View
724
Download
0
Category
Preview:
Citation preview
Coming & GoingPastor Jim Stretchberry christens Deacon T Buckley with a splash of frankincense
and myrrh, p. 32
Our TownMichael Bolton’s Ojai Golf Tourney
features Clint Eastwood, John O’Hurley, and a bevy of stars, p. 36
On EntertainmentGlen Campbell faces onset of
Alzheimer’s with courage… and a little Country Music at the Lobero, p. 41
The Voice of the Village S SINCE 1995 S
The best things in life are
FREE6 – 13 October 2011Vol 17 Issue 40
– Matt Middlebrook, Caruso Affiliated (full story on page 6)
COMMUNITY CALENDAR, P. 11 • CALENDAR OF EVENTS, P. 40 • GUIDE TO MONTECITO EATERIES, P. 42
Two hundred diners, including Tab Hunter and
friends, mourn the last day of Piatti; class-action big-
wig Robert Lieff settles into Montecito life, p. 6
Mineards’ Miscellany
VILLAGE BEAT
93108 OPEN HOUSE DIRECTORY P.45
San Ysidro Pathway May Really Become Safe Route To School After All (and $8.7-million Firehouse #3 Plans Move Forward), page 12
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL2 • The Voice of the Village •
Peter Martins, Artistic Director
Featuring principal dancers Joaquin De Luz, Gonzalo Garcia, Sébastien Marcovici, Sara Mearns, Tiler Peck, Jenifer Ringer, Abi Stafford, Jonathan Stafford, Janie Taylor, Daniel Ulbricht and Wendy Whelan
Two Nights, Two Breathtaking Programs!
“The foremost creative ballet troupe
in the world.” The New York Times
Community Dance Class with New York City Ballet MOVES
Mon, Oct 17 / 5:30 PM / Gustafson Dance, 2285 Las Positas Rd, SB
Co-presented with Santa Barbara Dance Alliance,Reservations: (805) 966-6950
“The choreography immediately seizes on the
music’s pulse and shows it… the complexity of the human foot
becomes intoxicating.” The New York Times
Wed, Oct 19 Christopher Wheeldon: PolyphoniaGeorge Balanchine: SonatinePeter Martins: ZakouskiPeter Martins: Hallelujah Junction
tue, Oct 18 Jerome Robbins: Dances at a GatheringChristopher Wheeldon: After the Rain Peter Martins: A Fool for You
tue, Oct 18 & Wed, Oct 198 pm / Granada theatre
Live Music!
Additional support generously provided byAndre Yewand Annette & Dr. Richard Caleel
An event of the Anne & Michael Towbes Dance Series
tickets & Info: (805) 893-3535 / www.artsandLectures.ucSB.edu
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 3
The Premiere Estates of Montecito & Santa BarbaraOffered by
RANDY SOLAKIAN(805) 565-2208
www.montecitoestates.comLicense #00622258
Exclusive Representation for Marketing & AcquisitionAdditional Exceptional Estates Available by Private Consultation
Park Lane - MontecitoOcean & Mountain Views - $4,150,000
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL4 • The Voice of the Village •
m issionAUDIO / V IDEO
TECHNOLOGY + PERFORMANCE + SERVICE
TECHNOLOGY + PERFORMANCE + SERVICE
Showroom open Tuesday thru Saturday missionaudiovideo.com 1910 De La Vina at Pedregosa, Santa Barbara 805.682.7575
BETTER PICTURE. BETTER SOUND. BETTER POPCORN.
Don’t trust your home to just any home
entertainment “expert”, you want an
experienced professional. We’ve been in
business for over 20 years and we’ve
installed thousands of home theater systems
in Santa Barbara. The technology is
changing everyday and it’s a full time job
just to keep up with it. That’s where we
come in, our highly trained staff will walk
you through choosing the right components,
making sure you get just what you need.
From plug-and-play systems to customized
whole house automation you can depend
on us to deliver the ultimate in technology,
performance and service. Stop by our show-
room and experience the impact that lead-
ing-edge audio and video can create. You
don’t want just any old home entertainment
expert, you want Mission.
5 Editorial Jeffrey Harding attended last week’s Radius 2011 Real
Estate & Economic Forecast; here are his observations6 Montecito Miscellany Piatti closes its doors for good; Brock Brower’s novel
republished; Robert Lieff featured in Columbia Law School magazine; Reality star goes back to school; News of eagle at SB Zoo goes national; SB Rescue Mission’s “Back to the Bayou”; Mike and Anne Towbes honored; “Yes is a Long Time” at UCSB; Westmont Museum of Art promoted; “Opera on the Go” season kicks off; Prince Harry to visit California
8 Letters to the Editor Richard Nordlund laments passing of David Myrick;
Randolph Siple swamped by readers; Bob and Tina Gale defend Montecito Christmas tree; Sylvia Weller reflects on origins of tree decorating; Monte Wilson celebrates Car show anniversary; Das Williams addresses AB 889 issue; Earl Stanfield smells a stench at SBCC; Dale Lowdermilk waits for The Big One; Leoncio Martins names ‘Worst Governors Ever’; devoted reader puts things into perspective
11 Community Calendar Hisham Matar discusses latest book; Ojai Peddler’s Fair;
MBAR and MA meetings; Senior Planning Services Meet & Greet; MERRAG trains on fire safety; Cecile Richards speaks at annual Planned Parenthood event; Carol Burnett honored; High School Reunion; Our Lady Mount Carmel holds annual auction
Tide Guide Handy guide to assist readers in determining when to take
that walk or run on the beach12 Village Beat Land Use suggests changes for Fire Station 3; Beautification
plans well underway; update on San Ysidro Pathway, Hot Springs Campaign and smart meters; Senior Planning Services celebrates new office opening; weather station installed on grounds of La Casa de Maria; hobbit-sized door at Crane School
14 Seen Around Town Picasso and Braque exhibit opens at SBMA; Stand Up
for Kids Auction benefits Boys & Girls Club; Santa Barbara Wildlife Care Network holds Wildlife Sunset cruise aboard Channel Cat
21 Sheriff’s Blotter Sign mystery continues; theft from Canon View Road;
classroom robbed on San Ysidro Road 23 On Finance Tim Hatton takes a look at investing in gold, and
whether ETF shares or physical possession is advised 24 Seniority Montecito’s Friendship Center adult day care expands… to
Goleta!25 Library Corner Montecito Library now has eBooks for Kindles; annual
book sale coming right up; puppet show on Friday October 21 and Karen Lee Stevens on the 24th
30 Your Westmont Five – count ‘em five – new tenure track professors introduced32 Coming & Going Anita Perry visits, addresses crowd of 200 at Montecito
Country Club; Bluegrass Festival features Mobile Homeboys and Haddon Cord; Deacon T christened at Tom and Mary Belle’s
33 Remembering David David Myrick, who died September 24, wasn’t just a
longtime resident; he wrote the history of Montecito35 Coup de Grace Birds tweet, marine layer lifts and Grace’s husband’s flight is
delayed; “time to finish that patio,” says Ms Rachow36 Our Town Ojai really knows how to put on a golf tournament;
Michael Bolton and celebrity friends tee off for charity38 Book Talk Lowenkopf revisits comic novel Lucky Jim, published in
1954
40 Calendar of Events Downtown Santa Barbara hosts 1st Thursday; “The Lives
of Giants” kicks off UCSB Arts & Lectures’ world music series; “Starry Night” begins State Street Ballet season; Glen Campbell’s bittersweet return to Santa Barbara; Kathleen Sharp signs new book at Chaucer’s
41 On Entertainment Hot Buttered Rum headlines fiddle festival; Glen Campbell to
perform benefit concert at Lobero; roundup of films at UCSB42 Guide to Montecito Eateries The most complete, up-to-date, comprehensive listing of all
individually owned Montecito restaurants, coffee houses, bakeries, gelaterias, and hangouts; some in Santa Barbara, Summerland, and Carpinteria too
43 Movie Showtimes Latest films, times, theaters, and addresses: they’re all here,
as they are every week45 Open House Directory Homes and condos currently for sale and open for
inspection in the 93108 Area 46 Classified Advertising Our very own “Craigslist” of classified ads, in which sellers
offer everything from summer rentals to estate sales47 Local Business Directory Business owners place business cards here so readers know
where to look when they need what those businesses offer
INSIDE THIS I SSUE
p.11
p.33
p.30
p.40
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 5You are not only responsible for what you say, but also for what you do not say – Martin Luther
Mod
el: M
ojde
h El
asyo
uty
Sw
eate
r and
Leg
ging
s: J
osep
h Ri
bkof
f Sh
oes:
BCB
G Ph
otog
raph
er: S
tacy
Rus
sell
“Sitting Pretty”
The Santa Barbara Real Estate Forecast
I attended the Radius 2011 Real Estate & Economic Forecast held last Thursday at Fess Parker’s DoubleTree Resort and got a very good picture of our local commercial real estate market, which, it turns out, is a bit better than last
year’s: In 2010, industrial vacancies were 5.3%; in 2011, 4.9%. Office vacancies: 10.3% in 2010; 8.0% in 2011. Retail: 2.4% vacancy in 2010; 2.0% in 2011.
Santa Barbara has always been a tight market, but isn’t immune from business cycles. Because it is so difficult to build here, and because it’s a beautiful place, the market has always been expensive even relative to other coastal California areas. Our market, however, has been sluggish since the Crash of ’08, which gives you an idea of the scope of what we have been going through.
Radius retail specialist Paul Gamberdella noted that things are heating up a bit on State Street; Marshalls and H&M, two big national retailers, took over the Borders and Barnes & Noble buildings. REI will be opening a new store on lower State Street in November, and Mr. Gamberdella hinted at several other deals in the works, one for the Pep Boys building at 424 State Street.
One popular measure of value is the capitalization rate; the average on the South Coast for commercial real estate is 6.5%. But it was 5.8% in 2007, the height of the boom, so prices have come down. Broker Brad Frohling said the majority of deals are bought by owner-occupants and that only 8% of deals were REO (foreclosed and sold by the lender).
Apartments have been tight since, well, almost forever, which is why rents are still high. Generally speaking, apartments have been the bluest of Santa Barbara’s blue chip real estate. And Radius’s Steve Golis saw nothing that would change that investment scenario. The average cap rate on South Coast apartments is a low 5.21%. In 2007, the height of the boom, the average cap rate was 4.1%, which is ridiculously low. Because we are Santa Barbara, and because there is a lot of money chasing apartment deals, apartments are more expensive.
Dragging Out The Economic PainThe new head of the UCSB Economic Forecast is economist Peter Rupert,
who had worked for the Cleveland Fed for 12 years. He follows economists Mark Schniepp and Bill Watkins in that position.
What attracted me to Professor Rupert was that the first thing out of his mouth when he was talking about business cycles was his intriguing answer to the question: “What should we do about the busts?” His answer? “Nothing.”
In particular, he noted that so-called Keynesian fiscal stimulus, which has been wildly popular with the current and last Administrations, is of ques-tionable value. Money sucked out of the economy and spent on government-favored projects do little to revive economies.
Professor Rupert made an insightful comment about why the economy is not growing: not because consumers aren’t spending, but because capital investment has declined by 30% to 40%, depending on what is being measured. His conclu-sion: this economy has a long way to go for complete recovery. He sees GDP continuing flat to perhaps modest growth.
Professor Rupert is dead-on as to why the economy is not growing. We have destroyed so much capital in the “bust” phase of this boom-bust cycle, it is going to take years, the Professor said, to rebuild this capital. And the capital is not the kind of capital that can be printed by the Fed. If printing worked, the U.S. would already have fully recovered.
Mark Schniepp noted several things. First, that the bulk of private sector growth in the county was in agriculture, the biggest sector of our economy. Growth in non-farm jobs was mostly in the professional and leisure sectors. So far in 2011, we are up about 2,000 private sector jobs and have lost 3,000 public sector jobs in the past four years. Dr. Schniepp sees modest growth in the future, both regionally and nationally.
The Montecito Capitalist is forecasting continued economic stagnation and weakness in the economy with continuing high unemployment. Our rea-soning has to do with the destruction, and lack of formation, of real capital needed for economic growth. The government has continued to put up bar-riers to the factors that would more quickly create capital, thus dragging out the economic pain. •MJ
Editorial by Jeffrey Harding
Mr. Harding is a real estate investor and a principal of Montecito Realty Investors, LLC. He was formerly a real estate lawyer in Santa Barbara. He also was financing director of a homebuilder. He has many years of experience in business cycles related to real estate, investments, and finance. He writes the blog, The Daily Capitalist (www.dailycapitalist.com). You can e-mail him at econophile@dailycapitalist.com.
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL6 • The Voice of the Village •
After more than two decades, Piatti, the popular Italian nosheteria in the Upper Village,
closed its doors for good last week. But the occasion did not go
unnoticed by the eatery’s loyal followers, many of whom started going to the restaurant as children.
Former actor Tab Hunter and a number of friends, including Teresa McWilliams, Allan Glaser and Dick Meyn, even wore black to mourn the occasion.
“We’re all sad to see it go,” lamented Tab, who lives just a tiara’s toss or two away. “It’s a lovely setting and the food has always been great. There’s a lot of history here.”
Manager Sarah Rudd, who worked at Piatti for 17 years, said, “It’s all very sad. It’s so hard saying goodbye after so many years. These customers have
become family and will all be missed so much. It has been a wonderful mix of celebrities and locals, includ-ing Carol Burnett, author T.C. Boyle and the late Secretary of State, Warren Christopher. This is a wonderful com-munity. We’ve had two hundred res-ervations for the final night, when normally it would be fifty. Everybody wanted to be here to say goodbye.”
One particular memory involves the late actor Robert Mitchum.
“His nurse called us and said he was limited to just one tequila because of his health regimen. I went and told him, and he was not amused. ‘You’ll serve me or I’ll go elsewhere!’ he snapped. We served him.”
Others turning out to wish the staff adieu were Penny and Adam Bianchi, writer Robert Eringer, bounty hunter Bob Burton, Thom Steinbeck, and
Best Facials and Waxing in Santa Barbara!
See how beautiful your skin can be!
– Client Testimonials –
“I used to wear make-up everyday to even out the tone and texture of my skin in order to feel beautiful, but that all changed the day I came into Peaches.” ~LR
“The best part is microdermabrasion and micro current are FREE with every fi rst time facial, which is a price unheard of!” ~Lee
“I tell people it feels like Christmas when I wake up in the morning, because everyday I notice a diff erence.” ~Becky
805-563-9796By Appointment Only
6 E. Arrellaga St. Santa BarbaraPeachesSkinCare.com
Are you and the people you love getting enough rest? Is sleep time anything but sleep?...If you snore or suspect you, your part-ner, or child have a sleep disorder, we can help with the use of an FDA approved dental appliance or for severe cases, our office works in collaboration with the finest sleep physicians in Santa Barbara.
DAYDREAMING ABOUT A GOOD NIGHT’S SLEEP?
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.santabarbaradds.com
What is Your “Dream Smile”?For some, its the Hollywood-style perfection that graces the covers of magazines. For others, it’s a more natural smile that reflects confidence fromhaving whiter, brighter and straighter teeth. Whatever your interpretation of your dream smile is, Dr Weiser can help. An LVI trained preferred dentistand a member of the “Extreme Makeover: Extreme Team”, Dr Weiser designs beautiful smiles every day!
Your cosmetic options include:• Customized porcelain veneers made by world famous lab technicians
• Zoom in office teeth whitening
• Invisalign, “the clear braces”
• Safe removal of mercury fillings
• Laser dentistry for optimizing gum health
Mark T. Weiser D.D.S.
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.boutique-dental.com
Aesthetic & Family Dentistry
“I find myself smilingmore than I ever haveand I am so grateful!Thank you Dr. Weiser.”
—Cara
“If looking for a good cosmetic dentist in Santa Barbara
almost everyone I know says to go to Dr Mark Weiser. I am so
grateful for what he has done for me and his staff are like family.
The added comfort and care provided are just a bonus!”
Changing Lives....One Smile at a time
– Sue Maloney
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.santabarbaradds.com
www.santab
arbara
sleepdentist
.com
We are pleased to introduce our new home sleep study, performed in the comfort of your own
home as an alternative to a sleep clinic study.
With the results from the study, Dr. Weiser will help you determine what therapy or custom-fit oral appliance might work best to reduce your
snoring, relieve your sleep apnea, and have you and your family sleeping soundly again!
– Mark T. Weiser, DDS
Sleep Consultation Options include:• Complimentary Sleep Consultation• Snoring and sleep home testing• Sleep and snoring disorder appliances• Member American Assn. of Sleep Medicine• Member Dental Organization for Sleep Apnea• Member American Assn. of Dental Sleep Medicine
What is Your “Dream Smile”?For some, its the Hollywood-style perfection that graces the covers of magazines. For others, it’s a more natural smile that reflects confidence fromhaving whiter, brighter and straighter teeth. Whatever your interpretation of your dream smile is, Dr Weiser can help. An LVI trained preferred dentistand a member of the “Extreme Makeover: Extreme Team”, Dr Weiser designs beautiful smiles every day!
Your cosmetic options include:• Customized porcelain veneers made by world famous lab technicians
• Zoom in office teeth whitening
• Invisalign, “the clear braces”
• Safe removal of mercury fillings
• Laser dentistry for optimizing gum health
Mark T. Weiser D.D.S.
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.boutique-dental.com
Aesthetic & Family Dentistry
“I find myself smilingmore than I ever haveand I am so grateful!Thank you Dr. Weiser.”
—Cara
“If looking for a good cosmetic dentist in Santa Barbara
almost everyone I know says to go to Dr Mark Weiser. I am so
grateful for what he has done for me and his staff are like family.
The added comfort and care provided are just a bonus!”
Changing Lives....One Smile at a time
– Sue Maloney
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.santabarbaradds.com
What is Your “Dream Smile”?For some, its the Hollywood-style perfection that graces the covers of magazines. For others, it’s a more natural smile that reflects confidence fromhaving whiter, brighter and straighter teeth. Whatever your interpretation of your dream smile is, Dr Weiser can help. An LVI trained preferred dentistand a member of the “Extreme Makeover: Extreme Team”, Dr Weiser designs beautiful smiles every day!
Your cosmetic options include:• Customized porcelain veneers made by world famous lab technicians
• Zoom in office teeth whitening
• Invisalign, “the clear braces”
• Safe removal of mercury fillings
• Laser dentistry for optimizing gum health
Mark T. Weiser D.D.S.
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.boutique-dental.com
Aesthetic & Family Dentistry
“I find myself smilingmore than I ever haveand I am so grateful!Thank you Dr. Weiser.”
—Cara
“If looking for a good cosmetic dentist in Santa Barbara
almost everyone I know says to go to Dr Mark Weiser. I am so
grateful for what he has done for me and his staff are like family.
The added comfort and care provided are just a bonus!”
Changing Lives....One Smile at a time
– Sue Maloney
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.santabarbaradds.com
What is Your “Dream Smile”?For some, its the Hollywood-style perfection that graces the covers of magazines. For others, it’s a more natural smile that reflects confidence fromhaving whiter, brighter and straighter teeth. Whatever your interpretation of your dream smile is, Dr Weiser can help. An LVI trained preferred dentistand a member of the “Extreme Makeover: Extreme Team”, Dr Weiser designs beautiful smiles every day!
Your cosmetic options include:• Customized porcelain veneers made by world famous lab technicians
• Zoom in office teeth whitening
• Invisalign, “the clear braces”
• Safe removal of mercury fillings
• Laser dentistry for optimizing gum health
Mark T. Weiser D.D.S.
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.boutique-dental.com
Aesthetic & Family Dentistry
“I find myself smilingmore than I ever haveand I am so grateful!Thank you Dr. Weiser.”
—Cara
“If looking for a good cosmetic dentist in Santa Barbara
almost everyone I know says to go to Dr Mark Weiser. I am so
grateful for what he has done for me and his staff are like family.
The added comfort and care provided are just a bonus!”
Changing Lives....One Smile at a time
– Sue Maloney
805.899.3600 • 1511 State Street • www.santabarbaradds.com
Arrivederci Piatti!
Monte ito Miscellany
by Richard Mineards
Richard covered the Royal Family for Britain’s Daily Mirror and Daily Mail before moving to New York to write for Rupert Murdoch’s newly launched Star magazine in 1978; Richard later wrote for New York magazine’s “Intelligencer”. He continues to make regular appearances on CBS, ABC, and CNN, and moved to Montecito four years ago.
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 7
Dream. Design. Build. Live.
PO Box 41459 Santa Barbara, California 93140
dwb@elocho.com | Phone.805.965.9555 | Fax.805.965.9566 | www.elocho.com
studiosBECKER
sweat!
MiSCELLAnY Page 184
artist Thomas van Stein. Next month the space will re-open as the Montecito Wine Bistro Pierre Lafond, as I exclu-sively revealed here...
Brock Brower’s BashIt was 40 years ago that Carpinteria
author Brock Brower, while work-ing as a writer for Esquire magazine, tapped out his second novel The Late Great Creature, which was nominated for the National Book Award.
Now, four decades later, the enter-taining 256-page tome, which lovingly traces the making of a low-budget horror film – a verbally agile tribute to Roger Corman-style phantasmago-ric cinema – has been republished by Overlook Press, a New York literary house determined to revive worthy books that have stood the test of even these parlous times.
“Peter Mayer, who previously ran two major publishers, Avon and Penguin, before launching his own publishing venture, was a fan of the book when it first came out,” explains Brock, who helped start the ABC-TV current affairs show “20/20,” produc-ing and writing for the co-anchor, the affable Hugh Downs.
“I started writing the novel, my second, in 1968 and it took three years to come to fruition. It was really the start of the celebrity culture. My first one, Debris, had come out in 1967. It is a great pleasure seeing it revisited nearly half a century later.”
Brock, who was formerly writer-in-residence at Princeton and chief speechwriter for U.S. Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, celebrated
Piatti manager, Sarah Rudd, with longtime employees, Chris Wright and Stace Morello
1 1 5 5 C O A S T V I L L A G E R O A D I 8 0 5 . 9 6 9 . 0 4 4 2 I W W W. S I LV E R H O R N . C O MF O U R S E A S O N S B I L T M O R E H O T E L I 8 0 5 . 9 6 9 . 3 1 6 7 I M O N T E C I T O , C A 9 3 1 0 8
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL8 • The Voice of the Village •
WESTMONTDOWNTOWN
WES
TMONT COLLEG
E
CH
RI S T U S P R I M A T U M
T EN
EN
S
Conversations About Things That Matter
Sponsored by the Westmont Foundation
The Arab Spring:Where Are the Swallows?
Heather Keaney, Westmont Assistant Professor of HistoryJim Wright, Westmont in Istanbul
5:30 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 20, 2011University Club, 1332 Santa Barbara Street
Free and open to the public. Seating is limited. For information, please call 565-6051.
This talk will look at whether the Arab Spring wasinevitable, why it happened and what may take placeas spring turns to summer. The speakers, who aremarried, lived in Egypt during the Egyptian Revolutionand the past decade, so the talk will focus on Egyptas one exemplar of the Arab Spring. The presentationwill combine big-picture historical analysis with more
personal, anecdotal insights. While the issue of what comes next is inevitablyspeculative, the couple will try to extrapolate from the multiple and often contradictoryforces at play to suggest some possible outcomes. The speakers will leave a generousamount of time for questions and answers as they realize there are many points ofentry into this rich and challenging topic.They would like to be as responsive toaudience interest as the time and the limits of their knowledge permit.
Publisher Timothy Lennon Buckley Managing Editor Kelly Mahan • Design/Production Trent Watanabe
Associate Editor Bob Hazard • Lily Buckley • Associate Publisher Robert Shafer
Advertising Manager/Sales Susan Brooks • Sales Tanis Nelson • Office Manager / Ad Sales Christine Merrick • Moral Support & Proofreading Helen Buckley • Arts/Entertainment/Calendar/Music Steven
Libowitz • Books Shelly Lowenkopf • Columns Ward Connerly, Erin Graffy, Scott Craig • Food/Wine Judy Willis, Lilly Tam Cronin • Gossip Thedim Fiste, Richard Mineards • History Hattie Beresford • Humor
Jim Alexander, Ernie Witham, Grace Rachow • Photography/Our Town Joanne A. Calitri • Society Lynda Millner • Travel Jerry Dunn • Sportsman Dr. John Burk • Trail Talk Lynn P. Kirst Medical Advice Dr. Gary
Bradley, Dr. Anthony Allina • Legal Advice Robert Ornstein
Published by Montecito Journal Inc.PRINTED BY NPCP INC., SANTA BARBARA, CA
Montecito Journal is compiled, compounded, calibrated, cogitated over, and coughed up every Wednesday by an exacting agglomeration of excitable (and often exemplary) expert edifiers at 1206 Coast Village Circle, Suite D, Montecito, CA 93108. How to reach us: Editorial: (805) 565-1860; Sue Brooks: ext. 4; Christine Merrick: ext. 3; Classified: ext. 3; FAX: (805) 969-6654; Letters to Editor: Montecito Journal, 1206 Coast Village Circle, Suite D, Montecito, CA 93108; E-MAIL: news@montecitojournal.net
You can subscribe to the Journal!!Please fill out this simple form and mail it to us with your payment
My name is:____________________________________________________________________________
My address is:____________________________________________________________ ZIP__________
Enclosed is ____________ $150 for the next 50 issues of Montecito Journal to be delivered via First Class Mail
P.S. Start my subscription with issue dated: Please send your check or money order to: Montecito Journal, 1206 Coast Village Circle, Suite D, Montecito, CA 93108
The best little paper in America(Covering the best little community anywhere!)
If you have something you think Montecito should know about, or wish to respond to something you read in the Journal, we want to hear from you. Please send all such correspondence to: Montecito Journal, Letters to the Editor, 1206 Coast Village Circle, Suite D, Montecito, CA. 93108. You can also FAX such mail to: (805) 969-6654, or E-mail to jim@montecitojournal.net
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Passing of a Friend
It is with great sadness that we note the passing of David Myrick last week. David was a dedicated
friend of the Montecito Association and our history office. David served on our board of directors for seven years. During many of these years, David was our History Committee chairperson, actively helping to keep that volunteer office open to the public and thriving through his generous contributions. In 2008, we recognized David’s contributions by honoring him as Montecito Citizen of the Year at Beautification Day.
David’s legacy to the Montecito community is enormous. His two published volumes on Montecito history, Montecito and Santa Barbara Volumes I & II: From Farms to Estates and The Days of the Great Estates, remain the authority on the history of Montecito properties and person-alities. David kindly shared his vast knowledge at a talk and slide show last year on behalf of the Association’s history office that we will remember dearly.
We will miss David’s kind manner, gentlemanly ways and keen mind.
Sincerely,Richard Nordlund, Presidentand the Board of Directors of the
Montecito Association
no Problem with Christmas
In response to Jay Fender’s letter opposing the Christmas tree at San Ysidro and 101 (“Tradition Should Die” MJ # 17/39) because he’s not Christian and is therefore offended by it: Mr. Fender, we’re offended by your desire to impose your disdain of Christmas on everyone else.
Like you, we’re not Christians, but unlike you, we love that tree (and Christmas too), and we want to see the tradition continue. If it’s on public property, so what? Christmas happens to be a legal national holi-day. And there’s no mention of a Christmas tree in the Bible. We’re not talking about a nativity scene. We’re not talking about a cross. We’re talk-ing about a tree on which schoolchil-dren hang garlands and paper plates they decorated. This gives our local kids an opportunity to make a cre-ative contribution to our community that everyone can enjoy – everyone but you, that is.
“Peace on Earth, good will toward men.” You’ve got a problem with
that? Really?Bob & Tina GaleMontecito
Swamped by MJ Readers
Yesterday (October 2) was our First Sunday on the mountain and I was swamped by all the people who read “Me and My Pacemaker” (“Letters to the Editor” MJ # 17/39). I was taken aback because I did not anticipate the response. Everyone was talking about the SM (Siple Maneuver). I thought you would like to know that page 20 was well read. We had about 50 people and one hell of a great jazz event. I even took the pacemaker and my wife for a dance. Everything worked well.
Thanks for the space.Randolph SipleCarpinteria (Editor’s note: Mr. Siple hosts “The
Rooster Crows,” which airs Tuesday 2 pm and 10 pm, and again on Saturday at 5 pm on AM 1290. He is also a winemaker and an organic certifier. “First Sunday” at his vineyard features Dixieland Jazz on the first Sunday of every month. He can be reached at therooster@west.net)
A Sign of HopeI read with surprise that the mys-
tery Christmas tree at the San Ysidro off-ramp had caused some negative feelings.
Most likely, the writer was not aware that decorating an evergreen in mid-winter harkens back to Winter Solstice celebrations pre-dating Christianity. When the Church calen-dar was put in place a few hundred years after Jesus died the date of his birth was chosen to coincide with the ancient celebration. In those frigid areas the Solstice party was held at the darkest time of the year. People cut trees and tied candles to them to mark the changing of the light and the lengthening of the days. This seems to have cheered them up con-siderably.
My father emigrated from Germany before the two World Wars. The tex-tile industry in New England needed trained chemists and he qualified to be admitted. At that time, not every-one who wanted to come to the U.S. could get in.
As a child, he had been sent to a Catholic school, but evidently
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 9Abuse of words has been the great instrument of sophistry and chicanery, of party, faction, and division of society – John Adams
805-687-00881919 State St., Suite 206
w w w. f o o ta n k l e i n s t i t u t e . c o mMedicare & Most PPO’s accepted
11 Locations in Southern California
a nationally recognizedFoot & ankle group
advanced Foot & ankle care
Dr. Lorie Robinson,Podiatric Medicine
& Foot Surgeon
Dr. Jason Morris,Sports Medicine & Reconstructive
Surgery of the Foot and Ankle
• Adults & Pediatrics• Conservative Care• Bunion Surgery• Hammertoe Surgery• Running Injuries• Reconstructive Ankle Surgery
• Braces/Orthotics• Arthritis Treatments• Ankle Replacement• Diabetic Foot Care• Digital X-rays• Diagnostic Ultrasound
Un
iver
sity
Fo
ot
& A
nkl
e in
stit
Ute
sAn
tA b
Ar
bA
rA
TM
BESTHAPPYHOUR
BEST SEAFOOD & BEST CLAM
CHOWDER
it didn’t take as he never went to church. He preferred riding a horse or sailing his boat, and he never saw any reason to explain why.
During the Depression, with all the textile mills closing down and the family moving to a small town, Christmas took on a magical essence. As the season approached we wait-ed with rousing excitement for the moment the Plymouth rolled into the driveway with a tree tied to the running board. It was a harbinger of hope. Nobody fussed or quarreled as we layered each bough with silver tinsel and then declared it the best one he had ever found.
Like many Germans of that era, only English was spoken in our home. My mother was American, but that wasn’t the only reason. The thinking was that this was his new country and his new life, freely chosen, and its language would be his own.
However, my non-church going father did teach me one German song, and I learned it by heart. It was O Tannenbaum (Oh Christmas Tree).
Sylvia WellerMontecito
One Year for Coast Village Car Show
Thank you so much for the kind article written by Carole Lieff and photographed by Marc Beauparlant about Cars & Coffee (MJ # 17/39). It’s hard to believe, but our group will celebrate its one-year anniversary on October 22. Our goal has been and will always be to help support the people, the community and the busi-nesses of Montecito and greater Santa Barbara.
While we started out as a bunch of car people that meet every Sunday morning on Coast Village Road for a cup of coffee and share car stories, it’s quickly grown to a true com-munity. We now have people that simply come by just to talk, catch up with old friends and yes, some bring some pretty neat cars. Ironically, we get people that come up on a regular basis from as far south as Pasadena to Santa Maria in the north. We’re so fortunate that our area has such beau-ty and charm that I think they like to have a destination to bring their car and then spend the day.
As Carole mentioned, we get some incredibly rare and unusual cars... you just never know what’s lurking in the garages of Montecito. We also have a weekly newsletter that we use to communicate different activities and highlight local cars, people and events as well as a Facebook page where we post all the latest photos and information.
If there is anything we can do to help the community please let us know and please pass our thanks on
to Carole and Marc for presenting our group in such a positive light. We hope to remain a very positive and active fixture for the community. Please stop by anytime, we’d love to have you join us.
Monte WilsonSanta Barbara Cars & Coffee
Babysitters not included
I appreciate the opportunity to address some factual inaccuracies made in a recent letter to the edi-tor by Mr. Ralph Iannelli (“Time to Start Governing” MJ # 17/39), regarding my vote on a bill that would have given domestic workers some basic work protections offered other workers. In this day of instant shared information, it is important that we remember a quote by Daniel Moynihan: “Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.”
When I voted for AB 889 on the floor of the Assembly back in early June, I did so because the proposed legislation would simply give domes-tic workers some of the same rights as other workers. That should not be surprising because I have long been and will continue to be an advocate for working people.
Historically, domestic workers have not received the same protections under the law as workers in other industries. Part of that is because of the nature of domestic work being more personal and “servant” based. Another element is that the work has long been seen as women’s work with the vast majority of domestic workers being women of color and immigrants.
Domestic workers, as defined in the bill, does not include babysitters as has widely been claimed. In fact, there is a specific exclusion of in-home Supportive Services program employees, specified family members and babysitters and child care pro-viders (Section 3 of AB 889).
Additionally, personal attendants, which explicitly includes babysitters, are completely exempt from the gen-eral overtime requirements, meal and rest break requirements and other provisions.
The bill, which was last being held in the Senate Appropriations Committee and not slated for any immediate further action, would sim-ply regulate wages, hours and work-ing conditions of domestic workers, a class of working people who are often taken advantage of with few protections.
These are workers who care for the most important elements of their employers’ lives, their families and
LETTERS Page 264
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL10 • The Voice of the Village •
Montecito Association
Beautification Day Saturday, November 7, 2009, 9AM
Upper Village Green Honoring Dana Newquist
T-Shirt Sponsorship
Plans are underway once again for Montecito Beautification Day. This annual event is held for neighbors to work together to clean up our community’s neighborhoods. The day will begin at 9:00 AM on the lawn across from the Upper Village Post Office. The Four Seasons Biltmore hosts a Continental Breakfast. When you return from your assigned clean-up project, our annual Beautification Award Winners are announced and our own Montecito Fire District hosts a hot dog and chili lunch. It is a great neighborhood day you and your family won’t want to miss!
We would like for you to join us again this year and be a T-shirt sponsor.
The T-shirt sponsorship program benefits on-going Beautification Committee projects in Montecito. For a minimum cost of $50.00, you and your family will have your name on this year’s T-shirt. Each sponsor receives two souvenir T-shirts. We hope you will sign up now and mark your calendars so you can join us on Saturday, November 7 for this fun family community event.
BECOME A T-SHIRT SPONSOR
1. Select a Sponsorship Level: Sparkler $500.00 Flare $100.00Firecracker $50.00
2. Orders must be received by October 26, 2009
3. Mail this form and check to: Montecito Association, P.O. Box 5278 Montecito, CA 93150
4. Your two T-shirts will be mailed to you prior to Beautification Day. 5. Please email Beautification Nominations to mindy.denson@sbcglobal.net
Please print your name below as you would like it to appear on the T-shirts:
NAME: ____________________________________ PHONE: _____________________
ADDRESS:______________________________________________________________
SIZES: Adult S ____ M ____ L ____ XL ____Youth S ____ M ____ L ____
YOUR CHECK IS YOUR RECEIPT ---RETURN FORM & CHECK BY OCTOBER 21, 2009
Questions? Please call Mindy Denson @ 969-9671 or email mindy.denson@sbcglobal.net
Montecito Association
Beautifi cation Day Saturday, November 5, 2011, 9AM
Upper Village Green Honoring Montecito’s Dick Thielscher
T-Shirt Sponsorship
Plans are underway once again for Montecito Beautifi cation Day. This annual event is held for neighbors to work together to clean up our
community’s neighborhoods. The day will begin at 9:00 AM on the lawn across from the Upper Village Post Offi ce. The Montecito Country Club hosts a Con-tinental Breakfast. When you return from your assigned clean-up project, our annual Beautifi cation Award Winners are announced and our own Montecito Fire District hosts a hot dog and chili lunch. It is a great neighborhood day you and your family won’t want to miss!
We would like for you to join us again this year and be a T-shirt sponsor.
The T-shirt sponsorship program benefi ts on-going Beautifi cation Committee projects in Montecito. For a minimum cost of $50.00, you and your family will have your name on this year’s T-shirt. Each sponsor receives two souvenir T-shirts. We hope you will sign up now and mark your calendars so you can join us on Saturday, November 5th for this fun family community event.
BECOME A T-SHIRT SPONSOR 1. Select a Sponsorship Level:
Trunk $250.00+Branches $100.00 Leaves $50.00
2. Orders must be received by October 24, 2011 3. Mail this form and check to:
Montecito Association, P.O. Box 5278 Montecito, CA 93150 4. Your two T-shirts will be mailed to you prior to Beautifi cation Day. 5. Please email Beautifi cation Nominations to mindy.denson@sbcglobal.net
Please print your name below as you would like it to appear on the T-shirts:
NAME: ____________________________________ PHONE: ____________________ ADDRESS: _____________________________________________________________SIZES: Adult S ____ M ____ L ____ XL ____XXL____Youth S ____ M ____ L ____
YOUR CHECK IS YOUR RECEIPT ---RETURN FORM & CHECK BY OCTOBER 24, 2011Questions? Please call Mindy Denson @ 969-9671 or email mindy.denson@sbcglobal.net
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 11The need for change bulldozed a road down the center of my mind – Maya Angelou
FRIDAY OCTOBER 7
Book Discussion Libyan novelist Hisham Matar will read from his latest book, Anatomy of a Disappearance. Matar wrote In the Country of Men, published in 2006 and has been translated into 26 languages. His debut novel was nominated for the 2006 Man Booker Prize, the Guardian First Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award. It won six international literary awards, including a Commonwealth Writers’ Prize. Matar was born in New York City to Libyan parents and spent his childhood first in Tripoli and then in Cairo. He lives in London, and serves as an associate professor at Barnard College in New York City.When: 12 noonWhere: Founders Room in Westmont’s Kerr Student Center, 955 La Paz RoadInfo: 565-6079
SATURDAY OCTOBER 8
Ojai Peddler’s FairThe Ojai Peddler’s Fair is held rain or shine, and is chockfull of quality antiques, collectibles, handcrafts and international crafts. This is a benefit for the Mira Monte PTO. Vendors are sought.When: 9 am to 4 pm, Saturday and Sunday, October 8 & 9Where: Chaparral Auditorium at 414 E. Ojai AvenueInfo: Pat, 964-8915
MONDAY OCTOBER 10
MBAR MeetingMontecito Board of Architectural Review seeks to ensure that new projects are harmonious with the unique physical characteristics and character of MontecitoWhen: 3 pmWhere: Country Engineering Building, Planning Commission Hearing Room, 123 E. Anapamu
TUESDAY OCTOBER 11
Meet & GreetSenior Planning Services invites the public for a meet and greet to celebrate the company’s new office in the Upper Village. Attendees will have the opportunity to meet
and speak with Suzanne McNeely, Senior Planning Services President and Founder, her elder care managers and consultants, and to reconnect with neighbors throughout the afternoon. A complimentary consultation with a Senior Planning Services elder care expert will be also be offered to all who come by.When: noon to 6 pmWhere: Upper Village NorthInformation: 969-3312
Montecito Association MeetingThe Montecito Association is committed to preserving, protecting, and enhancing the semi-rural residential character of Montecito; public is invitedWhen: 4 pmWhere: Montecito Hall, 1469 East Valley Rd
THURSDAY OCTOBER 13
MERRAG Meeting and TrainingNetwork of trained volunteers that work and/or live in the Montecito area prepare to respond to community disaster during critical first 72 hours following an event. The mutual “self-help” organization serves Montecito’s residents with the guidance and support of the Montecito Fire, Water and Sanitary Districts. This month: fire safety and extinguisher use. When: 10 am Where: Montecito Fire Station, 595 San Ysidro RoadInfo: Geri, 969-2537
FRIDAY OCTOBER 14
Politics, Sex & CocktailsPlanned Parenthood’s annual event takes place at the Montecito Country Club with featured speaker Cecile Richards, President of Planned Parenthood Federation of America and the Planned Parenthood Action Fund. Named one of Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of 2011, Richards is the daughter of the late, former governor of Texas, Ann Richards, who was keynote speaker at the 2002 Politics, Sex & Cocktails event and recipient of the Action Fund’s Giraffe Award.A drawing will be held for a Winemaker’s Dinner for eight in Santa Ynez Valley, featuring a dinner catered by New West Catering, served in the private wine cellar at
(If you have a Montecito event, or an event that concerns Montecito, please e-mail kelly@montecitojournal.net or call (805) 565-1860)
Community Calendarby Kelly Mahan
Montecito Tide ChartDay Low Hgt High Hgt Low Hgt High Hgt Low HgtThurs, October 6 12:52 AM 0.3 7:36 AM 4.5 01:08 PM 2.3 06:59 PM 5 Fri, October 7 1:34 AM 0.4 8:05 AM 4.8 01:53 PM 1.8 07:48 PM 5 Sat, October 8 2:08 AM 0.5 8:30 AM 5.1 02:30 PM 1.2 08:30 PM 4.9 Sun, October 9 2:36 AM 0.7 8:52 AM 5.3 03:03 PM 0.9 09:07 PM 4.8 Mon, October 10 3:00 AM 1 9:13 AM 5.4 03:34 PM 0.6 09:41 PM 4.7 Tues, October 11 3:23 AM 1.2 9:34 AM 5.6 04:04 PM 0.4 010:14 PM 4.5 Wed, October 12 3:44 AM 1.6 9:55 AM 5.7 04:35 PM 0.3 010:49 PM 4.2 Thurs, October 13 4:06 AM 1.9 10:19 AM 5.7 05:08 PM 0.3 011:26 PM 4 Fri, October 14 4:28 AM 2.2 10:44 AM 5.6 05:45 PM 0.4
Sunstone Winery. Tickets for the drawing are $100 each; only 200 tickets will be sold. When: 5:30 pm to 8 pmWhere: 920 Summit RoadCost: $200 per personRSVP: 963-2445 ext. 1771
An Evening of Laughter & LoveTeddy Bear Cancer Foundation helps honor Carol Burnett with a benefit auction at the Lobero Theater. Emmy host Jane Lynch is a special presenter and Dennis Miller, Emmy Award-winning comedian, TV personality and radio talk show host, will serve as Master of Ceremonies while actor, writer and Montecito local Billy Baldwin will serve as the event’s official celebrity auctioneer.Auction items include Platinum Passes to SBIFF 2012, tickets to the Ellen DeGeneres Show, Dancing with the Stars and other entertainment arenas, and a trip for ten to Casa Quixote on the Mexican Riviera.When: Friday, October 14, 8 pm to 10 pmWhere: Lobero Theater, 33 East Canon Perdido StreetCost: from $150Info: www.lobero.com or www.teddybearcancerfoundation.org
SATURDAY OCTOBER 15
High School Reunion Santa Barbara High School Class of 1976 will celebrate its 35-year reunion with various eventsWhen: Saturday, October 15 and Sunday, October 16Info: www.SBHSclassof1976.com
SAVE THE DATE
All are invited and welcome to attend Our Lady of Mount Carmel School’s 28th Annual Auction Fundraiser, Venetian Masquerade, at the Coral Casino. Beginning at 4 pm, it will be a wonderful evening of festive gathering, silent and live auctions, sunset views, and delicious food. John Palminteri serves as the master of ceremonies, and Bill Mandarino will provide the music for the evening. All proceeds directly benefit Our Lady of Mt. Carmel School.When: Sunday, October 23, 4 pmWhere: 1260 Channel DriveCost: $115 per person Info: 969-5965 or www.mountcarmelschool.net
ONGOING
Taste of HarvestIn tandem with the third annual epicure.sb – Santa Barbara’s month-long foodie festival – patrons are invited to take a “tasting tour” of the local wine country at the Biltmore’s Ty Lounge. During October, the lounge will
feature a flight of four wines from Santa Barbara’s Deep Sea label. Guests can opt to pair their flights with bites showcasing local seasonal ingredients.Ty Lounge is open daily at 1260 Channel Drive. For hours and information, please call 805-969-2261. MONDAYS AND TUESDAYS
Art ClassesBeginning and advanced, all ages and by appt, just callWhere: Portico Gallery, 1235 Coast Village RoadInfo: 695-8850
TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS
Adventuresome Aging Where: 89 Eucalyptus LaneInfo: 969-0859; ask for Susan
WEDNESDAYS THRU SATURDAYS
Live Entertainment at CavaWhere: Cava, 1212 Coast Village RoadWhen: 7 pm to 10 pmInfo: 969-8500
MONDAYS
Story Time at the LibraryWhen: 10:30 to 11 amWhere: Montecito Library, 1469 East Valley RoadInfo: 969-5063
Early Memory Loss ProgramWhere: Friendship Center, 89 Eucalyptus LnInfo: Susan Forkush, 969-0859 x15
TUESDAYS
Boy Scout Troop 33 Meeting Open to all boys ages 11-17; visitors welcomeWhen: 7:15 pmWhere: Scout House, Upper Manning Park, 449 San Ysidro Road
THURSDAYS
Pick-up Basketball GamesHe shoots; he scores! The Montecito Family YMCA is offering pick-up basketball on Thursdays at 5:30 pm. Join coach Donny for warm-up, drills and then scrimmages. Adults welcome too.When: 5:30 pmWhere: Montecito Family YMCA, 591 Santa Rosa LaneInfo: 969-3288
FRIDAYS
Farmers’ MarketWhen: 8 am to 11:15 amWhere: South side of Coast Village Road
SUNDAYS
Vintage & Exotic Car DayMotorists and car lovers from as far away as Los Angeles and as close as East Valley Road park in front of Richie’s Barber Shop at the bottom of Middle Road on Coast Village Road going west to show off and discuss their prized possessions, automotive trends and other subjects. Ferraris, Lamborghinis and Corvettes prevail, but there are plenty other autos to admire.When: 8 am to 10 am (or so)Where: 1187 Coast Village RoadInfo: sbcarscoffee@gmail.com •MJ
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL12 • The Voice of the Village •
We are 26 dealers with individual tastes, making us a unique marketplace for over twenty years.
2192 Ortega Hill Road Summerland 805-565-3189www.summerlandantiquecollective.com
BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind BuildingPeace of
Mind
A w a r d W i n n i n g B u i l d e r s S i n c e 1 9 8 6
GIFFIN & CRANEG E N E R A L C O N T R A C T O R S , I N C
Visit Our Website www.GiffinAndCrane.com
Phone (805) 966-6401 License 611341
gcr03785_MJ_2011_52weeks_FNL2.indd 15 2/22/11 3:08 PM
MONTECITOVILLAGENORTH
MANNINGPARK
EAST VALLEY RD
SAN
YSI
DR
O R
D
EAST VALLEY RD
EMERGENCY PLAN
For
Geri Ventura
BOLERO DR
Open to All Residents10/13/11 Montecito Fire FIRE SAFETY
EXTINGUISHER USE (C-2)
10/20/11 Montecito Fire SCHOOLS DRILL/ACTIVATION
11/10/11 Montecito Fire LIGHT SEARCH & RESCUE (C-5)
12/09/11 Biltmore Elect Board, Adopt Budget
2011 MERRAG TRAINING SCHEDULEMFD Headquarters
595 San Ysidro Rd. 10:00 a.m. (unless noted)
Training topics subject to changePlease RSVP Geri Ventura at 969-2537EMERGENCY PLAN
For
Geri Ventura
C-# NEXT TO TOPIC IS THE CORRELATING CERT MODULE WHEN APPLICABLE
At this month’s Montecito Association Land Use Committee meeting, Montecito
Fire Protection District representatives were back in front of the committee giving an update on plans for Fire Station 3. This was the third time the committee has seen the project, slated to be built on the 2500 block of East Valley Road.
Susette Naylor of Thompson Naylor Architects and Howard Leach of Leach Mounce Architects pre-sented modified plans of the station, which include parking, living quar-ters, administrative offices, appara-tus bays, and a 35-foot hose-drying tower. The architects have been work-ing with a firefighter committee to formulate plans for the station, which is expected to cost $8.7 million.
Back in April, the committee voiced concern over two 30-ft drive-ways scheduled for the site, which will be used for ingress and egress for fire vehicles but will be two-way for civilian vehicles. One of the driveways is directly across from the neighbor’s driveway on the other side of the street, which has been a source of contention for the neigh-bor. The plans presented on Monday still include the two driveways, a fact the committee takes issue with. Committee member John Watson suggested eliminating use of the west driveway to make the project more residential looking. “It’s bet-ter in my mind to have one primary driveway than two,” he said. He, along with chair Dave Kent, sug-gested closing off the west driveway with a landscaped gate, and using it only in emergencies.
The committee also had concerns with neighborhood compatibility, and directed the architects to make the station barely noticeable from the street. Naylor explained the
building is already 75 feet from the road, and it is designed in a Spanish Mediterranean style, similar to homes in Montecito. “It is a mix of residen-tial and function,” she said, “but it should still signal that the commu-nity cares about its people and wants to protect properties.” She went on, “It should be obvious that it is a fire station.”
The configuration of the build-ings was discussed, and Kent sug-gested shifting the main building 90 degrees to lessen the views from East Valley Road. Committee member Tom Bollay opined that the height of the apparatus bays is excessive. “They seem out of scale for no rea-son,” he said. Operations Chief Terry McElwee explained the height is due to the height of the fire engines; he anticipated fire engine heights will increase over time. “We plan on using this building for the next fifty years, without structural changes,” McElwee responded.
The land on which the station will be built, which sits on the Palmer Jackson estate, is about a 2.5-acre parcel. Originally the Jackson family agreed to sell 1.5 acres of their prop-erty to MFPD, but were asked for another acre to provide a buffer area on all sides of the building. Both sides of the building have a 50-ft setback, and there is a 30-ft landscape buffer on the backside of the station. Naylor said there are 51 trees on the site, and the project would require removal of two mature oaks, six smaller saplings and trimming of a number of other trees.
Palmer and Jim Jackson were in attendance at the meeting, and assert-ed they were disappointed that the setback in the rear of the parcel is not 50 feet as originally planned.
Fire Station 3 Update
Village Beat by Kelly Mahan
ViLLAGE BEAT Page 204
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 13
CLOSING STATE ST. LOCATION60-75% 0FF RETAILCLOSING STATE ST. LOCATION60-75% 0FF RETAIL
Dearest Friends,First and foremost I would like to thank you for all thewonderful years you supported us. Now time has come forus to move into a new direction to serve you even better.After 20 years we are closing our State St. store and aresearching for a new location. In preparation to move we areliquidating our entire inventory at unbelievable prices.I o�er you the biggest savings ever on all of our rugs andfurnishings. I am looking forward to seeing you at our BIG SALE. Michael Kourosh, CEO
IN PREPARATION TO MOVE WE ARE LIQUIDATING OUR ENTIRE STOCKIN PREPARATION TO MOVE WE ARE LIQUIDATING OUR ENTIRE STOCK
1117 State St. (805) 962-2166 Mon-Sat 10-6 rugsandmore.com LOWEST PRICES EVER!LOWEST PRICES EVER!
Two Beautiful Montecito Listings From Montecito Village Realty Group
665 Juan Crespi, Montecito - Situated on approximately 1 acre in Montecito’s Golden Quadrangle.- Short walk to the upper village and MUS.- Single level 3 Bd 3.5 ba pool home with incredible mountain views.- Tasteful and mature landscaping.- One of the best neighborhoods in Montecito.- Attached 2 car garage
BILL VAUGHAN - 805.969.5951 Broker/Owner/Realtor DRE LIC # 00660866
OFFERED AT $3,495,000
513 Crocker Sperry Drive, Birnam Wood, Montecito- Extensively remodeled inside and out by current owners.- Great central location in Birnam Wood Golf Club.- Exquisite views of the Montecito foothills and Santa Ynez Mountains.- Home features 4 large bedroom suites.- Stunning entrance way into the home.- Detached 3 car garage
OFFERED AT $3,395,000
www.665JuanCrespi.com
www.CrockerSperry.com
www.MontecitoVillage.com ®
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL14 • The Voice of the Village •
The Santa Barbara Museum of Art (SBMA) and director Larry Feinberg scored a “home run” with its lat-est special exhibition – Picasso and Braque: The Cubist Experiment, 1910-1912.” The preview reception invita-tions went out to exhibition donors, Dead Artists Society members, Benefactors Circle, Director’s Patron members, Legacy Society, lenders and special guests.
Chief curator and exhibition cura-tor Eik Kahng had intended for us to join her for a walk-through of the new exhibition, but the response was so overwhelming that we couldn’t all fit into the gallery. Instead, she spoke in the auditorium with a PowerPoint presentation before adjourning upstairs to view the real thing.
Larry reminded us that, “This is one of the most important shows this museum has organized. The first ever on the West Coast of this period. Many museums through-out the United States, Madrid and London sent pieces for the exhibit.” The Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas partnered the exhibit and it was supported by an indem-nity from the Federal Council on the
Arts and Humanities, the Women’s Board, Willfong Family Trust and the Mildred and Charles Bloom Fund.
Local lady Mrs. Robert Eichholz’s oval Braque was the inspiration for the show. Joining the computer age, the show will have iPads next to the paintings loaded with a special app to further dissect them and to enhance your understanding.
Picasso and Braque were just 27 and 29 when they began the cubist experiment in 1910-1912. “Almost every evening, either I went to Braque’s studio or Braque came to mine. Each of us had to see what the other had done during the day,” as recalled by Francoise Gilot in con-versation with Picasso. Come and see for yourself. The exhibit will be at SBMA until January 8, 2012 with
Better Vision, Better Life.
Get LASIK with Superior Results.Our new Allegretto Wave® Eye-Q LASIK system is the fastest FDA-approved laser in the U.S., with superior safety and accuracy.
Patients are seeing results like never before.
See Dr. Winthrop, Santa Barbara’s Eye Doctor.Enjoy life with improved vision.
Call us for a free LASIK consult or visit us online for more information.
Wendy OdaniApparel Technical DesignerWendy Odani
“Thank you, Dr. Winthrop and your staff, for changing my life.”
805.730.9111 • www.seewinthrop.com www.facebook.com/Dr.Winthrop www.facebook.com/Dr.Winthrop www.facebook.com/Dr.Winthrop
Stuart R. Winthrop, M.D., F.A.C.S.805.730.9111 • www.seewinthrop.com
www.facebook.com/Dr.Winthrop www.facebook.com/Dr.Winthrop
Stuart R. Winthrop, M.D., F.A.C.S.
www.facebook.com/Dr.Winthrop
Find the beach ball and tell us what page it's on
Santa Barbara Life Beach Ball Contest
in this edition of the Montecito Journal - Visit SBLIFE.COMwith the correct beach ball page number and enter to win
Dinner for and a romantic cruise on the Double Dolphin!
Brought to you by: and
Congratulations to our September winner - Joanne Wood
22
Brostrom’si n m o n t e c i t o
539 San Ysidro Road • Montecito, CA • (805) 565-0039
Timeless♦
Elegant♦
Affordable
Ms Millner is the author of “The Magic Make Over, Tricks for Looking, Thinner, Younger, and More Confident – Instantly!” If you have an event that belongs in this column, you are invited to call Lynda at 969-6164.
Seen Around Town by Lynda Millner
Picasso and Braque
Starr Siegele and husband, SBMA Director Larry Feinberg, with Chief Curator Eik Kahng (center) at the Picasso and Braque opening reception
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 15Americans are not a perfect people, but we are called to a perfect mission – Andrew Jackson
many related programming events between now and then; additionally, there are docent tours with admis-sion. Call 963-4364 for more infor-mation.
Stand Up for Kids Auction
The United Boys & Girls Clubs of Santa Barbara County welcomed 250 supporters to the 29th annual “Stand Up for Kids Auction 2011” at Fess Parker’s DoubleTree Resort rotunda. To me, it’s always a special treat to have the social hour at the top around the circle overlooking the ocean and the mountains. Guests sipped cock-tails, ate savory bites and bid on silent auction items.
Dinner was served below with blue and white lanterns swinging over the tables. On stage, Master of Ceremonies Eloy Ortega reminded us that the United Boys & Girls Clubs of this county touch the lives of over 4,600 members at ten locations includ-
ing clubhouses, school campuses and Camp Whittier.
CEO Mike Rattray introduced the Lifetime Achievement Award winner Marshall Sherrill. “He does every-thing,” Mike quipped, “from fixing toilets to writing checks with three zeros. He is a hero.” His wife Barbara spoke saying, “I think it’s well-deserved but I’m prejudiced. Marshall is aware of the haves and have nots.”
The keynote speaker Angel Martinez, now CEO of Deckers Outdoor Corporation (think UGGs), told us how he came from Cuba as a kid and lived in the Bronx. “There were adults, like this audience, who cared that kids have a place to come home to.” He was in slacks, hard shoes and white shirt; all wrong for American school and the kids teased him. When one of his mentors found out he didn’t have any other clothes, they went shopping. He took him to a Boy’s Club because he cared and
The ONLY Master Certified Technician in Santa Barbara
Providing a breath of fresh air for ....
Land Rover Service & Repair .... Come in for a new and pleasant experience.
16 year expert in all vehicle systems for -
Range Rover. LR3. LR4. R.R. Sport & LR2.
MASTER TECHNICIAN Land Rover North America is Pleased to Acknowledge Your
Achievement of Land Rover Master in The Journey to Excellence
BOB J. JARRETT
The ONLY Master Certifi ed Technician in Santa Barbara
Providing a breath of fresh air for....
Land Rover Service & Repair....Come in for a new and pleasant experience.
16 year expert in all vehicle systems for:Range Rover. LR3. LR4. R.R. Sport & LR2
BOB JARRETT ENTERPRISES 307 E. Gutierrez Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101
(805) 965-1166 • sblandrover@cox.net
FREE IN HOME CONSULTATION
www.MontecitoKitchens.com Don Gragg 805.453.0518 License #951784
SEEn Page 164
United Boys and Girls Clubs CEO and co-chair of the gala Mike Rattray beside Barbara Smith-Sherrill and co-chair and CFO Judy Jennings with honoree Marshall Sherrill seated
Past women’s board president Gwen Baker and current president Mary Maxwell with board member Mary Garton (center)
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL16 • The Voice of the Village •
one of the boys from our club shared, “Going to the Boys and Girls Club inspired me to complete my educa-tion,” as it did for Angel.
Bill Hoffer and Bill Hoffer, father and son, kept the action going in the auction. There were barbeques, a Hawaiian vacation, a retreat for 30 at Camp Whittier and more. The audi-ence generously bid for kids going along with the theme of “Stand Up
for a Kid.”CFO Judy Jennings and Mike head-
ed up the event committee of Mariann Cooley, Jim Crook, Lad Handelman, Jim Lisi, Christie Macias, Lindsay Massarella, Steve Ortiz and Sal Rodriguez. Steve Rehage is Board President.
Yareli Sanchez, age 12, did the invi-tation cover art and each of us had a thank you note from one of the kids
SEEn (Continued from page 15)
Boys and Girls Clubs President of the board Steve Rehage (left) and wife, Cindy, with former executive director Sal Rodriguez at the rotunda
Co-founders of Lynda.com Bruce Heavin and Lynda Weinman with directors of facilities Jacqui Burge and CEO Eric Robison at the Boys and Girls Clubs event
DIVORCEThinking about divorce? Want a fair resolution without conflict?
Tired of the legal hassle? I can help. I can work with you or both of you to get it done quickly
and ensure your privacy. I am a retired Family Law Judge
pro-term and a Family law Attorney with over 30 years experience.
Mediation or RepresentationRICHARD DOLWIG
Attorney at Lawfor brochure call: 637-7993
AMERICANSELF STORAGEREAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS
8% + CASH FLOWPROFESSIONAL MANAGEMENT
LONG TERM GROWTH25+ YEARS EXPERIENCE
CALLDENNIS PETERSONMANAGING PARTNER
805.963.5945PETERSON@DAPENTINC.COM
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS8% + CASH FLOW, PAID MONTHLYPROFESSIONAL MANAGEMENT
LONG TERM GROWTH25+ YEARS EXPERIENCE
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 17Because power corrupts, society’s demands for moral authority and character increase as the importance of the position increases – John Adams
DESIGNER
PRODUCTION ARTIST
ACCOUNT MANAGER
ART DIRECTOR
CREATIVE DIRECTORDOCKET:
FILE:
DATE:
PROJECT:
CLIENT:
DETAILS:
SIZE:
DESIGNER:
UPC NUMBER:
BLEED:
PROOF OK WITH CORRECTIONS REVISED PROOF REQUIREDPROOF OK
*Please note that this printout is not an accurate representation of the final printed colour. Although we work within a zero tolerance system for errors, we have yet to achieve infallibility. We urge you to check this artwork carefully. Our liability is limited to the replacement of our product.
PLEASE CHECK FOR: COPY, POSITIONING, SIZE AND COLOUR* APPROVAL BY:
MAGENTA
YELLOW
PMS
PMS
BLACK
CYAN PMS
NUMBER OF COLOURS:
WHITE
OV_11_1395 MJ
OVIS
MJ
Sept 28, 2011
OV_11_1395_MJ_Ad.pdf
Wine and Wellness
4.858” x 6.195”
None
N/A
RT
XXX
XXX
XXX
1
905 Country Club Rd. Ojai, CA | 805.646.1111 | www.ojairesort.com
Wine, Women and WellnessRelax with a vacation full of wine and wellness
Enjoy a luxurious Shangri-la Fireplace room, one Santa Ynez Wine Tour, one $25 Mind/Body or Artist’s Cottage credit and a delicious breakfast each morning of your stay.
Please call our reservations department, your travel professional or visit our website for complete details regarding
‘Wine, Women and Wellness’ and other great promotions.
This offer is available until December 22nd, 2011 based on availability. Restrictions apply. Taxes, service charge and gratuities are extra.
featuring more art. To find out more about this organization or to volun-teer in any way, call 681-1315.
Wildlife Sunset CruiseBesides the Zoo there is another
“wild” group in town – the Santa Barbara Wildlife Care Network Inc (SBWCN). They held their sixth annual Wildlife Sunset cruise aboard the Channel Cat. It’s not hard to get supporters out for this “funraiser.” What’s more beautiful than seeing Santa Barbara from a boat while eat-ing food and sipping wine?
An added enticement was a raffle for two sculptures by Bud Bottoms. One was a ten-inch replica of the large version he designed for our sister city, Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. The other was a seal won by the executive director of the Natural History Museum Carl Hatterer. Tina Handerhan chaired the event. Co-presidents are Sue Burrows and Lessie Nixon Schontzler.
Some time ago, Lessie had invited Don and I to visit the Wildlife facili-ties and so began a fascinating tour. We started at the Fairview Drop-Off Center, 139 N. Fairview (at the end of the restaurant row). The Drop-Off Center gets about six people a day bringing in animals and birds they have rescued. We saw various small critters the volunteers and staff were caring for, feeding baby birds at all hours just like you do human babies. They will all be returned to the wild
if possible.We then drove to the end of Fairview
towards the mountains to see the brand new rehab center. There is a sea-bird pond, which had many pelicans being cared for at the time. The seabird building is filled with state-of-the-art equipment and the area is landscaped with drought-tolerant plants.
The SBWCN exists to support the present and future health of wild-life species. They provide quality rescue, treatment, rehabilitation and release services to injured, sick, oiled, orphaned and displaced wildlife. They share information with other researchers and agencies and they educate the public and more. Take a walk on the wild side and let them show you around.
Back on the boat, board member-director Mindy Denson was Mistress of Ceremonies for the lively raffle. Bud and his wife, Carole Ann, were there to see who won. The first name drawn was Don Seth: my husband. He’d never won anything in his life except a floral centerpiece and had bought a ticket as a gesture of goodwill to Wildlife. Now we have a lovely sculpture in our living room. Coincidentally, just last spring we took pictures in Puerto Vallarta of Bud’s statue at the waterfront.
All proceeds from the cruise and art sale will go to support the rescue and rehabilitation work by SBWCN. In case you need to call, the rescue hotline number is (805) 681-1080. •MJ
Emcee and director Mindy Denson with co-presidents Lessie Schontzler and Sue Burrows aboard the Channel Cat
Wildlife chair Tina Handerhan, director Marc Fegarsky, Jill Nida and Gary Simpson enjoying the cruise
*A chance to win a Jane Iredale Makeup gift basket (Value $300.00) for each jane iredale purchase of $50.00 or more
* 25% -35% discounts on selected jane iredale products* jane iredale donates 100% of profi ts from Roses and Lollipops to
Living Beyond Breast Cancer
Institute of AestheticsA Montecito Tradition Since 1979
Supporting Breast Cancer Awareness Month
Institute of Aesthetics
A Special October Sale
*Free Roses and Lollipops* lip duo
with each jane iredale purchase of $150.oo or more
1485 East Valley Road, Montecito, Ca 93108
805-969-7374
donates 100% of profi ts from Roses and Lollipops to Living Beyond Breast Cancer
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL18 • The Voice of the Village •
OPENING SOON & NOW ACCEPTINGHIGH-END DESIGNER CLOTHING & VINTAGE CHIC COUTURE
HANDBAGS . SHOES . ACCESSORIES
1273 COAST VILLAGE ROAD . 805.845.0055 . MATTIANDME.COMA Portion of Our Profit is Donated to Select Humanitarian Non-Profits of Your Choice
Photo: Santi Visalli
MEET MATTI AND ME!
the re-launch of his novel with a bus-tling bash at Tecolote, the lively liter-ary lair in the Upper Village, which attracted a host of friends, including noted Ronald Reagan biographer Lou Cannon; former NBC White House correspondent Sander Vanocur; Gene Lichtenstein, his former editor at Esquire; TV writer Bob Swanson; Elaine Kendall, former book reviewer for the Los Angeles Times; and Fred Sidon, former president of Opera Santa Barbara.
“It was so wonderful seeing every-body,” says Brock, who has written six other books, including Blue Dog, Green River, a novella published two years ago...
Lieff it to RobertInternational legal eagle Robert
Lieff, who moved to our rarefied enclave with his wife, Gretchen, ear-lier this year, is featured in the lat-est issue of the Columbia Law School Magazine.
Robert, who splits his time between Montecito and his homes in Rutherford and San Francisco, found-ed his own law firm nearly 40 years ago and the business, with offices in New York and Baghdad by the Bay, now has more than 75 lawyers and 200 employees, one of the largest plaintiff-side law firms in the world.
Previously, he had litigated as a partner for the legendary attorney Melvin Belli, known as the “King of Torts” and by his detractors as “Melvin Bellicose,” whose lengthy client list included Mae West, Lana Turner, Martha Mitchell and Sirhan Sirhan, the assassin of Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
I particularly remember his office, which resembled a street-level store display window, while I was a commentator on KGO-TV’s “Good Morning Bay Area.”
Robert, 74, who swims dozens of laps daily at the Coral Casino, went on to great success as a key player in some of the largest class action suits in history, including the Exxon Valdez oil disaster and Holocaust litigation.
In 1996, he spearheaded the first settlement with a tobacco company,
which signaled the end of four decades of success by tobacco companies in defeating health-related lawsuits.
Two years later, an unprecedented $206 billion settlement was announced between the tobacco industry and the states’ attorneys general.
But life has not always been so suc-cessful, as Robert amusingly recounts in the university magazine.
To finance his legal studies when he started out in the early ‘60s, he took on a job as night watchman at the law school, a position that lasted just one day!
“My fellow student assistant at the other end of the building fell asleep on our first night,” he remembers. “The next morning, we were both uncer-emoniously fired.”
Robert, who now sits on the Dean’s Council and has endowed two profes-sorships, is also a keen winemaker, with his Napa Valley vineyard, Lieff Wines, producing around 500 cases of cabernet sauvignon and sauvignon blanc annually.
He also has a 2,500-acre property, Alamo Creek Ranch, in Santa Maria.
Later this month Robert and Gretchen, a former TV reporter, will be hosting a reception at their Montecito manse for the former president of Ireland, Mary Robinson, who is giv-ing a lecture at UCSB’s Campbell Hall as part of the popular Arts & Lectures series.
But, in the meantime, Robert will be in Manhattan hosting the 7th annual Global Justice Forum at Columbia Law School.
Busy man...
The Hills are Still AliveSanta Barbara’s Spencer Pratt once
starred in the most popular TV reality show, MTV’s “The Hills.”
But, as I recounted in this illustrious organ in August, Pratt, 28, and his wife, Heidi Montag, are now leading a much more humble, cash-strapped lifestyle, living in his parents’ beach house watching movies and eating Mexican food.
But now, reportedly, he has enrolled in a political science degree course at the University of Southern California,
MiSCELLAnY (Continued from page 7)
Author Brock Brower with former Washington Post White House correspondent Lou Cannon Robert Lieff, international attorney extraordinaire
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 19Fear not; the people may be deluded for a moment, but cannot be corrupted – Andrew Jackson
THANK YOU SANTA BARBARAFOR VOTING THE GRANADA THEATRE BEST PLACE TO SEE A PERFORMANCE
STARRY NIGHTSTATE STREET BALLET PRESENTS
SUN OCT 9 2PM
THURS OCT 6 7:30PM
CAMA PRESENTS
SUN OCT 16 4PM
THE LOS ANGELES
GUSTAVO DUDAMEL, CONDUCTORPHILHARMONIC
NEW YORK CITY BALLET UCSB ARTS & LECTURES PRESENTS
WED OCT 19 8PM
TUES OCT 18 8PM MOVES
SANTA BARBARA SYMPHONY PRESENTS
SAT OCT 22 8PM
FANASTIQUEOPENING
Nir Kabaretti, ConductorLynn Harrell, Cello
John Adams: Tromba LontanaElgar: Cello ConcertoBerlioz: Symphonie Fantastique
SUN OCT 23 3PM
HUBBARD STREET UCSB ARTS & LECTURES PRESENTS
TUES OCT 25 8PM
DANCE CHICAGO
THE GRANADA THEATRE CONCERT SERIES PRESENTS
SAT OCT 29 8PM
DONMCLEAN
805 969-1995Luxury Vacation Rentals
Short or Long Term
Interior Design Services also available
Hire the best in the industry to manage your income property.
Please stop in and visit us at our NEW location. 15 years serving the
Santa Barbara community
Melissa M. Pierson, Owner1211 Coast Village Road #4 Montecito, CA 93108Vacations@coastalhideaways.com www.coastalhideaways.com
Coastal HideawaysInc.
where he was photographed on cam-pus the other day.
Montag, 25, on the other hand does have an agent, who is currently help-ing the surgically enhanced blonde – she famously underwent ten pro-cedures in a one-day plastic surgery splurge – negotiate “a couple of proj-ects in the works.” Stay tuned...
Winged Trespasser News goes NationalMy story on the Santa Barbara
Zoo’s uninvited guest, a juvenile bald eagle, that was feasting on some of the 30-acre attraction’s younger animals, particularly the wild cormorants, was soon picked up by the L.A. Times, with writer Steve Chawkins doing a lengthy piece on the avian capers.
In no time at all the news went national on the Associated Press wire and was finally picked up, nearly two weeks later, by a local daily.
But, of course, as usual, you read it here first...
Back to the BayouNearly 300 guests turned out for
the Santa Barbara Rescue Mission’s 10th annual “Back to the Bayou” cow-boy-themed benefit at Rancho Dos Pueblos, a 3,000-acre ranch on the Gaviota Coast.
The bash raised more than $300,000 for the mission, which expects to serve around 160,000 meals by year’s end.
“These are really tough times, but there is now a greater commitment to our cause because supporters believe in the work we’re doing,” says Rebecca Wilson, director of com-munications. “Our annual budget is around $2.5 million, but it is getting more difficult to meet that budget.”
The ever-popular event, co-chaired by Susan Hughes and Suzi Ryan, and emceed by Gerd Jordano, hon-ored Santa Barbara County Sheriff
Bill Brown, who was re-elected to a second term last year. His 34-year law enforcement career spans from California to Idaho.
Among those enjoying the cowboy capers were Leni Fe Bland, SB district attorney Joyce Dudley, former mayor Hal Conklin, Bob and Patty Bryant, Dale Weber, Craig Case, Jerry Brown, and Jim and Barbara Dixon...
Celebrating the TowbesIt was all tutu much when State
Street Ballet honored philanthropic twosome Mike and Anne Towbes, at a gala at the Coral Casino.
The evening could not have been more perfect as 135 tony guests con-verged on the Pacifica Ballroom to cel-ebrate, as the program put it, “Santa Barbara’s Treasures.”
MiSCELLAnY Page 394
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL20 • The Voice of the Village •
“We gave them another acre in order to accomplish a fifty-foot buffer all around,” Palmer Jackson said. Jim Jackson also stated he was concerned with the height of the tower, and said he hoped it would be integrated into the building so it would be less intrusive.
The Land Use Committee gave the architects several suggestions, includ-ing maintaining a 50-ft buffer all around, considering using a single driveway instead of two, changing roof lines, lowering door heights, reducing the amount of sound walls around the property, and possibly reconfiguring the placement of the buildings. The architects said they would take the suggestions into con-sideration and will come back to the committee with modified plans.
Proposed East Mountain Drive Home
Also at the meeting, the committee discussed a proposed project at the top of San Ysidro Road at East Mountain Drive. The project, which includes a 7,000-sq-ft home, was at the Montecito Board of Architectural Review for pre-liminary approval last month. The project will require 6,500 cubic yards of grading and the construction of a 1,100-ft driveway to access the property. The driveway would have two bridges across a drainage and would require the removal of several oak trees. “It is not compliant with Montecito Community Plan [MCP] policies,” said MA executive director Victoria Greene.
Attorney Fred Clough, speaking on
Treasure HouseThe Rack
Donate clothing and home furnishing to The Rack and Treasure House,
the Music Academy of the West’s campus shops.
Items must be of good quality and in good condition. Their resale benefi ts the Music Academy’s full-scholarship program.
Not using it?Give it to a good cause.
SHOP HOURS: Tue – Sat, 12 – 3 pm
RACK: 969.0190 (drop off clothing during regular business hours)
TREASURE HOUSE: 969.1744 (donations by appointment only)
Donations especially appreciated
through October 29.
behalf of neighbor Diane Baskin and others, said the property is an oak woodland, and building on it would be in conflict with the MCP. Because the property is not in the Resource Management Zone, it is not required to be seen by Montecito Planning Commission, and is therefore in the range of control of Planning and Development staff. MBAR was not prepared to give preliminary approv-al of the plans due to the land use issues. “MBAR’s purview is narrowly focused on architecture and design,” said MBAR member Bill Palladini, who was sitting in the audience. “In this case it is the responsibility of county staff to ensure compliance with the Montecito Community Plan,” he said.
The Land Use Committee voted unanimously to send a letter to Planning & Development and MBAR stating that they find the project incompatible with the Montecito Community Plan and that it is grounds for MBAR to deny prelimi-nary approval.
MBAR, which meets every third Monday, will see the project once again next week, October 10.
Beautification Committee
Save the date! Saturday, November 5 is Montecito Association’s 26th annual Beautification Day, and Mindy Denson and her commit-
tee are in full swing planning the popular event. This year’s committee includes Elisa Atwill, Darlene Bierig, Helen Buckley, Deirdre Hanssen, LeAnn Madden, Dana and Andrea Newquist, Ann McWilliams, Birgit Gutscher, Jo and Willard Thompson, Jean von Wittenburg, and John and Christie Venable.
Upon arrival at the Village Green, volunteers will be treated to a con-tinental breakfast provided by Montecito Country Club, after which they will pick up their tee shirts and trash collector kits and head out to
clean various areas of Montecito. Pickup routes include streets, trails, roads, onramps, cul-de-sacs, byways, bridges and beaches.
At 11 am, volunteers will reconvene at the Village Green for the awards pre-sentation; Montecito homeowners will be honored with awards in sustain-able landscape, charming cottage and entryway. This year’s Citizen of the Year award will go to Dick Thielscher, former Montecito Association board member and Montecito Planning commissioner who currently sits on the MA Land Use Committee.
This year’s theme centers around trees, as Denson and Newquist are on a quest to replace the dead tree on the corner of San Ysidro Road and North Jameson Lane in time for the holidays.
Lunch will consist of Montecito firefighters’ Five Alarm Chili, hot dogs, salad and homemade choco-late chip cookies made by the Beautification Committee. Bluegrass band Glendessary Jam will be back to provide the background melodies.
During and after lunch, guests can peruse informational tables host-ed by local organizations including the Maritime Museum, Lotusland, Casa del Herrero, Music Academy of the West, DAWG, Santa Barbara Channels, Braille Institute, Montecito Fire Protection District, Water and Sanitation, Montecito Association, Montecito Trails, MERRAG, Wildlife Care Network, Montecito Library, and many others.
Members of the Beautification Committee: Willard and Jo Thompson, Helen Buckley, Jean von Wittenburg, Elisa Atwill and chair Mindy Denson
Architect Susette Naylor’s rendition of Fire Station 3, seen from East Valley Road. The walls along the building were a source of contention with the Montecito Association Land Use Committee, which suggested varying the heights of the walls and using additional landscape screening.
ViLLAGE BEAT (Continued from page 12)
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 21Fear is the foundation of most governments – John Adams
Prizes will be given out to local school kids who are busy drawing and painting their idea of beauty in their art classes. In the next few weeks, the “Beautification artwork” will be dis-played around town.
Sponsorship opportunities are still available. Call the Montecito Association office at 969-2026 for more information. Beautification Day is scheduled for November 5, beginning at 9 am, in the Upper Village Green, 1470 East Valley Road.
San Ysidro Path Update
Last week (Coming & Going, #17/39) we ran a picture of a small portion of the ongoing construction on the federally-financed Safe Routes to School pathway on San Ysidro Road, submitted to us by Craig Boehr, a La Vereda Lane resident who has opposed the pathway project since its inception. The picture Boehr sub-mitted was of one of the ADA ramps which are required as part of the path, explained Matt Dobberteen of County Public Works.
“The photo that was taken is in isolation of the rest of the project,” Dobberteen said. “The ramp is con-structed to accommodate grade dif-ferences between the pathway and the adjacent roadway.” Dobberteen reports the ramps, which are concrete, will be stained to match the surround-ing dirt and the decomposed granite, of which the path will be made. “Until
it’s complete, it is going to look like a project that is under construction,” he said. “When it is done, it will be a pathway that complements the semi-rural character of Montecito.”
Dobberteen estimates the project is about 25% finished, and says weather permitting, it should be about 6 to 8 more weeks before completion.
Work crews are in the area from 7 am to 4 pm Monday through Friday, with flagmen directing traffic when necessary.
Hot Springs Campaign Latest
The Campaign to Save Hot Springs Canyon, a limited-time effort by the Land Trust for Santa Barbara County to purchase and preserve Santa Barbara’s last undeveloped canyon, has received a major boost from local philanthropists Scott and Ella Brittingham through a $100,000 pledge from the Brittingham Family Foundation.
The Land Trust is one step closer to its $8.7 million goal, but still needs to raise about $1.75 million by the December deadline.
“I am proud to join the visionary local leaders who have raised almost seven million toward preserving this piece of our heritage, and hope others will be inspired to join Ella and me, in turn,” Scott Brittingham told cam-paign coordinator Leslie Turnbull.
A concrete ramp as part of the Safe Routes to School path on San Ysidro Road (photo by Craig Boehr)
The pathway on San Ysidro Road is about 25% complete; it is made from decomposed granite with concrete ADA ramps
ViLLAGE BEAT Page 284
compiled by Flora Kontilis from information supplied by Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Department, Carpinteria Division
SHERIFF’S BLOTTER
Sign Mystery
Santa Barbara County Sheriff deputies are investigating the vandalism of several street signs in Montecito. The department received a report from a local man stating that several street signs were either destroyed or knocked
down in the area of North Jameson Lane near Ortega Hill Road and Sheffield Drive. According to the man, local residents were posting makeshift signs. Deputies are investigating the matter further.
Theft from Residence on Canon ViewFriday, 30 September, 2:50 pm – Deputy Bordon was dispatched to a residence
on Canon View Road on reports of a residential burglary. The resident of the property told Bordon that when he arrived home that evening the back sliding glass door was wide open. The resident also stated an unknown suspect went into the master bedroom and took several pieces of jewelry. He could not con-firm with Bordon if he locked the back door or not. At this time there is not a confirmed list of missing items. A report was taken.
Classroom Robbed on San Ysidro RoadMonday, 3 October, 7:40 am – Deputy Smith was dispatched to a school on San
Ysidro Road on reports of a burglary. Upon arriving at the scene, Smith con-tacted the dean of the school; he told Smith that a teacher informed him that her classroom was robbed over the weekend. The teacher arrived at her classroom at 7:30 am that morning to find the window open and screen cut. The teacher reports an LCD TV and Mac computer missing from the classroom. The teacher also admits she left the window slightly open before leaving on Friday. Smith and the school’s dean are investigating a security tape with views of the robbed classroom. A report was taken. •MJ
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL22 • The Voice of the Village •
H o n o r i n gM I C H A E L D O U G L A S
T h u r s d a y , O c t o b e r 1 36 : 0 0 p m - C o c k t a i l R e c e p t i o n7 : 3 0 p m - D i n n e r a n d T r i b u t e
C o r a l C a s i n o - F o u r S e a s o n s B i l t m o r eB l a c k T i e A f f a i r
S A N T A B A R B A R A I N T E R N A T I O N A L F I L M F E S T I V A LP R E S E N T S
T A B L E S & T I C K E T S O N S A L E N O W !C A L L 8 0 5 . 9 6 3 . 0 0 2 3 O R V I S I T W W W . S B I F F . O R G
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 23Heaven will be no heaven to me if I do not meet my wife there – Andrew Jackson
Luxury Real Estate Specialist www.DistinctiveRealEstateOnline.com
License # 01327524
Luxury Real Estate Specialist www.DistinctiveRealEstateOnline.com
License # 01327524
Luxury Real Estate Specialist www.DistinctiveRealEstateOnline.com
License # 01327524
Luxury Real Estate Specialist www.DistinctiveRealEstateOnline.com
License # 01327524
453.3371
Antiques & Vintage Show and Sale
To Benefit
October 14, 15 & 16, 2011Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-6 p.m. • Sunday 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
80 Quality Antiques, Vintage and Decorative Arts Dealers
At the Earl Warren Showgrounds (Hwy 101 at Las Positas) in Santa Barbara, CA (Free Parking!)
$6 Adults ($5 Adults, 1 or more, with this ad)$5 Senior (62+) / Child (Under 12 Free)
(One time purchase applies to all 3 days)
Montano’s Glass RepairCrystal & China Repair
Antique Rug ConnectionSales, Repair, Cleaning of Orientals
Future Show: January 27, 28 & 29, 2012 April Thede, Show Manager 805-898-9715
Visit www.calmantiqueshows.com for more informationJoin us on facebook: calmshow
On Finance by Tim Hatton
As Good As Gold
In late February 2009, during the height of the financial crisis, I had a call with a client during which
we decided to include precious metals in his portfolio. The concern was the government’s easy money policy and the need to hedge against inflation. As a result of that call, I purchased 1800 shares of GLD, an exchange-traded fund (ETF) designed to track the performance of gold. That gold investment was my first as an investment advisor, and it was also my client’s first. You probably know that gold has performed extremely well since then, and over that period, GLD tracked the price of gold closely, rising nearly 80%.
About two years later, in consulta-tion with this client, we decided to make additional investments in gold and silver in order to maintain an appropriate precious metals alloca-tion. This time, however, we pur-chased bullion coins and took physi-cal possession. Our further research into GLD had exposed issues sug-gesting that the ETF might not track the price of gold as closely as desired.
As if to emphasize our own research, recently this client read an article suggesting that GLD might not deliver on its stated objective of tracking the price of gold “if and when that exposure is most needed.” As a result, the client asked if we should sell the GLD, pay the tax of 28% on the gain, and invest the pro-ceeds in physical gold. In a moment, I will share our recommendation. But if you want to hedge your portfo-lio against excessive money printing, should you invest in “paper” gold or take physical possession?
First, consider one “paper” gold alternative besides an ETF, i.e., pur-chasing shares in gold mining com-panies. While these companies could have tremendous value, their market
values don’t track the price of gold well, and hence I wouldn’t recom-mend that solution. A mining stock is a more complicated bet than that.
GLD on the other hand is a physi-cally backed ETF and hence is a purer bet: when you invest $50,000, the sponsor promises to buy $50,000 worth of physical gold and store it in a vault. However, this type of arrangement creates “counter party
risk,” and this is where the trouble begins. Here are a few items directly from the prospectus that give me cause for concern:
Redemption orders are subject to post-ponement, suspension or rejection by the Trustee under certain circumstances.
The Trust’s gold may be subject to loss, damage, theft or restriction on access.
Gold bars allocated to the Trust in connection with the creation of a Basket may not meet the London Good Delivery Standards and, if a Basket is issued against such gold, the Trust may suffer a loss.
Because neither the Trustee nor the Custodian oversees or monitors the activities of sub-custodians who may temporarily hold the Trust’s gold bars until transported to the Custodian’s London vault, failure by the sub-custodians to exercise due care in the safekeeping of the Trust’s gold bars could result in a loss to the Trust.
The follow-up language provides no comfort; on the contrary, it effec-tively puts the shareholder on notice that he is the primary risk retainer. But the biggest cause for concern is due to the ability to short shares, which is not found in the prospec-tus. When you purchase shares in GLD those shares represent a frac-tional and undivided interest in the trust, which is your share of physical gold. When shares are shorted, an additional fractional and undivided interest is created but no additional gold is purchased. Suddenly, some-one else, or perhaps several other parties, could have a claim on your share of gold.
I do view all of these negative pos-sibilities as remote and it is hard to compete with the liquidity of GLD in financial markets that are perform-
ing routinely. However, the reason to own gold is to have an asset that will perform well in extremely unfa-vorable economic times. There is no doubt in my mind that physical pos-session is the preferred way to hold gold, simply because fewer things outside your control can go wrong. A well-secured home safe or safe deposit box should handle your stor-age issue.
By the way, I’ve advised my client to replace GLD with physical gold and silver. We will attempt to make this transition over time, mitigating capital gains taxes by offsetting with capital losses. •MJ
Tim Hatton is the Owner and President of Hatton Consulting, Inc, a registered investment advisory firm. He is the author of, The New Fiduciary Standard, which outlines the prudent investment process individuals and trustees should follow in
order to meet the high standard of a fiduciary. He holds the Certified Financial Planner and Accredited Investment Fiduciary designations. He lives in Montecito with his wife Jen
and two children, Heidi and Hudson.
There is no doubt in my mind that physical possession is the preferred way to hold gold, simply because fewer
things outside your control can go wrong
J ARROTT & CO.R E A L E S T A T E I N V E S T M E N T S
SPECIALIZING IN1031 TAX-DEFERRED
EXCHANGESAND
TRIPLE NET LEASED
INVESTMENT PROPERTIESWITH NATIONAL TENANTS
CALL
Len Jarrott, MBA, CCIM805-569-5999
http://www.jarrott.com
MANAGEMENT FREE
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL24 • The Voice of the Village •
On July 11, the Friendship Center opened a new site in Goleta – making it more
convenient for families that live on the north end of Santa Barbara. The Friendship Center is the south coast’s only non-profit fully licensed adult daycare program, providing services to those with dementia and developmental disabilities. The program provides transportation, meals, activities, socialization, supervision, and compassionate care. On August 26, Friendship Center held its second Annual “Wine Down.” Proceeds from the event support the expansion of Friendship Center’s services including its new site at 820 N Fairview Ave.
At the “Wine Down” event, Rona Barrett was the featured guest speak-er. She spoke poignantly about her father’s struggle with Alzheimer’s and how it inspired her to make it her life’s mission to improve the quality of life for seniors in need and their families. Ms Barrett said that to meet those needs we should have at least 12,000 adult day care centers in the U.S. but that in actual-ity we only have 4,400. Rona praised the Friendship Center for opening its new center in Goleta and talked about the Rona Barrett Foundation, which is focused on the develop-ment of its own senior center, called “The Golden Inn.” She hopes it will serve as a replicable format, serving low-income seniors in communities throughout the United States. It is an innovative community-center model, providing combined housing that will include adult day care and short term caregiver respite.
Given the choice, most seniors, we suspect, would prefer to remain in their own homes rather than move to an assisted living facility. Adult day care centers such as the Friendship Center can make it possible for those
with dementia to continue to live in their own homes – or with their adult children. It can be an afford-able adjunct to home health care and allow spouses or children to get some respite or go to work.
At the event, I spoke to a former MUS teacher who I’ve known for years. Unbeknownst to me, her hus-band suffered from Alzheimer’s and she used to drop him off at the Friendship Center while she taught school. After speaking to her, I began to realize how fortunate our commu-nity is to have the Friendship Center on Eucalyptus Lane and now the new Goleta facility, just north of Cathedral Oaks Road.
Grants from the Santa Barbara Foundation, the Archstone Foundation, local businesses, and individuals helped to fund the new facility. Like the center in Montecito, the new facility will offer a wide range of programs and activities including exercise, gardening, music, art, and discussion groups. There are also unique programs designed for those with early memory loss: The Adventuresome Aging Program takes participants on outings through-out the Santa Barbara area and the Connections Program meets weekly to provide techniques and practical tips to help clients improve their ability to remember. Clients can attend The Friendship Center from one to five days a week and fees are established on a sliding scale based on each par-ticipant’s financial situation. •MJ
World-Class Whale Watching Year Round on the All-New
CONDOR EXPRESS
AVAILABLE FOR: Dinner & Party Cruises Island Excursions Private Charters Whale Watching Weddings
SEA LANDING301 W. Cabrillo Boulevard, Santa Barbara, Ca 93101
805-882-0088 or toll-free 1-888-77WHALE condor99@silcom,com • www.condorcruises.com
75 Foot Quad Jet, Hydrofoil Assisted Catamaran designed to provide a stable and comfortable ride at cruising speeds of 30+ knots USCG certified for up to 149 passengers Large walk-around and upper sun-decks Full-service bar and galley Luxuriously teak paneled cabin with booth
seating for 68 people Professional experienced crew
VOTED Best of Santa Barbara YEAR AFTER
YEAR
Santa Barbara’s ONLY year-round whale watching tours
The patio at the new Friendship Center in Goleta features a home-like atmosphere for adult day care
Montecito’s Friendship Center Expands
SENIORITYby Patti Teel
Patti Teel is the com-munity representative for Senior Helpers, providers of care and comfort at a moment’s notice. She is also host of the Senior Helpers online video show. www.santabar baraseniors.com. E-mail: patti@pattiteel.com.
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 25
Books for Kindles are here, as promised. Go to the Santa Barbara Public Library website (sbplibrary.org) and click on ‘downloadable eBooks’ or stop in at your local branch and we will show you how. It is fast, easy, and no charge to you!
Our annual book sale is next month on November 5. For the last two years, the sale has revolved around all things to do with food. This year we will include plant and garden books as well. If you have cooking, kitchen or garden books, you are ready to part with, please consider donating them to the Friends of the Montecito Library this month. All proceeds of the book and bake sale go toward purchasing new titles for the Montecito Library.
Speaking of new titles, did you know we have DVDs at the branch? We have documentaries, a small for-eign film collection, feature films, television series, children’s films and a Spanish Language telenovela for learning Spanish. DVDs tend to be a popular part of our collection and we add new titles all the time. They are available on a one-week check-out.
Another part of our collection we are especially pleased to highlight is books about the community of Montecito and surrounding areas. We have a wonderful set of books of Montecito and Santa Barbara history.
David Myrick wrote the definitive works, volumes 1 and 2, with several copies available for checkout. Filled with photographs taken as far back as the 1890s, the books are a trea-sure trove of historical information. Although Mr. Myrick is no longer with us, his good work lives on. If you haven’t seen his books, they are worth a look.
We have at least one special pro-gram for children each month. They are sponsored by our Friends of the Montecito Library; this month we are having a puppet show on Friday afternoon, October 21, at 4 pm. The show is called Monster Mash Up and is specifically for elementary- and preschool-aged children. We invite the children to wear costumes to the event and we will have a small costume parade through the library before the show. On Monday, October 24 at 10:30 am, we are hav-ing a couple of special guests for our story time. Author Karen Lee Stevens and the star of her book, Sandy, her Labrador Retriever, will be reading Animals Have Feelings, Too! This is a brand new book intend-ed to help children understand how animals share many of the same feel-ings that people do, in an A-Z for-mat, from “A is for Affection” to “Z is for Zonked.” The program helps children create a safe and satisfying relationship with animals. All ages are welcome.
The Santa Barbara Public Library System, of which the Montecito Library is a part, has a mission state-ment, guiding what we do, what we add to the collection and how we interact with our patrons. It reads: “The freedom to know is the founda-tion of our democracy. The mission of the Santa Barbara Public Library System is to be an information cen-ter for the communities it serves in order to preserve and encourage free expression of ideas essential to an informed citizenry.” We do our best to help you locate information, access that information and discern the credibility of the information you want. We also encourage input from our patrons on subjects and titles you would like to see in the library. As Augustine Birrell said, “Libraries are not made; they grow”. Happy reading, everybody. •MJ
Genius is sorrow’s child – John Adams
Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
Fri, Oct 7 / 8 PM / UcSB caMPBell Hall
“Troy possesses the rarest combination of talent, technical
capability and down-home soul. I’m his biggest fan.”
– Wynton Marsalis
Cambodia’s Khmer Arts Ensemble
tHU, Oct 6 / 8 PM / UcSB caMPBell Hall
“A gorgeous spectacle... Shapiro’s journey unfolds like a moving painting.
Exquisite.” The New York Times
Bill Gates’ “favorite teacher” provides free, world-class education to anyone, anywhere.
Salman KhanReinventing Our Education FutureMOn, Oct 10 / 8 PM UcSB caMPBell Hall
Daniel YerginThe Quest – Energy, Security, and
the Remaking of the Modern WorldWed, Oct 12 / 8 PM / UcSB caMPBell Hall
America’s leading energy expert explores the future of our economy and our way of life.
Riders in the Sky in Round Up at the Kids Corral
SUn, Oct 9 / 3 PM / UcSB caMPBell Hall
The whole family will enjoy hits from their Grammy-winning musical albums for
children, Woody’s Round Up (Toy Story 2) and Monsters Inc. – Scream Factory Favorites.
Mary OliverSat, Oct 15 / 8 PM UcSB caMPBell Hall
The beloved poet presents an evening of lyrical connections to the natural world.
WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE
FREE
Poetry Reading
(805) 893-3535 www.artsandlectures.UcSB.edu
TONIGHT!
TOMORROW!
suNday!
Kindles Have Arrived
Library Corner by Jody Thomas
Jody Thomas is the Montecito Branch Library Supervisor
Library patron Isabella Ferraro learns that animals have feelings too
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL26 • The Voice of the Village •
their homes; yet often have to do so while alone, behind closed doors and out of the public eye leaving them vulnerable to unlawful employment practices and abuses. On a personal note, my own stepmother has been a domestic worker locally.
The committee analysis on bills usu-ally provides great insight and fre-quently highlights opportunities for useful amendments. These analyses are documents that I frequently con-sult while researching how I will vote on a bill.
I’d like to thank Mr. Iannelli for pro-viding me with this excellent oppor-tunity to further share with the con-stituents of the Central Coast how I go about doing my job representing you all in the State Assembly. It remains an honor and a privilege to be able to serve the people of the communities where I grew up.
Das WilliamsAssemblymember 35th District(Editor’s note: Ralph may or may not
have misinterpreted AB889, but he is surely correct in assessing its long-term impact. Passage of the bill is a big foot in the domestic door and before long babysit-ters will be included. It’s simply a matter of time. – TLB)
A new Stench ArisesYour recent reporting of the inter-
view with Dr. Andreea Serban was the best I’ve encountered recently (“A College President Steps Down” MJ # 17/37). My only qualification with local government was working for more than thirty years on LaSalle Street in Chicago (not for the govern-ment), across from City Hall. Every so often a stench appeared in the air, and now the stench has surfaced again in Santa Barbara. Apparently some people have had a vested interest, using the Adult Education taxpayer money for several years, for personal gain. When Dr. Serban interfered, the usual contact for these people was to go the political hack route, scream-
ing to [former Santa Barbara Mayor] Marty Blum. It will be interesting to find a qualified person to replace Dr. Serban, in light of her treatment. And just add up the total cost to the tax-payers! By the way, what’s the next shenanigan? Could it be the local subsidized housing market?
Earl StanfieldMontecito(Editor’s note: You probably have that
right. We are baffled at the enormous efforts put forth to keep from the public any information as to who gets those cov-eted below-market taxpayer-subsidized units. When and if that information is ever allowed to surface, the smell will likely permeate the entire Central Coast. – J.B.)
A BoomsDay ProphecyThe U.S. Presidential election hap-
pens November 6, 2012. The Ancient Mayan calendar
predicts the end of the world on December 21, 2012.
Is there a connection and do we know what’s good for us?
If, “you-know-who” is beaten in a landslide, how humiliating would that be to a public servant who could be battling clinical depression or is a closet-megalomaniac? (especially if the winner is some ungrateful gun-woman from Alaska).
Could an overwhelming vote against an unnamed but “powerful-and-benevolent” incumbent just be asking for trouble?
Our Dear Leader never, repeat, never said “… if you love me, you’ve got to help me pass this [jobs] bill …” This out-of-context quote was merely a teleprompter malfunction caused by George Bush and micro-phone hackers within the T-shirt party.
This is not a threat or “blackmail,” but don’t forget that “a certain-indi-vidual” has command of the “launch” button and could be very upset if not
LETTERS (Continued from page 9)“appreciated” with a reassuring and jubilant re-election. Otherwise we might want to consider our “suicide-pact” options.
The Mayans are coming and the only person who can save us (USA) and the entire world from mushroom clouds is a wise and humble guy with golf clubs. The international com-munity is praying that we choose “properly” on November 6, 2012, so if you love Him and want your kids to reach adulthood, you’ll vote for him… or else.
Signed with tolerance and mutual cooperation,
Dale LowdermilkMeteorite Collector (Waiting For
The Big One!)Montecito
Worst Governors EverBob Hazard (“Some What Ifs For
Governor Jerry Brown,” Editorial MJ # 17/35)) wants for California a far-right GOP governor like Scott Walker, Rick Perry or Rick Scott, all Republicans governors who passed a radical right-wing agenda and dev-astating budget cuts that have put the whole country on the verge of a double-dip recession.
Scott Walker’s first act as Governor was to sign into law a huge tax break to the wealthiest 2% of wage earners and largest Corporations in Wisconsin. The cost to Wisconsin taxpayers: over $100 million, at a time when Walker claimed false-ly that “Wisconsin is broke.” The classic “trick-down” rationale was used that corporate wealthy needed those tax breaks to create “good pay-ing jobs” to get the economy going, and “Open Wisconsin for Business.” Walker’s entire message was an unmitigated deception. Wisconsin was not broke; Walker’s own poli-cies have expanded the state’s deficit for now and the future. The worst deception is promoting tax breaks rewarding his political allies, and the lie that they will help Wisconsin’s middle class. The simple truth is,
5885 Carpinteria Ave.Carpinteria, CA566-99485885 Carpinteria Ave.
Carpinteria, CA566-9948
5885 Carpinteria Ave.Carpinteria, CA566-9948
that tax cuts have never, and will never create jobs - well documented fact “Bush tax cuts failed to deliver jobs and Income Growth between 2001-2010.”
Over the last two decades, in fact, top-tier tax rates have dropped to the lowest they have been pre-Great Depression. The result is a increasing gap in wage equality - as great as pre-Great Depression levels.
The results of Walker’s “job cre-ating” agenda has been clear. Wisconsin’s unemployment rate and numbers are growing faster than the national average. In fact, Scott Walker’s policies have halted a jobs recovery in Wisconsin, which began slowly in mid 2010.
Scott Walker’s job policies are fall-ing. They are allowing Corporations in Wisconsin to achieve record prof-its, benefiting a select few (who happen to be his largest support-ers), while being detrimental to the majority of Wisconsinites. It is a fact that, strong collective bargain-ing agreements are crucial to wage equality and economic growth, yet Scott Walker has taken teachers and public employees away from the table. As Walker’s policies continue to lose family supporting jobs. He has never, and will never stands with labor. Walker stands with the wealthy and Big Corporations - they will benefits from his policies, not Wisconsin workers.
Texas Governor Rick Perry has a $27 billion shortfall. In order to bal-ance the books, Governor Perry wants to slash education By $10 billion. And he wants to fire 100,000 teachers. Everything is bigger in Texas. The football stadiums, the waistlines, the mosquitoes, the tornadoes, the num-ber of teenage pregnancies, the num-ber of high school dropouts...
Under Perry, Texas leads the nation in abstinence-only educa-tion. And, unsurprising, Texas has one the nation’s highest teen preg-nancy rates. In other Perry-related news he recently announced that states should have the option to opt out of Social Security. I wish that all of these government-hating conservatives would opt out using our roads and our police and our fire department. It would be nice if Perry opted out of using the govern-ment to watch over his border with Mexico.
And since Perry has talked of seced-ing from the Union, it would be nice if Texas just opted out of the United States.
Governor Rick Scott of Florida, he was once the CEO of Columbia-HCA a massive Hospital chain. The federal government fined Columbia-HCA for Medical and Medicare fraud. That fine, a jaw-dropping 1.7 billion dollars, is the largest in American
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 27I have always been afraid of banks – Andrew Jackson
TICKETS ON SALE NOWOctober 29 - 30, 2011
2nd Annual Vino d'Elegance Wine Festival
Benefiting
BUY T ICKETS at : www.st ratusmotorsports .com
happening concurrently with the 25th Santa Barbara Concours d'Elegance
Vino d’Elegance
Wine Festival
Hosted at the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club 3300 Via Real
Wine Tastings from some of the World's
Finest Wines
Book Signings by
“Sideways" & "Vertical"
author Rex Pickett
Food Demonstrations byCelebrity Chef, Scott LeibfriedWorldwide Classics & d’Elegance
Car Shows
Fresh-rolled cigars • Gourmet Cheeses • Local Olive Oils • Organic Tequila
Presented by:
Display and Awards Ceremony for the Mille Miglia North America Tribute
kids can come in costume all weekend
®
History.But instead going to jail, Rick Scott
become the governor of Florida. A guy scams the government and now is an elected official of the govern-ment. And in the first year since has been in office he’s doing his best to destroy the fourth largest state.
He rejected $2.4 billion in stimulus money to build a high-speed rail line from Tampa to Orlando.
He wants to slash $4 billion in spending while cutting taxes for mil-lionaires.
He tried to use funds to build golf courses in state parks while cutting education by 10 percent and corpo-rate taxes by 5 percent.
He just lopped of $2,300 a year in teacher salary to give massive tax cuts to big Corporations and the wealthy.
He proposed eliminating state support for two HBCUs. He’s shut-ting down a state agency that assists minority businesses.
Rick Scott is a bigger clown than the clown from it. This Fire stater where his economic policies will have resi-dents screaming “Redrum!” Sorry Florida, but it looks like you guys are in for a whole lot of Misery.
Bob Hazard there are a lot of truly terrible executives in various states-houses these days, but Scott Walker, Rick Perry and Rick Scott are vie for the Title of America’s Worst Governor Ever - to nobody’s surprise, they’re all Republicans!
Sincerely,Leoncio MartinsMontecito(Editor’s note: We didn’t know whether
to laugh or cry at your passionate mis-sive, but, it is addressed to us and was written in response to an editorial, so we have duly printed it – TLB)
A Lengthy ProposalHere’s all you need to know
about government bureaucracy: the Pythagorean theorem is 24 words long; the Lord’s Prayer consists of 66 words; Archimedes’ Principle is 67 words; the Ten Commandments takes all of 179 words; Lincoln penned 286 words for his Gettysburg Address; the Declaration of Independence is 1,300 words long and the U.S. Constitution, includ-ing all 27 Amendments, is written in 7,818 words. The U.S. Government Regulations on the sale of cabbage: 26,911 words.
Sort of puts things into proper per-spective, doesn’t it?
A Devoted ReaderMontecito(who wishes to remain anony-
mous)(Editor’s note: We have not examined
each item you reference, so don’t know for sure whether your word count is accu-rate, but we get your drift – TLB) •MJ
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL28 • The Voice of the Village •
You’ll want to attend
The 462-acre property encompasses all of Hot Springs Canyon, includ-ing Montecito Peak and the heart of the property, the historic Montecito Hot Springs. The Land Trust, led by executive director Michael Feeney, has entered into an option to buy the property for $8.7 million, with the intention to transfer ownership to Los Padres National Forest so that the property, which is zoned to allow six residential sites and possibly a day spa, will go undeveloped. The prop-erty is owned by Mark McCaslin and his siblings, whose father bought the property in 1962.
Meet & Greet in Montecito
Senior Planning Services, Santa Barbara’s first geriatric care managed home care agency, invites the public to stop by a Meet & Greet event cel-ebrating the company’s new office in Montecito’s Upper Village. Senior Planning Services, which was estab-lished in 1989, is also introducing Coastal Home Care, a new name for the agency’s in-home caregiving ser-vices division.
Caregiving services have been offered through Senior Planning Services since 1995; Coastal Home Care has been developed to offer more affordable, specially screened
and trained caregivers, with a new logo and satellite office. The division matches caregivers with clients from 2 to 24 hours a day. Services include transportation, medication reminders, personal care assistance, meal prepa-ration and grocery shopping, home-making and housekeeping, engage-ment and enrichment activities, and around the clock management sup-port.
Suzanne McNeely, Senior Planning Services President and Founder, will speak to guests at the event. Elder care managers and consultants will also be on hand to answer questions and give complimentary consultations. Participants will receive a thank you gift for stopping by and may also enter to win a dinner for two at Via Vai.
The new office is located at 1485 East Valley Road in the Upper Village and is staffed Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 11 am to 3 pm. The Meet & Greet will take place in the Upper Village North on Tuesday, October 11, from noon to 6 pm. For more information, call 969-3312 or visit www.seniorplanningser vices.com.
Smart Meter Ruling Last month, California Public
Utilities Commission president Michael Peevey issued a rul-
ing requiring Southern California Edison and PG&E to accept cus-tomer requests to delay the installa-tion of smart meters in their homes. The ruling comes after dozens of community members, as well as the Montecito Association, asked CPUC to allow customers to opt out of smart meter installation because of health and safety and privacy con-cerns.
For the time being, customers who have an analog meter and wish to defer installation of the controversial smart meters can contact their utility company and request placement on a delay list. This allows customers to postpone the installation until the CPUC formalizes more permanent opt out provisions.
SCE customers may request to be placed on the delay list by calling (800) 810-2369 (English) or (800) 477-4455 (Spanish), sending an e-mail to SCE, or writing a letter to SCE.
PG&E residential customers can call (877) 743-7378 to be added to the delayed installation list.
Weather Station installation
With fall precipitation on the horizon, Montecito Fire Protection District has a new Remote Automated Weather Station (RAWS), which
was installed at La Casa de Maria in September. The weather station provides hourly weather observa-tions that measure wind speed, wind direction, air temperature, rela-tive humidity, fuel moisture, pre-cipitation, solar radiation, and can be accessed by the public via the Internet.
The RAWS will assist Montecito Fire Protection District, the National Weather Service, and local Santa Barbara fire service agencies in mon-itoring up-to-the-minute weather observations to better provide for fire severity predictions and weather-related emergencies. This new unit is centrally located within Montecito on the La Casa de Maria Retreat Center property on El Bosque Road, within the urban interface at the 375-foot elevation. The information received will be utilized and gauged against information obtained from the District’s first RAWS unit, locat-ed at the 1650-ft level near Cold Spring trail.
“Unlike an earthquake that gives no warning, wild fires and storm related emergencies often have weather indicators that can be used to predict and prepare for potential disaster,” says Montecito Fire Chief Kevin Wallace. “This new RAWS will allow us to have accurate and current conditions to better staff and prepare for these conditions.”
Hobbit Door
Last week, we told you about the opening of Crane Country Day School’s new kindergarten. We wrote that the new 2,551-sq-ft classroom has many functional features, as well as some fun ones, including a hobbit-sized door for the students to enter through. Here is a picture of the miniature door, taken by Molly Green. •MJ
Kindergarten teachers Megan MacMurray and Andrea Soto stand with a Crane kindergartner near the hobbit-sized door of the new classroom
ViLLAGE BEAT (Continued from page 21)
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 29
Sue Brooks cell: (805) 455-9116
email: sue@montecitojournal.net
Tanis Nelson cell: 805.689.0304
email: tanis@montecitojournal.net
Christine Merrick office: (805) 565-1860 ext.3
email: christine@montecitojournal.net
COMING SOONTo a Home and Business
Near You!
Semi-Annual Winter/Spring 2011/12 issue
glossy
For advertising rates and other info call or e-mail:
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL30 • The Voice of the Village •
David L. AndersonEconomics and Business. Anderson’s
b a c k g r o u n d includes both business and aca-demic experience. He has worked in strategic plan-ning and technol-ogy for BlueCross-BlueShield of
Illinois, Hewitt Associates, IBM and Andersen Consulting. He has taught full time at Trinity International University and Wheaton College. While working in industry, he taught part time at DePaul, Loyola, and Northwestern Universities. He has written several textbooks, including “Entrepreneurship and Technology,” “Marketing with Web 2.0: Social Networking and Viral Marketing,” and “Management Information Systems: Solving Business Problems with Information Technology.”After graduating from Wheaton, he
earned a law degree from George Washington University, a Master of Business Administration from the University of Michigan, a doctorate in education at Harvard University and a Master of Science in computer science from Northwestern University. He belongs to the federal, U.S. Supreme Court, Ohio and District of Columbia bars.“It’s wonderful to teach at a place that works hard to develop a comprehen-sive, integrated student experience,” he says. “In preparing for business careers, students need to work col-laboratively as an integrated team, drawing on the expertise of people on campus. This approach helps them formulate cases, papers and technol-ogy.“Students here are committed, gra-cious and apply their faith,” he adds. “When they go into business, they are going to operate as individuals of conscience and compassion.”Anderson wants students to gradu-
ate with a portfolio of business proj-ects and skills so they can apply for positions with an online collection of business cases, well-written articles and a video or graphic piece that dem-onstrates what they’ve accomplished.
Michael EverestChemistry. Everest says liberal arts
education is in his DNA. His parents, Dan and Sherry S o n n e v e l d t Everest, both graduated from Westmont with degrees in psy-chology in 1967,
Sherry with a double major in edu-cation. Michael, a Wheaton College alumnus, earned his doctorate from Stanford University and most recent-ly taught chemistry at George Fox University, where he worked for the past decade.Everest’s research leans toward the physics end of chemistry, focusing on the use of lasers. He completed a one-year sabbatical at the Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas in Heraklion, Greece, in June 2010, where he studied the interaction of polarized light with matter.“Chemistry is a way of knowing,” he says. “It’s a field of inquiry. It’s inves-tigating a particular aspect of how the world works.” He hopes to instill that sense of amazement in his students.Professor Everest explains there’s a single principle that describes why every chemical reaction goes forward instead of backward and why ice freezes at zero and water boils at 100 degrees Celsius. “That amazes me,” he says. “It’s beautiful that at the core there’s a truth with all these implica-tions when on the surface it looks like crazy and unconnected observations.”He has earned numerous grants, fel-lowships and awards, including a grant from the America Chemical Society’s Petroleum Research Fund and five faculty research grants from George Fox. He has contrib-uted scholarly articles to the Journal of Chemical Physics, Journal of Chemical Education and Review of Scientific Instruments, to name a few.
Heather KeaneyHistory-Westmont in Istanbul. Heather Keaney ’93 has returned to Westmont as an assistant professor of history, but in January she and her husband, Jim Wright, venture back to the Middle East to co-lead Westmont in Istanbul. Keaney has spent the past 11 years living and teaching in Cairo at the American University in Cairo and at the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities’ (CCCU’s) Middle East Studies Program (MESP).Keaney graduated from Westmont with a degree in history. “When I enrolled, I
wanted to go into medicine – teach-ing seemed really boring,” she says. “I was going to be a missionary doctor in Africa, and then I fell in love with history. My profes-
sors made such a huge impact on me at a critical part in my life. I knew that I, too, wanted to be involved in that educational process in student’s lives.” She then earned a master’s degree and a doctorate in Middle East history at UC Santa Barbara. “In many ways I ended up a missionary doctor in Africa – just not the way I had originally thought,” she says.In Egypt, Keaney was acting direc-tor of MESP in fall 2009, leading 30 students through Turkey, Syria and Israel-Palestine. She enthusiastically shares her love and passion for the Middle East and its people. “There are great students at Westmont who are keen to learn and make a differ-ence in the world, which is exactly why we signed up,” she says. “I’m struck by the college’s mission to cul-tivate compassionate and informed students. You can’t just run off and do good without understanding what the problems are.”
Kristi LazarChemistry. As a student, Kristi Lazar
’00 says the unique living and learn-ing environment at Westmont shaped her life. “I felt blessed to have four years here to devote my time to learning and
growing as a person. My professors encouraged me every day.”Ten years later, Lazar, assistant profes-sor of chemistry, returns to Westmont, seeking to impart a joy for learning. “I hope my students feel motivated to apply themselves, embrace the materi-al and learn to think about the world in terms of God’s handiwork,” she says.Lazar, who earned a master’s degree at Princeton University and a doctor-ate from the University of Chicago, returned to Westmont as a visiting assistant professor in January 2010 and began her tenure-track position this fall.Her area of expertise is in protein aggregation, including the depos-its of misfolded proteins thought to be responsible for many degen-erative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s. She completed a 10-week summer research program with two Westmont students.Lazar enrolled at Westmont with the intention of becoming a pharmacist, but after conducting research in the chemistry department, her professors
Scott Craig is manager of media relations at Westmont College
Your Westmont
Westmont welcomes five new tenure-track professors
by Scott Craig
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 31
encouraged her to attend graduate school.She undertook two years of postdoc-toral research at Genentech Inc., a biotech company, before applying for the Westmont teaching position.“I worked as a teacher’s assistant while I attended Westmont, and I always dreamed about teaching,” she says. “I reread my prayer journal recently, and I mentioned it would be wonderful to teach at a place like Westmont. It’s a little surreal.”
Alex MooreKinesiology. Moore is no stranger to
the college. A Wheaton College alumnus, he taught classes as an adjunct instruc-tor at Westmont for the kinesiol-ogy and biology departments from
2004-06, including anatomy, tennis, physiology and a biochemistry lab.Alex then accepted a prestigious fel-lowship to study at the University of Missouri, which has one of the best microcirculatory programs in the country, and he earned a doctorate in biomedical sciences there.He returned to Westmont in fall 2010 as a sabbatical replacement in the biol-ogy department and began the tenure-
track position this fall in the kinesiol-ogy department, teaching physiology, biomechanics and a research course.“There’s a lot of overlap in what I do, working with students going into health professions,” he says. “I was a kinesiology major as an undergradu-ate, and it’s where my heart is even though my doctorate and recent expe-rience focused more on biology.”Moore’s research specializes in micro-circulation, studying hair-sized arter-ies and the regulation of blood flow to tissue. “We’re interested in the microvessels’ responsiveness and how they change as we age,” he says.Moore, who ran track in high school and college, earned his master’s degree in exercise and sport science from the University of North Carolina. “I want to spend my career teaching students and getting them excited about a topic they have little experience with,” he says. “The fellowship allowed me to focus on my research, but I enjoy teach-ing. Role models can make a great impact on students’ lives.“My message to students is to explore and take risks. I love when a stu-dent discovers their passion and their calling and place in God’s king-dom.” Moore met his wife, Kirsten, at Westmont when she was hired as head coach of Westmont’s women’s basketball team in 2005. They were married in 2008. •MJ
MICRO – DERMABRASIONFACIALS • WAXING • LASH & BROW TINTING
GIFT CERTIFICATES
• 2476 Lillie Avenue Summerland, CA • (805) 895–9190 •
PAM ANDERSON SKIN CARE SPECIALIST
FACIALS • WAXING • LASH & BROW TINTING
One last time.
Glen Campbell: The Goodbye Toura benefit concert for the Alzheimer’s Association on Sunday, Oct. 9 at 7 p.m. at the Lobero Theatre
A limited number of VIP tickets are available and include a private reception with Glen Campbell. Get your tickets early.
Tickets on sale now Lobero Theatre Box Office and Ticketmaster
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL32 • The Voice of the Village •
Marie Larkin 805.680.2525
Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.
$5,950,000
Open Sunday 1-4
1721 East Valley Road
montecitofarmhouse.com
Offered at $5,400,000
Coming & Going by James Buckley
Mary Belle and Anita
Anita Perry’s husband, Rick Perry, is one of nine candidates vying for the Republican
Party nomination as President of the U.S.A. Mrs. Perry visited Montecito recently to help her husband in that quest. In deference to strict Federal Election Commission rules, no money was allowed to change hands for the luncheon event held at Montecito Country Club on Monday October 3. So Mary Belle Snow invited 200
people to enjoy a free lunch on her dime. She only had about ten days to put the event together but it all fell into place quickly as 200 of Santa Barbara’s and Montecito’s most influential voters showed up on a beautiful nearly fall-like day to hear a calm but forceful speech from the candidate’s wife, free of charge.
In an interesting show of confidence and generosity, Mrs. Perry neither asked for nor required any commit-
ment from anyone for her appearance. After her talk and a brief question-and-answer period, a Perry represen-tative did make a plea for donations, but it was all-in-all an extremely soft sell.
In front of a packed Montecito County Club lunch crowd of mostly women (the ratio was at least 10 to 1, female to male), Anita spoke of the early tough days of both her hus-band and his family growing up on the windy plains of West Texas. She described herself as “a West Texas Optimist” and explained that she had known her husband since elemen-tary school. They began dating in high school and now have two children: son Griffin and daughter Sydney. Griffin married a girl named Meredith in 2009. Rick Perry is from Paint Creek, a West Texas community too small to be a town, so small that he was one of only thirteen students in his high-school senior class. Perry’s parents were tenant farmers, Anita says, as she affirmed that her husband’s deci-sion was a family decision and that she is “all in” with his candidacy, 100% behind his presidential quest, as is the rest of the family.
Reading from prepared notes, Mrs. Perry outlined her husband’s agenda as “more freedom for the individual, less power to a central government,” lower taxes, and other Republican positions.
“We need a leader,” she said to applause, suggesting her husband is that leader. At one point she slipped and said “Our leader needs a coun-try,” but laughed and corrected her-self, saying “Our country needs a leader,” though what could have been considered a Freudian slip referencing the current president was not lost on the audience.
She joked that Texas has been helped immeasurably by states such as California that have chased jobs and citizens out of California, New York, and other highly regulated high-taxed states and sent them to… Texas.
What we have learned, she said, is “You don’t spend all the money… We don’t over-tax. We have regulations that are fair and predictable. We don’t have the greatest weather,” she contin-ued without missing a beat, “so don’t come in August,” to big laughter. “For seven years in a row, CEO magazine has ranked Texas as the very best state to do business in,” she pointed out.
Concluding her 20-minute talk, Mrs. Perry stressed that “We are involved in Spiritual Warfare,” but that her hus-band was up to the task.
During the Q&A, she made it clear that Rick Perry’s position on illegal immigration had been distorted. The bill to allow children whose par-ents are living in Texas without legal immigrant status to attend college passed overwhelmingly by the Texas Legislature (with only four votes against). The bill merely gives equal standing to those children. “They’re not being subsidized,” Anita stressed, refuting GOP presidential hopeful Rick Santorum’s claim made during a recent GOP candidate forum. “They will pay the same tuition any other Texas resident pays,” she noted, “So, they’re not getting a break.”
No doubt the pleasant yet forceful would-be First Lady made friends and influenced voters for her husband during her short trip to the Central Coast. And, if Rick Perry is still in the race when California’s primary takes place, no doubt he and she will be back. And no doubt too, they’ll ask Mary Belle to put something else together for him.
The Montecito Valley Bluegrass Music Festival
I look forward to this every year (although it isn’t held every year) and consider the invitation-only Montecito Valley Bluegrass Music Festival the penultimate Montecito event, second
Anita Perry (left) and Mary Belle Snow, just after Mrs. Perry’s speech in front of 200 lunch-time listeners at the Montecito Country Club
200 of Montecito’s and Santa Barbara’s most influential folk showed up to enjoy a free lunch and a spirited talk by Anita Perry at the Montecito Country Club, among them are (from left) Tom Watson, Kate Packer, and Chris Mitchum
COMinG & GOinG Page 344
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 33Great is the guilt of an unnecessary war – John Adams
Fresh pressed raw, organically grown vegetable juices.Red or green. (We only make two so what we make had better be good.)Delivered. 698-5443. AscendingHealthJuicery.com
NEW
LO
CAT
ION
• N
EW L
OC
ATIO
N •
NEW
LO
CAT
ION
• N
EW L
OC
ATIO
N •
NEW
LOC
ATION
• NEW
LOC
ATION
• NEW
LOC
ATION
• NEW
LOC
ATION
•
Voted Best Antique Store 8th Year In A Row • Corner of Carrillo St. & Santa Barbara St.
www.anticafurnishings.com • 805-845-1285 • Monday-Saturday 10-6, Closed Sunday
ANTICAFURNISHINGS, INC.WORLD OF ANTIQUES AND FINE FURNISHINGSwww.anticafurnishings.com1117 STATE ST. • 962.8555
����������1117 STATE ST. • 962.21661117 STATE ST. • 962.21661117 STATE ST. • 962.21661117 STATE ST. • 962.21661117 STATE ST. • 962.2166
133 E. Carrillo St. • 845-1285ALL UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE MADE IN THE U.S.A.
NEW ARRIVALS!
David F. Myrick (June 17, 1918 – September 24, 2011)
Please forgive me, David, for divulging your age. And forgive me too, for availing a
picture of your wonderful face. These were a couple “quirks” that
David had; no discussion about age and don’t take my picture! Perhaps my only regret with David is that I don’t have pictures allowing me to reach back into a moment with him.
David authored 17 books on Montecito, Santa Barbara, Telegraph Hill, and the Railroads of the West. David was a member of several Historical Societies in several cities and states.
The Montecito History Committee was founded by Kit McMahon when she began to collect historical documents beginning in 1960. David Yeager asked if she would like to store the documents at the Montecito Community Center. David Myrick became Chairman of the History Committee in 1973 and remained as such until last week.
How did David F. Myrick become such an extraordinary individual?Much of that character came from an exceptional family.David’s Father, Donald Myrick, was born in Springfield Massachusetts,
January 13, 1893. His father was a publisher there and who bought “Good Housekeeping” in 1911. Donald Graduated from Princeton in 1915. He was Secretary of his class and Editor of the Daily Princetonian. After a year at Harvard Business School, Donald went to Los Angeles as a reporter for the L.A. Evening Express. Donald married his wife, Charlotte, in Hollywood. She was a musical woman with immense talent. She graduated with honors from Radcliffe.
Donald later moved to Santa Barbara and purchased a house, now called the McCormick House, across the street from what is now known as Alice Keck Park Memorial Gardens. The Myrick Family began with David, then Dick and finally young Julia (Ricky).
Donald became business manager for the Santa Barbara Morning Press.Donald also became founding director of Santa Barbara National Bank,
now Santa Barbara Bank & Trust. Other civic duties for Donald were Director of Alexander House, Music Academy, Laguna Blanca School, Friends of the Library, Santa Barbara Botanic Gardens, and Chairman of the Ration Board in WWII.. He was also a member and President of the Santa Barbara Club, Valley Club and Channel City Club.
Donald and wife were the first people signed up for residency at Casa Dorinda but died before the “Casa” was ready for occupancy in 1972.
As a young boy, David would ride his horse, Jack, into the mountains after school. His early education was spent at private schools after graduating from Crane School.
Most family vacations were spent at Sandyland. No horses were allowed there until David showed up with Jack. The vacations in the 1920s seemed very remote to any civilization, since there were no houses built on the beach, except at Sandyland. Donald Myrick suggested to the County the name “Padaro Lane” for that dirt road after the Padaro Creek; it was approved.
Santa Barbara was great fun for young David. He would take the street-car to the beach and watch seaplanes land in the harbor. He would also coast his wagon all the way from Pedregosa to the beach on State Street since there were no stop lights. Going to the Arlington was always great fun.
Continuing his education, he attended Fountain Valley School in Colorado Springs. Two years were spent at Santa Barbara State College before finishing his degree in Business at Babson College in Boston.
In 1938, David formed a small band, the “Stardusters.” The trumpet player “Perkins,” later became first trumpet for Woody Herman. Playing piano was more than a “gig” or hobby or pastime for David; it was a lifelong passion.
David’s fondness for history began with his association with Selden Spaulding. Selden and his colleagues from Deane School founded Laguna Blanca School in 1933.
Beginning in 1944, David began a long and distinguished career working in the President’s Office of the Union Pacific Railroad located in San Francisco. He immediately affiliated himself with the California Historical Society and the Nevada State Historical Society.
In 1962, David published his first book, Telegraph Hill.David returned to Santa Barbara in 1981 and continued his work on several
other books. Also at this time, he purchased a home in Montecito.I first met David setting up Montecito Video in the upper village in 1986.David had a voracious appetite for movies. He liked most everything but
preferred buying movies as opposed to renting them. Eventually, he amassed a collection of “Beta” movies into the many thousands.
David was a Director of the Montecito Association from 1996 to 2002. He was always Chairman of the History Committee.
The Village Fourth Committee of the Montecito Association picked David to be Grand Marshal in 2001.
The Beautification Committee voted him “Citizen of the Year” in 2008.There have been so many awards bestowed upon David, many that I am
unaware of. David Myrick was a man that comes along rarely. His skills were varied and
accomplished. He was a historian, writer, lecturer, statesman, financial genius, a linguist, and philanthropist. He was generous beyond words. He would rather write a check for thousands to a charity than buy himself a new pair of shoes. He had great heart. The man was always well prepared and had something to say. He commanded respect. David always reminded us of our roots. He leaves us with so many important and precious memories. Nothing was left to chance in David’s life. There was always a plan. He leaves us with a large part of his plan. Over the past 60+ years, David accumulated a large repository of historical documents that he has gifted to our community via a new “Historical Society” that he envisioned in Montecito. He leaves for us the books of our roots – Montecito and Santa Barbara Volume I, From Farms to Estates, and Volume II, The Days of the Great Estates – and David has entrusted me to complete Volume III, a tall order!
I can thank God for him calling me “friend.”Let’s bid our precious friend David F. Myrick a very fond farewell.He will be greatly missed. •MJ
Remembering David by Dana Newquist
David Myrick and Maxi Decker were great friends
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL34 • The Voice of the Village •
Thank You Santa Barbara Beautiful!Winner, Best New Architectural FeatureBy the Boats Under the Sails:
Chuck’s Waterfront Grill
Reservations (805) 564-1200113 Harbor Way
Pho
to b
y Sc
ott
Gib
son
Lunch & Dinner Daily on the Deck“Brunchfest” Sat. & Sun. 10 am-1 pm
only to the Village Fourth (of July) Parade & Celebration. Generally, Palmer Jackson, Jr., and his Mobile Homeboys entertain a crowd of a few hundred on the grassy expanse that lies in the center of the Montecito Valley Ranch near Sheffield Drive and Ortega Ridge Road.
This year, unfortunately, I had to
leave early because my grandson, Deacon T, was to be christened at 5 pm, so I could only spend forty-five minutes or so listening to what is generally some of the best music west of the Rocky Mountains. And, I wasn’t disappointed, as Montecito’s own Haddon Cord stepped up to the microphone on the stage under a mas-
sive and stately oak surrounded by post-and-rail fencing, lots of foliage, and stacks of seasoned firewood, to acoustically perform some of her own material.
We had to leave, as I’ve written, before the Mobile Homeboys got together to play, but I did get to hear Palmer Jackson play a Doc Watson tune before Haddon got up to sing. The Mobile Homeboys – John “Pone” Simpson, Palmer “Jethro” Jackson, Charlie “Skeeter” Crisafulli, Brother Tom Brigham, Paul “Zeke” Armstrong, and Mark “The Colonel” Jeffery – describe themselves as “an American Experiment in Melodic inbreeding” on their website, fol-lowing that up with a proclama-tion that they “give a damn. And take requests.” One thing the Mobile Homeboys surely are: a lot of fun and darn good musicians and singers.
There was a frozen yogurt truck at the far end of the common serving up cold sweet stuff as the weather cooperated, peaking out at perhaps 80 degrees. There were more children than adults, or at least a 50/50 ratio.
Many were piled around the over-sized rope swing with a wooden seat that hung conspicuously under the aforementioned stately oak behind the stage.
I’m so sorry I missed the main attraction this year and wasn’t able to stay and luxuriate in the music, but hopefully Palmer and his wife, Susan, will forgive me, and give us plenty of notice of next year’s scheduled festi-val date.
Christening Deacon TMary Belle and Tom Snow are now
officially Deacon T Buckley’s god-parents. Deacon T is the first son of Jacqueline and Timothy Buckley, edi-tor and publisher of Montecito Journal. Tim is, of course, my and my wife Helen’s son.
A small ceremony was held Saturday afternoon, October 1, at the Snows’ home in the foothills of Montecito; the Christening was officiated by Pastor James N. Stretchberry of Bethel Mission, who came prepared with a small vial of frankincense and myrrh,
which he used to anoint Deacon T’s forehead and dedicate the boy’s par-ents, grandparents, and godparents to the boy’s moral and spiritual upbring-ing. •MJ
COMinG & GOinG (Continued from page 32)
Montecito-born singer-songwriter Haddon Cord offered up a smattering of her own material as a warm-up to Palmer Jackson and his Mobile Homeboys at this year’s Montecito Valley Bluegrass Music Festival
The crowd spread out with their own chairs, blankets, cheese and wine near the stately oak as kids of all ages frolicked in the traffic-free common during this year’s Montecito Valley Bluegrass Music Festival
Godparents Mary Belle and Tom Snow with newly Christened Deacon T
Pastor James N. Stretchberry hoists the newly Christened Deacon T Buckley; the pastor carried a small vial of frankincense and myrrh with which to anoint Deacon’s forehead
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 35It is a damn poor mind indeed which can’t think of at least two ways to spell any word – Andrew Jackson
Diana ParadisePO Box 30040, Santa Barbara, CA 93130Email: DianaParadise_@hotmail.comPortfolio Pages: www.DianaParadise.com Prices start at $3200 for a 24”x36” oil portrait of one person.
Coup De Grace by Grace Rachow
Ms Rachow can out-sweep a leaf blower, out-dig a backhoe, and now she attempts to out-lay the professional patio guys.
Paving Paradise
My husband’s supposedly jetting his way to Washington, D.C., but I get
a tweet from him. He’s stuck on the tarmac in Denver waiting for one of those mysterious things that must be done before takeoff.
“The National Crying Child team’s aboard,” he writes. “They’re headed for the world championship. This group has the chops to win.”
I feel compassion, of course, but I’m sipping French roast in our back yard. The birds are tweeting the old-
fashioned way because the marine layer’s lifting gently toward another beautiful day. But this Garden of Eden is not perfect. A cotoneaster is growing out of an enormous pile of bricks stacked on the patio, a glaring reminder of my great brick boon-doggle of 2009.
The sordid tale began innocently enough when my friend Marie hired a crew to tear up her old patio and asked if I wanted the bricks. Two thousand beautiful vintage bricks? You bet your bippy I wanted them.
Saying yes was my first mistake. Her patio guys brought the load over. I asked them to put the stack on my crumbling patio… my second mistake.
I’m not a stupid woman. I made it through college calculus. I should’ve been able to see the flaw in this materials-management strategy. But everyone has a Bozo moment now and then. I figured I’d start breaking up the other end of the patio and go from there.
My third mistake was attempting this project with my husband home
on a stay-cation. I figured he would help, and we’d have a new patio by the end of the week.
He figured I was out of my mind. “You need pros with jackhammers and backhoes,” he said.
“Do you have any idea what that costs?”
Usually my thrifty French-Canadian moves heaven and earth to save a buck, but this time he wouldn’t lift a brick.
So I started sledging, and, voila, some of the patio got broken up. I
could do this alone if I had to. When the demo debris piled up, my hus-band said, “You need a dumpster.”
I figured I could make a big pile and worry about hauling it off later. I sledged away, figuring my enthusi-asm would get to my husband, and he’d join in.
Instead, he shook his head and said, “You’re crazy.”
Maybe he was right, but I hung in there for a few more days and made a colossal mess. After I smashed my finger with a sledge and dropped the pry bar on my toe, I decided if I was so crazy, maybe I needed to take a break. Turns out it was a two-year hiatus, long enough for that brick-loving cotoneaster to grow into a good-sized shrub.
So here I am on this gorgeous day, and there’s no sensible husband lurking about to tell me I’m crazy. The time has come to prove I’m Superwoman.
The first thing I do is transplant that crazy cotoneaster. If it has the moxie to grow in bricks, it’s defi-nitely my kind of shrub. Hopefully,
it’ll also grow in soil. Next, I move the enormous stack of bricks off the old patio. Only a few tons. I barely break a sweat.
About then my husband calls. He’s made it to his hotel in D.C., and now he’s waiting for room service to bring him a hamburger. I want one too, but I’ve work to do. Yes, it takes muscle and finesse, but breaking up old pavement is doable sans jack-hammer. Hopefully the neighbors don’t mind hearing me grunt when I heave the chunks into the wheelbar-row. I haul the debris to a corner of the back yard for disposal.
A couple of days go by. My hus-band enjoys his conference. I smash up the old patio and wheel it away. When a section of the old paving is gone I begin putting down new. Brick by brick, row by row, the new
patio appears.It’s a race to finish before my hus-
band returns. At the time his flight is due, I get a call. His car battery has died and he has to wait in long-term parking for AAA to bail him out. That gives me enough time to put two chairs and a table on the new section of paving and brew the French roast.
I’m there, relaxed and sipping when my husband walks through the door. “Care to join me?” I say.
I might be crazy, but sometimes I’m right. •MJ
So here I am on this gorgeous day, and there’s no sensible husband lurking about to tell me I’m crazy.
The time has come to prove I’m Superwoman.
1101 State StSanta Barbara, CA 93101
(at the corner of State and Figueroa)805.963.2721
a fine coffee and tea establishment
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL36 • The Voice of the Village •
(805) 692-2005 • harold@sblife.com(805) 692-2005 • harold@sblife.com
Syn
cin
g
m
ad
e e
asy
New
iP
ad
setu
p t
oo
!
G
et iP
ho
to
O
rg
an
ized
iPhones • iPods • iPhoto • Music • Movies
New Computer Setup • Troubleshooting
Serving Montecito & Santa Barbara for over 20 years
Harold Adams - Computer Consulting
All Things MacAll Things MacAll Things MacAll Things MacAll Things Mac
Training Beginners to AdvancedReasonable Rates • Quality Service
Home Theater • Apple TV • Everything Digital
Our Town by Joanne A. Calitri
Joanne is a published documentary photographer and jour-nalist since 2000; for your Our Town news story email her at
jcalitri_internationalphoto@yahoo.com
Celebrity Golf and Sing in Ojai
Michael Bolton, a name that brings to mind a romantic singer-songwriter, is also
a man whose charity organization established in 1993, The Michael Bolton Charities, funds programs for children and women at risk of domestic violence.
This year, he took his fundraising event to Ojai with a full day program that began at 10 am with an 18-hole golf tournament. The evening offered silent and live auctions and a sit-down dinner with entertainment by Bolton, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Dave Mason, Australian Guitarist Orianthi who was featured by Michael Jackson for his never-launched “This is It” Tour, singer Delta Goodrem and comedian Dennis Blair. The cause appealed to Clint Eastwood, who had
an auction bid to play in his golf foursome, and donated a live auction package of two tickets to his upcom-ing movie, J. Edgar, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, with red carpet, private reception and a signed picture from any Clint Eastwood movie.
The winning donation to play golf with Clint was won by Orianthi’s manager, Stirling McIllwain who bid $5,000. Silent auction items rang-ing from travel packages to coveted entertainment packages like the “Late Show with David Letterman,” brought in $1,000 - $10,000 per item. The largest single donation was from Ojai resident Cassie Wright for her $40,000 winning bid on Clint’s movie package. Clint and his wife, Dina, exclaimed, “This is the most money donated to date!” as they both went
over to Cassie’s table to hug her and thank her for her generosity.
The dinner show was emceed by actor John O’Hurley, who was also honored at the dinner for being one of the golf tournament’s Low Gross winners, along with his wife, Lisa, and Dennis and Leslie Hathaway. Michael Bolton and event Auctioneer Tom Gross presented them with tro-phies.
Del Bryant, President & CEO of Broadcast Music Inc. (BMI), was the event honoree. Supporting Del were Montecito-based singer-songwriter Hall of Famer Jeff Barry and Lamont Dozier. After playing golf in Michael Bolton’s foursome, Del took time for a 15-minute interview with me. He talked about his parents, Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, whose award win-ning music writing hits include the 1957 Everly Brothers tune, “Bye, Bye Love,” “Wake Up Little Susie,” “All I Have to Do Is Dream,” and “Love Hurts.” Del quipped that his hit, “I Cheated on a Good Woman’s Heart,” caused him to realize his larger poten-tial in the music industry, working
Michael Bolton with guests BMI CEO Del Bryant and singer Dave Mason
Orianthi rocks the house with Michael Bolton
Michael Bolton with guests BMI CEO Del Bryant, singer Delta Goodrem and Hall of Famer Jeff Barry
Clint teeing off on the 10th hole
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 37I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy – John Adams
Offerings from the Grill, Salads, Elegant Hors d'oeuvres & Homemade Soups
"Winner of Best Bagels 15 years running in the Independent and News Press"
(805)566-1558 #1 • www.jacksbistro.com 5050 Carpinteria Ave.
Justen Alfama Catering Coordinator 805-319-0155 • 805-566-1558 #4 • justencater@cox.net
David Barahona General Manager 805-453-1408 • davidb4@cox.net
Fresh LocaL cuisine
From the GriLL
BeautiFuL saLads
eLeGant hors d’oeuvres
BreakFast & PLatters
kinG’s ransom PLatter
dessert trays
Bistro Dining 6:30 a.m. - 3 p.m. Weekends 7 am - 3pm5050 Carpinteria Avenue • Downtown Carpinteria
Justen Alfama, Catering Director805.319.0155
justencater @cox.net
Thanksgiving TO YOU!generous Full Dinner serves 6 - $80 (delivery available)
Roasted Turkey - Hormone Free • Herb Stuffing • YamsVegetable Medley • Mashed Potatoes & Gravy • Cranberries & Rolls
Order by Monday nov. 22 Call David Barahona 805-453-1408
Fresh Apple and Pumpkin Pies Available Too!
You Know Our Bagels. Now, Know our Catering too!
for artists at BMI. His 40-year career there and his redesign of the royalty system (the establishment of divisions for Latin and urban music) have led him to many thanks from writers and singers.
Jeff Barry mentioned that his retire-ment has turned gears and he is work-ing every day in L.A. writing songs again.
The interview with Dave Mason was centered on his support of retired vet-erans, about which he said, “These are highly trained and motivated people. Once hired, they move through the
ranks quickly in any business and we are the only organization that helps them start their own businesses.”
Other celebs who attended the event were Malcolm McDowell, Richard Kind, Matt McCoy, Nick Jonas, Ed Marinaro, Richard Burgi, Tom Hallick, Hal Linden, Kermit Alexander, Bruce McGill, Michael “Scooter” McGruder, Seth Peterson
and Lisa Niemi Swayze.Benefactors of the event included the
Santa Barbara Community Food Bank, which was selected by Jacqueline J. Smaga, Executive Director for The Michael Bolton Charities. “We were looking for another local charity to include in our donations and con-tacted the Santa Barbara County Food
Bank,” she explained. They also got in touch with Yoga Blue Inc., founded by Winifred Wilson, whose mission is teaching yoga to people in recov-ery from substance abuse, other self-destructive behaviors and domestic violence, and Work Vessels for Vets, a program to help U.S. war veterans acclimate to civilian society. •MJ
Clint Eastwood with golf partner Warner Trepp Ready to golf are LA Car Connection’s Michael Sugg, Adam Krianes and Eric Brooks
Michael Bolton with teammate Nick Jonas at Ojai Valley Inn Golf Course
Delta Goodrem smiles for the Montecito Journal as she scopes out the tournament course in a golf cart with her friend
Clint Eastwood flashes his winning smile while waiting for the golf tournament to start, here with NFL player Scooter McGruder
Clint Eastwood patiently waits to tee off
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL38 • The Voice of the Village •
The year is 1954, a time in England when social changes were turning up like distant relatives
dropping in for an unannounced vacation. A young man of 32 was about to publish his first novel, which did for his generation what F. Scott Fitzgerald did for the previous generation in America: turn the literary convention on its head.
Few readers remember Fitzgerald’s first novel, This Side of Paradise, a work that could be fit into the distinguished company of college and coming-of-age adventures. Paradise catapulted this talented Minnesotan to overnight success, and propelled his seemingly dual career of writing and alcoholism. For a time, the writing seemed to have won out, allowing him to produce The Great Gatsby, regarded as one of the main contenders for the quintessential novel of the 20th Century.
Like Fitzgerald, the English writer came up from modest circumstances, had an extraordinary gift for learning, and managed to remain productive in spite of his own intense relation-ship with fermented spirits. He was
Kingsley Amis (1922-1995). Unlike Fitzgerald, Amis’s social observa-tions and concerns led him to politics, political statements, and at one point, membership in the Communist Party. Not to worry. At the time of his death, Amis had been knighted and awarded the status of CBE, Commander of the Order of the British Empire. His poli-tics could not have undergone greater transformation had he taken them to a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon.
This is neither to say nor suggest that his other works were of inferior order, rather to suggest that Lucky Jim was spectacular in its capture of a time, a place, and a significant sub-genre of fiction. The protagonist of Lucky Jim is based on Amis’s lifelong friend-ship with the teacher and poet, Phillip
PurchasersD i a m o n d s • Q u a l i t y J e w e l r y
u l l i va n a n d o m pa n y , i n c .
Appraiser’s Association of America • GIA GraduateBuyer and Appraiser 17 years Van Cleef and Arpels
Immediate Payment • Bank Appointments Bank References • CA License #4200-1039
805-565-7935
Former Buyer For Van Cleef and ArpelsImmediate Payment
Local Bank Appointment
Purchasers
Diamonds ◆ Quality Jewelry Large Fine Important
Bank References CA License #4200-1039805-565-7935
After
Before
After
Before
LipoLaser Lose Fat Painlessly• No pain, No surgery!• Body contouring• 40-60 minute treatment• Safe, Non-invasive• Reduce trouble spots
As little as $150 per session
Package specials available at a reduced rate
Robin A. Bernhoft, MD1200 Maricopa Hwy Suite A
Ojai, Ca 93023 www.drbernhoft.com
The number of sessions required to achieve desired results vary with each individual.
(805) 640-0180
Shelly Lowenkopf blogs @ www.lowenkopf.com. Shelly has reviewed books for met-
ropolitan daily and weekly papers since 1973. His latest
book is The Fiction Lover’s Companion, in trade paper
and e-book format.
BOOK TALK by Shelly Lowenkopf
non Campus Mentis
Larkin. Like Larkin, Dixon is a lectur-er in mediaeval history, but not a good one at all, caught up in the depart-mental squabbles of a university that is conspicuously not Cambridge, not Oxford, not even the London School of Economics. Dixon and the school where he teaches are out of the loop of the mannered, cultured classes. Like Amis himself, Dixon feels the pressure and pomposity of the social rankings above him and the ornate pompos-ity of his superiors, drooping like the curls on a judge’s wig.
It did no harm to Amis’s career that the appearance of Lucky Jim came in near synchronicity with Randall Jarrell’s Pictures from an Institution, taking the American university to task with great panache and humor-ous éclat. Lucky Jim sold over a mil-lion copies in America, and Amis was launched in a career that had many parallels to Fitzgerald’s. While Fitzgerald was thought of as the chronicler of the Jazz Age, Amis was often mentioned in tandem with play-wrights John Braine, John Osborne, and a group of middle class novelists called the “Angry Young Men.”
Amis’s style was deceptive in its simple directness, his placement of Jim Dixon in alternating humorous and comic logjams, the comedy often as outrageous as the Marx Brothers movies. In one memorable incident, Dixon, the guest at his department chairman’s home, manages to set fire to his bed clothing, which is amus-ing enough, but Amis always knows
where to take chances. This scene is trumped by Dixon’s attempts to con-ceal the damage.
Comedy, which is in essence physi-cal, gives way to humor when Dixon becomes caught up in a romantic relationship with a fellow lecturer, Margaret Peel, who inflicts a guilt trip on him by references to her attempted suicide after being dumped by a for-mer boyfriend. The humor begins to border on pathos when Dixon meets and becomes attracted to Christine, with whom there is an immediate, reciprocated chemistry. Sensing his life to be constrained, Dixon now appears to be heading into the dark hole of classless frustration.
Amis has stacked the deck against Jim Dixon. After building up a dreary set of traps and complications, he might easily have veered off the track of storytelling and into the rant of
polemic, but even in this early ven-ture, Amis has used the tools of irony, suspense, and individualism to a daz-zling and satisfying turn of events, reminding us of the clue that was there before us all the time in the title.
Luck in this context is the irony; discovery is the catalyst. Amis’s deft use of pacing, event, and appropriate moments for revelations place him on the same shelf with such nota-ble satirists as Evelyn Waugh, P.G. Wodehouse, and, in his humorous vein, Charles Dickens. His use of plot and the deft defusing of improbability suggests a young author on the make, wanting to take on the greats of the past and the present day. Stop for a moment to consider who could have been Amis’s principal target to take on in 1954. In both England and America, Graham Greene was reaching the peak of his form, his mastery of language and drama seemingly unassailable, his take on morality and salvation irresistible as a target. Compare the circumstances of Jim Dixon and his position with Margaret and Christine with the denouement of Greene’s The Heart of the Matter. Even if you were to prefer Greene, you would still have seen his rival in Kingsley Amis.
It was great, satisfying fun to reread Lucky Jim. My own favorite of Kingsley Amis’s work is a later novel, The Green Man, where, once again, the serious-ness of humor takes us where we had not expected to go and, as with Lucky Jim, gives us excellent surprises along the way. •MJ
Kingsley Amis’s use of plot and the deft defusing of improbability suggests a young author on the make, wanting
to take on the greats of the past and the present day
Kingsley Amis’s first novel, Lucky Jim, sold over one million copies in the U.S.
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 39
After his brother’s successful tour of California, including a visit to the Santa Barbara Polo Club in July, Harry is now set to check us out, as well as visit Nevada and Arizona.
Harry, 27, is due to spend three months in the U.S. honing his mili-tary aviation skills, after which he’ll become a fully-fledged Apache heli-copter pilot and could be re-deployed to the front lines in Afghanistan.
I’m told Harry is expected in El Centro, California, later this week, before spending time at the Gila Bend Air Force Auxiliary Field in Arizona.
The course is the culmination of
his training in flying the helicopter-gunships, which he has been doing back at RAF Wattisham in the east of England...
Sightings: George Clooney talking about his latest flick Ides of March at the Riviera Theatre, a SB Cinema Society event... Opera great Marilyn Horne lunching with friends at Tydes... Singer Britney Spears’ ex, Kevin Federline, walking on State Street with his girl-friend, Victoria Prince, and their baby daughter, Jordan
Pip! Pip! for now
Readers with tips, sightings and other amusing items for Richard’s column should e-mail him at rich-ardmineards@verizon.net or send invitations or other correspondence to the Journal •MJ
It is to be regretted that the rich and powerful too often bend the acts of government to their own selfish purposes – Andrew Jackson
Implant Special
$995Call for details. First implant only.
Limited to First 25 Patients. Some restrictions apply.
Expires 10/31/11
PATIENT ALERT! Use it or lose it! Dental insurance ends 12/31/11!
Emergencies Welcome Specializing in Lumineers
Se Habla EspañolIn-House Orthodontics
Laser Removal Technology for Sores
3906 STATE STREET SANTA BARBARA
(805) 687-6767Open Monday - Friday,
Call for an Appointment.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
B uyers of Estate Jewelry & Fine Watches
Diamonds, Gold, Platinum and Sterling
Members of the talented company, choreographed by William Soleau, danced throughout the evening, while Los Angeles Opera mezzo soprano Renée Rapier sang two arias, Habanera and Seguidilla from Bizet’s “Carmen,” accompanied by pianist Catherine Miller Popovic.
As usual, the ubiquitous Andrew Firestone was in fine voice as auction-eer, with two VIP tickets to see ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars,” five days in a Manhattan condo overlooking Central Park, and a necklace from Van Cleef & Arpels , which went for $4,900 to two separate bidders, among the prizes.
The bash, staged by Stellar Event Productions and decorated by Intuit Design owner Magi Myggen, was emceed by Jonatha King and Rodney Gustafson, the company’s founder and director, who was thanked by Anne for “16 years of giving us liquid grace.”
Among those helping raise around $100,000 for the ballet were Leni Fe Bland, Betty Stephens, Pat Gregory, Kathy Ireland, Scott Reed, Tim Mikel, Robert and Margo Feinberg, Peter and Dallas Clark, Ricardo and Dinah Calderon, Jennifer Hale, Christopher Lancashire and Mahri Kerley.
The 17-year-old company’s new sea-son opens at the Granada on Thursday, October 6, with “Starry Night,” based on the troubled artist Vincent Van Gogh...
Yes is a Long TimeMira Kingsley’s “Yes is a Long
Time” positively zipped by in 75 min-utes when staged at UCSB’s Hatlen Theater.
The three character production, an interesting mix of dance and theater, is based on a four-year-old New Yorker article about a meteorite crashing into a family’s home, rather mirroring the concern last month about where a 20-year-old U.S. satellite, weighing 13,000 pounds, would land when it came back to Earth.
The actors, Antonio Anagaran Jr., Jacqueline Kim and Kingsley, played their parts well on a stage essentially devoid of props and sets, other than large electronic framed works, giving the show, written by Sibyl O’Malley, a decidedly sci-fi effect.
Dan Evans’ video design and Pablo Molina’s lighting added immeasur-ably to the show...
Friend RaisingRobert and Christine Emmons
opened the doors to their magnificent four-acre Montecito manse to help raise funds and promote the year-old Westmont Museum of Art.
Judy Larson, the museum’s direc-tor, laments that more people need to know about the 2,500 sq ft space, practically on their doorsteps.
“There are 700 works in the perma-nent collection and we are looking to add to the collection, with many works on paper, in due course,” she says. “This is not so much a fund raiser as a friend raiser.”
More than 130 “friends” turned out for the dinner, with stunning views over the Pacific, while Westmont graduate Eben Drost played a selec-tion of classical and Cole Porter on the grand piano during cocktails and members of the college’s men’s cho-rus, under Grey Brothers, sang a cap-pella works among the diners, includ-ing Leslie Ridley-Tree, Brian King, Carter and Victoria Hines, Joanne Holderman, Penny Jenkins, Robert and Valerie Montgomery, Tom and Eileen Mielko, Eleanor Van Cott and Joanne Rapp.
An extremely sartorial Bob Ludwick emceed the show...
A Swell StartOpera Santa Barbara’s new season
of “Opera on the Go,” a monthly lecture series at the SB Historical Museum, got off to a good start when the company’s director, Jose Maria Condemi, was joined by Los Angeles soprano, Ashley Knight, who per-formed excerpts from the forthcom-ing season, including Mozart’s mad-cap “Marriage of Figaro” and Gluck’s “Orphee et Eurydice.”
“More than seventy people turned up, which bodes very well for the rest of the season,” says general direc-tor Steven Sharpe. “It is fun and it is accessible. People want to delve deeper into the work of opera.”
The next session, La Vie Boheme, on October 5 features Simon Williams exploring Puccini’s take on the popu-lar work, which Opera SB is perform-ing at the Granada next month...
Harry Visits USIt seems that anything Prince
William can do, his brother Prince Harry can do better.
Prince William’s brother Harry due in California this week
MiSCELLAnY (Continued from page 19)
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL40 • The Voice of the Village •
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6
1st Thursday – The 3rd annual month-long epicure.sb celebration – a 31-day culinary extravaganza featuring food and drink festivals, cooking classes, winemaker dinners, seasonal menus and much more – began last weekend, so naturally, savoring flavors in all the possible meanings of the word is the theme for this month’s 1st Thursday, too. The fun-for-foodies angle dominates at many of the more than 40 participating cultural art venues around lower State Street, including Viva Oliva at Paseo Nuevo, which is offering a special sampling of various foods using their delectable olive oils and balsamics, and Casa magazine’s HQ, which hosts the 3rd annual Flan Contest in addition to their usual assortment of free refreshments plus a taste of the work of photographer Bill Heller.More food frenzy takes place at Casa de la Guerra where the Chocolate Taste-Off takes fine local gourmet sweet treats and puts them to the test by local celebrity judges. Bella Rosa Galleries exhibits new paintings by André Monlleo in his show “Whatever the Cuisine,” which focuses on the natural bounty and artistic flare shared by local restaurants and wineries. Tracey Ryder and Carole Topalian, co-founders of Edible Communities, the nation’s largest publishing company dedicated to the local food movement (they publish Edible Santa Barbara), hold forth at the Book Den. Santa Barbara Canning will showcase live demos on food
preservation, freezing, dehydration and the art of water bath canning on the corner of State and Anapamu Streets.Special appetizers and wine will be served at Pierre Lafond Wine Bistro, where the Montecito Jazz Project will also perform. Elsewhere in entertainment, Inseazin plays popular styles from Hawaiian folk music to classic and modern rock, originals and island reggae at Saks Fifth Avenue and pop duo Lily & Marley perform at Paseo Nuevo Center Court. Meanwhile, the monthly Forum Lounge at CAF above Paseo Nuevo hosts Brooklyn-based video and performance artist Shana Moulton’s “I Lost Something in the Hills.” Just premiered less than six months ago at New York’s Bard College, the work integrates theosophical and anthroposophical theories into carefully orchestrated settings, which employ atmospheric, askew narratives that combine wry humor with a low-tech, pop sensibility. WHEN: 5-8pm INFO: www.santabarbaradowntown.com
‘Giants’ of Cambodia – Cambodia’s Khmer Arts Ensemble makes its Santa Barbara debut performing “The Lives of Giants,” a reflection on the country’s turbulent past based on the Reamker, which is the Cambodian version of the Ramayana, the ancient Sanskrit epic. Created by neoclassical choreographer Sophiline Cheam Shapiro, ‘Giants’ was inspired equally by mythology and contemporary global politics and serves as an allegory on the responsibilities of power. The work traces the story of the
C ALENDAR OF EVENTSNote to readers: This entertainment calendar is a subjective sampling of arts and other events taking place in the Santa Barbara area this week. It is by no means comprehensive. Be sure to read feature stories in each issue that complement the calendar. In order to be considered for inclusion in this calendar, information must be submitted no later than noon on the Wednesday prior to publication. Please send all news releases and digital artwork to news@montecitojournal.net and/or slibowitz@yahoo.com
by Steven Libowitz
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6
Gogh on, it’s still ‘Starry’ – State Street Ballet opens its 2011-12 season with an original multimedia production about the life of painter Vincent Van Gogh. Originally conceived and choreographed a dozen years ago by celebrated
New York choreographer William Soleau – who has created more than 80 ballets for companies around the world, including State Street Ballet productions of Carmina Burana and Appalachian Spring – the work brings together art, music, theater and dance in a masterwork that has drawn praise on both coasts. “Starry Night” features video projections of more than 270 paintings by the famed Dutch artist, and uses Van Gogh’s own poetic words drawn from his extensive correspondence with his brother Theo, who is portrayed onstage by Michael Daniels reprising his role from 1999. The actor debuted at the Kennedy Center in the title role in El Gato Montes with the Washington Opera and has also performed with Santa Fe Opera, Baltimore Opera, and Los Angeles Opera among others. In addition to the literary and video backdrops, State Street dancers will also perform to a magnificent score featuring works by Bartók, Dvorák, Fauré, Finzi, Hovhaness, Panufnik, Saint Saëns, Shostakovich, Vivaldi and Webern.Note: 1st Thursday visitors to the Granada from 5:30-6:30pm can venture backstage to glimpse dancers warming up and preparing for the performance later that night. WHEN: 7:30pm Thursday, 2pm Sunday WHERE: Granada, 1214 State St. COST: $23 to $58 INFO: 899-2222, www.granadasb.com or www.statestreetballet.com
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7
Get Shorty – Creole comes to campus when Grammy-nominated funk rock group Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue invade Campbell Hall on Friday. New Orleans native Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews and his six-piece band Orleans Avenue have been called “blistering, bold, exuberant and cutting-edge” by USA Today, and an “unstoppable force” by The New York Times, and that was before their sophomore CD, “For True,” came out. The new disc features guest appearances by
Jeff Beck, Kid Rock, Lenny Kravitz, Ledisi, Warren Haynes, Ivan and Cyril Neville, The Rebirth Brass Band and others, and while they won’t be there at UCSB tonight, Orleans Avenue will have plenty on their own to blow your socks off. The show kicks off the new Big Easy: Music of New Orleans series, which also features “A Night in Treme: The Musical Majesty of New Orleans” (Nov. 13), Preservation Hall Jazz Band (Feb. 1) and Irma Thomas (April 10). WHEN: 8pm WHERE: Campbell Hall, UCSB campus COST: $38 ($122 for series) INFO: 893-3535 or www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu
vengeful giant Akaeng Khameaso whom the gods granted a magic finger as a weapon to be used only in self-defense against merciless teasing, but his ceaseless torment engenders rage and problems for everyone. Called “a gorgeous spectacle...unfolding like a moving painting,” the piece features more than 36 ornately costumed dancers and musicians performing in a style rooted in Cambodia’s magnificent classical dance tradition, but with the ability to speak across time and geography to our own age. “The Lives of Giants” kicks off UCSB Arts & Lectures’ world music series, which also includes the Creole Choir of Cuba (Nov. 2), George Kahumoku Jr. and Masters of Hawaiian Music (March 8) and Sean Kuti & Egypt 80 (April 16). WHEN: 8pm WHERE: Campbell Hall, UCSB campus COST: $38 ($122 for series) INFO: 893-3535 or www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9
Gentle on our minds – The last time country singer Glen Campbell performed in the area, back in August of 2008 at the Chumash, he was just another aging star playing the casino circuit, albeit one with plenty of hits and influence. Now, after announcing that he has Alzheimer’s and that the concert tour he began this summer would be his last, Campbell is returning as something of a hero, a country legend saying goodbye to the fans who made such songs as “By the Time I Get to Phoenix,” “Wichita Lineman,” “Galveston,” “Rhinestone Cowboy” and “Gentle on My Mind” into massive hits, part of 45 million records sold in all in a career that dates back to the 1960s. But it’s not just nostalgia. Campbell’s final album, “Ghost on the Canvas,” is haunting in both its frank confrontations
with mortality that maintains an upbeat perspective (the songs were co-written with his producer based on recorded conversations about Campbell’s life and stories) and in the pristine beauty of his voice and the arrangements, which feature guest appearances by pop artists from Brian Setzer, Smashing Pumpkin’s Billy Corgan, Chris Isaak, Jellyfish’s Roger Joseph Manning, Jr., Dick Dale, and Keith Urban. Campbell will be supported by the roots band Instant People, which includes all three of his children with current wife, Kim (sons Cal on drums and Shannon on guitar, and daughter Ashley on banjo and keyboards), as well as his daughter Debbie from a previous marriage singing harmony. The concert also serves as a benefit for the Alzheimer’s Association California Central Coast Chapter. (See my entertainment column in this issue for more on the Alzheimer’s Association.) WHEN: 7pm WHERE: Lobero Theatre, 33 W. Canon Perdido Street COST: $66.50 & $136.50 (patrons $357.50 includes post-concert reception with the artist) INFO: 963-0761 or www.lobero.com
If you got it, flute it – Trinity Episcopal Church opens its 2011-12 Community Concert Series with “Flute Flourish,” featuring local flutist Suzanne Duffy & Friends in concert. Duffy – who has played locally with Opera Santa Barbara orchestra, the Santa Barbara Chamber Orchestra, Santa Barbara Symphony and New West – will perform in configurations variously featuring guitarist Anthony Ybarra, violinist Claude Lise LaFranque, violist Rachel Galvin, cellist Ervin Klinkon, and pianist Seungah Seo in a program including works by Piazzolla, Ravel, Ibert, Bach, Mozart, Poulenc, Rachmaninov and Gary Schocker. WHEN: 3:30pm WHERE:
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 41If we do not lay out ourselves in the service of mankind, whom should we serve? – John Adams
Fiddle Festival Frenzy
On Entertainmentby Steven Libowitz
Steven Libowitz has reported on the arts and entertainment for more than 30 years; he has contributed to Montecito Journal for over ten years.
They say you don’t change a lot after forty, but don’t tell that to the new owners of the
Old Time Fiddlers’ Convention and Festival.
What began as a purely acoustic event dominated by competitions on old-fashioned instruments with songs that were written no later than 1930 (which predates even bluegrass) and lots of impromptu jam sessions, has been transformed over the last two years since Sunrise Rotary took over into a more full-fledged festival with performances by touring acts, a full workshop area, lots of food and merchandise booths and a family-friendly focus (so much so that this year kids 17-and-under are being admitted free).
Which is why booking Hot Buttered Rum as the headliners makes a lot of sense. The Bay Area-based onetime string band has also modernized, adding a drummer, more amplifica-tion and a harder edge to its origi-nal bluegrass sound. The group will share the performance stage with returning Grammy Award winner Laurie Lewis and Tom Rozum, Irish band Molly’s Revenge, fellow Bay Area musicians old-time masters Eric and Suzy Thompson, and local favorites the Honeysuckle Possums, plus a special set by festival found-er Peter Feldmann and The Very Lonesome Boys.
We caught up with Hot Buttered Rum’s front man Erik Yates ear-lier this week, less than 24 hours after the band played at the massive Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco.
Q. You just finished playing HSB in your hometown. How was it? What was the highlight for you?
A. It’s a great Bay area gig and we
hadn’t been there for a few years, so it was really fun this time. It’s great not only for the fans but also the city in general because it’s free... We’ve watched it grow from being strictly bluegrass to having everything from gypsy rock to dumpster funk, which is about as far from bluegrass as you can get.
Yeah, so the event here will be just a bit smaller, several hundred versus sev-eral hundred thousand. How does that affect your show?
It’s interesting. I think that we’re a little bit like a goldfish: we expand or contract to fit the size of the contain-er. We grow to fill up that big stage when necessary in front of 10-15,000 people, but are just as happy when it’s ten or fifteen. Honestly, it’s really fun either way.
You noted the SF festival has grown from strictly bluegrass to so much more. The same could be said about Hot Buttered Rum. The sound has changed over the years.
The main difference, in a posi-tive way, was adding our drummer, Lucas Carlton, who’s like a born rock star. He’s really taken it upon himself to be in charge of the engine, setting the tempo and the feel. When you have mandolin and banjo and bass, but no drums, you’re all doing
Hot Buttered Rum brings its updated lineup and bluegrass sound to the Old Time Fiddlers’ Convention and Festival on Sunday October 9 at Stow House in Goleta
EnTERTAinMEnT Page 444
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11
New vibe at the Lobero – Jazz vibraphonist Gary Burton’s nearly five-decade quartet career began with an amazing collaboration with guitarist Larry Coryell, drummer Roy Haynes and bassist Steve Swallow that defied categorization in both composition and performance and excelled in exciting improvisations. Later, Burton created other bands that still boasted remarkable musicianship while serving as a launching pad for such up-and-coming players as guitarists Pat Metheny, whose recordings in the 1980s remain high water marks for the genre, and John Scofield. Now, invariably innovative Burton has returned to the quartet configuration for the first time since the mid-1990s, and has created musical alchemy once again with bassist Scott Colley, drummer Antonio Sanchez and guitarist Julian Lage, as heard
on the new album “Common Ground” that has garnered great reviews for its inspired musicality. The vibist graces the cover of the current edition of Downbeat Magazine, and gracing the stage at the Lobero on Tuesday with the New Quartet for what’s sure to be a highlight of the year. The concert also kicks off the 2011-2012 Jazz at the Lobero series, with a lineup that also includes Regina Carter’s “Reverse Thread” (Feb. 24), a trio featuring the always-popular ever adventurous vocalist Tierney Sutton with Hubert Laws and Larry Koonse (March 23), and Montecito’s own magician of the saxophone Charles Lloyd in a new collaboration with Maria Farantouri called Amarando (April 18). WHEN: 8pm WHERE: Lobero Theatre, 33 W. Canon Perdido Street COST: $50 & $40 (patrons $105); series tickets $152 & $120 INFO: 963-0761 or www.lobero.com
1500 State St. COST: free INFO: 965-7419 or www.trinitysb.org
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12
Energy expert espouses – Pulitzer Prize-winning author Daniel Yergin – one of the world’s most influential voices on global energy – discusses the world’s energy trends in a public lecture based on his influential new book, The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World. Yergin – whose talk makes the connections between Fukushima, Persian Gulf oil, other major international energy events and climate change – received a Pulitzer for his previous work, The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power. There will be a book signing
immediately following the lecture. WHEN: 8pm WHERE: Campbell Hall, UCSB campus COST: free INFO: 893-3535 or www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu
Sharp mind – Nationally acclaimed award-winning journalist Kathleen Sharp, who lives in Santa Barbara, signs and discusses her new book, Blood Feud: The Man Who Blew the Whistle on One of the Deadliest Prescription Drugs Ever, about the controversial development and marketing of the anti-anemia drug Procrit in the 1980s, at Santa Barbara’s popular independent bookstore Chaucer’s Wednesday evening. WHEN: 7pm WHERE: 3321 State Street COST: free INFO: 682-6787 or www.chaucersbooks.com •MJ
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12
A doll through the ages – Past and present violently collide when Lotte, an English tourist who repairs dolls, is captured while on a tour of current-day Troy and flung back into the ancient camp of Euripides’ “Trojan Women” in “Trojan Barbie,” the fall production at SBCC’s Interim Theatre. Christine Evans’ 2007 Jane Chambers’ Award-winning play is part contemporary drama, part homage to Euripides as the work recasts the legendary fall of the city of Troy against the vivid reality of modern warfare. Lotte books herself on a cultural tour for singles and travels with them to modern-day Troy,
where she finds more of a change of scene than she’d bargained for – ending up in the midst of an attack by the Greek army threatening to destroy the last fragments of a mighty civilization. The student showcase is directed by R. Michael Gros, Associate Professor of Theatre, and all the actors are current students in the school’s Theatre Arts Department. WHEN: opens 7:30pm Wednesday and plays Thursday through Saturday at 7:30pm, Sundays at 2pm, through Oct. 29 WHERE: Interim Theatre on SBCC’s West Campus, 800 Garvin Road COST: $15 general, $12 seniors, $8 students INFO: 965-5935 or www.sbcc.edu/theatrearts
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL42 • The Voice of the Village •
Bella Vista $$$1260 Channel Drive (565-8237)Featuring a glass retractable roof, Bella Vista’s ambiance is that of an elegant outdoor Medi-terranean courtyard. Executive Chef Alessan-dro Cartumini has created an innovative menu, featuring farm fresh, Italian-inspired California cuisine. Open daily for breakfast, lunch and dinner from 7 am to 9 pm.
Cafe Del Sol $$30 Los Patos Way (969-0448)
CAVA $$1212 Coast Village Road (969-8500)Regional Mexican and Spanish cooking combine to create Latin cuisine from tapas and margaritas, mojitos, seafood paella and sangria to lobster tamales, Churrasco ribeye steak and seared Ahi tuna. Sunflower-colored interior is accented by live Span-ish guitarist playing next to cozy beehive fireplace nightly. Lively year-round outdoor people-wat ching front patio. Open Monday-Friday 11 am to 10 pm. Saturday and Sunday 10 am to 10 pm.
China Palace $$1070 Coast Village Road (565-9380)Montecito’s only Chinese restaurant, here you’ll find large portions and modern décor. Take out available. (Montecito Journal staff is especially fond of the Cashew Chicken!) China Palace also has an outdoor patio. Open seven days 11:30 am to 9:30 pm.
Giovanni’s $1187 Coast Village Road (969-1277)
Los Arroyos $1280 Coast Village Road (969-9059)
Little Alex’s $1024 A-Coast Village Road (969-2297)
Lucky’s (brunch) $$ (dinner) $$$ 1279 Coast Village Road (565-7540)Comfortable, old-fashioned urban steakhouse in the heart of America’s biggest little village. Steaks, chops, seafood, cocktails, and an enormous wine list are featured, with white tablecloths, fine crystal and vintage photos from the 20th century. The bar (separate from dining room) features large flat-screen TV and opens at 4 pm during the week. Open nightly from 5 pm to 10 pm; Saturday & Sunday brunch from 9 am to 3 pm. Valet Parking.
Montecito Café $$1295 Coast Village Road (969-3392)
Montecito Coffee Shop $1498 East Valley Road (969-6250)
Pane é Vino $$$1482 East Valley Road (969-9274)
Peabody’s $1198 Coast Village Road (969-0834)
Piatti Ristorante $$$516 San Ysidro Road (969-7520)
$ (average per person under $15)$$ (average per person $15 to $30)$$$ (average per person $30 to $45)$$$$ (average per person $45-plus)
M O N T E C I T O E AT E R I E S . . . A G u i d e Plow & Angel $$$San Ysidro Ranch 900 San Ysidro Lane (565-1700) Enjoy a comfortable atmosphere as you dine on traditional dishes such as mac ‘n cheese and ribs. The ambiance is enhanced with original artwork, including stained glass windows and an homage to its namesake, Saint Isadore, hanging above the fireplace. Dinner is served from 5 to 10 pm daily with bar service extend-ing until 11 pm weekdays and until midnight on Friday and Saturday.
Sakana Japanese Restaurant $$1046 Coast Village Road (565-2014)
Stella Mare’s $$/$$$50 Los Patos Way (969-6705)
Stonehouse $$$$San Ysidro Ranch900 San Ysidro Lane (565-1700)Located in what is a 19th-century citrus pack-inghouse, Stonehouse restaurant features a lounge with full bar service and separate dining room with crackling fireplace and creekside views. Chef Jamie West’s regional cuisine is prepared with a palate of herbs and vegetables harvested from the on-site chef’s garden. Recently voted 1 of the best 50 restaurants in America by OpenTable Diner’s Choice. 2010 Diners’ Choice Awards: 1 of 50 Most Romantic Restaurants in America, 1 of 50 Restaurants With Best Service in America. Open for dinner from 6 to 10 pm daily. Sunday Brunch 10 am to 2 pm.
Trattoria Mollie $$$1250 Coast Village Road (565-9381)
Tre Lune $$/$$$1151 Coast Village Road (969-2646)A real Italian boite, complete with small but fully licensed bar, big list of Italian wines, large comfortable tables and chairs, lots of mahogany and large b&w vintage photos of mostly fa-mous Italians. Menu features both comfort food like mama used to make and more adventurous Italian fare. Now open continuously from lunch to dinner. Also open from 7:30 am to 11:30 am daily for breakfast.
Via Vai Trattoria Pizzeria $$1483 East Valley Road (565-9393)
Delis, bakeries, juice bars
Blenders in the Grass1046 Coast Village Road (969-0611)
Here’s The Scoop1187 Coast Village Road (lower level) (969-7020)Gelato and Sorbet are made on the premises. Open Monday through Thursday 1 pm to 9 pm, 12 pm to 10 pm Friday and Saturday, and 12 pm to 9 pm on Sundays. Scoopie also offers a full coffee menu featuring Santa Barbara Roasting Company coffee. Offerings are made from fresh, seasonal ingredients found at Farm-ers’ Market, and waffle cones are made on site everyday.
Jeannine’s1253 Coast Village Road (969-7878)
Montecito Deli1150 Coast Village Road (969-3717)
Open six days a week from 7 am to 3 pm. (Closed Sunday) This eatery serves home-made soups, fresh salads, sandwiches, and its specialty, The Piadina, a homemade flat bread made daily. Owner Jeff Rypysc and staff deliver locally and cater office parties, luncheons or movie shoots. Also serving breakfast (7am to 11 am), and brewing Peet’s coffee & tea.
Panino 1014 #C Coast Village Road (565-0137)
Pierre Lafond516 San Ysidro Road (565-1502)This market and deli is a center of activity in Montecito’s Upper Village, serving fresh baked pastries, regular and espresso coffee drinks, smoothies, burritos, homemade soups, deli salads, made-to-order sandwiches and wraps available, and boasting a fully stocked salad bar. Its sunny patio draws crowds of regulars daily. The shop also carries specialty drinks, gift items, grocery staples, and produce. Open everyday 5:30 am to 8 pm.
Village Cheese & Wine 1485 East Valley Road (969-3815)
Whodidily Cupcakes1150 Coast Village Rd (969-9808)
In Summerland / Carpinteria
The Barbecue Company $$3807 Santa Claus Lane (684-2209)
Cantwell’s Summerland Market $2580 Lillie Avenue (969-5894)
Corktree Cellars $$910 Linden Avenue (684-1400)Corktree offers a casual bistro setting for lunch and dinner, in addition to wine tasting and tapas. The restaurant, open everyday except Monday, features art from locals, mellow music and a relaxed atmosphere. An extensive wine list features over 110 bottles of local and inter-national wines, which are also available in the eatery's retail section.
Garden Market $3811 Santa Claus Lane (745-5505)
Jack’s Bistro $5050 Carpinteria Avenue (566-1558)Serving light California Cuisine, Jack’s offers freshly baked bagels with whipped cream cheeses, omelettes, scrambles, breakfast bur-ritos, specialty sandwiches, wraps, burgers, sal-ads, pastas and more. Jacks offers an extensive espresso and coffee bar menu, along with wine and beer. They also offer full service catering, and can accommodate wedding receptions to corporate events. Open Monday through Fri-day 6:30 am to 3 pm, Saturday and Sunday 7 am to 3 pm.
Nugget $$2318 Lillie Avenue (969-6135)
Sly’s $$$686 Linden Avenue (684-6666)Sly’s features fresh fish, farmers’ market veg-gies, traditional pastas, prime steaks, Blue Plate Specials and vintage desserts. You’ll find a full bar, serving special martinis and an extensive wine list featuring California and French wines. Cocktails from 4 pm to close, dinner from 5 to
9 pm Sunday-Thursday and 5 to 10 pm Friday and Saturday. Lunch is M-F 11:30 to 2:30, and brunch is served on the weekends from 9 am to 3 pm.
Stacky’s Seaside $2315 Lillie Avenue (969-9908)
Summerland Beach Café $2294 Lillie Avenue (969-1019)
Tinkers $2275 C Ortega Hill Road (969-1970)
Santa Barbara / Restaurant Row
Andersen’s Danish Bakery &Gourmet Restaurant $1106 State State Street (962-5085)Established in 1976, Andersen’s serves Danish and European cuisine including breakfast, lunch & dinner. Authentic Danishes, Apple Strudels, Marzipans, desserts & much more. Dine inside surrounded by European interior or outside on the sidewalk patio. Open 8 am to 9 pm Monday through Friday, 8 am to 10 pm Saturday and Sunday.
Bistro Eleven Eleven $$1111 East Cabrillo Boulevard (730-1111)Located adjacent to Hotel Mar Monte, the bistro serves breakfast and lunch featuring all-American favorites. Dinner is a mix of tradi-tional favorites and coastal cuisine. The lounge advancement to the restaurant features a big screen TV for daily sporting events and happy hour. Open Monday-Friday 6:30 am to 9 pm, Saturday and Sunday 6:30 am to 10 pm.
Ca’ Dario37 East Victoria Street (884-9419) $$A bustling trattoria located one block off State Street, owner Dario Furlati’s namesake eatery is known for its fresh pasta, savory meat and fish entrées, and daily and seasonal specials. Black and white photos of famous Italians line the walls; Dario, who hails from Lake Como, recently added a full bar menu in addition to a wine list featuring Californian and Italian wines. You have to try the the brown butter and sage ravioli, Ca’ Dario’s signature dish. Open every-day at 11:30 am until 10 pm (Sunday: 5 pm until 10 pm). Reservations strongly suggested.
Café Luck $$$18 East Cota Street (962-5393)One of just a handful of restaurants in Santa Barbara featuring mostly French cuisine, Café Luck aficionados report that the eatery’s Short Ribs (when available) are the standout item worth waiting in line for. Other favorites include Duck Confit with frisee, mushroom and potato chips, Bouillabaisse, and even the Café Luck Burger with Gruyere & Bacon. Open Sunday through Thursday from 4 pm until 11 pm; Friday and Saturday until midnight.
El Paseo $$813 Anacapa Street (962-6050)Located in the heart of downtown Santa Bar-bara in a Mexican plaza setting, El Paseo is the place for authentic Mexican specialties, home-made chips and salsa, and a cold margarita while mariachis stroll through the historic restaurant. The décor reflects its rich Spanish heritage, with bougainvillea-draped balconies, fountain courtyard dining and a festive bar. Dinner specials are offered during the week,
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 43
FAIRVIEW
Denotes Subject toRestrictions on “NO PASS”SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS
Information Listedfor Fr iday thru Thursday
October 7 - 13877-789-MOVIEmetrotheatres.com
REAL STEEL (PG-13)IN DIGITAL
Daily - 2:00 5:00 8:00Sunday 10/9 - 5:00 8:00
Sunday, October 9 - 2:00 pmLA PHIL - LIVE IN HD:
Dudamel conducts Mendelssohn
916 State Street - S.B.
FIESTA 5
2044 Alameda Padre Serra - S.B.RIVIERA
371 Hitchcock Way - S.B.PLAZA DE ORO
ARLINGTON1317 State Street - 963-4408
225 N. Fairview - Goleta
PASEO NUEVO8 W. De La Guerra Pl. - S.B.
METRO 4618 State Street - S.B.
Metropolitan Theatres
THE LION KING 3D (G)2:00 4:30 7:00
DRIVE (R) 2:20 7:40
KILLER ELITE (R) 5:00
WHAT’S YOUR NUMBER?2:10 4:45 7:20 (R)
Hugh JackmanREAL STEEL (PG-13)
12:50 3:50 6:50 9:50
(*) THE IDES OF MARCH1:15 4:15 7:00 9:40 (R)
(*) MONEYBALL (PG-13)12:40 3:40 6:40 9:35
DREAM HOUSE (PG-13)12:45 3:00 5:20 7:40 9:55
50/50 (R)1:30 4:30 7:10 9:30
DOLPHIN TALE (PG)in 2D - 12:30 3:30in 3D - 6:30 9:10
RESTLESS (PG-13)Fri & Mon-Thu - 5:00 7:45Sat/Sun - 2:15 5:00 7:45
THE HELP (PG-13)Fri & Mon-Thu - 7:30Sat/Sun - 2:00 7:30
MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13)Daily - 5:15
FINDING JOE (Not Rated)Fri & Mon-Thu - 5:00 7:30Sat/Sun - 2:15 5:00 7:30
(*) MONEYBALL (PG-13)1:45 4:50 8:00
CONTAGION (PG-13)2:00 4:40 7:20
THE LION KING 3D (G)2:20 5:10 7:30
WHAT’S YOUR NUMBER? (R)2:30 5:20 7:50
ABDUCTION (PG-13) 5:00
KILLER ELITE (R)2:10 7:40
REAL STEEL (PG-13)Fri/Sat - 1:10 4:10 7:10 10:10Sun-Thu - 1:10 4:10 7:10
DOLPHIN TALE (PG)in 2D: Daily - 1:30 4:20 in 3D: Fri/Sat - 7:00 9:35
Sun-Thu - 7:00
DRIVE (R)Fri/Sat - 1:45 4:40 7:20 9:50Sun-Thu - 1:45 4:40 7:20
DREAM HOUSE (PG-13)Fri/Sat - 2:00 5:00 7:30 10:00Sun-Thu - 2:00 5:00 7:30
A George Clooney Film(*) THE IDES OF MARCH
Fri/Sat - (R)1:15 2:30 4:00 5:10
6:45 7:45 9:20Sun-Thu -
1:15 2:30 4:005:10 6:45 7:45
Playing on 2 Screens!
(*) MONEYBALL (PG-13)Fri/Sat -
12:30 3:30 6:30 9:30Sun - 12:30 3:30 6:30Mon-Thu - 1:30 4:25 7:20
50/50 (R)Fri/Sat -
12:20 2:40 5:00 7:30 9:50Sun - 12:20 2:40 5:00 7:30Mon-Thu - 2:40 5:00 7:30
On Sale Now....The Arlington’s:2011-2012 MET OPERA HD SERIES
ARLINGTON THEATRE or www.metrotheatres.com
Saturday, October 15 - 9:55 am Donizetti’s ANNA BOLENA
Saturday, October 29 - 9:55 amMozart’s DON GIOVANNI
Saturday, November 5 - 9:00 amWagner’s SIEGFRIED
FINDING JOE (Not Rated) Riviera
RESTLESS (PG-13) Plaza De Oro
(*) THE IDES OF MARCH (R)
Paseo Nuevo on 2 Screens Camino Real
REAL STEEL (PG-13)
Metro 4 Camino Real Arlington in Digital
BARGAIN TUESDAYS AT ALL LOCATIONS!No Bargain Tuesday pricing for films with (*) before the title
Features Stadium Seating
CAMINO REAL MARKETPLACEHollister & Storke - GOLETA
CAMINO REALFeatures Stadium Seating
Features Stadium Seating
Features Stadium Seating
No one need think that the world can be ruled without blood; the civil sword shall and must be red and bloody – Andrew Jackson
. . . E AT E R I E Swith a brunch on Sundays. Open Tuesday through Thursday 4 pm to 10 pm, Friday and Saturday 11:30 am to 10:30 pm, and Sunday 10:30 am to 9 pm.
Enterprise Fish Co. $$225 State Street (962-3313)Every Monday and Tuesday the Enterprise Fish Company offers two-pound Maine Lob-sters served with clam chowder or salad, and rice or potatoes for only $29.95. Happy hour is every weekday from 4 pm to 7 pm. Open Sunday thru Thursday 11:30 am to 10 pm and Friday thru Saturday 11:30 am to 11 pm.
The Harbor Restaurant $$210 Stearns Wharf (963-3311)Enjoy ocean views at the historic Harbor Restaurant on Stearns Wharf. Featuring prime steaks and seafood, a wine list that has earned Wine Spectator Magazine’s Award of Excel-lence for the past six years and a full cocktail bar. Lunch is served 11:30 am to 2:30 pm Monday-Friday, 11 am to 3 pm Saturday and Sunday. Dinner is served 5:30 pm to 10 pm, early dinner available Saturday and Sunday starting at 3 pm.
Los Agaves $600 N. Milpas Street (564-2626)Los Agaves offers eclectic Mexican cuisine, us-ing only the freshest ingredients, in a casual and friendly atmosphere. Serving lunch and dinner, with breakfast on the weekends, Los Agaves fea-tures traditional dishes from central and south-ern Mexico such as shrimp & fish enchiladas, shrimp chile rellenos, and famous homemade mole poblano. Open Monday- Friday 11 am to 9 pm, Saturday & Sunday 9 am to 9 pm.
Miró $$$$8301 Hollister Avenue at Bacara Resort & Spa (968-0100)Miró is a refined refuge with stunning views, featuring two genuine Miro sculptures, a top-rated chef offering a sophisticated menu that accents fresh, organic, and native-grown ingredients, and a world-class wine cellar. Open Tuesday through Saturday from 6 pm to 10 pm.
Moby Dick Restaurant $$220 Stearns Wharf (965-0549)Sitting right on Stearns Wharf, Moby Dick of-fers fish, lobster, clam chowder, fish and chips and a plenty more. A great place to watch the sun set over the ocean. Open 7 days a week from 7 am to 9 pm.
Olio e Limone Ristorante $$$ Olio Pizzeria $ 17 West Victoria Street (899-2699) Elaine and Alberto Morello oversee this friendly, casually elegant, linen-tabletop eatery featur-ing Italian food of the highest order. Offerings include eggplant soufflé, pappardelle with quail, sausage and mushroom ragù, and fresh-imported Dover sole. Wine Spectator Award of Excellence-winning wine list. Private dining (up to 40 guests) and catering are also available.Next door at Olio Pizzeria, the Morellos have added a simple pizza-salumi-wine-bar inspired by neighborhood “pizzerie” and “enoteche” in Italy. Here the focus is on artisanal pizzas and antipasti, with classic toppings like fresh moz-zarella, seafood, black truffles, and sausage. Salads, innovative appetizers and an assort-ment of salumi and formaggi round out the
menu at this casual, fast-paced eatery. Private dining for up to 32 guests. Both the ristorante and the pizzeria are open for lunch Monday thru Saturday (11:30 am to 2 pm) and dinner seven nights a week (from 5 pm).
Pierre Lafond Wine Bistro $516 State Street (962-1455)The Wine Bistro menu is seasonal California cuisine specializing in local products. Pair your meal with wine from the Santa Barbara Winery, Lafond Winery or one from the list of wines from around the world. Happy Hour Monday - Friday 4:30 to 6:30 pm. The 1st Wednesday of each month is Passport to the World of Wine. Grilled cheese night every Thursday. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner; catering available. www.pierrelafond.com
Renaud’s $ 3315 State Street (569-2400) Located in Loreto Plaza, Renaud’s is a bakery specializing in a wide selection of French pas-tries. The breakfast and lunch menu is com-posed of egg dishes, sandwiches and salads and represents Renaud’s personal favorites. Brewed coffees and teas are organic. Open Monday-Saturday 7 am to 5 pm, Sunday 7 am to 3 pm.
Rodney’s Steakhouse $$$633 East Cabrillo Boulevard (884-8554)Deep in the heart of well, deep in the heart of Fess Parker’s Doubletree Inn on East Beach in Santa Barbara. This handsome eatery sells and serves only Prime Grade beef, lamb, veal, halibut, salmon, lobster and other high-end victuals. Full bar, plenty of California wines, elegant surroundings, across from the ocean. Open for dinner Tuesday through Saturday at 5:30 pm. Reservations suggested on week-ends.
Ojai
Maravilla $$$905 Country Club Road in Ojai (646-1111)Located at the Ojai Valley Inn & Spa, this upscale eatery features prime steaks, chops and fresh seafood. Local farmers provide fresh produce right off the vine, while herbs are har-vested from the Inn’s herb garden. The menu includes savory favorites like pan seared diver scallops and braised beef short ribs; dishes are accented with seasonal vegetables. Open Sun-day through Thursday for dinner from 5:30 pm to 9:30 pm, Friday and Saturday from 5:30 pm to 10 pm. •MJ
MOVIE GUIDE
Advertise in
Affordable. Effective. Efficient.Call for rates (805) 565-1860
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL44 • The Voice of the Village •
one piece of it – which is also incred-ibly cool; it’s like everybody is one hand of a drum set. But having Lucas take charge of the rhythmic soul of the band is pushing us to new highs, musically speaking. It comes through – people notice it. He’s not only hitting the drums at the right time, but also with the right intention. I can’t wait to get a few albums together with this lineup.
Now that it’s not so acoustic anymore, it seems the songs are more structured too. Tell me about the transition and the reasons.
I think what happened is we’ve always followed the songs that we were writing to determine which direction we’d go in. We kept writing songs that weren’t straight-ahead bluegrass. Even though we could do a lot of it without drummers, we realized much of the music we were coming up with was crying out for percussion. So we tried it out and I know for me it’s opened me up as a singer. The one thing that’s tough is it does interfere with the sound of banjo and acoustic guitar; it’s hard to get them to carry over the sound of the drums. But as a singer I feel like I can settle back into the pocket and it pushes me to sing differently in, like, a more emotionally commu-nicative style.
How does that updated sound coalesce in the newer songs?
There’s a little more grit and a lot more drive. I’m using more Dobro versus banjo; it’s not my strongest instrument but it speaks in a specific way that works now. Also we can do more mid-tempo stuff without feel-ing sluggish or slow. Usually a blue-grass band, if you do one slow song you have to speed it up again before people fall asleep on you. Now, we don’t have to spend the whole night way up at the top of the metronome. Sometimes we miss that more rooted sound of not having a drummer. But Lucas has also been playing more washboard, so we’re able to still go acoustic.
Our fiddle festival also draws lots of musicians who either compete or just come to play in the picking sessions. Any chance you guys will be out there jamming before or after your set?
I think we’ll be doing some roam-ing around and playing with folks. I have a lot of interest in the old-time banjo players. It’s a real important thread of American music. I’m look-ing forward to listening as well as playing.
(The 40th annual Old Time Fiddlers’ Convention and Festival takes place Sunday 10am-5pm at
Stow House in Goleta. Admission is $25 general, $20 seniors/students, free 17 & under. Visit www.fid dlersconvention.org for details and schedule)
A noble FarewellCredit Rhonda Spiegel, execu-
tive director of the Alzheimer’s Association, California Central Coast Chapter, for securing Glen Campbell to perform a benefit con-cert at the Lobero Sunday evening, the only such benefit the famed coun-try singer has announced as part of his final tour before retiring in the face of his diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (see the Events Calendar for concert details). But credit Campbell himself for taking the unusual step acknowledging his disease publicly. The national press will go a long way toward raising awareness of the horrifying, debilitating disease that last year claimed nearly 500,000 lives in California alone, said Barbara Lanz-Mateo, the association’s com-munications manager.
Why is it so important to raise awareness? I wondered. Doesn’t everybody have a relative or a friend who is suffering from the disease where the brain gradually wastes away until, as Lanz-Mateo put it, “You not only can’t remember who people are but eventually can’t even recall how to eat or go to the bath-room; you forget how to be human.
“Believe it or not, there remains a stigma attached to dementia or any disability involving the brain, which is sad because people have absolutely no control over the dis-ease,” Lanz-Mateo explained. “We have people in this town – includ-ing Montecito – very well known families, who have a family member with dementia or Alzheimer’s who don’t want anybody to know. While it doesn’t make sense to us, it feels safer not to have to talk about it. That’s what makes Glen Campbell publicly revealing his disease so important. That stigma still exists. It takes a lot of courage to come out in the face of it.”
Frank and candid talk about the disease is also important beyond social reasons, Lanz-Mateo said. There’s an economic factor that is fast becoming a crisis.
“With the aging of the culture, ten thousand baby boomers are reaching age sixty-five every day,” she said. “And while being old doesn’t mean you’re going to get Alzheimer’s, it’s the biggest risk factor. So when you combine the fact of the sheer num-bers with the sad fact that there’s no treatment, no cure or even a way to slow it down, our health care system is going to be overwhelmed, as are
families.”Lanz-Matteo noted that despite
the growing numbers, the federal government hasn’t made dementia research a priority. “The funding is at a ridiculously low level. Cancer research gets $5.8 billion, heart dis-ease $4.3, HIV/AIDS $3 billion, while there’s only $450 million for Alzheimer’s research. And we know it pays off.”
All the other diseases’ death rates are way down, while Alzheimer’s is up 66 percent in the period 2000-2008, she noted.
“If we could just get the federal government on board to dedicating the money necessary... If we could just delay the onset by five years, we’d dramatically improve our out-look. But we just don’t have it.”
Now, because of the Rhinestone Cowboy, that may change a little bit.
Focus on filmBig events including major con-
certs, touring dance companies, large scale theater one-offs and the like deservedly get the lion’s share of the attention of the general pub-
lic at UCSB Arts & Lectures. Also fulfilling the organization’s mission, as well as bringing manna of the intellectual kind to the masses, is the lecture programming, which entices some of the most powerful, influen-tial and just darn interesting folks from all walks of life onto the cam-pus by the sea each year. But let’s not forget the films. Even in a shallower season such as this fall’s offerings, you’ll find nonfiction gems that you won’t be able to see on a large screen anywhere else in town.
The series opens on Tuesday with Passing Strange, Spike Lee’s docu-mentary film of the Broadway show about a young African American’s artistic journey of self-discovery in Europe, a work that was developed at the Sundance Institute. It’s a rivet-ing piece of performance art-cum-rock musical, one that speaks to the specific and the world at large and features terrific ensemble work. Despite Lee’s cachet, it only played on TV back in 2009 and never saw theatrical release.
Into Eternity, which screens on October 17, hits home in a far more harrowing way: how we are
Glen Campbell will perform a benefit concert at the Lobero on Sunday as part of his final tour before retiring due to being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s
EnTERTAinMEnT (Continued from page 41)
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 45In politics, the middle way is none at all – John Adams
handling nuclear waste. Michael Madsen’s 2010 doc takes a look at the world’s first permanent reposi-tory in Finland – the materials have long been stored in temporary facili-ties worldwide – which is being designed to last 100,000 years – a period scientists estimate will take to make it safe.
October’s final entry is Rejoice and Shout, which celebrates the 200-year musical history of African-American gospel music and features Mahalia Jackson, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, The Dixie Hummingbirds, The Staple Singers and many more superstars of the genre in a moving and thrill-ing movie just made this year.
Also due this fall: Journey From Zanskar, narrated by Richard Gere, explores the last place where the original Tibetan Buddhist way of life still exists, Zanskar’s inacces-sibility and isolation have protected it from cultural change, but now the Dalai Lama has chosen 17 chil-dren to be educated so that their heritage will not be lost. The film follows them on their dangerous 10-day trek to a school on the other side of the snow-covered Himalayas (Nov. 22). If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front delves into the radical environmental organization through one of its members, taking a look at activism and terrorism from
numerous vantage points (Nov. 29).All the films screen at Campbell
Hall on the UCSB campus, and admission is $6. Details at www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu.
Pop TartsA week filled with frothy pop,
alluring Americana and rocking roots music gets underway Thursday with two separate shows at SOhO: New York-based fingerstyle and tap-ping guitarist Preston Reed at 6 pm, followed by a double-bill of Nashville clawhammer banjo player Abigail Washburn, who blends old-timey folk elements with far-flung modern sounds (much like her hus-band, Bela Fleck), and NorCal indie-folkie Lauren Shera at 8:30 pm... New Noise has put together an even more appealing double-bill at Velvet Jones on Friday night in Seattle’s gritty Rocky Votolato, a punk-rocker-turned-acoustic-troubadour whose gravelly voice immediately compels attention, and Matt Pond PA, the veteran East Coast melody-heavy band fronted by Pond, a sing-er-songwriter who was originally trained on French horn and trumpet which explains the rich musicality and diversity displayed on the more than a dozen releases since 1999. Also on Friday: Steve Key – best
known as the writer of “33, 45, 78 (Record Time)” recorded by country music star Kathy Mattea – head-lines a Cambridge Drive Concert Series show with opening act Kat Devlin, the hot young songstress who recently moved to town.
That same night, the Song Tree Concert Series takes a bit of a left turn when the Son Jarocho trio Chucumite makes its area debut. Based on the harp and jarana, a gui-tar-like instrument, Son Jarocho is the traditional musical style of Veracruz, Mexico, that evolved over the last 250 years to represent a fusion of indigenous, Spanish and African musical elements with lyrics that include humorous verses and subjects such as love, nature, sailors, and cattle breeding. That’s also the same night that the new season of the Ojai Concert Series at Dancing Oaks Ranch launches with T-Rock, which is not the hip-hop star but a folk-rock ensemble with a bent for Italian tar-antella.
Saturday brings the best bet of the week, a remarkably generous triple bill from Club Mercy cou-pling Blitzen Trapper, Dawes and the Smoke Fairies at SOhO. Dawes plays Americana rock with a purist’s heart and lyrics that both evoke landscapes via detailed imagery and grab the heart with honest simplicity. “Love Is
All I Am,” from 2009’s “North Hills,” still sends chills down the spine with every listen, while the L.A. band’s new CD, “Nothing is Wrong,” is very aptly titled. Blitzen Trapper is another astonishing outfit from the alt country Mecca that is Portland, Oregon, one with a Wilco-like pen-chant for ambitious experimentation whose new album takes on a bit of a harder edge albeit with plucked gui-tars and harmonicas. The British duo Smoke Fairies offers dark and lusty folk-blues from Sussex, England.
Sunday brings Santa Barbara jazz singer Kimberly Ford to the month-ly Santa Barbara Jazz Society after-noon gig at SOhO, fronting a band featuring bassist Randy Tico, key-boardist George Friedenthal, percus-sionist Kevin Winard and special guest Sally Barr on violin and vocals. Also, UCSB Arts & Lectures’ Family Fun Series gets underway with the Grammy-winning cowboy quartet Riders in the Sky offering kid-friend-ly wacky Western wit and home-on-the-range warbling at Campbell Hall. Finally, Montecito singer-songwriter Glen Phillips returns to SOhO on Tuesday, this time in tow with the great country singer-songwriter Kim Richey whose two-decade career has had hits on the pop charts as well as songs covered by the likes of Trisha Yearwood. •MJ
If you have a 93108 open house scheduled, please send us your free directory listing to realestate@montecitojournal.net
93108 OPEN HOUSE DIRECTORY SATURDAY OCTOBER 8 ADDRESS TIME $ #BD / #BA AGENT NAME TELEPHONE # COMPANY60 Butterfly Lane 1-3pm $2,995,000 4bd/5ba Maureen Mcdermut 570-5545 Sotheby's2516 Sycamore Canyon Road 2-4pm $2,149,000 4bd Ingrid A. Smith 689-2396 Coldwell2150 East Valley Road By Appt. $1,495,000 4bd/3ba Jason Streatfeild 280-9798 Prudential California Realty83 Seaview Drive By Appt. $1,395,000 2bd/2ba Joyce Enright 570-1360 Prudential California Realty1511B East Valley Road 1-4pm $1,249,000 2bd/2ba Brook Ashley 689-0480 Prudential California Realty654 Circle Drive 1-4pm $875,000 4bd/2ba Bob Ratliffe 448-6642 Prudential California Realty1944 N Jameson Lane C By Appt. $565,000 3bd/2ba Bunny DeLorie 570-9181 Prudential California Realty
SUNDAY OCTOBER 9ADDRESS TIME $ #BD / #BA AGENT NAME TELEPHONE # COMPANY2084 East Valley Road 1-4pm $6,950,000 6bd/5.5ba Paul Hurst 680-8216 Prudential California Realty700 Lilac Drive 1-4pm $4,300,000 3bd/3ba Joe Stubbins 729-0778 Prudential California Realty655 Oak Springs Road 2-5pm $3,495,000 3bd Holly McKenna 886-8848 Coldwell1344 School House Road 2-4pm $3,150,000 4bd/3.5ba Sandy Stahl 689-1602 Sotheby's60 Butterfly Lane 2-4pm $2,995,000 4bd/5ba Francie Berezo 705-2561 Sotheby's111 Cedar Lane 2-4pm $2,995,000 3bd/2ba Katinka Goertz 708-9616 Sotheby's1323 Arroyico 2-4pm $2,895,000 4bd/6ba Andrew Templeton 895-6029 Sotheby's90-92 Humphrey Road By Appt. $1,795,000 4bd/3ba Stu Morse 705-0161 Goodwin & Thyne733 El Rancho Road 2-5pm $1,575,000 3bd Joan Wagner 895-4555 Coldwell2150 East Valley Road 2-5pm $1,495,000 4bd/3ba Jason Streatfeild 280-9798 Prudential California Realty727 Alston Road 2-4pm $1,475,000 3bd/3ba Robert Johnson 705-1606 Prudential California Realty83 Seaview Drive By Appt. $1,395,000 2bd/2ba Joyce Enright 570-1360 Prudential California Realty1515 East Valley Road #D 1-4pm $1,349,000 3bd Maurie McGuire 403-8816 Coldwell677 Orchard Ave 1-4pm $1,295,000 3bd/2.5ba John Comin 689-3078 Prudential California Realty805 Park Lane West 1–3pm $1,290,000 Land Brian Felix 455-3669 Sotheby¹s1368-70 Virginia Road 1-4pm $1,285,000 2bd Gloria Carmichael 896-6567 Coldwell85 Depot Road 1-4pm $1,100,000 3bd Sally Clyne 450-0852 Coldwell1128 Oriole Road 1-4pm $1,095,000 3bd/5ba Ewy Axelsson 689-4124 Prudential California Realty1944 N Jameson Lane C By Appt. $565,000 3bd/2ba John Sween 448-9171 Prudential California Realty
6 – 13 October 2011MONTECITO JOURNAL46 • The Voice of the Village •
J.C. MALLMANNCONTRACTOR
(805) 886-3372BONDED – FULLY INSURED
LIC # 819867
DRAINAGE SYSTEMS
IRRIGATION
EROSION CONTROL
LOW VOLTAGE LIGHTING
WATER SYSTEMS
LANDSCAPE INSTALLATION
WATER SERVICES
MONTECITO ELECTRIC
EXCELLENT REFERENCES
Over 25 Years in Montecito
• Repair Wiring• Remodel Wiring• New Wiring• Landscape Lighting• Interior Lighting
(805) 969-1575STATE LICENSE No. 485353MAXWELL L. HAILSTONE1482 East Valley Road, Suite 147Montecito, California 93108
MONTECITO ELECTRIC
EXCELLENT REFERENCES
Over 25 Years in Montecito
• Repair Wiring• Remodel Wiring• New Wiring• Landscape Lighting• Interior Lighting
(805) 969-1575STATE LICENSE No. 485353MAXWELL L. HAILSTONE1482 East Valley Road, Suite 147Montecito, California 93108
J.C. MALLMANNCONTRACTOR
(805) 886-3372BONDED – FULLY INSURED
LIC # 819867
DRAINAGE SYSTEMS
IRRIGATION
EROSION CONTROL
LOW VOLTAGE LIGHTING
WATER SYSTEMS
LANDSCAPE INSTALLATION
WATER SERVICES
ESTATE/GARAGE SALE
“Mini-May-Madness in October” Huge sale, antiques, picture frames, kitchen hutches, studio stuff, garden furniture. 1709 Overlook Lane-off of APS. Sat October 8th & Sun October 9th from 9-3pm.
SPECIAL REQUESTSWanted To Buy older Hi Grade Older Men’s Wrist watches Rolex, Patek Phillipe, Omega, Breitling, Universal Geneve, IWC, Old Longines, etc. Thomas Schmidt 563 1267.
HEALTH SERVICES
Private yoga in your home. If you are new to yoga, recovering from an injury or just too busy to make it to a class. $40 hour. Simone 805 452 8240.
Treat yourself well with a high quality massage by a leading therapist in the Montecito area. I have 11 years of experience, use only organic massage oils, and offer a variety of modalities. Enjoy a healing, relaxing massage in the comfort of your home. Please call me for more details and pricing. Scott Hunter LMT - 455-4791
PETS / PET SERVICES
CRITTER SITTERS of Santa BarbaraProfessional pet sitting/house sitting, Over 25yrs exp. Scheduled drop-in visits, dog walking. Pedicures, tons of special needs experience & geriatric care. Estate experience, celebrity confidentiality. Many excellent refs. Lic/bonded/insured. www.sbcrittersitters.com or 805 968-1746.
COMPUTER/VIDEO/PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES
VIDEOS TO DVD TRANSFERSHurry, before your tapes fade away!Only $10 each 969-6500 Scott
TUTORING SERVICES
PIANO LESSONS Kary and Sheila Kramer are long standing members of the Music Teachers’ Assoc. of Calif. Studios conveniently located at the Music Academy
practical, personalized solutions for your office, home or storage unit. Reasonable rates; references available. Call David toll free at 855-771-4858 or write davidtheorganizer@gmail.com. “A passion for organizing.” Personal assistant - Let me lighten your load. Excellent organizational skills, cleaning, cooking, errands, household projects. Excellent local refs. Avail immediately. 805-450-1936
Personal Assistant / Manager8 Years property maintenanceExcellent Local ReferencesSteve: 805-545-0142 / 4m@cwik.com
Companion/Personal Assistant to the ElderlyMature and experienced. Services include: shopping, escorting and scheduling appointments and outings, bookkeeping, and much more. Excellent work history and references. Contact Anna Marie at 805-683-6118
POSITION WANTED
Property-Care Needs? Do you need a caretaker or property manager? Expert Land Steward is avail now. View résumé at: http://landcare.ojaidigital.net
Non-medical care/personal assistant. Compassionate, Drs appt, lite cleaning, meals, etc. Local woman, English speaking. Local agencies exp. Call Sharlene (805) 252-3973
Experienced nurse available for weekend respite care. Reasonable rates. References. (562) 537-5875
“Extraordinary Executive Assistant Available”Part or Full Time (Contract or Permanent) Your Office or Mine* 20 years experience to C-Level/Successful individuals and attorneys * Mac and PC expert* 100 wpm typing speed * All Microsoft Office Applications Outlook * Preparation of proposals and contracts, maintaining paper and electronic files * Manage intricate busy calendars and maintain scheduling for meetings, conference calls, seminars * Very well versed with domestic and international travel arrangements * Ability to meet any and all deadlines! HOURLY SALARY NEGOTIABLE. I am very good at what I do. Montecito based 805-280-6669 cjlegal@gmail.com
ESTATE/MOVING SALE SERVICES
ESTATE & MOVING SALE SERVICES: I will handle your estate moving sale for you; efficient, experienced, knowledgeable. Call for details—Elizabeth Langtree 733-1030
Antiques & Fine Arts Appraisals, Estate & Moving Sales, Buy or Consignment,30 Years Local experience, References. Thomas Schmidt 563-1267.
THE CLEARING HOUSE 708-6113 Downsizing, Moving & Estate Sales Professional, efficient, cost-effective services for the sale of your personal property Licensed. Visit our website: www.theclearinghouseSB.com
REAL ESTATE SERVICES
# 1 Coastal Housing Partner Nancy Langhorne Hussey 805-452-3052Coldwell Banker / MontecitoDRE#01383773
SHORT/LONG TERM RENTAL
CARMEL BY THE SEA vacation getaway. Charming, private studio. Beautiful garden patio. Walk to beach and town. $110/night. 831-624-6714
Villa Vista Bella luxury 3-acre Montecito estate for lease. Ocean view, pool, spa, 8,000sqft. www.villavistabella.com $13,950/mo.call Karen 213-400-8511.
Country living at its best. Unfurnished 3bd/2 ba guesthouse. Housekeeper/gardener included. No dogs, cats ok. $3800/mo. 964-1891
VILLA FONTANA Large, third floor 1-bdrmapt with huge patios and mountain view. Serene pool and gardens, parking garagewith elevator access. 1150 Coast Village Road,805-969-0510 Furnished 3bd/3ba home on 5-acre, 10 minutes from State St. Peace, privacy & views. Pool, Jacuzzi, sauna. Includes housekeeper/gardener. No dogs, cats ok. $4500/mo.964-1891.
Montecito Ocean View Estate For Lease
Luxurious, yet relaxed, appr. 8000 sf. 4 bdrm, 5.5 bath, gated estate, pool, outdoor kit/room. Cold Springs School. Furnished, Long Term Only. $10,900/mo.Steve Downarowicz 560-9951 Harbor View Real Estate MIRAMAR BEACH HOUSE1 bd, fully furnished + utilizes. $5000/mo. ($500/day). 805 565-1354. See website for photos & particulars. www.sbbeachrental.webs.com/
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING(You can place a classified ad by filling in the coupon at the bottom of this section and mailing it to us: Montecito Journal, 1206 Coast Village Circle, Suite D, Montecito, CA 93108. You can also FAX your ad to us at: (805) 969-6654. We will figure out how much you owe and either call or FAX you back with the amount. You can also e-mail your ad: christine@montecitojournal.net and we will do the same as your FAX).
of the West. Now accepting enthusiastic children and/or adults. Call us at 684-4626.
MATH TUTORING Experienced math teacher (current CA math credential) available for private tutoring – individual or small groups. All levels up to calculus. Alison.Livett@gmail.com or (805) 220 6746
ENTERTAINING
Professional: Server/Bartender for hire25+years Exp. @private homesHonest & Discreet, Ref: availPeter 310 625-6439 SB area
INTERIOR DESIGN SERVICES
Design solutions interior designA fresh approach to interior design services combining professional expertise with client collaboration. Consultations on an as needed basis. www.designsolutionsinteriordesign.com 805-259-9078
PERSONAL/SPECIAL SERVICES
Cook Caregiver Gal FridayLet me simplify your life! reliable, cheerful, cook, caregiver, personal assistant with a :can do attitude”. 15 years exp. with ex. refs.Charlotte @ 805-896-0701
CAREGIVING/ADMININSTRATORFor elderly person who needs in home care. I will assist making Dr. appts, transportation, maintaining household. Prepare meals, grocery shopping & other duties as needed. Years of experience in area. Refs. Dorothy 805 280-1235.
Sell Your Valuables Anonymously. Experienced eBay and Craig’s List seller in your area will sell your items for you for a fee. Your personal trading assistant will do all the work. Photo-graphing, description, pricing, listing, answering customer service inquiries, collecting payment and shipping. For private consultation call 805-969-6017 or email: discreetmarketing@cox.net
Give your home a tune-up! Let me help you simplify and reorder any space that needs attention. Together we’ll create
6 – 13 October 2011 MONTECITO JOURNAL 47Nullification means insurrection and war, and the other states have a right to put it down – Andrew Jackson
COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE FOR LEASE
COAST VILLAGE RD OFFICE SPACEBeautiful suites 1,210-1,610 sf. Executive offices from $1,000/mo. Great visibility and parking. Call Michael Martz 898-4363Hayes Commercial Group
CLEANING SERVICES
Andres Residential & Commercial Cleaning Service. Guaranteed best job & lowest price in town. Call 235-1555 ineedree@yahoo.com
PAVING SERVICES
MONTECITO ASPHALT & SEAL COAT, •Slurry Seal• Crack Repair• Patching• Water Problems• Striping• Resurfacing• Speed Bumps• Pot Holes • Burms & Curbs • Trenches. Call Roger at (805) 708-3485
WOODWORK/RESTORATION SERVICES
Ken Frye Artisan in WoodThe Finest Quality Hand MadeCustom Furniture, Cabinetry& Architectural WoodworkExpert Finishes & RestorationImpeccable Attention to DetailMontecito References. lic#651689805-473-2343 ken@kenfrye.com
GARDENING/LANDSCAPING/TREESERVICES
Estate British Gardener Horticulturist Comprehensive knowledge of Californian, Mediterranean, & traditional English plants. All gardening duties personally undertaken including water gardens & koi keeping. Nicholas 805-963-7896
High-end quality detail garden care & design. Call Rose 805 272 5139 www.rosekeppler.com
Landscape Maintenance: over 30 yrs experience.
Call Jim (805) 689-0461
GENERAL CLEAN UP/HAULINGLicensed specialist in maintenance, weedwacking & avoiding fire hazards. No job too big or small if your house looks like a jungle. Call if you want a beautiful landscape. FREE mulch included. All while you save $! Local over 20yrs exp. Jose Jimenez 805 636-8732.
ART/COLLECTIBLES/FURNITURE
Antiques & Fine Arts Appraisals, Estate & Moving Sales, Buy or
Consignment, 30 Years Local experience, References. Thomas Schmidt 563.1267.
PERSONALS
Asian woman Single’s Club would like to invite you. All ages, nice gentlemen with good character and cheerful personality. Please call 805 469-7204
CEMETERY PLOT
Montecito Cemetery Plot. Ocean View. Cremated remains for two. $17,500. Telephone 805 680-3701. 10@nuigrave.com
LOCAL BUSINESS DIRECTORY (805) 565-1860
Live Animal Trapping“Best Termite & Pest Control”
www.hydrexnow.comFree Phone Quotes
(805) 687-6644Kevin O’Connor, President
$50 off initial service
Voted#1
Termite Inspection 24hr turn around upon request.
Tree, Plant & Lawn
Treatments
It’s Simple. Charge is $2 per line, and any portion of a line. Multiply the number of lines used (example 4 lines x 2 =$8) Add 10 cents per Bold and/or Upper case character and send your check to: Montecito Journal, 1206 Coast Village Circle, Suite D, Montecito, CA 93108. Deadline for inclusion in the next issue is Thursday prior to publication date. $8 minimum. Email: christine@montecitojournal.net Yes, run my ad __________ times. Enclosed is my check for $__________
$8 minimum TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD $8 minimum
STEVEN BROOKS JEWELERSCustom Design • Estate Jewelry
Jewelry Restoration
Buyers of Fine Jewelry, Gold and SilverConfidential Meeting at Your
Office , Bank or Home
SBJEWELERS@GMAIL.COM (805) 455-1070
BILL VAUGHAN - Cell/Txt: 805.455.1609 Principal & Broker DRE LIC # 00660866
www.665JuanCrespi.comFirst Time Ever On The Market, 3 Bed 3.5 bath Rancho Style
Estate With Beautiful Pool, Situated On Approx 1 Acre Of Montecito’s Coveted Golden Quadrangle
www.edwardjones.com
Your Source forTax-advantaged Income
Joseph M KirklandFinancial Advisor.
1230 Coast Village CircleSuite AMontecito, CA 93108805-565-8793
www.edwardjones.com
Your Source forTax-advantaged Income
Joseph M KirklandFinancial Advisor.
1230 Coast Village CircleSuite AMontecito, CA 93108805-565-8793
www.edwardjones.com
Your Source forTax-advantaged Income
Joseph M KirklandFinancial Advisor.
1230 Coast Village CircleSuite AMontecito, CA 93108805-565-8793
www.edwardjones.com
Your Source forTax-advantaged Income
Joseph M KirklandFinancial Advisor.
1230 Coast Village CircleSuite AMontecito, CA 93108805-565-8793
www.edwardjones.com
Your Source forTax-advantaged Income
Joseph M KirklandFinancial Advisor.
1230 Coast Village CircleSuite AMontecito, CA 93108805-565-8793
1101 State StSanta Barbara
CA 93101State and Figueroa
805.963.2721
a fine coffee and tea establishment
Gopher BustersComplete Pest Control Services
Improving Man’s Environment For Better LivingRussell Rosenberger
Horticulturist / Insect & Rodent SpecialistState Licensed & Insured
2979 Sea View, Ventura, CA 93001Tel: (805) 684-6463, Cell (805) 448-7864
(805) 681-8831
Eva Van Prooyen, MFTPsychotherapist
1187 Coast Village Road Suite 10-GSanta Barbara, CA 93108(805) 845-4960
Mailing Address:P.O. Box 50105Santa Barbara, CA 93150LIC#: 43829
Visit us online at
www.prusb.com
A Member of HomeServices of America, Inc., Berkshire Hathaway affiliate.
3868 State Street, Santa Barbara 805.687.2666 1170 Coast Village Road, Montecito 805.969.5026
Country English Tudor $2,900,000Mermis/St. Clair 805.895.56504 bed, 5 bath home on 1+ acre w/3 fireplaces, a pool & spa, a 3 car garage, & mountain views.
1319 Plaza Pacifica $2,895,000Nancy Kogevinas 805.450.6233Montecito. 3BR/3BA single level ground flr. Ocn vw patio. www.MontecitoProperties.com
Oceanfront View Home $3,250,000Kathleen Winter 805.451.4663Redone & prvt 3/2.5 with stunning ocean views & gardens. www.ShorelineDriveHome.com.
Paradise in Montecito $3,250,000Mermis/St. Clair 805.895.5650Gated 4 bed, 3.5 bath hm + 1 bed, 1 bath guest house. www.Paradise-In-Montecito.com
Medit. Masterpiece $5,100,000Team Scarborough 805.331.1465Immaculate villa with ocean & mountain views. 4 bedroom suites, 4.5 baths.
1006± Acres Ranch! $4,995,000SiBelle Israel 805.896.42181006± Acre Ranch! Privacy, miles of trails for riding, & mins from SYV! www.SiBelleHomes.com
4645 Via Huerto $3,595,000Tim Dahl 805.886.2211Private single level 3 bed, 2 bath with fabulous ocean views & sep. 3 bed, 2 bath guest house.
Magical Lifestyle $3,495,000Team Scarborough 805.331.14654 bed, 3 bath on 1 acre with pool. Ocean and mountain views. www.1956eastvalleyroad.com
9950 Sulphur Mtn Road $6,995,000Nancy Kogevinas 805.450.6233Heaven in Ojai combines timeless design & luxury. Breathtaking location. www.HeavenInOjai.com
1473 Bonnymede Drive $5,450,000Nancy Kogevinas 805.450.6233Sea Meadow. 3br + office/4th bd, 3ba, southwest sun exposure. www.MontecitoProperties.com
New French Normandy $11,800,000The Brothers Gough 455.3030/455.1420Magical French Normandy countryside estate on +/- 4 acres; @ 4/5 plus pool and guest cabana.
919 Park Lane $7,950,000Nancy Kogevinas 805.450.6233Montecito. 5br/7ba Ocean vus. 3 ac, tennis crt, pool, scrning rm. www.MontecitoProperties.com
1150 Via Del Rey $2,750,000Randy Glick 805.563.4066Beautiful 5 bedroom, 4 bath French Country Estate. Situated on 5 acres of stunning ocean, island & mountain views, this gated enclave of 11 newer homes gives you the feel of privacy & seclusion. www.1150ViaDelRey.net.
Stone Italianate Estate $24,500,000Mermis/St. Clair 805.895.5650The best of Saladino! The perfect pairing of comfort & grandeur, modern & old, in this 1929 stone Italianate estate completely restored by the master himself, for himself. www.SaladinoVilla.net
Recommended