Santa Barbara Independent, 01/05/17

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Filmmaker Mike Mills Talks 20Th CenTury Women jan. 5-12, 2017 VOL. 31 ■ nO. 573

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Connecting Heaven and Earth ALL-NEW 2017 SHOW WITH LIVE ORCHESTRA

“ I’ve reviewed about 4,000 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

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It must be experienced.” — Christine Walevska, “goddess of the cello”, watched Shen Yun 5 times

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Recipient of a MacArthur “Genius” Award, the Kennedy Center Honors and two Tony Awards for Best Choreography

Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company

Story/Time

Fri, Jan 20 / 8 PM / Granada Theatre / (Mature Content) Tickets start at $35 / $19 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

“Choreographer Bill T. Jones is a born storyteller… Every text is as carefully constructed as a poem.” – Mark Swed, Los Angeles Times Dance Series Sponsors: Annette & Dr. Richard Caleel, Margo Cohen-Feinberg & Robert Feinberg and the Cohen Family Fund, Barbara Stupay The Lynda and Bruce Thematic Learning Initiative: Creative Culture

Canada’s Ballet BC Emily Molnar, Artistic Director Featuring Choreography by Crystal Pite and Sharon Eyal

Fri, Feb 3 / 8 PM / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $35 / $19 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

“This superb contemporary ballet company… is packed with charismatic dancers performing at full-strength.” The Boston Globe Dance Series Sponsors: Annette & Dr. Richard Caleel, Margo Cohen-Feinberg & Robert Feinberg and the Cohen Family Fund, Irma & Morrie Jurkowitz, Barbara Stupay

Award-winning French Canadian Cirque Troupe

The 7 Fingers

(Les 7 doigts de la main) Cuisine & Confessions Mon, Feb 6 / 7 PM (note special time) / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $25 / $19 UCSB students (with valid ID) and youths (18 & under) A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

“A delicious evening in every sense of the word. A perfect blend with just the right dose of ingredients, like in the very best recipes.” Huffington Post

Event Sponsors: Audrey & Tim Fisher Corporate Sponsor: The Lynda and Bruce Thematic Learning Initiative: Creative Culture

(805) 893-3535 / www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Corporate Season Sponsor:

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T H E S A N TA B A R B A R A S Y M P H O N Y P R E S E N T S

DISNEY

FANTASIA

Live in Concert

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Featuring select scenes from Walt Disney’s Fantasia (1940) and Fantasia 2000 David Lockington, Guest Conductor

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January 28, 2017 8pm I January 29, 2017 3pm I The Granada Theatre Disney shares one of its crown jewels of feature animation with the Santa Barbara Symphony accompanying scenes from Disney’s original Fantasia (1940) and Fantasia 2000, highlighting a selection of both films’ magnificent repertoire. Concert also includes Paul Hindemith’s brilliant Symphonic Metamorphosis.

Not valid with any other offers. Limit (1) per patient. Must present coupon. Some restrictions apply. Discount does not apply to past purchases. Cash paying patients only.

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(Presentation licensed by Disney Music Publishing and Buena Vista Concerts, a division of ABC Inc. (c) All rights reserved.)

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News Editor Tyler Hayden; News Reporters Kelsey Brugger, Keith Hamm; Columnists Gail Arnold, 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 Assistant Savanna Mesch Copy Chief Jackson Friedman; Copy Editors Diane Mooshoolzadeh, Amy Smith Art Directors Ben Ciccati, Caitlin Fitch; Editorial Designer Megan Illgner; Web Producer/Social Media Michael S. Gahagan; Web Content Assistant Nya Burke Sports Editor John Zant; Food Writer George Yatchisin; Contributors Michael Aushenker, Rob Brezsny, Victor Cox, John Dickson, Brandon Fastman, Rachel Hommel, Rebecca Horrigan, Eric HvolbØll, Shannon Kelley, Mitchell Kriegman, Kevin McKiernan, Ninette Paloma, Michael Redmon, Carolina Starin, Tom Tomorrow, Cynthia Carbone Ward, Maggie Yates; Editorial Interns Blanca Garcia, Sarah Sutherland, Alegra Zuchowicz; Founding Staff Emeriti Audrey Berman, George Delmerico, Richard Evans; Honorary Consigliere Gary J. Hill Copy Kids Henry and John Poett Campbell, Chloë Bee Ciccati, Miles Joseph Cole, Asher Salek Fastman, Izadora and Savina Hamm, Madeline Rose and Mason Carrington Kettmann, Simone and Zoe Laine, Izzy and Maeve McKinley, Miranda Tanguay Ortega, Avila Paige and Marie Autumn Smith, Sawyer Tower Stewart Office Manager/Legal Advertising Tanya Spears Guiliacci; Administrative Assistant Gustavo Uribe; Distribution Scott Kaufman; Advertising Representatives Camille Cimini Fruin, Suzanne Cloutier, Rachel Gantz, Lynn Goodman, Laszlo Hodosy, Tonea Songer, Brandi Webber; Marketing and Promotions Manager Emily Cosentino Production Manager Marianne Kuga; Advertising Designers Helene Laine, Alex Melton Chief Financial Officer Brandi Rivera; Director of Advertising Sarah Sinclair Publisher Joe Cole The Independent is available, free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Back issues cost $2 and may be purchased at the office. The Independent may be distributed only by authorized circulation staff or authorized distributors. No person may, without the permission of publisher, take more than one copy of each Independent issue. Subscriptions are available, paid in advance, for $120 per year. Send subscription requests with name and address to subscriptions@independent.com. The contents of The Independent are copyrighted 2017 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 12 E. 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.

for more information and videos visit

216 W. Pueblo St. Ste A www.fabulouslegs.com Santa Barbara 6

Executive Editor Nick Welsh; Senior Editors Michelle Drown, Matt Kettmann; Editor at Large Ethan Stewart; Photography Editor Paul Wellman

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Contact information: 12 E. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101 PHONE (805) 965-5205; FAX (805) 965-5518; CLASSIFIED (805) 965-5208 EMAIL news@independent.com, letters@independent.com Staff email addresses can be found at independent.com/info


Angry Poodle Barbecue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16 In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19 Barney Brantingham’s On the Beat . . . . . .  21

Cov CoveR STORY

Living Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39

Santa Barbara Independent reader Sherry Holland sent this photo to us not too long ago. “I saw this on my way to work this morning and thought it was so cute,” she wrote. “I don’t know who the guy is, but the dog is carrying The Independent!” Just another example of our high-quality readers.

online now at

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Food & Drink . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Free Leonard Peltier

roger durling

23

the week.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 living.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Dining Out Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

Will Obama Release the Native American Activist?

The Restaurant Guy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47

(Kevin McKiernan)

a&e. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49

ON THE COVER: Leonard Peltier, at Leavenworth, mid1990s, photographed by Kevin McKiernan, a Pulitzernominated journalist who was at the 1975 shootout and has covered Peltier ever since.

Arts Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 courteSy

Dance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

Classical . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53

Pop, Rock and Jazz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54

film & tv. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57

out west

Feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Movie Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57

27 featuRe

odds & ends. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

Filmmaker Mike Mills Talks 20th Century Women

(Hilary Dole Klein)

Sherry holland

news.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 opinions.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

dog-gone peRfeCt

carleton WatkinS

volume 31, number 573, Jan. 5-12, 2017 kevin m c kiernan

Contents

Rob Brezsny’s Free Will Astrology . . . . . . . 61

Classifieds.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Tom Tomorrow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64

Jeff Miller ponders the misnaming of places, including Santa Barbara. �������������������

s.B. QuestionnaiRe

Roger Durling interviews our very own photographer, Paul Wellman (pictured). � � � � � � � � � independent.com/sbq

independent.com/out-west

opinions

Footbridge for UCSB North Campus? What happens to health care? And more. � � � � � � � � � � � independent.com/opinions

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THE INDEPENDENT

JANUARY 5, 2017

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December 22, 2016 January 5, 2017

NEWS of the WEEK pau l wellm an

by Kelsey Brugger @kelseybrugger, Keith hamm, tyler hayden @TylerHayden1, and nicK Welsh, with Independent staff

news Briefs law & disorder The day after Christmas, a 69-year-old man in the County Jail suffered a “cardiac-related medical emergency” at about 9:50 p.m. and was pronounced dead two hours later at Cottage Hospital. According to the Sheriff’s Office, an inmate in the jail’s dormitory housing area discovered the suffering man — whose identity is being withheld pending family notification — and called custody staff for help. The inmate became unresponsive in the ambulance taking him to the hospital, and life-saving procedures were unsuccessful. Preliminary indications are that the man died of natural causes. He had been arrested on 12/22 for failing to appear in court and for resisting an officer.

cou rtesy

Standing beneath a dark gray sky near Miramar Beach, Das Williams hugged longtime benefactor Peter Sperling just before he was sworn in as Santa Barbara County’s 1st District supervisor late Monday afternoon. The moment he began to take his oath it started to drizzle. “I’d take the oath every day if it means more rain for the First District!” he later posted on Facebook. Mike Allen, the county’s clerk of the board, performed the ceremony as Williams’s wife, Jonnie Erika Williams; their baby girl, Ya’Ash; billionaire Peter Sperling; and others watched. County attorneys reportedly insisted Williams be sworn in the day before outgoing 1st District supervisor Salud Carbajal formally assumed his new post in the House of Representatives so that Carbajal would not briefly hold two offices. But for Williams, the first county supervisor to get sworn in at the beach, the act was important in a philosophical sense.“One of the great innovations of our democracy—over the way the Roman Empire worked— worked is that we can’t hold simultaneous offices.” Meanwhile, Mike Allen, the county’s clerk of the board, quickly swore in Joan Hartmann as 3rd District supervisor on Tuesday in the —Kelsey Brugger hearing room at the County Administration Building (right).

A driver reportedly hit the gas instead of the brake on Stearns Wharf on 12/30, propelling his rented Volkswagen Passat off the east side of the wharf and into the sea. The airbag burst open, causing minor cuts and bruises, and the man escaped the car, swam to a ladder, and climbed back up to the wharf, according to city firefighters. The vehicle was later winched out of the sea.

education

city

Montessori suddenly Closes K-6 Private School Never Fully Recovered from Great Recession

F

“We made some major efforts to streamline operations, and we relied on a lot of volunteers,” said former board president Melissa Moreno, whose daughter is an alum. “We were on the upswing, and we really did everything we could to turn it around. Then we got hit by forces outside of our control that we were unable to overcome.” Moreno and Fitzpatrick politely declined to state what those outside forces were. Montessori parents familiar with the situation explained that another complication arose when many families became disappointed last year as the school stopped offering instruction at a junior high level. And when those families with kids in multiple grade levels decided to leave the school, they expected full tuition refunds for each child, even those not yet in junior high

pau l wel lm an

by Keith Hamm

aced with what’s been described as a “shocking and sudden” perfect storm of financial troubles, according to cofounder Jim Fitzpatrick, Santa Barbara Montessori School closed its doors late last month. “It has been really tough,” said Fitzpatrick, 68, who opened the school with his wife, Frances, in 1975.“This is a difficult time. We’ve dedicated more than 40 years of our life to this, and it’s come to a screeching halt.” Fitzpatrick said the K-6 private school — with an annual tuition between roughly $10,000 and $14,000, depending on grade level—never fully recovered from enrollment drops during the Great Recession, as numbers plunged from nearly 150 students to about 90 kids two years ago. The school adjusted by shrinking its footprint at Goleta Union School District’s El Rancho campus, where it has rented space for the past 12 years, and cutting back its staff.

The man’s body discovered after a fire on 12/5 below Highway 101 in a drainage pipe near Punta Gorda has been identified as a homeless man named Candelario Martinez. The Salinas Street off-ramp on the northbound 101 wil be closed for about four more weeks while Caltrans repairs it. Cal Portland is the contractor for the project, which will wrap up by early February, weather permitting, at a cost of about $1 million.

Jim Fitzpatrick classrooms. While the school was prepared to reimburse the families for their junior high kids, it would not do the same for younger children, which is consistent with contractual obligations between the school and the parents of each student. Tensions grew thick with litigious sentiment, and the school’s financial future just didn’t add up.

Transient occupancy tax (TOT) from vacation rentals in the city dropped 21.4 percent in November compared to the previous year, but the loss was made up by a hotel and motel TOT increase of 10.9 percent. Overall, bed tax income rose by 9.1 percent. In dollars and cents, November’s TOT was $1,274,277, adding to the more than $9.4 million collected in the first five months since the fiscal year began in July. This year’s goal is $19.7 million. In sales tax collection, city revenue also rose, going up 2 percent in its first fiscal quarter compared to the previous year, or a gain of $5.5 million in sales tax for July-September. The target for 2017 is $22.3 million. Rainfall totals so far have Santa Barbara on track toward a normal wet season. The first four months of the 2017 water year — SeptemberDecember — delivered 5.45 inches to downtown Santa Barbara, 96 percent of normal. Dating back to 1900, the rainy season delivers a fraction more than 18 inches. For the past five years, totals never surpassed 11 inches. A water year runs September 1-August 31.

environment As the safety of fracking remains in question, the U.S. Forest Service is halting new oil and gas development in Los Padres National Forest,

cont’d on page 14 ~

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JANUARY 5, 2017

cont’d on page 14 ~

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December 22, 2016 - January 5, 2017

mental health

INTERVENE

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Longtime Commissioner Quits Two Cultural Committees in Protest by Héctor Sánchez Castañeda

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r. Manny Casas has been general trend of Hispanic underrepresentathe only Latino in the county tion in services and an overrepresentation in on the Santa Barbara Mental the juvenile system. Health Commission for the last Casas recounted stories of clinical staff 30 years, and he’s tired of what grabbing janitors to interpret conversations he calls a lack of effort from administrators for them with a mental-health patient. “It has happened,” said Behavioral Welland higher-ups to address ethnic and racial disparity within Behavioral Wellness. Casas ness’s Ethnic Services manager, Yaneris recently resigned from two committees in Muñiz, of Casas’s story. “I have seen it hapcharge of doling out recommendations to pen myself.” Muñiz said situations like these the department on how to deal with eth- come about as an “act of desperation,” when nic inequality. Now 75, Casas wants to put interpreters are not readily available. She a spotlight on the county’s mental-health said that interpretation services are indeed department and its lack of what he calls “cul- something that the department struggles tural awareness.” with but that there is an ongoing effort to Born in Chihuahua, Mexico, in 1941, improve and renew availability. Casas immigrated to the U.S. when he was While the department itself doesn’t hire 3. He recalls spending one summer as a interpreters, Muñiz said, bilingual and multeenager working at a sugar refinery and brick-making factory. He soon decided he wanted an education. Casas attended Berkeley in 1959, riding a Greyhound bus for an hour to campus daily, and witnessed the racial disparity he’s trying now to erase. “In the four years I was [at Berkeley], I can actually say I never ever met another Mexican in that campus, and lanGuaGe GaPs: Dr. Manny Casas wants Behavioral Wellness to look in those days we had at its ethnic biases, which have translated to poor services for black and 24,000 to 26,000 stu- Latino clients. dents,” Casas said. It’s hard to paint a clear picture of diver- ticultural staff members can undergo trainsity at Behavioral Wellness. The department ing and become certified to interpret for the has no up-to-date statistics on the ethnicities department. In addition, she said she plans of the department’s staff, according to Chief on hiring more contractors for languages Quality Care and Strategy Officer Suzanne such as Korean and Cantonese, which the Grimmesey. Efforts are underway, however, department does not have instant access to. to gather information on staff ethnicity data Casas resigned as chair from the Cultural and bilingual proficiency, she said. Patient Competency and Diversity Action Team — information, however, was more readily a committee that Muñiz now chairs — after available. Throughout 2015 and the first expressing his concern that the administrahalf of 2016, the majority of departmental tion was not acknowledging his team’s recpatients were Hispanic. ommendations. Muñiz, who’s been the ethGiven that proportion, a 2015 report nic services manager for about a half a year, that Casas shared with me demonstrated a said that she currently thinks she has the stark disparity in treatment. White patients backing and full support of administrators. throughout the county consistently went “We know that most people have biases,” through the department’s Assertive Com- Casas said.“And there’s all kinds of research munity Treatment (ACT) — one of the most now and interventions for dealing with what expensive treatment options available. Cau- is called implicit biases. The big companies casians constituted more than 66 percent of at Silicon Valley provide training for all their ACT patients, while Hispanics accounted people in this area … we need the same kind for less than 20 percent throughout a of training at the mental-health services, 10-month period the report surveyed. The and it can be done.” report, which was prepared by one of the Casas pointed at the Santa Barbara committees Casas resigned from, showed a Probation Department as an example of

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r. David Dodson, president-elect

of the Central Coast Medical Association, signed a petition opposing Congressmember Tom Price’s nomination to be President-elect Donald Trump’s secretary of health and human services and taking exception to the American Medical Association (AMA) for endorsing Price, a Republican from Georgia and a former orthopedic surgeon as well as an ardent opponent of the Affordable Care Act. Dodson is one of nearly 6,000 doctors nationwide to sign petitions opposing the AMA’s endorsement of Price and Price himself. Dodson stressed he was acting as an individual when signing the petition, circulated online by the National Physicians Alliance, and not as a representative of the Central Coast Medical Association, which represents 700 doctors in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. Dodson said Price’s vehement opposition to the Affordable Care Act runs counter to the AMA’s position of support, as does Price’s opposition to abortion. “The AMA helped craft the Affordable Care Act,” Dodson said.“I was among the house of delegates in Chicago when President Obama showed up to outline his ideas about health care reform.” Dodson expressed concern that neither Price nor Trump had explained what alternatives would be provided to provide insurance for the 22 million now covered under the Affordable Care Act. He likewise expressed concern that Price’s positions regarding Medicaid and Medicare would severely limit access. Price has stated in the past that Medicare should be replaced with a voucher system and that Medicaid be

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funded through block grants administered by individual states. According to the petition Dodson signed, those two programs provide care for 57 million and 68 million senior and low-income citizens, respectively. If the Affordable Care Act were repealed, it also asserted, 129 million patients with preexisting conditions would find themselves stripped of the protections afforded by the Affordable Care Act. Those protections bar insurance companies from excluding clients with preexisting medical conditions. While the AMA has supported the Affordable Care Act, it endorsed Price because, as a medical professional, he’s been “a leader in the development of health policies to advance patient choice and market-based solutions as well as reduce excessive regulatory burdens that diminish time devoted to patient care and increase costs.” Dodson, who moved to Santa Barbara from Massachusetts six years ago and now works for Sansum Clinic with an internal medicine specialty, said the Affordable Care Act was modeled upon “RomneyCare” — passed when Mitt Romney was governor of Massachusetts. “Back then, it enjoyed bipartisan support,” Dodson said. Only after it became known as “Obamacare,” Dodson said, did Republicans condemn it as “a terrible idea.” Dodson described Price as an “outlier” within the AMA itself. Since Trump’s election, he said Price and others of like minds have enjoyed a political resurgence. The AMA’s position has sparked an outcry among many doctors throughout the country, and several petitions from multiple medical organizations have since surcont’d on page 14 ~

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alud Carbajal raised his right hand and was sworn in Tuesday — along with 437 other members of Congress — as the new representative of the 24th Congressional District on the House floor, accompanied by his teenage son, Michael. Carbajal, a Democrat and a 12-year county supervisor, replaces Lois Capps. Carbajal cast his first vote against a rule imposing fines of $2,500 on any members of Congress who take photographs or videos of themselves while on the House floor. The measure was pushed by the Republican leadership in reaction to a sit-in that took place on the House floor six months ago by many Democratic congressmembers, Capps included, protesting the Republican refusal to allow any gun control measures to come to a vote. Carbajal—a member of the Democratic minority—has yet to be assigned to any committee. He’s applied for appointment to Veterans Affairs, Transportation and Infra—Nick Welsh structure, and Science, Space, and Technology.

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in the house: Salud Carbajal (fourth from right) was sworn in as Representative for California’s 24th Congressional District, and is pictured here with his family at a ceremonial instant-replay, photobombed by Speaker of the House Paul Ryan.

JANUARY 5, 2017

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he first time since 2008, Santa Barbara County Public Health officials announced a confirmed case of measles. On December 27 at about 7:30 p.m., a Santa Barbara man was admitted to Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital after feeling ill soon after returning from Los Angeles. Hospital staff took immediate precautions, confining him to an infection control room, according to Susan KleinRothschild, County Public Health’s spokesperson. He was treated and released, and he was instructed to go into isolation. Klein-Rothschild declined to reveal specifics about the man’s prior whereabouts or immunization history, but she Susan Klein-Rothschild noted there is currently an outbreak in Los Angeles. Twelve people are believed to have contracted the airborne disease. “It is highly, highly contagious,” she stressed. Of the 12, just one was fully vaccinated, she added. Protection against measles requires two doses of the MMR vaccine, she said, noting it is 97 percent effective. Two years ago, Public Health agents in Santa Barbara County went on high alert after a measles scare. They quickly convened a press conference at which doctors implored all members of the community to get fully vaccinated. The case turned out to be a false alarm, but it unleashed an impassioned debate about inoculations, a controversy that picked up steam across the state. Last year, the State Legislature passed a law requiring all schoolchildren to be fully immunized, barring medical exemptions. Symptoms of measles include rash, cough, runny nose, and pink eye, and according to Public Health, individuals showing symptoms have already been infectious for four days. Those exposed who are unvaccinated could be quarantined for up to 21 days. The disease can cause encephalitis, pneumonia, and death, Klein-Rothschild said. Before the MMR vaccine was developed in the 1960s, the disease was fairly common, sending 48,000 to the —Kelsey Brugger hospital each year; about 500 people would die annually.

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r. Virgil Elings — former

UCSB physics professor, nanotech pioneer, and high-profile philanthropist—is hardly the first colon cancer patient who kicked himself after the fact for not getting a colonoscopy. But he’s undoubtedly the first and only one to donate $4 million to the fundraising campaign for Sansum Clinic’s new consolidated Cancer Center, now under construction. Sansum set a fundraising goal of $38 million for the $53 million project, and with Elings’ donation, that goal has been met. Elings’ donation secured naming rights to the new building—located at 540 West Pueblo Street. The actual cancer center — with operations in Santa Barbara, Lompoc, and Solvang—will be named after Leslie Ridley-Tree, who donated $10.73 million. Elings and the Cancer Center go back about six years when he underwrote the cost of free colonoscopies for 400 uninsured individuals to the tune of $200,000. At age 67, Elings had been diagnosed with colon cancer. “The insurance industry doesn’t want us to know about our colons until we reach the age when Medicare kicks in,” he said. Unfortunately, for many, colon cancer surfaces before then. Initially, Elings said he’d hoped to underwrite 1,000 such procedures. “It turns out people aren’t exactly lining up to have colonoscopies,” he stated. Elings started the company Digital Instruments in 1987, which created highpowered, state-of-the-art scanning microscopes. When he sold the company in 1998, Elings became exceptionally rich and exceptionally generous, donating $2.5 million to the park that bears his name, $12.5 million to UCSB, $3.5 million to MIT, and $1 million for a field at Girsh Park in Goleta.“I’m a little

JANUARY 2017 Sansum Clinic’s unified, patient-first approach to healthcare is built around you. We provide health education programs at low or no-cost to the community. Learn more at www.SansumClinic.org

NEW Online Health Education Calendar The all new Health Education calendar is now available online at www.sansumclinic.org/health-and-wellness. Dr. Virgil Elings crazy when it comes to naming things,” he said with gruff self-deprecation.“Years from now, they’ll be wondering ‘Who the hell was that guy?’” he said. “They may not know how to pronounce my name, but at least they’ll know how to spell it.” For years, the Santa Barbara Cancer Center operated out of three downtown locations. The new building—slated to be ready for occupancy next summer — will allow the center, which has recently joined forces with Sansum Clinic, to fuse all operations into one location. Not only will this allow greater collaboration among treatment providers, but the new radiation treatment chambers will feature machines that are far more precise in targeting tumors, reducing collateral damage associated with the treatment. Elings noted that cancer had been no stranger to his family. “People talk about finding the cure for cancer,” he said, “but I think cancer is trying to find the cure for me.” Speaking of Elings, Sansum CEO Dr. Kurt Ransohoff stated: “If you look at Santa Barbara without Virgil Elings, it looks like a n much different community.”

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dr. Casas cont’d from p. 10 a system successfully exploring inequality in their department without fear of a conversation on their shortfalls. In 2015, the W. Haywood Burns Institute, a San Francisco– based organization that works with jurisdictions to address area racial and ethnic disparities, released a report detailing the disparity of arrests based on ethnicity. With a $147,940 grant from the Board of State and Community Corrections, the institute and UC Santa Barbara worked with Probation to educate and train juvenile justice stakeholders in implicit bias. Several county stakeholders, the report found, had a negative view of Latino culture. Given that, culturally based programs had

a low priority since stakeholders thought the culture itself helped in the fostering of crime, the report stated. Statistics-wise, arrests and probation diversion was disproportionate, as well. Black and Latino youths in the county were more likely to get arrested, less likely to get diverted probation, and more likely to end up in secure detention than white youths, the report said. “I want to make sure that the diverse population, especially the Latino population in town, get equitable service,” Casas said. “I want [Behavioral Wellness] to address that issue and make sure that what they’re doing is appropriate.”

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news Briefs cont’d from p. 9 where a 2005 plan looked to open more than 50,000 additional acres to leasing. The suspension allows the agency, which was facing ongoing litigation by conservation groups, to revisit the industry’s impact on climate change, water quality, and wildlife, such as endangered steelhead and condors. As of 2008, Seneca Resources Corporation is the sole oil and gas leaseholder and field operator in the Sespe Oil Field at Los Padres, according to the Forest Service. Seneca holds all 16 existing oil and gas leases, and operates 44 idle wells and 119 active wells.

county The Sheriff’s Mounted Enforcement Unit made its first-ever appearance in the Rose Bowl Parade on 1/2. The group of 10 deputy riders, including Sheriff Bill Brown, and four deputy outwalkers, along with a team of horses, paraded down Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena. The parade’s theme, “Echoes of Success,” was fitting, as Lt. Erik Raney, Parade Marshal for the Sheriff’s Office said, “Our unit enjoys great support from the community and from within, and sharing those stories of success is what this year’s parade theme is all about.”

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Montessori cont’d from p. 9 On December 10, the board voted unanimously to engage bankruptcy counsel. School families will be listed as creditors in the proceedings. “We [boardmembers] all feel terrible for the families, the kids, and the people who lost their jobs,” Moreno said. After getting married in 1969, the Fitzpatricks — both Angelenos — moved to Bergamo, Italy, to study with Mario Montessori, son of Maria Montessori, the Italian physician who pioneered early-childhood educational techniques and fundamentals in human learning more than 100 years ago. Wanting to start a family away from Los Angeles, they eventually landed in Santa Barbara, where they launched the school — initially called Montessori Children’s Home—with three students at Trinity Episcopal downtown. After two years, their head count hit 25. “We had to expand because the program was so popular,” Jim Fitzpat-

rick remembered. After 20 years of growth at Trinity, they found a brief home on the Westside at Grace Church before moving to the Boys & Girls Club near Santa Barbara High School, where they operated until the move to El Rancho. “It was a big move from downtown to Goleta,” he said. “We called it our ‘risk and promise campaign,’ ” because the school was born downtown but the new nine-acre campus out past Dos Pueblos High School was so appealing. Over the decades, the Fitzpatricks’ son and two daughters all attended and later worked at the school. Their four grandsons were also enrolled. “Frances and Jim did an incredible thing,” Moreno said. “They started a business and ran it for 41 years in Santa Barbara, providing jobs for people and an incredible education for children. That’s their legacy.” n

Price ain’t right cont’d from p. 11 faced. The National Physicians Alliance, 11 years old, has garnered more than 6,000 signatures, about 150 from California doctors. Other medical organizations have supplied the other signatures. Dodson said Price’s positions on abortion are equally ideological. “He defines human life as beginning at conception,” Dodson said, “which makes anyone who uses an IUD [intrauterine device] guilty of murder.” IUDs prevent the fertilized egg and sperm from implanting themselves on the wall of the uterus. Dr. Kurt Ransohoff, CEO of Sansum, said he shares some of Dodson’s concerns. “How do you repeal care for 22 million people without providing any alternative? A lot of doctors — myself included — find that very worrisome.” Ransohoff said he hadn’t signed any petitions to date, but added, “I certainly support Dr. Dodson’s right to express his own opinion and probably his opinion, as well.” Dodson won’t take over as president of the CCMA until this week. He said he’d like the organization to take a position on the matter, but he acknowledged his membership reflects a broad range of political

opinion. Local medical associations are not able to take positions in opposition to that of the California Medical Association (CMA), and with the CMA on break during the holiday season, he hasn’t been able to determine what its stance on the Price nomination or the AMA’s endorsement are. Price proved so vocal in his opposition to the Affordable Care Act that when former Congressmember Lois Capps attempted to make a brief speech in favor of the act — one day prior to its passage — Price interrupted her nearly a dozen times, repeatedly stating, “I object.” Ultimately, he was ruled out of order. Capps said she didn’t take Price’s interruptions personally, nor did she remember them. As a rule, Capps said, she tried to get Republicans to cosponsor bills that she wanted to introduce but that in recent years, it became increasingly difficult to find Republicans to whom she could reach out. Price, she said, “was pretty much of an ideologue. I never would have thought to reach out to him even though there are so many things we should have had in comn mon.”


pau l wellm an f i le photo

NEWS of the WEEK cont’d national

state

liMón Made new asseMBly assistant wHiP First-Time Santa Barbara Dem Legislator Named to Leadership Team by Kelsey Brugger

N

washinGton callinG? Former California lieutenant governor and Santa Maria farmer Abel Maldonado (left, with Brooks Firestone) met with Donald Trump to discuss a possible secretary of agriculture appointment.

Maldonado Plays Footsie witH truMP Interviews with Prez-Elect for Ag Post by Nick Welsh

A

bel Maldonado, California’s former

lieutenant governor, the Central Coast’s former assemblymember and state senator, and Santa Maria’s former mayor, was in Florida on December 28, reportedly interviewing with Presidentelect Donald Trump to discuss a possible appointment as secretary of agriculture. Maldonado — whose political ambitions have been all dressed up with no place to go since losing a high-stakes showdown with Lois Capps in 2012 — was one of five candidates vying for the position. Maldonado, whose family owns a sprawling farming operation in the Santa Maria Valley, would be the first Latino appointed to the Trump cabinet should he get the nod. To secure the post, however, Maldonado will have to account for critical remarks in a letter he signed along with many other prominent California Latino business leaders last year, taking issue with Trump’s harsh rhetoric regarding Mexican immigrants. America, the letter stated, needed a president who could unite the country. “You fail on all accounts,” it read. “As such, not only have you lost our respect and our buying power, but you have lost our vote.” Efforts to contact Maldonado have not been successful. As of deadline, he was described in other media accounts as a front-runner for the post. Maldonado was once the rising star within the constricted confines of the California moderate Republican universe. He worked closely with former governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to whose wagon he appeared to have been hitched. Maldonado sought to work across the aisle and for doing so was widely distrusted by all. In 2009, he cast the deciding vote needed for a tax increase pushed by Democratic leadership. In exchange, he got the Democrats to place before state voters a ballot initiative that effectively rewrote the rules guiding primary elections. Under the changes championed by Maldonado, the top two vote-getters

face off in the November runoff regardless of party affiliation. Maldonado’s moderation did not serve him well when facing off against Lois Capps in 2012, as many in the local and statewide Republican Parties turned their backs on his campaign. Even so, he was designated by the national party as a “young gun,” meaning he’d been identified as a viable challenger going up against an entrenched incumbent. Whatever crossover appeal Maldonado possessed evaporated in the face of revelations detailing hundreds of thousands of dollars in unpaid taxes. Maldonado insisted those taxes were in dispute. But the reports were damaging, and he remained on the defensive. After losing to Capps, Maldonado toyed with running for governor in 2014, but backed out of that race early in the year. Also vying for the secretary of agriculture post is former Georgia governor Sonny Perdue, former Texas A&M president Elsa Murano, former Texas comptroller Susan Combs, and current Texas Ag Commissioner Sid Miller. Miller, according to Politico, has courted controversy, referring to Syrian refugees as “rattlesnakes” on his Facebook page and calling Hillary Clinton the c-word on Twitter, and was under investigation for using taxpayer dollars to fly to Oklahoma to receive a cure-all cocktail of legal drugs and vitamins known as a “Jesus Shot.” Maldonado is one of several Santa Barbara County residents — current or recent — making the A-list for the new Trump administration. Colony Capital’s Thomas Barrack — also owner of Happy Canyon Vineyards — is in charge of Trump’s inaugural celebration. Andrew Puzder, CEO of CKE and until a few months ago a Montecito resident, has been nominated Secretary of Labor. And Montana Congressmember Ryan Zinke — whose wife Lolita Hand Zinke grew up in Santa Barbara and whose family still owns property here — has been nominated for interior secretary. n

Assembly, Monique Limón was appointed last week to be assistant majority whip, part of the house’s leadership team. Limón, 37, a former Santa Barbara school boardmember, won 64 percent of the vote in the race to represent the 37th Assembly District, which stretches from Buellton to Fillmore. She succeeds Das Williams, who was elected to the County Board of Supervisors. “It is a really neat place since I am coming in as a freshman,” Limón said of the appointment by Speaker of the Assembly Anthony Rendon. The assistant majority whip is expected to corral members to vote in line with the party. Limón explained the job entails mobilizing members around major issues, but exactly what those are depends on the year. Legislators have until February 17 to introduce new legislation.“If anything, I’ll have the ability to work with the leadership team to be a bigger voice,” she said.“It is a big deal. I am truly honored to serve in that capacity.” Limón said she got to know the Speaker, whose district is in Los Angeles, over the past two years, and he greatly supported her campaign, attending a fundraising event in Santa Barbara in early October. (In total, Limón brought in about $342,000, according to state records; she still has $252,000 left.) At the swearing-in ceremony on December 5, Limón was one of just three assemblymembers to second Rendon’s nomination for Speaker and the only freshman who spoke that day. The burning question in state politics remains the same as it was on Election Day: How could a Donald Trump administration affect California laws? “We don’t want anyone to catch us unprepared,” Limón said. “We will closely follow what is happening at the national level.” In his first move as Speaker, Rendon put forward a resolution — AB 4 — to protect all vulnerable communities against any potential threats presented by the coming administration. Limón, who supported the resolution, explained some people have asked her why state legislators felt compelled to act so quickly as Trump has not even been sworn into office yet. “We are acting on direct quotes,” she said. “We’ve been given something to consider. The state wants to be vigilant and prepared. “We’ve always cared about what has happened at the federal level,” she added. “We work very closely with the federal government. … It doesn’t mean that California agrees with everything that the independent.com

pau l wellm an f i le photo

ewly elected to the State

Monique Limón Obama administration did … you still have folks on the same side of the aisle who have disagreements.” Even though Democrats now make up two-thirds of both houses, Limón reasoned, “on some issues you can get them to vote the same way, but not on all of them.” When asked, Limón was quick not to confine herself to a bloc within the Democratic Party. She noted, though, that moderate Democrats have opposed efforts to strengthen environmental policies. “That, to me, is really a priority of the district,” she said. The resolution to protect immigrant communities essentially asked Presidentelect Trump not to carry out his proposed mass deportation plan, but it did not specify actions or funding amounts. But the move turned out to be controversial, leading Limón to wonder, “Gosh. Is this a taste of what the year is going to be like?” However, Limón said, “The fact that not all Republicans voted against it says something.” In early December, Limón asked Santa Barbara Unified’s school board, which she served on for six years before stepping down to go to Sacramento, to adopt a similar resolution. “I really stress there is meaning behind them,” she said, even though many things remain unknown. “Schools are schools … not this place that people fear going to. Students and families with diverse backgrounds had asked her to do something, she said. Limón, who grew up here, comes from a big and accomplished Santa Barbara family. In January, Limón plans to speak with students worried that the threat of deportation could separate them from family members, assuring them she will “do anything we can.” This week, committee appointments in the Legislature should be announced. “Everyone is expecting that I’ll do Education,” she said.“I have also expressed interest in thinking a little more broadly,” such n as Economic Development.

JANUARY 5, 2017

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Opinions

angry poodle barbecue

No Dog, No Bark

SCANDAL MEETS STUPIDITY: A coinci-

dence? Or merely a strained confluence of curious unrelated events? You tell me. The very same week that Republican members of Congress conducted a late-night, behind-closed-doors caucus meeting to defang, de-claw, and defenestrate the single most effective ethics watchdog agency that institution has ever had, we also heard that Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of health and human services — Republican Georgia Congressmember Tom Price — belongs to a medical organization that believes the effect of the landmark 1965 law creating both Medicare and Medicaid is “evil” and that participation in its provisions is “immoral.” Is there a connection? Maybe not. But if you squint a little, you might conclude otherwise. By now, the g-force of the news cycle surrounding President-elect Donald Trump has exacerbated the deficit of our collective attention disorder. But certain facts are worth reviewing even if they’re now so stale and crunchy they’ll crack your teeth. On Monday night, a rump faction of rogue, retrograde Republicans orchestrated a neck-tie party on behalf of the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE), an investigative agency created in 2008 amid the lobbyist-bribery scandals then coming to light. OCE has no power to subpoena, and it imposes no disciplinary measures. Instead, it refers cases to the House Ethics Committee for any such action. Leading the charge against OCE were Republicans

who found religion where civil liberties and due process were concerned only after their offices had been on the receiving end of OCE’s allegedly less-than-delicate probing. Against the vehement opposition of House Republican leaders Paul Ryan and Kevin McCarthy — worried principally about bad optics — this group of lawmakers voted to reconstitute OCE as a mere “complaint review board.” More critically, the renamed agency would no longer be empowered to pursue investigations based on anonymous tips, to share findings with other government agencies, to investigate allegations of criminal wrongdoing, or to make public the fruits of its labor. It’s worth noting that since OCE was created, the number of disciplinary actions taken by the House Ethics Committee increased fourfold. In the five years after OCE first started, the House Ethics Committee initiated 20 disciplinary actions. In the previous 10, by contrast, it initiated only five. The good news, we are to believe, is that sanity quickly prevailed. Even Trump was aghast and tweeted loudly his intense displeasure that House Republicans would so openly seek to irrigate the swamp he’s vowed so improbably to drain. By Tuesday afternoon, House leaders Ryan and McCarthy asserted what nominal authority they actually possess and announced OCE would live to die another day. As a semi-sentient being, I take heart in the astonishing incompetence of it all. Yes, Republicans enjoy an absolute hammer lock on all political power — controlling the

White House, Congress, the Senate, and soon the Supreme Court. But if this is what total

control looks like, maybe the health care of 22 million Americans — recently insured under the admittedly imperfect Affordable Care Act (ACA) — might survive. I mention the Affordable Care Act because Price, Trump’s nominee for the Department of Health and Human Services, has famously crafted detailed blueprints for its death and destruction. But that’s old news. New to me is Price’s membership in the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, a kookywhacky medical outfit with about 5,000 members that, among other things, published an article in its newsletter suggesting that President Obama deployed a “covert form of hypnosis” to win over voters vulnerable to “neuro-linguistic programming.” Less amusing, however, is the moral rage with which the group has condemned Medicare and Medicaid — evil and immoral — which provide health care to 57 million and 68 million elderly and low-income people, respectively. The last time Republicans enjoyed such total control was back in 2003; that’s the last time they sought to “fix” Medicare, which provides health care for American seniors. That’s when the Republicans narrowly passed the now infamous “Part D” bill, which refers to the specific Medicare program that covers the purchase of prescription medications. Inserted into that legislation was language that explicitly prohibited Medicare from negotiating directly with pharmaceutical companies to secure the best prices possible on behalf of customers, not to mention taxpayers and

the federal government. Depending on what study one cites, that you-can’t-negotiate clause has cost the feds anywhere from $332 to $563 billion in excess payments made to the pharmaceutical industry. In stark contrast, Medicaid and the Veterans Health Administration are legally empowered to negotiate better prices for the drugs they buy. Guess what? Medicare Part D pays 73 percent more for drugs than Medicaid does and 80 percent more than the Vets Administration. With these stakes, it’s little wonder the pharmaceutical lobby has spent $150 million twisting arms and bending ears on Capitol Hill since 2003. Corruption — legal or otherwise — is clearly a bipartisan affliction, but in that time span, roughly 62 percent of Big Pharma’s graft and payola went to Republicans. To further belabor the obvious, the co-author of the Part D legislation — Republican Billy Tauzin of Louisiana — took a $2-million-ayear job as top lobbyist for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America

two years after the bill was passed. Too bad the Office of Congressional Ethics didn’t exist back then. Maybe Tauzin would have gotten an after-the-fact letter of reprimand. If that’s what happened 13 years ago when Republicans sought to “reform” just one part of Medicare, imagine the billions to be made off the hides of the sick when they go after the Affordable Care Act. That was no errant eruption of political miscalculation. That was a strike of surgical precision. And if that’s not a coincidence, it’ll have to do until the real thing comes along.

—  Nick Welsh

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Lévy argues that the spirit of Judaism must continue to inform our moral thinking and courage today. Co-presented with the Herman P. and Sophia Taubman Foundation Endowed Symposia in Jewish Studies in cooperation with the UCSB Department of Religious Studies, Congregation B’nai B’rith, the Jewish Federation of Santa Barbara and Santa Barbara Hillel

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obituaries

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

William Robert Royal 06/17/54-12/25/16

Willie passed away on Christmas morning in Sarasota, Florida from early onset Alzheimer’s disease. Born in El Paso to Muriel and Bill Royal, Willie loved the sea, fishing and surfing in the Gulf of Mexico, and playing the violin. Willie wrote and recorded music for twelve albums featuring the gypsy jazz duo “Willie and Lobo.” The duo got their start in San Miguel de Allende at Mama Mia’s. Their unique brand of world music took them on tour all over the world, including stops in Santa Barbara at the Soho. Surviving him are his wife Alison, of Sarasota; his son Pablo; and siblings Isabel McIver (Bruce) and Moo Moo Royal. His ashes will be scattered in the Gulf beyond the South Venice Jetties during a paddle out with his wife and friends later this year.

William R.W. Coleman 07/15/41-12/29/16

Bill Coleman passed away on December 29th, 2016 at 6:00 am, at home with his wife, Delia, sons, Abraham and Romeo, his daughter in-law Joy and daughter Ligaya by his side. Bill had been diagnosed with lung cancer in October of this year. Bill was born William Robert Wood Coleman in Santa Barbara, CA on July 15th, 1941, to Shirley and Warren Coleman. He grew up in Mission Canyon with his brother Cole and sister Fredericka, and graduated from Santa Barbara High School in 1959. Soon after graduation he worked at the family business, Coleman Building Materials, and lived in a small adobe in the Mountain Drive Community started by Bobby and Floppy Hyde, which later became known as ‘Santa Barbara’s Pioneer Bohemian Community’. Those he met among the group of families on Mountain Drive, and the values he learned there, would be a lasting 18

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influence throughout his life. The Mountain Drivers’ sense of community, of living without overly processed food, electronic stimulation, and mass consumerism were ideals that he would embody throughout the rest of his life. His first relationship provided two sons, Basilio and Abraham, and a bridge to the Filipino community, whose culture and values Bill took on wholeheartedly. It was among the Filipino elders that he learned the value of family and the discipline of farming – two factors that would later shape his life. He discovered the meaning of Sakop (family circle) through the Filipinos and though he was already an avid horticulturalist, it was the Filipino oldtimers, including Lolo Pastor, Claudio Recorba and Federico Talaugan that taught him their traditional farming methods. In 1963 Bill bought a piece of land on Gobernador Canyon, in Carpinteria, which would become the home base of the Coleman Family and later Coleman Farms. After two years of letter writing, in 1969 he married the love of his life, Fidela (Delia) Calip. She was the yin to his yang and her patience and strength helped him realize his dreams. They danced in the moonlight, created fantastic meals, farmed the land and raised their family together. Soon after they married, Romeo was born, followed by Rizal, Santiago, and Ligaya. With six children, they had laid the foundation for their ‘Sakop’. After working at Carpinteria Valley Lumber and farming part time, he and Delia decided to become full time farmers. In March of 1979, together with a handful of other farmers, including John Tapia and Randy Wade, he established Santa Barbara’s first certified farmers’ market. The first markets took place monthly, first at the Mission, then the Santa Barbara County Bowl, and later at the Santa Barbara High School. Then the farmers’ market moved downtown and took place on a weekly basis. As the years went on, the farmers’ markets increased, as did his involvement in them. He was truly a pioneer in his field, his passion for farming and curiosity always leading him to new discoveries. He was nominated into Slow Food’s ‘Noah’s Ark’ for his cultivation of amaranth, and was the first farmer in the area to introduce arugula, endive, radicchio, mizuna, broccoli spigarello and many other vegetables and herbs to the local markets. He was not shy to expand beyond the ‘one variety’ norm. He cultivated numerous varieties of everyday herbs such as mint and basil, and had 14 different varieties of lettuce. He pushed the boundaries to grow things that at first many would pass by. He reintroduced native edible greens such as lambsquarters and purslane, and rarities such as Jerusalem artichokes and fenugreek, to the local farmers markets. As his farm grew, so did his family. He is survived by his wife, Fidela, and his six children and their fami-

JANUARY 5, 2017

lies –Basilio, his son Alani and wife Sheila; Abraham, his wife Joy, and their children Tesandra and Grant; Romeo, his wife Gillian and their children Lukasz and Isabella; Rizal, his son Codi, his wife Mahana, and their children Owen and Leila; Santiago, his wife Lisa and their children Maria and Amani; and Ligaya, her husband Wolfgang, and their children Sebastian, Camilo and Severin. Bill was one of a kind. He was a true legend and leaves behind a legacy that will endure for generations to come. He taught us to open our eyes and introduced us to the world and all it has to offer. He taught us the meaning of family and the importance of our roots. He left an impact on everyone he met. His big heart and generosity touched so many – he was able to speak with anyone, and recognized that underneath it all, we are all the same. And it was on that level that he reached out, connected, and opened his heart and his home. His door was always open and there was always a place at the table. Bill had a deftly intelligent sense of humor, lived a fulfilled life, and did not stop short to dance in the moonlight, sing out loud, and enjoy every moment of this sacred life. He did not let fear stand in the way of his playful heart nor convention stand in the way of his dreams. Farewell, Dad, you will be in our hearts forever. We love you and thank you for creating this wonderful Sakop. A Rosary will be held on Friday, January 6th at Welch-Ryce Haider on 15 East Sola in Santa Barbara at 7:00 pm, with Visitation from 5:00 – 8:00 pm; and a Memorial Service will be held on Saturday, January 7th at 10:00 am at St. Joseph’s Church on 1532 Linden Ave. in Carpinteria.

developed a love for motorcycles and belonged to many riding groups, one of his favorites being the annual Toys for Tots run, which he participated in for 25 years. He was a kind and gentle soul who was loved by many who knew him from childhood; from his work at the family owned business, the Unocal 76 Station at State and La Cumbre for 37 years; and from participation in his favorite activities in the community. People were drawn to Tinker, he made friends easily. He couldn't go very far without someone knowing him. Mention the name, “Tinker” and everyone knew who you were talking about. He was a dedicated and beloved son, brother, cousin, father, uncle, husband, and true friend. He will be missed by many but we will always remember that smile. Tinker is preceded in death by his parents, Edward and Olympia, and his beloved wife, Kathy (CrillyLotz) Marquez. He is survived by his brothers Walter (Jenni) and Robert (Norma) Marquez; his daughter Lia and her mother, Shari Palmer; and his stepsons Daniel Lotz (Ashley) and Matthew Lotz (Vickie). Services will be held on Saturday, January 7th at 12:00 PM Shoreline Community Church 935 San Andres St. Santa Barbara, CA

Norman Wolfgang Jaffe 12/04/24-08/13/16

Edward Timothy “Tinker” Marquez 09/19/42-12/26/16

Tinker, as he was affectionately known, was born in Santa Barbara, CA to Olympia (Ortega) and Edward David Marquez. A true Santa Barbara Native Son, Tinker was a direct descendant of Juan Francisco Ortega, the first commandant of the Presidio de Santa Barbara. Tinker lived his whole life in Santa Barbara where he attended Our Lady of Guadalupe School and Bishop Diego High School. Some of his fondest childhood memories were of family camping trips, sports, and time spent with friends. This carried throughout his life. He later

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In memory of my dearly beloved Norman. We will celebrate his life. Born in Dresden, Germany December 9, 1924 named Wolfgang N. Jaffe. He survived Auschwitz Concentration Camp liberated by the American Army May 1945. Arrived in America in May 1945. He met Rose October 1946, married April 1947. Became an American citizen in 1949. For 69 years and 4 months, he lived a good and charitable life, filled with love, togetherness, discovery and adventure. Norman put a smile on your face and made you laugh. He was successful in his lifelong career as a commercial artist in New York City and Los Angeles. He resided in Santa Barbara for the last 39 and a half years. On August 13, 2016 at the age of 91 years and 8 months his life ended on Earth. Services held on January 7, 2017 at 12:30pm. Welch Ryce Haider 15 E. Sola St.

Margaret Florence Morreale 06/12/29-12/15/16

Margaret (Peg) Florence Morreale passed away at Serenity House in Santa Barbara on December 15, 2016. Peg was born in Boston, Massachusetts on June 12, 1929 the daughter of Martin Welby and Mary Nee, Irish immigrants who moved to America shorty after World War I. She had fond memories of her early years growing up in Jamaica Plain with her siblings Mary, Anna and Marty until the passing of her mother in 1937. Peg married Charles Morreale in 1951 and shortly after they moved cross-country to begin a new life in Buena Park, California. Early on, Peg set her sights on a beach community and they soon moved to Corona Del Mar followed by Laguna Nigel before finally settling in Laguna Beach where they raised their sons Steve and Phil. In her thirties, Peg evolved from a fifties housewife to a sixties feminist. She returned to school, earning a bachelor’s degree in cultural anthropology and a master’s degree in public administration. In 1972 she was elected to the office of Laguna Beach City Treasurer. In a 1973 quote from The Daily Pilot Peg said about her position; “A man comes in and he has it made. A woman must constantly say ‘I’m here, I’m important’ to gain recognition.” During this period of personal growth, Peg and Charles took a “break” from their marriage, remaining friends and remarrying eight years later. They lived a happy life together until her recent passing. Peg is survived by her sister Mary Cataldo, husband Charles Morreale, sons Steve and Phil Morreale (Catharine), granddaughters Ali Manset Morreale and Jessica Morreale Therkelsen (Peter), great grandson Soren Lynn Therkelsen, and numerous nieces and nephews. The family offers a warm thank you for the care provided by the nurses at Cottage Hospital and the staff at Serenity House. May Peg’s Irish eyes continue to smile on us all. A memorial celebrating Peg’s life will be held at the Maravilla Clubhouse in Santa Barbara on February 3 at 2 p.m. Memorial contributions in Peg’s name may be made to the "George and Peggy Manset Memorial Scholarship Fund" (made payable to the Santa Barbara Scholarship Foundation, PO Box 3620, SB, CA. 93130)


in Memoriam

Robert W. Sheffield, MD ANNOUNCES REOPENING OF HIS PRACTICE IN SANTA BARBARA Dr. Sheffield’s practice focuses on less invasive, minimal and non-surgical methods of facial rejuvenation. He and his staff offer a unique perspective to patients in a comfortable, professional environment.

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Michael Waugh Jochim

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805-568-5988

1975-2015

M

A Very Able Individual

by Mike, Marcy, and katie JochiM ichael lit up our lives on the day he was

born, and though he died last November, he still lives on in our hearts. Born with a physical disability, he faced many challenges, and doctors told us his future was not at all bright. But his eyes told us otherwise, and his life proved them wrong. He had a true zest for life, and everyone who knew him noted his positive outlook, as well as his quick wit, infectious laugh, and sarcastic sense of humor. When his younger sister, Katie, joined the family, he was initially a bit wary, but they developed a strong friendship and love that lasted until his death. As a child, Michael embraced life and took advantage of opportunities as they presented themselves. He enjoyed swimming, horseback riding, sit-skiing, and archery. He attended Wheelchair Sports Camp many times and participated in swim meets all over California. Michael was active in Cub and Boy Scouts and Goleta Presbyterian Church youth group. Michael was thrilled when, as a preschooler, he was asked to help light the Christmas tree downtown, and he became a virtual poster boy in the coverage of disability issues. Michael loved to travel and spent many summers in Germany with his family, where he delighted in the castles, chocolate, and cows. Like his archaeologist father, he truly enjoyed digging in Germany; he would hop out of his wheelchair and sit or lie on the ground to dig, getting filthy, of course, and enjoying every minute. On one dig, Michael used crutches to go watch a student water-screen dirt for small artifacts over a pit full of muddy water. He became so absorbed looking for shards in the screen that he actually fell face-first into the puddle. It didn’t faze him; he just popped up (with help) and carried on. During a Sabbatical year, Michael attended school in Cambridge, England, where he particularly liked the taxi rides to school and the fun of the minimally supervised playground. Trips through Switzerland, France, England, and Scotland fired his interests in history and family connections to Scotland; he loved following the family tree back to William the Conqueror and Robert the Bruce. As an adult, Michael developed strong interests in not only history but also politics, astrophysics, archaeology, and paleontology, and he frequently was able to update his parents on new developments in these areas. His political views were libertarian, which encouraged lively debates in the household. He had an eclectic love of music, ranging from Metallica to Phan-

Inner Engineering

Coming to Santa Barbara, January 19-22 tom of the Opera (which he saw numerous times). He was our go-to guy for all issues with computers and other devices, and he felt free to express his strong opinions about our apps and updates. Through the Internet, Michael reached out to a host of people, with whom he developed friendships and shared jokes, satire, and an interest in Star Wars and Comic-Con. It wasn’t until after he died that we learned how many lives he had touched through these conversations. His friends wrote, “Your life was spent never regretting, always being supportive, positive, and most of all fun,” and another post, which made us laugh, mentioned “memories of late-night antics during high school.” In his hand-controlled van, Michael visited Goleta Beach nearly every day, where he usually spotted dolphins and sometimes whales. Karaoke and game nights out with friends were other favored activities. He was amazingly independent and concerned about overtaxing his parents. Michael lived on his own for a while in Chico, and when he returned to Santa Barbara, he took care of the house and dog while we traveled and calmly evacuated himself and our dog during the Gap Fire. He felt he could do anything, including going down stairs in his wheelchair (with mixed results) and was always trying to devise a bigger, better, more powerful wheelchair. Michael died suddenly but peacefully in his sleep in November 2015, after nearly 40 years of living life to the fullest. He is sorely missed by many local friends and a diverse Internet community. He is survived — and will always be loved and missed — by his parents, Mike and Marcy Jochim; his sister, Katie; and numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins. A memorial bench in his honor now sits on Campus Point on the Marine Science Research Building terrace, overlooking his beloved Goleta Beach. n

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Opinions

cont’d

on the beat

Read It and Weep

SHE GETS A KICK: Little did we know just

how dangerous it would be, eh? Hillary kicking Trump in the rump on the cover? Maybe the next edition will have a different cartoon. So what were people reading while observing the birth of the Prince of Peace and/or various other avenues of spiritual uplift? Well, it turns out that man’s inhumanity to man (and woman) still commands our eyeballs. John Grisham is No. 1 on the fiction bestseller list with The Whistler, a tale of judicial corruption, the Mob, and Indian casinos. Only three murders and an innocent man sits on death row. Broke after yuletide gift-giving, I clicked on the Santa Barbara Public Library, looking to borrow a copy for a quick fireside read. Huh! Only 270 others ahead of me. So, as the turbulent year ground to a painful halt, I resorted to my own lurking pile of bedside reading. I confess, officer: I’m hooked on the current darling of bloody murder and mayhem, Tana French. She probes Dublin’s Murder Squad cops and crimes that beset hard-drinking, hardloving Irish families. They’re tough on each other, these people, and toss Irish slang around, rough words that you may need a translator to figure out. There’s love and hate underneath it all, enough to break your heart. I couldn’t put down French’s The Trespasser and Faithful

SHE WHO KICKS FIRST: Maureen Dowd’s The Year of Voting Dangerously equally flays politicians she’s covered for decades.

Place (a lane I’ll never forget) and got on the library waiting list for more, anything by Tana French, gory as it is. She can write. Two bigger-than-life giants caught my eye, books about the mighty Yankee slugger Babe Ruth: The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth by Leigh Montville (Doubleday) and Hemingway’s Boat: Everything He

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

Loved in Life, and Lost by Paul Hendrickson (Knopf). The Hemingway boat bio is about the man and his beloved 38-foot motor boat Pilar and digs into facts about my first literary love, inside stuff I never read before in my longtime collection of his work. This is wartsand-all Hemingway. Sadly, in both cases, these two giants fell hard at the end. We’ve all heard about the Black Sox scandal of the 1919 World Series, but what really happened? And did a little kid really ask the great White Sox player “Shoeless Joe” Jackson, “Say it ain’t so, Joe!” Jackson has denied it. Charles Fountain goes into the whole Black Sox mess in a new book, The Betrayal (Oxford University Press). Hitting the best-seller list is our own Fannie Flagg and her latest, The Whole Town’s Talking (Random House) — a century of life in small-town Elmwood Springs, Missouri, as only Fannie can write it. My bedside table also includes our own (yes) Sue Grafton, her next-to-almost-last in the alphabet series, titled only X (G.P Putnam’s Sons). Only two more to go. Then Z-end. Why does murder most foul sound both worse and more intriguing when the locale is foggy Scotland? New to the bookstores are a couple to delight the armchair blood-thirsty among us.

In Out of Bounds (Atlantic Monthly), Val McDermid’s smart Detective Chief Inspector Karen Pirie tackles the two-decadeold rape and murder of 24-year-old Tina McDonald. As in Tana French’s Dublin, the slang is dense. In Plaid and Plagiarism (Pegasus Crime), the scene shifts to Scotland’s Highlands, where a group of women have opened a bookshop. Sound harmless enough? But in Molly MacRae’s tale, a body is found in Janet Marsh’s back garden. I’m a fan of Scandinavian crime novels, and I found a new one in Kjell Ericksson’s Stone Coffin (Thomas Dunne/Minotaur). A mother and child are accidently-on-purpose run down on a boondock road. But why? Officer Ann Lindell wants to know. It’s good to see so many successful female whodunit authors. Is it because there’s a flock of women snapping up these bloody stories? I still haven’t gotten to the pile of unread books I toted home from the last Planned Parenthood sale. Let’s see, there’s David McCullough’s The Great Bridge (Simon & Schuster), a compelling account of the building of the Brooklyn Bridge. I can’t wait to dig into Great American Trials (New England Publishing Associates), accounts of dozens of cases from the Salem witch trials to many other milestones of judicial lore. — Barney Brantingham

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Paul Nash, Flight of the Magnolia (detail), 1944. Pencil, pen and ink, and watercolor on paper. SBMA, Gift of Wright S. Ludington.

EXHIBITION ON VIEW

EVENTS

British Art from Whistler to World War II

Thursday, January 5, 5:30 – 6 pm

FINAL WEEKEND! Through January 8, 2017

Sunday, January 8, 1:30 – 4:30 pm

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Let Leonard PeLtier Go Free an interview with a native american Seeking Clemency after 41 Years Behind Bars

I

by Kevin McKiernan

© Kevin McKiernan

don’t know which Native Americans killed FBI agents Peltier was indicted on the same evidence that ended H. Reynolds, the U.S. Attorney who had overseen the governJack Coler and Ronald Williams in the notorious 1975 up acquitting his two codefendants on the grounds of self- ment’s opposition to Peltier’s appeals. He wrote to President shootout in Oglala, South Dakota. Nor do I know the defense. However, his codefendants’ trial was held separately, Obama in support of the bid for clemency. Reynolds said his identity of the federal lawman who shot and killed before an all-white jury, in Iowa. Their jury heard evidence change of heart was “in the best interest of Justice in considerJoe Stuntz, the American Indian Movement (AIM) from the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights about the “climate ing the totality of all matters involved.” member. But what is troubling is that federal prosecutors don’t of fear” on the reservation between 1973 — when Indian activAccording to Jack Healey, the former Amnesty official, that know either, yet Leonard Peltier has spent 41 years behind ists occupied Wounded Knee for 10 weeks — and the shootout leaves as Peltier’s most potent opponent in the current clembars for the FBI agents’ deaths. Now, in the waning days of in 1975. Peltier told me, “Conditions there were worse than ency drive a group of retired FBI agents who had pressured the Obama administration, Peltier has the Clinton administration not to release Peltier. petitioned President Obama to comAs Bill Clinton’s term was ending, Peltier’s attormute his sentence. (See tinyurl.com/ neys were invited to the White House and given PeltierClemencyPetition.) strong indications that the president would grant I was there on the Jumping Bull clemency. But a few weeks before Clinton left office ranch on that hot June day in 1975 when in 2001, 500 agents protested outside the White some of the bullets were flying, and I’ve House, prompting the president to renege. Today, been able to interview Peltier several the FBI Retired Agents Association (which also times since then, most recently from played a role reportedly in convincing FBI DirecFlorida’s maximum-security Coleman tor James Comey to announce 11 days before the penitentiary. The audio file of that conpresidential election that he was re-opening the versation, as well as links to many of investigation of Hillary Clinton’s emails) is lobbythe facts and history, can be found at ing President Obama to keep the Indian activist independent.com/freepeltier, and editedin prison. for-print extracts follow this story. When I spoke with Peltier last month, he was Over the last four decades, many reluctant to rehash details of the oft-debated shootout and trial, as he had in previous interviews. And groups, including Amnesty Internawhile there is no doubt that someone killed the two tional, have advocated for Peltier’s release. Amnesty maintains that LeonFBI agents, Jack Healey wasn’t interested in doing ard Peltier, who is 72 and in ill health, so, either. “When you’re going for clemency, you did not get a fair trial. The former don’t reargue the case. … By definition, clemency is not about guilt, and even if Leonard did it — which director of Amnesty International I don’t believe — murderers are usually out in 12 U.S.A., Jack Healey, has produced 11 video testimonials for Peltier’s release years or so.” in recent years from famous actors and Healey noted that Peltier’s next scheduled parole hearing is not until 2024, and he drew a distinction musicians, including Ringo Starr, Bonbetween justice and vengeance. “Leonard’s served nie Raitt, Harry Belafonte, and the late his time. If you hold him beyond 41 years in prison Pete Seeger. Over the course of his imprisonment, you are talking about vengeance.” Healey said, high-profile advocates such Before he leaves office on January 20, 2017, PresiFreedom Seeker: Leonard Peltier has petitioned President Obama for clemency, asking for an end to his 41 years in as Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu, dent Barack Obama could provide closure to one captivity. Convicted of aiding and abetting the 1975 killing of two FBI agents, Peltier saw his clemency request to President of the most difficult, divisive periods in modern Mother Teresa, and actor Robert De Clinton in 2000 blocked by FBI agents’ groups. The 72-year-old leader of the American Indian Movement hasn’t been allowed to see a reporter in almost a decade. The writer took this photo of Peltier in Leavenworth in the mid-1990s. Niro all have lobbied the White House Indian history. As Judge Heaney wrote, “At some to free Peltier. In the last six months, point, the healing process must begin. We as a he said, Robert Redford, who produced the documentary third-world countries. … People … were being murdered, and nation must recognize their unique culture and their great Incident at Oglala about the 1975 shootout and its aftermath, people were living in terror.” contribution to our nation.” His codefendants’ jury also learned of an FBI connection to has met with President Obama to make the case in person. A former Franciscan priest, Healey said he is sending a message an anti-AIM group that called itself the GOONs (Guardians to Pope Francis through his friend Boston Cardinal O’Malley: of the Oglala Nation). Some jurors said afterward that testi- In the last year, it has become increasingly difficult to visit “If I can reach the Holy Father to reach President Obama, I’ve mony countered the FBI’s claim of neutrality between Indian Leonard Peltier, who contends that authorities are restricting done my job.” factions following the Wounded Knee siege. Testimony about his visits, especially from the press, in an effort to keep the President Obama now has two weeks — until January 20 casualties during that 71-day siege in 1973 (in which two Indi- spotlight off his controversial prosecution. Only after months — to decide whether to release Leonard Peltier. ans were shot to death, and two lawmen and a dozen Indians of intervention by Representative Lois Capps (D-CA) did the Bureau of Prisons relent and permit me an interview by phone Though Peltier’s current clemency plea is on humanitarian wounded) was also blocked at Peltier’s trial. grounds for his age and declining health, the violations of legal Fourteen years after Peltier’s 1977 conviction, Gerald W. last month. Despite an overall record of good conduct, Peltier procedure that occurred during trial continue to astound. The Heaney, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals that upheld told me it had been several years since he’d been allowed to government has never produced an eyewitness to the deaths the verdict, surprised court watchers by petitioning the White speak with a reporter. of the agents. The prime witness during Peltier’s extradition House to commute Peltier’s sentence. Heaney later told 60 Tell me: What is your ancestry? My father was from Turtle from Canada, Myrtle Poor Bear, later recanted, saying she’d Minutes that Peltier’s was the most difficult case of his career Mountain Chippewa Nation in North Dakota. My mother is signed three affidavits under pressure from FBI agents. When in light of governmental misconduct, which he branded “a a Dakota —“the people of the white corn”— from what’s now she tried to come forward to tell her story at Peltier’s trial, the disgrace.” Advocating for Peltier’s release in his 1991 letter, called Spirit Lake. We were farmers, and my grandfather was North Dakota judge ruled her incompetent and barred that Heaney said the government “must share the responsibility” actually from Mankato, Minnesota. After the Little Crow war for the deaths of the two agents and Joe Stuntz in the shootout. testimony. in the 1860s, they hung 38 Indians [in Mankato], the largest The U.S. Attorney was castigated by the Eighth Circuit He said the government had “overreacted” to the 1973 occuhanging in the United States. Court of Appeals for its use of the “fabricated evidence” — pation of Wounded Knee. Instead of “carefully considering One of them was my great-grandmother’s brother White which prosecutors later acknowledged to be false — to secure the legitimate grievances of Native Americans,” he said, “the Dog. There were 300-something indicted, and they had Peltier’s extradition. In the past, Peltier has admitted to “firing response was essentially a military one that culminated in a 10-minute trials, 10 at a time. Abraham Lincoln was going to in their direction,” meaning toward the FBI agents during the deadly firefight on June 26, 1975.” According to Judge Heaney, execute everybody, but his aides sent him numerous memos shootout, but said he did so “because they were firing at me.” “the government’s role in escalating the conflict into a firefight — this is all in the record — telling him that if he killed all those The appeals court also chastised prosecutors for misconduct … can properly be considered as a mitigating circumstance.” people, he’d be known as a mass murderer. So he stopped at 40. At press time, Peltier’s clemency attorney, Cynthia Dunne, in withholding from the jury a key ballistics test that elimiTwo escaped to Canada, and 38 were hung. a former assistant U.S. Attorney, released a letter from James nated Peltier’s gun as the murder weapon.

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© Kevin McKiernan

cover story friends with an FBI agent said that [FBI Director] Comey is going to oppose it, but right now they’re all mad at him because he helped [Hillary Clinton lose the election]. She won by over two million votes because, you know, he went out there and pulled that bullshit he did. That’s the reason she lost the election. When he came out two weeks before the election and said that there was more investigation to be done on Hillary Clinton.

Yeah.

I’m interested in what ceremonies there are for Native Americans in prison. Well, we have one, the inipi; the sweat lodge

it’s called in English. And we have the pipe ceremonies. And here, that’s about it. … I built the first sweat lodge in the prison. And now there’s the possibility of clemency before President Obama leaves office. Is there a special prayer that you say?

Well, you know, we don’t believe in praying for yourself. It keeps you from being arrogant, you know. We don’t say,“God, please make me rich.” We don’t believe in that way, so we pray for everybody else. So I pray for my people. What is your health situation? They gave me some nitros the

other day because my heart is bad. I need medical treatment. I have what they call an aortic aneurism in my chest. If this aneurism bursts, I’m dead. My joints are bad; my hip is bad, so I have a hard time walking from one place to another. I got all these old-man ailments comin’ on me.

Wasn’t there an Indian who was killed at Oglala? Well, someDid you grow up knowing all this history? Yes, I used to sit around and listen to my elders talking. I was born in 1944, and I grew up in apartheid conditions. A candy bar was a rarity, [and] meat on the table wasn’t a regular thing. We had to have a [written] pass to leave the reservation! Even to go shopping in bordering towns, or to go work in the migrant fields of the Red River Valley or the barley fields of Montana. The media was doing major articles, calling us the vanishing American Indians. By 1985, the “Termination Act” was going to be completed, and we would no longer exist. They were implementing the assimilation [policies] to “take the Indian out of being Indian” through the boarding schools, which have a horrific history — I was in one of those schools from 9 to 13 years old. On the Pine Ridge Reservation, after the Wounded Knee Occupation in 1973, were people divided? Yeah, there was pro-

termination; there were traditionalists who refused to give up their lands.

And there were factions loyal to the tribal chairmen who were against AIM, the group you were with. Yes, precisely. May I ask you about June 26, 1975? Oh, yeah. Well, I mean, I

was at camp, and there was some gunfire up at the Jumping Bulls’. A couple of days before that, somebody down there at the dam was firing off an automatic weapon, getting everyone all paranoid and scared. He said he was shooting fish. So at first that’s what everybody thought it was, but by the time we got up there, it was a full-scale gun battle going on. Until the shooting stopped, everything was surrounded with SWAT teams. My responsibility was to try to get those women and children out of there; that’s precisely what I did. The government said that the agents were killed at close range after a period of gunfire exchanged from both sides. The gov-

ernment also said they don’t know who killed the agents nor what participation either culture may have had in it. In other interviews, you admit you were firing a weapon that day. Yeah.

body sniper-shot him and killed him. We’ve been fighting for 41 years to get that investigated. Who killed that man? Were you sentenced for two lives without parole? No, nope, no. I’ve been to the parole board numerous times. I was found guilty of first-degree murder in 1977 and sentenced to two life sentences with parole. I appealed it … and the main issue that we argued was … jury instructions of aiding and abetting and manslaughter and first-degree murder. Under the extradition treaty, they [could] only charge and prosecute for first-degree murder because that’s what they asked [Canada] to return me for. The appeals court said the most critical evidence against me was the murder weapon. I filed a Freedom of Information Act, and they turned over 18,000 documents about a year after I was convicted. Two FBI documents said all scientific tests came out negative, so this was not the murder weapon. In 1984, at the appellate court, the judge says,“Just what was Mr. Peltier convicted of? ’Cause we can’t find no evidence of first-degree murder in the record.” The prosecutor responded with this: “Your Honor, the government does not know who killed the agents, nor do we know what participation Leonard Peltier may have had.”

Tell me about your kids and your family. I’m a great-grandfa-

ther now, and all my kids, of course, are grown. I haven’t even met some of my grandchildren yet, because I can’t afford to bring them all the way down here [to Florida] to visit.

I imagine sometimes it gives you a frog in your throat …

Talking about it right now … [Laughs.] I’m doing everything to keep from crying. Yup. It would be great. I mean, just to see them little kids hanging all over. They know a lot about Grandpa, but some of them have never even seen me yet. I hope they all come running to me. I’m going to stay alive until that happens. If you knew that this would cost you some 40 years, would you do it all again? We have just as much a right as any race

of people on earth to live. So, yeah, I’d do it again. I’d be there n for my people again.

© Kevin McKiernan

AFTERMATH: Above, American Indian Movement member Joe Stuntz lies dead at the feet of a lawman after the 1975 shootout at Oglala, South Dakota. Stuntz’s killer has never been identified. Pictured top left is Joe Stuntz’s funeral. Below left, over Cecilia Jumping Bull’s shoulders are draped the flags she received for family members who died fighting for the U.S. She said she was sending them back: “The government, he don’t respect me; he shoot my house.”

During the 1980s, you figured in the Cold War, didn’t you?

Yes. Ronald Reagan and Gorbachev met, where they had the negotiation for nuclear weapons. The first thing Ronald Reagan starts telling Gorbachev is “You have political prisoners in your country; you should release this man.” So Gorbachev said, “Well, you have Leonard Peltier in prison. And, gee, there’s no proof he killed anybody. How come you don’t release him?” It just wasn’t the left that was demanding my freedom. It was in Time magazine. I even had people like George Will, a right-wing columnist. He said, “Why he didn’t give clemency to Peltier is shocking to us.” Fifty-five members of Congress demanded my freedom, 51 members of the Canadian Parliament, and 50 members of the European Parliament. That [FBI] demonstration at the Clinton White House, do you think that that played a part in the denial of your clemency?

I don’t know, Kevin. I don’t know. One of my lawyers who’s

IN TOUCH: During his long stay in prison, Peltier has been painting and drawing: “I love doing it. That’s what I want to do when I get out.” Sales have benefited human rights and social welfare organizations.

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In ConversatIon wIth

Filmmaker

Mike

Mills Family Friend Reminisces with the 20th Century Women Writer/Director

hilary dole klein

by Hilary Dole Klein

W

Mike Mills riter/director Mike Mills’s

pictures paired with my own portraits. Jan and 20th Century Women is Paul were one of the couples I interviewed and his second film to mine photographed. the mysteries of his parThus I can claim — and brag about it — that ents. Beginners, released I created art about Mike’s parents years before in 2011, was based on the story of Mike’s father, he dreamed of using them in his movies. Years Paul, coming out as a gay man after his wife, Jan, before he even dreamed of being a film direcdied. It won an Academy Award for star Christo- tor. As he told me when I visited him recently pher Plummer. Mills’s newest film, 20th Century at his mid-century home in Silver Lake, “First I Women, is a poignant inquiry into the essence wanted to be a professional skateboarder. When and the enigma of his mother and a testimony that didn’t work out, I wanted to be in a band. to the women he knew growing up in Santa Bar- When that didn’t work out, I went to art school.” When Mike first told me bara in the 1970s. My parents met the he was making a film about the various women who Millses soon after Paul became the director of the “raised” him and later asked Santa Barbara Museum of me if I knew of a “very big, Art, in 1970. At the time, my rundown house,” saying, father, William Dole, was an “I’ve been scouting up [in artist and professor at UCSB, S.B.], and of course thinkbest known for his collages. ing of you and your family,” How perfect, I thought, for I thought of the Doles’ big, my father to be such good rundown house and that friends with the museum perhaps my mother was director. But when I met the —Mike Mills going to be a character in Millses, I saw it was much the film — such is my selfmore than that; the two couples genuinely liked centric view. Instead, what I saw in his portrait and enjoyed each other, sharing a keen love for of his mother, superbly played by Annette Benart, parties, interesting people, and idealistic ing, were the things that made Jan and Kate so causes. I have a note that Jan wrote, describing simpatico. They both wore pants — sometimes my mother, Kate, as “one of our dearest friends jumpsuits — literally and metaphorically. Both of and one of the most special people in the world.” them took care of all the day-to-day operations The Millses once threw a 6 a.m. birthday — the kids, the houses, the finances — leaving the party for my mother, in tribute to her love of artist and museum director free to concentrate early rising. My husband and I drove up from Los on their muses. Angeles for the celebration, which was a vibrant, “I always think of your mom and my mom colorful, happy event. At the time, I was working as sort of a team. They’re very different in lots of on a series of honeymoon stories (later excerpted ways, but they’re very similar in lots of ways,” said in the News & Review), which included wedding Mike.“They were single moms in a sense. My dad

Memories make great film scenes. You know they’re not totally real— real life is impossible to contain.

Jan and Paul Mills

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was there, and my dad was very sweet, but never very the characters based on his sister and his friends was present, emotionally. The raising of me was left to my grandly wish-fulfilling. mom. My sisters were older and had a lot of stuff going I first became aware of Mike when my mother told on in their lives as good ’70s teenagers — they put on a me the horrendous story of how he fell into an ash pit good show of things that can happen in your life. the day after the Sycamore Canyon Fire in 1977. He suf“When my mom was sick with a brain tumor,” Mike fered second- and third-degree burns on both feet and said, “she couldn’t tell me she had cancer. Your mom spent a month in the hospital. My mother would go visit came over one day, and, not knowing that I was in the and read to him, and I realized she thought there was room, Jan said to her,‘I guess I have that C word.’ There something special about him. She was also fascinated was that tremendous vulnerability. They didn’t have by how Jan was raising him. language to deal with their feelings, that generation, and “My mom let my punk band practice in the house,” a lot of it came out sideways.” Mike remembered. “We would be playing during Mike often gets asked what is true and what is made museum parties. Her friends were like, ‘What?’ And up about his mother. “It’s based on my mom, but it’s she’d say, ‘He’s doing it, and it’s creative.’ Even though also playing with my mom.” His mother did not recruit there was nothing musical about it,” he laughed. Jan girls to help raise him as in the movie, he said. “But she also took Mike to skate parks and contests all over L.A. liked to get others to chime in on her raising me. I like “She knew the names of all the tricks. She was a pilot, to think of it as a kind of socialist mentality. There’s and she always described skateboarding as like flying.” a lot of things she did When Mike was a junior in high school, she really say and do that said to him,“So this sumare in the movie and lots of things she didn’t. mer, you have to move My rule is if I’m creatout, and you have to pay ing a character that my for it yourself. You’ll have mom would like, then to cook and eat on your I’m in the safe zone. But own, and you have to get it’s a trip even for me to a job.” In January, she told understand how much him to start looking for a is or isn’t my mom.”And place. “I ended up living then Bening’s portrayal —Mike Mills with this 25-year-old guy adds a new dimension. who was in our band for “My mom inspired my a minute, and I worked at writing. But the performance is Annette’s body and soul McDonald’s. It was pretty cool. I did what I wanted, and and heart and timing,” he said. it was great!” Mike and I both often heard,“Oh, your mother is so Jan’s plan was for him to go out and make mistakes great,” and we both agree that doesn’t always translate and figure things out on his own. “She was desperately into the most ideal mother. Unlike my mother, Jan was afraid of me being spoiled,” he explained. “She used to a pragmatic, hardworking businesswoman who knew say,‘Michael, you’ve got to get out of here as soon as you how to make money, not only with stocks but also with can. This town is too kinky. There’s too much money, real estate. She always seemed serious, even when she too much leisure.’” Rather adamantly, Mike corrects people who think was joking, and she had a sardonic wit. Still, the movie made me see both women better: two strong, smart 20th Century Women is his own coming-of-age story, women, brought up in the 1920s, grappling with marital fooled possibly because the boy who plays him, Lucas challenges and unsettling new cultural mores. Mike’s Jade Zumann, is so appealing. “Sorry,” Mike said, “he’s attempt to define his mother allowed me to see my own not the protagonist. It’s about what he sees. I’m just there mother in a clearer, more sympathetic way. to love the other people.” Were it about him, we would Mike maintains that growing up in matriarchy is be seeing the portrait of an artist as a young teen. Unlike what made him women-centric. “To my eyes, power his character, Mike was always drawing. “And I had to is held by women. You need to please women. And take every single kid art class the museum had anything women are the most exciting and the ones who try to to do with. I remember that my parents were constantly help you and don’t beat you up. So I was like ‘women are having parties — like weekly 50-person cocktail and good,’ and I was trying to figure them out more.” And dinner parties, and I’d end up hiding in my room and of course having Greta Gerwig and Elle Fanning play drawing. I remember Paul Tuttle [an internationally

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much less neurotic Allen. “They should be,” he agreed. “He’s smarter than me in lots of ways; I’m more schmaltzy; people are nicer to each other in my movies. But in Allen’s best films, his early films, you can just smell that it’s the real thing, that this is a problem he is going through himself. Plus his cinematographer, Gordon Willis, is my favorite. In 20th Century, I’m thinking of Willis and [Federico] Fellini all the time. Fellini’s Amarcord was a big influence. It’s as much about character and place as anything. It’s a little untidy in terms of story, and I like that a lot. And you can tell that these are real memories. Real material. “I’m so lucky to get to make personal movies. When I’m shooting, I’m keenly aware that this is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I love the actor’s soul, the actor’s boundary-less emotional soul. We had a lot of fun shooting this. I wear a suit and tie every day — just like my dad — and we have live musicians come and play, and before shooting, we have dance parties. Mike is not sure what is next for him. He’s been working for a while on a This American Life story to turn it into a film.“I’m doing with the people in the story what I do with myself — getting all their memories from around a specific time. And memories make great film scenes. You know they’re not totally real — real life is impossible to contain. But memories are stopped. And you’ve made a beginning, middle, and end from them.” Once I saw 20th Century Women, it became one of my own memories, vivid, fleeting, and delicious to ponder. And with this off-beat, articulate, magical film, I got to spend a bit of time with Jan, with all her complications and her challenges, and remember how her heart — like her son’s — was always in the right place. I left my visit with Mike having had a conversation with a man whose blend of creativity, eloquence, humor, and sensitivity verges on the intoxicating. My mother was right. Mike Mills is special.

acclaimed designer] would come and hang out because he was sort of shy, and [Kate], too, would come and visit me. I remember them as two people who could talk to you as a kid and not patronize you. I have fond memories of them. “And I loved your dad’s work — it meant a ton to me. And [Robert] Rauschenberg — I thought I would be an urban Rauschenberg. And that influences this movie. This movie is very much like a collage. It’s all these found objects of memory and cultural artifacts. Just as your dad’s work takes elements with their own specific shapes and torn edges and textures and makes a whole of them, I hunt and gather little found things and find a way to put them together.” I had the impression when Mike went off to The Cooper Union art school that Jan had bought an apartment for him, and that my mother was very impressed by this. I had it wrong. Mike said that what she did was give him $100,000 and tell him he had to invest it. He could live off the returns, but he had to give the $100,000 back. He bought mutual funds, but it wasn’t enough money to live on, so he lived at the 92nd Street Y and had to get a job.“Which made my mom happy,” said Mike.“‘Oh, you have to work, too? Good!’” Calling his last two movies “activated portraits,” Mike said that Beginners is more akin to memoir. “All the dad memories are actually much closer to what happened. But if you write it down, it’s one thing, but then to cast it, find a location, light it, and shoot it, it becomes much more fantastical. It’s a magic trick at that point.” As a writer, I envy how many things Mike can draw from his toolbox to make his writing come alive cinematically and viscerally. Favoring character over plot, he incorporates music, narration, photographs, graphics, color, and the fracturing of time. And yes, it’s a kind of memoir, and yes, it captures the Santa Barbara of 1979, but it builds on this to make a touching, heartfelt, beautiful, funny movie. Using fiction, memory, and history to examine character, Mike calls his genre memory-based fiction. “Maybe I got this from my mom, but when you refuse to fit into a box, it becomes much more exciting, more alive. You’re a mongrel, though, and it’s harder to raise money and harder to market and harder to award, but it makes me really excited. And it has a kind of feral-ness to it, which is good. It’s not quite playing by any rule.” I asked him if others besides me have compared him to Woody Allen — albeit a

women opens Friday, January 6,  at20thPaseoCentury nuevo Cinemas (8 w. De la Guerra st.). Gunther GaMpine

Annette Bening and Mike Mills

Beloved Former Host of A Prairie Home Companion and The Writer’s Almanac An Afternoon with

Garrison Keillor “Garrison Keillor must be doing something right – millions of Americans consider themselves honorary citizens of his fictive town, Lake Wobegon.” San Francisco Chronicle

Sun, Jan 22 / 3 PM (note special time) / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $35 / $15 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

The recipient of Grammy, ACE and George Foster Peabody awards, the National Humanities Medal and elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Keillor will deliver insights and stories from his journey as one of America’s greatest storytellers. Pre-signed books will be available for purchase

Michael Douglas Visiting Artist Tony Award-winning star of Broadway’s Bridge & Tunnel and the hit show Sell/Buy/Date An Evening with

Sarah Jones

“Ms. Jones brings to life more than a dozen characters with such distinctness that each seems to take over her voice, her mind, her very presence.” The New York Times

Tue, Jan 24 / 8 PM / UCSB Campbell Hall Tickets start at $25 / $19 UCSB students Co-presented with the UCSB Department of Theater and Dance Event Sponsors: Jody & John Arnhold Corporate Sponsor: Part of the Lynda and Bruce Thematic Learning Initiative: Creating a Better World Corporate Season Sponsor:

Greta Gerwig, Elle Fanning, and Annette Bening

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

JANUARY 5, 2017

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31


welcome

SANTA BARBARA COTTAGE HOSPITAL BABIES

Baby Girls Carpinteria Gia Maria Redfield, 10/29 Goleta Rohana Rachel Theogarajan, 10/9 Teegan Lin Blaver, 10/21 Chloe Rose Valdez, 10/21 Vayda Nadine Perez Lopez, 11/26 Lompoc Khaleesi Xiomara Cardona-Wells, 11/15 Zoe Cynthia Silva, 11/23 Ojai Daisy James McCarthy, 10/20 Santa Barbara Marlo Snow Jenkins, 10/4 Tatiana Samano, 10/7 Adelyn Moorea Siersma, 10/7 Aribel Rivera Martinez, 10/9 Sophia Laila Ibarra-Medina, 10/15 Olivia Allison Kip, 10/17 Calico Moon Smith, 10/24 Ebony Iris Smith, 10/24 Grace Adeline Huff, 10/27 Olivia Loraine Piligian, 10/29 Ilona Mesa, 10/31 Kate Rose West, 10/31 Harlow Elizabeth Valenzuela, 12/3

Valentina shares a big birthday with Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital.

Two Happy Birthdays,

Baby Boys Buellton Parker Anothy Cardoza, 12/2 Carpinteria Adam Matej Pisacich, 9/5 Elias Olavi Boyer, 10/9 Spencer George Ivor Clark, 11/1 Finn Niklaus Gomez, 11/21 Goleta Henry Dix Julian, 10/10 Lompoc Sebastian Sergio Duran, 10/15 Aaron Dominic Schiada, 10/17 Joshua Canaan Schiada, 10/17 Santa Barbara Maverick Lee Hazard, 8/25 Marlo Dean Munoz, 8/29 Cody John Lanzon, 10/3 Zeal Kingsley Morales, 10/6 Christopher Kai Olvera, 10/6 Alan Daniel Aguinaga, 10/7 Alexander Fadel, 10/10 Coleman David Kramer, 10/11 Shaurya Talwar, 10/11 Jack Robert Reifert, 10/20 Alejandro Angel Villalpando, 10/24 Jack Dean Dennett, 10/27 Luca Lawrence LaBarrie, 10/27 Robert Gardner Neustadt, V, 10/31

125 Years Apart

SBCH 1891

On December 8, Valentina Scarlett Rojas-Hoyos was born, exactly 125 years to the day that Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital first opened its doors. There’s already a family tradition for both. Of Valentina’s more than 200 family members in Santa Barbara, over half were also born at Cottage. Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital (SBCH) has grown a lot since opening in 1891. These days, Cottage Children’s Medical Center alone contains a 17-Bed Acute Pediatrics Unit, 22-Bed Level III NICU, 8-Bed PICU, a Level II Pediatric Trauma Center and the Grotenhuis Pediatric Multispecialty Clinics in Santa Barbara, Pismo Beach and Ventura.

As Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital turns 125 years old this December, we reflect on the many generations of families who have been touched by Cottage. We want to hear from you! Do you have generations of family who were born here? What memorable moments has SBCH been a part of in your life? Big life-saving ones, little humorous ones— we’re collecting them all as part of the 125th year celebration: Moments Live On. Send your story to mystory@sbch.org. For more information, visit cottagehealth.org/125.

Everybody needs a little help Office based medical treatment for drug & alcohol dependence. Interventional Psychiatry Associates 805-845-8770 32

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JAN. 17-18

The Granada Theatre

805.899.2222 BroadwaySantaBarbara.com


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

e h T

Jan.

5-12

by Terry OrTega and Savanna MeSch

courtesy

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.

MuSIc of nOTe 1/5: Layovr, The Neighborhood Thieves Area band Layovr will have you dancing all night long with its self-made hybrid genre of indie rock and tropical reggae, trop rock, alongside S.B.-bred Boston transplants The Neighborhood Thieves. 8:30pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10. Ages 21+. Call 962-7776.sohosb.com

1/5-1/8:

¡Viva el Arte de S.B.!: Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano You are invited to watch these masters

of the mariachi tradition who have been around for more than 50 years as they host a community workshop for experienced players. Bring your own instrument and music stand; sheet music will be provided. This Grammy Award–winning group will also perform a series of family concerts to commemorate another year of bringing Latin music and dance to the community, with the chance to meet the artists at a post-show reception following the 7 p.m. concerts. Workshop: Thu.: 6:30-8:30pm. Casa de la Raza, 601 E. Montecito St. Call 893-3382. Concerts: Fri.: 7pm. Isla Vista School, 6875 El Colegio Rd, Isla Vista. Call 252-3493. Sat.: 7pm. Guadalupe City Hall, 918 Obispo St., Guadalupe. Call 343-2455. Sun.: 4 and 7pm. Marjorie Luke Theatre, S.B. Junior High, 721 E. Cota St. 884-4087 x7. Free. tinyurl.com/VivaElArteSB

thurSday 1/5 1/5: Poetry Club: W.S. Merwin “Your absence has gone through me / Like thread through a needle / Everything I do is stitched with its color.” Hear poems like this, and others, written by 2010’s U.S. Poet Laureate W.S. Merwin at the monthly poetry club. Bring your favorite poem from Merwin, the poet of the month, to share and discuss his life’s works. 3:305pm. Community Hall, Montecito Library, 1469 E. Valley Rd. Free. Call 969-5063.

Nuevo. $35-$40. Call 963-0408.

centerstagetheater.org 1/6: 12th Night Party with Joe Spano Join Speaking of Stories at its final event of the year, and in keeping with Twelfth Night tradition, enjoy an evening of excellent food, great company, entertainment, and French wines. Emmy Award winner Joe Spano will perform a wonderful comedic story, and Yvonne Bazinet will lead the wassailing and perform some additional

musical selections. 5:30pm. Home of Carolyn Butcher and Michael Perry. $75. Call 966-3875. tinyurl.com/12thNightParty

1/6: Friday Crafternoon Coloring isn’t just for kids! Take a break from the work week to embellish adult coloring books, or join a sit ’n’ stitch knit and crochet circle for some creative meditation and relaxation. Noon-2pm. Tech Lab, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 564-5604.

sbplibrary.org

Saturday 1/7 1/7: Writing Your Memoir Cynthia Waring, the mind behind the semiautobiographical performance piece Bodies Unbound, will present the key elements Unbound to use when writing your memoir. 3-5pm. Faulkner Gallery, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 564-5641.

sbplibrary.org

National Opera Association’s annual convention, three opera excerpts will be performed by the UCSB Opera Theatre in a juried competition. The 2016-2017 finalists include After Life by Tom Cipullo (composer) and David Mason (librettist), Letters from Quebec to Providence in the Rain by Jeremy Gill (composer and librettist), and The Scarecrow by Joseph Turrin UCSB Opera Theatre’s Helena von Ruedan and Bryan Lane (composer) and Bernard Stambler (librettist). There are only 100 tickets available to the public for this special event. The winning opera will be performed in its entirety at the association’s 2017 convention. 7:30pm. Hahn Hall, Music Academy of the West, 1070 Fairway Rd. $10. Call 893-3230. Read more on p. 53. music.ucsb.edu

1/7: Latin Soul Review Wine, dine, and jive to area musicians Bella Heart & Soul, Pepe Marquez, Anthony Prieto Band, and Holly Roze as they play a selection of Latin-inspired tunes. 8pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10. Ages 21+. Call 962-7776. sohosb.com

1/8: Ryan Stoll, Cows Cabbage, The Shorelines Boogie down to psychedelic pop jams inspired by the beach at this concert showcasing the original works of area musicians. 8pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10. Call 962-7776. sohosb.com

sbplibrary.org

1/8: This Wild Life, Oyster Kids, Royal Teeth Dance freely to indie

Friday 1/6

pop music from acoustic rock duo This Wild Life and Oyster Kids from L.A., alongside Louisiana’s Royal Teeth. 6pm. Velvet Jones, 423 State St. $15. Call 965-8676.

velvet-jones.com

1/6: Get a Healthy and Happy Start to 2017 Dietician Stacey Bailey

1/10: Danny Briere, Elena Shelton, Taylor Hamilton Sit back and relax for a night celebrating area singers/songwriters as they play original pieces for you. 7pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $8. Call 962-7776.

will share exercise and eating tips to get you on track for the New Year. Noon-1pm. Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital, 2050 Viborg Rd., Solvang. Free. Call 694-2351.

sohosb.com 1/11: Headless Household Spend an

1/6-1/7: Dance Fever Winter Showcase Dance Fever studio owners Vasily Golovin and Anastasia Banderovskaya will present a showcase of ballroom dance from performers of all ages. You won’t want to miss a special professional performance by world champions from Russia and U.S. National Latin finalists. 7pm. Center Stage Theater, 751 Paseo

tony mastres

1/6: UCSB Opera Theatre As part of the

evening with this long-running area band that fuses jazz, rock, funk, country, and other genres. 7:30pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10. Call 9627776. sohosb.com

Sully

1/6:

Sully Tom Hanks portrays American hero Capt. “Sully” Sullenberger in this film adaptation of the 2009 U.S. Airways Flight 1549 emergency landing on New York’s Hudson River and the investigation that followed. 2-4pm. Faulkner Gallery, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Rated PG-13. Call 564-5641. sbplibrary.org

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RS

A YE 30 as

Santa Barbara’s

L❤VE DOCTOR Dr. Suzanne E. Rapley ❤ ❤ ❤

Jan

5-12

Love yourself Love your partner Enhance your level of intimacy

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.

arT TOwn O Own

Specializing in Relationships, Intimacy and Sexuality Issues

exhibition featuring art made from varied materials to create visual magic. The paintings and sculptures will be on view through January 30. 5-8pm. Faulkner Gallery, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 962-7635.

Psychologist Psy 11846 Diplomate, AASECT Sex Therapist Call (805) 963-3329

sbplibrary.org 1/5: 1st Thursday: Anne Anderson If sculpture and abstract art aren’t your thing, venture into the library’s other gallery on 1st Thursday for watercolor paintings. 5:307:30pm. Faulkner Gallery West, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 8989424. sbplibrary.org

“God Light II” by Pat Calonne

1/5: Exhibit Opening: Coastal Beauty Photographer Sharon Foster digitally enhances her scenic photographs to resemble the joy and wonder found in nature for an engaging viewing experience. Her art will be on view through March 2. Los Olivos Café, 2870 Grand Ave., Los Olivos. Free. Call 964-8837.

1/5: Opening Reception: Pamela Larsson Enjoy live music and complimentary wine and bites at an art reception featuring Larsson’s one-of-a-kind collection of oil paintings. She employs old painting methods within a contemporary format to paint recognizable figures and objects inspired by today’s sentiments and politics. 5-8pm. Lady McClintock Studios Art Gallery, 1221 State St., Ste. 6. Free. Call 845-0030. art.ladymcclintockstudios.com 1/5: Joe Girandola: Duct Tape Dreams Don’t miss

Lend Us YoUr ears CheCk out our new series of intimate reCording sessions from homegrown & visiting performers

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your chance to view this visually stunning, thought-provoking exhibition of art created entirely with Duct Tape that leaves town January 20. Mon.-Fri.: 8am-5pm. Channing Peake Gallery, 105 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 568-3990.

sbac.ca.gov

1/5: Family 1st Thursday: Memory Paintings Recreate a scene of one of your favorite memories in tempera on mid-tone paper inspired by depictions of urban life in and around L.A. from artist David Korty. 5:30-7:30pm. Family Resource Ctr., S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free. Call 963-4364. sbma.net 1/5: Opening Reception: Ken Bortolazzo Proto Synthesis, kinetic sculpture artist Ken Bortolazzo’s seventh exhibit at this American art gallery, will feature his abstract, minimalist, stainless-steel pieces that have paved the way for contemporary sculpture. The exhibit is on view through February 26. 5-8pm. Sullivan Goss, 11 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 730-1460. sullivangoss.com

“The Space Between” by Sharon Foster

1/6: Opening Reception: The Abstract10: SynerSyner gies The Abstract10, a collective of 10 area women artists, will present its diverse cultivation of work made from various materials and styles. The women’s abstract art is inspired by nature, architecture, the figure, the subconscious, memory, gesture, and geometry and will be on view through February 11. 5-7pm. Architectural Foundation of S.B. Gallery, 229 E. Victoria St. Free. Call 455-4787.

1/5: Opening Reception: New Year, New Art Start

tinyurl.com/TheAbstract10-Synergies

off the New Year with a selection of new art! Celebrate the gallery’s 12th anniversary with contemporary artists’ works, on view through January 29. 5-8pm. Artamo Gallery, 11 W. Anapamu St. Free. Call 568-1400. artamogallery.com

1/8: Studio Sunday on the Front Steps: Glittered Liquid Watercolor Reimagine Julie Becker’s “Untitled

1/5: 1st Thursday: SBSG & AAC The S.B. Sculptors Guild and Abstract Art Collective will present a joint juried

(Branch)” with a pencil sketch, and then paint over it with glittered watercolor to create a vibrant mixed-media piece of work. 1:30-4:30pm. Museum Front Steps, S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free. Call 963-4364. sbma.net

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e

callie bowdish

Th

1/7:

Coal Oil Point Reserve Tour Take a beautiful guided walk

along trails as you explore the protected wildlife and ecosystem of this reserve adjacent to the ocean. You’ll also learn about the natural and cultural history of the land. Reservations are required. 10am-noon. Coal Oil Point Reserve, Slough Rd., UCSB. Free. Call (760) 822-8406. tinyurl.com/CoalOilPointReserveTour

Sunday 1/8

THURSDAY

THE FAB FOUR

the fields. His hard-work ethic wins him the coveted award “The Bracero of the Year,” which he loses before returning to Mexico just as he left: without a dollar in his pocket. No subtitles. El tema de la película de 1964 es la migración de mexicanos a Estados Unidos en busca del “sueño americano.” El divertido Piporro cruza ilegalmente, nadando el Río Grande y finalmente llegando a trabajar en los campos. Sin embargo, su buen trabajo en el campo lo llevó a ganar el codiciado premio como “El Bracero del Año,” el mismo premio que perdería antes de regresar a México justo tal y como llegó: sin dinero en el bolsillo. 3pm. Granada Theatre, 1214 State St. $7.50-$20. Not rated. Call 899-2222.

JAN

19

RICK SPRINGFIELD THURSDAY

JAN

BOB NEWHART

1/8: STEAM Sunday Young scientists and their parents can learn through hands-on activities with weekly discoveries. This week’s topic is “Why Science Is Cool & Bottle Biology.” 2-3:30pm. Island Rm., S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Ages 7+. Call 564-5604.

26

THURSDAY

sbplibrary.org

FEB wes skiles

of the Year) The theme of this 1964 film is the migration of Mexicans to the United States in search of the “American dream.” The funny Piporro crosses illegally, swimming the Rio Grande and eventually working in

12

THURSDAY

granadasb.org 1/8: Cine en Domingo Film Series: El Bracero del Año (The Farm Worker

JAN

2

TOWER OF POWER THURSDAY

FEB

JOHNNY MATHIS

1/8:

9

National Geographic Live! Kenny Broad: The Risky Science of Exploration Join this underwater cave explorer as

he takes you on an adventure into some of the most dangerous and scientifically significant places on Earth. From chasing venomous snakes in Vietnam to plunging into subaquatic caves in the Bahamas, Broad will share with you the tragedies, the triumphs, and the just plain weird things he’s experienced while discovering the depths of our planet. 3pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. $15-$25. Call 893-3535. Read more on p. 49. artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu

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Jan

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.

courtesy xanadu silent disco yoga

5-12

IndependenT Calendar

1/8:

self in a truly unique yoga experience as the sun sets over the Pacific Ocean. You will wear wireless, glowing headphones as melodic beats from a live deejay and yoga instruction are played right to you. Afterward, enjoy complimentary wine, juice, and food tasting as the music continues. You will receive a complimentary Spa Day Pass to use at the resort in the future! All proceeds from the event benefit The Xanadu Foundation, which inspires positive change surrounding ocean environmental issues through activation, education, and art. 3:30-6pm. The Bluff, Bacara Resort & Spa, 8301 Hollister Ave., Goleta. $40.

Sustainable Heart

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

tinyurl.com/YogaSocialOn TheBluff

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Graduate Institute), 801 Ladera Ln. Free. Call 969-5750.

opusarchives.org/events

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

1/8: Met: Live in HD: L’Amour de Loin Kaija Saariaho’s opera comes to life

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

in a dazzling new production by Robert Lepage, complete with ribbons of LED lights across the stage as a knight embarks on a quest for his lover on the other side of the sea. Get there an hour early for a chance to score discounted tickets. 2pm. Hahn Hall, Music Academy of the West, 1070 Fairway Rd. Free-$28. Call 969-8787.

Drawn to Dream Awaken the Artist Within

Laurie J. Pincus, M.A.

- Over 20 years experience Visual Artist, Art Educator, Depth Psychology Counselor

musicacademy.org

Creativity and Depth Psychology Counseling Individuals (all ages), Couples, Families, Seniors, Workshops

Drawn to Dream Fall and Spring Travel Workshops (805)705-9894

Ball and Kenny Sultan, 1:15-4pm; Teresa Russell and Cocobilli, 4:30-7:30pm. 5995 Stagecoach Rd. Free. Call 967-0066.

coldspringtavern.com

Energy & Vitality Bod

MS SUPPORT GROUP

y

Brain

1/7: Mercury Lounge CENTRAL COAST

You’re Invited to Join Us

All Zones Are Zones. 9pm. 5871 Hollister Ave., Goleta. Free. Call 967-0907.

Breath

Listen to MS Experts Meet Local MS Peers

1/11: Blush Restaurant + Lounge Bruce

for

MONTHLY MEETINGS Goleta, 3rd Wednesdays

Goldish. 7-9pm. 630 State St. Free. Call 957-1300.

mention the Independent for a free consulation & wellness routine planning

36

Victor Vega and the Bomb, 10pm1am. 513 State St. Free. Call 962-2688. sbjamesjoyce.com

1/6-1/8: Cold Spring Tavern Fri.: Fort Taylor, 7-10pm. Sat.: Dan Grimm, 2-5pm; The Nombres, 6-9pm. Sun.: Tom

for

Improved Q uality of Life All Ages & Abilities Call (805) 335-1772 THE INDEPENDENT

to stories to share wisdom and meaning with the present moment since the origin of language. Dr. Catherine Svehla will teach you a simple divination method to tell stories for insight into cultural and personal concerns in today’s modern world. 5-7pm. Classroom G, OPUS Archives and Research Ctr. (located on the campuses of Pacifica

1/5-1/7, 1/10-1/11: The James Joyce Thu.: Alastair Greene, 10pm-1am. Fri.: The Kinsella Brothers, 10pm-1am. Sat.: Ulysses, 7:30-10:30pm. Tue.: Teresa Russell, 10pm-1am. Wed.:

Dream Work – Art and Sandplay Therapy

Personalized Sessions

1/8: Once Upon a Time Is Now: An Interactive Exploration of Storytelling Humans have told and listened

bandS on Tap Tap

Discover and Engage the Healing Power of the Imagination

Therapeutic Yoga

HIGH SIERRA GRILL: 11:30am - 1pm michaeldjack@aol.com, 805-886-3000

Santa Barbara, 1st Tuesdays

blushsb.com

Monday 1/ 9 1/9: Elmer Bernstein Memorial Film Series: The Shootist In this 1976 film, John Wayne plays gunfighter J.B. Books, who has cancer at the turn of the 20th century. He is confronted by several people with questionable motives in his last days, and, not wanting to die a quiet, painful death, he devises a plan to go out with a bang. 7pm. Granada Theatre, 1214 State St. $10-$20. Rated PG. Call 899-2222. granadasb.org

tueSday 1/10 1/10: Lecture: Elizabeth Scharpf The American Association of University Women presents founder and CEO Elizabeth Scharpf of Sustainable Health Enterprises, who will give a talk on how her small start-up created a job market for women in Rwanda. When she learned that women often miss work because a sanitary pad costs more than a day’s wages, Scharpf became determined to invest in women’s and girls’ entrepreneurial ideas to create and distribute affordable, quality, ecofriendly maxi pads while creating more than 600 jobs for all citizens there. 7pm. Faulkner Gallery, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call 564-5604.

sbgv-ca.aauw.net

1/10: Tuesday Lunch and Learn: Swedish Research Tips Bring your lunch and genealogy questions or topics to share related to Swedish ancestry, which can be traced back to prehistoric times. Noon-1:30pm. Community Rm., Sahyun Library, S.B. County Genealogical Society, 316 Castillo St. Free. sbgen.org

VISTA DEL MONTE: 6:30-8pm Sierra Madre Bldg. 3rd floor

louminess@aol.com

JANUARY 5, 2017

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Yoga Social on the Bluff Immerse your-

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e

Th

Grand Re-Opening Celebration Celebration Grand Re-Opening Celebration Grand Re-Opening Grand Re-Opening Celebration "Explore the the World in in 2017" 2017" "Explore “Explore the World World inin2017” "Explore the World 2017" Grand Re-Opening Celebration "Explore the World in 2017" Wed, January 11th, 6:00PM-8:30PM Wed, January 11th, 6:00PM-8:30PM Wed, January 11, 6:00-8:30 PM Wed, January 11th, 6:00PM-8:30PM "Explore the World in 2017" Wed, January TravelStore - 132411th, State St6:00PM-8:30PM Suite C, Santa Barbara TravelStore - 1324 State St Suite C, Santa Barbara

Wed, January 11th,StSt 6:00PM-8:30PM TravelStore --1324 State Suite Santa Barbara TravelStore 1324 State Suite C, C, Santa Barbara

Shine a Light

1/10:

And the Band Played On Film Series: Shine a Light Filmmaker Martin Scorsese’s music documentary captures the Rolling Stone’s performance at New York’s Beacon Theatre in 2006 with guest appearances by Buddy Guy, Christina Aguilera, and Jack White. The film also spans the band’s lengthy career with music clips and interviews from previous decades. 7pm. Granada Theatre, 1214 State St. $10-$20. Rated PG-13. Call 899-2222. granadasb.org

WedneSday 1/11

Visit our new location in the Arlington Plaza Visit our new location in the Plaza TravelStore - 1324 State St Suite C,Arlington Santa Barbara Grand Prize giveaways - over $5,000 value Visit our new location in the Arlington Plaza Visit ourPrize newgiveaways location -inover the$5,000 Arlington Plaza Grand value Meet our awesome TravelStore team! Grand Prize giveaways - -over $5,000 value Visit new location in the Arlington Plaza Meetour our awesome TravelStore team! Grand Prize giveaways over $5,000 value Meet our awesome TravelStore team! value Grand Prize giveaways over $5,000 Meet our awesome TravelStore team! Meet our awesome TravelStore team!

Come and meet our preferred travel partners & Come participate and meet our preferred travelcircle! partners & in an African drum in an African drum circle! Come participate and our preferred travel partners & Pleasemeet RSVP to Tanya Bryant at 805-963-6521 or

1/11: Advance Care Planning Community Workshop Trained professionals and volunteers will support you and your loved ones in facilitating important conversations about end-of-life wishes. Registration is required, and notary services are available upon request. 4-6pm. Community Rm., Visiting Nurse & Hospice Care, 602 E. Montecito St. Free. Call 845-5314.

FarMerS

MarkeT

allianceforlivinganddyingwell.org

Schedule

1/11: New Year and New Leaders Issue and Policy Roundtable Come

THURSDAY

for lunch, and welcome new mayor of Goleta Paula Perotte, Mayor Pro Tem Stuart Kasdin, and Councilmember Kyle Richards. Don’t miss this opportunity to meet these new leaders and hear their plans and priorities for 2017. Noon-1:30pm. Glen Annie Golf Club, 405 Glen Annie Rd., Goleta. $25. Call 967-2500 x4.

participate in an African drum circle! Come andmeet meet our our preferred travel partners & & Come and preferred travel partners email - tanya.b@travelstore.com Join our Santa Barbara Travel Club at Meetup.com Admission is at FREE participate in an African drum circle!or Please RSVP to Tanya Bryant 805-963-6521 participate in an African drum circle! Join our Santa Barbara Travel Club at Meetup.com email - tanya.b@travelstore.com email tanya.b@travelstore.com Please RSVP to-Tanya Bryant at 805-963-6521 or

Please RSVP to Tanya Bryant at 805-963-6521 or

Please toBarbara BryantClub at 805-963-6521 email - Tanya tanya.b@travelstore.com Join ourRSVP Santa Travel at Meetup.comor email - tanya.b@travelstore.com Join our Santa Barbara Travel Club at Meetup.com

Join our Santa Barbara Travel Club at Meetup.com

Goleta: Corner of Storke and Hollister; 7004 Marketplace Dr., inside the Camino Real Shopping Center, 3-6:00pm Carpinteria: 800 block of Linden Ave., 3-6:00pm

FRIDAY courtesy

tinyurl.com/NewYearPolicyRoundtable

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

SATURDAY

Downtown S.B.: Corner of Santa Barbara and Cota sts., 8:30am-1pm

ESCAPE COUPON PACKAGE Includes two dinner entrees & bottle of House wine. Complimentary breakfast buffet. Rooms from $149 (value up to $267) Suites from $179 (value up to $377) 25 acres of Monterey pines & gardens! Nightly entertainment in the Fireside Lounge Outdoor heated pool & spa

SUNDAY

Goleta: Corner of Storke and Hollister; 7004 Marketplace Dr., inside the Camino Real Shopping Center, 10am-2pm

1/11: Trivia Night Host Zoey Koster will test your brain power with a night of obscure trvia for a chance to win a $50 cash prize. 7-9pm. The Goodland Hotel, 5650 Calle Real, Goleta. Free. Call 964-6241.

thegoodland.com

TUESDAY

Old Town S.B.: 500-600 blocks of State St., 3-6:30pm

WEDNESDAY

JAN. 17-18

The Granada Theatre

Solvang: Copenhagen Dr. and 1st St., 2:30-6:00pm

805.899.2222

BroadwaySantaBarbara.com

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JANUARY 5, 2017

THE INDEPENDENT

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growth hormone patches 38

THE INDEPENDENT

JANUARY 5, 2017

independent.com


Opportunity

Grooming

J

Enterprise

The healthy and happy BigSpeak crew

David Karys-Schiff

past 12 years, putting 600,000 miles on their combined odometers getting between here and there. So now the Mesa Bookstore is on the market for $35,000. There have been a couple prospects, but should those not pan out, he will sell the three years remaining on his lease to someone trying to open a hookah shop. The shop is currently home to 25,000 titles, said Karys-Schiff. — Nick Welsh

1838 Cliff Dr.; 966-3725

Shave & a Haircut:

Danny’SS BarBer Shop

onathan Reid Ramirez’s backstarted out as a ground. Ramirez shoe-shine boy was born in Santa in his father’s barber Barbara in 1924 and shop on Edwards Air served in the U.S. Force Base. He worked Navy during World his way up, and at 16, War II. One day at he took off alone to sea in 1944, he got Rosston University of tired of waiting in Men’s Hair Design in line for a haircut, San Bernardino, where so he and another he studied during the sailor cut each othday, washed dishes at the SHEAR TALENT: Pictured from left are Sam Huerto, owner Jonathan er’s hair. Ramirez next-door bar and grill Reid, Alfonso Aguilar, and Israel Rodenas. did a fine job, and at night, and slept out “the next thing he back on a cot. Straight out of barbering school, he won knew he had his next four customers standing in line,” a haircutting contest, bringing in job offers from nearby according to the document. Los Angeles. After the Navy, Ramirez enrolled in barbering He found a rental in Redondo Beach and school and started cutting professionally in July launched his career, which quickly evolved from 1946. Back then, a haircut cost 35 cents. In 1952, he straight-up haircutting to high-end grooming and opened Danny’s Barber Shop at 12 West Figueroa styling. In the late 1970s, he visited a friend in Santa Street (where Willie’s Barber Shop is today). In 1960, Barbara and succumbed to its beach-town allure, he noticed a growth boom along Upper State Street working at Henry Franco’s salon for several years. To and relocated; Danny’s Barber Shop was the second get away from the hairdressing chemicals, he eventu- business (behind the pharmacy) in Loreto Plaza. ally circled back to his barbering roots, taking over a “This is a special shop — and not just because it’s chair at Danny’s Barber Shop in Loreto Plaza about been around for 56 years,” Reid said. “We’ve got some eight years ago. In January 2016, he bought the place really great barbers, but the best thing about this place from second owner Sam Huerta. is the incredible clientele. Danny was great at building Earlier this year during a remodel project, Reid it up over the years, and Sam sustained it. Now it’s my was in the shop’s ceiling crawl space when he discov- turn to take care of them.” — Keith Hamm ered old photographs and paperwork, including a handwritten letter describing original owner Danny 3337 State Street; 687-7915 paul wellman

courtesy

paul wellman file photo

P

For Sale: MeS MeSSaa Book BookSStore Store

erhaps the smallest bookstore this side of the Continental Divide is looking for a new owner. For the past 25 years, David Karys-Schiff and his wife, Lisa, have run the Mesa Bookstore, a 205-square-foot hole-in-the-wall bursting with literary escape and adventure, located on the one-blocklong frontage road alongside Cliff Drive where it intersects with Carrillo Street. Karys-Schiff said he needs to spend more time tending to the mounting health needs of his father, explaining, “He stepped up for us. It’s our turn.” Karys-Schiff has functioned as a combination literary tour guide, maître d’, and bartender for customers whose reading tastes he absorbs with both comprehensive ease and delight. His wife, Lisa, has brought to bear the organizational discipline needed to maximize the number of books — used paperbacks mostly— that can be crammed into such a small space mostly without making the space feel crammed. The couple run another shop in Santa Maria, where they live. That commute has led to the downfall of three cars in the

living p. 39

Big Things Happening at

BigSpeak

B

igSpeak: It’s kind of a big deal. While you may not know about the Santa Barbara–based speakers bureau, there’s a good chance you’ve heard one of their keynote speakers if you work or study in town. Since its founding in 1995 out of CEO Jonathan Wygant’s garage, the business has grown in very big ways, booking speaking engagements at 65 percent of the nation’s Fortune 1000 companies with names including Trevor Noah, Marc Randolph (cofounder of Netflix), Peyton Manning, Jay Leno, and Diana Nyad among a huge roster of innovators and thinkers in the commerce, sports, science, and leadership fields. Booking speakers for companies both hometown — such as Yardi, Deckers, Ontraport, and Procore — and global— global such as Google, Honda, and Coca-Cola —BigSpeak, whose revenue doubled this past year, was recognized by Inc.com as one of America’s fastest growing companies for the second year in a row. Wygant started BigSpeak to service companies that sought better professional development for their employees. Initially named Consciousness Unlimited, the bureau enlists speakers who emphasize the human element of the work environment and the importance of re-investing in employee potential, social responsibility, and conscientious work cultures. “The overtone is that anything is possible within any individual, but you need information and inspiration to provoke that, to inspire transformation and help them evolve,” said BigSpeak President Barrett Cordero. “There is real value in human assets — humans are the ones driving innovation and growth, and now more than ever, companies are investing a lot in their people.” Offering innovative insights on not just familiar topics such as leadership, HR, and sales but also A.I., futurism, and emotional intelligence, “we’re moving needles in corporate America,” said Ken Sterling, executive V.P. and chief learning officer. BigSpeak’s talent helps companies adapt to a rapidly modernizing marketplace, touching on everything from the rise of social media to the ever-elusive millennial demographic. They book with a keen sense for client matchmaking— matchmaking what speakers would work best with which culture — at a fraction of the cost of a direct booking.“We’re experts on these experts,” Cordero said. Though most of their business is global, BigSpeak certainly maintains a Santa Barbara vibe, with “Life Is Good” as an operating motto and a top-down emphasis on health and fitness, remote work, and leisurely Fridays. A whiteboard in their office outlines not just professional goals but personal ones, such as volunteering locally, doing more yoga, and starting a family. “BigSpeak acts like a 20-year-old startup,” said Amber McEldowney, marketing associate. “BigSpeak values life outside of work.” In spreading that message widely through presentations more empowering than the usual PowerPoint, BigSpeak is improving business culture around the world, and there’s only room to grow. Expect more big things to come.

independent.com

JANUARY 5, 2017

THE INDEPENDENT

39


G

et

afty wit r C

Visit Santa Barbara, along with The Santa Barbara Independent and the Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara, call upon local restaurants, bars, lounges, tasting rooms, and breweries to develop a new, unique drink that best embodies the spirit of Santa Barbara.

noW ACCepting SuBMiSSionS! SuBMiSSion period: January 3 - January 13

Photo courtesy of Blake Bronstad

puBliC Voting period: January 14 - January 19

Submit your cocktail at independent.com/officialdrinkofsb

SANTA BARBARA VINTERS

40

THE INDEPENDENT

JANUARY 5, 2017

independent.com


living

courtesy

Sustainability

Sun Jan 8 4:00p & 7:00p “Mariachi LoS caMperoS de nati cano” The Luke Theatre and UCSB A&L present these FREE family concerts as part of the Viva el Arte SB series. The Grammy Award winning band, and a Santa Barbara favorite, rekindle the spirit of the expansive “golden age” of mariachi music of the 1940s and 1950s. For more info please visit www.facebook.com/ VivaelArteSB or call 805-884-4087 x7. See you there!

Sun Jan 29 3:30p “bLack hiStory Month WorShip & ceLebration” Visions of Hope presents this FREE celebration of a century of Black History, life and culture. This 7th annual kickoff event brings the community together in a unified worship, enhances cultural awareness, and strengthens faith. For more info please e-mail visionsofhope@cox.net or call 805-455- 2765. The Gospel music will bring you to your feet and the spiritual message will give you a vision of hope!

Sun Feb 12 7:00p “baLLet hiSpánico” The Luke Theatre and UCSB A&L present these FREE family show as part of the Viva el Arte SB series. Ballet Hispanico explores the diversity of Latino culture through a fusion of classical, Latin, and contemporary dance powered by theatricality and passion. For more info please visit www.facebook.com/VivaelArteSB or call 805-884-4087 x7. Described as energetic, entertaining and always surprising, fusing the finest modern ballet with a fantastic New York City Latino flair! LEARNING WHILE HELPING: This is a recent shot of the Youth Drought Project, which is managed by Brad Smith (back right).

Learning from the

youth Drought projeCt

What'S your piece oF the Luke? This holiday season, what better way to honor a family member, mentor or loved one than by creating a lasting remembrance for someone you hold dear? Did you know you can sponsor a permanent donor tile in the beautiful Bryan Family Foyer, or sponsor a seat in the Theatre to honor a family member, friend or mentor? Seats ($500) & tiles ($350) make great tribute gifts! Please visit www.luketheatre.org for more details – get your piece of the Luke today!

T

he Youth Drought Project (YDP) helps make Santa Barbara yards more drought-tolerant by helping property owners use sheet mulching to convert their lawns to more sustainable gardens and install rainwater harvesting systems. The nonprofit organization also serves as a work training program for the high-school- and college-age students involved, teaching them skills to use in the real world and paying them for their time. During a work session on November 17, one such studentemployee, Stefani Valdez, explained that she heard about the program from a job-opportunity email sent out by Santa Barbara High School. “It said you didn’t need experience and you could start getting paid,” she said. “I have been working here for a month, and all my friends do it, and we’re always together. It’s not a normal job. There’s different locations, and you don’t just work the same job.” When asked about what she’s taken away from the experience, Valdez replied, “I’ve learned responsibility of a job and ways to save water now that we’re in a drought.” Also working that day was Brandy Flores, who saw the job posted on flyers in Santa Barbara High’s college and career center. She was focused on sheet mulching the property’s lawn, a process in which the Youth Drought Project covers the grass with cardboard and mulch, thereby killing it but creating a rich, moist soil for future planting. “It’s a better way to have a yard in Santa Barbara because of the drought,” said Flores. “It’s a way for it to still look pretty. It’s better than a dry grass lawn.” Once the grass dies and cardboard decomposes, low-water landscaping can be planted, and roof-rainwater-harvesting and irrigation systems can be installed to keep them alive. Best of all for homeowners, much of the work that the Youth Drought Project does is subsidized by the state, said YDP founder and manager Brad Smith, who explained that rebates cover up to $2,000 and that the group will also handle the processing. Even dead or dormant grass can qualify for the rebate, said Smith, who also added that the group is working with a retired landscape contractor and is now available for complete relandscaping services. — Alegra Zuchowicz

For more info, call Brad Smith at 705-5844 or email bsmith.interplay@gmail.com.

January Classes Rose Pruning with Dan Bifano

Life stops when you hear

Imagine how your life would change in a moment.

Make a difference for families who have a child battling cancer.

Saturday January, 7, 1:00 PM

Fruit Tree Pruning

with Karen Christman

Saturday January 14, 10:00 AM

Backyard Orchard Culture with Tom Spellman

Saturday, January 28, 10:00 AM Free classes, held in the greenhouse, rain or shine.

DONATE TODAY! 165 S. Patterson Ave. 805 -964-9944 www.lasumida.com

TeddyBearCancerFoundation.org 805.962.7466 independent.com

JANUARY 5, 2017

THE INDEPENDENT

41


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Erin Baer, DDS Dane Dudley, DDS Sten M. Ericson, DDS Katina Landon, DDS Steven Greenman, DDS Diplomate of the American Board of Dental Sleep Medicine

THE CAT AND CHRIS SHOW: After realizing that the Mesa needed a burger joint, businessman Chris Chiarappa (right) approached his neighbor, star chef Cat Cora (left), with a concept. As long as the restaurant could grow into more locations, Cora was game and now predicts, “We’re the next Shake Shack.”

Mesa Burger’s

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“W

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e just said today that we need to find the

a wide range of burgers for all tastes, from “chef-y” next location,” Cat Cora explained to me (the Funk Zone has fried egg, bacon, bourbon-glazed last month, less than a week after she mushrooms, roasted tomato, and more) and Mediterand business partner Chris Chiarappa ranean (the Sandspit features Kalamata olives and opened Mesa Burger across from Lazy Acres on Meigs tzatziki sauce) to “powerhouse” (the Goodland comes Road. “We want to make 100 of these, go public, and with a double stack, onion rings, bacon, and a beer ring the bell on Wall Street,” she continued, exuding brat!) and classic (the simple Mesa). The ingredients the commerce-savvy confidence that only a celebrity are, of course, extremely fresh, regionally grown, suschef can have. “We’re the new tainable, and “conscientiously Shake Shack.” sourced,” with hometown brews Cat Cora’s New Restaurant Just Though a resident of Santa on tap, as well as Central Coast Opened, but Star Chef Already wines and McConnell’s Ice Barbara’s Mesa neighborhood Aiming for Expansion for the past dozen years, Cora, Cream. Said Cora, “I wanted a who first hit television screens well-rounded menu of things by Matt kettmann in 1999 and rose to become the that I knew would sell.” Meanwhile, Chiarappa assemFood Network’s first female Iron Chef, consciously avoided opening her own restaurant bled a number of “investor families,” including many in town.“It’s been my oasis away from everything else,” from the Mesa. “Without their support, their belief, she explained. their trust,” he said,“we wouldn’t be where we are.” But then came a unique burger concept from ChiThey took over the old Mexican Fresh location, as arappa, whose kids went to Washington Elementary that restaurant’s owner was moving out of the busiwith Cora’s brood. A medical device salesperson by ness, and brought in Nelson Construction to transday, the San Diego native—who moved here in 2008 form the space. “It was a lotta work,” said Chiarappa. with his S.B.-born-and-raised wife — was “literally In came wood beams rescued from old barns, a roll-up swinging in hammocks” on a surf trip outside of front door, Mesa-centric photos by Phil Gerlach, and Mazatlán with his friends a couple of years ago when a laid-back, beachy vibe, enhanced by the design wisthey realized the Mesa was missing a burger spot. “I dom of Kristi Gordnier. “We were trouble together,” know nothing about restaurants,” he readily admits, said Cora, who also played a role in the look of the but he dove into the research, trying burgers from place, which will include a surfboard shaped by Renny New Orleans to Los Angeles. Yater above the kitchen. When he approached Cora with the idea in August The place was immediately packed upon opening 2015, she was splitting from her partner of 17 years in early December, and business has remained steady —they have four kids together—and was ready to ever since, a good omen for the ambitions to come. do something new. “I’ve done burgers in my joints, But expansion goals aside, Cora and Chiarappa see but never a burger joint,” said Cora, who saw a kin- this flagship location as being a longtime community dred work ethic in Chiarappa.“We’re both pretty anal hub for Santa Barbara families, a place to meet and about attention to detail,” she explained, noting that eat, but also where the generations of kids can work there is plenty you can teach someone about running each summer. “It’s been everything I hoped for,” said restaurants but that such an innate “sense of urgency” Cora, a mere week into the new venture,“if not more.” is what’s required to serve consistently great food. Cora immediately required that the concept could be scaled into a national chain, so they planned the branding and menu with that in mind. “Mesa means 963-7492, ‘table’ in Spanish and Portuguese, so we feel that the name can travel,” said Chiarappa. They developed mesaburger.com

315 Meigs Rd.

42

THE INDEPENDENT

JANUARY 5, 2017

independent.com


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Food & drink •

f you stood in the Calle Real shopping mall Perera. In fact, it’s the only fish market in Goleta, parking lot in front of the now-closed Petri- aside from grocery stores. The fish comes from ni’s and spun a complete 360-degree circle, wholesale markets in Los Angeles, so the quality your eyes would take in four Japanese-food- is high—sushi grade, in many instances—“and themed businesses owned by the husband-and- it doesn’t have the cheapest prices, either,” said wife team of Laxman Perera and Keiko Miyata. Perera candidly. He even introduced Chef James The couple’s holdings include the regionally uni- Sly, of Sly’s in Carpinteria, to the joys of shopping versal Sushi Teri (with four locations between at the market.“He loves it,” said Perera, who actuLompoc and Carpinteria) as well as Nikka Japa- ally owns the building that houses Sly’s and also nese Market, the Nikka Fish Market & Grill, and, bought Henning’s Cake Boutique on Figueroa as of last month, Nikka Ramen. (Nikka, a name Street from that family a few years ago. chosen by the market’s original owner, apparently Today, though, the excitement brewing in this means “Japanese Chinese.”) Mall of Goleta is Nikka Ramen, which opened just before Thanksgiving and is already mobbed. Their food world began with Sushi Teri, the economical yet delicious way Santa BarAs in all things, Perera and Miyata took the barians crush their cravings for raw fish trendy comfort-food concept seriously.“Our and sweet marichef is in Japan right now, studying at a nated chicken, ramen school for the next two salmon, and weeks,” said Perera before it opened in Novembeef. Intimate ber. “The food is and homey, each going to be very Sushi Teri offers reasonable. We’ll a middlebrow Build Japanese Food empire approach to Japahave rice bowls By D.J. PallaDino and poké.” The menu nese dishes more reflects ramen prices often offered on the higher end ranging in the low two digits in this town, from and throws the holy trinity of Japa Japanese warm-up dishes: gyoza, edamame, Arigato to Yoichi’s. and shishito peppers. “We liked to eat there when we were students,” said Perera. “That’s Perera denies marching toward a how we met, at City College going food empire of any sort. They’re too busy. “We really are involved in every to school. So when it came to be for aspect of our businesses; we make all sale, we wanted to buy it.” Both Miyata, who was born in the decisions, but at the same time, we Nagoya, Japan, and Perera, who hails live behind the scenes as best we can,” he from Sri Lanka, wound up at SBCC, said. “This ramen restaurant is mainly for studying business and economics. “She went the people who shop at the Nikka store. They’re on to UCSB,” said Perera, but he was too eager very excited about it opening.” to get into real-world commerce. They bought Two weeks later when I visit on a Sunday the mini-chain in 1997 and kept it small despite night, it’s packed. The delicious ramen I ate at the franchising temptations, only adding the spot in counter was creamy pork broth with thin noodles Lompoc. “It’s a very hard town, Lompoc,” said and a big slab of pork belly. The broth simmers Laxman. “Restaurants don’t last there more than for more than 24 hours, explained Perera as he served other guests, coached the kitchen, and two years. But we’re doing fine.” The next stop on their stealthy climb to success talked to a young friend who dropped in. The was Nikka, the oldest store in the 30-something- friend asked what he did for a hobby nowadays, year-old Calle Real shopping center that once and Perera stopped what he was doing. “Hob“Hob didn’t allow chains.“I’m pretty sure it was the first bies,” he proclaimed in disbelief. “Who has time store in the mall,” said Perera. The original mar- for hobbies?” ket was sparse but accommodatingly pan-Asian, with an emphasis on Japanese items, prepared food, and hard-to-find essentials such as miso, bonito flakes, and dried kelp. Nowadays, Nikka’s remarkable range includes gourmet tofu, finely graded soy sauces, and a variety of sesame oils. The clientele is remarkably steady and grateful. The couple liked Calle Real, so they decided to do seafood next, mixing a market with casual dining.“There was a fish market there a long time ago, but we started this one long after it had gone,” said

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diNiNg Out

Guide

ethiopian Authentic Ethiopian cuisine Featured at Petit Valentien Restaurant 1114 State St. #14, 805‑966‑0222. Serkaddis Alemu offers an ever changing menu with choices of vegetarian, vegan, and meat options. Catering Avaliable for parties of up to 40 people. Sat/Sun lunch 11:30‑2:30 french Petit Valentien, 1114 State St. #14, 805‑966‑0222. Open M‑F 11:30‑3pm (lunch). M‑Sat 5pm‑Close (dinner). Sun $24 four course prix fixe dinner. In La Arcada Plaza, Chef Robert Dixon presents classic French comfort food at affordable cost in this cozy gem of a restaurant. Petit Valentien offers a wide array of meat and seafood entrees along with extensive small plates and a wine list specializing in amazing quality at arguably the best price in town. A warm romantic atmosphere makes the perfect date spot. Comfortable locale for dinner parties, or even just a relaxing glass of wine. Reservations are recommended. indian Flavor of India 3026 State 682‑6561 $$ www.flavorofindiasb.com Finest,

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most authentic Indian cuisine is affordable too! All You Can Eat Lunch Buffet $10.95 M‑S dinner combos $9.95+ Specials: Tandoori‑ Mixed or Fish, Chicken Tikka Masala, Shrimp Bhuna. Also: meat, curries & vegetarian.Wine & Beer. Take out. VOTED BEST for 20 YEARS! 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

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The reSTauranT Guy TurnS 10 Dickson hn Jo

GUY • b y

• Cachuma Lake Café, Cachuma Lake marina • Ca’ Dario Trattoria and Pizzeria, 250 Storke Rd., Goleta • Cajun Kitchen, 6025 Calle Real, Goleta (formerly Rusty’s Pizza) • Chicken in a Barrel BBQ, 310 S. Fairview Ave. • Cito Street Café, 305 W. Montecito St. • Dickey’s, Santa Barbara • Dunkin’ Donuts, three more South Coast locations • Grocery Outlet, 2840 De la Vina St. (formerly Ralphs) • Guicho’s Eatery, 901 Linden Ave., Carpinteria (formerly The Beach Bowl) • Hana Kitchen, 503 State St. (formerly Mac’s Fish & Chip Shop) • Handlebar Coffee Roasters, 2720 De la Vina St. (formerly Sleep Shoppe) • HiWI Tropical Fusion, 6555 Pardall Rd., Isla Vista • Kyle’s Kitchen, 7060 Hollister Ave., Goleta (Hollister Village Plaza) • La Entrada de Santa Barbara, 30 State St. • Luna Grill, 3925 State St. (formerly Carl’s Jr.) • Magic Castle, 30 Los Patos Wy. (formerly Café del Sol) • Mestizo by Los Agaves, 119 State St. (formerly Nuance) • Meun Fan Thai Café, 5664 Calle Real, Goleta • Oliver’s, 1198 Coast Village Rd. (formerly Peabody’s) • Renaud’s Patisserie & Bistro, corner of Carpinteria Ave. and Holly Ave., Carpinteria • Rusty’s Pizza, 2315 Lillie Ave., Summerland (Stacky’s Seaside) • Rusty’s Pizza, 4880 Hollister Ave., Goleta (moving from 149 S. Turnpike Rd.) • Sharkey’s Woodfired Mexican Grill, 7000 Hollister Ave., Goleta (Hollister Village Plaza) • Which Wich, five South Coast locations • Unnamed Asian Fusion, 5892 Hollister Ave. (formerly The Natural Café) • Unnamed BBQ, 4444 Hollister Ave., Noleta (formerly Creekside) • Unnamed Sushi, 134 E. Canon Perdido St. (formerly Sojourner) • Unnamed Taco, 134 E. Canon Perdido St. (formerly Sojourner) • Unnamed, 1134 Chapala St.

• Wine Guide

cover in January 2007? Milk & Honey had just opened, Panino was opening in Goleta, Coffee Bean was replacing Santa Barbara Sandwich Company next to the Granada, DogHouse restaurant on Milpas Street closed, Crumbs bakery was opening in Goleta, SpiritLand Bistro on Victoria Street was hosting a Santa Barbara Young Professionals Club meeting with guest speaker Roger Durling, Julian’s Mexican Café on Milpas Street closed, Taiko on State Street closed, and The Hungry Cat restaurant was opening soon in the former home of JoJo’s and L’Ombretta. That first week, I also wrote about some personal restaurant experiences (which I don’t do

THE CRYSTAL BALL KNOWS ALL: After intense concentration and a wave of my hand over the allknowing crystal ball, my eatery oracle has revealed a list of food and drink locations appearing in your future:

Dining Out Guide

10 YEARS AGO: So what did my first column

much anymore), including comments about Dargan’s Irish Pub, Arigato Sushi, Del Pueblo Café, Dish Café, Milk & Honey, La Super Rica, and, yes, McDonald’s. I was surprised to discover that it is impossible to order a double hamburger at McDonald’s because it is not in their computer system.You must order a double cheeseburger with no cheese.

The R

Food & drink •

Yelp or even Google existed, I was running Santa Barbara’s only online restaurant guide and review system on santabarbara.com, using software I wrote myself because you couldn’t buy such a thing. After more than a decade of operating the restaurant guide (where I became privy to a lot of food news), I launched a food news blog on January 4, 2007. Soon after it went online, I was asked to write restaurant news for the since-departed Santa Barbara Daily Sound newspaper. This was a huge surprise because I am a computer software engineer by trade with no formal food or journalism training. Despite my fear of public humiliation, I accepted the challenge. For the first year, this column didn’t have a name because I couldn’t think of one. Then one day I was exiting a downtown elevator when I bumped into John Zant, who has been a working journalist in Santa Barbara for more than 40 years. He looked at me and said, “The restaurant guy!” Unlike a blog, which has visitor analytics, when you write for a newspaper, you never know if anyone actually reads your work. There’s usually a lot of other great stuff to choose from, and, in fact, I’m not even sure you are reading this. For all I know, the first sighting of this week’s column might be by a canary looking at the bottom of her bird cage. But while writing for the Daily Sound, I eventually discovered that at least a few people stumbled across my ramblings. When I broke the news that BevMo was coming to upper State Street, which I had learned many months before any official announcement, other newspapers, radio stations, and television channels ran their own stories soon after. There was also a learning curve. When I reported that The Cheesecake Factory was going to take over Pep Boys on lower State Street, that turned out to be totally false. That’s when I realized there is no delete key when you publish in print. I was rightfully blasted for my error, complete with calls from an attorney. But I was also blasted once by this newspaper for a restaurant story that turned out to be … true. After five years at the Daily Sound, the paper ended circulation in 2012. Then I had the great fortune to be invited to join the talented crew at The Santa Barbara Independent, which has been my happy home ever since. Writing for this paper has been a dream come true, and the Indy editors do an amazing job cleaning up my column each week so that it is actually readable.

T

tarting in the mid-1990s, before

AURA ST N E

S

(The Column, Not Me)

RC17 Rincon Brewery Kick off Party! Wed Jan 11, 2017 5-8pm Rincon Brewery

Enjoy tasty food and drinks while listening to live music by some of your favorite local pros with an acoustic performance by Tim Curran, and a jam by Conner Coffin, Adam Lambert and friends. Autograph signings, raffle, and plenty of fun for the whole family.

(formerly The Hungry Cat)

John Dickson’s reporting can be found every day online at SantaBarbara.com. Send tips to info@SantaBarbara.com. independent.com

JANUARY 5, 2017

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46

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JANUARY 5, 2017

independent.com


living | Sports

TenniS Phenom Kayla day GoeS Pro Santa Barbara Teenage Superstar Will Play Australian open This Month

K

ayla Day truly went

paul wellman photos

said. “I took up tennis when I through a leap year in saw him playing at the club. He gave me so much motivation. 2016. Santa Barbara’s teenage tennis phenom I was at his funeral bawling. I vaulted from one of many to had dreams he was still alive. number one and from amateur He would show up in different girl to professional woman. ways. When I won that tourHer progression was evident nament [U.S. Open] the next in the junior girls’ singles at year, I was thinking about him three major tournaments. Day all the time. I was so loose. I thought I was going home after reached the round of 16 at the French Open, advanced to the the first round.” semifinals at Wimbledon, and Trigueiro was unseeded, won the championship at the but he went on to upset Joey U.S. Open. Her sixth and final Blake in the final, 6-3, 6-2. “It match in Flushing Meadows, was on the same court and by New York, was a 6-3, 6-2 victhe same score that Kayla won tory over Viktoria Kuzmova this year,” Mousouris pointed out. of Slovakia. With that triumph, Day secured the end-of-theAfter competing at UCLA year No. 1 girls’ world ranking for two years, Trigueiro went out on the pro tour. “I was by the International Tennis Federation (ITF). done by age 22,” he said. “I had Day turned 17 on September cracked feet from the hard 28 and could continue to comcourts. I also got out there too late. Guys under me pete for junior championships in 2017. One of the goals she GRAND SLAM DREAMS: Santa Barbara tennis star Kayla Day had teach— [Andre] Agassi, [Jim] ing pro Larry Mousouris at her side when she told of her decision to turn proclaimed several years ago professional at age 17. Courier, [Pete] Sampras was, in fact, to win the Wim—they saw the writing on bledon girls’ title at 17. But at a the wall and turned pro.” Mousouris, whose tennis Trigueiro presently gathering last week at the Santa Barbara Tennis Club, she announced her decision to leap into the WTA (Women’s coaching career spans four teaches tennis and does Tennis Association) Tour as a professional. decades, has attained a unique some real estate business in Santa Monica. He “It was a tough decision,” Day said. “It was hard to pass distinction. Day is his third up great colleges”—schooled by her parents and a tutor, protégé to win a U.S. Open approves of Day’s decision she is a semester away from completing her high school junior title. The others were a to go pro. “You’re the No. requirements—“but tennis is something I want to wake up pair of boys’ champions from 1 junior; you need to go Santa Barbara High: Mike now,” he said. “There are and do every day.” Tennis Club pro Larry Mousouris, who guided Day Falberg in 1980 and Tim hungry people out there.” through her youth career, said she’s Trigueiro in 1985. Mousouris has high paid her dues. “She embraces the dif“That’s insane,” Trigueiro hopes for Day. “I love this kid; she really hates to ficult,” he said. “So many times, in so said.“Even to have two champimany matches, things get difficult.” ons from our little part of the world … .You’re talking Grand lose,” he said. “She’s going to shake hands and show that Day frequently left the comforts of Slam tennis. It’s international.” Since the junior competition million-dollar smile, but she’s going to go to her room and home, he added, to hone her game in New York was established in 1973, only 12 American boys be angry.” with stops from China to Eastern have emerged victorious. Fifteen U.S. girls have won, but Day Off the courts, Day has a cheerful demeanor. She is a Europe. “She made the choice to leave paradise and go to is just the fourth in the last 20 years. Santa Barbara girl who likes to take her dogs for a walk on hell and back.” “Larry always made you think bigger than a normal per- the beach. She is close to her parents, Dana and Andrew. “I try to stay in touch with what’s going on in their lives,” Day got a taste of competition with the pros in several son,” Trigueiro said.“He opened up your possibilities.” minor WTA tournaments last year, and by virtue of winning Falberg, Trigueiro, and Day were willing to dream big. Mousouris said.“I’d say Kayla is essentially pretty happy.” the USTA Girls 18 national championship, she received a “They were great goal setters,” Mousouris said.“They enjoyed n And ready to enter an unfriendly world. wild-card entry into the main draw of the U.S. Open. She the fight. Those kids keep me out won her first-round match before losing to No. 8–seeded longer [in practice sessions]. I Madison Keys, 6-1, 6-1. After that lesson, she mowed down never schedule anybody after a workout with them. They always the girls. John From now on, Day will be mixing it up with experienced want one more.” Falberg pursued the sport professionals and trying to earn her share of prize money. She has been granted a wild-card entry in the Australian with a perfectionistic passion. Open, beginning January 16 in Melbourne. “I’m really “He was so demanding of him1/7: College Basketball: Biola at Westmont It is possibly the most feverish excited about my second Grand Slam tournament,” she self; it was unbelievable,” Mousmall-college basketball rivalry in Southern California. Because Biola will be moving out of the NAIA said. She is realistic about the nature of the business. “There souris said. The distress that into NCAA Division II next year, Saturday’s double-header will be the last time Westmont hosts the are not a lot of friendships on the WTA Tour,” she said. overtook Falberg after he went Eagles with their standings in the Golden State Athletic Conference at stake. Westmont’s men entered “Everybody’s kind of out for themselves.” on to college at Stanford was the New Year with records of 13-1 overall and 2-0 in the GSAC. Biola, which was ranked No. 1 in the NAIA Day, a left-hander with a two-fisted backhand, has edged unfathomable. He died by suilast month, was 14-1 and 0-1 after being upset by William Jessup in its conference opener. Westmont into the top 200 of the ITF women’s rankings. Mousouris cide in 1984. leads the all-time series, 58-52. The Warrior women (12-1, 2-0), ranked No. 4 nationally, will also get a To this day, Trigueiro gets calculated that most of the others will be past their primes test from Biola (10-3, 1-0). Their series lead is 27-11. Women: 5:30pm; Men: 7:30pm. Murchison Gym, by the time she turns 20.“There’s nobody she can’t play with choked up at the memory. “FalWestmont College, 955 La Paz Rd. Free-$6. Call 565-6010. berg was my idol growing up,” he already,” he said.

by John

Zant

Zant’s

independent.com

Game of the WeeK

JANUARY 5, 2017

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1st Thursday is an evening of art and culture in downtown Santa Barbara. On the first Thursday of each month, participating galleries and cultural art venues are open from 5-8pm offering the public free access to art in a fun and social environment. In addition, State Street comes alive with performances and interactive exhibits.

1St ThuRSday PaRticiPating vEnuES

1st THURSDAY Jan. 5, 5-8PM 13 TE AMO ESTATE & FINE JEWELRY

6 ARTAMO GALLERY

811 State Street, Suite G, 805-845-7558 • For “Amour de la Provence”,

the New Year with New Art. We present a selection of new works by Judy Hintz Cox, Elana Kundell, Jack Mohr, Donn Angel Pérez, and Julia Pinkham — all arrived just days before this exhibition. Enjoy champagne and chocolate to also celebrate the 12th anniversary of our gallery with us.

Olga Hotujac captures a unique perspective with her versions of iconic Provencal France landscapes created while working en plein air. Videos accompanying each painting will be shown as part of the show, along with a live painting demonstration by the artist during the reception.

Center: Paint your favorite memory in tempera, inspired by David Korty’s work on view in “Untitled: Drawing from the Schorr Collection.” 5:30 pm: Special performance: Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano! Also on view “British Art from Whistler to World War II.” FREE!

photographers: Craton, Haynes, Louy, Muench, Owen, Reierson & Sipress. Unexpected beauty, graceful simplicity and epic wonderment will delight you in this exhibit where each photographer’s vision reveals 8 FAULKNER GALLERY MOMENTS OF CLARITY. Exhibit runs Jan 3rd-Jan 28th. (Open M-F 10:0040 East Anapamu Street, in the SB Public Library, 805-962-7635 5:30, Sat 10-4:30, closed Sun.) • A Santa Barbara Sculptors Guild and Abstract Art Collective joint exhibition, juried by Nancy Gifford. Many genres and materials are 2 LADY MCCLINTOCK STUDIOS ART GALLERY represented in this diverse show. Visual magic happens when paintings 1221 State Street #6, 805-845-0030 • Showcasing Pamela Larson’s and sculptures are shown together… up through January 30. grand collection of vivid paintings full of emotions and feelings with hints of the past, present and future acts of the world we live in. View the paintings, meet the artist, enjoy live music, complimentary wine and hors d’oeuvres. Parking lot#5 on Chapala Street for close parking.

14 SBCAST

513 Garden Street, 805-252-1065 • Kick-off 2017 in All Studios:

1130 State Street, 805-963-4364 • 5:30 – 7:30 pm: Family Resource

1331 State Street, 805-845-4833 • A photo exhibition by local

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11 East Anapamu Street, 805-568-1400 • ARTAMO GALLERY begins

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D - Brigit Faustman with paper sculptures; E- Performance Art and Installation with Mazia Hixson in “Dream Disaster” a post-apocalyptic performance and installation that re-frames society’s collective apathy towards climate change; Lynn Brown with STUDS in Studio A/Abolish Blandness; and MAT /UCSB Studio F. 15 KEEFRIDER CUSTOM FURNITURE

434 East Haley Street Unit C, 805-617-3342 • Come join furniture

designer Jay Keefrider for a glass of wine in our woodworking studio. Jay custom designs and handcrafts stunning works in wood, with recently completed pieces and works in progress on display. Pieces available include this elegantly inlaid mahogany console table, as well as handmade children’s rocking chairs.

1114 State Street #17, 805-451-3824 • A CLASSIC FEEL FOR MODERN

TIMES: Black & White Landscape photography by Kern Ducote

1ST ThuRSday PERFORMERS YES YOU Y CAN DANCE D SALSA

10 WATERhOUSE GALLERY

3 10 WEST GALLERY

10 West Anapamu Street, 805-770-7711 • The annual holiday “Small Wall” of gift-sized artwork continues through January 23. Take-away your purchase and we will hang another in its place, ensuring a great selection of Santa Barbara area artwork throughout the show! 4 SULLIvAN vAN GOSS - AN AMERICAN GALLERY v

11 East Anapamu Street, 805-730-1460 • Sullivan Goss celebrates the

opening of two exciting exhibitions. Ken Bortolazzo, one of America’s foremost kinetic sculptors, opens his 6th show with the gallery. Our Contemporary Abstraction show will feature non-objective paintings demonstrating the rich diversity of the subject. Also on view, 100 Grand: 100 works for $1000 or less. 5 ChANNING PEAKE GALLERY

105 East Anapamu Street, 1st Floor • Joe Girandola: Duct Tape Dreams

Joe Girandola visualizes the world’s greatest architectural wonders out of duct tape. Employing a quick fix material to depict now crumbling artifacts, Girandola creates a wry commentary on past and present empires. Curated by Maiza Hixson.

¡entrada Gratuita!

Marshalls Patio, 6:00-7:30 pm • Free Pop-up Salsa Dance Class offered by 1114 State Street # 9, 805-962-8885 • The Gallery is going on its 33rd Yes You Can Dance Salsa. No pressure and maximum fun, for all ages and year and 26 years in La Arcada Courtyard. It features artwork from some abilities. Music provided by the CycleMAYnia Boom Boom and Carpinteria Open Streets. A perfect start to the New Year. of today’s finest nationally-known painters. Southwest Art Magazine

recognized Diane & Ralph Waterhouse among “10 Prominent People” in ThE BRAz RA ILIAN CULTURAL RAz ULTURAL ARTS CENTER OF SANTA ANTA BARBARA BARBARA WITh MESTRE MARIANO SILv ILvA ILv vA the Fine Art Business. Ralph Waterhouse will give a painting demonstraCorner of State and Anapamu Streets, 5:00-8:00 pm • The BCACSB tion at 5:45 pm. Guitar by Lou Spaventa. presents a dynamic Capoeira (Brazilian martial arts) and Brazilian dance performance featuring acrobatics, fast kicks and musical accompaniment. Celebrating their 16thanniversary in Santa Barbara, Mestre Mariano Silva Santa Barbara Art Association Members: Artist of the Month, Liz Tallak- brings the magic of Brazil to life through arts education. Classes are offered son, presents Nature’s Wonders that include her pastel landscapes and daily including Samba, Capoeira, Afro-Brazilian Dance, Batucada Drumming watercolor florals inspired by the amazing colors and textures of nature. and Kids Program! 11 GALLERY 113

1114 State Street, La Arcada Court #8, 805-965-6611 • Exhibition of

Featured artists are Helena Hill, Michael Marzolla, Jo Merit, Mary-Gail King, Lynn Humphrey, and David Peacock. 12 CASA GALLERY @ vOICE v MAGAz AGA INE AGAz

23 East Canon Perdido Street, 805-965-6448 • New Light, New Year

celebrates light emerging from darkness after winter solstice as seen in the work of local artists. What do you dream your new year will bring to light the way for the new day? Sing along to Auld Lang Syne with Harold Kono and welcome 2017. Refreshments.

Música, Danza, y Mucho Más

ART CRAWL 735 Anacapa Street · The Santa Barbara Arts Collaborative, in partnership with Downtown Santa Barbara, will lead a curated Art Crawl through 1st Thursday festivities. The Art Crawl starts at 5:30 pm in de la Guerra Plaza on the back steps of City Hall (735 Anacapa Street, then head around to the back).

Free ConCerts!

SPONSORS

Roy oRbison comes to life. Dont miss this special performance by Wiley Ray & The Big O Band, a nationally touring musical group paying tribute to one of the greatest singer/songwriters of all time.

MARIACHI LOS CAMPEROS DE NATI CANO  Friday / Viernes, Jan 6 • 7 pm • isla Vista school  6875 El ColEgio Road, isla Vista, Ca • (805) 252-3493

 sunday / domingo, Jan 8 • 4 pm & 7 pm • marJorie luke theatre, santa BarBara Jr. high  721 E. Cota stREEt, santa BaRBaRa, Ca • (805) 884-4087 x7

Las puertas se abrirán media hora antes de la función. Habrá recepción después del concierto. Doors open one half hour before the show starts. Reception follows concert.

 TALLER DE MARIACHI / MARIACHI WORKSHOP  Para estudiantes avanzados. Observadores son bienvenidos. / For experienced players. Observers welcome.

6:30 - 8:30 pm • Jueves, 5 de enero / Thursday, January 5

La Casa de La Raza, 601 E. Montecito Street, Santa Barbara, (805) 893-3382

The voice remains after the man is gone. Roy Orbison left us with a treasure chest of timeless songs such as Pretty Woman, Crying and many more.

www.facebook.com/VivaelArteSB

box office 805-963-0761 or lobero.com 48

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JANUARY 5, 2017

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email: arts@independent.com

Into the Void wes skiles

the mind under control. It works could give you a on the surface, too. bunch of rational, scientific, and conserWhat is the most beautiful sea vation reasons, but it’s cave you’ve ever seen? Why? I the feeling of being somewhere guess my bias is that the most that no one has been before, beautiful underwater caves are drifting through this most in the Bahamas because of the peaceful, delicate, inner space, diversity of what you see and with all my focus on the task types of caves, from ocean holes at hand,” said Kenny Broad of that boil up to the surface or have why he is drawn to the extreme whirlpools depending on the and often dangerous discipline tides to caves found inland in the of exploring underwater caves. rock pine lands that go for miles But Broad, who holds a PhD in DIVING DEEP: Kenny Broad rises through a shaft within the mineral-rich inland in every direction, decorated anthropology from Columbia underwater cave Dan’s Cave on Abaco Island in the Bahamas. with crystals, flowstone, and speUniversity and is a professor leothems, to deep canyon caves at the University of Miami, cave formations, stalagmites, and sediments also sees the scientific knowledge gained by in particular are recorders of environmen- with the ceiling at 40 feet and the bottom at probing these rarely charted territories:“The tal history such as temperature and rainfall. 400 feet and you feel like you’re swimming microbial life in some of these caves can also The speleothems form when the cave was through the Grand Canyon. help us understand what some of the earli- dry during past ice ages and the sea level was est forms of life were like going back over much lower, so sometimes we find the caves Where are you set to explore next? Are there three billion years as some of these sinkholes inland and sometimes in the coastal areas. any caves you haven’t visited but hope to? are modern day equivalents of the ancient, With these samples, we can do geochemical Bob Ballard, along with Lynn Gamble from primordial oceans that life evolved out of.” analyses to reconstruct past climates, going UCSB and folks at the Channel Islands Broad was in the Bahamas studying “blue back hundreds of thousands of years. This Marine Sanctuary, among others, have holes” when I caught up with him over email. allows us to better understand natural cli- expeditions planned for 2017 to the Chanmate variability and thus make more sense nel Islands to study the undersea caves that When did you become interested in exploring of what is happening now as we put green- have formed primarily from wave actions during past sea level stands, so I’m hoping underwater sea caves? I grew up in Florida, house gases into the atmosphere. which is made up of limestone — the best Beyond the scientific value, these caves to join them as these are new areas for me. type of rock for extensive cave formation. are windows into our freshwater reservoirs They are not extensive cave systems like the My neighbor was a professional diver, so at — aquifers. Diving in them can shed light on ones we normally work in, but they could about 11 years old I realized you can breathe what’s arguably our most critical resource, hold really interesting clues to past human and nonhuman inhabitation and previous underwater and escape the confines of grav- fresh water. rates of sea level change, among other things. ity and basically I became addicted early on. As I received more formal training, the mys- The Bahamas’ blue holes avalanche looked I’d be thrilled to participate, even if it’s doing terious aura of cave diving was always in the so frightening. How do you find the courage dishes and cleaning toilets, as there’s always background, and I was introduced to some to return to cave diving after experiencing something to learn when you get a group of the cave diving pioneers when I was about something like that? It’s a lot scarier— scarier and, of experts together and go to new places. — Michelle Drown 19 years old and quickly realized that there objectively, more dangerous — driving on was another world right beneath my feet. the highways in Florida where I live than cave diving. You mentally train for different As part of Arts & Lectures’ What can underwater caves tell us about underwater scenarios and hope that your National Geographic Live the environment and/or geological history? muscle memory kicks in and is not overseries, Kenny Broad will present The Risky Many of the caves, what are referred to as whelmed by adrenalin. When things go Science of Exploration on Sunday, January 8, “blue holes” in the Bahamas, “cenotes” in south, we take a couple of slow, deep sanity 3 p.m., at UCSB’s Campbell Hall. Call 893-3535 Mexico, or “sinkholes” in the U.S., are really breaths before dealing with problems, and or see artsandlectres.sa.ucsb.edu. time capsules along many dimensions. The that seems to keep the heart rate down and

4•1•1

Named SBIFF American Riviera Award Honoree Santa Barbara favorite Jeff Bridges will be celebrated at this year’s Santa Barbara International Film Festival (SBIFF) for his fantastic turn in the compelling drama Hell or High Water. Bridges will receive the American Riviera Award, which is given in recognition of an actor’s important contribution to U.S. cinema. “Jeff Bridges shows us in Hell or High Water that an already great artist can continue his growth,” said SBIFF Executive Director Roger Durling. Past recipients include Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, and Mark Ruffalo (2016); Patricia Arquette and Ethan Hawke (2015); Robert Redford (2014); Quentin Tarantino (2013); and Martin Scorsese (2012). The tribute takes place Friday, February 10. See sbiff.org. — Michelle Drown

Teen sTar sT audiTions For the past seven years, Santa Barbara youth with powerful pipes have been singing their hearts out in hopes of being named the winner of Teen Star, our seaside burg’s version of American Idol. It’s on again, and the time to sign up for auditions is now through Monday, January 16. Grammy Award–winning singer/ songwriter Kenny Loggins will be reprising his role as mentor to the 10 finalists (and Kenny Loggins alternates), helping them prepare for the big show on Saturday, February 25, at the Arlington Theatre. “I’m really looking forward to hearing the new young talent in Santa Barbara,” said Loggins in a press release. “Over the years, I’ve enjoyed helping a few fantastic young artists grow into their promise. I expect this to be a terrific year.” For more information, see teenstarusa.com. — MD

susan weininger

Jeff Bridges

l I f e page 49 courtesy

“I

Nat Geo explorer Kenny Broad ttalks the MaGic of Underwater Caves

BoB Dylan:

30th AnniversAry ConCert CelebrAtion Forget Patti Smith’s wobbly rendition of “A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall.” If the Nobel Prize committee had any sense, as soon as they realized that Bob Dylan was not going to show for the ceremony, they would have just slapped on the incredible film known as Bob Dylan: 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration. This star-studded affair took place at Madison Square Garden in October 1992 and featured an extraordinary cast of musical legends. One by one, the greatest popular musicians of the era got up and did their best to bring out the genius in Dylan’s songs, and, by and large, they succeeded. On Friday, January 13, Hale Milgrim continues his entertaining and educational Go to Hale film series at the Lobero by screening highlights from that show and offering his always trenchant and amusing commentary. Although the audio CD of the night was remastered and re-released in 2014 with some additional tracks, Milgrim will undoubtedly have video rarities to share, and that means getting a peek at some of the show’s more obscure, but still fascinating, moments. What might they be? Lou Reed tossed off a powerful version of “Foot of Pride,” a long and enigmatic unreleased Dylan song that he cribbed from bootlegs. That would be interesting to see. It’s likely that the acoustic “Masters of War” by Eddie Vedder and Mike McCready will make it, as will Eric Clapton’s blazing “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright” and Milgrim hero George Harrison’s tender take on “If Not for You.” Perhaps the most amazing thing about this carnival of Dylan-worshiping megastars is how completely they gave themselves to the project. Just sample John Mellencamp’s “Like a Rolling Stone” or Johnny Winter’s frantic “Highway 61,” and you will hear immediately what total immersion in a songwriter’s universe sounds like. In addition to the clips and Milgrim’s remarks, the event, which begins promptly at 7:28 p.m., will also include a silent auction of some great memorabilia, with all proceeds going to benefit live music at the Lobero Theatre (33 E. Canon Perdido St.). For tickets and information, visit lobero.com or call 963-0761. — Charles Donelan

m o r e a r t s & e n t e r ta i n m e n t > > > independent.com

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Rod tucknott tktk

a&e | DANCE FEATURE

2017 SEASON

Christopher Pilafian, Artistic Director

SANTA BARBARA DANCE THEATER

Anima and Animus

THE POWER OF DANCE: “It’s a training ground for the next generation for artists and, inside of that, a place where women can feel good about themselves, empowered, and smart,” said SBDA director Alana Tillim.

S.B. DAnce ArtS

January 13 - 22, 2017 Hatlen Theater Tickets: theaterdance.ucsb.edu

20-YeAr VeterAn StuDio ServeS Community

photo: Wes Skiles (Kenny Broad shuttling hi def video camera through tight spot in Ralph’s cave)

A

building ground for budding danc- scholarships to children in homeless shelers, a buzzing hub for visiting world- ters, foster care, or abusive family situations. renowned choreographers and Santa “Dance is one of the only things that sustains Barbara artists, a place to let loose, a home these kids. It brings them joy,” Tillim said. away from home — Santa Barbara Dance Last year’s Teen Dance Star event helped raise Arts (SBDA) is all of these and continues to $3,000 for AMP youth dance scholarships, be more. Since moving into its new space in and SBDA’s own student company raised January 2014 after skyrocketing rents forced another $8,000. them out of the Funk Zone, the dance studio SBDA promotes work that is socially has flourished with expanded programs and conscious and progressive in an environment youth-mentorship opportunities, serving as that is supportive and nurturing, Tillim said. a community center for all things choreo- It’s a community space with a “wonderful graphed, improvised, or hometown heart … a trainen pointe. ing ground for the next Now in its 20th year, generation for artists, and, SBDA’s is a “tale of how the inside of that, a place where arts can survive in S.B.,” women can feel good about director Alana Tillim says. themselves, empowered, Calling their neighborand smart.” hood migration “a success Recent pieces include story out of the Gentrificaone choreographed by two tion Exodus” wherein risseparate teens who had by Richie DeMaria ing property costs forced been bullied to the point many creative souls out of authority intervention, a of their Funk Zone abodes, the dance studio piece last year addressing the Isla Vista shoothas managed to expand in its new space on ings, a post-2016-election reflection, and an Cota by offering affordable spaces to rent Orlando shootings tribute titled “Stop the for visiting artists, Fiesta dancers, and area Hate,” which moved judge Tyce Diorio to tears theater companies, on top of its wide array at a competition in Anaheim.“We’re not afraid of master classes, adult programs, and work- of tackling issues, and we feel dance gives kids shops. In light of the recent Oakland Ghost a tool to speak about them,” Tillim said. Ship fire, Tillim says, the need for affordable SBDA stands out, as well, for teaching about creative spaces has never been more evident, a kind of self-acceptance and self-esteem that with rising rents, permitting protocols, and isn’t based on appearance, Tillim said. While parking modifications all strangling creative the rest of the youth dance world has seen construction. “costumes getting smaller, and the moves Most remarkable, though, is SBDA’s part- more provocative,” SBDA in form and practice nership with the Arts Mentorship Program offers a different image of female empower(AMP), a separate nonprofit cofounded by ment and recognition than the overtly sexual SBDA founder Steven Lovelace and Tillim. choreography popular nationally; Toddlers Providing dance and creative arts oppor- and Tiaras they are not. “We let girls be girls. tunities for children in Santa Barbara who We let them be valued without wearing lingeotherwise could not afford them, AMP’s one- rie,” Tillim said. to-one mentorship program has expanded Upcoming events include a mother/daugh“exponentially” thanks to a sub-tenancy at the ter dance intensive, a March dance showcase, new Cota space, wherein SBDA donates up to and world-class summer instructions in hip$85,000 per year in in-kind services, staff time, hop, contemporary, jazz, and others. With supplies, and studio and office space.Working spring semester classes beginning the first with CASA Santa Barbara, Transition House, week of January, now would be a great time to CALM, and creative partner Teen Star Santa kick-start a career in dance, be you a dancer of n Barbara, among many others, the AMP gives any age or the parent of one.

Photo: ©2016 Phil Channing Painting: Night Venus © Mary Heebner

Makes a Difference Through Dance

SUNDAY!

in new SpAce

THE RISKY SCIENCE OF EXPLORATION with Cave Diver and Anthropologist Kenny Broad

Sun, Jan 8 / 3 PM / UCSB Campbell Hall

$25 / $15 UCSB students and youths (18 & under) Join Broad, a UCSB alumnus, as he laughs his way through tales of his triumphs, tragedies and just plain weird experiences while furthering our knowledge of the world.

National Geographic Live series sponsored in part by Sheila & Michael Bonsignore Kenny Broad is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow in the UCSB College of Creative Studies

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KIDS HELPING KIDS

UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

GAVIN DEGRAW

GARRISON KEILLOR

SAT JAN 14 7PM

SUN JAN 22 3PM

UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

THE PEKING ACROBATS

ITZHAK PERLMAN

SUN JAN 15 3PM

MON JAN 23 7PM

THEATER LEAGUE

NEDERLANDER PRESENTS

SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER

GREGORY PORTER

TUE JAN 17 7:30PM WED JAN 18 7:30PM

TUE JAN 24 8PM

UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

SANTA BARBARA SYMPHONY

BILL T. JONES/ARNIE ZANE COMPANY

DISNEY FANTASIA LIVE IN CONCERT

FRI JAN 20 8PM

TUE JAN 17 7:30PM WED JAN 18 7:30PM

MATURE CONTENT

EL BRACERO DEL AÑO

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SUN JAN 8, 2017 3PM

THE SHOOTIST

MON JAN 9, 2017 7PM

SHINE A LIGHT

TUE JAN 10, 2017 7PM

JANUARY 5, 2017

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courtesy photos

a&e | CLASSICAL PREVIEW

EVERYTHING OPERA: These photos from the 2016 National Opera Association Conference in Indianapolis show the range of performances one can expect at the event in Santa Barbara this weekend. Religious subjects (left), modern and contemporary works (center), choral arrangements (right), and, as seen below, the outstanding individuals who receive the Association’s Lift Every Voice Legacy Award for contributions to opera by AfricanAmericans.

UCSB ArtiStS Perform in

Chamber Opera COmpetitiOn NatioNal opera associatioN coNveNtioN iN saNta BarBara

S

an Diego may have their Comic-Con, and Las Vegas, of course, has the Consumer Electronics Show, among many others, but for 2017 at least, Santa Barbara has the hospitality edge. On January 5-7, the Fess Parker DoubleTree Resort on Cabrillo will host the annual convention of the National Opera Association (NOA). Three full days of talks, workshops, performances, and competitions will have our waterfront echoing with some of the world’s greatest music. Although the conference’s programming caters to the many opera professionals who will travel from all over the country to be here, there’s one event in particular that’s open to the public to enjoy at the bargain price of just $10 a ticket. The Dominick Argento Chamber Opera Competition will be at the Music Academy’s Hahn Hall on Friday, January 6, at 7:30 p.m. Portions of the three finalist chamber operas will feature talented students from UCSB’s Opera Theatre program, and a distinguished panel of judges will declare one of these compositions the winner of a prize that leads to a full production at next year’s NOA conference in New Orleans. For UCSB Associate Professor Benjamin Brecher, NOA’s choice of Santa Barbara for its 2017 annual convention represents the culmination of years of effort developing the UCSB Opera Theatre program, followed by months of hard work planning the event.With the Dominick Argento Chamber Opera Competition at Hahn Hall, Brecher hopes “to show opera directors and producers from all over North America the quality of teaching and students we have here.” The Department of Music is bringing in Sara Widzer, a veteran stage and opera director from Los Angeles, expressly to prepare the students for their big night.

by Charles Donelan As for the chamber operas they will perform, the three finalists underscore the vitality and dynamism of an art form that has grown in both interest and productivity among composers in this century. Tom Cipullo’s After Life follows on the success of his first opera, Glory Denied, which was recorded at the Fort Worth Opera Festival and released in 2013 by Albany

turned it into a short opera for four singers and a chamber ensemble. This piece is short enough for it to be performed in its entirety on Friday night. Joseph Turrin’s The Scarecrow adapts Nathaniel Hawthorne’s wonderful late story “Feathertop” as the point of departure for a two-act piece, of which we will see Act One.

Records. Where Glory Denied took its story from the real-life experiences of Colonel Jim Thompson, the longest-held POW in the history of the United States armed forces, After Life imagines a conversation between the spirits of Pablo Picasso and Gertrude Stein. When a victim of the Holocaust shows up to add another perspective, these two titans of modernism must reconsider what they think they know about life and death. In Letter from Quebec to Providence in the Rain, composer Jeremy Gill has taken a play of the same name by the prolific Don Nigro and

Turrin’s range as a composer is reflected in the varied forms in which he has worked, from film and theater scoring to jazz and electronic music. With this piece, he will show what he can do with Hawthorne’s dark ironies. The judges — Michael Ching, Robin Guarino, Henry Price, and Kostis Protopapas — will render a decision at the conclusion of the evening, a circumstance that ought to make for genuine excitement. Since these three operas were chosen out of 45 pieces that were nominated this year, they are already elite instances of the form, and Brecher and independent.com

his singers are determined to deliver the most compelling possible version of each.“It’s about giving the best presentation we can and doing something that will make the composers proud,” he said. What’s more, he’s enthusiastic about the concert setting, where there will be a live audience alongside the panel that makes the decision. “What we will have is not just a committee sitting in a room somewhere and making their choice,” said Brecher. It will instead be a full evening of music in front of a live audience, a situation which is certain to inform their judgment. For those with the inclination to dive deeper into the NOA convention, there will be additional events, including the association’s annual vocal competition — with judges Marilyn Horne, Laverne Monte, and John Churchwell on Saturday morning in the Fess Parker Grand Ballroom — and loads of interesting lectures and workshops; however, to access these, you will be obliged to register. If you do, look out for Opera Santa Barbara’s Kostis Protopapas, who will give the keynote lecture on Thursday, and UCSB’s Simon Williams, who will be interviewed Saturday on operatic acting. Many of the talks will be illustrated with live vocal performances, as singers work with their teachers to explore the field of opera through analysis and practice. For more information or to register, visit noa.org.

4•1•1

The Dominick Argento Chamber Opera Competition will be on Friday, January 6, at 7:30 p.m. at Hahn Hall (1070 Fairway Rd.). To buy tickets, go to www.music.ucsb.edu/news/purchasetickets or call the Associate Students ticket office at 893-2064. Any remaining general admission tickets will be available at the door.

JANUARY 5, 2017

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Matt Jacoby

a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ PREVIEW

LYRICAL BARD DUDES: Taylor Goldsmith (second from right) is the lead singer and songwriter of the L.A.based band Dawes.

Dawes’ Taylor GolDsmiTh

Talks sToryTelling

D

The Automobile Club of Southern California acts as an agent for the various travel providers featured at the show and is a motor club with a principal place of business at 3333 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. CTR #1016202-80. Copyright © 2016-2017 Automobile Club of Southern California. All Rights Reserved.

espite the vast and stunning array and a real universe they create, but I don’t of diverse, inventive, and simply struggle with digging through the weeds in great music being created today, that order to get something out of it. lowest-common-denominator style of catchy hooks and simplistic songwriting There’s a melancholy mood to a lot of the music, still manages to dominate airwaves and the but also some joy, sort of like the two sides of life. festival circuit. The Los Angeles–based band Is that intentional? I appreciate that you find Dawes is a strong antidote to that, offering that. When I listen back to our first records, rich storytelling in their which I like and am proud lyrics, which are laid of them all, there is only across meanderingly one side, and it’s pretty melancholy chords that down, pretty sad. That’s usually culminate in only showing one half of a chorus full of emothe equation. The human tion and meaning. The condition requires two band is led by singer/ halves of that picture. It is by Matt Kettmann song writer brothrough and it is dark, but we are also able to laugh at the ers Taylor and Grifsame time, and sometimes fin Goldsmith, who spent their formative years in Malibu. Tay- we’re laughing at that same dark shit. I really lor spoke to me over the phone for a half wanted, as much as I could, to bring that to hour last month. What follows is a con- the music so that there was a more complete densed version of our chat, a longer ver- human picture rather than just a sob story. sion of which can be found at independent .com/dawes17. Is that why the first song off the new album is a party song? We didn’t really think about that. That What did your parents do? Our dad was a singer song is a good example of what we’re talking and keyboardist and was in bands throughout about because it does show the duality of his whole life. He was in a band called Sweat- that lifestyle and that world, especially in Los hog that opened for Black Sabbath and even- Angeles. You want to go out and be a part of it; tually was the lead singer of Tower of Power you want to be invited. Then you are witness to for a few years. He still sings and plays all the this debauchery in the midst of what was supposed to be a celebration.You have to figure out time, but he’s also a real estate agent now. where the line is and what is ugly and what is The strong storytelling aspect in your music is appealing. I hope that is what’s conveyed in the missing in most popular music these days. Why do song. The singer in the tune is not entirely sure you make music that way? There are some kind where he stands on what he’s experiencing. of songwriters who know how to create an impression by not really being too particular What can people expect on this tour? We’re doing in connecting their intended emotions. They “An Evening With…”, so there is not going write what they need to do for their own trip, to be an opener, and we are going to be able and that turns into something that is power- to play more than we ever have before. As a ful for the listeners. I’ve always struggled with band, we love what we do, and we want to that. I don’t know how to do that. stay onstage longer and longer. We get an For me, it’s always been more so figuring opportunity to play for two, two and a half out how to write a song by making it as simple hours, and we’re really looking forward to and understandable as I can, like Warren what that allows us to do. We’ll be revisiting Zevon and John Prine and guys like that. parts of the catalog that we haven’t played in When I listen to them, there is a real depth a long, long time.

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4•1•1

Dawes performs at the Lobero Theatre (33 E. Canon Perdido St.) on Saturday, January 14, at 8 p.m. See lobero.com.


bob barry

a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ FEATURE

Itzhak Perlman

20th Anniversary - In the Fiddler’s House Featuring Hankus Netsky, Andy Statman and members of Brave Old World, Klezmer Conservatory Band and the Klezmatics Mon, Jan 23 / 7 PM / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $35 $19 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

JAZZ OF LIGHT: With works such as 2013’s Luz and 2010’s Invisible, Luis Muñoz employs themes of light to add brightness to his jazz compositions.

Looking on the Bright Side with

“I

LuIs Muñoz

’m a happy man,” reports Luis Muñoz, But he’s not blocking out the light; with the celebrated Costa Rican–born Santa records such as 2013’s Luz and 2010’s Invisible, Barbara jazz artist and producer, who light — both come and gone — is a recurring continues to win accolades worldwide theme. “I try to find beauty in everything for his optimistic, soothing, and sultry works. around me; there’s a lot of ugliness in the It’s a deep happiness, the kind that comes world already, so I try to be an optimist and from a gratitude for the fabric of life itself. At see it with a perspective of light,” he said. For age 5, the young Muñoz had to undergo heart vocal records, he prefers the colorful and surgery.“It was a blessing in disguise. It makes surreal prose and poetry of authors such you present at all times, to try to get as much as Roberto Bolaño, Horacio Quiroga, and Gabriel García Márquez. out of life as possible,” he said. Certainly, he’s seizing every day, with For one of his newer works, an upcoman output that only seems to grow more ing release titled The Dead Man, Muñoz prolific as the years go by. took inspiration from a short Last year, he won two ACAM story.“With the theme of the (Association of Composers & dead man, it’s about seeing a Musical Authors) awards for bit of the limit in your exishis new album, Voz—includtence in this world of ours, ing Jazz CD of the Year in kind of like,‘I’ve got so much his native country — and his stuff in my soul that I want music was even chosen by to put out; I gotta get on the NPR’s Alt.Latino program as a ball and do it while I’m still by Richie DeMaria around,’” he said. Fittingly, “Music for Healing” selection in a post-Trump world. FeaThe Dead Man is vivacious turing an international roster of musicians, and spontaneous, recorded live over two days including Magos Herrera, Téka Penteriche, and spiked with harsh electric guitar. and Claudia Acuña—renowned jazz singers In fact, rock was Muñoz’s first music. But from Mexico, Brazil, and Chile, respectively then he was introduced to jazz by his brother’s —Voz also features incredibly skilled locals friend, who was traveling in a van full of “litersuch as bassist Randy Tico and pianist George ally hundreds of the greatest jazz records of Friedenthal, plus mixing and engineering the world — Monk, Coltrane, Miles. I wanted from S.B. sound engineers Emmet Sargeant to be part of that idiom — so fresh, so in the moment.” From there, he went on to play and Dominic Camardella. For lyrics, Muñoz turned to two childhood in ensembles and compose pieces for short friends: poets Luis Enrique Mejía Godoy and films, and through steady dedication, one Osvaldo Sauma, the winner of the National day he found himself playing a festival slot at Poetry Award in Costa Rica in 2014, whose the Long Beach Jazz Festival between giants words are sung along with those of Rómulo Chick Corea and Miles Davis. Castro and Jaime Gamboa. “It is wonderful With a sequel to Voz in the works called because with them you have such a deep sense The Infinite Dream, Muñoz continues to feed of history and friendship. I grew up in a place his artistic hunger.“You have to try new things where everybody knew each other, and then as an artist, and you have to write to maintain to see them flourish and to be able to col- your inner peace,” he said. Creating, relaxing, laborate with them—it is a very nice thing.” and finding contentedness — it seems there’s Something of a collaborator-come-lately, much inner peace, indeed. “To me, being Muñoz, like many artists, began his early years accomplished and rich is being joyful, being in incubatory solitude to develop his own at peace with your loved ones. That’s what it’s musical voice, and the studio is very much still all about. In that sense, I am a happy man, and a refuge and a place of shelter for him. I am a successful man, too.” n

Jazz artIst Caps off suCCessfuL Year

“With klezmer, Perlman appears to be perfectly at home… the look of sheer delight that continually illuminates his face underscores the sense of discovery that touches almost every note he plays.” Los Angeles Times

Event Sponsors: Sara Miller McCune Anne & Michael Towbes Education Sponsors: William H. Kearns Foundation Sonquist Family Endowment Presented in collaboration with the Herman P. and Sophia Taubman Foundation Endowed Symposia in Jewish Studies

Back by Popular Demand

Joshua Bell, violin Sam Haywood, piano Tue, Jan 31 / 7 PM / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $35 $19 UCSB students

A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

“[Bell’s] technique is full of body – athletic and passionate – he’s almost dancing with the instrument.” The Washington Post Program Beethoven: Violin Sonata No. 1 in D Major, op. 12, no. 1 Brahms: Scherzo in C Minor, WoO posth. 2 from the F.A.E. Sonata Brahms: Violin Sonata No. 3 in D Minor, op. 108 Kernis: “Air” for Violin and Piano Ysaÿe: Violin Sonata No. 3 in D Minor, op. 27 (“Georges Enescu”) Rachmaninoff: “Vocalise,” no. 14 from op. 34, Fourteen Songs Sarasate: Carmen Concert Fantasy, op. 25

With support from our Community Partner the Orfalea Family Corporate Season Sponsor:

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

JANUARY 5, 2017

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THE BEST FILM OF THE YEAR .

“A SPECIAL KIND OF MAGIC.”

MATTHEW JACOBS ‒ THE HUFFINGTON POST

Kenneth Turan, LOS ANGELES TIMES

SANTA BARBARA RAPE CRISIS CENTER

★★★★”

James Mottram, MARIE CLAIRE

CENTRO CONTRA LA VIOLACION SEXUAL

24-Hour Hotline: (805) 564-3696 www.sbrapecrisiscenter.org

more than rape, not only crisis

EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT NOW PLAYING

SANTA BARBARA Paseo Nuevo Cinemas (877) 789-6684

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 Denotes ‘SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT’ Restrictions Our offices were closed on Monday after New Year’s and thus we could not make the Independent’s production deadlines with revised showtimes for this directory. For features and showtimes you can always visit: www.metrotheatres.com. Now Showing and Coming Soon film tabs are on the home page, as well as a LOCATION tab at the top of the home page for individual theatres.... We apologize any inconvenience. BELOW: FRIDAY 1/6 - THURSDAY 1/12

PASEO NUEVO 8 W. De La Guerra Pl. - S.B.

 20th CENTURY WOMEN (R)  SILENCE (R)

ARLINGTON 1317 State Street

 SING (PG) (2D)  HIDDEN FIGURES (PG)

 ROGUE ONE:

A STAR WARS STORY (PG-13) (2D)

 A MONSTER CALLS (PG-13)

 LA LA LAND (PG-13)

WHY HIM? (R)

JACKIE (R)

CAMINO REAL

CAMINO REAL MARKETPLACE Hollister & Storke - GOLETA

 LA LA LAND (PG-13)  ROGUE ONE: (PG-13) (2D) A STAR WARS STORY

INDEPENDENT Thusday, January 5

FIESTA 5

9 1 6 Sta t e St r e e t - S . B .

 UNDERWORLD: (R) BLOOD WARS (2D) PASSENGERS (PG-13) (2D) MOANA (PG) (2D) FENCES (PG-13)

METRO 4

6 1 8 Sta t e St r e e t - S . B .

MOANA (PG) (2D)

 ROGUE ONE:

FAIRVIEW

2 2 5 N . F a i r v i e w - G o l e ta

 HIDDEN FIGURES (PG)  SING (PG) (2D) WHY HIM? (R)

PLAZA DE ORO 3 7 1 H i t c h c o c k Wa y - S . B .

MANCHESTER BY THE SEA (R) LION (PG-13)

A STAR WARS STORY (PG-13) (2D/3D)

 UNDERWORLD: (R) BLOOD WARS (2D/3D) PASSENGERS (PG-13) (2D) FENCES (PG-13)

RIVIERA

2044 Alameda Padre Serra - S.B.

ELLE

(R)

 Starts Thursday, January 12 

Ben Affleck....  LIVE BY NIGHT (R) Mark Wahlberg....  PATRIOTS DAY (R) Jamie Foxx....  SLEEPLESS (R)

 THE BYE BYE MAN

(PG-13)

www.metrotheatres.com

 THE MET Opera 2017  Saturday, January 7 - 9:55 am

Verdi’s...

NABUCCO

Metro 4 - Santa Barbara

Stadium Seating ‘Live’ - An HD Digital Presentation 56

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a&e | film & TV

Co-presented with The Granada Theatre

STAnd-up CoMedy for grAy WinTer dAyS And nighTS

30th Anniversary Tour

Tig Notaro, Michael Che, and Others Crack Wise About Politics and Personal Experiences on Netflix

W

hen the weather outside is frightful, binge watching comedy specials on Netflix is one sure way to perk up the gray mood. Nothing is better than curling up in bed, wearing your favorite fuzzy socks, and laughing until hot cider comes out of your nose. From the recent presidential election to miscarriages, cancer, and dodging ill-fated flights, these comedians will have you laughing at things you probably shouldn’t and keep you giggling all winter long.

Tig: I stumbled upon this documentary about comedian Tig Notaro, and while not technically a stand-up special, it had me laughing and crying the whole way through. It chronicles the everyday woman’s mid-life crisis: breast cancer, a mother’s untimely death, a breakup, infertility issues, and a Clostridium difficile diagnosis — all of which occurred within one year. Instead of falling victim to her tragedies, Notaro turned her pain into humor at a routine gig at L.A.’s Largo comedy club, which eventually made her a viral sensation. The film follows Notaro’s deeply personal journey in the year following the legendary set and her struggle to deal with her newfound notoriety as the woman who makes jokes about cancer. By complementing reels of old shows with her new material, Notaro offers a humorous and inspiring look into how comedians use wise-cracking to make light of personal strife.

Movie guide

Michael Che Matters: This past year, the entire world saw politics turn personal. For Michael Che, no topic is off the record when it comes to exploring contemporary society’s racial, sexual, and religious views. As a co-anchor on Saturday Night Live’s “Weekend Update,” Che is comfortable speaking honestly about politics, and he plays on his audience’s expectations of what is considered politically correct. For example, the audience reacts with dismay toward his approval of Donald Trump at first, but Che throws them off when he states that the Donald shouldn’t be president but that he is one funny dude. Che questions Jesus’s carpentry

skills (“Why would he be a carpenter if he could perform miracles?”), legitimizes white supremacists’ anger (“You can’t be a racist if you’re insecure”), and satirizes black peoples’ fight for civil rights (“Why is it that if you’re black you have to let things go?”) to provide much-needed comedic relief. Admittedly raunchy, he does sort of resemble Trump: He says things people are too afraid Tig Notaro to say in public.

The Peking Acrobats Sun, Jan 15 / 3 PM / Granada Theatre

$45 / $25 UCSB students (with valid ID) and children (12 & under) A Granada facility will be added to each ticket price

Ali Wong: Baby Cobra: Comedian and TV writer Ali Wong accomplished something not often seen: performing a live stand-up special while seven and a half months pregnant. Don’t worry; it’s not all just jokes about what to expect while you’re expecting. She takes a dark stab at miscarriages, Asians, and her definition of feminism. At the beginning of the set, Wong makes a tongue-in-cheek criticism jab at modern feminism, asking women why they let men in on the joke that they are fully capable of working. She fully commits to her jokes, even twerking and frolicking around on her back on the floor. Her dark sense of humor, deadpan energy, and storytelling will have you glued to the screen until the very — unexpected — end. Kathleen Madigan: Bothering Jesus: With Irish-Catholic roots and a Midwestern upbringing, this funny femme intertwines personal stories and mainstream news headlines to provide her perspective of the world. Madigan’s stand-up gig in Wisconsin begins with her telling the audience about growing up in Ferguson, Missouri, and how she isn’t surprised by the racial divide — in fact, she wonders why it’s taken this long for the news to break. With set-running jokes about missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 that mysteriously disappeared and the politics of noodling (catching catfish with your bare hands), she makes you feel as if you’re in her home, sipping wine in rigorous, arm-raising motions just to fool your Fitbit. Her hearty laugh and tales of growing up with six siblings are genuine, satirical, and all too relatable to those who — Savanna Mesch grew up in rural America.

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Event Sponsor: Kay McMillan With support from our Community Partner the Orfalea Family Family Fun series Sponsor:

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

®

Nabucco N V rdi Ve

SAT A ATTT,, JAN 7, 9:55 AM SUN, JAN 22, 2 PM

Hidden Figures

PREmiERES

20th Century Women (118 mins., R) Annette Bening, Elle Fanning, Greta Gerwig, Lucas Jade Zumann, and Billy Crudup star in this portrait of a boy and the women who influence his upbringing in Santa Barbara in the 1970s. See the feature on page 27 for more. Paseo Nuevo Hidden Figures (127 mins., PG-13) Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, and Janelle Monáe star in the film based on the true story of the women who helped NASA launch its first space mission.

Fairview/Fiesta 5

L'A ''Amour de Loin

A Monster Calls (108 mins., PG-13) Based on the fantasy novel of the same name, this story follows young boy Conor, who struggles to talk about his mother’s terminal cancer when he is visited by a tree monster who warns him he will tell the boy three stories. Then, Conor must tell his own story. Felicity Jones, Sigourney Weaver, and Lewis MacDougall star. Fiesta 5

Kaij iija Saariaho SUN, JAN 8, 2 PM

FR E E PA R K IN G

Silence (161 mins., R) Director Martin Scorsese’s nearly three-hour epic tells the story of two 17th-century Jesuit priests who travel from Portugal to Japan to locate their mentor, facing violence and persecution along the way.

$1 CONCESSIONS

CoNT’d oN p. 59 >>>

The legendary Plácido Domingo as Nabucco

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––NY T Times

HAHN HALL | 1070 Fairway Road Ticket Office open 1 hour prior to screening

TICKETS

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GO TO HALE

F ilm Series I Friday, January 13th at 7:28 PM Bob Dylan: 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration Recorded at Madison Square Garden in 1992, this epic concert features many artists performing classic Dylan songs including members of Booker T. and the MG’s, Kris Kristofferson, Roger McGuinn, Ronnie Wood, Johnny Cash and June Carter, Neil Young, Lou Reed, Eddie Vedder, The Band, and more! Proceeds support live music at the Lobero Theatre.

For current exhibitions, events, membership information or to donate go to: presents

JANUARY

14 DAWES An Evening with

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805.966.5373 Paseo Nuevo | 653 Paseo Nuevo Santa Barbara | CA 93101

JANUARY

17

LUCINDA WILLIAMS

“Her music places itself in a vanishing, idealized Southland where country, soul, blues and gospel all share a common spirit and a vocabulary of twang.” – The New York Times LOBERO THEATRE ENDOWMENT FOR AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC

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a&e | film & TV cont’d from p. 57 two passengers on the starship Avalon, which is on course for a 120-year journey to a new planet to colonize. Things go awry when Aurora Lane (Lawrence) and Jim Preston (Pratt) wake up from their hibernation pods just 30 years into the trip. Camino Real/Metro 4

Presidents and the National Parks From Theodore Roosevelt to Barack Obama

Douglas Brinkley

O Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (134 mins., PG-13)

Jackie Andrew Garfield, Adam Driver, and Liam Neeson star. Paseo Nuevo Underworld: Blood Wars (91 mins., R) Kate Beckinsale reprises her role as vampire Selene in this fifth installment of the film franchise.

Camino Real (2D)/Metro 4 (2D and 3 D)

NOW SHOWiNG Elle (130 mins., R) Isabelle Huppert stars in this mystery/ thriller as a woman who is raped and then sets about tracking down her assailant. Directed by Paul Verhoeven.

Riviera (Fri.-Sun. only)

Ginger Rogers, including a delightfully enchanting tap dancing scene. Through song, dance, humor, romance, and heartache, the lovers inspire each other to work for their dreams. Yet the film also reminds the audience that fantasy can be just that — things we desire but may never have. (SM)

Camino Real/Paseo Nuevo

Lion (118 mins., PG-13) Dev Patel (Slumdog Millionaire, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel) stars as a man who was adopted from Calcutta when he was a boy by an Australian couple and searches to find his birth family.

Plaza de Oro

O Manchester by the Sea (137 mins., R)

This poignant film captures raw human emotion in the wake of tragedy. Not only do Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams shine, but breakout actor Lucas Hedges perfectly portrays how difficult is it to deal with the death of a parent during adolescence. Anyone who has experienced the loss of a family member can find solace in the film’s themes of grief, forgiveness, and learning to let go. (SM) Plaza de Oro

In terms of the Star Wars timeline, Rogue One falls between the space opera’s disappointing prequels and its game-changing originals — so after the Empire really hits its dark-side stride but before the Alliance blows the Death Star to bits. In terms of appeal, the spinoff, directed by Gareth Edwards, hits right in the middle, too. Interstellar dogfights sizzle above deliciously immersive worlds where sassy androids best storm troopers who still can’t shoot worth a damn. Fun homages abound without being overplayed. But Rogue One tries too hard to cement a new cast of gritty yet lovable rebel warriors, throwing out action and one-liners when a couple more moments of meaningful dialogue would have hit much harder. Still, it’s a ride worth taking. (TH)

Arlington/Camino Real/Metro 4

Sing (108 mins., PG) Koala bear Buster Moon (Matthew McConaughey) owns a theater that has fallen upon financial difficulties thanks to a series of flops he’s produced. In an attempt to raise funds to save the theater, Moon holds a singing competition, which brings unlikely hopefuls to audition. Reese Witherspoon, Scarlett Johansson, Seth MacFarlane, Taron Egerton, and Jennifer Hudson are just a few of the stars who lend their voices to this animated film. Fairview/Fiesta 5

Thu, Jan 26 / 7:30 PM UCSB Campbell Hall $20 / FREE for all students (with valid ID)

Described by CNN as “a man who knows more about the presidency than just about any human being alive,” Brinkley will discuss how U.S. presidents have led the crusade to establish National Parks and National Wildlife Refuges. Books will be available for purchase and signing

Supported in part by:

Presented in collaboration with Channel Islands National Park and the UCSB Natural Reserve System

National Parks series sponsored by: Lillian Lovelace, Sara Miller McCune With support from our Community Partner the Orfalea Family

Media Sponsors:

Fences Fences (138 mins., PG-13) Academy Award winner Denzel Washington directs and stars in this film adaptation of August Wilson’s play about a father struggling with his life and trying to raise his family amid strained race relations of the 1950s. Viola Davis also stars. Camino Real/Metro 4 Jackie (100 mins., R) Natalie Portman is getting Oscar buzz for her turn in this biopic about Jacqueline Kennedy and how she copes after the shocking assassination of president John F. Kennedy. It also stars Peter Sarsgaard, Billy Crudup, John Hurt, and Greta Gerwig. Paseo Nuevo

O La La Land

Moana (113 mins., PG) Disney’s latest animated feature tells the story of a young girl named Moana, daughter of a chieftain, who sets sail to find the demigod Maui (Dwayne Johnson) to help her unite her people. During their adventure, she meets a giant crab, a lava witch, and various other characters. Camino Real/Fiesta 5 Passengers (116 mins., PG-13) Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt star in this sci-fi romantic thriller about

Why Him? (111 mins., R) James Franco and Bryan Cranston go head-to-head in this comedy about a father (Cranston) who wildly disapproves of his daughter’s new, socially incompetent billionaire boyfriend, Laird (Franco). Megan Mullally and Zoey Deutch costar. Fairview/Fiesta 5

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It’s been a long time since I’ve seen a film that had me sitting upright the whole time, amazed at the magic that Hollywood creates, but La La Land did just that. Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling play young artists trying to make it in the entertainment industry; their chemistry is akin to Fred Astaire and

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

Why Him?

(805) 963-4747 Passengers

The above films are playing in Santa Barbara FRIDAY, January 6, through THURSDAY, January 12. Descriptions followed by initials — TH (Tyler Hayden) and SM (Savanna Mesch) — have been taken from our critics’ reviews, which can be read in full at independent.com. The symbol O indicates the film is recommended.

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JAN. 17-18 • 805.899.2222 • BroadwaySantaBarbara.com Tickets available online and at The Granada Theatre Box Office. Groups 10+: 866.314.7687

Be sure to follow The Santa Barbara Independent @sbindependent for a chance to win on a pair of tickets to the show. Broadway in Santa Barbara

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RC17 Rincon Brewery Kick off Party! Wed Jan 11, 2017 5-8pm Rincon Brewery

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Enjoy tasty food and drinks while listening to live music by some of your favorite local pros with an acoustic performance by Tim Curran, and a jam by Conner Coffin, Adam Lambert and friends. Autograph signings, raffle, and plenty of fun for the whole family.

r e t a i l e r s

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a&e | Rob bRezsny’s fRee will astRology week of januaRy 5 ARIES

CANCER

(Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Light, electricity, and magnetism are different expressions of a single phenomenon. Scottish scientist and mathematician James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879) was the first to formulate a theory to explain that startling fact. One of the cornerstones of his work was a set of 20 equations with 20 unknowns. But a younger scientist named Oliver Heaviside decided this was much too complicated. He recast Maxwell’s cumbersome theory in the form of four equations with four unknowns. That became the new standard. In 2017, I believe you Aries will have a knack akin to Heaviside’s. You’ll see the concise essentials obscured by needless complexity. You’ll extract the shining truths trapped inside messy confusions.

(June 21-July 22): The creature known as the shorteared elephant shrew is typically four inches long and weighs a little more than one ounce. And yet it’s more genetically similar to elephants than to true shrews. In its home habitat of southern Africa, it’s known as the sengi. I propose we regard it as one of your spirit animals in 2017. Its playful place in your life will symbolize the fact that you, too, will have secret connections to big, strong influences; you, too, will have natural links with powerhouses that outwardly don’t resemble you.

TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): “The thornbush is the old obstacle in the road,” wrote Franz Kafka. “It must catch fire if you want to go further.” Let’s analyze this thought, Taurus. If it’s to be of maximum use for you in 2017, we will have to develop it further. So here are my questions. Did Kafka mean that you’re supposed to wait around passively, hoping the thornbush will somehow catch fire, either through a lucky lightning strike or an act of random vandalism? Or should you, instead, take matters into your own hands — douse the thornbush with gasoline and throw a match into it? Here’s another pertinent query: Is the thornbush really so broad and hardy that it blocks the whole road? If not, maybe you could just go around it.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The fictional character Scott Pilgrim is the hero of Bryan Lee O’Malley’s series of graphic novels. He becomes infatuated with a “ninja delivery girl” named Ramona Flowers, but there’s a complication. Before he can win her heart, he must defeat all seven of her evil ex-lovers. I’m sure your romantic history has compelled you to deal with equally challenging dilemmas, Gemini. But I suspect you’ll get a reprieve from that kind of dark melodrama in 2017. The coming months should be a bright and expansive chapter in your Book of Love.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “When I look back, I see my former selves, numerous as the trees,” writes Leo poet Chase Twichell. I’m sure that’s an experience you’ve had yourself. Do you find it comforting? Does it feel like being surrounded by old friends who cushion you with nurturing familiarity? Or is it oppressive and claustrophobic? Does it muffle your spontaneity and keep you tethered to the past? I think these are important questions for you to meditate on in 2017. It’s time to be very conscious and creative about shaping your relationships with all the people you used to be.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “‘Life experience’ does not amount to very much and could be learned from novels alone … without any help from life.” So said Nobel Prize–winning author Elias Canetti, who was born in Bulgaria, had British citizenship, and wrote in German. Although his idea contradicts conventional wisdom, I am presenting it for your consideration in 2017. You’re ready for a massive upgrade in your understanding about the nature of reality — and firsthand “life experience” alone won’t be enough to ensure that.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I am rooting for you to be flagrantly unique in 2017. I vehemently want you to be uninhibited about expressing your deepest, rawest, hottest inclinations. In this spirit, I offer the follow-

ing four rallying cries: (1) “Don’t be addicted to looking cool, baby!” —My friend Luther. (2) Creative power arises when you conquer your tendency to stay detached. —Paraphrased from poet Marianne Moore. (3) If you want to be original, have the courage to be an amateur. —Paraphrased from poet Wallace Stevens. (4) “In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities; in the expert’s mind there are few.” —Zen teacher Shunryu Suzuki.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “There is a desperation for unknown things,” wrote poet Charles Wright,“a thirst for endlessness that snakes through our bones.” Every one of us has that desperation and thirst from time to time, but no one feels the pull toward perplexing enchantments and eternal riddles more often and more intensely than you Scorpios. And according to my astrological meditations on your life in 2017, you will experience this pull even more often and with greater intensity than ever before. Is that a problem? I don’t see why it should be. In fact, it could make you sexier and smarter than ever — especially if you regard it as a golden opportunity to become sexier and smarter than ever.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I hope you will seek out a wide range of intoxicating experiences in 2017. The omens predict it. Fate sanctifies it. I hope you will gracefully barrel your way through the daily whirl with a constant expectation of sly epiphanies, amusing ecstasies, and practical miracles. There has rarely been a time in your life when you’ve had so much potential to heal old wounds through immersions in uncanny bliss. But please note: The best of these highs will NOT be induced by drugs or alcohol, but rather by natural means like sex, art, dancing, meditation, dreamwork, singing, yoga, lucid perceptions, and vivid conversations.

“I feel imbued with a mysterious positive energy,” he wrote,“as if thousands of supplicants are worshipping golden statues of me somewhere.” Given the astrological omens, I think it’s quite possible you will have similar feelings on regular occasions in 2017. I’m not necessarily saying there will literally be golden statues of you in town squares and religious shrines, nor am I guaranteeing that thousands of supplicants will telepathically bathe you in adoration. But who cares how you’re imbued with mysterious positive energy as long as you are?

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): When it’s summer in the Northern Hemisphere, the birds known as arctic terns hang out in Greenland and Iceland. Before the chill sets in, they embark on an epic migration to Antarctica, arriving in time for another summer. But when the weather begins to turn too cold there, they head to the far north again. This is their yearly routine. In the course of a lifetime, a single bird may travel as far as 1.25 million miles — the equivalent of three roundtrips to the moon. I propose that you make this creature your spirit animal in 2017, Aquarius. May the arctic tern inspire you to journey as far as necessary to fulfill your personal equivalent of a quest for endless summer.

PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): In June 1962, three prisoners sneaked out of the Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, located on an island in San Francisco Bay. Did they succeed in escaping? Did they swim to safety through the frigid water and start new lives abroad? No one knows. Law enforcement officials never found them. Even today, though, the U.S. Marshals Service keeps the case open, and still investigates new evidence when it comes in. Are there comparable enigmas in your own life, Pisces? Events in your past that raised questions you’ve never been able to solve? In 2017, I bet you will finally get to the bottom of them.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I thought of you when I read a tweet by a person who calls himself Vexing Voidsquid.

Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s EXPANDED WEEKLY AUDIO HOROSCOPES and DAILY TEXT MESSAGE HOROSCOPES. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700.

Homework: Send me a list of your top five New Year’s resolutions. Go to RealAstrology.com and click on “Email Rob.”

Inspiring Gifted Learners

OPEN HOUSE Saturday, January 21st 10am – noon

Join us at 10am for a presentation on The Knox School’s curriculum and educational approach followed by visits to the classrooms. Children welcome!

1525 Santa Barbara Street • 805.222.0107 www.KnoxSchoolSB.org independent.com

JANUARY 5, 2017

THE INDEPENDENT

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emploYment

EXCELLENCE, INTEGRITY, COMPASSION …Our core values Having a positive impact on others, and feeling fulfillment in return, is a cornerstone of the Cottage Health culture. As a communitybased, not-for-profit provider of leading-edge healthcare for the Greater Santa Barbara region, Cottage emphasizes the difference each team member can make. It’s a difference you’ll want to experience throughout your entire career. Join us in one of the openings below.

Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital

Non-Clinical

Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital

Nursing

• Environmental Services Rep

• Cook – Temp

• Clinical Nurse Specialist – NICU • Clinical Nurse Specialist –

• Environmental Services Supervisor • EPIC Analyst (Rev Cycle, Optime,

• RN – Emergency • RN – ICU – Nights/Days

Cottage Business Services

Beaker, CPOE)

Oncology • Director – Pediatric Outpatient Clinics

• EPIC Instructional Designer

• Director – Contracting

• EPIC Systems Support

• Director – Patient Business Services

Specialist/Trainer

• Emergency • Hematology/Oncology • Infection Control Practitioner

• Manager – Accounting

• Information Security Analyst

• Manager – HIM

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• Manager – Patient Access

• Lead Cook

• Lactation Educator

• Manager – IT Service Delivery

• Manager – Cardiology

• Research Coordinator – Non RN

• Med/Surg – Float Pool

• Research Business Analyst

• NICU

• Research Financial Analyst

• Nurse Educator – Diabetes

• UC – Mother/Infant

• Orthopedics

• Pediatric Research Coordinator

• Occupational Therapist – Per Diem

• Pulmonary Renal

• Physical Therapist – Full-time

• Surgery

• Special Procedures Technologist – Cath Lab • Speech Language Pathologist –

• Telemetry

Per Diem

Clinical

Pacific Diagnostic Laboratories Part-time/Full-time – Inpatient/Outpatient

• Case Manager – C.O.P.E.

• Peds

• Surgical Trauma

• Neuropsychologist – Part-Time/Exempt

• Certified Phlebotomy Technician –

Allied Health

• Pediatric Outpatient

Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital

• Clinical Lab Scientist – Days/Nights • Histotechnician • Lab Manager – Blood Bank (CLS) • Lab Manager – Pathology • Transfusion Safety Coordinator

The University of California Santa Barbara, College of Creative Studies (CCS), seeks a temporary part‑time lecturer at 33% time to teach during the spring quarter of 2017 with the possibility of reappointment depending upon performance and programmatic needs. This is a non‑tenure track, non‑ladder position. Further information about the CCS Music Composition program can be found at www.ccs.ucsb. edu. Required Qualifications: The successful candidate will possess at least a Masters degree in music, theater, dramatic arts, or equivalent. Desired Qualifications: Candidates should have the equivalent of at least one year teaching and/or directing in a university environment. Candidates should also possess some experience in directing for television, and a willingness to teach in a cross‑disciplinary fashion, a pool of students in the CCS Music Composition major. Demonstrated dance or movement‑oriented experience a definite plus. Preliminary interviews of top qualified candidates will be conducted by phone or by Skype. The University is especially interested in candidates who can contribute to the diversity and excellence of the academic and community through research, teaching and service as appropriate to the position. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. Candidates who wish to be considered must submit a letter of application, curriculum vitae, a statement of teaching, and the names and contact information of 2‑4 references to: https://recruit.ap.ucsb. edu/apply/JPF00925. Applications will be accepted through January 12, 2017.

PROFeSSIONaL

• Support Counselor – SLO Clinic

• LVN – EDHU • Manager – Cottage Residential

Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital

• RENTAL & RELOCATION ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE FOR SELECT FULL-TIME

• Patient Care Technician – Neuro • Patient Care Technician – PRID

• Cardiac Rehab Nurse

• Surgical Technician

• Rad Technologist – Per Diem

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. Candidates may also submit a resume to: Cottage Health, Human Resources, P.O. Box 689, Pueblo at Bath Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93102-0689

Excellence, Integrity, Compassion

Please reference “SBI” when applying. EOE

www.cottagehealth.org

THE InDEPEnDEnT

Temporary Part Time Lecturer in Music Composition

• Please apply to: www.pdllabs.com

• CT Technologist

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January 5, 2017

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ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR, RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT FOR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

OFFICE OF RESEARCH The Research Development division in the Office of Research at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) seeks an Academic Coordinator to serve as Associate Director of Research Development for Science and Engineering. The Associate Director advises faculty and researchers in science and engineering on funding opportunities and strategic planning for extramural

research proposals. The main focus of efforts are 1) single investigator proposals from early career faculty, 2) major large scale, multidisciplinary and/or multi‑investigator research projects, and 3) training, institutional program development, and outreach proposals focused in engineering and the sciences. The Associate Director serves as a strategic funding advisor and proposal reviewer for early career faculty in science and engineering in developing competitive proposals to grow their research programs. The Associate Director works with faculty to facilitate the preparation of successful major grant applications, including the coordination of large multi‑investigator, multi‑disciplinary research proposals. This position develops workshops to support proposal development, and understands how campus priorities and information needs fit into the larger national education, research, and funding contexts in order to provide advice to faculty and researchers. This is a full‑time Academic Coordinator 2 position, with the initial appointment for one year, subject to renewal based on performance. The annual salary range is $84,044 ‑ $111,536, depending on qualifications and experience. Minimum Requirements: Graduate degree in science or engineering, or equivalent combination of education and experience. Desired Qualifications: Ph.D. in science or engineering and experience with proposal writing. For primary consideration, applications should be received by January 16, 2017. This position has an anticipated start date of March 1, 2017. To apply, please submit your application to UC Recruit: https://recruit.ap.ucsb.edu/ apply/JPF00888. The Department is especially interested in candidates who can contribute to the diversity and excellence of the university community through research, teaching and service. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.

CONTRACTS & GRANTS ANALYST

GEVIRTZ GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Responsible for managing contract and grant proposal submission and administration. Prepares detailed budgets and all necessary University and agency forms. Works closely with Principal Investigators to ensure submission deadlines are met. Shares responsibility for the financial administration of research funds, including ensuring that all expenses charged to extramural funds are appropriate and allowable according to all agency and campus policies, and that adequate funds are available; analyzing expenditures and spending patterns; advising faculty, staff, and students of campus policies for employment, purchasing, and travel; disseminating financial reports, etc. Maintains knowledge of contract and grant policies of the University and funding agencies. Demonstrates flexibility in learning, interpreting, adapting and implementing new policies and procedures. Maintains

effective communication and individual working relationships. Reqs: Excellent organizational skills with ability to maintain a high level of accuracy. Ability to work under pressure of strict deadlines while using independent judgment. Demonstrated professionalism. Ability to work independently and as part of a team. Excellent communication skills. Proficiency in Microsoft Excel. Note: Fingerprint background check required. $22.29‑$24.50/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration, apply by 1/11/17, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20160630

SaLeS/maRKeTINg SALES REPRESENTATIVE California Trade Association located in Sacramento is seeking someone with strong knowledge for Advertising, print, digital and social media solutions, great with detail, an amazing attitude, and a passion for selling content and integrated partnerships. 3‑5 years experience a plus. We offer a competitive base salary, commission and bonus plan, along with great benefit package. Email Resume and Salary History to jobs@cnpa.com. EOE (Cal‑SCAN)

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Tide Guide Day

High

Low

High

Sunrise 7:05 Sunset 5:08

Low

High

Thu 5

3:14 am/ 4.6

9:32 am/ 2.1

2:49 pm/ 3.5

9:04 pm/ 1.0

Fri 6

4:05 am/ 5.0

10:57 am/ 1.4

4:32 am/ 3.3

10:03 pm/ 1.4

Sat 7

4:54 am/ 5.5

12:03 pm/ 0.6

6:02 pm/ 3.4

11:03 pm/ 1.6

Sun 1

5:43 am/ 5.9

2:58 pm/ -0.1

7:12 pm/ 3.6

Mon 2

12:00 am/ 1.7

6:30 am/ 6.4

1:47 pm/ -0.8

8:10 pm/ 3.8 9:00 pm/ 4.0

Tue 3

12:54 am/ 1.8

7:17 am/ 6.7

2:32 pm/ -1.2

Wed 4

1:45 am/ 1.8

8:03 am/ 6.8

3:17 pm/ -1.5

9:46 pm/ 4.2

Thu 5

2:35 am/ 1.8

8:48 am/ 6.8

4:00 pm/ -1.4

10:31 pm/ 4.3

5 H

12

19

27 D

crosswordpuzzle

s tt Jone By Ma

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The Santa Barbara County Superior Court is seeking applications:

Family Custody Mediator Two positions available-one in Santa Barbara; one in Santa Maria. The Court seeks a professional with education, training and/or background in Marriage and Family Therapy, Social Work, Counseling or a related field to mediate custody & visitation disputes between clients of the Court, & to prepare custody & visitation agreements for submission to the Court in legal disputes. The positions available are full-time, regular status (benefitted). Bilingual ability in English and Spanish is required. $60,021.73 - $73,275.90 annually - plus an annual unit cash allowance of $6,149.26 Deadline to apply is January 13, 2017 For the full recruitment posting and to apply go to: http://www.sbcourts.org/gi/HR/ HR@sbcourts.org 805.882.4739

across

57 The one squinting at the clues right now 58 Candy packaged in pairs 1 Ebsen costar on “The Beverly 60 Barbecue menu item, or Hillbillies” what’s going on with the 5 Amts. in recipes theme answers 9 “America’s Got Talent” judge 63 Almond ___ (candy in a Heidi canister) 13 “Devil Inside” rock band 64 Gets the pot started 14 Long-eared hoppers 65 Commedia dell’___ 16 Nostalgic soft drink brand 66 Woolly mamas 17 Open some champagne 67 Ceases to be 19 Clumsy lummoxes 68 Pigsty 20 “Ambient 4: On Land” musician Brian 21 Tombstone lawman 1 Two-legged beast 22 “SportsCenter” source 2 False name 24 Bad beginning? 3 “60 Minutes” piece, often 25 Freebie with many takeout 4 U will come after these orders 5 A mission to remember? 29 Islamic pilgrimage site 6 Lowest spinal bones 31 “Allergic to Water” singer 7 Credit, slangily DiFranco 8 Delivery from a rev. 32 By way of 33 Fabric named for a Mideast 9 Book publisher Alfred A. ___ 10 Bend forward capital 11 “Weird Al” Yankovic movie 36 Religious branch of 1989 37 Where ships dock in the Big 12 Understanding start? Apple 15 Ball of yarn, e.g. 41 Some Louvre hangings 18 Jazz devotee 42 World’s largest cosmetics 23 “MythBusters” subj. company 26 Selfish sort 43 Condition for TV’s Monk 27 Morty’s mate in animated 44 Body scanner grp. adventures 46 Lake Titicaca setting 28 “2 Broke Girls” actress 49 One whose work involves Dennings moving letters around 30 Some writeable discs 53 It may be reached while 34 Company with a duck mascot binge-watching 35 ___-Cat (cold-weather 55 “Frasier” actress Gilpin vehicle) 56 “Nasty” Nastase of tennis

Down

independent.com

36 Auctioneer’s call 37 One-trillionth, in metric names 38 Brand with “The Man Your Man Could Smell Like” ads 39 Most spent 40 Tugged hard 41 “Alley-___!” 44 Driveway stuff 45 ___ cog (blunder) 47 Donkey with a pinned-on tail 48 Bull pen sounds 50 It’s represented by a red, white, and blue flag 51 Rhythmic melodies 52 Oprah’s “Epic Rap Battles of History” foe 54 Hazzard County heroes 58 “American Idiot” drummer Cool 59 “I’m speechless!” 61 College, Down Under 62 Grier of “Jackie Brown” ©2016 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-2262800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800655-6548. Reference puzzle #0804

Last week’s soLution:

January 5, 2017 THE InDEPEnDEnT

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FITNeSS

for rent

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maRKet place

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME S TAT E M E N T The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Presidio Fencing Club at 372 Valdez Ave Goleta, CA 93117; Timothy Robinson (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 6, 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: 2016‑0003317. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: AMPIGE INVESTMENTS at 1450 Camino Manadero, Santa Barbara, CA 93111; AMPIGE INVESTMENTS LLC at 1450 Camino Manadero, Santa Barbara, CA 93111. This business is conducted by an Limited Liability Company Signed: Stephen Wilson. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 09, 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: 2016‑0003356. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017

aNNOUNCemeNTS THOUGHTFUL SOULS‑ Thank you all for loving gifts of food and $! Dawn (homeless) EDDIE AND Joelle I was the best man at your wedding at the beach. Joelle you used to to sell flowers at the road leading into Isla Vista. Eddie, I used to keep your LPs Call me Michael at 318‑228‑5993 please

hOme FURNIShINgS HOME BREAK‑INS take less than 60 SECONDS. Don’t wait! Protect your family, your home, your assets NOW for as little as 70¢ a day! Call 855‑404‑7601(Cal‑SCAN) HOME BREAK‑INS take less than 60 SECONDS. Don’t wait! Protect your family, your home, your assets NOW for as little as 70¢ a day! Call 855‑404‑7601(Cal‑SCAN)

LOST & FOUND LOST CAT Small grey cat lost at Pilgrim Terrace, Mission and Modoc. Last scene Dec 13 Please call 858‑336‑3620

Meet Milo

Meet Wendy

Milo is about 2 years old bichon/ Wendy is a sweetheart! She’s poodle mix. He’s a shy guy, but quiet, housebroken, and looking loves attention and to play. for someone to love her forever!

Cold Noses Warm Hearts (805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117

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

Meet Daisy

Daisy is a sweet girl who’s owner just died unexpectedly. She is a happy little girl who is looking for someone to love her!

Meet Oliver

Oliver is a young guy that would be great for an active family! He has long legs and loves to play!

Cold Noses Warm Hearts (805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117

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

Coastal Hideaways (805) 969-1995 Luxury Vacation Rentals Serving the Santa Barbara community for 20 years

Melissa M. Pierson, Owner

vacations@coastalhideaways.com www.coastalhideaways .com 1211 coast Village R d., suite 4 montecito January 5, 2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: READYWORK SOLUTIONS at 800 South Broadway Ste 209, Santa Maria, CA 93454; John Bassi at 800 South Broadway Ste 209, Santa Maria, CA 93454. This business is conducted by an Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 27, 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: 2016‑0003490. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CATALYST CUISINE at 336 E Victoria St Unit A, Santa Barbara, CA 93101; GOGO CLEANSE, LLC at 336 E Victoria St unit A, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Irina Skoeries. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2016‑0003474. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: YOUR CAKE BAKER at 2018 Cliff Drive, Santa Barbara, CA 93109; MAEVA, LLC at 315 Meigs Road, Suite A154, Santa Barbara, CA 93109. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2016‑0003427. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SKUM BAGZ at 5481 El Carro Ln, Carpinteria, CA 93013; Ivan Sanchez Millhollin at 1905 De la Vina St. #7, Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Kyle Sanchez Millhollin 5481 El Carro Ln Carpinteria, CA 93013. This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 13, 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 Tania Paredes‑Sadler. FBN Number: 2016‑0003394. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: The Grease Monkey at 145 Walnut Ln Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Tami Hill (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 09, 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 Cristine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0003363. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: BEYOND TOLERANCE at 227 Constance Ln, Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Adele Rosen at 227 Constance Ln, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. This business is conducted by an Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2016‑0003425. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: ANYTECHCA at 3905 State Street #7, Suite 191, Santa Barbara, CA 93117; Shain Cox at 7226 Tuolume Drive, Goleta CA 93117. This business is conducted by an Individual Signed: Shain Cox This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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: 2016‑0003337. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: OMNIXRAY, LLC at 421 Pine Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117; OMNIXRAY, LLC at 421 Pine Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Timothy W. James. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 19, 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2016‑0003438. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017.

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Legals (continued) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Brunner Leasing, Dean Brunner Rentals at 6778 Pasado Rd Goleta, CA 93117; Dean R Brunner (same address) Penny S Brunner (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 09, 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: 2016‑0003364. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Arnett Gunson Facial Reconstruction, The Center For Corrective Jaw Surgery at 9 E Pedregosa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Michael J Gunson DDS MD Professional Medical Corporation 260 Cinderella Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93111 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 09, 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: 2016‑0003357. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Designs By Laura Ashley at 355 Oak View Ln Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Laura Ashley Mimms (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: L. Ashley Mimms This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 6, 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: 2016‑0003325. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: J & J Photobooth at 7190 Davenport Rd #205 Goleta, CA 93117; Janet Briseno (same address) Javier Castro Jr (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: Janet Briseno This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Nov 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 Melissa Mercer . FBN Number: 2016‑0003263. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: San Roque Florist at 3623 State Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Mario David Amador Diaz 6688 Picasso Rd Apt G Goleta, CA 93117; Ana Theresa De Munoz Diaz (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: Mario Diaz This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Jessica Sheaff . FBN Number: 2016‑0003346. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Sun Potion, Sun Potion Transformational Foods at 430 East Gutierrez Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Sun Potion, LLC 27 West Anapamu #408 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Scott Linde This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016‑0003289. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Auto Spa, SBAS Santa Barbara at 26 South Milpas Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Blancy W Adams (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Nov 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 Tania Paredes‑Sadler. FBN Number: 2016‑0003163. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: MCLUB at 1010 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Montecito Bank & Trust (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Maria E. McCall‑Agent This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Tania Paredes‑Sadler. FBN Number: 2016‑0003348. Published: Dec 15, 22, 29 2016. Jan 5 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Grab Eat Fit at 231 S. Magnolia Ave Goleta, CA 93117; Sania Revault Diaz 106 Sumida Garden Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93111 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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: 2016‑0003287. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Give Wings To Your Dreams, Golden Wings Press, Inspired Life Design at 880 Clark Road Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Lauren E Sullivan (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Lauren E. Sullivan This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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: 2016‑0003418. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Olivia Loewy, PHD And Associates at 5134 Cathedral Oaks Road Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Olivia Rochelle Loewy (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Leo Cortez This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2016‑0003399. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: A R Catering at 6034 Hollister Ave Goleta, CA 93117; Alejandro Reyes 311 Beech Ct Buellton, CA 93427 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016‑0003305. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Carpetech at 327 West Cota Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Leo A Coretz (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Leo Cortez This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016‑0003429. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Breakthroughs International at 329 Salida De Sol Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Educational Kinesiology Foundation (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Kari Coady This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016‑0003419. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Gaviota Wildlife Films at 1121 North Milpas St Apt B Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Gaviota Wildlife Films LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016‑0003416. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: All Terrain Solar Electric at 1121 North Milpas St Apt B Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Shaw Leonard (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016‑0003415. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Pro Driver Staffing, Trucker Hotspot at 304 Sherwood Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Kayla J. Horwat (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 09, 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 Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016‑0003367. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Down Under Painting at 2012A Castillo St Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Todd Cummings (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 12, 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 Cristine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0003372. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Compassionate Coaching at 6647 El Colegio Rd #B225 Goleta, CA 93117; John David Mudie (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Connie Fran. FBN Number: 2016‑0003318. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

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e m a i l s a l e s @ i n d e p e n d e n t. c o m

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: 805 Iron at 225 E Carrillo Suite 200 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Travis Twining 475 Santa Rosa Ln Santa Barbara, CA 93108 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Cesar Her nandez‑Agent This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 13, 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 Cristine Potter. FBN Number: 2016‑0003384. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dash Medical at 235 W. Pueblo Street 2nd Floor Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Palliative Care Consultants of Santa Barbara, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 20, 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: 2016‑0003451. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Michael Bordofsky MD And Trautwein Medical Corporation Joint Venture at 515 E. Micheltornea Street Suite C Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Michael Bordofsky 416 Foxen Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Trautwein Medical Corporation 1805 E Cabrillo Blvd #C Santa Barbara, CA 93108 This business is conducted by a Joint Venture Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 20, 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: 2016‑0003450. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Archer‑Gimbal Publishing, Greg Jacobson International at 6 Harbor Way #200 Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Gregory Lawrence Jacobson 130 Santa Rosa Place Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 13, 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 Connie Fran. FBN Number: 2016‑0003381. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Meal Prep at 1269 Camino Meleno Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Adriana Garcia (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 19, 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: 2016‑0003448. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Asociacion Nacional DE Locutores DE Mexico AC EN CA at 3755 San Remo Dr. Apt 161 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Alma Patricia Blando Rangel (same address) Sergio Naveda Pedraza (same address) This business is conducted by a Unincorporated Association Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 09, 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: 2016‑0003362. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Conversation Cafe at 821 State St. Unit B Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Bridging Borders International 66 Ocean View #14 Santa Barbara, CA 93103 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Nov 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 Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2016‑0003261. Published: Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Gift & Apparel at 933 State St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Tiamo, LLC 217A Stearns Wharf Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 20, 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: 2016‑0003453. Published: Dec 29 2016. Jan 5, 12, 19 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Cejae Photography at 611 Miramonte Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Cierra Benavidez (samea address) This business is conducted by an Individual Signed: Cierra Benavidez This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016‑0003089. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Goleta Realty, Santa Barbara Realty at 7103 Monique Ct. Goleta, 93117; William Michael Gadsby (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2016‑0003461. Published: Dec 29 2016. Jan 5, 12, 19 2017.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: The Free Methodist Church-USA at 214 El Monte Drive Santa Barbara, CA 93109; The Free Methodist Church of North America 770 N. High School Road Indianapolis, IN 46214 This business is conducted by an Corporation Signed: Larry Roberts This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 20, 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2016-0003458. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Creative Promotions, Creative Promotions Unlimited, The Map at 1072 Camino Del Retiro Santa Barbara, CA 93110; David Adam Zeff (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: David Zeff This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 20, 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: 2016‑0003460. Published: Dec 29 2016. Jan 5, 12, 19 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Hireth Makery at 3739 Foothill Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Alexis Saghie (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Nov 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 Tania Paredes‑Sadler. FBN Number: 2016‑0003262. Published: Dec 29 2016. Jan 5, 12, 19 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Carpets Unlimited Colortile at 1217 S. Blosser Rd. #A Santa Maria, CA 93458; Carpets Unlimited of Santa Maria, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Greg Frainer This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 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 Mary Soto. FBN Number: 2016‑0003345. Published: Dec 29 2016. Jan 5, 12, 19 2017. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Veronica Springs Church at 949 Veronica Springs Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93105; First Baptist Church of Santa Barbara (samea address) This business is conducted by an Corporation Signed: Hans Kistre. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Dec 09, 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: 2016‑0003360. Published: Jan 5, 12, 19, 26 2017

Name Change IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF JAMES MICHAEL MOSKOW and LINDA FRANCINE MOSKOW CHAN TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 16CV05619 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: A petition has been filed by the above named Petitioner(s) in Santa Barbara Superior court proposing a change of name(s) FROM and TO the following name(s): FROM: JAMES MICHAEL MOSKOW TO: JAMES MICHAELS FROM: LINDA FRANCINE MOSKOW TO: LINDA FRANCINE MICHAELS 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 Feb 22, 2017 9:30 am, Dept 1, Courthouse, SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT HOUSE 1100 Anacapa St. Santa Barbara, CA 93121‑1107 Anacapa Division 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 Dec 13, 2016 . by Judge James E. Herman of the Superior Court. Published. Dec 22, 29 2016. Jan 5, 12 2017.

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