Chautauqua panel discusses fracking impacts

Transcription

Chautauqua panel discusses fracking impacts
Donna Sallen
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124th Year, No. 15 • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 • Newsracks, 75¢, retail stores, 70¢ plus tax • Yearly subscription, $52
Chautauqua
panel discusses
fracking impacts
Kimberly Rivers
Ojai Valley News correspondent
For those who have been following
the issue of hydraulic fracturing
recently, it is easy to understand that it
is not a single-faceted issue. But as you
dive in, other angles emerge. There are
the obvious, much-discussed concerns
— environmental impact, adequate
oversight, water use, jobs and effects on
the economy and so on. And then when
you dig a bit deeper you find the other
layers of issues — antiquated permits,
induced seismicity, oil field waste
management, and effects of truck
traffic, among others.
Last Sunday's panel discussion on
hydraulic fracturing, held by Ojai Chautauqua, dove into many of these issues,
and may have left the attendants with
more questions than when they
arrived. And that was intentional. “If
you have more questions now than you
did two hours ago, we succeeded,” said
Tom Krause, chair of the Ojai Chautauqua committee, in his closing
remarks.
The Chautauqua community group
formed around a desire to host events
where the community would hear
“good information on important,
complex and controversial subjects,”
and hydraulic fracturing — or fracking
— seemed to meet those criteria.
Krause emphasized the group has no
political agenda and encourages no
action. Rather, they are “trying to illuminate the issue.”
About 174 people, mostly from the
Ojai area, attended the panel discussion on Sunday evening, held at the
Ojai Valley Inn & Spa. Kit Stoltz, an
award-winning science and environmental journalist who has written for
the Ojai Valley News, moderated the
discussion. The speakers on the panel
were: Don Clark, a petroleum geologist
who has worked in California for oil
companies and city governments; Craig
Nicholson, a geophysicist at University
of California at Santa Barbara who has
analyzed seismic risks associated with
oil production and who conducted a
study for the Environmental Protection
Agency on the risks of oil field waste
injection wells; Dave Quast, the local
director for Energy In Depth, an
industry advocacy group for independent oil producers; Henry Stern,
who works as a legislative aide to Sen.
Fran Pavley and helped formulate new
regulations regarding well stimulation
processes like fracking; and Brian
Segee, an environmental attorney who
works for the Environmental Defense
Center.
Fracking is a well stimulation or
completion (to complete the well)
process that involves water, sand and
See Panel, Page A3
Ojai Valley News photo by Ashley Wilson
Matilija students honor local vet
Monday, Matilija Junior High School students got an up-close-and-personal chance to learn about Veterans Day and what
it truly means. Local Navy veteran, 96-year-old Hal Wilder Jr., spoke about his experiences during World War II and
answered questions submitted by students. Matilija's music groups also performed the national anthem, the “Armed
Forces Medley” and “America the Beautiful,” and leadership students offered readings. Above, Matilija principal Bill Rosen
(left) joins the students on stage and in the audience in a standing ovation for Wilder.
OBGMA says it’s ready for state’s new water rules
Tiobe Barron
Ojai Valley News correspondent
Despite California’s “exceptional”
drought — and the legislation recently
drafted in response — the Ojai Basin
Groundwater Management Agency
(OBGMA) maintains it is in good shape,
and better positioned to become a
groundwater sustainability agency
than the other water management
organizations in the valley.
California Gov. Jerry Brown signed
three bills into law Sept. 16 to form the
Sustainable Groundwater Management Act. These bills ostensibly seek to
prepare local water agencies to more
efficiently handle groundwater, stating,
“all groundwater basins and sub-basins
shall be managed sustainably by local
entities pursuant to an adopted
sustainable groundwater management
plan.” As stated in one of the three bills,
“California is the only state without a
mandatory statewide system of
groundwater management.”
“A central feature of these bills is the
recognition that groundwater management in California is best accomplished
locally,” said Gov. Brown in his signing
message. “Local agencies will now have
the power to assess the conditions of
their local water basins and take necessary steps to bring those basins in a
state chronic long-term overdraft into
balance.”
Here is where Ojai Valley is actually
ahead of the game: the area already has
a local groundwater management
agency in OBGMA.
In response to an earlier drought, and
concerns about possibly over-taxing
the groundwater basin, Ojai City
Council created OBGMA with the 1991
Ojai Basin Groundwater Management
Agency Act. According to the OBGMA
website, it is OBGMA’s mission “to
preserve the quantity and quality of
groundwater in the Ojai Basin in order
to protect and maintain the long-term
water supply for the common benefit of
the water users in the Basin,” and
“although there have been some good
water years and the Ojai Basin has
“About 105,000 squarefeet of water per day is
leaving the basin in the
driest period of time.”
— Jordan Kear, hydrogeologist,
on Ojai’s groundwater basin
continued to provide sufficient water
for its well owners, competition for
scarce water resources in Southern
California and Ventura County is ever
expanding, water resource planning is
intensifying, and the importance of the
OBGMA mission is even greater today.”
While OBGMA has been assessing
the Ojai groundwater basin since 1992,
in order to become the local groundwater sustainability agency per the new
California law, the agency must file its
intent with the state. It must also
See OBGMA, Page A3
It’s My Job: Andy Gilman, writer, designer, educator, dad
Maria Saint
Ojai Valley News correspondent
As director of outreach for
Oak Grove School in Ojai,
when Andy Gilman needs to
update the school's website, he
doesn't have to scramble for
ideas on what to post.
“I just step out and look into
a classroom and I can't believe
what these kids are doing right
now. It's so incredible,” he said.
“It's been a lot of fun to work
on video, take pictures and to
write articles of what's
happening at school.”
A writer and designer who
has been with the school since
2010, Gilman also teaches one
of its design classes in high
school. There are 10 students
in his class.
“The class size is small, so
that provides a lot of individual
attention,” he said of the
school, which has 227 students
from preschool through 12th
grade. “The campus is really
beautiful and expansive, and
it's really a place for students to
truly flower there, to grow up.”
Gilman's son Noah, 17, is a
senior at Oak Grove. He also
has two daughters, Sinead, 19,
and Nici, 26. He's always been
a part of his own kids' education, Gilman said, so it felt
natural to be a part of the Oak
Grove students' lives, too.
“Knowing all the kids and
their class, and knowing them
well — knowing their aspirations and, you know, their
challenges, too, and things like
that, it feels like being a part of
a community like that is something I'm always going to want
to do,” he said.
Education in general seems
to be something Gilman will
always want to be involved in,
including through The Agora
Foundation. It came about in
1998 when he and others
wanted to continue something
similar to The Great Books
program, which Gilman experienced at his graduate school
(St. John's College in Santa Fe,
N.M.). The Agora seminars are
made up of 10 to 20 students
with a tutor. “The tutor is
guiding the discussion, but the
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teacher in the room is the
author of the work — so the
tutor is not the teacher, the
tutor is more like the facilitator.
The tutor will ask questions
just to try to get the participants in there digging in to try
to understand the text,”
Gilman explained.
By 2006, the group became
incorporated after teachers
expressed interest in using the
format for their own classes.
“That's when we started
getting grants from places like
The Ahmanson Foundation
and Southern California
Edison to pay for us to go to
schools, teach teachers how to
do this method and do it with
them so that they could see
what it's like,” he said. The
foundation has set its next
seminar for Nov. 22 and will
focus on the short stories of
Willa Cather.
Along those same educational lines, Gilman has also
been involved with the Ojai
Chautauqua events — a panel
that discusses all sides to a
specific topic with the commu-
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nity. Past topics have included
GMOs, water and, most
recently, fracking. Gilman said
that the Chautauqua organizers don't aim to change
people's positions; instead, the
intention is to have a civil
dialogue. “We are on the road
to establishing an Ojai tradition! We plan to have at least
six Chautauqua events in
2015,” Gilman e-mailed after
Sunday's fracking talk. “The
panel was balanced and
thoughtful.”
When he's not spending
time on education, Gilman is a
musician and an artist.
“I've been a musician for a
long time. I started playing in
lots of bands, and I'm really
interested in world music —
music from other countries
and those rhythms — so I've
done that in bands. But then I
can play bass in a rock band,
too, that's a lot of fun,” he said,
adding that one of the main
instruments he plays is the
octave mandolin. Currently,
he's working on getting better
at playing the cello and wants
to devote two years at it.
“I was in this Weezer-cover
band when I was playing bass,
so we had this band for like
three years I guess, but all of us
had to disband because of life,
work … I want to get really
good at the cello and find some
guys who want to do maybe
kind of a folk/world music
fusion type thing where we can
write our own songs, so I'm
just working at practicing at
this point,” he explained.
Gilman, who earned his
undergraduate degree in art at
California Institute for the Arts,
is also working on pieces that
are similar to pointillism. He
would like to eventually exhibit
the series.
The Ojai resident also hikes,
especially though Los Padres
National Forest. Travel is
something he enjoys as well,
especially with his kids. About
two years ago, he took them all
to Paris, London and Dublin.
Last summer, he and the girls
went to Greece and Italy for
See Gilman, Page A3
A2 Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014
Obituary
Hallie May
Patterson
Today we mourn the
passing of Hallie May
Patterson whose life was
taken from all on Oct. 25,
2014 at 12:32 p.m. Hallie was
born on June 8, 1931 in
Northern California and was
raised in Mesa, Arizona.
To those who loved her and to whom she loved
with no reservations, she shared herself and love
with anyone willing to accept it. She was
affectionately and respectfully known to all as
Grandma Hallie and she lived her life believing we
were all God’s children and as so, accepted God’s
calling to share that one thing we all could define
as God, love.
In the years Hallie lived she shared in the things
life gives, being a daughter, a wife, a mother, a
grandmother and a great-grandmother. And as
life shares all of the wonderful things Grandma
Hallie had the joy in receiving, it also shared its
troubles in disappointment, her life was not
exempt from struggles or heartaches, in her last
few months on earth Hallie was diagnosed with a
rare bone cancer which she was unable to fight.
Grandma Hallie touched many lives in many
different ways and always with just what they
needed, love and understanding. God needed
another angel, and so who better to call. She will
be missed and loved by all who knew her.
Hallie is survived by her family, Gene and Linda
Brassfield, Ed and Sharlynn Patterson, Allen
Patterson, Ginger Patterson, Junellen Patterson,
Judy Dixon, Dwight Patterson, Charlene Bustillos,
and her countless grandchildren and many greatgrandchildren.
Please join us in celebrating her life on Nov. 15
from 2 to 6 p.m. at the Ojai Valley Moose Lodge.
All who knew Hallie are welcome to attend.
Memorial Service
Photo submitted
A celebration of life will be held for Glen Morgan,
Saturday, Nov. 15, at 11 a.m. at The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, 411 San Antonio Drive,
Ojai. In his memory, wear something pink and
bring stories, photos, etc. to share. Food and beverages will be served at the conclusion of the memorial.
Drama gone adrift
What happens when the drama teacher abandons her students on opening night because they never bothered
to come to rehearsal? A raucous, hilarious and mostly inaccurate montage of theater’s greatest plays. Villanova
Preparatory School’s theater students will present “Just Another High School Play” Nov. 21, 22 and 23 at 7
p.m. in the school’s theater, 12096 N. Ventura Ave. Tickets are $10 each; call 646-1464.
Pakistani teen to give talk
Julie Albright
Ojai Valley News contributor
Priya Parkash is a long
way from home; she’s
having a great time and
she wants others to
share in her adventures.
As previously reported in the OVN, (Oct.
8, “Teen hopes to alter
U.S. perceptions of Pakistan”) Parkash is hoping to introduce the
Pakistan she knows and
loves to others, empow-
Authors will
discuss the
wisdom of
peacemakers
ering them to see the
world in a new way and
perhaps to follow in her
footsteps.
“I’d like to show them
my family, some of our
celebrations and what
we do every day,” she
told me when she came
into the Ojai Library to
volunteer; and we came
up with a plan.
“Lighting Lamps for
Understanding
and
Unity” will be presented
at the Ojai Library on
Tuesday, Nov. 18, at 6:30
p.m.
Parkash will present
visuals and a discussion
of family life and celebrations, and accept
questions from the audience. Admission to
the program is free and
for all ages.
For more information
on the talk, contact the
Ojai Library at 6461639, or check the
website at www.venco
library.org.
Bridge
The Ojai Valley Bridge Club
meets every Monday and Friday at
12:30 p.m. at the Ojai Valley Community Church at the corner of El
Centro Street and Loma Drive.
Everyone is welcome and singles
will be provided with a partner.
For more information, contact
cunningham2059@roadrunner
.com or 646-1211.
The winners for Monday, Nov. 3,
were: 1st N/S, Alan Greenberg and
Joe Gaynor; 2nd N/S, Dick Zizic
and John Eliason; 3rd N/S, Joan
It’s like getting the
Ojai Valley News
at no cost!
Glenn and Carol Jarboe; 1st E/W,
Gary Petrowski and Rick Howell;
2nd E/W, Pat Shaw and Irene
Petroff; 3rd E/W, Mary Jane Graham and Ginny Rockefeller.
The winners for Friday, Nov. 7,
were: 1st N/S, Alan and Valerie
Greenberg; 2nd N/S, Marie Offerman and Gary Petrowski; 3rd N/S,
Gwen and Dick Wagner; 1st E/W,
Elaine McAdams and Anne Conn;
2nd E/W, Peggy Nielsen and
Bonny Letizia; 3rd E/W, Irene
Petroff and Carol Jarboe.
Dutch Personal Services
Dutch Detailing to the Max
Wed. - Sat. 8-5
Free Downtown Shuttle
Fri. & Sat. 9pm - 3 am
Ojai’s Designated Driver
7 days a week with appointment
The authors of the
award-winning book,
“Great
Peacemakers:
True
Stories
from
Around the World,” will
give a free talk in Ojai on
“Ten Life-Changing Insights of the Great
Peacemakers” of our
time (Gandhi, Mother
Teresa, Dalai Lama, Martin Luther King, and others). You can learn how
these famous peacemakers used these insights to
change the world, and
how you can use them to
change your life. You will
get inspiration and tools
to enjoy a meaningful,
peaceful and fulfilled life
with peaceful relationships, inner peace, no
stress and no conflict.
The free talk will be
held at The Ojai Retreat,
160 Besant Road, Ojai,
Nov. 14, at 7 p.m. This
talk will be followed by a
seminar, Nov. 15, 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. For reservations for the seminar,
call 640-1142. Cost is $50
per person, $30 for students and seniors. For
details, visit the website,
www.ojairetreat.org.
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Postmaster send all address changes to
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Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 A3
Panel:
Continued from Page A1
chemicals being injected underground at
high pressure with the intention of fracturing the rock formations in order to better extract the oil and natural gas which
are trapped in the rock. In California,
Segee pointed out that fracking is aimed
at releasing oil, not gas, as in other parts
of the nation.
“So the discussion regarding using natural gas as a bridge fuel is a debate we
don’t have here,” said Segee. He also
brought up the issue of antiquated conditional use permits (C.U.P.) in Ventura
County. There are permits, which were
written in the 1940s that allow drilling to
occur in the county under very limited review. “These permits represent 90 percent
of the oil drilling in the county, which
happens without any discretionary review, no public notification, no transparency. The public doesn’t know
beforehand where this is happening.” He
pointed out this causes a gap in information. “We can see an uptick (in activity
and production) but to what extent that
is being driven by acidization and fracking, we just don’t know yet.”
One focus of the talk was induced seismicity. Clark and Nicholson pointed to
new research, which shows a “temporal
correlation” between the injection of
waste products from oil production and
seismic events (earthquakes).
“The main difference between California and places like Ohio, Pennsylvania
and Texas is that California has a lot of active faults already,” said Nicholson. "Every
time you hydro-frack, you are artificially
creating an earthquake. They are almost
uniformly very small. In some instances
they can reach a magnitude of three to
four, but in most cases you won’t even
know they are there.”
Nicholson pointed out that because of
California's many faults, the rocks are already fractured quite a bit — actually reducing the need to use processes like
fracking, which break the rock get the oil
out. “Because of the natural fractures that
already occur in California, fracking has
never been a major component of producing oil and gas in California.” But it
has increased over the past 10 to 15 years,
Nicholson said. “California geology is way
more complicated than other parts of the
country where fracking is used. California
always has more problems.”
But even with that potential increase of
stress on rocks which are already fractured by active faults, Nicholson showed
data which reveals California has not seen
the uptick in seismic activity other parts
of the nation have experienced. But he
did point to waste injection wells as a
place to look for an effect on seismic activity in the state.
“When it comes to induced seismicity,
what we really need to be talking about in
this context is waste disposal, because the
volumes of fluid involved in waste disposal are, on orders of magnitude, higher
than a single fracking operation,” said
Nicholson. “In California, as the number
of fracking operations has increased and
the number of waste disposal wells associated with fracking have increased, we
have not seen a dramatic increase in
earthquake activity in California,” he said.
However, he did add that in other areas,
there is a correlation between induced
seismic events and increased pressure
from the injected waste.
“If there is a preexisting fault and that
fault is already under a high level of stress,
by injecting fluid in the ground you actually reduce the strength of the fault itself,”
said Nicholson. He explained the two
ways a man-made, or induced earthquake, can occur. “You can either raise
the level of stress to the failure criteria of
the rock, or you can lower the strength of
the rock. The major cause of triggering or
inducing earthquakes is associated with
fluid injection.” He explained injection
causes an increase in the “pore fluid pressure at the base of the well and that increased pore fluid pressure can migrate
over to an existing fault — already under
a level of stress — and the rock will then
fail.”
He pointed to a slide of a table showing
new data, with lines creeping up as they
move to the right up the table. “The induced maximum earthquake that you
can likely produce as a result of fluid injection is proportional to the volume of
fluids that you injected,” said Nicholson.
Basically, small amounts of fluid injected
can create small seismic events, and
larger amount of fluid injected can create
larger seismic events.
The earthquakes that register a magnitude four are shown to have occurred
during the same time that high volumes
of waste were being injected into a nearby
well.
Nicholson did point out that, for data
they have collected in Kern County, the
occurrence of seismic activity actually
“fell off” as injection activity increased in
recent years. The verdict is still out on
why, exactly, that is.
Then there's the issue of brine water.
Brine water, or produced water, is generated with oil and gas production. For
every gallon of oil generated, about 15
gallons of produced water is also recovered. “92 percent of the fluid that comes
out is water. Only 8 percent is oil,” said
Clark.
This water is salty — hence "brine" —
and can contain naturally occurring radioactive compounds trapped underground for millennia, as well as any
chemicals and other fluids put down the
production well. Some companies are
finding ways to reuse this water in their
production activities, though some of the
smaller operators simply dispose of it at a
commercial Class II facility. There are two
of these facilities in Ventura County: Anterra Energy in Oxnard, and Southern
California Waste Water (previously Santa
Clara Waste Water), in Santa Paula.
“Brine disposal in California has doubled in the last 10 years,” said Stoltz. It
used to be about 400 million gallons per
year, now it is at about 800 million gallons.
“That is a lot more waste water and
drilling mud to get rid of.”
A video of the panel will be available at
www.OjaiChautaqua.com next week.
Gilman:
Continued from Page A1
three weeks. “We had a
lot of fun! On the island
of Santorini, it was just
so beautiful there. Normally I have to be sort of
economical on where we
stay … but I splurged on
this one studio place
where when you wake up
in the morning and look
out the window, you're
kind of at the top and
you see this incredible
view of the whole ocean
and the whole bay where
the whole island is. It was
just so wonderful to
wake up with the kids
and to just be at this
place,”
he
magical
shared. “Every morning
when I woke up I kind of
couldn't believe we were
there.”
officials appoint a representative with whom
they can interact. Additionally, OBGMA will
host a public outreach
meeting later this month
to elucidate these plans
to Ojai residents; the date
and location have yet to
be announced.
“We are in great
shape,” said OBGMA
President Jerry Conrow at
the OBGMA’s Oct. 30
meeting.
When it comes to the
current status of the Ojai
Basin, OBGMA staff hydrogeologist Jordan Kear
remains optimistic, in
spite of dry conditions.
During the Oct. 30
OBGMA meeting, Kear
went over well data collected from around the
groundwater basin, detailing various water
table elevations for these
wells.
“We have a pretty good
idea of where water is
flowing,” said Kear. “A
certain percentage is
leaving the basin; it is still
flowing, even in the driest of conditions …
About 105,000 squarefeet of water per day is
leaving the basin in the
driest period of time.”
The
next
regular
OBGMA meeting is Dec.
4 at 5 p.m. at 428 Bryant
Circle in Ojai.
OBGMA:
Continued from Page A1
develop, adopt and implement a sustainable
groundwater management plan and must hold
a public hearing and
adopt a resolution regarding the sustainable
groundwater management plan. If a local
agency fails to do so, the
state reserves the right to
step in and create a management plan for local
agencies.
OBGMA members say
they will file their intention to serve in this capacity as soon as state
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A4 Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014
arou valley
nd
OUR
GARDEN CLUB MEETING — The Ojai Valley Garden Club will meet today at
10 a.m. in Fisher Hall at St.
Andrew’s Episcopal
Church, 409 Topa Topa
Drive, at the corner of Bristol Road. All guests are welcome. Kim Spadillos from
Flora Gardens will demonstrate ways to construct a
Thanksgiving centerpiece
using succulents and
pumpkins.
PARKINSON’S SUPPORT GROUP — The Ojai
Valley Parkinson’s Support
Group will meet today
from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at
Little House, 111 W. Santa
Ana St. Guest speaker
Susan Salguero will suggest
ways to live more comfortably. She is a retired counselor and the author of
“Lighten the Load.” Everyone is welcome and there
is no charge. Call 646-4410.
“EMBRACING LIFE
THROUGH LOSSES” —
The Gables of Ojai, 701 N.
Montgomery St., will host
Jaikoo Lee, M.Div., offering
a free Bereavement Support Group, “Embracing
Life Losses,” on four
Wednesdays from 7 to 8:30
p.m., today through Dec.
10, to help those coping
with the loss of loved ones
during the holiday season.
Open to the public and donations are welcome. Call
Christine Fenn at 646-1446
for more details.
Thursday, Nov. 13
“STRONGER TOGETHER” — will meet
Friday, Nov. 14
GRANGE HOLIDAY
CRAFT FAIR — The Ojai
Valley Grange, 381 Cruzero
St., will host a holiday craft
fair and boutique Friday
from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and
Saturday and Sunday from
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Local
crafters will sell their handmade gifts, decorations
and more. Cash and personal checks accepted.
“INTO THE WOODS JR.”
— Ojai Youth Entertainers
Studio, 316 E. Matilija St.,
will present Stephen Sondheim’s fairytale musical,
“Into the Woods Jr.,” Friday
through Nov. 23 at various
times (see ojaiyes.org for
schedule). Tickets: $10 (at
www.BrownPaper
Tickets.com). Call 6464300.
“LIFE-CHANGING INSIGHTS OF GREAT
PEACEMAKERS” — The
Ojai Retreat, 160 Besant
Road, will host a free talk
by the authors of the
award-winning book,
“Great Peacemakers,” Fri-
O J A I VA L L E Y E V E N T S
[email protected]
day at 7 p.m. Learn how
great peacemakers
(Mother Teresa, Gandhi,
Dalai Lama, etc.) used
these insights to change
the world and how you can
use them to change your
life. No reservations are
necessary. Call 640-1142.
Saturday, Nov. 15
“PEACE SEMINAR” —
The Ojai Retreat, 160 Besant Road, will host a
“Peace Seminar” based on
the insights of the great
peacemakers, Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
What if you could meet
some of the most inspiring
people of our times (Mahatma Gandhi, Mother
Teresa, the Dalai Lama and
more) and gain their lifetimes of wisdom distilled
into key insights to improve your life. This seminar is the next best thing.
Seats are limited. For costs
and reservations, call 6401142.
HOLIDAY HOME LOOK
IN — The Women’s Committee’s annual Holiday
Home Look In will be held
Saturday and Sunday from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tour distinctive Ojai Valley homes
adorned with seasonal
trimmings. A Holiday Marketplace is also held at the
Matilija gym, which is
open Saturday from 10
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Proceeds benefit the Ojai
Music Festival and the
Bravo! music education
program. Go to
www.ojaifestival.org or call
646-2094, Ext. 104.
OJAI HISTORICAL
WALKING TOURS — Saturdays at 10:30 a.m., Ojai
Historical Walking Tours
depart from the Ojai Valley
Museum, 130 W. Ojai Ave.
(approximately one-hour
tours of downtown historical and cultural attractions). Docent Barbara
Washburn will lead the
Nov. 15 tour. Cost is $7 or
$15 per family. Drop-ins
are welcome. For reservations or to schedule tours
during the week, call 6401390.
“GOD’S EYE CRAFTS” —
The Ojai Library, 111 E.
Ojai Ave., will host Gail
Herscher leading a free
workshop on “God’s Eye
Crafts” for children, Saturday at 1 p.m. Call 6461639.
“PAT AND MIKE” — The
Ojai Valley Museum, 130
W. Ojai Ave., will screen
free classic family films
every Saturday at 4 p.m. in
the Rotating Gallery
through Dec. 20, in con-
Photo submitted
Win two tickets for Holiday Home Look In
The Holiday Home Look In is this weekend! Want to win tickets? The first person
to e-mail [email protected] with the correct response to the following question will win two tickets, good for either day:
• Several local musicians will perform at the homes throughout the weekend.
Name the two pictured above.
junction with its exhibit on
“The Ojai Theater.” The
film being shown Nov. 15
will be “Pat and Mike”
(1952), starring Katherine
Hepburn and Spencer
Tracey. The golf scenes in
this movie were filmed at
the Ojai Valley Inn & Country Club. Call 640-1390.
“WOOD” — Ojai Youth
Entertainers Studio, 316 E.
Matilija St., will present
OhMy’s ridiculous bawdy
fairytale for adults only,
“Wood,” Saturday and Nov.
22 at 8 p.m. Bar opens at
7:30 p.m. and an afterparty follows the performance (must be at least 18).
Tickets: $20, proceeds will
benefit OYES. Go to
ojaiyes.org or call 6464300.
“AN EVENING OUT
WITH SAM HARRIS” —
Singer-songwriter-actorwriter-producer Sam Harris will perform in concert
Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
Ojai Art Center Theater,
113 S. Montgomery St.,
celebrating the center’s
75th anniversary. Proceeds
will benefit the Art Center.
An auction will precede
the concert from 7 to 8
p.m. Call 646-8797 for
reservations.
Sunday, Nov. 16
PERFORMANCE BYYOUTH CHOIR — Sunday
at 5:30 p.m.,the Ojai Art
Center, 113 S. Montgomery
St., presents a free, 15minute performance of
“The Voices of Children,”
an art-song cycle that sets
eight short poems of English-speaking children
from around the world to
music for youth choir,
piano, percussion and guitar. Judith Vander composed the songs and will
conduct the singers, many
of whom participated in
the Ojai Youth Opera
Camp. Rebecca Comerford
and Julija Zonic selected
the choir and were invaluable in teaching the
songs. Pianist Raelynn
Clare, percussionist Kevin
Conahey, and guitarist Jon
Lambert will accompany
the choir. For more information, call 640-8327.
“EMOTIONAL INTIMACY” TED TALK — The
Ojai Retreat, 160 Besant
Road, will host TED Talks
Michael Russer speaking
on “Emotional Intimacy,”
Sunday from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Learn how to achieve emotional, physical and spiritual intimacy and
connection and become
“heart open.” Cost: $10 per
person, $7 for seniors and
students. Call 646-2536.
Monday, Nov. 17
JAZZ BY PRIMAL
MATES — The Ojai Library,
111 E. Ojai Ave., will host a
meeting of music and poetry ranging from Shakespeare to Kerouac,
Monday at 6:30 p.m., titled
“Poetry in Music: Music in
Poetry.” In the tradition of
the classical art song,
where composers wrote
music for the poetry to be
sung, the chamber jazz
duo, Primal Mates, combines a variety of writers
and poets with the sound
of voice, cello and vibraphone for a unique listening experience. Call
646-1639.
Tuesday, Nov. 18
Ojai
Oak View
Post Office
Park Ave.
➞
OAK VIEW
SELF STORAGE
www.oakviewselfstorage.com
805-649-5533
Sign up for your drive-up units in our
new building today — NOW OPEN!
Large 20’ and 30’ spaces available.
X
Builders
Mart
➞
Portal St.
Ventura
➥
Wednesday, Nov. 12
Thursday from 11 a.m. to
12:15 p.m. at OjaiCARES,
960 E. Ojai Ave., Suite 105.
Support groups at
OjaiCARES are peer-led,
offered free of charge, and
on a drop-in basis. They
are open to cancer survivors of all diagnoses at
any point in time (newly
diagnosed, in or post treatment, or living with a recurrence). Participants can
share issues, insights and
emotions related to their
cancer experience, as well
as ways to live more fully.
Call 646-6433 for more details.
LISTING OF
Ventura Ave.
This Week
YOUR COMPLETE
65 Portal St.
Oak View
FUNDRAISING FOR
NHS MUSIC — Maestro
and the Nordhoff High
School music department
will hold a fundraising
night Tuesday from 4 p.m.
to closing at Jim & Rob’s
Fresh Grill in Ojai, where
15 percent of all food sales
will be donated to the
music department. There
will also be student performances outside the
restaurant. Visit
www.nhsmusic.com for
more information.
“CANCER AS A TURNING POINT” — will meet
Tuesday from 6 to 7:15
p.m. at OjaiCARES, 960 E.
Ojai Ave., Suite 105. Support groups at OjaiCARES
are peer-led, offered free
Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 A5
arou valley
nd
YOUR COMPLETE
thanks which includes a
karma-free banquet
dinner. Always free.
Call 640-0405.
Down the Road
SMART DRIVER
CLASSES — AARP will
sponsor a Smart Driver
course, Nov. 19 and 20
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
Help of Ojai, 111 W. Santa
Ana St. Cost: $15 for AARP
members, $20 for nonmembers. Call 646-5122.
“PEACE BEYOND
LOSSES” — Brock Travis,
Ph.D., will give a free talk
on “Peace Beyond Losses,”
Nov. 19 from 2 to 3:30 p.m.
at Livingston Memorial
Hospice, 202-A Cañada St.,
Ojai. Learn spiritual and
psychological strategies for
serenity amidst bereavement and other life-changing losses. Call 272-8593.
FUTURE FRESHMAN
NIGHT — Parents of students currently in grades
seven or eight are invited
to attend the Future Freshman Night, Nov. 19 from
6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., to
learn about Nordhoff High
School. Students and parents are invited to attend
and learn about Nordhoff’s
tradition, scholarship,
community and the many
opportunities available to
Rangers. Current NHS student representatives from
a variety of programs will
be available for parents
and current seventh- and
eighth-grade students to
talk to about their experiences at NHS. For questions, contact Kim Hoj,
academic dean, at
[email protected].
NHS SITCOM SHOWCASE AND AUCTION —
Friends of Our Theater will
host an evening of entertainment and an auction
to support the Nordhoff
High School drama department at the school’s
cafe stage, 1401 Maricopa
Highway, Nov. 20 at 7 p.m.
Students will perform sitcoms from the golden age
of television.
“HOLOS” PRESENTATION — Nov. 20 at 7 p.m.,
The Ojai Retreat, 160 Besant Road, will host Brian
Berman, local sculptor and
member of Ojai Studio
Artists, and Julie Heyman,
peace cultivator, sharing
their vision of public artwork for peace, which will
be installed in Ojai on International Peace Day,
Sept. 21, 2015. David Henderson will perform
“Whispers of the Trees,” a
piano piece he composed
for Peace Day. Audience
participation will be welcome. Suggested donation:
$10; no one will be turned
away. Call 640-1142.
NPA POINSETTIA
FUNDRAISER — Order
your poinsettias from the
Nordhoff Parent Association and proceeds will
support all students at
Nordhoff by providing
funding for academics,
Saint Thomas Aquinas Catholic
Church RCIA Program
Stan Coburn
“Handling all aspects
of buying or selling
Real Estate in the
Ojai Valley for over
30 years!”
• Broker Associate
• Experience, Knowledge,
Resources
(805) 415-6153
[email protected]
RCIA, Right of Christian
Initiation of Adults
O J A I VA L L E Y E V E N T S
[email protected]
OUR
of charge, and on a dropin basis. They are open to
cancer survivors of all diagnoses at any point in
time (newly diagnosed, in
or post treatment, or living
with a recurrence). Participants can share issues, insights and emotions
related to their cancer experience, as well as ways to
live more fully. Call 6466433 for more details.
“TEEN TALK” — The
Ojai Library, 111 E. Ojai
Ave., will host visiting Pakstani teenager, Priya
Parkash, talking on “Lighting Lamps for Understanding and Unity,”
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. Call
646-1639.
“INVISIBLE WORLD:
ANNIE BESANT” — The
Theosophical Society in
the Ojai Valley will meet at
Krotona School, 46 Krotona Road, Ojai, Tuesday at
7 p.m. Kurt Leland will talk
about “Invisible Worlds:
Annie Besant on Psychic
and Spiritual Development.” Donations are appreciated. Call 646-2653.
“PRE-THANKSGIVING
FEAST” — The American
Vedic Association Bhagavad-Gita As It Is Fellowship will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at 687 Villanova
Road for a celebration of
LISTING OF
athletics and the arts. The
sale goes through Nov. 21;
prices are $10 for poinsettias and $15 for a centerpiece. Go to www.nordh
offparentassociation.org.
Orders should be picked
up Dec. 4 from 2 to 5:30
p.m., Dec. 5 from 2 to 5
p.m. or Dec. 6 from 9
a.m.to noon at the NHS
Administration Building.
“JUST ANOTHER HIGH
SCHOOL PLAY” —
Villanova Preparatory
School’s theater students
will present “Just Another
High School Play,” Nov. 21,
22 and 23 at 7 p.m. in the
school’s theater, 12096 N.
Ventura Ave., Ojai. What
happens when the drama
teacher abandons her students on opening night
because they never bothered to come to rehearsal?
This is a raucous, hilarious
and mostly inaccurate
montage of theater’s greatest plays. Tickets: $10. Call
646-1464.
“SHE LOVES ME” — Ojai
Performing Arts Theater
Foundation will present
“She Loves Me,” the romantic musical which inspired the movie “You’ve
Got Mail,” Nov. 21 through
Nov. 30 at Matilija Auditorium, 703 El Paseo Road,
with performances Fridays
and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
and Sundays at 2 p.m. Proceeds from the Nov. 21 and
23 shows will benefit the
Ojai Valley Museum and
the show on Nov. 30 will
benefit Ojai Unified School
District. Tickets available
at www.ojaithe
ater.org or 649-1937.
DEVOTIONAL RETREAT
AT MOUNT — Meditation
Mount, 10340 Reeves
Road, will host the Rev.
Karen S. Wylie’s monthly
devotional retreat, Nov. 22
from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. The topic will be
“Thanksgiving: The Creative Power of Gratitude.”
Open to people of all
faiths. Suggested donation:
$10 (no one will be turned
away). Call (310) 968-8928.
OJAI HISTORICAL
WALKING TOURS — Saturdays at 10:30 a.m., Ojai
Historical Walking Tours
depart from the Ojai Valley
Museum, 130 W. Ojai Ave.
(approximately one-hour
tours of downtown historical and cultural attractions). Docent Rose Boggs
will lead the Nov. 22 tour.
Cost is $7 or $15 per family. Drop-ins are welcome.
For reservations or to
schedule tours during the
week, call 640-1390.
“CHILDREN’S HOUR”
AT MUSEUM — Julie Albright, children’s librarian,
will read “Gracias, The
Thanksgiving Turkey” and
“A Gift of Gracias” at the
“Children’s Hour,” Nov. 22
from 2 to 3 p.m. at the Ojai
Valley Museum, 130 W.
Ojai Ave. Children will
make cloved oranges and
receive a goodie bag. No
RSVP required. Children
must be accompanied by
an adult. Call 640-1390.
“ROMAN HOLIDAY” —
The Ojai Valley Museum,
130 W. Ojai Ave., will
screen free classic family
films every Saturday at 4
p.m. in the Rotating
Gallery through Dec. 20, in
conjunction with its exhibit on “The Ojai Theater.” The film being
shown Nov. 22 will be
“Roman Holiday” (1953),
starring Audrey Hepburn
and Gregory Peck. Hep-
burn won the Best Actress
Academy Award for her
role in this movie. Call
640-1390.
“WORLD OF WONDER”
— Performances To Grow
On will present Leland
Faulkner’s “World of Wonder,” Nov. 22 at 4 p.m. at
the Ojai Art Center, 113 S.
Montgomery St. Spellbinding theater artist Faulkner
combines Japanese art
forms, mime, shadow theater, illusion, improvisation and folk tales with
original special effects to
produce an imaginative
performance. Tickets: $10
for children, $15 for adults;
available online at
www.ptgo.org, Ojai
Coffee Roasting Co., or
call 646-8907.
SANTA PAWS IS COMING TO TOWN — Greg
Cooper will be taking photographs of you and your
pets with “Santa Paws,”
Nov. 23 from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. at the Humane Society of Ventura County, 402
Bryant St. Call 646-6505.
Funds raised will benefit
the animals at the shelter.
CHAMBER MUSIC
CONCERT — The Ojai Art
Center, 113 S. Montgomery
St., will host a concert of
chamber music, Nov. 23 at
2 p.m., by three musicians
well-known to Ojai audiences: violinist Yue Deng,
cellist Virginia Kron, and
pianist Kacey Link. They
will perform some of the
most beloved duos and
trios of the classical
repertoire by Beethoven,
Kodály and Brahms.
Tickets sold only at the
door: $10 general, $8 for
Art Center members and
students. Call 640-8327
for more details.
Have you, or anyone you know ever wondered
what it means to be Catholic?
We invite you to come to our open door meetings.
Even if you are a non-practicing Catholic,
come learn more about how the church positively affects the lives of people all around the world,
and learn more about how Pope Francis is
effecting change in the World, the Church and
our community, and of course you.
Contact the Parish Office at
(805) 646-4338 or (805) 646-0307
St. Thomas Aquinas Church
185 St. Thomas Dr. • Ojai, CA • 93023
Office Hours 8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m. • Closed 12p.m. - 1p.m.
How about:
Best Kept Secret in VC
Red Hot Foods—Cannery & Co-Packing • Santa Paula Salsa Company—Retail
All In One Location
Classifieds
[email protected]
A6 Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014
foUnD
SUDOKU ANSWERS
renTals WanTeD
professional woman (Ojai resident of 15
yrs.) seeks SM. CABIN
OR GUEST HOUSE.
n/s, xlnt. refs. 758-4042.
[email protected].
Phone, 11/10 at Ojai
Meadows, 886-6691.
Glasses at Matilija
Dam, 76-3137.
for sale
Help WanTeD
Btfl. white wicket
bdrm. set, incl. dbl.
mattress, headboard,
dressers & mirror.
Wooden buffet, all
exclt. cond. 216-3772
$54
renTals, CoTTaGe
1 + 1.5 English country cottage on 5
acres. Gourmet kitchen, tile, fireplace, pets
welcome. $2,750/mo.
626-720-7456.
[email protected]
renTals, HoUses
BeaUTifUl custom
duplex. 1 + 1, kitchenette, f/p, on 1 acre,
oak grove, seas.
stream, parking for 1.
$1,200 + dep. incl.
util. No s/d/p, 7011327.
renTals, offiCes
oJai: NICE LARGE
office & warehouse
suites in Ojai Valley
News building.
805-563-9400.
S K I L L E D
MAINTENANCE
WORKER: Performs
journey-level work in a
variety of the bldg
trades
in
the
maintenance
and
repair of facilities.
$18.71-$22.74/hr;
CUSTODIAN
II:
Performs
custodial
and light grounds work
at
assigned
site.
$ 1 4 . 6 8 $17.84/hr; SCHOOL
OFFICE
MGR,
ELEM: performs a
variety of clerical
duties to coordinate
school
office
activities. $15.40$18.72/hr; These
positions work 12
months/year,
12
m o n t h s ;
TECH RESOURCE
COORD: Provide
supervision/instruction
to
students
in
computer
lab
classroom. $12.96$15.75/hour - works
11 months/year, 5
hrs/day.
H Y P E R L I N K
"http://www.ojai.k12.c
a.us/hr"www.ojai.k12.
ca.us/hr - classified current
vacancies.
805-640-4300 X1041 414 E. Ojai Ave, Ojai
$378
OJAI VALLEY NEWS
BUSINESS AND SERVICE DIRECTORY
Eric Anderson Landscape Contractor
Mulch delivery, $40.00 cu. yd., 2 yd. min.
•Commercial/Residential maintenance
•Fine tree trimming
•Drought tolerant landscapes
•Irrigation system audit and repair
St. lic. # 876863, city lic. # 14017
805-512-0513 or [email protected]
Joe Anderson Foreman/operator
Bringing down the prices in the Ojai Valley
"Making
Ventura County greener
one yard at a time"
Locally
Owned &
Operated
• Weekly lawn Care
• Weed abatement
• sprinkler repair
• Yard Clean-up
Brand New 7 Gallon Filled
Propane Tanks
$89.99
+tax
culverbaseballacademy.com
Call for Appointment
805.207.3263
230 Burnham Rd.
Oak View
Culver Softball Academy
Termite damage, fungus repairs & fumigation
(sub-contracted)
Termite reports for escrow, all rodents, ants, spiders, etc.
Gophers & ground squirrels, Live & dead animal removal
FREE ESTIMATES
Commercial & residential
[email protected]
REYES
HAN DYMAN
SERVICES
Gardening Service
(805) 646-2917
Landscape Maintenance, Irrigation Systems,
Tree Trimming & Pruning, Weed Abatement,
Tractor Work & Clean Ups, FREE ESTIMATES
20% OFF Any Service
Private Lessons
on a Private Field
(805) 646 - 6504
Available seven days a week
Weekly, Bi-monthly, Monthly - 20 Years Experience
While supplies last
Culver Baseball Academy
Over 30 Years Ser ving the Ojai Valley!
“We will beat any competitor’s bid”
Efrain’s
Down to Earth Lawn & Garden
805.217.0766
OJAI TERMITE &
PEST CONTROL
Manuel Reyes
“Your local handyman”
15 years experience
WANTED Old Race Cars, Classics, Motorcycles:
798 - 5797
Electrical installations,
finished wood work,
tile work, plumbing,
painting, fix door problems,
change water heater,
garbage disposal repairs,
wood fences and more!
FREE ESTIMATES!
LIC. # 14366
Tri-Valley Tree TriMMing
KENTON AUTO INSURANCE
CALI TREE CARE
• Tree MainTenance
• Firewood
• Brush clearance
• Free esTiMaTe
DMV REGISTRATION • TAGS
TREE REMOVAL
call carlos
805-798-0693
Deadlines for placing your ad
For Wednesday’s paper, Monday before Noon.
For Friday’s paper, Wednesday before Noon.
We accept personal checks, Visa, Mastercard, Discover,
American Express & Debit.
LIFE INSURANCE
WE’RE YOUR INSURANCE AGENTS!
TREE PLANTING
805-652-1400
FIREWOOD • FREE DELIVERY
$10 OFF FIREWOOD
kentoninsurance.com
805-798-1463
We reserVe THe riGHT to require that any ad be
paid in advance of publishing. refUnDs will be
mailed within 30 days of cancellation. reaDers are
cautioned to make no investments before thoroughly
investigating any advertisements in the Classified
columns, which require investments in stocks,
samples, equipment or cash bond in order to obtain a
position. reaDers are cautioned to thoroughly
investigate services and products advertised in this
publication. Consumers are urged to use prudence in
their patronage. advertising in this publication in no
way represents an endorsement by the publisher.
DISCRIMINATION: Any advertisement with respect to the sale or rental of a dwelling, or with respect to an employment opportunity that indicates ANY PREFERENCE, limitation or
discrimination based on race, color, religion, creed, sex, national origin or ancestry, marital status, number of tenants, status with respect to public assistance, disability, age and
affectional or sexual preference is unacceptable. Advertisements For Roommates: Advertisements for roommates may specify gender, but only in two cases: IF the accommodation
involves shared living space, or IF the housing is a dormitory in an educational institution.
Keep in mind: Advertisements for apartments or housing not involving shared living space may not specify gender. Where living space is shared, only the gender of a roommate may
be specified, and the ad may not specify race, religion, or any other protected class. THE PUBLISHER assumes NO FINANCIAL responsibility for errors nor for omission of copy. Liability
for errors shall not exceed the cost of that portion of space occupied by such error.
Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 A7
OVN10-13-2014
Published Ojai Valley News
October 22 & 29, 2014
November 5 & 12, 2014
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
File Number 2014092310017176-0 1/1
Ventura County Clerk and
Recorder
MARK A. LUNN
File Date: 09/23/2014
THE FOLLOWING
PERSON(S) IS (ARE)
DOING BUSINESS AS: (1st
Fictitious Business Name)
Lil’ Miss Sweets
Street Address of Principal
Place of Business (P.O. Box
or PMB are not acceptable):
991 Poplar Ct., Simi Valley,
CA 93065
County of Principal Place
of Business: Ventura
Full name of 1st Registrant
Individual/Corporation/Limit
ed Liability Company:
Melissa Celeste Lefton
Residence Address of 1st
Registrant (P.O. Box or PMB
are not acceptable):
991 Poplar Ct., Simi Valley,
CA 93065
This Business is conducted
by: An Individual
The registrant commenced
to transact business under the
fictitious business name or
names listed above on
9/1/14.
I declare that all information
in this statement is true and
correct.
(A registrant who declares
information as true any
material matter pursuant to
Section 17913 of Business
and Professions Code that
the registrant knows to be
false is guilty of a
misdemeanor punishable by
a fine not to exceed one
thousand dollars ($1,000).)
Melissa Celest Lefton
/s/MELISSA CELEST
LEFTON
NOTICE – In accordance
with subdivision (a) of
Section 17920, a fictitious
name statement generally
expires at the end of five
years from the date on which
it was filed in the office of
the county clerk, except, as
provided in subdivision
section 17920, where it
expires 40 days after any
change in the facts set forth
in the statement pursuant to
section 17913 other than a
change in residence address
or registered owner. A new
fictitious business name
statement must be filed
before the expiration. The
filing of this statement does
not of itself authorize the use
in this state of a fictitious
business name in violation of
the rights of another under
Federal, State, or Common
Law (see section 14411 ET
SEQ., Business and
Professions Code).
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Ventura on the date indicated
by the file stamp above.
————————
OVN10-14-2014
Published Ojai Valley News
October 22 & 29, 2014
November 5 & 12, 2014
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
File Number 2014092310017178-0 1/1
Ventura County Clerk and
Recorder
MARK A. LUNN
File Date: 09/23/2014
THE FOLLOWING
PERSON(S) IS (ARE)
DOING BUSINESS AS: (1st
Fictitious Business Name)
Sugar Pearl Bakery, (2nd
Fictitious Business Name)
Hot Shots Photography
Street Address of Principal
Place of Business (P.O. Box
or PMB are not acceptable):
1006 Ney Court, Simi Valley,
CA 93065
County of Principal Place
of Business: Ventura
Full name of 1st Registrant
Individual/Corporation/Limit
ed Liability Company:
Alicia Ann Ford
Residence Address of 1st
Registrant (P.O. Box or PMB
are not acceptable):
1006 Ney Court, Simi Valley,
CA 93065
Full name of 2nd
Registrant
Individual/Corporation/Limit
ed Liability Company:
Sean Mitchell Ford
Residence Address of 2nd
Registrant (P.O. Box or PMB
are not acceptable):
1006 Ney Court, Simi Valley,
CA 93065
This Business is conducted
by: Married Couple
The registrant commenced
to transact business under the
fictitious business name or
names listed above on
9/23/2014.
I declare that all information
in this statement is true and
correct.
(A registrant who declares
information as true any
material matter pursuant to
Section 17913 of Business
and Professions Code that
the registrant knows to be
false is guilty of a
misdemeanor punishable by
a fine not to exceed one
thousand dollars ($1,000).)
Alicia Ann Ford
/s/ALICIA FORD
NOTICE – In accordance
with subdivision (a) of
Section 17920, a fictitious
name statement generally
expires at the end of five
years from the date on which
it was filed in the office of
the county clerk, except, as
provided in subdivision
section 17920, where it
expires 40 days after any
change in the facts set forth
in the statement pursuant to
section 17913 other than a
change in residence address
or registered owner. A new
fictitious business name
statement must be filed
before the expiration. The
filing of this statement does
not of itself authorize the use
in this state of a fictitious
business name in violation of
the rights of another under
Federal, State, or Common
Law (see section 14411 ET
SEQ., Business and
Professions Code).
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Ventura on the date indicated
by the file stamp above.
————————
OVN10-15-2014
Published Ojai Valley News
October 22 & 29, 2014
November 5 & 12, 2014
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
File Number 2014092310017202-0 1/1
Ventura County Clerk and
Recorder
MARK A. LUNN
File Date: 09/23/2014
THE FOLLOWING
PERSON(S) IS (ARE)
DOING BUSINESS AS: (1st
Fictitious Business Name)
Advanced Technology
Solutions
Street Address of Principal
Place of Business (P.O. Box
or PMB are not acceptable):
2077 Creekridge Ave., Simi
Valley, CA 93065
County of Principal Place
of Business: Ventura
State of Incorporation/
Organization: CA
Full name of 1st Registrant
Individual/Corporation/Limit
ed Liability Company:
Wayne Snyder
Residence Address of 1st
Registrant (P.O. Box or PMB
are not acceptable):
2077 Creekridge Ave., Simi
Valley, CA 93065
This Business is conducted
by: An Individual
The registrant commenced
to transact business under the
fictitious business name or
names listed above on 9-114.
I declare that all information
in this statement is true and
correct.
(A registrant who declares
information as true any
material matter pursuant to
Section 17913 of Business
and Professions Code that
the registrant knows to be
false is guilty of a
misdemeanor punishable by
a fine not to exceed one
thousand dollars ($1,000).)
Wayne Snyder
/s/WAYNE SNYDER
NOTICE – In accordance
with subdivision (a) of
Section 17920, a fictitious
name statement generally
expires at the end of five
years from the date on which
it was filed in the office of
the county clerk, except, as
provided in subdivision
section 17920, where it
expires 40 days after any
change in the facts set forth
in the statement pursuant to
section 17913 other than a
change in residence address
or registered owner. A new
fictitious business name
statement must be filed
before the expiration. The
filing of this statement does
not of itself authorize the use
in this state of a fictitious
business name in violation of
the rights of another under
Federal, State, or Common
Law (see section 14411 ET
SEQ., Business and
Professions Code).
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Ventura on the date indicated
by the file stamp above.
————————
OVN10-18-2014
Published Ojai Valley News
October 29, 2014
November 5, 12 & 19, 2014
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
File Number 2014102210019066-0 1/1
Ventura County Clerk and
Recorder
MARK A. LUNN
File Date: 10/22/2014
THE FOLLOWING
PERSON(S) IS (ARE)
DOING BUSINESS AS: (1st
Fictitious Business Name)
Final Fix Patch
Street Address of Principal
Place of Business (P.O. Box
or PMB are not acceptable):
19 Don Antonio Way, Ojai,
CA 93023
County of Principal Place
of Business: Ventura
Full name of 1st Registrant
Individual/Corporation/Limit
ed Liability Company:
Jeffrey M. Jones
Residence Address of 1st
Registrant (P.O. Box or PMB
are not acceptable):
19 Don Antonio Way, Ojai,
CA 93023
Full name of 2nd
Registrant
Individual/Corporation/Limit
ed Liability Company:
Marilyn A. Heathcote
Residence Address of 2nd
Registrant (P.O. Box or PMB
are not acceptable):
19 Don Antonio Way, Ojai,
CA 93023
This Business is conducted
by: Married Couple
The registrant commenced
to transact business under the
fictitious business name or
names listed above on N/A.
I declare that all information
in this statement is true and
correct.
(A registrant who declares
information as true any
material matter pursuant to
Section 17913 of Business
and Professions Code that
the registrant knows to be
false is guilty of a
misdemeanor punishable by
a fine not to exceed one
thousand dollars ($1,000).)
Jeffrey M. Jones
/s/JEFFREY M. JONES
NOTICE – In accordance
with subdivision (a) of
Section 17920, a fictitious
name statement generally
expires at the end of five
years from the date on which
it was filed in the office of
the county clerk, except, as
provided in subdivision
section 17920, where it
expires 40 days after any
change in the facts set forth
in the statement pursuant to
section 17913 other than a
change in residence address
or registered owner. A new
fictitious business name
statement must be filed
before the expiration. The
filing of this statement does
not of itself authorize the use
in this state of a fictitious
business name in violation of
the rights of another under
Federal, State, or Common
Law (see section 14411 ET
SEQ., Business and
Professions Code).
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Ventura on the date indicated
by the file stamp above.
————————
OVN11-03-2014
Published Ojai Valley News
November 12, 19 & 26, 2014
December 3, 2014
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
File Number 2014110510019919-0 1/1
Ventura County Clerk and
Recorder
MARK A. LUNN
File Date: 11/05/2014
THE FOLLOWING
PERSON(S) IS (ARE)
DOING BUSINESS AS: (1st
Fictitious Business Name) To
Your Health
Street Address of Principal
Place of Business (P.O. Box
or PMB are not acceptable):
160 Apricot St., Oak View,
CA 93022
County of Principal Place
of Business: Ventura
Full name of 1st Registrant
Individual/Corporation/Limit
ed Liability Company:
Barbara A. Kennedy
Residence Address of 1st
Registrant (P.O. Box or PMB
are not acceptable):
160 Apricot St., Oak View,
CA 93022
This Business is conducted
by: An Individual
The registrant commenced
to transact business under the
fictitious business name or
names listed above on
9/1/14.
I declare that all information
in this statement is true and
correct.
(A registrant who declares
information as true any
material matter pursuant to
Section 17913 of Business
and Professions Code that
the registrant knows to be
false is guilty of a
misdemeanor punishable by
a fine not to exceed one
thousand dollars ($1,000).)
Barbara A. Kennedy
/s/BARBARA A.
KENNEDY
NOTICE – In accordance
with subdivision (a) of
Section 17920, a fictitious
name statement generally
expires at the end of five
years from the date on which
it was filed in the office of
the county clerk, except, as
provided in subdivision
section 17920, where it
expires 40 days after any
change in the facts set forth
in the statement pursuant to
section 17913 other than a
change in residence address
or registered owner. A new
fictitious business name
statement must be filed
before the expiration. The
filing of this statement does
not of itself authorize the use
in this state of a fictitious
business name in violation of
the rights of another under
Federal, State, or Common
Law (see section 14411 ET
SEQ., Business and
Professions Code).
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Ventura on the date indicated
by the file stamp above.
[email protected]
Ojai Valley News’
Ojai for the Holidays
Advertising Package
2X5 color ad in 8 issues of the Ojai Valley News
from Friday Nov. 26 through Friday, Dec. 19
$62.50 per run
and you will get a free 2 x 5 ad in January
to announce post-holiday specials or clearance sales
Contact Mike Dawkins
805-646-1476 Ext. 228
[email protected]
Metro Creative - CROSSWORD PUZZLE
CLUES ACROSS
1. Hindu stratification
6. Least harm
12. Medical
confinement
16. Silver
17. In a sick state
18. Belonging to me
19. 1/2 an em
20. “Makeover’s”
Pennington
21. Take a seat
22. 1/10 meter (abbr.)
23. Atomic # 13
24. Fallow deer genus
26. Skin lesions
28. Charlie Parker’s sax
30. 31st state
31. Disparity
32. Poking stroke
34. Long time
35. Wm. the Conqueror
grave
37. Hosts film festival
39. Mend
40. Gear teeth
41. Of cadmium
43. 1618 Reformed
synod
44. Fringe-toed lizard
45. Where passengers
ride
47. 1/60 hour (abbr.)
48. Initials of TV
cartoon father
50. Pack down
52. ___ and feathered
54. Hyperbolic cosecant
56. Operating system
(abbr.)
57. Atomic #99
59. Crown owned Isle
60. Santa __ trail
61. Booze support
group
62. Footcandle
63. Retaliations
66. Natural logarithm
67. Quality of
usefulness
70. Sitting position
71. They turn litmus
paper red
CLUES DOWN
1. Brandy region of
France
2. Equally
3. Spittles
4. Very small
5. Ethiopia
6. Filled with sediment
7. An antiviral AIDS
drug
8. Saudi king to 2005
9. Early word forms
10. Yes in Spanish
11. Ketchup veggies
12. Used to have
(Scottish)
13. Old Greek
storyteller
14. Den
15. Stockings
25. Scottish road
surface
26. Diego, Francisco,
Anselmo
27. Bodily cavity
29. Durations
31. About gene
33. “Footloose” actor
Kevin
36. Supply weaponry
38. Neither
39. Capital of Syria
41. Shortcut
42. Feline
43. Have already done
46. Rifle barrel cleaning
tool
47. High IQ group
49. Libra constellation
51. Perch genus
53. Summer
precipitation
54. Ancient Roman
boxing gloves
55. Silver Skates’
Brinker
58. Cobblestone
60. Policeman (French)
64. Pizza, apple or
chiffon
65. Winglike structure
68. 37th state
69. Potato state
Due to a technical issue, the New York Times Crossword puzzle was unable for this issue.
A8 Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014
Perspectives
ASTROLOGY
RISA D’ANGELES
Everything is changing — and it needs to
The week is filled with
heavenly squares, triangles, rectangles, lines and
conjunctions as the planets accelerate their interactions with each other.
We are preparing for December's Uranus (in
Aries) square Pluto (in
Capricorn) — a persistent
square causing uncompromising change in humanity.
Aries
and
Capricorn are cardinal
signs. Cardinal signs initiate new realities, squares
challenge and lead us
onto new pathways. They
awaken in us new ideas,
archetypes, rhythms and
new ways of being.
As Saturn (dweller on
the threshold) disciplines
us to face truths and then
relinquish the past,
Uranus (the new order)
presents us with breakdowns and Pluto transforms
everything,
everywhere relentlessly.
Aries rules all things new.
Capricorn rules governments, leaders and the
entire structure of our civilization.
Everything's
changing. It needs to. The
old is exhausted. We are
too.
Neptune (the fish god,
the waters of life) in Pisces
(saving the world) turns
stationary direct Sunday
ter
e Ve inary
tasks. Tend carefully to
health and limit extraneous activities.
GEMINI: Your spirit
needs art and creativity
each day lest you become
dry as a thistle in desert
heat. You should not gamble. However many will
and for moments you find
prosperity but it's as fleeting as a tumbleweed. You
find yourself flirting at
times, bringing loved
ones closer, then walking
away at a moment's notice. Constancy you will
learn someday — when
another walks away.
CANCER: Do you have
a sense that others care
for you, tending and nurturing when you're in
need? Nurture all associations and interactions in
your life so you feel the
real possibility of care
from others. Do you
sometimes feel separated
from loved ones? It's hard
to share and be close from
afar. However whatever
interactions you have
with them are deep and
profound. Your love is an
art form.
LEO: You may never
want to leave home except for a very short time.
Careful with implements
(tools) in daily life. They
become dangerous if not
H
Vi
os
on your sleeve, in the air,
acting like a shooting star
attempting to share
something about yourself
with everyone everywhere? Sometimes you
slip behind the curtain, a
bit fearful of revealing to
others your vulnerabilities, desires and aspiration. When you connect
with others love is released. Love underlies
your entire world of
events. You deserve everything.
SAGITTARIUS: Parts of
you are shy about intimacy. It hides behind
your sense of adventure.
You attempt to be cheery
even under stress. You
hide behind laughter,
your love of food, family.
Soon there will be new a
call to service. It's searching for you. Each joy and
crisis brings it closer. A
door opened. You walked
through it with grace. The
unobtainable became the
obtained. You're laughing
and happy.
CAPRICORN: You have
the ability at this time to
organize social events
that are a healing and
comfort for others. Your
sense of justice, ethics
and aspiration to serve
humanity allow you to
comfort and counsel
those who mourn, those
in need, unnoticed, un-
T
om
Weber
p it a
l
O jai
handled with awareness.
With great assurance you
can now prepare your
body for utmost fitness
through dietary and exercise choices. Interactions
with others may feel very
difficult (Plutonian). Try
to have right relations
anyway.
VIRGO: Begin to be
conservative with money
and resources, important
later when resources will
be needed. However,
there may arise some material necessity that is expensive (buy it) or
someone in great need
(help them). You will find
these choices appropriate
at times. Always tithe first.
Social interactions are important. Should you find
no one to talk with, the
garden devas will listen —
and respond.
LIBRA: Are you feeling
overworked,
overextended, tired early in the
evening and awakening
before dawn? Bananas
and milk (raw) and protein before bed help. Are
you readying your home
for the holiday season? Do
not overspend this year.
Use resources already accumulated. They're beautiful and enough to make
the coming season fill
with light, beauty and
your loving generosity.
SCORPIO: Is your heart
If you are thinking of buying or selling...
Please give me a call
l
g
la
morning as Venus enters
Sag Sunday night. Sun
joins Saturn (in Scorpio)
Tuesday. Venus and Scorpio work with money and
resources. We are being
moved forward globally
into new economic directions, new archetypes. A
revolution is occurring.
ARIES: You become
deeply intuitive, your
business sense soars, especially if working with
others, unusual for you.
Yet this is how you move
forward. If passions ebb
and flow, and at times
stop altogether, it's because you're assessing
which path to take, which
behaviors are beneficial,
and what resources to use
most effectively. Your
work in the world daily
becomes more potent. Be
sure to add love to all endeavors. Your will can either destroy or create.
TAURUS: You tend to
those you love with words
of care and tenderness,
unusual for you. However
it's articulating what you
feel. Seeking closeness,
your attitude is one of
benevolence, commitment and loyalty. On the
other hand, you are physically drained and must
rest much each day in
order to accomplish small
(805) 320-2004
Associate Broker
CalBRE: 00805061
Gold Coast
e-mail: [email protected]
Ojai Village Veterinary Hospital
FREE LASER
THERAPY
CONSULT
ONE PET, NEW OR EXISTING CLIENTS
OJAI VILLAGE VETERINARY HOSPITAL
OFFER EXPIRES 11/26/14 • PLEASE
PRESENT THIS SAVINGS COUPON
Ojai Village Veterinary Hospital is
proud to offer alternative treatment to
complement our conventional care.
Laser therapy is a noninvasive, painfree, surgery-free, drug-free treatment
option available for both dogs and cats.
Laser therapy is extremely effective
and in many cases is a more effective
alternative to pharmaceuticals.
Studies have shown the ability to
promote healing as much as three
times faster then conventional
treatment procedures.
PICTURED:
A Labrador
Retriever receives
laser therapy on a
cruciate ligament
suture area. The
laser treats pain
and swelling,
and speeds up
healing in soft tissues, muscle and skin. The procedure
takes only minutes, and can be a pivotal way to
help your pet return to normal activity rapidly.
Alternative Veterinary Care
Laser Therapy Treatment
What is Laser Therapy?
seen, overlooked and left
out. Slowly your personal
power and capabilities for
doing good are recognized. Each opportunity
reveals another. Continue
up the ladder. It leads to
the stars. A crisis becomes
a hidden opportunity.
Look for it!
AQUARIUS: Your imagination will give rise to
great ideas leading to feelings of confidence, success and no longer being
held back. There's a secret
to personal success. Allow
your heart to speak. Not
your desires but your
heart. They are different.
Tell the truth about how
you feel at all times. Speak
of your needs, hopes,
wishes. This makes you
authentic. Those in touch
with their hearts will recognize you.
PISCES: In years to
come, a group project will
begin to manifest. It will
have profound effects
upon humanity. The seeds
have been planted and although you feel it will
never come about, much
is occurring in many unseen ways. Gather flower
and vegetable seeds. Sow
them everywhere — in
fields and meadows and
small patches of soil —
even indoors. This (seeds,
sowing, growing) is the
metaphor to carry you forward into the future with
calmness, courage, surety
and stillness.
Risa D'Angeles is founder
and director of the Esoteric
and Astrological Studies
and Research Institute, a
contemporary
wisdom
school in the ancient mysteries tradition. E-mail risa g o o d w i l l
@gmail.com, go to night
lightnews.com or see her
Facebook pages.
VENTURA ROOFING
“There is No Substitute for Experience”
Laser therapy is the use of specific
wavelengths of light to treat painful
and debilitating conditions.
FREE
ESTIMATES
How does it work?
Light energy enters the damaged cells
and stimulates inter-cellular activity. This
reduces pain in the area and speeds
recovery of the damaged cells. Once the
cells recover, the healing process is
complete.
What can my pet expect
during treatment?
Laser therapy is a PAINLESS treatment
that lasts an average of 3 minutes. Your
pet may experience a comfortable
sensation at the point of application.
What can my pet expect
after treatment?
Most patients see positive results in one
to three treatments. Acute conditions can
subside with as few as one set of treatments.
Chronic conditions can be managed with
regular monthly treatment. And there
are no know negative side effects.
Often, pain medication can be reduced or
eliminated after laser therapy tratment.
311 W Ojai Ave
(805) 646-3111
Celebrating our 32nd year in business!
Hot Mop • Composition • Shingle • Rock Tile
• Shake • New Construction • Re-Roofing
• Repair • Bonded • Insured •
Financing Available
805-646-7663
“Thanks to all our loyal friends and customers in the Ojai Valley!”
Kacy and Tim Reed
State License # 440157
In Business for 32 years and looking forward to 32 more!!
Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 A9
Azu premieres Ojai’s newest wine, Alisal
Azu Restaurant &
Tapas Bar is now exclusively offering Ojai Alisal, a new wine grown
and produced in the Ojai
Valley by Bruce Chernof
and Dan Garcia.
Alisal and Azu are both
labors of Ojai love. Vintner Chernof and Garcia,
both Los Angeles physicians, began their Ojai
journey over a decade
ago in the East End with
a bare patch of land.
They built a home,
planted the vineyard
and spent their weekends planting, weeding,
fertilizing, pruning and
now harvesting their varietals which include
Malbec,
Grenache,
Syrah,
Viognier,
Grenache Blanc and
Mouvedre. Chernof said,
“Through the decade of
building our home, raising our grapes and now
harvesting, Azu has been
our home away from
home. Every Saturday
night, for over a decade,
Daniel and I have spent
dining on the wonderful
food Laurel and Elizabeth provide at Azu. For
us, it was a perfect pair-
ing to have Azu as our
exclusive outlet.”
Elizabeth Haffner, Azu
general manager, said,
“Through the years, Dan
and Bruce attended our
winemakers’
dinners
and saw our passion for
showcasing the craft of
our local artisan winemakers. With grapes
strictly from Bruce and
Dan’s winery in Ojai,
their wines are the true
flavor of our uncommon
terroir. Ojai Alisal is the
best Ojai has to offer and
we are proud to showcase these exemplary
Photos submitted
Ojai Alisal offers several varietals.
wines with our California tapas menu.”
Vintner Chernof said,
“For us, Azu really captures the spirit that is
Ojai. Azu’s food is the
high quality that you really want, yet it has a
sense of casualness ...
Azu makes such great
use of local produce,
and embodies the notion of California tapas
perfectly, and we think
our wines pair beautifully with both the atmosphere and the food.”
Nearly 14 years ago,
Laurel Moore renovated
Bill Baker's 1910 building and opened the
doors of Azu with a vision to translate the best
cuisine of the Mediterranean into an exclusive,
Ojai-sourced menu. Her
daughter,
Elizabeth,
came on as general
manager in 2006.
Friday through Sunday from noon to 5 p.m.
Ojai Alisal will be featured in the Tasting
Room at Azu Bar. Enjoy
flights of wine — including Viognier, Grenache
and Syrah 2012 — along
with specialty tapas
from executive chef
Damien Halderman.
Azu Restaurant &
Tapas Bar is at 457 E.
Ojai Ave. See www.azu
ojai.com.
Dan Garcia and Bruce Chernof (right) pour their first
flights at Azu.
Azu general manager Elizabeth Haffner takes a sniff and
a sip of Ojai Alisal.
Meet Your Hometown Realtor
Sherry Stuckey
805-216-3700
OPEN SUN 1 - 4
905 HOLLy KNOLL, O.V.
Dennis Guernsey
805-798-1998
Ojai Valley Office
(805) 640-1440
727 W. Ojai Ave.
236 W. Ojai Ave., Suite 100
Ray Deckert
805-272-5218
Cheryl Deckert
805-272-5221
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.bestbuysinojai.com
DRE #01761150 / 00780642
Ojai Valley
Real Estate
Price reduced to $524,900!
This remodeled 4BR/2BA offers 2014 sq
ft., a guest suite option, formal living room,
open kitchen, generous family room, an
in-grund 10 person spa, & patio w/ a gas
fire place. Special decor items include rock
masonry, slate flooring, & granite counters.
Tour at www. 905HollyKnoll.com.
Sherry Stuckey • 805-640-1440
Ojai Valley
Real Estate
Anne
Williamson
805.320.3314
Sales/Prop Mgmt./Notary
www.ojaivalleyrealestate.com
BRE#
01448441
805-646-4911
Call or stop by today!
COLDWELL BANKER
Propertry Shoppe
Sales/Prop Mgmt./Notary
www.ojaivalleyrealestate.com
2 Locations!
Ronald R. McCrea
Owner/Broker
805-646-4911 x101
221 E. Matilija Street, 93023
(805) 646-4911
206 E Ojai Ave
(805) 646-6344
Larry Wilde
805-646-7288
2 Locations!
221 E. Matilija Street, 93023 (805) 646-4911
206 E Ojai Ave (805) 646-6344
Rosalie Zabilla
805-455-3183
727 W. Ojai Ave.
Ryan Elliott
805-794-1774
Cassandra
VanKeulen
805.798-1272
BRE#
01929366
COLDWELL BANKER
Propertry Shoppe
Ojai Valley Office
(805) 640-1440
Ojai Valley Office
(805) 640-1440
236 W. Ojai Ave., Suite 100
236 W. Ojai Ave., Suite 100
Kristen
Currier
Tonya Peralta
805-794-7458
[email protected]
805.798.3757
“The Realtor with
COLDWELL BANKER
DRE: 01314850
Appraisal Experience”
www.OjaiHomeSearch.com
109 N. Blanche St., Ste. 100 • www.OjaiHomes4Sale.com
n
Riki Strandfeldt n
California DRE Lic. #01262026
(805)
Realtor®
Erik Wilde
805-830-3254
727 W. Ojai Ave.
Sharon McClung
805-637-4467
794-6474
Call me to see any property
or list yours for sale!
www.Riki4RealEstate.com
Jerry Michaels Char Michaels
805-620-2437 805-620-2438
Search all Ventura County listings...
no sign-in required!
COLDWELL BANKER Property Shoppe
109 N. Blanche St., Ste. 100
• www.OjaiHomes4Sale.com •
Sports
A10
Wednesday
Nov. 12, 2014
Mike Miller, editor
[email protected]
Highlighting prep, rec and area sports
Nordhoff defeats rival Bishop Diego to claim league title
Mike Miller
[email protected]
Nordhoff senior Baylee
Rogers should not expect
to receive holiday cards
from the Bishop Diego
faithful this winter.
Rogers has been a thorn
in Bishop Diego’s side
and has single-handedly
snatched victory from
the Cardinals in recent
years and then Friday
night he scored three
first-half touchdowns to
give NHS a 35-14 victory.
With the win, the
Rangers clinched the TriValley League championship and spoiled
Bishop Diego’s undefeated season.
Nordhoff got a break
early in the first quarter
when a shanked punt
deep in Bishop Diego territory gave NHSthe ball
at the 6-yard line. Rogers
would follow his offensive line into the end
zone from 3 yards out to
give the Rangers the early
7-0 advantage.
After forcing Bishop
Diego into a three-andsituation,
the
out
Rangers got right back to
work. Senior quarterback
Austin Santino found
wide out Nick Sterling
who made a nifty open
field move and raced 25
yards to get NHS into
scoring position. Again it
was Rogers who would
power his way into the
end zone on a short
touchdown run. Cooper
Garcia’s extra point
made the score 14-0.
Bishop Diego then got
a break after a questionable celebration penalty
on the Rangers kept their
drive alive. Eventually,
the Cardinals would
score when quarterback
Spencer Stovesand connected with Alvoid Ben-
nett on a 9-yard scoring
play to make the score
14-7 in favor of NHS.
Later in the second
quarter, Bishop Diego
was picking up momentum but then the Rangers
would turn the tides
when linebacker Jevon
Morrison intercepted a
Stovesand pass and returned it into Bishop
Diego territory.
Rogers would then
score his third touchdown of the night, this
time from 4 yards away
to make the score 21-7.
On the very next play,
Bennett took the kickoff
at the goal line and outran the NHS defenders
99 yards for a muchneeded touchdown. The
two teams would go to
the locker room with
NHS hanging onto a slim
21-14 lead.
Strong defense and a
power running attack
would carry NHS in the
second half as they
began to pull away from
the Cardinals. “You can
do a lot with that combination. If you play good
defense and can run the
football, good things
happen,” said NHS head
coach Erik Monson.
In the third quarter,
Regin Wilson intercepted
another Stovesand pass,
which would lead to
Nordhoff’s next score.
This time
it was Santino who
w o u l d
score on a
fourthand-goal
play. The senior signal
caller tucked behind his
line and found the end
zone to make the score
28-14.
In the final quarter of
play, the Rangers started
to wear down the Cardi-
Ojai Valley News photo by Ken Brown
Shane Hersh (No. 21) was a force on offense and defense for the Rangers last Friday night as the Rangers defeated
the Bishop Diego Cardinals, 35-14.
nals and it showed when
senior Shane Hersh
bowled his way to a 22yard touchdown, capping the scoring on the
night at 35-14.
“Give them credit, they
said, “I always get up for
Bishop Diego week. I try
to focus on all of the little
things to make sure I am
ready to go. It is easy to
get up for this game because of the rivalry.”
things around, Monson
said, “It is not how you
start, but how you finish.
Our kids and coaches
continued to work hard
and believe. I really felt
like we’d find our step
and grow as a
team and we
did. I’m happy
for these kids.”
Hersh finished the game
with 73 yards
on 11 carries and he led
the team with 12 tackles
while senior Atticus
Reyes was in on nine
tackles. The story of the
game was the play on
Nordhoff’s offensive and
defensive lines. NHS was
Nordhoff will play Arroyo Grande in a firstround playoff game Friday at 7 p.m. at NHS.
are good football team
and I think they will
make some noise in the
playoffs,” said Monson
after the game.
Rogers, who finished
with 113 yards rushing
and three touchdowns
There were times this
season that Nordhoff
looked as though they
might not win another
game, but then they captured the league title.
When asked how the
team managed to turn
able to control the line of
scrimmage and limited
Bishop Diego’s potent
running attack to just 102
yards.
As Tri-Valley League
champions,
Nordhoff
earned the right to host a
first-round playoff game
and they received a
tough draw to open the
postseason. NHS will
host a very talented Arroyo Grande (8-2) team
in the first round. The
winner of that game will
take on the winner of the
Lompoc against Camarillo contest.
See Friday’s Ojai Valley
News for more information on Arroyo Grande.
Ojai Valley School runners capture Condor League title
Cole Zellner
Ojai Valley News contributor
After a long season of
practice and persistence, the Ojai Valley
School girls’ cross-country team secured the
Condor League championship last Wednesday
with a strong showing at
the league final.
The Spuds were bolstered by a first-place
finish in the league final
by senior Momoe Takamatsu, who outpaced all
runners to earn the individual Condor League
title in the three-mile
race at Dunn School.
Takamatsu ran the
Photo by Eva Tseng
OVS senior Momoe Takamatsu (right) and sophomore
Gilim Bae finished first and third at the Condor League
final cross-country meet. Their finishes helped secure
the team Condor League cross country title for OVS.
fastest race of her life to
win the Condor League
crown, finishing in a
blistering 21:11. Her
nearest competitor was
nearly 40 seconds behind.
“I was relieved for
sure,” said Takamatsu,
who was very emotional
after the race. “I didn’t
believe at first that I had
won, but I worked so
hard for this.”
In addition to Takamatsu’s fast finish, two
other OVS runners,
sophomore Gilim Bae
and senior Vivian Yan,
earned medals for their
top 10 finishes. Bae finished in third place with
a time of 22:43, and Yan
came in sixth with a time
of 23:27.
The OVS girls’ came
within seconds of winning the league final.
They ended up tied with
Dunn School for first
place in that race, but
Dunn was credited with
the win due to crosscountry’s tiebreaking
system.
However, the league
champion is determined
by a point system that
tallies team finishes for
all
league
meets
throughout the season.
Based on the girls’ performance this season —
the OVS team won two
of the three Condor
League meets — they
earned enough points to
earn the Condor League
title.
E-mail your local sports stories, photos and requests
for coverage to sports editor Mike Miller:
[email protected]
For OVS cross-country
coach Fred Alvarez, that
title wasn’t as important
as watching the girls
learn to work as a team
throughout the season,
and run their best by
season’s end.
“I could not be more
proud of the way these
girls came together this
year,” Alvarez said.
“They ran in 100-plus
degree heat, and they
ran when they were sore
and they ran in the early
morning darkness. They
committed themselves
to improving each and
every day. I couldn’t ask
for anything more.”
It is the second time in
four years that an OVS
runner has won the individual Condor League
cross-country title.
In 2011, OVS senior
Reika Kijima won the
cross-country championship. She is now running cross-country and
track for the University
of Southern California.
This
cross-country
season was the first
under a league realign-
ment that saw longtime
Condor League members Cate and Thacher
move to the Tri-County
Athletic Associatio. Alvarez said the realignment has improved the
competitive spirit of the
league, bringing more
parity to sporting competitions. “We are all
now competing on a
much more level playing
field,” he said. “This is
really in keeping with
the spirit of the Condor
League, and what this
league is all about.”
Photo submitted
Nordhoff water polo heads to CIF playoffs
The Nordhoff water polo team (8-2) is headed back to the CIF playoffs after taking
second place in the Tri-Valley League behind Malibu. They will take on ValenciaPlacentia in the first round Thursday. Coach Marty Armstrong said he is proud of
the resurgence of water polo in the Ojai Valley despite the lack of a community
pool. The seniors recently posed for a photo with their parents; pictured are Jeff
Holland (from left), Andrew Holland, Carol Bentz, Paul Bentz, Magda Perkins,
Spencer Perkins, Marcy Kern, Justin Kern, Sherie Morin, Derek Krzyski, team captain Sean Edwards and Katrine Edwards.
535 W. El Roblar • naturesblendojai.com
&Entertainment
B1
Arts
Wednesday
Nov. 12, 2014
[email protected]
Photo club talk to focus on elephant seals
Photographer
Susannah Sofaer
Kramer returns to the
Ojai Photography Club
as its November
presenter and guest
judge. The presentation
will begin at 7 p.m.,
Tuesday, at Help of
Ojai’s Kent Hall, 111
Santa Ana St. in Ojai
Kramer’s presentation will include digital
slide show presentations on the Piedras
Blancas Elephant Seal
Rookery and information and tips for both
visitors and photographers on this seal sanctuary north of San
Simeon.
Sofaer is an awardwinning fine art landscape, nature and
portrait photographer.
She was born in the
proverbial trunk of an
English theatrical
family. Her father,
Abraham Sofaer, was a
well-known classical
actor and her mother
was a dancer in
London’s West End
Theater.
She gave up her
career to raise a family,
but always needed a
creative outlet. As her
children grew her childPhoto by Susannah Sofaer Kramer hood dream of owning
a horse became a
An image by Susannah Sofaer Kramer taken at the Piedras Blancas Elephant Seal Rookery.
reality and she became
a competitive dressage
rider and started photographing friends and
their mounts at horse
shows.
The magic of seeing a
print develop in the
darkroom caught her
imagination and
inspired Sofaer to learn
and to further explore
what she could do with
a camera. Her passion
for photography
expanded to encompass portraits, both
people and animals and
later to landscape and
nature photography.
Visit her website at
http://www .sofaerphotography.com to see
more of her work.
Monthly presentations are part of the
Ojai Photography
Club’s community
service and education
outreach. Visitors are
welcome to attend.
The club, which is
devoted to education,
inspiration, and camaraderie, meets on the
third Tuesday of each
month, Februarys
through Novembers.
Only members may
submit images for
critique.
Visit www.ojaiphotoclub.com for more
information about the
club.
Ojai Youth Entertainers slate
adaptation of Sondheim classic
The Ojai Youth Enter- director when it
tainers Studio (OYES)
debuted on Broadway.
Will present “Into The
OYES provides young
Woods, Jr.,” on its main performers with
stage at 316 E. Matilija
resources and guidance
St. in Ojai.
towards mounting a
Into The Woods origi- theatrical production
nally opened on
under the mentorship
Broadway in November of professional theatre
1987. Adapted for the
artists and practiyouth stage,
tioners.
with a score
From
by Stephen
actors, to
Sondheim,
designers,
• “Into the
this advento
techniWoods, Jr.”
ture weaves
cians,
• Cost is $10
together
students
many
play a
• Opens Nov. 14
favorite
variety of
• Call 1-800-838storybook
roles in
3006
characters
this
into one
production
intricate plot to undo a
of “Into The Woods, Jr.”
curse and live happily
“Into The Woods, Jr.”
ever after!
opens Friday and will
“Into The Woods, Jr.”
run through Nov. 23,
comes alive under the
with weekend,
musical direction of
weekday, evening and
Krista Kim, who is
matinee performances.
serving as both artistic
Visit www.OjaiYES.org
director and musical
for the performance
director. The producschedule.
tion is co-directed by
Tickets are $10 and
Daena Bleu and Megg
are available from
Sicotte-Kelly. It is based www.OYESITW.brownon the book by James
papertickets.com
Lapine who also was
or by phone at 1-800the show’s original
838-3006.
OYES
Stand alone headline
Select paintings by Ojai artist David Paul Dobek will be on display and for sale on Saturday from 1 to 4
p.m., and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., in the Ojai Presbyterian Church’s Stockham Hall, at 304 N. Foothill
Road in Ojai. A portion of each sale will benefit the church’s Special Music Program.
Tallis Scholars on tap
for Lobero performance
The Community Arts
Music Association of
Santa Barbara (CAMA)
will host its
Masterseries at the
Lobero 2014/15 season
Dec. 5 at 8 p.m.
This year’s event will
feature The Tallis
Scholars with Peter
Phillips as director.
Phillips and The
Tallis Scholars, founded
in 1973, have worked to
establish the sacred
vocal music of the
Photo by Valérie Batselaere Renaissance as one of
the great repertoires of
Peter Phillips will direct The Tallis Scholars Dec. 5 at the Lobero Theatre.
Western classical
music. Renowned for
capturing the purity
and clarity of Renaissance music, their 60plus recordings have
Lobero Theater
• The Tallis
Scholars
• Dec. 5 at 8 p.m.
• Cost is $39 or
$49
• Reservations
suggested
• Call 963-0761
attracted many prestigious awards including
Record of the Year from
Gramophone magazine, the Diapason d’Or
de l’Année in France,
and induction in 2013
into Gramophone’s
Hall of Fame.
Tickets are on sale
now and are available
for $39 and $49. To
purchase tickets, visit
www.lobero.com or
contact the Lobero
Theatre Box Office at
963-0761. E-mail
[email protected] for
additional information.
B2 Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014
Photo submitted
The Marching Band and Color Guard perform at a Nordhoff football game.
Local restaurant, school group bands
together for music program fundraiser
Jane Peterson’s “Man Halfway-Spring”
Holidaze Group Show
celebrates anniversary
galerie102 is turning
a year old and will celebrate with its Holidaze
Group Show: Art Take
Out featuring works by
Britt Ehringer, Aaron
Farley, Elisa Berry
Fonseca, Erin Garcia,
Masha Keating, Ashley
Macomber, Jane
Peterson, Allie Pohl,
Jon Rajkovich, Ricardo
Rodriguez, James Wills
and others in a rotating
exhibit of painting,
sculpture, photography, works on paper
and mixed media.
A public reception
with the artists is
scheduled for Nov. 22
from 4 to 6 p.m. The
exhibit runs from Nov.
22 to Dec. 28.
Art Take Out
promotes the concept
of making art accessible and portable;
literally being able to
buy the art off the
gallery walls in a
rotating exhibit (unlike
most gallery exhibitions
where the art stays in
place until the show
closes). Holidaze Group
Show: Art Take Out
spans the holiday
season and encourages
art and its availability
as a perfect gift.
galerie102 is dedicated to bringing
progressive contemporary art to the Ojai art
scene. With an
emphasis on outsider
art by emerging and
mid-career artists,
Gallery director Jolene
Lloyd considers the
gallery a small piece of
the vibrant Chelsea, NY
art scene thriving in
bucolic Ojai. Exhibits
change every four to six
weeks and her program
focuses on painting,
mixed media, sculpture, photography and
video.
galerie102 is at 102
W. Matilija St. in Ojai,
two blocks northwest of
the Arcade. Gallery
hours are Thursday
through Sunday from
11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
by appointment.
For more information,
visit www.galerie102.co
m, e-mail
[email protected]
or call 640-0151.
ojai playhouse
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CLOSED
to
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646-1011
ojaiplayhouse.com
Ojai Valley Grange
Holiday Craft Fair and Boutique
381 Cruzero St., Mira Monte, CA 93023
(Hwy 33 to Tico Road, right on Cruzero, 1 block)
Local Crafters will be selling their handmade gifts,
Thanksgiving & Christmas Decorations, and more!
Friday, November 14th
10:00am - 7:00pm
Saturday, November 15th
9:00am - 6:00pm
Sunday, November 16th
9:00am - 6:00pm
The Nordhoff Music Department
and Maestro will hold a fundraising
evening at Jim and Rob’s Fresh Grill
Tuesday.
Fresh Grill will donate 15 percent
of all food orders from 4 p.m. to
closing to the music department.
There will also be student performances from 4 to 8 p.m. outside the
restaurant.
The Maestro Board is a parentsupported group assisting with
public awareness and fundraising for
the Nordhoff High School Music
Program in support of Nordhoff
students who strive to play, sing and
learn music.
Each year, Maestro struggles to
raise the funds necessary for instruments, repairs, music, festival fees,
transportation and financial aid for
uniforms and the Spring Tour.
Community members can help in
two ways. The first way is to become
a patron sponsor and make a donation to Maestro. The second is by
attend music department events,
including the Fresh Grill evening, the
upcoming holiday concerts Dec. 9
and Dec. 10, the annual Broadway
show featuring Disney music Jan. 25
and others.
For more information, including a
complete list of upcoming events,
visit www.nhsmusic.com or call 6404343, extension 1861.
50-70-90
Photo sumbitted
A trio of multigenerational
photographers—one in her
50s, one in her 70s and one in
his 90s—has joined together
for a “50-70-90” photography
exhibit at Ojai Coffee Roasting
Co. The exhibit runs through
Nov. 30. Participating photographers (from left) are Sally
Carless, Phil Harvey and
Myrna Cambianica, all of
whom are members of the
Ojai Photography Club.
Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 B3
Ojai Theatre presents “She Loves Me"
Just when the thought of
being able to put the classic
“male chauvinist pig” to rest,
he’s back and is embodied by
actor Phil Nemy in the
upcoming production “She
Loves Me.” Nemy plays
Steven Kodaly as outrageous,
selfish and oblivious of
anyone but himself. And
Nemy is having a great time
playing the part.
“Playing Kodaly is such
mischievous fun! I get to play
a man who is incredibly arrogant, self-centered, mischievous, lacks a certain level or
morals, and yet is audaciously seductive, charming,
and attentive to women all
while being a male chauvinist pig,” Nemy explained.
“And for the most part, he
gets away with it! All of the
things that I, as a man, and
most men today for that
matter, would never get away
with. My wife can attest to
that!”
But how does Ilona —
played by Julia Denney
Hamann — the occasional
object of Kodaly’s desire, feel
about this awful character?
“Awful character??! Phil
Nemy’s Kodaly is charming,
handsome, sexy, exciting and
successful. What more could
a woman hope for? Hamann
asked. “Well, for Ilona, it
turns out, a lot more and she
is bound and determined to
find it. She’s resilient and the
eternal optimist. That’s why I
love playing her so much! As
for the male chauvinist, I
would argue that he never
left the building. He is alive
and well and, possibly,
waiting in an on-line dating
service near you!”
Tickets for “She Loves Me”
are available at www.ojaitheater.org or by calling
649-1937.
Photo by Logan Hall
Phil Nemy (left), as Steven Kodaly and Julia Denney Hamann, playing Ilona Ritter, star in “She
Loves Me.”
“A Very Electric Christmas” comes to the Granada
Known for its signature brand of dazzling
visuals, poignant storyand
music
telling
designed
to
evoke
imagery,
Lightwire
Theater will bring its “A
Very Electric Christmas”
to the Granada Theatre
in Santa Barbara Dec.
10.
This “America’s Got
Talent”
semi-finalist
duo will kick off the
holiday season with a
captivating and magical
tale of adventure, friendship and love, that
centers around a young
bird named Max, a
familiar character to
Lightwire Theater audiences and brings a
whole new meaning to
coming “home for the
holidays.”
Performed
in
complete darkness, this
features
storyline
Nutcracker soldiers with
Livewire Theater will bring its technological holiday program to Santa Barbara.
candy-canes, naughty
rats,
an
electric
Christmas
tree
surrounded by presents,
glow worms, dancing
flowers and other creatures that light up the
stage.
Audiences of all ages
will enjoy the timeless
Christmas
classics
including songs from
Nat
King
Cole,
Mariah
Tchaikovsky,
Carey and others.
Lightwire Theater has
been entertaining audiences all over the world
with a unique combination of dance, puppetry
and technology, since its
appearance in 2012 as a
semi-finalist
on
“America’s Got Talent.”
Tickets for this onenight-only event are
available online at
www.granadasb.org or
at The Granada Theatre
box office.
Presents
Jamie Kennedy
Nov 28-29
World Class Comedy
every Tuesday through Sunday
in The Comedy Club
NFL action every week
in The Green Room
Happy Hour at 4:00,
Pool Table and Food with
beautiful Harbor Views from our Patio.
Ticket Price: $20.00
Show Type: Special event
21 & over
Two item minimum per person
Door time: 7:00 p.m.
Telephone: (805) 644-1500
Tickets also available online
VenturaHarborComedyClub.com
Saturday November 15, 2014
5:30-6:30
Tequila Tasting & Appetizers
6:30-7:30
3-Course Dinner
7:30-close
Dancing, Raffles and Fun
$55/ person at the door
$50/ person in advance
Ventura Harbor Comedy Club
1559 Spinnaker Drive, Suite 205 • Ventura, CA 93001 World's Greatest
Outdoor
Bookstore
Ojai’s Farm-To-Table Dining And Live Music Mecca
an Ojai tradition
s i n c e
1 9 6 4
LOCAL THURSDAYS
THE OJAI JAMBOREE MUSIC SHOWCASE
Locals night at the Deer Lodge with a weekly musical
extravaganza featuring performances by up to 20 local acts.
FRIDAY
November 14 • 9 pm
Debut of
“Dream Club”
Feat. Justin Warfield
Live at the Deer Lodge
First US show
for former Lead Singer of
“She Wants Revenge”
Dream Club
SATURDAY
November 15 • 9 pm
Over 100,000 books
outdoors on tree-shaded patios
One block north of Ojai Avenue • Cañada at Matilija
7 Days a Week, 9:30 am - Sunset
805-646-3755
DJ Mariana Shultz
• used • new • rare • first editions • CDs & DVDs •
Residency Bands ~ 7:30 pm
Monday ~ Skin & Bones
Wednesday ~ Cindy Kalmenson & Lucky Ducks
Log on to www.ojaivalleynews.com
B4 Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014
Saturday, Nov. 15
• Ventura bookstore
Bank of Books will host
a Day of Authors from 1
to 5 p.m. at 748 E. Main
St. From 1 to 3 p.m.,
Michelle Parker will be
the featured author
and Zhena Muzyka and
Kate Dunbar will be
present from 3 to 5
p.m. Call 643-3154 for
more information.
• The Madrid-inspired
fashion
show
“Invierno” will showcase wearable art by
artist members of
Studio Channel Islands
Art Center. The third
annual event is at 7
p.m., in the Blackboard
Gallery
of
Studio
Channel Islands Art
Center in Old Town
Camarillo. E-mail [email protected]
or call 383-1368 for
ticket information.
• “Little Big Man,”
Upcoming Events
“Davy Crockett” and
“Old Yeller” will be
shown during Conejo
Valley Film Festival III.
The Cal Lutheran event
will begin at 7 p.m. in
Richter Hall on the
Thousand
Oaks
campus. This is a free
event. For more infore-mail
mation,
[email protected]
du or call 493-3241.
• Paintings from artists
from OVA will be part
of a silent auction
starting at 7 p.m. to
support the Ojai Art
Center, the oldest
continuously running
m u l t i p u r p o s e
nonprofit art center in
California. Other OVA
items will be offered as
well as two computers,
a round of golf at the
Ojai Valley Inn and
items donated by shops
including
Barbara
Bowman, Meadow and
Babes.
The
Busy
auction will precede a
performance by awardwinning singer Sam
Harris who has crafted
a show to celebrate the
Ojai Art Center’s 75th
anniversary.
Monday, Nov. 17
• A meeting of music
and poetry, ranging
from Shakespeare to
Kerouac,
will
be
performed
by
the
chamber jazz duo
Primal Mates at 6:30
p.m. at the Ojai Library,
111 E. Ojai Ave. in Ojai.
For information, call
646-1639.
Wednesday, Nov. 19
• UCSB Arts & Lectures
presents an evening
with Monty Python star
John Cleese, in conversation with former BBC
TV
director
Terry
Hughes at The Granada
Theatre. For tickets or
more information, visit
www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu or call
UCSB Arts & Lectures
at 893-3535.
Thursday, Nov. 20
• At 7 p.m., the Ojai
Retreat will host Brian
Berman, local sculptor
and member of Ojai
Studio Artists, and Julie
Heyman, peace cultivator, who will share a
vision for “HOLOS,” a
public artwork for
peace that will be
produced and installed
in Ojai on International
Peace Day, Sept. 21.
The Ojai Retreat is at
160 Besant Road in
Ojai. Suggested donation is $10, but no one
will be turned away.
For information, call
640-1142.
• Artist and author
Susan Florence will
read from her new
book of poems “A Stunning Absence, poems
for all who grieve,” in
the EP Foster Library’s
Topping Room at 7:30
p.m. The library is at
651 E. Main St. in
Ventura.
• The Tim Buley Band
will perform Beatles
tunes for a fundraising
event to support the
Ventura Music Festival.
The
event,
which
begins at 5:30 p.m., will
be held at the Tower
Club in Oxnard and
a
buffet
includes
dinner
and
VIP
champagne reception.
Past
president
of
the Festival, author
Ivor Davis, will speak
about his travels as a
British journalist with
the Beatles in 1964.
This is a reservationonly event. E-mail
[email protected] or call
983-7777 Ext. 223 for
reservations.
• “She Loves Me,” the
romantic musical that
inspired the movie
“You’ve Got Mail”
opens at 8 p.m. for six
performances
at
Matilija Auditorium.
The opening night
show benefits the Ojai
Valley
Museum.
Tickets are available at
www.ojaitheater.org or
by calling 649-1937.
• An Evening of
Stand-up
Comedy
Under
the
Stars,
including Asif Ali,
Bronston Jones and
Bijan
Moustafavi
with
host
Julia
Jasiunas will be held at
7:30 p.m. at the
Hillcrest Center for the
Arts,
403
W.
Hillcrest
Drive
in
Thousand Oaks. For
visit
information,
www.hillcrestarts.com
or call 381-1246.
• Jan. 10: Ojai Studio
Artistsis
accepting
applications for 2015
membership. The deadline to apply is Jan. 10.
www.ojaistuCheck
dioartists.org for information and a downloadable application.
• Through Jan. 18: Fox
Fine Jewelry, 560 E.
Main St., Ventura, will
display work by Ojai
resident and photo
historian, Joe Sohm, in
exhibit
titled
an
“Visions of America,”
through Jan. 18. Call
652-1800.
• Through Jan. 25:
Paula
Art
Santa
Museum, 117 N. 10th
St., Santa Paula, will
display its seventh
annual “Art About Agri-
culture,” an exhibit
featuring work by more
than 65 artists, through
Jan. 25. Call 525-5554.
Part of the exhibit will
also be on display at the
nearby Museum of
Ventura County-Agriculture Museum, 926
Railroad Ave., Santa
Paula. Call 525-3100.
• Through Jan. 31: The
Museum of Ventura
County, 100 E. Main St.,
Ventura, will display
“Colossal Efforts: A
Behind-the-Scenes
Look at Stuart’s Creative
Process” through Jan.
31. This is an exhibit of
more than a dozen
examples of historical
figures by Ojai’s George
Stuart. Call 653-0323,
Ext. 303.
Friday, Nov. 21
Exhibits
• Through Nov. 14: The
Invitational Gallery at
Ojai City Hall, 401 S.
Ventura St., will display
paintings by Ojai’s
Tartaglia
Danna
through Friday. Call
646-5581.
• Nov. 22: galerie 102,
102 W. Matilija St., Ojai,
will display “Art Take
Out,” a group show for
the “holidaze,” Nov. 22
through Dec. 28, with
an opening reception
Nov. 22 from 5 to 7 p.m.
Call 640-0151.
• Through Nov. 23: The
Museum of Ventura
County, 100 E. Main St.,
Ventura, will display
“Cruel Season: Artists
Reflecting on Drought
and Fire” through Nov.
23. The exhibit includes
works by artists Susan
Petty, Hiroko Yoshimoto and Richard
Amend, photographers
Bill Dewey, John Nichol
and Terri Laine, and
poetry by Robert Louis
Chianese. Call 6530323.
• Through Nov. 23: The
Porch Gallery, 310 E.
Matilija St., Ojai, will
display a mini-retrospective of Ojai resident
Jamie Caliri’s 25-year
video production career
through Nov. 23.
• Through Nov. 28: The
Blackboard Gallery of
Studio Channel Islands
Art
Center,
2222
Ventura Blvd., Camarillo,
will
display
“Clothing Optional,” a
juried exhibit of interpretive
artwork,
through Nov. 28. Call
383-1368.
• Through Nov. 29:
Gallery 525, 525 W. El
Roblar
Drive,
will
display “The Magic of
Vintage
Movies:
Posters and Paper
Ephemera,” through
Nov. 29. Call 701-1156.
• Through Nov. 29:
Buenaventura Gallery,
700 E. Santa Clara St.,
Ventura, will display
paintings
by
Port
Hueneme’s Michele B.
Baggenstoss in an
exhibit titled “A Touch
of Nature” through Nov.
29. Call 648-1235.
• Through Nov. 30: The
Ojai Art Center, 113 S.
Montgomery St., will
display artwork by
Michael Rohde in the
Main Gallery, and work
by pastel artist Evelyn
Frament in the Signature Gallery, through
Nov. 30. Call 646-0117.
• Through Nov. 30:
Sullivan Goss Gallery, 7
E. Anapamu St., Santa
Barbara, will display the
work of Frank Kirk
through Nov. 30. Visit
www.sullivangoss.com.
• Through Dec. 1: The
Ventura Harbor Village
Gallery, Entrance 3,
Ventura, will display
“Water, Waves and
Wonder,” an exhibit of
artwork by Karen Wu
and
Olivia Smith,
through Dec. 1. Call
644-2750.
• Dec. 5: The Ojai Art
Center, 113 S. Montgomery St., will display
its winter show, “What’s
Your Sign?,” from Dec.
5 through Jan. 8. A
reception will be held
Dec. 13 from 1 to 3 p.m.
This show is juried and
offers cash awards. Call
646-0117.
• Through Dec. 13: Ojai
Community Bank, 402
W. Ojai Ave., will display
resin paintings by Ojai
Kirk
Lowry
artist
through Dec. 13. Call
646-9909.
• Through Dec. 13:
Primavera Gallery, 214
E. Ojai Ave., will display
“Lit from Within,” an
exhibit of works by Ojai
artist Jennifer Moses,
through Dec. 13. Call
646-7133.
• Through Dec. 15: The
Oaks at Ojai, 122 E. Ojai
Ave.,
will
display
artwork by Ojai’s Leslie
Marcus through Dec.
15. Call 646-5573.
• Through Dec. 27:
Blanchard Community
Library, 119 N. Eighth
St., Santa Paula, will
display “Celebrations,”
an exhibit of drawings
and paintings by Plein
Air Artists In Nature’s
(PAAINT)
Theater
members, through Dec.
27. Artwork by Ojai’s
Melanie Hirdler and
Cathy Smith will be
included. Call 525-3615.
• Through Dec. 28: The
Ojai Valley Museum,
130 W. Ojai Ave., will
display an original
history exhibit, “The
Ojai Theater: 100 Years
of
Movies
(19142014),” through Dec.
28. Opened in 1914 as
The Isis, the Ojai Playhouse is one of the
oldest surviving singlescreen theaters in the
country. Call 640-1390.
Music
Friday, Nov. 14
• Old Man Canyon will
perform at Velvet Jones,
423 State St. in Santa
Barbara beginning at 9
p.m. Visit http://velvetjones.com for more
information.
Saturday, Nov. 15
• Multi-platinum
recording artist, Tony
Award-nominated actor
and author Sam Harris
returns to the Ojai Art
Center stage at 8 p.m.
There will be a silent
auction from 7 to 8 p.m.
Tickets for An Evening
Out with Sam Harris
are $50 and $75. Tickets
range from $50 to $75
and are available by
calling (805) 640-8797
or online at
http://tinyurl.com/Sam
HarrisShow.
• The Channel Islands
String Quartet will
present “An Afternoon
Of Chamber Music:
Birds, Roses and a
Czech,” at 3 p.m. at the
Hillcrest Center for the
Arts, 403 W. Hillcrest
Drive in Thousand
Oaks. The event
features classical
favorites performed in
an intimate setting. For
tickets, visit www.hillcrestarts.com or call
381-1246.
• Maestro Nir Kabaretti
will lead the Santa
Barbara Symphony and
guest artist Caroline
Goulding through the
life of Ludwig Van
Beethoven, from his
early days as a student,
through one of his
greatest masterpieces,
the Violin Concerto.
This event, “Beethoven:
Student to Master” will
be held in The Granada
Theatre at 8 p.m. For
tickets, visit
www.thesymphony.org
or call 898-9386.
• Sons of Bill and Emy
Reynolds will perform
at the Lobero Theatre at
8 p.m. Reynolds grew
up in Ojai. Visit
http://www.lobero.com
for information. The
Lobero Theatre is at 33
E. Canon Perdido St. in
Santa Barbara.
Sunday, Nov. 16
• Maestro Nir Kabaretti
will lead the Santa
Barbara Symphony and
guest artist Caroline
Goulding through the
life of Ludwig Van
Beethoven, from his
early days as a student
studying with Haydn,
through one of his
greatest masterpieces,
the Violin Concerto.
This event, “Beethoven:
Student to Master” will
be held in The Granada
Theatre at 8 p.m. For
tickets, visit
www.thesymphony.org
or call 898-9386.
Sunday, Nov. 23
• Love At Work, The
Ten Commandments
Musical will be
performed at the
Lobero Theatre at 2
p.m. This will be the
first time the Ten
Commandments
Musical will be
presented in Santa
Barbara. Visit
http://www.lobero.com
/events/love-work-tencommandmentsmusical/ for information. The Lobero
Theatre is at 33 E.
Canon Perdido St. in
Santa Barbara.
Tuesday, Nov. 25
• Legends of New
Orleans, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band and
Allen Toussaint will
perform together on the
stage of the Lobero
Theatre at 8 p.m. as
part of the Jazz at the
Lobero Fall Series. Visit
http://www.lobero.com
/events/jazz-neworleans-legends/ for
information. The
Lobero Theatre is at 33
E. Canon Perdido St. in
Santa Barbara.
Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 B5
Marketplace offers handcrafted holiday gifts
The Holiday Marketplace, a companion event
to the Holiday Home
Look In will take place
Saturday and Sunday,
and will feature more
than 40 specialty artisans.
The event attracts
vendors from Los
Angeles, Malibu,
Pasadena, Inverness,
Newbury Park, Orange
County, the Central Coast
and Ojai.
This tradition kicks off
the holiday season and
supports funding for the
Ojai Music Festival and
its BRAVO program in the
schools and the community. BRAVO offers free
music workshops,
programs and concerts to
public school students in
the Ojai Valley and parts
of Ventura, plus the
award-winning program
includes free community
events.
Shoppers will discover
handcrafted soaps from
The Soap Dishes,
Fiamma Soy Candles,
Cocoa Luxe chocolates,
oils and vinegars from
Gourmet Blends, Charter
Oak’s preserves, handcrafted textiles from Lady
Lazzarona and Sophie
Roche, unique jewelry
designs from Shari
Milner. In addition, a
number of local artists
Carrie Rubalcava, Teresa
Smith and Janet Jacobs
will be part of the line-up
of vendors.
New to this year’s event
will be original works
made by the Ojai Pottery
and Clay School,
Lavender Farm and Sassy
Diva.
Admission to the
Marketplace is free and
open to the public at
Holiday Home
Look In
• Holiday
Marketplace
• Saturday, 10 a.m.5:30 p.m.
Sunday, 10 a.m.-4
p.m.
• Matilija Junior
High School
• 703 El Paseo Rd.
• No charge for
admission
Matilija Junior High
School, 703 El Paseo
Road. The event will take
place rain or shine.
The Marketplace is
open Saturday from 10
a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and
Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Also during the
weekend, four Ojai Valley
homes will be showcased
during the 18th Holiday
Home Look In. This
year’s homes will include
the Ojai Masonic Lodge,
built in 1927 and transformed into a private
residence in the Palladian
manner; Las Piedras, a
craftsman-style home
worthy of Greene &
Greene; Buena Robles, a
Spanish rancho-style
home with Asian influences and lush gardens;
and the Schmidt home at
Rancho Matilija, a
Mediterranean-style residence with a galleryworthy art collection.
The advance tour ticket
is $30 per person and $35
day of the event. Tickets
can be purchased at Attitude Adjustment, Down
Home Furnishings, Kava
Gifts and Rains Department Store, by visiting
www.OjaiFestival.org or
by calling 646-2094.
Photo submitted
Teresa Smith shows off some of her work at a past
Marketplace event.
OVA offering classes for the holidays
OVA arts has classes in
everything from mosaics
to writing and jewelry
making and this month
will offer holiday classes
to make gifts and boxes.
Sheri Sanchez will host
her mosaic “Rock of
Love” class. Participants
will learn the techniques, materials and
tools needed to make
mosaics on rocks and
will finish one heart
mosaic rock using glass
and beads and a center
jewel piece.
The class will be held
Nov.16 from 11:30 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m. The cost is
$45 plus $5 for a center
jewel piece or participants can bring their
own.
Jonna Faulkner will
teach a hollow-form
pendants class. Students
will use cork clay as the
armature for making
hollow-form pendants in
silver metal clay. The
class will also cover coilrolling, stone and pearl
setting, applique work.
Basic metal clay experience is helpful, but not
required.
The class will be held
Nov. 22 and Nov. 23
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The cost for the two-day
class is $185 and materials are not included.
Patty Van Dyke will
teach a class to held
participants get ready
for the holidays by
making gift boxes from
“filed” paintings.
Patterns and adhesives
will be supplied, participants should bring their
old work and paints.
The class will be held
Dec. 2 from 1 p.m. to 4
p.m. The cost is $30.
Sara Smelt will teach a
holiday flower corsage
class in which each
student will create a
felted poinsettia or
flower of their choice
using traditional (wet)
felting techniques and
Angelina fibers.
The class will be held
Dec. 3, from 1 to 4 p.m.
The cost is $48 and
includes all materials.
OVA arts is located at
108B N. Signal and is
open daily from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m.
For more information
or to register for classes,
visit the website at
www.ojaivalleyartists.com
or stop in at the gallery.
B6 Ojai Valley News • Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014
Movie memories
Gallery featuring display of posters from the past
Photo submitted
Trio of artists featured at Bohemia Coffee Shop
The Beauties of Boheme Art show, featuring works by local artists Marc Whitman,
Vera Long and Mary Kennedy will run through Dec. 31 at Bohemia Coffee Shop.
Bohemia is at 214 W. Ojai Ave.
Working Artists Gallery to offer a
varity of art classes during November
Working Artist
Gallery in Ojai will offer
a variety of classes
during November.
• A “Learn To Draw”
class with Bernadette
DiPietro will be offered
Friday from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m.
This two-hour class
will help participants
train their eye to see
like an artist, breakthrough limitations and
begin to experience the
world in a whole new
way. A variety of
drawing materials/tools
and sketching techniques will be taught.
The cost is $75, which
includes all materials.
For more information
and to register, e-mail
bamboostudio@sbcglo
bal.net or call 646-2539.
• A silk painting
workshop, with
Kandace Pearson, will
be held Sunday from 1
to 3 p.m.
Pearson, who has
been painting on silk
for 30 years. will teach
participants to use a
gutta resist technique
and non-toxic fabric
paints to paint on a 22inch silk square. Class
size is limited.
The cost for the class
is $60 and includes all
materials.
For more information
or to register, e-mail
[email protected]
m or call 640-7336.
• Learn to make
origami boxes with Gail
Hercher Monday from
9 a.m. to noon or Nov.
23 from 1 to 3 p.m.
Japanese origami
(folded paper) boxes
can be used for holiday
treats, small gifts,
cookies or candy.
Participants will make
several different styles
and sizes of boxes with
lids and also a paper
‘wallet’ that can be
used to present money
or gift cards.
The cost for the class
is $45.
For more information
or to register, e-mail
[email protected] or
call 272-8563.
• Bernadette DiPietro
will teach a class on
how to make decorative
paper for the holidays
Tuesday from 11 a.m.
to 12:30 p.m.
Participants will learn
how to create decorative papers using a
Japanese technique to
fold and dye paper. The
dried paper can be
used to make notecards, paper flowers,
collage and wrapping
paper.
The cost for the class
is $35 and includes all
materials.
For more information
or to register, e-mail
bamboostudio@sbcglo
bal.net or call 646-2539.
Contemporary fine art
jewelry and crafts
All
Travel Books
20% OFF
BookEnds Bookstore
and other curiosities
Housed in an
enchanting old church
in Meiners Oaks
Unique gifts, attractive prices
108-B. N. Signal St.
Open daily 10-6 • (805) 646-5682
www.ojaivalleyartists.com
©
P ERSONA L M AN DALA R EA DINGS
“Looking back...Dreaming forward”
805.640.9441
110 S. Pueblo Ave.
corner of El Roblar, Ojai
BookEndsbookstore.com
Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
(closed Wednesday)
Gift yourself with a personal journey....
Make
an
iMpression.
nancy sandstrom
computer graphics
805•816•2281
[email protected]
Create your personal mandala under the gentle
guidance of Renate Collins Hume. Her private
feedback reading will give you deeper insights,
illuminating your purpose & direction.
To arrange for a session,
please call (805) 914-4923
or email [email protected].
Gift certificates available.
www.personalmadalareading.com
In recognition of their sacrifices in the service of our country
The Ojai Valley News
is offering free online subscriptions to all
U.S. active duty military.
Call 805-646-1476 or email [email protected]
and provide the servicemember’s
name, date of birth and date of separation.
Servicemember’s active status must be verifiable via: https://www.dmdc.osd.mil/appj/scra/single_record.xhtml
A collection of rare,
vintage movie posters
and original paper
ephemera “The Magic
Of Movies” will be
featured at Gallery 525
in an exhibition
running through Nov.
29.
Ranging from 1908 to
2010, the movie posters
represent a wide array
of artistic and graphic
styles, from a vibrantly
colored stone lithograph designed by
Candido de Faria for an
early silent movie
released by Pathé in
1908 (“Les Pompiers de
Paris”) to the most
contemporary digital
photo composition for
Easy “A” (filmed on
location in Ojai in
2010).
A group of rare
PAPER EPHEMERA
complements the show,
highlighted by the first
issue of “Cinema Arts”
(June 1937) possibly the
most lavishly illustrated
movie magazine ever
published; a couple of
slabbed still photos
from D.W. Griffith’s
epic “The Birth of a
Nation” the program
produced by Columbia
Photo submitted
“Horizons Perdus” an original movie poster from the
1970’s re-release for Frank Capra’s 1937 classic “Lost
Horizon.”
in 1936 to promote the
1937 release of “Lost
Horizon,” with an original cover illustration
by James Montgomery
Flagg.
For more information, visit www.gallery
525.com or call 798
0407. Gallery 525 is at
525 W. El Roblar Drive
in Ojai.
A classic
Photo by Ethan Garcia
“A Christmas Story” is now
in rehearsals. Performances will be Dec. 5
through Dec. 21 at Ojai
ACT. The play is based on
the movie of the same
name. Shown are (seated
left) The Old Man (Todd
Tickner) backed by Chelsea
Vivian and Aileen Scott,
who double as the mother
to Ralphie (Rhett Speer
with glasses) and his little
brother, Randy (Arshan
Barati). Reservations are
available by calling 6408797 or www.ojaiact.org