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Ventura Family YMCA wants kids to “Charge into Summer”

On Saturday, April 29, the Ventura Family YMCA is holding a free community event to inspire more kids to keep their minds and bodies active at the annual YMCA’s Healthy Kids Day®, the Y’s national initiative to improve health and well-being for kids and families. The event features activities to motivate and teach families how to develop healthy routines at home.

The Ventura Family YMCA’s Healthy Kids Day takes place at 3760 Telegraph Rd. from 10:00am – 1:00pm and features fun, active play and educational activities . Meet Lorenzo Booker, NFL Running Back, graduate of St. Bonaventure High School in Ventura.

YMCA’s Healthy Kids Day, celebrated at over 1,600 Ys across the country by over 1.2 million participants, works to get more kids moving and learning, creating habits that they continue all summer long.  When kids are out of school, they can face hurdles that prevent them from reaching their full potential. Research shows that without access to out-of-school learning activities, kids fall behind academically – this summer learning loss is more pronounced among students from low-income families.

“Healthy Kids Day is a signature event at the Ventura Family Y and families attend year after year. It’s a great day, partnering with other like-minded individuals and organizations to encourage families and children to lead healthy lives, together “said Julie Obrien, Youth Programs Director, Ventura Family YMCA.

For more information, contact the Ventura Family YMCA at 642.2131 or visit www.ciymca.org/ventura.

 

 

 

Music for changing times

The festival is curated by five-time Grammy Award-winner Noel Paul Stookey

Rubicon Theatre Company, in association with Music2Life, presents a weeklong series of events bringing together three generations of artists from different genres to celebrate the power of music to effect positive change. The festival is curated by five-time Grammy Award-winner Noel Paul Stookey of Peter, Paul, and Mary, who lives part-time in Ojai and has appeared in solo concerts at Rubicon.

The festival includes three readings of a new musical (as part of Rubicon’s Play-In-Progress) — The Folk-Rock Project; a National Songwriting Competition for those 18-38 and a Top 10 Concert and Awards Ceremony; a master class; a one-night-only concert starring Stookey and Peter Yarrow that takes the audience on a musical journey through their lives as activist artists; and a culminating Saturday night event featuring music related to issues of the environment, peace and social justice, with Stookey, Yarrow and others including Nuvi Mehta (Artistic Director of Ventura Music Festival musicians of The Lonesome Travelers and more. Music For Changing Times: Looking Back/Moving Forward begins Monday, May 8 and runs through Saturday, May 13.

Schedule of Events:

  • The Folk-Rock Project Mon., May 8 @ 7:00 p.m. Tues., May 9 @ 2:00 & 7:00 p.m.
  • Master Class and Showcase Wed., May 10 @ 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
  • Songwriting Top 10 Finalists Concert and Awards Announcement Thurs., May 11 @ 7:00 p.m.
  • Open Mic Night at the Rubicon Pub Thurs., May 11 @ 9:30 p.m.
  • Looking Back/Moving Forward: Peter and Paul in Concert Fri., May 12 @ 7:00 p.m.
  • Music for Changing Times Benefit Concert Sat., May 13 @ 7:00 p.m.

Rubicon Theatre Company Ventura’s Downtown Cultural District
1006 E. Main St.
Tickets: $20-$150  ($4 processing fee)
Series Pass: $225 Patron Pass: $500.
For a complete schedule, go to www.rubicontheatre.org or call  667-2900.

Local sleep consultant, Andi Metzler, helps parents solve challenging sleep problems

Parents of newborns may joke about sleep deprivation being a “rite of passage,” but the fact is that many families suffer sleepless nights for months (or even years) – and the toll it can take on not only the child, but also the parents, is no laughing matter.

According to local infant and toddler sleep consultant, Andi Metzler, tackling the problem early is the most important step in avoiding these issues. Metzler helps parents develop a customized sleep plan that addresses their family’s specific challenges, using gentle techniques and strategies from The Sleep Sense™ Program developed by world-renowned sleep expert Dana Obleman.

Andi has been personally trained by Dana Obleman, whose methods have been used worldwide by more than 30,000 families to solve their children’s sleep problems.  She offers one-on-one sessions and group seminars for parents, and is available to lead workshops at drop-in groups or for public appearances at a reduced or pro-bono rate. She can be reached at 626-8990 or online at www.amsleepconsulting.com.

A sampling of library events at E.P. Foster Library

May 6: The Ventura County Writers Club will be hosting Authors at the Library at the E. P. Foster Library. The event will be from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. The club invites interested writers to a panel discussion by local authors who have found success. Learn the secrets of what it takes to lift your writing to the next level. Contact Sheli Ellsworth at 499.3490 for information.

Opera Santa Barbara Noontime Concert
5/12 Friday @ 12pm
Spend Your Lunch Hour listening to members of the Mosher Studio Artist Program, who will perform a selection of popular opera arias and duets as well as some musical theatre pieces.

E.P. Needlecraft and Fiber Arts Club
5/11 & 25 Thursdays @ 10:30am
Get together with makers from all across the fiber-arts world.
Meet, teach, connect, share.

Poetry Open Mic Night
5/4, 11, 18, & 25 Thursdays @ 7:30-9pm
On these Thursday nights, come join this group of writers as they meet in the Topping Room to share their work.

Ukulele Jam Session
5/8 &22 Mondays @ 7-10pm
Locals gather to play the ukulele on the first and third Monday of the month.
5/6, 13, 20, & 27 Saturdays @ 1pm
Calling all chess players! Keep your skills sharp with this one-hour, drop-in session of free play. Boards will be set up and ready to go. Bring your best moves!

Crafternoon Mother’s Day
5/11 Thursday @ 3:30pm
Make something for your Mom!

Family Coloring
5/6, 13, 20, & 27 Saturdays @ 10:30am – 12pm
Saturday Family Coloring Fun!

Lego Play
5/2, 9, 16, 21, & 30 Tuesdays @ 3pm
Build, Learn, and Play! Bring your imagination and experiment with creative designs. Children of all ages welcome!

Paws for Reading
5/6, 13, 20, & 27 Saturdays 12 – 1pm
Read aloud to a registered service dog. (sign-up required)

TAG: Teen Advisory Group
5/3 & 17 Wednesdays @ 5pm
If you want to share ideas, meet new people and have a great time shaping the library teen program join TAG! This is for 13+ and grades 8+ and counts toward community service requirements.

Saticoy Library May 2017 Events

Adult Ongoing Events
English Class
5/1, 3, 8, 10, 15, 17, 22, 24, 31
Monday & Wednesday 3pm – 5pm
ESL Conversation Groups hosted by Laubach Literacy of Ventura County

Children’s Events
Family Coloring
5/6, 13, 20, & 27 Saturdays @ 10:30am– 12pm
Enjoy a relaxing coloring session. Coloring sheets for children and are adults are provided free of charge.

Avenue Library May 2017 Events

Family Coloring
5/6, 13, 20, & 27 Saturdays @ 10:30 – 12pm
Enjoy a relaxing coloring session. Coloring sheets for children and are adults are provided free of charge.

English Class
5/1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 9, 10, 11, 15, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 25, 30
Mondays @ 11am -12pm
Tuesdays @ 10am & @ 12-1pm

Vol. 10, No. 15 – April 26 – May 9, 2017 – Opinion/Editorial

•  I want to congratulate the new members of the Measure O Citizens Oversight Committee. With the passage of Measure O last November an oversight committee was required to review the new revenues and to recommend expenditures for the new funds. Ventura’s half-cent sales tax oversight board received close to 70 applications for seven spots. The tax is expected to generate close to $11 million in 2017-18 and will last 25 years.

The members for a one-year term are Kristopher Hansen, Bill Hickman, Mary Laurel Rutledge and Jordana Ybarra-Telias. Three-year term members are Kathlene Bololes, Marni Brook and David Jaffe.

In a previous issue, we erroneously stated that the members would serve 3 and 4 year terms. They have a very important job so I hope that they do it well. Their first presentation to the City Council will probably be on May 10. Should be very interesting.

•  Deciding when Scamp’s time will be up has been one of the hardest decisions that I have ever had to make (so I will let Diane make it). We are not even sure if spoon feeding him to keep him alive is the right thing to do. He is still drinking water on his own and moving around the house and smiling at us. Just not sure if we are keeping him going for his sake or ours?

•  The latest guest on my new radio show on KPPQ-LP 104.1FM was Elena Brokaw – the Interim Executive Director for the Museum of Ventura County. The show airs Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays at 10am. Try to listen (low wattage so not always easy to pick up) and give me your feedback (good and bad) and suggestions for future guests.

•  In this issue our Person to Person question is “What is your favorite season in Ventura?” Interesting that no one specifically said summer which would shock mid-westerners. A compliment to us that all of our seasons are wonderful.

•  I know that I shouldn’t make too many comments about our president, but like late night comedians it is impossible not to. When running he kept telling us that he never would settle a law suit (real men don’t do that). He just paid a $25 million settlement in the Trump University litigation. Maybe he doesn’t consider a measly $25 million a settlement.

•  Three very important people make the Ventura Breeze happen me, Alfred J. Lewis and Breezy Gledhill are left-handed. There have been some (and are) other lesser known lefties like Alexander The Great, Julius Caesar, Leonardo Da Vinci, Isaac Newton, Napoleon Bonaparte, Beethoven, Charlie

Chaplin, Babe Ruth, Bill Gates and 6 out of the last 8 US presidents – to name just a few. About 10% of the population are lefties. No wonder the Ventura Breeze is so amazing.

But being left-handed has not always been easy. Even today I read a report that a school teacher in Oklahoma sent a 4-year old left-handed boy home with a note from the teacher that left-handedness is associated with evil and the devil.

In fact the word left derived from the Old English word “lyft” which means weak and useless.

In the old days when people used ink pens our hands went right over the writing and smudged the ink. That is why some older people write with the hand kind of upside down so that the hand is in back of the ink. Of course lefty kids today don’t have that problem because they do as all of their writing on computers, tablets and phones.

But now at least you know that if the Breeze does something wrong that the devil made us do it.

•  Say it isn’t so – my world just got turned upside down. The writers of “reality” TV shows walked off the job recently in an attempt to unionize more unscripted shows. Will I find out next that the Easter Bunny really has nothing to do with Easter?

•  Between Donald Trump and Mexican drug cartels there is a war on journalists and journalism. Trump has called journalist “enemies of the people.” That’s one of the nicer things he has called us. Anything that he doesn’t agree with is “fake news”( I know I said I wouldn’t comment too much on him , but I just can’t help myself).

In Mexico, so many journalists have been killed for writing articles exposing the drug cartels that several newspapers have closed down.

Of course no news organization is perfect (liberal or conservative) but an independent press is vital in all democracies and guaranteed by our constitution.

•  Jackie Moran, who was elected to the Ventura Unified School District board last year, has been found not guilty of truancy by allowing her son to be routinely absent from Cabrillo Middle School.

Moran had been charged in February with allowing her son to be routinely truant.

She told Judge Michele Castillo that her son had to miss school because of an ongoing medical condition (without doctor’s proof). The judge felt that Deputy District Attorney Brandon Ross did not prove his case beyond a reasonable doubt.

I’m not taking sides but to waste the time of a judge, district attorney, etc. for what could have been a $100 fine is ludicrous. Certainly the school and the Moran’s should have been able to work this out without going to court.

Stamp club to offer classes, evaluation of collections

Many people who have inherited a stamp collection, bought one in a garage sale or run across one they started as a child and wonder what, if anything, it’s worth.  They’ll have a chance to find out and learn more about stamp collecting at an by the Ventura County Philatelic Society on May 6. The event is aimed at developing new or returning stamp collectors and helping people who need information about collections they own.

The Adult Education Stamp Collecting Seminar and Free Stamp Collection Review & Evaluation will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Bonaventure, 10949 Telegraph Road.

The classes will be presented from 9 a.m. to noon and will run for about 45 minutes with time for questions. The classes will be What to Collect, 9 a.m.; How to Collect, 10 a.m.; and Understanding a Stamp Catalog, 11 a.m. A lunch break will run from noon to 1 p.m., and the evaluations will be from 1 to 3 p.m.

The classes are $8 for people who register by April 30 and $10 for those who pay at the door. To register, send your name, address, a postal mail or email address so you can be contacted if plans change, and an $8 check made out to VCPS (Ventura County Philatelic Society), to John Weigle, P.O. Box 6536, Ventura 93006. Weigle’s email address is [email protected].

The Ventura County Philatelic Society meets on the first and third Mondays of each month at the Church of the Foothills, 6279 Foothill Rd. The doors open at 6:30 p.m., and the meetings start at 7:30 p.m. Guests are welcome.

Promenade at Surfer’s Point by Dean Seagren

The students of Ventura Watercolor Artists will host a special art show and sale on Sunday, May 21 from 3 to 7 pm. art lab, 1932 E. Eastman, Unit 101.  Instructor and award winning professional watercolorist, Julie Merrill, heads the group in presenting this exciting display of watercolor art created by her past and current students.  An opportunity to view work while watercolorists are at work.  Light refreshments will be served.  Visit Ventura Watercolor Artists on Facebook for more information and to view art.

City of Ventura classes and camps

Check out hundreds more on web-site

Call  658-4726 to register, if you already have an ACTIVENET account online, visit www.cityofventura.net

Registration open now for The City of Ventura’s Summer full and half day camps in cooking, theatre, dance, circus, rock & roll, fine arts, Legos, science and so much more. To see a whole menu of summer offerings visit cityofventura.net.  To have a summer camp brochure mailed to you call 658-4726

5/13       Saturday              4pm                       FREE
Fairytales in the Park is celebrating its 23nd season! Join us at Barranca Vista Park for a production of Peter Pan 3: The Switcheree.  Performances are the 2nd Saturday of every month through September. Bring a blanket, picnic and low lawn chairs. 7050 Ralston St.

Murals & Roses Annual Art and Garden Exhibit
5/14       Sunday                 11am-3pm          FREE
Come visit the historic Olivas Adobe for a wonderful exhibit featuring Marguerite Hardman’s stunning, enormous murals and the Olivas Adobe’s own spectacular rose garden in full bloom. Admission is free.

Line Dance with a Twist  18 years-adult
5/1-6/5                 M/W                     1-2 pm                  $60         #8010
Experienced line dancers enjoy exercise fun with a twist of salsa, ballroom and jazz. Instructor Jackie Ringhof. No class 5/29. Classes held at the Barranca Vista Center, 7050 E Ralston St.

Social Ballroom  16 years-Adult
5/1-6/12               M            7:30-8:30pm       $70         #9058
Beginners get on the floor after just a few lessons. The 6 week session includes Foxtrot, Swing, and Cha Cha. Leather or Suede bottom shoes required. No sneakers of flip flops. No partner needed. No class 5/29. Classes held at The House of Dance, 3007 Bunsen #E in Ventura.

Beach Yoga  16 years-Adult
5/2-5/25               Tu/Th                    9:00-10:10 am                    $85         #8947
Increase flexibility, tone the lungs and instill peace with classic Hatha-style breathing and postures, for all levels. Park on Martha’s Vineyard Ct. by Pierpont School. Bring large towel, yoga mat, sunglasses and/or hat. Please wear sunscreen. Instructor Nisahna Engel.

Courage in the Kitchen  16 year-adult
5/2 & 5/16           Tu           6-8 pm                  $80+$20 monthly supply fee       #8055
Get processed foods out of the pantry and learn to cook with fresh, seasonal and budget-friendly ingredients. We’ll meet to study recipes, learn new techniques and create meals that include vegan and vegetarian options. For view each month’s menus visit www.chefjudy.net. The $20 supply fee is due to instructor at first class. Classes held at the Barranca Vista Center.

LEGO® Wheeled Wonders  5-10 years
5/6         Sa           10 am-12 pm      $30         #7704
Build and reengineer such motorized vehicles as massive monster trucks, record setting race cars and luxurious RVs. please register by the Wednesday before class. Classes held at the Barranca Vista Center.

Basic Guitar  9 years-adult
5/9-6/13               Tu           7-8:30 pm            $55         #8041
Bring your own acoustic or electric guitar to learn folk and pop strums, patterns and chord progressions. At Dudley House, 197 N Ashwood St. Instructor Randy Covington.

High school seniors win college scholarships from Edison

Michael’s life changed when his mom was diagnosed with cancer.

Five high school seniors from Ventura County have each won a $40,000 college scholarship from Edison International in their pursuit of a STEM (science, technology, engineering or math) degree. The students are among 30 students from throughout Southern California Edison’s service territory who were chosen for their academic success and demonstrated financial need as part of the $1.2 million Edison Scholars Program.

The winners were Juan Carrillo Channel Islands High School, Oxnard, Jesus Contreras Magana

Santa Paula High School, Santa Paula,,Mireille Vargas,Santa Paula High School, Santa Paula,,Gissele Vazquez Oxnard High School, Oxnard and Michael Morrissey Hanson Ventura High School, Ventura.

Michael’s life changed when his mom was diagnosed with cancer when he was 13. He helped care for his mom through her medical procedures and took care of his younger brother. Michael wants to find ways to protect natural water resources and ensure that all people have access to safe drinking water. He is also an Eagle Scout and a member of the track and field team at his high school.