Category Archives: This ‘n’ That

Ventura College Foundation receives nearly $185,000 gift from Aurora Loss Estate

Aurora Loss with scholarship winner Vanessa Apodaca.

Ventura College Foundation, which provides financial support to students and programs of Ventura College, received $184,105 from the estate of long-time Ventura College supporter Aurora Loss who passed away in April 2020 at age 102. Loss has a 20-year history of giving to Ventura College Foundation to fund scholarships for Ventura College nursing students. 

Loss’ donation is divided equally with $92,052 designated for the establishment of the Aurora Loss Scholarship Fund endowment and $92,052 to the college’s nursing department for the purchase of medical training equipment. The scholarships will be managed and awarded through the Ventura College Foundation. 

Loss grew up on a farm in a mining town in Montana. An independent and career-driven woman, she attended Billings Business College and soon was employed in the engineering industry and as a government administrator during WWII.

Her career included working at the Pentagon. While in Washington D.C., she became ill and was hospitalized. Doctors minimalized her symptoms but she received the support of a nurse who advocated for her. Loss believed the nurse helped save her life. She never forgot the nurse’s kindness. When Loss eventually relocated to California, she found an opportunity to reciprocate by supporting Ventura College’s nursing students with scholarships and program support.

Dr. Sandra Melton, director of the college’s School of Nursing & Allied Health, had the opportunity to have lunch with Loss on several occasions and to take her on a tour of the nursing school.

Currently, 151 students are enrolled in the Ventura College two-year nursing program. The program normally enrolls up to 200 students, but the pandemic temporarily limited the number of enrollments. The students use life-like manikins (also known as patient simulators) in the learning process. These manikins are computer controlled and simulate breathing, life-like sounds, heartbeats, pulse and other bodily functions. As a tribute to Loss’ generosity, one of the manikins is being named, “Auntie LaLa” in her memory. 

“The manikins allow students to use their critical thinking skills to perform patient assessments and administer patient interventions in a safe environment,” says Melton. 

Melton says her department currently uses three high fidelity adult, pediatric and birthing simulators and is considering adding a more advanced wireless child simulator with Loss’ donation. The department will also purchase additional medical equipment with the funds. “It’s important that students have access to practice with the same equipment that they will use in local hospitals,” she says. “We’re always updating our program with the latest technology.” 

The nursing program is one of the most expensive on campus. Students must purchase textbooks, uniforms and medical supplies such as stethoscopes, and pay for drug testing, CPR certification and licensing exams. “Scholarships help offset some of these costs,” says Anne Paul King, Ventura College Foundation executive director. 

The Ventura College nursing program enjoys a 100% hiring rate for those graduates seeking employment with the majority of graduating students accepting positions locally. “The generous donations from Aurora Loss will support the degree completion of our nursing students,” says Ventura College President Kim Hoffmans who is also a registered nurse. 

For more information about scholarships and other support services provided by the Ventura College Foundation, go to www.VenturaCollegeFoundation.org.

 

Third graders at Ventura Charter School hold month long school-supply-drive

Kids & Families Together on the campus of Ventura Charter School

June 7, 2021, was the culmination of a year-long project by the 3rd grade classes at Ventura Charter School of Arts & Global Education (VCS). Teachers, Flow Hansmeier and Emily Noel worked with their students on a year-long “Peace Project”. During the first half of the year, students interviewed (via Zoom) various individuals from organizations within the community asking the question, “How do you bring peace into the world?”

As part of this project, the students interviewed Kids & Families Together (K&FT)’s Co-Founder Faith Friedlander, LMFT in October of last year. Faith, an adoptee herself, explained how K&FT helps children, many who are adopted or in foster care, along with their families, though counseling programs and support services and various resource events during the year.

As a way to wrap up the school year, the students wanted to find a way to give back and help others in the community so they selected one of the individuals/organizations they had interviewed during the year. The students chose to support K&FT’s annual school supply event hosted for Ventura County Foster/Resource, Kinship and Adoptive Families who are working in programs with K&FT.

During the month of May, the 3rd graders at VCS established a “School Supply Drive” and promoted the event throughout the entire K – 8 campus by making posters and talking with the other classes. On Monday June 7th, Carrie McAuliffe, Heart 2 Heart Program Manager, and Amy Huot, Outreach Manager, with K&FT paid a visit to the school’s campus, to thank them and celebrate their amazing success! Students helped to load all the school supplies that were collected into vehicles to be taken back to the K&FT offices in preparation for the annual August “School Supply Gift Away Event”. Their school supply drive was such a success that the amount of supplies collected filled up two entire cars! Kids & Families Together would like to sincerely thank the students, staff and families of Ventura Charter School for their wonderful and generous support. And we hope they all have a fun and fantastic summer!

Kids & Families Together (K&FT) is a nonprofit that has been serving foster/resource, adoptive, kinship, and birth families throughout Ventura County since 2000. K&FT works with children who have experienced trauma, abuse, neglect, loss, and multiple placements. K&FT also works with caregivers who need specialized education, support, and strategies to help raise safe, healthy, nurtured children that thrive.

Master classes offered for dancers and dance teachers at NAMBA Performing Arts Space

“Modern dance is an investigation of movement from the inside out.”

On Saturday, July 10, and Tuesday, July 13, danah bella (it’s spelled this way), Director of the BFA Dance program at the Peabody Conservatory at Johns Hopkins University will teach master classes for both dancers and dance teachers at NAMBA Performing Arts Space.

“Modern dance is an investigation of movement from the inside out,” states bella. “This class encourages efficient use of alignment and technique while exploring full bodied movement with an emphasis on strength, breath and dynamics.” danah was named one of Baltimore Sun’s 25 Women to Watch in 2018 and just recently received the Maryland Dance Education Association’s 2021 Higher Education Dance Educator of the Year Award.

“We are thrilled to be able to offer this level of dance education to our local community,” said Cathy Butter, Dance Liaison at NAMBA Performing Arts Space.

In addition, on July 18 danah will teach a master class for local dance teachers utilizing Functional Awareness® (FA); an approach to embodied anatomy through reflective practice to enhance our understanding of movement function, facilitate ease in body action, and improve movement skills.  For more information about FA: https://functionalawareness.org/

Classes will be held at NAMBA Performing Arts Space, 47 S Oak St. in Historic Downtown Ventura. Cost for individual classes is $25. To sign up visit NambaArts.com or call (805) 648-9250.

danah bella, is the artistic director of d a n a h b e l l a DanceWorks, a modern dance company focused on reclaiming evocative movement as social practice. She is an award-winning choreographer who has performed & presented her work throughout the country and abroad. danah has taught workshops and has been artist in residence in festivals and universities throughout the United States.

NAMBA Performing Arts Space is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization in historic Downtown Ventura with a mission to provide an intimate venue to inspire and develop interdisciplinary art projects with a creative emphasis on dance, music, theater, writing and audio-visual arts.

The Bookmark About Libraries and Friends

Writer Jill Forman Friends of library volunteer helping move and set up new Foster Library bookstore. Photo by Clyde Hofflund

by Jill Forman

So much library news!

All branches are open. Hours are mainly the same as before COVID, with minor alterations. Check the website or your branch.

Staff and volunteers will continue to mask. Masking is optional for vaccinated patrons.

New library website – Vencolibrary.org  has an updated, bright look. All the features you counted on are still there and easy to access.

Foster Bookstore new location
Friends of the Library volunteers have been moving the partitions, furniture and books to the new location, a larger space on the first floor. Opening date is July 1. Come in and check it out!
Thanks to Sandy Greenberg and her (almost) tireless team of volunteers for getting the new store ready.

We need bookstore volunteers! It’s a fun way to meet other booklovers, serve your community, and help the Friends. Contact Sandy at [email protected]

Hill Road Used Book Shelves
These shelves will be stocked and ready for business as of July 1. Gently-used books at bargain prices. Fiction, non-fiction, CD’s and DVD’s, Childrens’ books at several reading levels, puzzles.

Book Sale and MORE
A real community event to celebrate summer and the loosening of pandemic precautions. July 31-August 1 at the Dudley House. Plant sale July 31, Dudley House tours August 1. Rotary will be doing a hot dog lunch.

Online Book Store
This popular service will continue, with a more select offering of books and puzzles, and with different pickup dates and times. Anyone ordering will be notified of these. Kudos to Leslie Bellmore, who got this up and running during the pandemic, and her team.

Volunteers
You may have noticed the words “Friends” and “volunteers” often mentioned in this column. The Ventura Friends of the Library runs on community members who love books and libraries and have fun helping with many activities.

And…we love members! All our membership funds, and donations, go to support Ventura’s libraries with books, supplies, and programs. To join, donate, or volunteer: [email protected], website: venturafriendsofthelibrary.org.

Or, you can pick up our flyers in the bookstore, at the libraries, and at book sales. There is a membership form and address if you prefer to send a check.

Parent and Child Together Class: Infants/Toddlers (from Library press release)
Ventura County Library and First 5 Ventura County are proud to partner on Parent and Child Together classes for local families starting this summer. In this free 12-week class, families with infants or toddlers are invited to learn new skills together, play fun activities, and share the love of reading.

“Parents are their child’s first and most important teacher. Every child comes into this world ready to learn. It’s never too early to talk, read, and sing to your child,” says Petra Puls, Executive Director of First 5 Ventura County.

Online registration began Tuesday, May 25 for the first summer session of classes, which will be held during the months of June, July, and August. Parents must register using this link: bit.ly/VCLPact. .

There is a familiar sight at CMH these days

They’re Back!

Those Auxiliary volunteers in their navy and white uniforms are back after more than a year’s absence! A measured return of volunteer activities began with the easing of COVID protocols and Ventura’s entry into less-restrictive tiers. While not all services have returned, pending safety review, most areas of the hospital are now accessible to volunteer workers, relieving staff of some of the more mundane duties and allowing them to concentrate more fully on patient care.

While hospital staff have expressed their appreciation for the return of the CMH Auxiliary help, the volunteers have been equally enthusiastic about being able to resume their activities. If you’re interested in volunteering, contact the Auxiliary at 805-948-4299.

Alicia Doyle will discuss her autobiography

Alicia Doyle, an award-winning journalist and author of Fighting Chance, will discuss her award-winning autobiography as part of the Museum of Ventura County’s Local History Happy Hour series on July 27 at 5 p.m. This event is free.

Alicia’s first book, Fighting Chance, has won three awards since it was published on Valentine’s Day in 2020: 1st Place for Creative Nonfiction in the 2020 North Street Book Prize Winning Writers Competition; 2020 WBAN Awards “Cool Story of the Year”; and “Best of Los Angeles Award” for Best Autobiographical Book of 2021.

Alicia’s presentation will take place at the museum, where she will answer questions from the audience and autograph books for $20 per copy. Those who cannot attend in person can watch Alicia’s presentation via Zoom.

The Museum of Ventura County is proud to host an event featuring Alicia Doyle and her new book, Fighting Chance,” said Denise Sindelar, Deputy Director of the Museum of Ventura County. “Alicia’s story is a compelling tale of one woman’s journey into the male dominated world of boxing. Our mission at the museum is to record and archive the stories of the Ventura County community in order to share with future generations.”

A journalist for more than two decades, Alicia has earned a reputation as “The Writer Specializing in Good News” for authoring thousands of stories about inspirational people and efforts that have a positive impact. Alicia discovered boxing at age 28 in the late 1990s when she went on assignment at a boxing gym for at-risk youth called Kid Gloves. For two years, she simultaneously worked as a newspaper reporter while training and competing as a boxer, making her one of only a few hundred women in America at the time who infiltrated this male-dominated sport. During her boxing career, she won two Golden Gloves championship titles and earned three wins by knockout—and her pro debut at age thirty in the year 2000 was named The California Female Fight of the Year.

In today’s challenging times, I am especially honored and humbled that the Museum of Ventura County invited me to discuss my book’s themes of empowerment—and how boxing is a metaphor for life,” said Alicia, 51, of Ventura. “To this day, the skills I discovered in the ring translate to everyday life. I learned that the fight starts from within—and when faced head-on with conviction, honesty, vulnerability and faith, the battle is sublime.”

Who: Alicia Doyle, Author of Fighting Chance

When: July 27 at 5 p.m.

Where: Zoom streaming or in person attendance at the Museum of Ventura County, 100 E. Main Street, Ventura, CA 93001

Cost: Free

For more information about the Museum of Ventura County, visit https://venturamuseum.org/. For more information about Alicia Doyle, visit https://aliciadoyle.com/

The Riddle of the Cindy Lee Mellin

by Richard Senate

A saleswoman at Macy’s at the Pacific View Mall told me that the department store was haunted. Footsteps were heard when there was no one there, someone humming, and clothes moved on the rack. Not only did she say it was haunted but she even knew the name of the ghost. It was a former salesgirl named Cindy Lee Mellin who worked at the store when it was The Broadway.

I did some research on the salesclerk and discovered that on the night of January 20th, 1970 she vanished from the parking lot. Co-workers saw she had a flat tire and a young man was helping her jack up the car. They thought it was Cindy’s father. That was at 10:30 at night—from that time on she has never been seen again. When she didn’t come home, her father went looking for her and found her car, still jacked up with the flat tire still attached and the spare on the pavement next to it. All the doors were open as well as the glove compartment. The flat looked like it had been slashed with a knife.

Even after all these decades the case is still unsolved and the 19-year-old woman is listed as “endangered missing.” In the investigation that followed they questioned a man matching the description given by co-workers who worked at a near by gas station. After questioning, the man was released and mysteriously vanished.

Because of his flight some believe he might well have been the killer. Some even speculate he might have been linked to the infamous Zodiac Killer who terrorized the San Francisco Bay area. Both of Cindy’s parents have passed away now without answers or closure. Playing armchair detective the victim may well have known her kidnapper and killer. He must have known her car so he would know which car tire to slash. He may well have stalked her in the department store. We may never know Ms. Mellin’s fate but it seems she has good reason to haunt. Maybe her ghost can give us the name of her killer or where her remains may rest. It is one of the great unsolved cases in Ventura history.

VMF’s live July 24th concert presents Time for Three: a string trio who sings

“This remarkable group is not to be missed, and its members play and sing with joy”

by Richard Newsham, VMF consultant

It’s “time” for “three of a perfect pair”—three musicians who flawlessly “pair” their impeccable voices to astonishing bow techniques on strings (two violins and one double bass)—in other words, a string trio who sings! Charles Yang, Nicolas Kendall and Ranaan Meyer bring their sensationally uncommon blend of vocals and instruments to the 2021 Ventura Music Festival live concert on Saturday, July 24, at 8 pm, at Pacifica High School Performing Arts Center, 600 E Gonzales Rd, in Oxnard.

Time For Three (TF3) celestially navigates the busy intersection of bluegrass and jazz Americana, modern pop and classical music. To experience this “classically trained garage band of fervent travelers” live is to hear the various eras, styles, and traditions of Western music (including Leonard Cohen, Jack Johnson and Bach’s Chaconne”) fold in on themselves and emerge anew. This unequalled ensemble of energy, intensity and artistry makes every audience—from PBS and NPR to Carnegie Hall and Yoshi’s jazz club—feel transportive joy!

Besides five albums, TF3 has commissioned new works from Pulitzer-Prize winning composers Jennifer Higdon and William Bolcom; and scored, with Ben Sollee, Robin Wright’s directorial debut “Land” that premiered at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival.

“This remarkable group is not to be missed, and its members play and sing with joy, mastery, creativity and supreme artistry in all that they do,” says music critic Leah Hollingsworth. “Truly, no one else is like Time for Three.”

Tickets and details for this 100% vaccinated event at www.venturamusicfestival.org.

Tree Town

The Jacaranda Mimosifolia tree is native to Argentina and Brazil and has been planted extensively in California coastal communities beginning in the 1890s.

Its fern-like foliage makes it an excellent shade tree, and its striking purple blossoms adorn Ventura each June and July. Once established, Jacaranda trees can grow to 50′ and are moderately drought-tolerant, requiring watering only during prolonged dry periods.

Ventura Tree Alliance, www.venturatreealliance.com