reporting to Federal and Non‑Federal agencies, as well as award closeout procedures as assigned. Files pay‑ ment documentation for checks and wires into award files. Disseminates, reviews, and tracks Annual Project Contribution Reports to support cost share documentation on Federal grants. Disseminates electronic Close Letters & Overdraft Notices. Researches credit deposits of $500+ and coordinates with departments for appropriateness. Reqs: B.A. degree in Accounting or equivalent plus 2 years of relevant accounting experience, or equivalent combination of educa‑ tion and experience. Demonstrated proficiency in Excel. Analytical skills and the ability to communicate effec‑ tively. Excellent customer service skills. Ability to perform multiple tasks, simultaneously with frequent inter‑ ruptions. Desirable: Knowledgeable of specific agency policy, specific agency databases, and fund accounting. Knowledgeable of UC policies. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Occasional overtime during peak periods. No vacation time during month of July. $21.43 ‑ $24.00/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer. All quali‑ fied applicants will receive consider‑ ation for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabili‑ ties. Open until filled. Apply online at https:­//jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20150425

data backup/recovery, directory ser‑ vices, file sharing, and network con‑ nectivity. Researches new technolo‑ gies and solutions, develops strategic priorities, and represents the College in IT matters with vendors, campus units and extramural agencies. Works on the development and implementa‑ tion of long‑term strategic vision of IT services as well as funding pri‑ orities in the College. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent combination of education and work experience. 5‑7 years demonstrated leadership, ana‑ lytic, problem‑solving, and interper‑ sonal and communication skills. Expert level knowledge in Linux system and network administration and able to continue to develop skills to imple‑ ment, manage and support emerging technologies. Ability to work directly with supported units and other mem‑ bers of senior support staff to ensure services are provided and expectations met. Working knowledge of more than one programming language. Expert level knowledge of configura‑ tion management and orchestration tools. Experience with LDAP admin‑ istration and virtualization. Desired: Note: Fingerprinting required. Salary is commensurate with experience. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employ‑ ment without regard to race, color,

religion, sex, sexual orientation, gen‑ der identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 4/17/16, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20160142

TO OUR COMMUNITIES.

SCIENTIFIC WEB DE­VELOPER/ DESIGNER

NATIONAL CENTER FOR ECOLOGICAL ANALYSIS AND SYNTHESIS Works to help design, create, and deploy materials that communicate moderate to complex scientific find‑ ings about ecological and environ‑ mental research efforts at the Center. Responsibilities will be primarily but not exclusively Web‑based, including potentially other digital technology delivery mechanisms (e.g. Ebooks). Principal duties involve “full stack” Web skills, including: web/graphics design; front‑end development and deployment; user experience evalua‑ tion; and creation of end‑user docu‑ mentation, and outreach and train‑ ing materials. Also configuration and use of leading Content Management

Computer/Tech

The County is hiring! DIRECTOR, ENGI­NEERING COMPUT­ING INFRASTRUC­TURE

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Provides expert technical and admin‑ istrative leadership and oversight to the College of Engineering in the planning, budgeting, design, policy development, implementation, and management of information tech‑ nologies to meet the research, educa‑ tional, and administrative goals of the College. Serves as a senior member of the support team and is responsible for and has a direct role in imple‑ menting, administering, supporting, and enhancing the College’s critical services used by its business, instruc‑ tional, and research groups including: electronic messaging, web services,

COMMITMENT Because we care for our neighbors. A career at Cottage Health is an experience in caring for and about the people who call our coastal area of California home. Our not-for-profit health system identifies closely with the communities we serve and has a long tradition of providing area residents with highly personalized, clinically excellent care. Patients aren’t just patients here – they’re neighbors. Be there for them through one of the openings below.

Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital Nursing • Administrative Director – Surgical Services • Bed Control Coordinator (RN) • Birth Center • Cath Lab/IR • Clinical Manager – Telemetry • Clinical Nurse Specialist • Clinical Quality Consultant • CNC – Surgery • Educator – Surgery • Electrophysiology • Emergency Psych Supervisor • Emergency Psychiatric • Infection Control Practitioner • Manager – Cardiology • Manager – Endoscopy • Manager – Palliative Care • Manager – Surgical Trauma • Med/Surg – Float Pool • Neurology/Urology • NICU • Nurse Practitioner – Nights • Nursing Administration RN Coordinator • Orthopedics • PACU • Peds • PICU • Psych – Per Diem • Pulmonary Renal • SICU • Surgery • Surgical Trauma • Telemetry

Clinical • Medical Assistant – VENTURA Peds Clinic • Telemetry Technician

The County employs over 4000 employees in jobs from entry level to executive! Visit our website for a list of current openings:

www.sbcountyjobs.com

Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital

Allied Health • Behavioral Health Clinician – Per Diem • Chemical Dependency Technician • Dietitian – Per Diem • Echocardiographer – Per Diem • Pharmacy Tech – Per Diem • Speech Language Pathologist II – Per Diem • Surgical Tech

• • • • •

Cottage Business Services

Non-Clinical • Administrative Assistant – Technical Services • Administrative Director – Surgical Services • Catering Set-up – Part-Time • Concierge • Cook – Part-Time • Director – IT Security • Director – Population Health Analytics • Environmental Services Rep • Environmental Services Supervisor • EPIC Clinical Analyst (Optime and CPOE) • EPIC Clinical Analyst, Sr. (Optime and CPOE) • Food Service Rep • Integration Analyst – HIE • Inventory Technician • Security Officer • Sr. Administrative Assistant – Research • System Support Specialist, Onbase • Systems Support Analyst – Supply Chain • Teacher II – Infant/Toddler – Part-Time

Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital • • • • •

Lifeguard Occupational Therapist – Per Diem Personal Care Attendant – Villa Riviera Physical Therapist II Recreation Therapist

• Content Writer • Financial Analyst – Revenue Cycle • Patient Financial Counselor – Admitting – Per Diem • Patient Financial Counselor II – Credit/ Collections – Full-Time • Supervisor – Admitting • Supervisor – Patient Business Services

Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital • • • • •

CNC – Nursing Administration CRN – ICU – Nights/Days RN – ED – Nights/Days RN – ICU – Nights/Days RN – Med/Surg – Per Diem

Pacific Diagnostic Laboratories • • • • • • • • • •

Account Manager – Sales Certified Phlebotomy Techs Clinical Lab Scientists – Nights/Evenings CLS Lab Supervisor Histotechnician Lab Assistant II – Central Processing & Core Lab – Part-Time Lab Manager – Blood Bank (CLS) Sales Rep – Lab Sales Support Rep Transfusion Safety Coordinator

• Please apply to: www.pdllabs.com

CLS – Day/Evening Pharmacy Tech – Per Diem Radiology Tech – Per Diem RN – ED – Per Diem RN – Med/Surg – Per Diem

• 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?

Please apply online at jobs.cottagehealth.org. 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 reference “SBI” when applying. EOE

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Employment Systems such as Drupal or Wordpress; Web‑related technologies such as HTML, CSS, PHP, JavaScript (e.g. JQuery, D3), JSON, and XML; and graphics production software such as Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign. Knowledge of RDBMS, SQL, ER mod‑ eling, and RDF useful, as is familiarity with a programming language (e.g. Python, Java, “R”). Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Sciences, Digital Media or relevant area, or equivalent combination of education and experi‑ ence. Strong interpersonal and com‑ munication skills for interaction with highly technical as well as non‑tech‑ nical audience. Demonstrated profi‑ ciency in diagramming and prototyp‑ ing Web sites using design tools, and in practices and tools necessary to build robust, appealing Web sites sup‑ porting understanding of potentially complex, multi‑disciplinary environ‑ mental insights. $60,691‑$84,929/yr. Notes: Fingerprinting required. This is a career appointment with an end date of one year after hire date. Possibility of continued appointment is dependent upon grant funding. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employ‑ ment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gen‑ der identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 4/21/16, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20160165 Software Engineer at Citrix in Goleta, CA. Design, develop, test, troubleshoot & debug complex soft‑ ware applications. Set operational specifications & analyze software requirements to guide direction of design & implementation. Requires bachelors degree or foreign equiva‑ lent in computer science, computer engineering, electrical engineering or related tech field & 5 yrs of pro‑ gressive, post‑baccalaureate software development exp. Must pass company technical review. Mail resumes to: Citrix, c/o A. Gonzalez, Job Code C160301, 851 W Cypress Creek Rd., Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33309.

General Full-Time

ASSOCIATE TECHNI­CAL ACCOUNT MAN­AGER

Associate Technical Account Managers at Yardi will provide consultative, implementation and technical support to a group of assigned Yardi clients in order to manage business operations and financial accounting functions in Yardi’s Voyager software. Responsibilities • Implements the Yardi suite of soft‑ ware products by assisting clients with system implementation, training, and technical support • Researches, analyzes and resolves software issues •Supports software product custom‑ ization based on client requirements • Performs data mapping and con‑ versions • Performs system and business pro‑ cess reviews and other service reviews and makes recommendations on best practices • Works on a regular basis with Yardi internal resource teams to include: training, conversion, sales and devel‑ opment Requirements • Bachelor’s degree in Economics, Business, Math, Statistics or Information Management preferred • Experience setting and managing client expectations • Superior verbal and written com‑ munication skills • Project Management, Accounting, or Property Management experience/ background • Solid Proficiency in MS Office Suite

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and Outlook • Knowledge in three of the fol‑ lowing areas: Property Management, Accounting, Microsoft Windows, Technical Support, SQL, HTML/ASP • Prior experience with property man‑ agement software or real estate soft‑ ware highly desirable • Prior experience with Yardi software highly desirable • Regular attendance and a regular work schedule is an essential function of this job. EOE/Race/Gender/Disability/Vets

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 cece‑ lia@cnpa.com or fax 916‑288‑6022. No phone calls please! (Cal‑ SCAN)

Hospitality/ Restaurant

PLEASE APPLY TO: http://www.yardi.­ com/about‑us/career‑opportunities/ ATTN: CDL Drivers – Avg. $60k+/yr. $2k Sign‑On Bonus. Family Company w/ Great Miles. Love Your Job and Your Truck. CDL‑A Required – (877) 258‑8782 drive4melton.com (Cal‑SCAN)

SOFTWARE DEVEL­OPMENT ENGINEER I

Yardi Systems is currently hiring for a Software Development Engineer I to join their growing product development team! The Software Development Engineer I analyzes, modifies and debugs existing applica‑ tions. Detailed responsibilities include the following: • Modifies, implements, and main‑ tains an existing application to estab‑ lished standards, specifications and approved changes. Performs main‑ tenance programming for existing versions. Uses corporate approved CRM systems to track cases, defects and resolutions. Explains defect reso‑ lutions to the Team Leader. Uses corporate approved integrated devel‑ opment environment (e.g., Visual Studios, Eclipse) to implement defect resolutions. • Performs unit testing on his/her defect resolutions to ensure accuracy, integrity, interoperability and com‑ pleteness to achieve desired results. Analyzes and documents reasons for test failures, and revises/debugs assigned programs and/or procedures as necessary. • Learns and increases knowledge of a single domain and best prac‑ tices. Expands technical and industry expertise. • Uses corporate approved sourced control applications (e.g., Microsoft Team Foundations) to maintain code changes. • Adheres to Department policies, procedures and standards in the development and implementation of software. Successful candidates will meet the following criteria: • Bachelor’s Degree in Computer/ Engineering Science or equivalent experience • Independent problem solving and analysis skills • Clear, effective verbal and written communication skills • Good time management skills • Ability to meet critical deadlines and prioritize multiple tasks in a fast‑paced environment • Strong team orientation with the desire and ability to establish coop‑ erative working relationships with employees at all levels within Yardi, outside of Yardi, and with clients • Familiarity with one of the follow‑ ing computer programming language (VB.NET, Java, Java Script, C#) • Experience with relationship data‑ bases (SQL Server, Oracle) • Experience with accounting systems • Experience with Web applications • Understanding of property manage‑ ment industry

DINNER COOK

PORTOLA DINING COMMONS Performs culinary duties such as pre‑ paring soups and casseroles, grilling, roasting or barbequing, sautéing, and preparing made‑to‑order entrées serving up to 1,500 meals per shift. Ensures that assigned responsibili‑ ties are accomplished and that high standards of food quality, service, sanitation and safety are met at all times. Assists with student train‑ ing, food production and sanitation. Reqs: HS diploma and minimum of one year culinary experience in a high‑volume culinary environment; or an equivalent combination of educa‑ tion and experience. Knowledge of and experience with culinary tech‑ niques, including sautéing, grilling, frying, steaming, preparing sauces and stocks. Experience working with commercial kitchen equipment and preparing large quantities. Ability to perform and teach standard quan‑ tity culinary techniques. Knowledge of state and federal safety and sani‑ tation regulations regarding proper handling, storing, cooking and hold‑ ing temperatures and proper use and cleaning of kitchen equipment. Supervisory skills to train and oversee the work of students. Ability to ana‑ lyze recipes, recognize problems and make corrections as needed. Ability to perform basic mathematical calcula‑ tions needed for recipe development and other required functions. Verbal and written understanding and abil‑ ity to communicate in English. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Must be able to lift up to 50 pounds and work standing up to 8 hours during shift. $16.03‑$17.71/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive con‑ sideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, pro‑ tected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. Apply by 04/24/16. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20160167

Medical/Healthcare

INFANT/TODDLER TEACHER

Join the team of Early Educational pro‑ fessionals who care for our employ‑ ee’s children @ the Orfalea Children’s Center @ Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital. This is a part‑time benefited position, M‑F, approximately 30 hours per week for an experienced Infant/ Toddler teacher. Preferred candidates will have 2+ years of experience with infants and toddlers. We require a minimum of 24 units in ECE, three of which must be specifically in infant/ toddler development. We are looking for a warm and enthusiastic teacher who is well versed in implementing infant/toddler curriculum and is able to build strong and positive relation‑ ships with children, families and team EOE/Race/Gender/Disability/Vets members. Lab teaching experience is PLEASE APPLY TO: http://www.yardi.­ a plus and knowledge of the RIE and Reggio philosophies is helpful. com/about‑us/career‑opportunities/ 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)

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Cottage Health offers an excellent compensation package that includes above market salaries, premium medical benefits, pension plans, and tax savings accounts. Salary range depends on education and experi‑

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Please apply online at: http://www.cottagehealth.org/careers/

ASSISTANT DIREC­TOR RN‑Eye Center Cottage Health seeks an experienced acute care RN for their nationally recognized Eye Center. Surgical pro‑ cedures include cataract and retinal procedures, as well as laser assisted surgery, posterior capsulotomy, pan retinal photocoagulation, strabismus, oculoplastic, iridotomy and trabecu‑ lotomy procedures. We also do a variety of others outpatient proce‑ dures such as Tilt Table studies, TEE, Cardioversions and bone marrow biopsies. The Eye Center supports a multidisciplinary approach to patient care and provides an environment of learning and professional growth for staff development. The ideal candi‑ date will have 1+ years’ experience in ophthalmic surgery. We offer an excellent compensation package that includes above‑market salaries, premium medical benefits, optimal staffing ratio and a good life/ work balance. Please apply online at www.cottagehealth.org. EOE

Room Service Server Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital is currently hiring for part‑time Room Service Server in our Dietary Department. Will be responsible for delivering patient meals and will assist patients and family members in plac‑ ing meal orders. Will record food intake when patient tray is picked‑up. Must be able to communicate effec‑ tively and follow oral and written instructions. Cottage Health offers an excellent compensation package that includes above market salaries; premium medi‑ cal benefits, pension plans, and tax savings accounts. Please apply online at: www.cottagehealth.org.

CHILD CARE CENTER Assumes responsibility for the daily operation of the Centers for the Infant/Toddler/ Preschool Programs. Meets the daily Center staffing requirements, plans the Center’s staff development program, supervises and evaluates Program Coordinator staff, maintains NAEYC accreditation guide‑ lines, and meeting State Department of Social Services licensing standards. Facilitates communication between Coordinators, teachers and parents and Director. Promotes a multicultural/ anti‑bias community environment that supports the mission of the University and reflects the diverse population served by the Children’s Center. In the Director’s absence, and under general direction, assumes full responsibility for the operation of the Children’s Center. Advises campus administrators on significant problems that may arise and collaborates with various campus program directors and campus per‑ sonnel to find appropriate solutions. Reqs: Must possess working knowl‑ edge of the Children’s Center budget, and fiscal operation and have familiar‑ ity with the California Department of Education contracts, in order to make appropriate decisions when necessary. BA in Child Development, Early Childhood Education or related field or equivalent combination of education and experience. 3 years administrative experience in ECE. Early Childhood classroom teaching experience. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Hold or qualify for Child Development Director’s Permit issued by the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing. Must hold and maintain Pediatric First Aid and Infant‑Adult CPR certificate. Clear TB test results. Criminal Record and Child Abuse Index Clearance. Mandated reporting requirements of child abuse. $4,600‑$5,200/mo. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive con‑ sideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, pro‑ tected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. Apply by 4/26/16. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20160158

EOE

Sr. Department As­sistant Cottage Health seeks a part‑time Sr. Department Assistant to support the Orfalea Children’s Center at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital. This is a unique early morning front desk posi‑ tion. The optimal candidate will not only have the required clerical skills but will also be a warm personality capable of making strong connections with the families and children in our program and willing to spend time helping out in classrooms as needed. To that end, we are looking for an individual who has experience with young children and preferably has at least 6 units in Early Childhood Education The position also requires proficiency in MS 2010 PowerPoint, Word, Excel and Outlook; min. typing speed 45+ wpm; 2+ years’ administrative assis‑ tant experience. The shift is Monday – Friday, 6:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.­m Cottage Health offers an excellent compensation package that includes above market salaries; premium medi‑ cal benefits, pension plans, and tax savings accounts. Please apply online at: www.cottagehealth.org. EOE

CONDUCT OFFICER

OFFICE OF JUDICIAL AFFAIRS Serves as a conduct officer for com‑ plex academic and behavioral student misconduct cases. Provides input and assistance with some of the most challenging cases in which an accused student is struggling with a mental health issue. Responsible for assessing student conduct issues off campus and recommends revisions to cur‑ rent initiatives and programs. Analyzes qualitative data. Confers with the Assistant Dean/Interim Director of Judicial Affairs, as well as local officials and other campus leadership. Seeks student input. Assesses environmental factors contributing to student mis‑ conduct issues in the community of Isla Vista. Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree in Education, Counseling, or other relat‑ ed field, or equivalent combination of education of experience. Strong inter‑ personal skills to interact with clients on the phone as well as in person to ascertain the nature of the concern or conflict. Strong analytical and com‑ puter skills for the collecting, coding, and recording of conduct information with speed and accuracy. Experience working with faculty, as well as a sensitivity to the political climate and campus and community cultural sub‑groups, and an ability to develop successful collaborations across orga‑ nizational boundaries. This position entails a high degree of indepen‑ dence, sound judgment, discretion, and confidentiality. Notes: Occasional

evenings and weekends may be required. Fingerprinting required. Mandated reporting requirements of child abuse. $50,177 ‑ $55,000/ yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, reli‑ gion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law includ‑ ing protected veterans and individu‑ als with disabilities. Open until filled. Apply online at https:­//jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20150637

FINANCIAL MAN­AGER

STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE Responsible for analyzing long‑range needs assessments, evaluating policies and procedures, drawing conclusions and making recommendations con‑ cerning the general direction of the department’s complex and growing $21+ million budget. Must conduct financial planning and forecast‑ ing while taking into consideration changes in income and responding to current and emerging fiscal chal‑ lenges that include budget reductions and medical inflation. Oversees the fiscal performance of UC insurance and supervises the insurance advis‑ er office and billing staff. Oversees the department payroll and benefit costs, deploying staffing expenditures across available funds with the intent of minimizing the impact of such expenses on departmental budgets and supervises the Payroll Officer. Reqs: Experience in financial manage‑ ment in large institution with at least 5 years or equivalent combination of education and experience in account‑ ing and fiscal management. Advanced professional experience in payroll, per‑ sonnel, budget analysis, administra‑ tion, and supervision. Advanced expe‑ rience with MS Excel, financial and personnel payroll systems, and time management software experience. Ability to maintain a high level of con‑ fidentiality. Ability to exercise initia‑ tive and independent judgment while overseeing complex projects. Desired: Experience in financial and insur‑ ance management in healthcare set‑ ting. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Student Health is closed between the Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays. Any HIPAA/ FERPA viola‑ tion is subject to disciplinary action. $4,600 ‑ $6,441­/mo. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive con‑ sideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, pro‑ tected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. Open until filled. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20160096 Management Assistant The City of Goleta is seeking a quali‑ fied individual to perform entry level administrative work in support of the Neighborhood Services and Public Safety Department. City application is required by April 28, 2016. Faxes or emails are not accepted. Complete descriptions and applications are avail‑ able at www.­cityofgoleta.org.

SENIOR PUBLICA­TIONS COORDINA­TOR

UCSB EXTENSION Responsible for creating, monitoring and enforcing scheduling for the pro‑ duction of all UCSB Extension market‑ ing jobs, including brochures, flyers, newspaper advertising, email market‑ ing, web and social media postings, press releases and the production of any other promotional materi‑ als. Directly manages every aspect of the job production process which entails establishing realistic dates for production, intervening and mediat‑ ing when dates are not being met,

enforcing quality standards from ven‑ dors, estimating costs for services and troubleshooting when actual costs exceed estimates. Manages mailings and understands and enforces US Postal regulations for domestic and international marketing campaigns. Implements marketing e‑mailings after extracting appropriate lists from the corporate database. Administers the in‑house marketing data, list purchases, and email/contact lists. Negotiates for and secures the pur‑ chases of contact lists, updating the in‑house database. Reqs: Bachelor’­ s Degree and/or equivalent combination of education and work experience. Microsoft office suite, experience with cloud‑based software, social media, FileMaker or other database prod‑ uct. Project management experience, general knowledge of marketing prin‑ ciples. Strong communications skills, written and oral. Note: Fingerprinting required. $21.86 ‑ $25.75/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employ‑ ment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gen‑ der identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 4/21/16, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20160164 Sr. Office Specialist The City of Goleta is seeking qualified individuals to perform a full range of advanced level clerical duties and a variety of administrative support tasks. City application is required by April 28, 2016. Faxes or emails are not accepted. Complete descriptions and applications are available at www.­ cityofgoleta.org.

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“The Movie Room” – is there room for more?

KiLL BeD BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killers/ Kit. Complete Treatment System. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com (Cal‑SCAN) KiLL SCorpionS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Effective results begin after spray dries. Odorless, Long Lasting, Non‑Staining. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com (Cal‑SCAN) SwitCH to DIRECTV and get a $100 Gift Card. FREE Whole‑Home Genie HD/DVR upgrade. Starting at $19.99/ mo. New Customers Only. Don’t settle for cable. Call Now 1‑800‑385‑9017 (CalSCAN)

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Winn Dixie has been waiting for her forever home for a while now! She’s very sensitive, but would make a great companion for an older person.

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Nina is a very sweet little girl. She’s only about 18 months old and would be a great member of any home!

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These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home

These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home

across

1 Charlie Brown’s oath 5 Acquisition by marriage 10 Library vols. 13 Songstress Shore 14 “The West Wing” actress ___ Kelly 15 Exercise unit 16 She starred in 2002’s “Panic Room” 18 Shiba ___ (Japanese dog breed) 19 It keeps pages from flying everywhere 20 Certain orthodontic device 22 Hardwood trees 24 Keep from escaping 25 Republican presidential candidate Marco 28 “Rock-hard” muscles 31 “Boyz N the Hood” actress Long 32 Devoured 33 Awake into the wee hours 36 Big game show prize, maybe 39 Circulation improver 40 He played the central unifying character in 1995’s “Four Rooms” 42 Reduction site 43 Pad prik king cuisine 45 Country with a red, white and blue flag 46 “Alley-___!” 47 Agcy. concerned with fraud 49 Bill ___, the Science Guy 50 Po, in a 2016 sequel, e.g. 52 How walkers travel 55 1850s litigant Scott 57 Rainy-day boots 60 “Keep Portland Weird” state

35 H, as in Greek 37 Apple MP3 player 38 P, in the NATO phonetic alphabet 41 “The Five People You Meet in Heaven” publisher 44 “___ know what it’s like ...” 48 Olympics broadcaster Bob 51 “___ Fideles” 52 Architectural rib 53 Tennis champ Rafael 54 Primrose protector 56 Use 62-Down 58 Austen title matchmaker Major uproar 59 Skyline haze Time-half link 61 Right turns, horsewise Asian capital nicknamed the 62 Sculling needs City of Azaleas 63 “Rapa-___” (1994 Easter Island Fork over film) “According to me,” in shorthand 66 2222 and 2468, e.g., briefly Small bite

64 Chemistry suffix 65 He wrote, directed, and starred in the 2003 cult film “The Room” 67 Short cleaner? 68 Jouster’s outfit 69 Ferrell’s cheerleading partner on “SNL” 70 Antlered animal 71 Bumps in the road 72 Loch of legend

1 2 3

Down

4 5 6 7 Less caloric, in ads 8 Neighborhoods 9 Prison chief 10 Best Actress nominee for 2015’s “Room” 11 Alaska’s ___ Fjords National Park 12 Blow off 13 Club crowd-workers 17 Masc. alternative 21 Canter or trot 23 Fish served on a cedar plank 25 “Huckleberry Finn” transport 26 Johnny ___ (“Point Break” character) 27 He played a part in 2000’s “Boiler Room” 29 Maurice and Robin’s brother 30 In storage 34 Wrestler’s objective

independent.com

©2016 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-655-6548. Reference puzzle #0767 Last week’s soLution:

April 14, 2016 THE iNDEpENDENT

63


independent classifieds

Legals Administer of Estate NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: FRANCES E. VILLA NO: 16PR00107 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contin‑ gent creditors, and persons who may oth‑ erwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of FRANCES E. VILLA A PETITION FOR PROBATE: has been filed by: KIRI JULIA MARIA VILLA in the Superior Court of California, County of SANTA BARBARA THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that KIRI JULIA MARIA VILLA be appointed as personal representatives to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests author‑ ity to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the per‑

sonal 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 05/05/2016 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: 5 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Anacapa Division. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing

Service Directory Domestic Services

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and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hear‑ ing. 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 representa‑ tive, 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 (name) Thomas E. Olson 39 North California Street, Ventura, CA 93001; (805) 648‑5111 Published Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: FRANCES E. VILLA NO: 16PR00107 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contin‑ gent creditors, and persons who may oth‑ erwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of FRANCES E. VILLA A PETITION FOR PROBATE: has been filed by: KIRI JULIA MARIA VILLA in the Superior Court of California, County of SANTA BARBARA THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that KIRI JULIA MARIA VILLA be appointed as personal representatives to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests author‑ ity to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the per‑ sonal 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 05/05/2016 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: 5 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Anacapa Division. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hear‑ ing. 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 representa‑ tive, 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 (name) Thomas E. Olson 39 North California Street, Ventura, CA 93001; (805) 648‑5111 Published Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: BARBARA J. ROTH NO: 1371366 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, con‑ tingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of BARBARA JANE ROTH,

64

THE INDEPENDENT

April 14, 2016

independent.com

BARBARA J. ROTH A PETITION FOR PROBATE: has been filed by: RONALD K. ROTH in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that RONALD K. ROTH be appointed as personal representatives to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests author‑ ity to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the per‑ sonal 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 06/02/2016 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: Five SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Anacapa Division. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hear‑ ing. 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 representa‑ tive, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE‑154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: James F. Cote ,­ (SBN 088161) P.O. BOX 20146, Santa Barbara, CA 93120‑0146; (805) 966‑1204. Published Apr 7, 14, 21, 2016..

FBN Abandonment STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Jenny And Marcia’s at 105 West Walnut Ave Lompoc, CA 93434 The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 3/07/2016 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2016‑0000698. The per‑ son (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Jennifer Camille Paping 1312 West Olive Ave Lompoc, CA 93436; Marcia Ranae Wertz 305 W. Walnut Ave Lompoc, CA 93436 This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 08 2016, 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 Melissa Mercer. Published. Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Serenity Property Management, Serenity Organizing Solutions at 311 Sherman Road Santa Barbara, CA 93103 The original state‑ ment for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 10/31/2012 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2012‑0003183. The person (s) or enti‑ ties abandoning use of this name are as follows: Ana Ojeda (same address) This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Mar 31 2016, I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office, Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Noe Solis. Published. Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016.

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Fictitious Business Name Statement FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: John’s Handywork at 202 Cooper Road Santa Barbara, CA 93109; John’s Francis Avila (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Apr 01, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000991. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Soma Get Fit, Sparkling SPA at 903 State Street Suite 209 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Scott Crawford 1187 Coast Village Road #433 Santa Barbara, CA 93108 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 16, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000805. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Earthzown at 609 Mulberry Ave Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Earthzown (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 03, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000657. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: McMahon Construction Services at 2175 Piedras Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Patrick Leo McMahon (same address) This busi‑ ness is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 18, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000852. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Copper Kettle Apartments at 716 N “G” St Lompoc, CA 93436; Gloria Jane Gomez 284 Salisbury Ave Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 18, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000853. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Carolina Apartments at 525‑529 N “D” St Lompoc, CA 93436; Gloria Jane Gomez 284 Salisbury Ave Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 18, 2016. 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.Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0000854. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Microbreak: Mobile Massage Medic at 298 Aspen Way Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Toni Feste (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 11, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000761. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Inspire People at 221 West Pedregosa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Sedef Buyukataman (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Sedef Buyukataman Santa Barbara County on Mar 18, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000855. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Valdez Flowing Chocolate Fountains at 802 North Voluntario Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Thomas E Roberts 6158 Craigmont Drive Goleta, CA 93117; Anthony Valdez 802 North Voluntario Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103 This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 17, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000846. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: All Heart Rentals at 725 W Anapamu St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Joshua W Lee (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 15, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000800. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Good Land CPA at 7052 Marymount Way Goleta, CA 93117; Fabio Oliveira (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 14, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0000775. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Wholesome SB at 1701 Anacapa St Unit 7 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Wholesome Body Management LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Julian Wolfe Santa Barbara County on Mar 15, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000794. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Lotus Blossom Counseling at 5276 Hollister Ave #355 Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Nancy Chen Marden 632 Dara Rd Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Nancy Chen Marden Santa Barbara County on Mar 08, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0000710. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: JDC Design at 351 Paseo Nuevo, Second Flr Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Innovation Factory LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 02, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000651. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Jenny And Marcia’s at 105 West Walnut Ave Lompoc, CA 93436; Jennifer Camille Paping 1312 West Olive Ave Lompoc, CA 93436; Marcia Ranae Wertz 305 W. Walnut Ave Lompoc, CA 93436 This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Marcia R. Wertz Santa Barbara County on Mar 07, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000698. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Leo Active Wear at 3749 Mariana Way Unit B Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Stephanie Anne Armstrong (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Feb 26, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000586. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: NRG CPA Solutions at 2120 Oak Park Ln Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Nicholas Galuzevski (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Nicholas Galuzevski Santa Barbara County on Mar 02, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000645. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Liquid Swords at 36 South Calle Cesar Chavez Suite A Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Christopher Drake Whitcraft 3022 Lomita Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: C. Drake Whitcraft Santa Barbara County on Mar 16, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000818. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Malulani, Malulani USA, Malulani Shop, Tangonadas, Malulani Shop USA at 1014 State Street Suite Suite B Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Tangonadas, Inc 2443 Cochran Street Simi Valley, CA 93065 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 15, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000799. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Joshua Tree Custom Construction at 725 W Anapamu St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Joshua W Lee (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 15, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000801. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Santa Barbara Clinical Aesthetics at 1515 State St. Ste 7 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Mary Jane Buchanan 1030 Arbolado R This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Mary Jane Buchanan Santa Barbara County on Mar 14, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000779. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Marcia’s at 105 West Walnut Avenue Lompoc, CA 93436; 305 West Walnut Ave Lompoc, CA 93436 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Marcia R. Wertz Santa Barbara County on Apr 08, 2016. This state‑ ment 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: 2016‑0001058. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Moon Minded Medicine at 824 W Sola St #A Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Body Culture LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Siena Perez del Campo Mgr Santa Barbara County on Mar 25, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0000934. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Santa Barbara Seamstress at 513 Garden Street Unit G Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Megan Illgner 224 East Figueroa Street Apt G Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conduct‑ ed by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 17, 2016. 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.Adele Bustos. FBN Number: 2016‑0000841. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.


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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Vida Natural Baking Company at 1515 Alta Vista Road Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Carla Guimaraes (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Carla Guimaraes Santa Barbara County on Mar 22, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000892. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Mark Flan Tenants In Common at 5134 Cathedral Oaks Road Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Markin Family Properties, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Olivia Loewy Schoer Santa Barbara County on Mar 23, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000901. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Storm Acai at 1007 Del Sol Ave Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Ori Alves (same address) This busi‑ ness is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 23, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000892. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Oak Tree Bookkeeping at 27 W Anapamu St Suite 235 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Amanda McElfresh 1429 De La Vina Street #2 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Amanda McElfresh Santa Barbara County on Mar 14, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000778. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Blossom Tools, Flow, Sparkle & Sparkles at 811 Cieneguitas Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Stardust Capital LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 04, 2016. This state‑ ment expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0000677. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dierberg Vineyard, Star Lane Vineyard, Three Saints at 2121 Alisos Avenue Santa Ynez, CA 93460; James F Dierberg 135 N Meramec Clayton, MO 63105 This busi‑ ness is conducted by a Limited Partnership Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 22, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000888. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Ground Effect Wine Co., LLC at 27 W Anapamu Street Suite 406 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Doligny LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Frederic Coumes Santa Barbara County on Mar 22, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000889. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: The French Diet Center at 27 W Anapamu Street Suite 406 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Doligny LLC (same address) This business is con‑ ducted by a Individual Signed: Frederic Coumes Santa Barbara County on Mar 22, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000889. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Lemongiftcards. com at 512 Calle Mastil Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Brian Dutter (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 28, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000939. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Henry’s Painting And Repairs Services at 4395 Cathedral Oaks Road Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Enrique T. Mendez (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 28, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000938. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Becky Boo Skincare, Becky Boo Underarm at 1151 Deer Hill Dr Solvang, CA 93463; Vanessa Bley (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 23, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000902. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Open Ocean Seafood at 2515 Golden Gate Rd Summerland, CA 93067; Miles Jamal Wallace (same address) Sarah E. Wallace (same address) This business is con‑ ducted by a Married Couple Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 24, 2016. This state‑ ment 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: 2016‑0000912. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Estimating Service Team at 5587 West Camino Cielo Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Justin Klosinski Consulting, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 24, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000920. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Peak Performance Training International at 220 East Cota Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Hannah Leigh Parsons 320 East Islay Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 23, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0000898. Published: Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Twilight Motel/Apartments at 427 W Montecito Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Genetta Clark 1225 Mill Creek Scott Bar, CA 96085 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 15, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000790. Published: Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: S.B. Easter Relays, Santa Barbara Jaycees, Santa Barbara Easter Relays, South Coast Wrestling Club, Santa Barbara Easter Relays Committee at 1427 San Andres St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Santa Barbara Junior Chambers of Commerce (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 25, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000926. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Barefoot Massage at 3711 San Remo Drive Apt #1 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Joseph Claus (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 16, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000677. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Integrative Psychiatry at 5973 Encina Rd Ste 100A Goleta, CA 93117; Mind‑Body Integration & Healing, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 18, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000859. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Silk Road Transportation at 5680 Hollister Ave Goleta, CA 93117; Silk Road Transportation LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 31, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000981. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: The Charitable Foundation at 12544 High Bluff Drive Suite 420 San Diego, CA 92130; Pickford Realty Cares (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 24, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000917. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: CMS Contracting at 1489 Cantera Avenue Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Charles M. Schwab (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Apr 04, 2016. This state‑ ment 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: 2016‑0000992. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Studio And Cine at 720 Bath St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Ian Scott Mayta (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 10, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000756. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Learn The Risk at 3463 State Street #182 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Council For Vaccine Safety (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 23, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000903. Published: Apr 7, 14, 21, 28 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Speedway Car Wash at 530 North I Street Lompoc, CA 93436; Kan Holdings, Inc 237 Town Center West #330 Santa Naria, CA 93458 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Apr 06, 2016. 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. Deborah Sanchez. FBN Number: 2016‑0001038. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Fig Avenue Furnishings at 519 Fig Avenue Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Jeff Shelton 801 Cold Springs Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93108 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Apr 05, 2016. 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: 2016‑0001011. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Gold Star Realty at 3009 De La Vina St #B Santa Barbara, CA 93105; J.L. Comstock & Associates, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: J. L. Comstock, CEO Santa Barbara County on Mar 21, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000874. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Gordon Sterling Graphic Design at 148 B Aero Camino Goleta, CA 93117; Valerie Oesterling 478 Pacific Oaks Road Goleta, 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Mar 30, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000966. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Denise Speer Consulting, Mission Roses at 4884 Sawyer Ave Carpinteria, CA 93013; Denise Mary Speer (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Denise Speer Santa Barbara County on Apr 11, 2016. 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: 2016‑0001065. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Prime Properties, Soleil Investments at 315 Meigs Rd Ste A‑335 Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Heather Gray (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Apr 11, 2016. 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: 2016‑0001082. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: Gloria’s Gourmet Kitchen at 1627 Bath St #3 Santa Barbara, CA 93101(same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: Agustin Lopez Santa Barbara County on Mar 17, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000847. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Olga’s Hair Salon “Your Beauty In Your Hands” at 612 N Milpas St Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Olga Villareal­(same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Apr 07, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0001041. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Olson Art at 1445 Calle Pasado Lompoc, CA 93436 (same address) Grace Geer‑Olson (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Grace M. Geer‑Olson Santa Barbara County on Mar 30, 2016. 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. Meissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016‑0000972. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing busi‑ ness as: R&J Development at 1010 Via Los Padres Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Clara De Hoog (same address) Roger C Pyle (same address) This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: Clara De Hoog Santa Barbara County on Mar 21, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0000870. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dart Coffee Co at 218‑C Santa Barbara Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Dart Artisan Coffee, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Susan Anderson Santa Barbara County on Mar 21, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000976. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Santa Barbara Center For Child Neurology at 1919 State Street Suite 208 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Sabrina Carter 3701 Lincolnwood Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93110 This busi‑ ness is conducted by a Individual Signed: Sabrina Carter Santa Barbara County on Apr 01, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000989. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: XCEL Jet at 28030 Dorothy Drive #204 Agoura Drive #204 Agoura Hills, CA 91301; XCEL Jet Management, Inc 351 Paseo Nuevo, 2nd Floor Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This busi‑ ness is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Apr 05, 2016. 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: 2016‑0001021. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Mazaa at 385 Weldon Road Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Rakesh Bahadur (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Apr 06, 2016. 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: 2016‑0001024. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Cybersitter, Solid Oak Software at 1209 De La Vina Street #B Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Brian P Milburn (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Brian P. Milburn Santa Barbara County on Mar 15, 2016. 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: 2016‑0000792. Published: Apr 14, 21, 28. May 5 2016.

Name Change IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF RAFAEL H. SAAVEDRA & CLAUDIA MAZZOTTI ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 16CV00972 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: A peti‑ tion 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: RAFAEL MARIA SAAVEDRA GUTIERREZ TO: RAFAEL MARIA SAAVEDRA 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 May 18, 2016 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 Mar 23 2016. by James E. Herman, Judge of the Superior Court. Published. Mar 31. Apr 7, 14, 21 2016.

Public Notices James F. Cote, Esq. (SBN 088161) Law Office of James F. Cote 222 East Carrillo, Suite 207 P.O. Box 20146 Santa Barbara, CA 93120‑0146 Telephone No. (805) 966‑1204 Fax No. (805) 966‑1294 E‑mail Address: jim@jfcotelaw.com Attorney for James F. Cote, Administrator SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA 1100 ANACAPA STREET P.O. BOX 21107 SANTA BARBARA, CA 93121‑1107 ANACAPA DIVISION ESTATE OF: ABDALLA MOHAMED HAFEZ EL‑BADRY, DECEDENT

NOTICE OF HEARING ‑ ESTATE CASE NUMBER: 15PR00194 NOTICE is given that JAMES F. COTE, ADMINISTRATOR of the Estate has filed a Report of Sale and Petition for Order Confirming Sale of Real Property. A HEARING of the matter will be held as follows: Date: May 26, 2016 Time: 9:00 a.m. Place: Department 5 at the address of Court listed above REPORT OF SALE AND PETITION FOR ORDER CONFIRMING SALE OF REAL PROPERTY 1. Petitioner: JAMES F. COTE, ADMINISTRATOR, is the personal representative of the estate of the decedent and requests a court order for: a. confirmation of sale of the estate’s interest in the real property described in Attachment 2e c. approval of commission of: 6% of the amount of : $1,400,000 d. additional bond is fixed at: $1,302,103 2. Description of property sold: a. Interest sold: 100% b. Improved d. Street address and location: 7242 Gobernador Canyon Road, Carpinteria, California e. Legal description is affixed as Attachment 2e 3. Appraisal a. Date of death of decedent: June 5, 2015 b. Appraised value at above date: $1,200,000 d. Appraisal or reappraisal by probate referee has been filed 4. Manner and terms of sale a. Name of purchaser and manner of vesting title: Nichols Family Trust, dated December 7, 2015 c. Sale was private on: January 21, 2016 d. Amount bid: $1,400,000 Deposit: $70,000 e. Payment: Cash f. Other terms of sale (specify terms on Attachment 4f) 5. Commission b. A written exclusive contract for commission was entered into with: Berkshire Hathaway Home Service, Linos Kogevinas and Nancy Kogevinas c. Purchaser was procured by: California Oaks, Kenneth Duff, a licenced real estate broker who is not buying for his or her account d. Commission is to be divided as follows: 6% commission; 3.5% to Estate’s agents; 2.5% to buyer’s agent 6. Bond a. Amount before sale: $127,651 b. Additional amount needed: $1,302,103 7. Notice of Sale a. Published 8. Notice of Hearing a. Special devisee: (1) None b. Special notice: (1) None requested c. Personal representative: (1) Petitioner (consent or notice not required) 9. Reason for Sale a. Necessary to pay (4) expenses of administration (5) taxes b. The sale is to the advantage of the estate and in the best interest of the interested persons 10. Formula for overbids a. Original bid: $1,400,000 b. 10% or first $10,000 of original bid: 1,000 c. 5% of (original bid minus $10,000): 69,500 d. Minimum overbid (a + b +c): $1,470,500 11. Overbid. Required amount of first overbid (see item 10): $1,470,500 12. Petitioner’s efforts to obtain the highest and best price reasonably attainable for the property were as follows: See Attachment 12. 13. Number of pages attached: 42 Date: March 18, 2016 James F. Cote, Esq., Attorney for Petitioner I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of California that the foregoing is true and correct. Date: March 18, 2016 James F. Cote, Petitioner Attachment 2e Address: 7242 Governador Canyon Road, Carpinteria, CA APN: 001‑050‑034 REAL PROPERTY IN THE UNINCORPORATED AREA OF THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: PARCEL ONE: THE PORTION OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 25, TOWNSHIP 4 NORTH, RANGE 25 WEST, SAN BERNARDINO MERIDIAN IN THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A PIPE SET IN THE NORTH LINE OF SAID SECTION 25, DISTANT THEREON SOUTH 89˚40’­EAST 734.56 FEET FROM A PIPE SET IN A MOUND OF ROCKS SET FOR COMMON CORNER SECTIONS 23,24,25 AND 26 IN SAID TOWNSHIP 4 NORTH, RANGE 25 WEST, SAID POINT OF BEGINNING BEING SOUTH 0˚22’ WEST 25.35 FEET FROM A 2 INCH PIPE SURVEY MONUMENT; THENCE SOUTH 0˚22’ WEST 730.55 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89˚40’ WEST 298.16 FEET;

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THENCE NORTH 0˚22’ EAST 730.55 FEET TO THE NORTH LINE OF SAID SECTION 25; THENCE SOUTH 89˚40’ EAST 298.16 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. PARCEL TWO: A NON‑EXCLUSIVE EASEMENT FOR WATER PIPE LINES, ELECTRIC LINES AND INCIDENTAL PURPOSES IN, ON, OVER, UNDER AND THROUGH THE NORTH 10 FEET OF THE EASTERLY 298.15 FEET OF THE WESTERLY 436.40 FEET OF SECTION 25, TOWNSHIP 4 NORTH, RANGE 25 WEST, SAN BERNARDINO MERIDIAN, IN THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, STATE OF CALIFORNIA. PARCEL THREE: AN EASEMENT FOR ROAD AND PUBLIC UTILITY PURPOSES OVER THAT PORTION OF LOT 1 AND THAT PORTION OF THE NORTHWEST ONE‑QUARTER OF THE NORTHWEST ONE‑QUARTER OF SECTION 25, TOWNSHIP 4 NORTH, RANGE 25 WEST, SAN BERNARDINO MERIDIAN, IN THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A POINT ON THE NORTHERLY LINE OF SAID SECTION 25, DISTANT THEREON 138.25 FEET EASTERLY FROM THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF SECTION 25; THENCE SOUTH 0˚22’ EAST 718.55 FEET TO THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE SOUTH 89˚40’ EAST 298.15 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 0˚22’ WEST 12.00 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89˚40’ WEST 262.15 FEET TO THE BEGINNING OF A CURVE TO THE LEFT HAVING A RADIUS OF 25 FEET; THENCE SOUTHWESTERLY AND SOUTHERLY ALONG THE ARC OF SAID CURVE TO THE POINT OF INTERSECTION WITH A LINE DRAWN PARALLEL WITH AND 12 FEET EASTERLY, MEASURED AT RIGHT ANGLES FROM THE SOUTHERLY PROLONGATION OF THAT CERTAIN COURSE ABOVE DESCRIBED AS “SOUTH 0˚22’ EAST 718.55 FEET”; THENCE SOUTH 0˚22’ WEST ALONG SAID PARALLEL LINE 785 FEET MORE OR LESS TO THE CENTER LINE OF GOBERNADOR CANYON ROAD; THENCE NORTH 59˚31’ WEST ALONG SAID CENTER LINE 13 FEET MORE OR LESS TO A POINT FROM WHICH THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING BEARS NORTH 0˚22’ EAST; THENCE NORTH 0˚22’ EAST 781.53 FEET TO THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING; THE LAND DESCRIBED AS PARCELS ONE, TWO AND THREE ABOVE IS ALSO SHOWN ON A MAP RECORDED MAY 9, 1963, AS INSTRUMENT NO. 20204 IN BOOK 65, PAGE 60 OF RECORD OF SURVEYS. Published Apr 7, 14, 21 2016.

Summons IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA : Case No. 16FL00546 CITATION ON PETITION TO DECLARE MINOR FREED FROM PARENTAL CUSTODY AND CONTROL Case No. 16FL00546 In the matter of The Petition of LETICIA MEDLEJ To Declare KAREEM MOHAMMAD MUSTAFA, CITATION ON PETITION TO DECLARE MINOR FREED FROM PARENTAL CUSTODY AND CONTROL TO: THE UNKNOWN BIOLOGICAL PARENTS OF KAREEM MOHAMMAD MUSTAFA a minor male child born on or about October 27, 2004, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates: By order of this court you are hereby advised that you may appear before a judge of the Anacapa Division of the Santa Barbara Superior Court, in Department 5, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101, on the date of May 9, 2016, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., to show cause, if you have any reason why the above‑named minor child, born on a date unknown but given as October 1, 2004, should not be declared free from your custody and control, according to the Petition filed herein under Family Code 7822, a copy of which is served herewith or may be obtained from counsel for Petitioner. The petition to declare the child free from the custody and control of a parent has been filed for the purpose of freeing the minor child for adoption. For failure to attend, you may be deemed guilty of contempt of court. You have the right to be represented by counsel. If you appear without counsel, and are unable to afford counsel, upon your request, the court shall appoint legal counsel to representyou. The court may appoint counsel to represent the minor, whether or not the minor can afford counsel. Private counsel appoinnted by the court shall be paid a reasonable sum for compensation and expenses, in an amount to be determined by the court and which amount may be ordered paid by the parties, other than the child, in proportions the court deems just. However, if a party is unable to afford counsel, the amount shall be paid out of the county’s general fund. The court may continue the proceeding for not to exceed 30 days as nec‑ essary to appointcounsel and to enable counsel to become acquainted with the case. The minor will not be present in court unless the minor so requests or the court so orders. If you fail to attend the hearing, the child may be declared freed from your parental custody and control, and the child may be adopted by the Petitioners without further notice to you. Douglas R. Donnelly; Attorney at Law State Bar No. 076264 1332 Santa Barbara Street, Suite 201 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 (805) 962‑0988 Attorney for Petitioners Dated: Mar 16 2016 . By: Deputy Clerk; Robyn Rodriguez Published in The SB Independent Mar 24, 31. Apr 7, 14 2016.

April 14, 2016 THE INDEPENDENt

65


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Presented By

Lee & AssociAtes centrAL coAst

For d etails, see Page 5


888 Cold Springs Rd | $18,400,000 10 beds 12 baths Riskin Partners 805.565.8600

4621 Via Roblada | $18,100,000 7 beds 8 baths Riskin/Kendall 805.565.8600

818 Hot Springs Rd | $14,875,000 6 beds 9 baths Riskin Partners 805.565.8600

FEATURED PROPERTY

972 Via Los Padres | $1,995,000 3 beds 3 baths Alyson Spann 805.637.2884

1664 E Valley Rd | $13,500,000 7 beds 12 baths Riskin Partners 805.565.8600

1379 Oak Creek Canyon Rd | $12,995,000 6 beds 10 baths Gregg Leach 805.565.8873

764 San Ysidro Ln | $10,700,000 764sanYsidroLane.com Riskin Partners 805.565.8600

660 Hot Springs Rd | $10,650,000 660hotspringsroad.com Tim Walsh 805.259.8808

3485 A Padaro Ln | $5,995,000 4 beds 4 baths Pamela Regan 805.895.2760

1421 Wyant Rd | $5,878,000 5 beds 5 baths Grubb Campbell 805.895.6226

1159 Hill Rd | $5,435,000 3 beds 3 baths Riskin Partners 805.565.8600

905 E Alamar Ave | $4,300,000 5 beds 4 baths Ted Campbell 805.886.1175

720 Ladera Ln | $3,785,000 5 beds 5 baths Brian King 805.452.0471

2101 Refugio Rd | $2,600,000 2 beds 3 baths Elizabeth Wagner 805.895.1467

43 Humphrey Rd | $2,299,000 2 beds 2 baths Jackie Walters 805.570.0558

901 Aleeda Ln | $2,150,000 3 beds 3 baths Susan Jordano 805.680.9060

1702 Hillcrest Rd | $2,125,000 3 beds 3 baths Shandra/Ted 805.886.1176

4132 Hidden Oaks Rd | $2,095,000 4 beds 5 baths Aaron Gilles 805.895.1877

1295 Spring Rd | $1,995,000 3 beds 3 baths Barbara Savage 805.455.1933

1746 Prospect Ave | $1,995,000 2 beds 4 baths Julie/Jeff 805.895.9498

19 Seaview Dr | $1,995,000 2 beds 2 baths Riskin Partners 805.565.8600

7744 Kestrel Ln | $1,959,000 3 beds 4 baths Alyson Spann 805.637.2884

1570 Oramas Rd | $1,749,000 3 beds 2 baths Judy/Leanne 805.570.5555

1836 Hillcrest Rd | $1,550,000 4 beds 3 baths June/Christina 805.689.7036

219 Equestrian Ave | $1,495,000 2 beds 2 baths suding//murphy 805.455.8055

220 E Yanonali St B | $1,389,000 2 beds 3 baths Regina/David 805.451.1994

1520 San Miguel Ave | $1,295,000 2 beds 1 bath Gregg Leach 805.565.8873

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


1269 Mountain View Rd | $1,189,000 4 beds 2 baths Grubb Campbell 805.565.8879

2519 Emerson St | $1,175,000 3 beds 2 baths Jim Witmer 805.448.3921

301 Por La Mar Cir | $1,150,000 2 beds 2 baths Billy Mandarino 805.570.4827

3791 State St D | $1,140,000 3 beds 3 baths Darcie/Thomas 805.637.7772

3791 State St E | $1,100,000 3 beds 3 baths Jan Banister 805.455.1194

FEATURED PROPERTY

121 N Ontare Rd | $1,399,000 3 beds 3 baths Anita Ward 805.689.5403

2045 Paseo Almeria | $1,095,000 3 beds 4 baths Susan Jordano 805.680.9060

502 Brinkerhoff Ave | $899,000 2 beds 2 baths Darcie/Jay 805.637.7772

123 Bath St A7 | $849,500 1 bed 2 baths Kim Crawford 805.886.8132

645 Costa Del Mar C | $899,000 2 beds 3 baths Billy Mandarino 805.570.4827

161 Por La Mar Cir | $839,000 2 beds 2 baths Phil Shirinian 805.637.8722

607 Bath St | $825,000 2 beds 1 bath Tomi Spaw 805.698.7007

30 Santa Ynez St C | $799,000 3 beds 2 baths Robert Kemp 805.259.6318

1331 W Valerio St | $799,000 2 beds 1 bath Lynda Bohnett 805.637.6407

728 W Mission St | $799,000 3 beds 2 baths Mary Lu Edick 805.452.3258

3863 Fairfax Rd | $755,000 3 beds 3 baths Ruth Eggli 805.252.9763

1163 Calle Lagunitas | $746,750 3 beds 3 baths Michelle Glaus 805.452.0446

3375 Foothill Rd 933 | $745,000 Polo Condo Susie Maybery 805.565.8884

1208 Castillo St | $740,000 2 beds 1 bath Patricia Griffin 805.705.5133

122 W Micheltorena St F | $649,000 2 beds 2 baths Jay Krautmann 805.451.4527

231 Linden Ave 18 | $589,000 1 bed 1 bath John Bahura 805.680.5175

201 Toro Canyon Rd | $3,850,000 9+/- aCres Emily Kellenberger 805.252.2773

871 Park Hill Ln | $2,950,000 4.25+/- aCres John Henderson 805.689.1066

The Meadows | Starting at $1,650,000 themeadowssb.Com Dianne/Brianna 805.455.6570

My Road | $399,000 three ParCels Wayne Natale 805.680.7227

LOTS & LAND

3828 Pemm Pl | $1,259,000 3 beds 2 baths Marty Rodgers 805.886.1459

669 Picacho Ln | $5,995,000 669PiCaCholane.Com Riskin Partners 805.565.8600

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


Make Myself at HoMe

GreeN your Crib courtesy

by Sarah Sinclair

New efficiency standards

for electronic Chargers

Historic

4

independent real estate

april 14, 2016

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Hacienda andaluz S

pringtime in Santa Barbara means the sight and scent of roses blooming all around town, this weekend’s Earth Day celebration kicking off the festival season, and—just and in case you think your ears are playing tricks on you — it also means the start of Old Spanish Days. I kid you not. This Saturday, April 16, at noon, a squadron of hopeful young dancers will audition at La Cumbre Junior High School for the coveted roles of Spirit and Junior Spirit of Fiesta 2016, bringing the historic era of Old Spanish Days to life upon the stage (visit

details. The house was carefully remodeled in 2009, with area designers and artisans enlisted to refurbish and re-create custom light fixtures, cabinetry, paint, and wrought iron throughout the property. I found myself opening more than one of the windows just to marvel at how well the old-world hardware functions. Perfectly patterned after the original, but smooth and seamlessly operating, these touches have obviously been wrought by hand because they literally don’t make ’em like they used to. In addition to its three bedrooms and three baths downstairs, the main house has an elegant master bedroom suite upstairs, with a bookshelf-lined sitting area, a small office, a sundeck overlooking the backyard, and a sumptuous master bathroom with a huge walk-in closet, and a gorgeous sunken tub with a remotecontrolled fireplace in the corner. As stunning as the main house is, the garden and grounds are what really stole my heart. The lot is not huge, at less than three-quarters of an acre, but across the lawn, down a staircase, and over a bridge lies a beautifully landscaped secret garden area. A separate cabana house faces the sparkling pool and spa, which are bordered by a wall with fountains and greenery, sitting just low enough from the main house to be in a world of their own. Walking back through the house for one last look at the central courtyard with its trees, fountains, fireplace, and bar for entertaining, this home struck me as someplace one could live in happily ever after and never have to leave. Its timeless fairy-tale quality makes it easy to conjure up visions from the past, complete with the scent of roses and a flamenco soundtrack.

Address: 470 Hot Springs Road, Montecito Status: On the market Price: $5,450,000 oldspanishdays-fiesta.org for tickets). So if you hear the sounds of flamenco music mixed with the scent of roses, that’s the reason. When I visited Hacienda Andaluz last week, a lovingly restored adobe estate at 470 Hot Springs Road, I found the beauty and romance of the same bygone era. This home and its grounds are patterned after Casa de la Guerra, arguably Santa Barbara’s most famous residence, home to Don José de la Guerra and family in the mid 1800s. The Spanish Colonial Revival style is evident at a glance both inside and outside the hacienda, from its double-barreled mission redtiled roof to its terraces and walkways, the eucalyptus vigas in the ceilings, and the Saltillo tile floors. It’s most distinctive architectural feature, and very typical of this period, is the central interior courtyard, onto which the living room, family room, dining room, kitchen, and one of the bedrooms all open. The real magic of this lovely home, however, is in the authenticity of its

470 Hot Springs Road is currently for sale in Montecito, listed by Nancy Kogevinas and Thomas Schultheis of Berkshire Hathaway Luxury Collection. Reach Nancy at 450-6233 or Thomas at 729-2802.

by Dennis Allen

I

n 2004, California established the first energy-efficiency standards in the country for external power supplies. This phrase, or the less elegant term “wall warts,” refers to the little boxes that connect many of our electronics— smartphones, laptop computers, electric toothbrushes — to wall outlets. These power adapters may be small, but collectively they consume a lot of energy. Following California’s example, national external-power-supply energyefficiency standards were established in 2008. This past February, eight years later, updated federal standards took effect, strengthening efficiency requirements and extending them to new types of power adapters not previously covered so that now the vast majority of these devices use the best technology to minimize energy wastage. While these updated standards drew little public notice, they will cut nearly everyone’s electric bill and reduce harmful pollution. With 5-10 wall warts in the average U.S. home, the new standards are projected to save consumers $300 million a year in electricity costs and decrease the carbon pollution that fuels climate change. An example of small changes producing big results, the new standards are an important step to achieving President Barack Obama’s goal of reducing car-

bon emissions. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) projects that they alone will cut nearly 47 million metric tons of carbon dioxide during 30 years, equivalent to the annual electricity used in 6.5 million homes, or the carbon emitted by 10 million cars. While adapters consume a modest amount of energy individually, the power draw adds up, given that there are a billion in use in the United States. Many of these wall warts, when plugged in, draw power even if disconnected from a device such as a phone or connected to a fully charged device. A good counter to these boxes that consume power with no load is to replace them with flip switch boxes or, even better, with timer switch chargers set for 30 minutes or three hours. (Belkin is one reliable brand.) Although wall warts are only a part of the electronics used in a home, 75 percent of electricity used to power home electronics, according to the DOE, is consumed while appliances are turned off. The DOE is planning to create standards for battery chargers, 500 million of which are sold annually in the U.S. Making both external power supplies and battery chargers more efficient can lead to substantial savings on utility bills and significant health and environmental benefits, not only because of the huge volume sold annually but also because

the number is sure to grow, given the proliferation of electronic devices in our lives. Another challenge looming, however, is the recent appearance of the wireless charger — a big power draw that is still unregulated.

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.


FAbled GAbles by G. Vince Giovannoni

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Bill Dewey

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Original owner and builder: Peter Grant Year built: 1896 Based on information from, among other sources, Survivors; Santa Barbara’s Last Victorians, a publication of the Santa Barbara Historical Museum.

2560 Lillie Avenue SUMMERLAND | CA 93067 3,500 SF | $2.15/sf NNN Extensively Remodeled Available 06/16 Please Contact:

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1980-1992 Old Mission Dr. SOLVANG | CA 93463

THE MERKANTILE - MAJOR REDEVELOPMENT

Pad A: 6,750 ± SF, Shops B: 9,500 ± SF, Pad D: 8,000 ± SF

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228 W. Carrillo St., Ste A Santa Barbara, CA 93101

5

his Eastlake-style Victorian house was constructed by original owner Peter Grant, who was a livery stable owner and proprietor of Santa Barbara’s first brickyard. His masonry business, which he officiated from the home’s backyard, gave him the freedom and flexibility to design and build his residence as one of the first and only allbrick homes covered in stucco that remain from the Victorian era. The decorative Eastlake style was named for Charles Locke Eastlake (1836-1906), a noted Englishman, author, architectural designer, and critic of the Gothic Revival style. In his book, Hints on Household Taste in Furniture, Upholstery, and Other Details, he advocated that both furniture and décor in the home should be designed with great pride. Manufacturers in the United States quickly caught onto his ideas from the book and used his drawings to mass-produce Eastlake-style and cottage furniture. This home’s architectural attributes on the lower level include a spacious bay window and spindlework on the front porch, while the second-story gable is festooned with decorative motifs that include ornamental brackets juxtaposed on the roof’s eaves. The 16-foot-deep foundation is set to ensure ample protection from earthquakes, while the sunny yellow exterior and white trim make this a valued asset in the lower Riviera neighborhood.

realestate.independent.com

T

Please Contact:

april 14, 2016

5940 Calle Real Goleta | CA 93117 3,100 SF | $10,000/mo NNN Premier Restaurant Location Available NOW

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OPEN SUN 12-4

$4,900,000 | 5219 E Camino Cielo, San Marcos Pass | 26± ac (assr) Mormann/Elliott | 805.689.3242/805.450.9933

$4,795,000 | 791 W Park Ln, Montecito | 4BD/6BA Daniel Encell | 805.565.4896

OPEN SUN 12-4

$5,600,000 | NOT IN MLS, Montecito | 5BD/5BA Tim Dahl | 805.886.2211

OPEN SUN 12-4

$3,510,000 | 2835 Gibraltar Rd, El Cielito/Las Canoas | 18± acs (assr) Kerry Mormann | 805.689.3242

$3,500,000 | 4520 Foothill Rd, Carpinteria | 23 acres (assr) Kerry Mormann | 805.689.3242

$4,250,000 | 280 Gould Ln, Montecito | 4BD/6BA Scarborough/Calcagno&Hamilton | 331.1465/565.4000 ©2016 An Independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. CalBRE# 01317331

Visit us online at bhhscalifornia.com Montecito | Santa Barbara | Los Olivos


OPEN SUN 1-3

$7,495,000 | 2794 Kara, Solvang | 5BD/7BA Sharon Currie | 805.448.2727

$1,788,000 | 2575 Latigo Dr, Solvang | 4BD/3BA Banchik/Currie | 805.588.3616/805.448.2727

OPEN SUN 2-4

$649,000 | 950 Miramonte Dr #3, Mesa | 2BD/2BA Kathy Hughes | 805.448.4881

$2,100,000 | 1205 Lomita Ln, Carpinteria | 4BD/3BA Barbie Detmer | 805.886.2233

OPEN SAT 1-4/SUN 1-3

$824,000 | 31 Mendocino Dr, Goleta | 3BD/3BA Madhu Khemani | 805.252.0265

$655,000 | 531 Meadow View Dr, Buellton | 4BD/2BA Sharon Currie | 805.448.2727

OPEN SUN 2-4

$649,000 | 4405 Catlin Cir #D, Carpinteria | 3BD/2BA Kalia Rork | 805.689.0614 Š2016 An Independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. CalBRE# 01317331

Visit us online at bhhscalifornia.com Montecito | Santa Barbara | Los Olivos


area

Seller

buyer

price

date

addreSS

buellton/solvang CaRPInteRIa

FeeleY JoHn F tRustee DYeR MICHael W eu HaRRIson sCott a tRustee CaRbaJal eDMunDo P snYDeR RICK D

KIng JoHn g eu MaRKs JuDY MaRCHbanKs PRoPeRtIes llC aRReola MaRtIna WIlson PHIlIP K tRustee

$1,195,000 $570,000 $1,800,000 $101,500 $863,500

3/23/16 3/23/16 3/24/16 3/25/16 3/29/16

945 olD RanCH RD 4527 CaRPInteRIa ave H 4885 sanDYlanD RD 5 4819 sIsQuoC st 95 santa ana ave

sPenCe RICKeY l eu

CaMeRon gRegoRY J

$710,000

3/30/16

4770 Calle CaMaRaDa

gRunt Jetton R tRustee

eRMan natHanIel ea

$483,000

3/31/16

5290 oveRPass RD 5

WalMan RonalD

RanDall Jason eu

$133,000

3/23/16

4942 la gaMa WaY

PetIt KennetH a tRustee

CaballeRo Jose eu

$747,000

3/25/16

5553 CatHeDRal oaKs RD

sHellabaRgeR JoHn l tRustee

sQuIRes toDD M eu

$1,070,000

3/24/16

5730 stoW CanYon RD

alMeRotH ConstanCe l

lobo oRlanDo M eu

$721,000

3/24/16

615 las PeRlas DR

PIetsCH teResa

PIetsCH teResa ea

$16,000

3/30/16

199 n Kellogg ave a

noYola antonIo

RIveRa eDgaR eu

$620,000

3/21/16

5775 alonDRa DR

JennIngs KRIstIn M

bRaueR JonatHan

$442,500

3/30/16

484 lInFIelD Pl F

MeRRIll stuaRt eu

gagne aleC eu

$1,595,000

3/31/16

890 glen annIe RD

saRagosa eDWaRD a eu

leIsuRe benJaMIn g ea

$825,000

3/31/16

6427 CaMIno vIvIente

esPInoZa vICente o eu

RaMos PRIMIto C eu

$118,000

3/31/16

4813 PagalIng DR

RaMos geoRge R

nevItt eRIC eu

$103,500

3/25/16

4578 tWelFtH st

RuIZ alFReDo eu

RuIZ RobeRto

$315,000

3/30/16

879 PIoneeR st

RegalaDo aleX M estate

CHRIstoFF susan

$195,000

3/25/16

4455 seConD st

estes nanCY P

leo HeMMIng

$290,000

3/21/16

215 n e st

navaRRo Jose M eu

baRaJas RaYMonD

$322,000

3/31/16

317 baRRIngton Pl

RobeRts JaMes R

Robles JulIo C

$240,000

3/31/16

900 n tHIRD st

baRaJas RaYMonD

MCIveRs JoCelYn M tRustee

$255,000

3/24/16

539 n e st

FoltZ levI e

MuelleR JosePH

$265,000

3/25/16

417 e leMon ave

MCCaMMon laRRY g tRust

MullIns WIllIaM s JR

$260,000

3/25/16

912 e bell ave

DunlaP sCott a eu

DunlaP Douglas P

$340,000

3/31/16

1108 n g st

balDaCCHIno MaRCus eu

CHaveZ elIZabetH n ea

$360,000

3/29/16

205 CountRYWooD DR

lInDeMann PaMela D tRustee

bIus JaMIe ea

$275,000

3/24/16

1316 W PIne ave

vaZQueZ agustIn C

toRRes DIego eu

$266,000

3/23/16

1316 W neCtaRIne ave

ellIott DavID R eu

bRanCH bIll W eu

$280,000

3/31/16

912 W antHonY WaY

bRanCH bIll W eu

KsYnKIna IRIna

$185,000

3/29/16

902 n M Pl

busCH WIllIaM l

tuRneR ClaYton g eu

$340,000

3/24/16

1233 stonebRooK DR

esPaRZa susan

PeReZ veRRonICa eu

$333,000

3/22/16

1244 stonebRooK DR

anDeRsen Jon tRust

bRooKsHIeR DonalD eu

$305,000

3/30/16

1013 aRMstRong st

Dean JaCob

Jones CRaIg M

$292,000

3/25/16

1348 CRoWn CIR

KnuDsen KatHeRIne tRustee

PIllsbuRY KellY

$130,000

3/25/16

1307 W CYPRess ave D1

Robles agustIn ea

ZuKanovICH aMIR eu

$158,000

3/31/16

1205 W CYPRess ave H

CuYaMa goleta

guaDaluPe

independent real estate

april 14, 2016

realestate.independent.com

loMPoC

8

Santa barbara county SaleS

aRIas Ruben eu

botello luIs a

$162,000

3/25/16

27 vIllage CIRCle DR

neWMan JeFFReY C JR tRustee

MoYa steven o tRustee

$4,350,000

3/31/16

758 vIa Manana

DaMe InvestMents InC

sCHWaRtZ JonatHan tRustee

$4,900,000

3/25/16

1948 tollIs ave

DoWnIng PatRICIa F tRust

FaRIsH CHaRles b tRustee

$837,500

3/22/16

304 ennIsbRooK DR

PatRICK Russell l

aMHeRst eXCHange CoRP

$2,500,000

3/24/16

230 Hot sPRIngs RD

laFFeRtY steven tRustee

taIt MaRtIn M tRustee

$3,325,000

3/25/16

665 Juan CResPI ln

Juan CResPI HolDIngs llC

JuDson K leonaRD tRustee

$1,575,000

3/21/16

655 Juan CResPI ln

sHeRbY tHoMas a tRustee

Jensen gRegoRY M eu

$2,725,000

3/25/16

584 baRKeR Pass RD

los olIvos

sCHMIDt DanIel R eueu

DelasKI DavID

$1,844,000

3/31/16

2555 santa YneZ st

HeatH MaRgaRet D tRustee

sCHMIDt JennIFeR l

$2,100,000

3/31/16

2754 santa YneZ st

santa baRbaRa

Holt teRRanCe K eu

MIlleR WaRRen P tRust

$2,550,000

3/22/16

1650 oveRlooK ln

sCHaKett FaMIlY InvestMent llC

bReWeR JaY s tRustee

$970,000

3/25/16

101 PoR la MaR CIR

eHle CeCelIa J

PosneR alan b eu

$579,000

3/30/16

360 PoR la MaR CIR

MattHeWs HeIDI J tRustee

KWoCK stePHanIe

$1,525,000

3/25/16

2010 las tunas RD

easteR sanDRa l

PInI DaRIo l

$700,000

3/30/16

255 ConeJo RD

bRouHaRD tRust

bRoIDa aleXa

$1,325,000

3/25/16

1226 alaMeDa PaDRe seRR

KRugeR JoHn ea

DoYle MaRY C

$1,320,000

3/31/16

150 loMa MeDIa RD

sCHlaCHteR gaIl tRust

YeageR JeFFReY tRust

$2,188,000

3/25/16

240 las altuRas RD

HIRsCH JeFFReY K tRust

HollanD angela v

$1,977,000

3/24/16

2451 las Canoas RD

ReIs MaRJoRIe a

RuDnICK RobeRta l

$1,410,000

3/29/16

2839 ben loMonD DR

ZeReY MaRC

Jenneve JeFF eu

$1,102,000

3/25/16

967 CHeltenHaM RD

HeRnanDeZ antHonY C eu

Colven DYan e tRustee

$1,317,000

3/31/16

2775 WIllIaMs WaY

alM PaMela M tRustee

DonaHoe PatRICK H eu

$1,105,000

3/29/16

2985 glen albYn DR

glYnn CRYstal o tRustee

MaY elIZabetH e eu

$760,000

3/31/16

2696 FootHIll RD

savatal llC

MCFaRlane MICaHel J tRustee

$1,055,000

3/25/16

2972 la CoMbaDuRa RD

CIollI June C estate

ReIno MICHael eu

$895,000

3/31/16

2415 CHaPala st

DaWson DavID P tRustee

Musante PeteR P tRustee

$1,392,000

3/22/16

2109 CHaPala st

MonteCIto

PeDeRsen lIsa ea

PRaIRIe ventuRes llC

$1,529,000

3/28/16

336 e PaDRe st

JoHn l CaRleton FounDatIon

eMeRson JulIa C tRust

$1,734,000

3/22/16

1919 santa baRbaRa st

Mello JosePH M

WagneR WIllIaM l JR eu

$570,000

3/31/16

2525 state st 12

MaYeuR suZanne

lee KellIe H

$520,000

3/25/16

1307 CaRMelIta ave

KoMoRosKe FRanCes e

tg FoleY seP-IRa InvestMents

$850,000

3/29/16

santa baRbaRa st

KoMoRosKe FRanCes e

tg FoleY seP-IRa InvestMents

$850,000

3/29/16

801 gaRDen st

tRogan KaRen H tRust

talleY steven e

$600,000

3/22/16

440 e oRtega st

This data is provided to The Santa Barbara Independent by an outside third-party source and represents a partial list of recorded residential sales in Santa Barbara County on the dates listed. While this information is public record, The Santa Barbara Independent cannot guarantee the accuracy nor the completeness of this list.


Santa barbara county SaleS Seller

buyer

price

date

addreSS

santa baRbaRa

sMaRIga JulIan a tRust

steWaRt PatRICIa a tRust

$1,350,000

3/25/16

921 Isleta ave

MaZZlotta vInCent ea

sIX staR assoCIates llC

$1,750,000

3/22/16

520 W gutIeRReZ st

Maassen JeFF ea

Maassen MoRgan

$850,000

3/21/16

5 st ann DR

PIKe leslIe a

PIKe aDaM J eu

$700,000

3/23/16

2528 boRton DR

CastRo Manuel

WIlson sCott eu

$525,000

3/24/16

835 W valeRIo st

HaCKIng tuCKeR t eu

WHIPPs sCott eu

$1,150,000

3/25/16

1114 Del sol ave

selanDeR KatHleen P tRustee

Ross RICHaRD H eu

$950,000

3/31/16

1211 Del MaR ave

FPutZ tIMotHY P tRustee

350 CHaPala llC ea

$1,102,000

3/30/16

3016 De la vIna st

MInus CRaIg eu

RIntels DavID W tRustee

$980,500

3/30/16

316 PeaCH gRove ln

gRubb J RobeRt eu

MCRee WIllIaM e tRust

$875,000

3/25/16

298 Calle esPeRanZa

baRRett MaRJoRIe l H estate

HIll steven C eu

$820,000

3/25/16

3715 bRent st

laWson geoRge t ea

bRooKs CHaD ea

$700,000

3/25/16

126 e alaMaR ave

boRgonovI baRbaRa eu

sHYu KenYa s eu

$1,160,000

3/31/16

349 WooDleY Ct

oK Wave llC

FeRRatta FRanKlIn a tRustee

$785,000

3/22/16

4440 sHaDoW HIlls CIR J

RogeRs RobeRt C eu

toMIlloso eDWaRD

$335,000

3/31/16

1121 RICe RanCH RD

KossutH CHaRles g ea

blaCK MaRlIn nteRPRIses llC

$374,000

3/31/16

1265 MIRa FloRes DR

PanKeY DavID l ea

PanKeY KIM b eu

$150,000

3/24/16

758 Don Pablo DR

ReYnolDs RonalD l eu

gueRRa JonatHan v

$365,000

3/31/16

393 HIgHlanD DR

RobeRtson WIllIaM t eu

RYan tHoMas J JR tRustee

$500,500

3/23/16

1565 Jensen RanCH RD

batson CuRtIs a tRustee

HealIng RooMs santa MaRIa vall

$595,000

3/28/16

745 ManDa DR

baRgenQuast laRRY eu

MoRgan DavID R tRustee

$415,000

3/24/16

4446 DanCeR ave

sHeRWooD MICHael l

seRRano RuFIno ea

$353,000

3/30/16

390 sHIRleY ln

b oF a

WesneR Jon

$330,000

3/21/16

4278 eastWooD DR

MaRMelZat nICKI

anDeRson RobeRt W eu

$365,000

3/31/16

1168 sHaDY glen DR

ClaRY IRa g tRust

YaMate Dave ea

$263,000

3/22/16

512 PaRKvIeW noRtH

gaIneY RICHaRD t tRustee

DelIsle CoRbIn

$243,000

3/23/16

1180 suMneR Pl a

santa MaRIa

$355,000

3/31/16

4195 bRIDgePoRt RD

$364,000

3/29/16

432 FeRnDale DR

HaRDIn FaMIlY tRust

FloRY tHoMas R eu

$350,000

3/31/16

3012 s bunFIll DR

KoKKInaKIs & sons llC

DaR PRoP HolDIngs llC

$1,200,000

3/29/16

2240 s tHoRnbuRg st

esCobeDo RolanDo R tRustee

luPeRCIo Juan C

$270,000

3/24/16

3442 satInWooD RD

RoYan PatRICK M tRustee

PaZ gIlbeRt t

$245,000

3/31/16

2053 sanDalWooD DR

MaCIas CaRMen tRustee

aRone laWRenCe J III eu

$530,000

3/30/16

851 bRIaRClIFF DR

FIsHeR teResa tRust

estRaDa Raul

$475,000

3/25/16

925 aMbeRleY Pl

HettInga JoRDan ea

sHIn euI s eu

$100,000

3/31/16

2311 sKYWaY DR 5

HeRnanDeZ DavID II

HeRnanDeZ DavID II ea

$150,000

3/29/16

2422 CountRY Club vlge

KItCKo FRanCes R tRustee

tRenev valeRIe s

$155,000

3/25/16

2479 CountRY ln

laIblIn JessIe l

bRIggs teRRY ea

$423,000

3/21/16

4306 s FoXenWooD CIR

aYala DavID t eu

aYala DavID t eu

$75,000

3/30/16

517 W MonRoe st

alMagueR MIKe F eu

sIMeRlY DustIn W

$315,000

3/22/16

1558 s WallIs ave

gaRCIa Jose M M

MateMatICo Ruben ea

$290,000

3/31/16

1832 alton DR

WIlson KennetH P

bIXleR XenIa

$260,000

3/24/16

2303 n leXIngton ave

sIbleY, DavID l

Do loC eu

$374,000

3/31/16

2422 DIvIDe WaY

RaItHel, KeItH W

Do loC eu

$370,000

3/31/16

2430 n sCHuMan Pl

CPH HaRvest glen llC

goMeZ CelestIno eu

$444,000

3/30/16

743 W elaIne ave

Do loC eu

$404,000

3/31/16

1908 s JaYe Ct

gutIeRReZ egaR g

$260,000

3/31/16

967 W HaRDIng ave

HeRReRa gIlbeRto tRustee

HeRReRa Juan eu

$170,500

3/28/16

819 e alvIn ave

estoRga Rosalene K tRustee

gee toM

$252,500

3/22/16

703 e alvIn ave

RoDRIgueZ MaRgaRIta ea

RoDRIgueZ MICHelle l

$91,500

3/22/16

1419 sageWooD DR

esCaRZaga RonnIe eu

nuneZ Juan H

$235,000

3/22/16

1108 W MaIn st

MeDIna Jose J

MontoYa JoHanna

$139,000

3/29/16

709 s lInColn st 2

MoRgan MaRvIn D tRustee

Magana gRegoRIo M eu

$290,000

3/24/16

1140 s aDaM WaY

CoRbIn glenn t eu

PaDIlla ana

$320,000

3/24/16

1222 s sPeeD st

MClean MaRgaRet l tRustee

soloRIo CaRlos s eu

$280,000

3/28/16

406 e PaRK ave

evans alIson eu

evans MICHael eu

$192,500

3/25/16

2229 lIllIe ave

aRMouR allY M tRust

stoCKMann PeteR J tRust

$1,570,000

3/31/16

2572 banneR ave

CRossen ClaRa ea

MlaDenova DessIslava

$250,000

3/25/16

513 s u st

MaCPHeRson stePHen eu

toWnsenD bRIan K eu

$238,000

3/25/16

410 CoRonaDo DR

sIgnoRellI RobeRt a ea

RaMIReZ Jose ea

$425,000

3/31/16

605 ColeMan DR

MaCgoWan CHRIstIna

KaeWbang IZZanun l

$389,000

3/31/16

1003 tRanQuIllIon Ct

bReCKenRIDge PRoPeRtY FunD

CHaveZ esMeRalDa ea

$282,000

3/24/16

4024 CaPella DR

PHIllIPs RanDal e ea

MaInHaRDt MaDalYn

$279,000

3/30/16

583 sunbeaM RD

MtI CaPItal InC

CouRtneY teResa a

$285,000

3/29/16

1569 Calle PoRtos

tHoMeY DavID eu

JoHnson antHonY g JR

$282,000

3/25/16

1658 Calle nueve

WHalen gaRY R tRustee

KRYDeR saMuel

$285,000

3/24/16

253 antaRes ave

langstaFF JaMes g eu

tHoMeY DavID M eu

$330,000

3/25/16

276 alDebaRan ave

CollIns JoHn g eu

De Rouen DavID

$365,000

3/31/16

4220 ConstellatIon RD

KRug Helen a tRustee

guDgeon WIllIaM e eu

$385,000

3/30/16

184 HeRCules ave

alDRIDge leWIs H III eu

vasQueZ antHonY ea

$385,000

3/31/16

4342 aQuaRIus 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

CPH HaRvest glen llC MeDIna abIgaIl

realestate.independent.com

unInCoRPoRateD

leasuRe RoXanne e eu bRennan PatRICK eu

april 14, 2016

suMMeRlanD

PaRKInson MaRtHa s tRustee gRanDe Jo tRust

independent real estate

area


OPEN HOUSES Saturday 4/16 & Sunday 4/17 Carpinteria 5700 Via Real #1, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $145,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Karen Musser 805-8953958

4902 Sandyland Road #241, 1BD/1BA, Sun 12-3, $550,000, Sotheby’s, Carolyn Wood Friedman 805-886-3838 4405 Catlin Circle #D, 3BD/1.5BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $649,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Andrea Ruhge 805-895-5862 Kalia Rork 805-659-0614 1235 Franciscan Village, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 1-4, $658,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Linda Havlik 805-451-8020

10

independent real estate

april 14, 2016

realestate.independent.com

3375 Foothill #933, 2BD/2BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $745,000, Village Properties, Susie Maybery 805-684-3415 1163 Calle Lagunitas, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $746,750, Village Properties, Michelle Glaus 805-452-0446 954 Concha Loma Drive, 4BD/2BA, $959,000, Sun 1-4, Santa Barbara Estates, Christopher A Page 805-284-8422 3375 Foothill #911, 3BD/2BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $1,575,000, Village Properties, Susie Maybery 805-684-3415 4664 4th Street #B, 3BD/3.5BA, Sun 1-3, $1,829,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Brooke Ebner 805-453-7071 3375 Foothill Road 1114 + 1113, $1,898,000, 5BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, Coldwell Banker, Carole Thompson 805-452-8787 1205 Lomita Lane, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $2,100,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Barbie Detmer 805886-2233 4520 Foothill Road, 4BD/5BA, Sun 12-4, $3,500,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kerry Mormann/ James St. James 949-547-1860 Michelle Madril 805-453-0927 3553 Padaro Lane, 2BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $5,950,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Barbara Neary 805698-8980 3447 Padaro Lane, 5BD/3.5BA, Sun 1-4, $12,500,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kathleen Winter 805451-4663

Downtown Santa Barbara 1720 Chapala Street #8, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $465,000, Coldwell Banker, Fred Dabby 805895-6026

1121 San Andres #D, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $659,000, Alemann and Associates, Terence Alemann 805-637-3378 123 Bath Street #A8, 1BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $747,000, Village Properties, Marcos Lazaro 805-637-9121 1831 Chapala Street, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $749,000, Sotheby’s, Gene Archambault 805-455-1190 1827 De La Vina Street, 1BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $819,000, Coast and Valley Properties, Monica Lenches 805-689-1300

1829 De La Vina Street, 2BD/1.5BA, Sun 2-4, $879,900, Coast and Valley Properties, Monica Lenches 805-689-1300

510 Coronado Drive, 5BD/4BA, Sun 1-4, $995,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Stu Morse 805-705-0161

106 San Nicholas, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,495,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Steve Heller 805-2522749

1709 Overlook Lane, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-4, $4,420,000, Sotheby’s, Mark Lomas & Kristin Wolf 805-845-2888

502 Brinkerhoff, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $899,000, Village Properties, Jay Krautmann 805451-4527

72 Sanderling Lane, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,195,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Christopher Smith 805351-2474

559 Ricardo Avenue, 5BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,950,000, Coldwell Banker, Venturelli Group 805-680-5141

555 East Arrellaga Street #1, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-3, $995,000, Sotheby’s, Chris Kane 805-448-7421 Joanna Slott 805335-0158

1043 North Patterson, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,275,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, PJ Williams 805-403-0585

102 San Nicholas, 2BD/1BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $2,195,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Steve Heller 805-252-2749

1423 East Mountain Drive, 4BD/4.5BA, Sun 2-4, $4,695,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Calcagno & Hamilton/ Nancy Hamilton 805565-4000

18 W Victoria Street #208,1BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $1,050,000, Village Properties, Tim Walsh 805-259-8809Emily Kellenberger 805-252-2773 18 W Victoria Street #305,1BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $1,350,000, Village Properties, Tim Walsh 805-259-8808Emily Kellenberger 805-252-2773 1502 De La Vina Street, 2BD/1BA, Sun 1-4, $1,350,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Anthony Bordin 805-729-0527

4999 San Marcos Court, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $1,285,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Calcagno & Hamilton/ Lisa McCollum 805886-6746 7744 Kestrel Lane, 3BD/4BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $1,959,000, Village Properties, Cindy Campbell 805-570-4959 7720 Kestrel Lane, 3BD/4BA, Sat 1-4, $2,100,000, Keller Williams, Janay Marshall 720-9840087

Hope Ranch

220 East Yanoanli Street #B, 2BD/2.5BA, Sat 12-3, $1,389,000, Village Properties, David Magid 805-451-0402

4132 Hidden Oaks Road, 4BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-4, $2,095,000, Village Properties, Aaron Gilles 805-895-1877

219 Equestrian Avenue, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-5, $1,495,000, Village Properties, Tiare Barels 805-680-6816

4140 Marina Drive, 5BD/2BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-4, $2,950,000, Sotheby’s, Arve Eng 805-6982915

909 Laguna Street, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2:30-4:30, $1,749,000, Keller Williams, Louise McKaig 805-285-2008

1151 Estrella Drive, 4BD/3.5BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 2-4, $3,649,000, Tim Dahl 805-8862211 Team Scarborough 805-3311465

18 W Victoria Street #308,2BD/3BA, Sat 1-4, $2,499,000, Village Properties, Tim Walsh 805-259-8808Emily Kellenberger 805-252-2773

4178 Creciente Drive, 4BR/3BA, Sun 2-5, $3,875,000, Stones Real Estate, Team Eric and Mary 805-682-6090

Mission Canyon 2660 Montrose Place, 4BD/4BA, Sun 1-3, $1,650,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Hristo Hristov 805-284-8471

Montecito 1220 Coast Village Road #110, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $999,000, Sotheby’s, Janine Huarte 805-698-4379

769 Chelham Way, 3BD/3BA, Sat 1-4, $1,240,000, Prestigious Properties & Investments, Francie Berezo 805-705-2561 546 San Ysidro Road #B, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-4, $1,299,000, Coldwell Banker, Holly McKenna 805-886-8848 Ingrid Anderson Smith 805-6892396 62 Olive Mill Road, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $1,329,000Berkshire Hathaway, Gloria Easter 805-570-0403 1410 North Jameson Lane, 3BD/2BA, Sun 11-2, $1,329,000, Sotheby’s, Wilson Quarre 805680-9747

The Mesa

2727 East Valley Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-5, $1,875,000, Coldwell Banker, Team Bollinger 805-220-8808

988 Miramonte Drive #7, 2BD/1.5BA, Sun 1-3, $585,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jessie Sessions 805-709-0904

71 Olive Mill Road, 3BD/2.5BA, By Appt., $1,998,000, Sotheby’s, Sandy Stahl 805-689-1602

31 Dearborn #31, 2BD/1BA, Sun 1-4, $399,500, Berkshire Hathaway, Marguerite Taylor 805705-0957

950 Miramonte Drive #3, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $649,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kathy Strand Spieler 805-895-6326

740 Coyote Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-5, $2,449,000, Village Properties, Jackie Walters 805570-0558

371 Cannon Green Drive #C, 3BD/1BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 2-4, $595, 000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Stu Morse 805-705-0161 William Stonecipher 805-450-4821

209 Reef Court, 2BD/1.5BA, Sun 1-3, $739,500, Coldwell Banker, Joanne Stoltz 805-8957322

298 East Mountain Drive, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-4, $2,450,000, Sotheby’s, Daniela Johnson 805453-4555

213 Reef Court, 2BD/1.5BA, Sat 11-1, $760,000, Sun Coast Real Estate, Jeff Reeves- Broker 805-689-2058

1781 San Leandro Lane, 4BD/3.5BA, $2,695,000, Sun 1-3, Coldwell Banker, Rachel Moyer 805-452-2100

444 La Maria Drive, 3BD/1.5BA, Sun 1-3, $1,095,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Reyne Stapelmann 805-705-4353

20 South Sierra Vista Road, 5BD/3.5BA, Sun 2-4, $2,795,000, Village Properties, Marcy Bazzani 805-717-0450

215 Las Ondas, 3BD/1BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $1,150,000, Keller Williams, Breanne Painter 805455-2404

1110 Oriole Road, 4BD/3BA, Sat 12-3 Sun 12-3, $2,995,000, Coldwell Banker, Eric Stockmann 805-895-0789

1638 Payeras Street, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,250,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, Caitlin Benson 805-699-5102

216 Ortega Ridge Road, 4BD/4BA, Sun 1-3, $3,250,000, Coldwell Banker, Teresa McWilliams 805-0789

241 Palisades, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,235,000, Village Properties, Darcie Dierenfield McKnight 805-637-7772

595 Freehaven Drive, 7BD/5.5BA, Sun 1-4, $3,475,000, Berkshire Hathaway, John Comin 805-689-3078

1520 San Miguel, 2BD/1BA, Sun 2-4, $1,295,000, Village Properties, Phyllis Lenker 805-8862342

754 Winding Creek Lane, 4BD/3.5BA, Sun 1-4, $3,495,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Mary Whitney 805-689-0915

Goleta 4551 Oak Glen #E, 1BD/1BA, Sun 1-4, $385,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Sue Irwin 805-7056973

280 Daytona Drive, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $755,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jamie Jo Sim 805-6895799 31 Mendocindo Drive, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-3, $824,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Bob Ratliffe 805-448-6642 Madhu Khemani 805-252-0625 876 Sanford Court, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $875,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Bob Ratliffe 805-4486642 905 Barcelona Drive, 4BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $875,000, Goodwin & Thyne Properties, PJ Williams 805-403-0585 17 Sanderling Lane, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $905,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Rachel Brown 805-570-7160 5689 Berkeley Road, 5BD/3BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 12-2, $925,000, Sotheby’s, Laury Woods 805-729-0909 Cherie De Lisle 805-636-5373

2180 Alisos Drive, 4BD/3.5BA, By Appt., $3,750,000, Sotheby’s, Sandy Stahl 805-689-1602

1159 Hill Road, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-3, $5,435,000, Village Properties, Wayne Barker 805637-2948 470 Hot Springs Road, 4BD/5BA, Sun 2-4, $5,450,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Thomas Schultheis 805-729-2802 1098 Golf Road, 5BD/4BA, Sun 11-4, $5,450,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jason Streatfeild 805969-0211 923 Buena Vista Drive, 6BD/6.5BA, By Appt., $5,495,000, Sotheby’s, Frank Abatemarco 805-450-7477 117 Crestview Lane, 6BD/6BA, Sat 2-4, $5,950,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Michele White 805452-7515 745 Lilac Drive, 4BD/4.5BA, Sun 2-4, $5,995,000, Sotheby’s, Jenny Hall 805-705-7125 1250 Pepper Lane, 4BD/4BA, Sun 2-4, $5,995,000, Sotheby’s, Maureen Mcdermut 805-570-5545 420 Toro Canyon Road, 6BD/6.5BA, Sun 1-4, $6,295,000, Sotheby’s, The Stricklands 805455-3226 630 Stonehouse Lane, 5BD/5BA, Sun 1-4, $6,650,000, Sotheby’s, Linda Borkowski 805252-7305 1525 Las Tunas Road, 5BD/7.5BA, Sun 1-3, $6,695,000, Coldwell Banker, Conger/Petersen 805-637-0312 2225 Featherhill Road, 6BD/6.5BA, Sun 2-4, $6,995,000, Sotheby’s, Debbie Lee 805-6377588 1813 Fernald Point Lane, 4BD/4BA, By Appt., $7,750,000, Sotheby’s, Bob Lamborn 805-6896800 1530 Mimosa Lane, 6BD/6BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $7,795,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Calcagno & Hamilton/ Lisa McCollum 805886-6746 660 Hot Springs Road, 5BD/5BA, Sun 1-4, $10,650,000, Village Properties, Timothy Walsh 805-259-8808

610 Cima Vista Lane, 6BD/7BA, Sun 1-3, $11,900,000, Village Properties, Pamela Regan 805-895-2760

Noleta 5068 San Julio Avenue, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $879,900, Sun Coast Real Estate, Chris Agnoli 805-682-4304

1000 Via Regina, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $919,000, Prestigious Properties & Investments, Adam Zetter 805-689-8403 532 Lorraine Avenue, 3BD/2BA, $1,175,000, Sun 12-3, California Property Group, Suzanne M Tonoli 805-331-0978

>>>


OPEN HOUSES Saturday 4/16 & Sunday 4/17 Noleta (CONTINUED) 4569 Via Clarice, 3BD/4BA, Sun 1-4, $2,150,000, Village Properties, Gregg Leach 805-5658873

Riviera 3570 Modoc Road #15, 2BD/1.5BA, Sat By Appt., $550,000, Sotheby’s, Joanna Slott 805-335-0158

331 Conejo Road, 4BD/3BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 1-4, $1,295,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Andy Madrid 805-452-1456 Jarrod Shively 805714-5114 601 East Micheltorena Street #107, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,395,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Ken Switzer 805-680-4622

151 La Vista Grande, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-5, $1,749,000, Sotheby’s, Frank Hotchkiss 805403-0668 1570 Oramas Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,795,000, Village Properties, Leanne Wood 805-2847177

1829 Mira Vista, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-3, $2,150,000, Sotheby’s, Lauren Stewart 805-618-6007

1729 Hillcrest Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $2,295,000, Sotheby’s, The Olivers 805-680-6524 1800 El Encanto Road #A, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-3, $2,350,000, Sotheby’s, Debbie Lee 805-6377588 1520 Franceschi Road, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-3, $2,395,000, Sotheby’s, Michelle Damiani 805729-1364

Samarkand 528 Alegria Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,439,000, Keller Williams, Kimberly Rockwell 805698-8848

San Roque 3639 San Remo Drive #19, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-3, $529,500, Berkshire Hathaway, Paul Mueller 805-315-1515

3132 Calle Mariposa, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 2-4, $1,475,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Debbie Kort 805-368-4479 3844 Lincoln Road, 5BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,525,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jenny Easter 805-4556294 841-861 East Alamar Avenue, 1BA, Sun 2-4, $1,895,000, Sotheby’s, Robert Heckes 805-637-0047 1333 Santa Teresita Drive, 3BD/5BA, Sun 2-4, $2,995,000, Coast and Valley Properties, Robert P Ruccione 805-729-2004

1632 San Andres Street, 1BD/1BA, Sun 2-4, $479,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Andy Madrid 805-452-1456

728 Mission Street, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-3, $799,000, Village Properties, Chris Salvetti 805-7054040 1331 W Valerio Street, 2BD/1BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-3, $799,000, Village Properties, Lynda Bohnett 805-637-6407 Chris Salvetti 805-705-4040

1231 Cuesta Street, 2BD/1BA, Sun 12-3, $535,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Deanna Harwood 805325-1452 385 Centennial Street, 4BD/3BA, Sat 2-4, $549,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Suzy Ealand 805-698-9902 3364 Sagunto Street, 3BD/2BA, Sat 12-3, $669,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Hristo Hristov 805-284-8471 3455 Cerrito Street, 4BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $698,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Rhoda Johnson 805705-8707 3340 Sagunto Street, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $758,500, Sotheby’s, Barbara Radom 805688-1101 2866 Santa Barbara Avenue, 3BD/2BA, Sat 12:30-3, $805,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Karin Aitken 805-252-1205 675 Pine Street, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $849,000, Berkshire Hathaway, David Macbeth 805689-4178

1908 Ringsted Place, 4BD/2BA, Sat 12-3, $979,000, Sotheby’s, Linda Williams 805680-7541 5575 Baseline Road, 4BD/4BA, Sun 12-3, $1,950,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Carole Colone 805-708-2580 10199 Suey Creek Road, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 12-5, $2,500,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kerry Mormann/ Brad Berch 805680-9415

Ventura County 652 Allegro Court, 4BD/3BA, Sun 12-3, $739,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Tony Rodriguez, 805901-0425

761 Mandalay Beach Road, 4BD/4BA, Sun 1-4, $3,300,000, Trusted Real Estate Enterprises (T.R.E.E.), Danny Belitski 805-8047091

Submit your open house listings to gustavo@independent.com Tuesday by 3pm to be included in this directory.

HOLLISTER VILLAGE

902 East Alamar Avenue, 5BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $3,400,000, Village Properties, Ted Campbell 805-886-1175

A PA RT M E N T C O M M U N I T Y

905 East Alamar Avenue, 5BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $4,300,000, Village Properties, Ted Campbell 805-886-1175

Summerland 2205 Lillie Avenue #D, 2BD/2BA, Sun 12-3, $850,000, Sotheby’s, Marie Larkin 805-6802525

2368 Whitney, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,675,000, Village Properties, Shandra Cambell 805886-1176

Upper East Santa Barbara 232 East Los Olivos, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-4, TBD, Berkshire Hathaway, Errol Jahnke 805-259-6969

601 East Micheltorena #85, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-4, $1,188,000, Village Properties, Kathy Henry 805-637-4400 106 San Nicholas, 2BD/2BA, Sat 2-4, $1,495,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Steve Heller 805-2522749 1434 Laguna Street #A+B , 4BD/3BA, $1,500,000, Sun 2-4, Keller Williams, Janice Laney 805705-6474 1816 Garden Street, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $2,850,000, Pacific Group, Erin Eamer 805-680-6859

Up to 1 Month Free!* Community adjacent restaurants, shopping, services and more!

map not to scale

101

Hollister Ave.

PACIFIC OCEAN

Storke Rd.

128 Bath Street #A8, 1BD/1.5BA, Sun 1-4, $747,000, Village Properties, Jane Alexander 805-886-2930

528 Alegria Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,439,000, Kathleen Barnato, Realtor 805-570-3366

Westside Santa Barbara

Rd . nnie nA

541 North La Cumbre Road, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-3, $705,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jessie Sessions 805-709-0904 Paul Mueller 805-315-1515

1189 North Ontare Road, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,400,000, Berkshire Hathaway, DeLorie 805570-9181 Salvione 805-570-7812

221 East Constance, 6BD/5.5BA, Sun 12:30-3, $5,500,000, Village Properties, John Henderson 805-689-1066

Gle

3570 Modoc Road #15, 2BD/1.5BA, By Appt., $550,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Joanna Slott 805-335-0158

1431 Portesuello Avenue, 4BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $1,349,000, Sotheby’s, Dan Johnson 805-8955150

5219 East Camino Cielo, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 12-4, $4,900,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Mary Elliott 805-450-9933

2745 Arbor View Lane, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $485,000, Central Coast Realty Group, Pamela Stevens 805-757-9664

3173 Samantha Drive, 4BD/3BA, Sun 12-3, $899,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Chris McCool 805-680-3594

11

1919 Las Tunas, 5BD/3.5BA, Sun 2-5, $5,250,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Linda Havlik 805-4518020

3823 Sunset Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 12-2, $1,325,250, Keller Williams, Louise McKaig 805-2852008

2835 Gibraltar Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 12-4, $3,510,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Kerry Mormann/ Jo Anne Mermis, 805895-5650

5153 Brittany Court, 3BD/2BA, Sat 2-4, $455,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Suzy Ealand & Ken Sideris 805-698-9902

2699 Quail Valley Road, 5BD/3BA, Sat 2-4, $869,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Rhoda Johnson 805-705-8707

realestate.independent.com

2217 Mission Ridge Road, 2BD/3BA, By Appt., $2,195,000, Sotheby’s, Linda Borkowski 805252-7305

3719 State Street #D, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1-3, $1,140,000, Village Properties, Thomas Dabney 805-689-7306

2659 Todos Santos Lane, 4BD/4BA, Sun 1-3, $3,295,000, Sotheby’s, Paula Goodwin 805451-5699

Santa Ynez Valley

april 14, 2016

1746 Prospect Avenue, 2BD/3.5BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 1-4, $1,995,000, Village Properties, Priscilla Bedolla 805-680-7146

2940 Valencia Drive, 3BD/1BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $949,000, Village Properties, David Hekhouse 805-455-2113

1721 Santa Barbara Street, 5BD/4BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $2,950,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Anderson 805-618-8747 Hurst 805-680-8216

independent real estate

1836 Hillcrest Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $1,550,000, Village Properties, June Laula 805-6897036

3863 Fairfax Road, 7BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $755,000, Village Properties, Matt Credo 805-4486284

LE AS I N G F R O M $2,245 – TO U R M O D E L S TO DAY!

New One, Two and Three Bedroom Residences Gourmet Kitchen with Stainless Appliances In-Home Washers and Dryers • Private Parking Garages Community Amenities Resort-Style Pool & Spa • Outdoor Area with TVs, BBQs and Wi-Fi Bocce Ball Courts • Health & Fitness Center Gourmet Demonstration Kitchen • E-Business Center • PetSpawTM

844-329-2177 RentHollisterVillage.com LEASING CENTER OPEN DAILY 9-6, SUNDAY 10-5

100 Baldwin Drive, Goleta, CA 93117 El Colegio Rd.

* O.A.C. See leasing representative for more details. ©2016 Hollister Village. All rights reserved. Features, amenities and pricing subject to change.


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