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Fuddy Meers – Really?

Rubicon Theatre Company continues the 2019 season with the dark and zany comedy Fuddy Meers. Amnesiac Claire awakens each morning as a blank slate on which her husband and teenage son must imprint the facts of her life. One morning, Claire is abducted by a limping, lisping man who claims her husband wants to kill her. The play culminates in a cacophony of revelations, proving that everything is not as it appears to be.

Performance Times and Prices- Closes on March 31.

  • Wednesdays at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. ($25-$55) (Talkbacks follow all Wednesday evening shows)
  • Thursdays at 7 p.m. ($25-$55)
  • Fridays at 8 p.m. ($25-$55)
  • Saturdays at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. ($25-$55)
  • Sundays at 2 p.m. ($25-$55)

Rubicon Theatre Company
Ventura’s Downtown Cultural District
1006 E. Main St.
Ticket Range: $20 – $55 ($120 for opening night including post-show party)
Previews: $20-$40
Prices above do not include a $4 ticket service fee
Discounts Available for Groups of 10+
Discounts for Seniors 65 and over, Students, Teachers and active Military available
Box Office (for single and group tickets): 805.667.2900

Community Memorial Hospital Foundation’s 47th Benefactors’ Ball

James D.Woodburn II to be honored at the 2019 Benefactors’ Ball.

Three physicians in Ventura’s Woodburn family, along with Community Memorial Health System Board Member Jeffrey D. Paul, will be honored at the Community Memorial Hospital Foundation’s 47th Benefactors’ Ball, which takes place on Saturday, April 13 at the Ventura Beach Marriott.

The public is welcome to attend and tickets are available online at www.benefactorsball.org or by calling 805-667-2881.

The Ball will feature craft cocktails and gourmet cuisine as well as live entertainment and a DJ for after-dinner dancing. The proceeds from the Benefactors’ Ball will be used to purchase equipment for the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at the new Community Memorial Hospital and to support the CMH Surgery Department.

Honored this year with the Cephas Bard Awards as CMH Physicians of the Year are brothers Dr. Douglas A. Woodburn and Dr. James D. Woodburn III. Honored as the Retired CMH Physician of the Year is their father, James D. Woodburn II. The three surgeons have cared for thousands of patients at Community Memorial Hospital for decades and share a legacy of service to the community.

Jeffrey D. Paul, a Ventura native and the executive vice president/director of Commercial Banking for Montecito Bank & Trust, was named the Community Leader of the Year. He is deeply rooted in the community banking landscape, with over 30 years of experience in the industry. Paul currently serves on the Community Memorial Health System Board of Trustees and is a past CMHS board chair.

The Benefactors’ Ball begins at 5 p.m. with cocktails followed by dinner at 6 p.m. and dancing and music at 8 p.m. For tickets and sponsorship information, please visit www.benefactorsball.org, call 805-667-2881, or email [email protected].

Harriet H. Samuelsson Foundation awards $551,000 to local non-profits

The trustees of the Harriet H. Samuelsson Foundation recently awarded a total of $551,000 in grants to 15 local non-profit organizations providing services to youth and adolescents. Grants ranged from $10,000 to $100,000, and were allocated to fund children’s services in the coming year, including:

Local recipients were:

Academic assistance in math, reading, and language by the Boys and Girls Club of Moorpark and the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Oxnard and Port Hueneme

Teenage volunteers providing in-home senior support services by CAREGIVERS: Volunteers Assisting the Elderly

Volunteer recruitment, screening, and training to assist foster youth in Delinquency Court by CASA (Court-Appointed Special Advocates) of Ventura County

Scholarships, youth programs, and childcare services for 300 children, including foster children and children with incarcerated parents, by Channel Islands YMCA

Youth and teen grief counseling by Livingston Memorial Visiting Nurse Association and Hospice

Grants are awarded in the spring and fall of each year. The deadline for letters of interest for fall 2019 grants is March 31, 2019. For more information about the Harriet H. Samuelsson Foundation, including instructions on how to apply for a grant, please visit the Foundation’s website at www.samuelssonfoundation.org.

The Harriet H. Samuelsson Foundation was established in 2005 upon the death of Harriet H. Samuelsson, an Oxnard philanthropist, at age 96.  The Foundation awards over $1 million in grants each year to organizations providing services for the health, education, guidance, or welfare of children under the age of 18 residing in Ventura County, or to organizations conducting cancer research.

Vol. 12, No. 13 – Mar 27 – Apr 9, 2019 – Harbor Patrol Blotter

3-8 Dispatched to a fall/injury in the Ventura Marina Community. Officers responded and assisted VFD/AMR with the call, providing first aid. The patient was transported to local hospital for further evaluation.
3-9 5:45pm, received a complaint of all the debris on the beaches from Harbor Cove to the Santa Clara Rivermouth. The individual was wondering if the debris were to be removed. Advised that dredging operations were to begin soon and that the debris could be moved/removed at that time with the heavy machinery (bull dozers/skip loaders) involved with the operation.
3-10 1:13pm, dispatched to a medical in the Ventura Marina Community. Officers responded and assisted VFD/AMR with a female complaining of chest pain. The patient was transported to local hospital for further evaluation.

4:40pm, while releasing a tow at the launch ramp, observed a large group of juveniles fishing on the docks. A warning was issued for the violation and the group educated about local ordinances and the priority boaters have at the L/R.

3-11 12:15pm, while on patrol in the fireboat, officers observed a whale in the entrance of the harbor between the South Jetty and the Detached breakwall. After a brief investigation, the whale was observed heading back out to sea.

4:05pm, during shift change, officers observed a sailboat in distress just South of the South jetty. Officers responded and found the vessel with 3 persons on board listing heavily on the South Jetty. The 3 persons were dangerously tossed around the boat before a tow line could be passed to the disabled 25ft sailboat. The vessel was towed off the rocks and safely delivered to its slip in VIM. The skipper and one of the passengers sustained minor injuries.

3-12

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3-15

3-16

3-18

3-19

8:20am, officers observed 0.99 inches of rain in the Harbor

7:00am, while opening the beach restrooms and gates, officers observed a sweep and cleanup of homeless encampments near the Santa Clara Rivermouth

1:36pm, dispatched to an unknown medical at 2000 block of Bayshore. Officers responded and assisted Ventura Fire Department with the call.

7:03am, while on patrol observed a baby elephant seal crawling up the launch ramp. Officers contacted CIMWI (marine mammal rescue) and assisted with capturing and placing the mammal in their vehicle for further evaluation.

11:43pm, officers monitoring a mayday call on VHF 16, man overboard in the Santa Barbara channel. The call was being handled by the U.S. coast guard.

12:45pm, dispatched to a medical emergency in the Ventura Marina Community. Officers responded and assisted Ventura FD / AMR with a fall patient.

12:15pm, officers in the Fireboat and Boat 17 blocked boating traffic in the main channel of the harbor while Manson Dredging towed 1200 feet of plastic pipe onto Harbor Cove from Channel Islands Harbor for dredging operations to start soon. D-9 bull dozers moved what little sand was left on Harbor Cove, South Beach and Surfers Knoll to begin placing the dredge pipe.

Ventura Breeze self-publishing seminar at Mimi’s Café

On March 24, the Ventura Breeze presented a self-publishing seminar at Mimi’s Café. It featured presentations by four Breeze contributing writers Mira Reverente, Maryann Ridini Spencer, James Francis Gray and Sheli Ellsworth. It was moderated by Breeze publisher-editor Sheldon Brown. After the presentations the crowd of over 30 asked many important questions that were answered by the presenters.

International art gathering returns to Ventura

After traveling to the Netherlands in 2017 and Miami in 2018, The Representational Art Conference is returning to the Crowne Plaza Ventura Beach, where two California Lutheran University faculty members launched it seven years ago.

TRAC2019 will run from March 31 through April 4, drawing international academics, artists, collectors, critics and curators to discuss and to demonstrate techniques in a broad category of the visual arts. Representational art portrays identifiable people, places and objects.

Presented by Cal Lutheran for the sixth time this year, the conference will focus on the relationship between imagination and 21st-century representational art. Boris Vallejo, whose illustrations of fantasy characters are loved throughout the world, and his wife and fellow fantasy artist Julie Bell will demonstrate their drawing and painting. One of the panel discussions will explore “The Art History of Fantasy and Science Fiction.”

Tim Jenison, subject of the 2014 documentary “Tim’s Vermeer,” is a keynote speaker. Intrigued by how Johannes Vermeer painted photorealistically 150 years before the birth of photography, the inventor set out to recreate one of the Dutch master’s paintings with the use of 17th-century technology. Other presenters include Roger Dean, the prolific creator of album covers for the rock band Yes; Z.S. Liang, an award-winning painter from Agoura Hills known for his portrayals of Native American culture; and Corinna Wagner, author of “Pathological Bodies: Medicine and Political Culture” and “Art & Soul.”

Academic presentations will range from “The Body of Christ, Trauma Porn and Realism in Western Painting” to “The Monuments Nobody Asked For.” TRAC2019 also will feature movie screenings and demonstrations by sculptors Brian Booth Craig and Alicia N. Ponzio and painters Virgil Elliott, Teresa Oaxaca, Scott Prior, Alexey Steele and Pamela Wilson.

Participants will take field trips to view exhibits and talk to featured artists at the Blackboard Gallery in Camarillo, Carnegie Museum in Oxnard, and Kwan Fong Gallery of Art and Culture, William Rolland Gallery of Fine Art and outdoor Chalk Festival at Cal Lutheran in Thousand Oaks. Blackboard Gallery’s “The Illusionists,” curated by TRAC co-founder and Cal Lutheran art professor Michael Pearce, and the Carnegie’s “The Imaginary: Art Commingling Realism and Imagination” were designed to reflect the conference’s focus on fantasy.

Pearce and former Cal Lutheran art faculty member Michael Lynn Adams launched TRAC in 2012 to address what they saw as a lack of critical appreciation of representational art and to explore the new directions it might take.

For more information or to register, visit trac2019.org.

Vol. 12, No. 13 – Mar 27 – Apr 9, 2019 – Police Reports

by Cindy Summers

Police reports are provided to us by the Ventura  Police Department and are not the opinions of  the Ventura Breeze. All suspects mentioned  are assumed to be innocent until proven guilty  in a court of law.

Attempt Vehicle Burglary Arrest

On March 14, at approximately 3am, officers responded to a report of a person attempting to break into a vehicle in the 6000 block of Cardinal Street. When officers arrived in the area, they were initially unable to find the suspect. He had fled from the area prior to their arrival. After a lengthy search, the suspect, 35 year old Ventura resident David Williams, was located and detained. The investigation confirmed he had attempted to break into a locked vehicle. At the conclusion of the investigation, he was arrested.

Armed Robbery Arrest

Over the past several weeks, Detectives with the Special Enforcement Team and Major Crimes were able to identify 23 year old Jonathan Sabalza as the suspect in the listed armed robberies.

On March 18, at approximately 6am, Ventura Police Major Crimes, Special Enforcement Team and Street Crimes Unit Detectives, along with patrol and K9, located Sabalza hiding in an apartment in the 6300 block of Whippoorwil Street in Ventura. After a brief standoff, the suspect came out of the apartment and was arrested. During a subsequent search, the handgun used in both robberies was located.

Carjacking

On March 23, at 9am, the Ventura Police Department’s Command Center received a call of a carjacking that just occurred at the Chevron gas station in the 2500 block of E. Main St. The caller was the gas station clerk, who was calling for the victim.

Officers responded and contacted the 42-year-old male victim. He told officers he was allowing an acquaintance to drive his vehicle, when they got into an argument. The acquaintance drove into the alley to the rear of the gas station and threatened to get a weapon to harm the victim if he did not get out of the vehicle. Fearing for his safety, the victim got out of the vehicle. The acquaintance, later identified as Jeffrey Gonzalez, and a female passenger fled in the vehicle.

Approximately 2 hours later, officers were on a foot patrol in the area of Chestnut St. and Thompson Blvd., when they observed the stolen vehicle parked in a parking lot. The officers checked the vehicle and found Gonzalez sleeping inside. Gonzalez was detained and arrested without incident for carjacking.

The victim was not injured during this incident and his vehicle was returned.

A review of the Ventura County Superior Court website shows that Gonzalez has a prior conviction in 2016 for possession of drug paraphernalia.

The winners of the County Ventura St. Patrick’s day parade have been announced

There were 76 parade entries. The parade theme was “Memories of the Past.”  The Grand Marshal was a nod to the past honoring the Grand Marshals of all the past parades, led by Jim Monahan.

The winners are:

Color Guard: Oxnard High School Air Force Junior ROTC

Bands

High School Band: (Tie) Marching Swarm of Oxnard High School,  Buena High School Marching Band

Junior High School Band: Ocean View Jr. High Seahawk Marching Band

Adult Band: Pacific Coast Highlanders Pipe Band

Families: The McGrath Family

Equestrian: El Brilliante II & My Good Silver (2 single horses)

Clubs and Organizations:

Adult: Ventura Hot Rodders

Youth: Thousand Oaks High School Cheer and Stunt Team

Non-Profit: Totally Local VC

Vehicles:

Antique: Ventura County Model “A” Ford Club

Special Interest: Ventura County Corvette Club

Commercial:

Rabobank

Media: (tie)

Cumulus Media, Gold Coast Broadcasting

Novelty: Surf Rodeo

Walking Entries: Billy Clower Dance Studio

Most Irish: Claddagh School of Irish Dance

Environmental Green Theme: Servpro Ventura

Restaurants and Pubs: O’Leary’s Tavern

Government Agencies: Ventura City Firefighters

Mayor’s Trophy: Surf Rodeo

Best in Parade (Arnold Hubbard Perpetual Trophy): O’Leary’s Tavern

Judges for the parade were Roger Rice, Ventura Unified School District; Robyn Daniels, Rabobank; Celina Zacarias, California State University Channel Islands; James Lockwood, Ventura County Fairgrounds and Connie Stahl, Elk’s Lodge #1430.

Empoderamienta: The Art of Latina Artists until April 18th in the New Media Gallery

The Ventura College Art Galleries, Gallery 2 and the New Media Gallery, were created in the 1970’s, to showcase faculty and student works, as well as artwork by prestigious artists from throughout the country.

Empoderamienta: The Art of Latina Artists until April 18th in the New Media Gallery.

This exhibition will explore the art of Latin American women artists with an emphasis on the art object as a form of cultural, artistic, and social expression. The exhibition will also explore the historic and artistic constructs of women artists in Latin America, who re-created themselves as beguiling personalities, posed uneasily between the worlds of artifice (art) and nature, or the instinctual life.

Art Gallery hours are Monday through Thursday, 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. For more information please call (805) 289-6040.

Parking on Campus requires a parking permit, which may be purchased from two automated yellow boxes in the West parking lot, and one automated yellow box in the North parking lot. The cost for parking is two dollars ($2).