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Hannah-Beth Jackson callenges Jason Hodge and Mike Stoke in the race for the 19th District State Senate seat.
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SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 2012 WWW.THEDAILYSOUND.COM FREEVOLUME 7 ISSUE 109
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ACTIONJACKSON
19th District StateSenate Race
There has to be awillingness to tryeverything. We
have to reinvigoratethe state.’
‘
By JOSHUA MOLINAPage 2
ELIZABETHSTEWART
MISS KITTY
DAILY SOUNDINSIDE
Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 1
When Hannah-BethJackson fell asleep onElection Night in 2008, shewas ahead by about 4,000votes.When she woke up at 6
a.m. the next morning, herhusband Judge George Eskinbroke the news. Her lead wasdown to 300.Her slim victory now sud-
denly was slipping from hergrasp. Her lead would onlyshrink more and eventuallyshe lost the senate race toTony Strickland — by 857votes.“It was heartbreaking,”
Jackson said. “It was terriblydisappointing. We lost thatrace in Santa Clarita.”But for Jackson, the former
attorney, UCSB professor andsix-year Assemblywoman, itwasn’t the end. Now she’s
back, hoping for a differentoutcome this time. At a timewhen California is crumblingfinancially, Jackson said shehas the right amount of expe-rience, vision and ability tomake a difference.
“I want to restore theCalifornia dream,” saidJackson, “and create a suc-cessful and vibrant econo-my.”Jackson is running against
Democrat Jason Hodge andRepublican Mike Stoker forthe 19th District state senaterace, which includes SantaBarbara and most of Venturacounties. The top two vote-getters, regardless of partyaffiliation, will battle for theseat in November.Jackson has emerged as
frontrunner in the race, somuch so that Hodge andStoker recently teamed up onher at a forum, while singingeach other’s praises. Hodge, a
Ventura County firefighter,also serves on the OxnardHarbor Commission, but haslittle name recognition inSouthern Santa Barbara,where Jackson is strong.Santa Clarita, which is con-servative, is no longer in thedistrict, so Jackson isn’t tooconcerned about an electionnight upset.Most political observers
believe that Jackson andStoker will battle it out for theseat in November.“It’s a primary, anybody
can run,” Jackson said. That’sthe beauty of this country. ButI think Jason needs to getsome experience before heruns for state senate.”California is in a much dif-
ferent place today than whenshe left Sacramento becauseof term limits in 2002. Thestate is facing a financial cri-sis. Pension costs have soaredout of control. Colleges and
universities are making dra-matic cutbacks. And the K-12public school system is expe-rience growing classroomsizes and billions of dollarsless in funding.Jackson, who is endorsed
by the California DemocraticParty, believes she has theright balance of intelligenceand understanding to immedi-ately make a difference.The key, she said, is for the
state to invest money in pub-lic education at all levels. Theuniversities, she said, areresponsible for training thenext generation’s workforce.There needs to be a focus ongreen jobs, she said, whichwill stimulate the economy.Schools should be trainingworkers in green technology,manufacturing and high-tech,she said.“Things have changed so
2 Saturday, June 2 2012 Daily Sound
COVER STORY
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Printed on recycled paper
Jackson looks to goback to Sacramento
BY JOSHUA MOLINADAILY SOUND EDITOR
See HBJ, page 3
Santa Barbara County First District Supervisor Salud Carbajal, Hannah Beth Jackson and Santa Barbara County Second District SupervisorJanet Wolf.
DAILY SOUND / Cover Photo/Victor Maccharol/Daily Sound, Inside/Courtesy photos
Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 2
Daily Sound Saturday, June 2 2012 3
COVER STORY
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much,” Jackson said. “It’s thesix or 10-year-olds who knowmore than we do.”Much of Jackson’s political
narrative is constructedaround the idea of reachingyoung people and steeringthem in the direction to helpdrive California’s economy.In interviews and on the cam-paign trail she frequentlytalks about intervening earlywith at-risk children. Whenthe economy crumbles, themiddle-class and low-incomeresidents are most severelyhit, she said. Parents thenhave to take on multiple part-time jobs to support the fami-ly. When parents aren’thome, children lose their mostvaluable resource at home.This cycle repeated over
the years can lead to legaltrouble down the road forthese children. Jackson saidthe government needs tointervene often — and early.“We need to step in by the
time they are in first grade,”Jackson said. And it doesn’tstop there. A former domesticviolence prosecutor, Jacksonsaid helping students throughthe education process can leadto more stable families.“Seventy percent of adult
men in prison have a learningdisability,” she said. “Why dowe have all these gangs? Weneed to identify these prob-lems early and find out whatevery child needs. We havebuilt a corrections system, notan education system.”Jackson said the state
needs to pay now, rather thanpay for new jails and prisonslater.“It’s not complicated,”
Jackson said. “We just need toinvest at the front end.”On California’s economy,
she’s also an advocate for anoil-severance tax. She wantsto pressure banks to startloaning money again to smallbusiness so that they can hirepeople and get the communityback to work. Middle-classCalifornians, she said, aretaking the brunt of the state’s
cuts, and it’s time to end that,she said.“We need to close the tax
loopholes that we have givencorporations,” Jackson said.“Those who have the most arenot paying their fair share.”Daraka Larimore-Hall,
chairman of the Santa BarbaraCounty Democratic Party,said Jackson has a record offighting for the people andwill continue to do so.“In the Assembly Hannah-
Beth Jackson earned strongratings from environmentalgroups, unions, teachers, con-sumer advocates andwomen’s organizationsbecause she is a fighter,”Larimore-Hall said. “Andlook who’s lined up againsther again — tobacco, Big Oil,pesticides. Case closed. I amready for November.”Jackson leads in the money
race. The latest campaignfinance reports show thatJackson raised $218,024 inthe last quarter and has a totalof $491,764 in contributions.
HBJFROM PAGE 2
See JACKSON, page 10
Hannah-Beth JacksonDAILY SOUND / name
Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 3
4 Saturday, June 2 2012 Daily Sound
NEWS IN BRIEF
ASKSETH&BRAD
Justin Bieber gives balcony show(Reuters) - Teenage pop star Justin Bieber turned a quiet
Paris street corner into an impromptu concert venue on Fridayafternoon, crooning through a megaphone at a balcony windowover the screams of hundreds of adoring female fans.Wearing a leather jacket and dancing under the watchful eye
of his bodyguard and grinning guitarist, the 18-year-old sanghits like "Baby" and "One Time" to the increasingly frenziedcrowd gathered at a street behind the Pantheon monument in theLatin Quarter.Some of Bieber's fans, who waved messages saying "Thank
You Justin" and got into occasional scraps with security guardsin front of the building, had waited hours for their idol afterbeing told via Bieber's Twitter feed to "sing with" Justin at theoffices of record label Universal in Paris."We've been here since 10:30 a.m...We got in a taxi and came
straight here after it appeared on Twitter," said 21-year-old stu-dent Sonia O'Donnell, accompanied by her friend SineadMurphy.Not everyone was as pleased by the noise as the true
"Beliebers" were. One glum-looking Parisian living at a neigh-boring building held a makeshift flag up at his window with thewords: "Bieber Go Home".
Cooler69°
TodayWeekend temps will warm into the upper 60s and lower70s by the coast, and the 80s inland. Further cooling isexpected next week as the trough axis finally swingsthrough Southern California. This trough will also deepenup the marine layer and bring windy weather for the after-noon hours to the tri-counties.
AMFog,PM Sun54/72°
Breezy57/69°
Patchy Fog,Mild
55/67°
AMFog,PM Sun54/69°
WednesdayMondaySunday Tuesday
(Reuters) - Pop superstar Madonna kicked off a new world touron Thursday wishing peace on the Middle East even as she show-cased grim dance routines depicting violence and bloody gunmenamong her more colorful numbers.Madonna, 53, mixed hit songs over three decades in music with
tunes from her recent album, "MDNA," before a packed audience,and she took a sly dig at younger diva, Lady Gaga."She's not me!" Madonna belted out at the end of "Express
Yourself," which she had reworked to include a sampling of LadyGaga's recent "Born This Way."That song from Lady Gaga, who emerged on the pop music
scene about four years ago and has enjoyed a huge following, wasnoted by many fans and critics as being very similar to Madonna'slate 1980s dance club smash.Since Lady Gaga, 26, released "Born ThisWay," there has been
speculation that a generational challenge was in the works andcomedians have poked fun at any imagined rivalry between thetwo womenDespite occasional lighthearted touches such as a baton-
twirling routine in cheerleader formation and a psychedelic hom-age to Indian philosophy, the dominant mood at Thursday's con-cert in Tel Aviv seemed more grim with a stage shrouded in blackand red and costumes that often appeared ominous.
Madonna is no Lady Gaga
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loan in about six months,how should I prepare myselfto get the money at the bestdeal? – Pete, Santa BarbaraBefore the “banking cri-
sis,” it was fairly easy toobtain money, hence the “cri-sis” that ensued. But thatlandscape has obviouslychanged. When in need offunds in the future, youshould be preparing yourselfto be a good candidate forfavorable terms and “quick”financing? So what does thatmean?When dealing with
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– this is notsomethingyou canmeasure or put a ratio on. Itis a reflection of who you areand how you are perceived.Are you trust worthy? Doyou stand by your word? It isyour apparent willingness todo all you can do to pay backthe money you owe, espe-cially in hard times. In short,does the banker trust you anddoes your credit history sup-port that feeling?Capacity – do you have
the ability to generate suffi-cient cash flow in order topay your debts? For mort-gages, the focus is on wageincome and investment earn-ings. They are looking forcash flow stability and theprospect for it continuingwith some form of certainty.For business owners, the
focus is on growth and profittrends of the business. Ifthings are currently going thewrong way, you really haveto demonstrate how thingsmay turn. Be prepared tohave “plan B” already writ-
ten down toshare withthem if thingsdo notimprove.Capital –
do you haveadequatefunds to oper-ate your busi-ness and stay
competitive? The banks cansupply extra capital but theyare going to want to see thatyou personally have “skin inthe game” and that you haveproper funds to operate effec-tively. This goes for realestate ventures as well wherecapital reserves need to be atproper levels for expectedtenant improvements, vacan-cies, leasing costs, mainte-nance, etc.Conditions – though you
can’t control the economyaround you, lenders are look-ing for you to demonstratehow you can survive andhopefully thrive.Collateral – lending
becomes easier when youhave assets that can bepledged to back up a loan.However, not all asset valuesare perceived the same fromthe borrower and lender.Expect that appraisals willcome in lower than what youbelieve they are worth.When it comes to new
debt or refinancing, get yourfinancial house in order. Thelending process in generalhas become more methodi-cal. Be prepared for loanofficers to require increaseddocumentation and to ask farmore questions than in recenttimes past.
You have to understandyour strengths and weakness-es. They know what they areso don’t try to “bend” thereality. If your books are indisarray, make sure you hirean accounting professional tohelp you get things in order.Bankers won’t look kindlyon sloppy financials and itcan kill a deal right out of thegate.Even if you are not in the
market for a loan today, wesuggest you start a relation-ship so that you can generatehistory with an organization.It can’t hurt to invest sometime to build trust and under-stand one another. Makingsure there is a good fitbetween what you are look-ing for and who the institu-tion prefers to work with(especially for business own-ers) can be critical.
If you have a questionsyou would like answered,please submit them [email protected].
Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 4
Daily Sound Saturday, June 2 2012 5
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Kate'sWedding Cake andReagan’s Blood atAuctionKate's Wedding Cake and
Reagan's Blood at AuctionWell, I can tell you, we all
missed this treasure – some-one grabbed it, and we didn't– a boxed piece of royalwedding cake from the mar-riage of Prince William andKate Middleton auctioned onMay 24th in England for$2997. The BuckinghamPalace reception featured just649 other such boxes of thistraditional wedding fruit cakefor friends and family; eachcontained a printed card fromthe Prince of Wales andDuchess of Cornwall. The tinbox measure 5 ½ x 4 ¼ x 2,and was designed by PeterWindelt and Sally Mangum.The cake itself was baked byFiona Cairns for the wed-ding, April 29, 2011. Threethousand dollars for a pieceof 399 days old cake, if youare reading this on Saturday.In other unlikely auction
sales this past week, thesame auction house whichauctioned off the cake, PFCAuctions, operating onlineonly from their base offEngland on Guernsey,Channel Islands, tried to sella vial of Ronald Reagan'sblood. Yes you read thatright. PFC was forced towithdraw Ronnie's blood lastweek under pressure from theRonald Reagan PresidentialFoundation. The story as toldon the House's website, isunbelievable. PresidentReagan, we all remember,
was shot by JohnHinkley, Jr. onMarch 30, 1981,as he was leavingthe WashingtonHilton Hotel afteraddressing a groupof union officials.He was taken toGeorgeWashingtonUniversityHospital. The vialhas labels statingthe President'ssex, age (70), referring physi-cian (Aaron), the name of theDirector of LaboratoryMedicine at GeorgeWashington UniversityHospital (Marsh) and instruc-tions to Dr. Marsh to test forlead levels in the blood. Aprinted instruction form tothe lab accompanied this vialof dried blood as an auctionitem.The consigner, who
remained anonymous, had amixed story of where heobtained the vial. He report-edly bought the vial at a pub-lic auction in the U.S.February 2012 for $3500.But looking a little farther, Ifound a personal statementfrom the consigner on theauction house website, astatement of provenance. Heclaims the vial was his moth-er's, a worker in the laborato-ry which tested Reagan'sblood in the 80's, and hismother's boss allowed her totake it home in April of
1981. Here's wherethe story reads like aspy thriller. The con-signer writes thatbefore he decided tolet PFC auction thevial, he called theReagan NationalLibrary and spoke toan unnamed headlibrarian whom hesays was a FederalAgent. The agentdidn't want to buythe vial, he wanted it
donated. The seller refused.The agent, according to theseller's report, said to himover the phone ---"don'tmove from your house forabout 30 minutes while I callthe FBI.”Here's what the seller
replied to the agent/librarian:"I said, am I in any kind oftrouble or will there be someblack cars/SUV's or helicop-ters hovering above myhome; and he said not yet butpossibly in the very nearfuture depending on what helearned from the phone callshe had to make."The poor guy waited on
the hot seat for 25 minutes,the agent called back said,no, National Archives wasnot interested, but the agentagain suggested the sellergive it to the Archive. Theseller answered "no I don'tthink that was something Iwas going to consider, since Ihad served under PresidentReagan when he was my
Commander in Chief when Iwas in the Army from 87-91and that I was a real fan ofReaganomics and felt thatPresident Reagan himselfwould rather see me sell itrather than donating it."OMG. What magnificentlogic. This fan ofReaganomics lost out bigtime when the vial of bloodwas withdrawn. If you knowanything about online auc-tions, the price goes up overtime until it doesn't. Whenthe poor seller was forced todonate the blood, the last bidwas $30,086. Gone forev-er…..PFC called this "dona-tion" to the Ronald ReaganPresidential Foundation "aconsiderable financial ges-ture from the consigner."John Heubusch, theExecutive Director of theFoundation, was quoted assaying "while we contendthat the removal of the vialfrom the hospital laboratoryand the US auction sale inFebruary 2012 were not legalacts in our opinion, we aregrateful to the current custo-dian of the vial for this gen-erous donation to theFoundation, ensuringPresident Reagan's bloodremains out of public hands."This couldn't be weirder.
Please email me [email protected] or call me at805.895.5005 with any artworld news, or pictures ofyour items.
ELIZABETHSTEWART
Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 5
6 Saturday, June 2 2012 Daily Sound
KITTY IN THE CITY
If you are wondering, askearly in the relationship
Dear Miss Kitty,
I am dating a new manand want to ask him somepersonal questions.What questions are accept-
able to ask without soundingrude? I have a history ofbeing with the wrong kind ofguy (for me) and I think if Itake a more logical approachto dating I will do better.Not only that, but a fewthings about him are just notadding up right. On theother hand I could be totallyin left field and I don’t wantthis guy to get the wrongidea about why I am askingthese questions and be turnedoff. Help?
S.K, SANTA BARBARA
Dear S.K. -If fireworks lit up the
night sky with brilliant colorbut no noise we wouldnotice. If we saw sherbetplaced on red hot coals wewould notice. If we went tothe beach and green grasshad replaced all the sand wewould notice. Not onlywould we notice, we wouldhave questions — and lots ofthem. So why is it, when weare getting to know a newsomeone, are we shy aboutgetting needed answers?Why is the act of acquiringknowledge via questioning
perceived as beingtoo forward?Should we reallyaccept everyone asthey say they areuntil proven other-wise? When itcomes to diggingin deeper, it is thewise that bring asturdy and reliableshovel.It is no lie that
early on in every relationshipeveryone is on their bestbehavior. Like little kids at adinner party for grown-ups,keeping quiet and being“good” gets you an invite forthe next time and you get toostay up way past bedtime.Not to mention the extracherries in your ShirleyTemple! But as the partywinds down, and children gettired of being “good” realitygets the chance to show upand show off.While learning someone
new, there is no reliable orknown time frame for theauthentic to manifest. Asairy-fairy and non-committalas it may sound, only timewill tell - and that can makeframing a new relationshipwithin an existing life style alittle difficult. It also takesthe events that will eventual-ly transpire within a relation-ship to know the true depthof another human being.
Does this mean thatup-front questionsare out of order?Absolutely not, norare they rude unlessthe subject in underharsh lighting, duck-taped to a chair andforbidden water formore than 24 hours.Does this mean, thetruth will always betold? Absolutely
not. It might also mean thatthe truth is not somethingthat can be understood orperceived at this particularplace in time.For example: A man
remodels his home and does-n’t install a kitchen. Hedoesn’t cook and bringshome a couple of cokes withhis take-out food everyevening which works forhim. He meets a woman andshe does cook. He nowinstalls a kitchen. She isthrilled. She never ques-tioned him or herself becausein the framework of the reali-ty she was being shown, thehouse sans kitchen madesense. Unless one has a refer-ence point in their own expe-rience file cabinet, another’sexplanation might not seemlogical. It would take time toknow that the real reason Mr.I-Don’t-Cook-Don’t-Need-a-Kitchen was he was inca-pable of finishing anything
he started - even a homeremodel. Could she haveknown that by simply askingquestions? Not in the earlydays…not unless he was aperson that was so secure inhis own reality – and soknowledgeable of himself -that he would have told herthe actual truth, not the onethat she would accept asvalid.Darling SK, Boys and
Girls, unlike gadgets thatcome with a handbook, peo-ple don’t - so asking ques-tions is always a good idea.Questions start a dialogueand assist in filtering outaspects that we need toknow. The way a personresponds or doesn’t respondto questions has value of itsvery own. However, Q andA sessions are not a perfectlyreliable oracle that will tellthe future with certainty. Thefuture is subject to changeand what was yesterdays’perception will no doubt alterwithout the scope of contin-ued self-discovery, communi-cation and congruence. Thebest part about the asking isthat you did ask and thatmeans if things go wrong, atthe very least you were tak-ing care of you.
Melanie Doctors akaMiss Kitty can be reached [email protected].
MISS KITTY
Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 6
Daily Sound Saturday, June 2 2012 7
©2012 Union Bank, N.A. Subject to receipt of required regulatory approvals and satisfaction of other closing conditions. Visit us at unionbank.com
PERSONAL / BUSINESS / COMMERCIAL / WEALTH MANAGEMENT
That was our philosophy back in 1864, and we still live by it today. It’s why we direct millions of dollars each year back to our communities. It’s why Union Bank employees spend nearly 54,000 hours annually volunteering in places like local food banks and for organizations such as Habitat for Humanity.® It’s why our lending practices and financial products are tailored to meet the needs of our diverse customer base. And why we’ll soon be combining our efforts with Santa Barbara Bank & Trust, ensuring the future of responsible local banking in California. Here’s to strong communities. And to doing the things that make them even stronger.
A bank shouldn’t just serve the community, but strengthen it.
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`
8 Saturday, June 2 2012 Daily Sound
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To list your service, please call 564-6001 or visit www.TheDailySound.com
LAUNDRYAire your dirty laundry
Too busy?Let me do your laundry
I pick up and deliver, I also ironCall me, Debra at 805-403-8361
FOR SALE1963 Ranchero. 4 speed.
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SERVICE EVALUATORNo Associated Fees
Greater Santa Barbara area opportunities!Safeway Inc. is a Fortune 100 company and one of the
largest food and drug retailers in North America based onsales. The company operates 1,678 stores in the United
States and Western CanadaWe are seeking responsible, motivated and computerliterate individuals to provide feedback specific to store
conditions and service levels. Hourly rate paid for driving,observation, and report times. Reimbursement for mileage
based on the distance associated with assignments.For additional information and to submit an online
application visit:https://qualityshopper.org
Looking to rent a roomwith private bath (up to800/month) Or a smallguest house/studio (up to$1000/month) in SantaBarbara, Mission Canyonarea preferred. CallMarguerite at805-570-3745.
DRYWALLRepairs, remodels,
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Find these classified ads andmore at thedailysound.com
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call564-6001
to advertise
THE 2012 CAMPAIGN STARTS
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GREAT WEEKEND/EVE.JOB FOR STUDENTS!Campaign Fundraising
Positions for Democraticand Progressive groups.Telefund, S.B.ʼs ONLYprogressive fundraising
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SERVICE EVALUATORNo Associated Fees
Greater Santa Barbaraarea opportunities!
Safeway Inc. is aFortune 100 companyand one of the largestfood and drug retailersin North America basedon sales. The companyoperates 1,678 stores inthe United States andwestern Canada
We are seekingresponsible, motivatedand computer literateindividuals to providefeedback specific tostore conditions andservice levels. Hourlyrate paid for driving,observation, and reporttimes. Reimbursementfor mileage based on thedistance associated with
assignments.
Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 8
Daily Sound Saturday, June 2 2012 9LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
ATTN:ATTORNEYS!!
WHYPAY
MORE?Place your legalnotices in theDaily Sound
Notice ofTrustee Sale$175 (for most)
Summons$175 (for most)
Notice ofPetition
$175 (for most)
Name Change$150
FictitiousBusiness$40
Contact
Jeramy [email protected]
orCall (805) 564-6001
X3500
PROPERTY NOTICE OF SEIZURE AND NOTICEOF INTENDED FORFEITURE
Property was seized pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 11470 in the followingcases and the District Attorney of Santa Barbara County has instituted proceedings to forfeitthis property pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 11488.4. The case number andproperty description for each case is set forth below.
You are instructed that, if you desire to contest the forfeiture of this property, pursuant toHealth and Safety Code section 11488.5, you must file a verified claim stating your interestin the property. You must file this claim with the Court Clerk in the Superior Court of the Countyof Santa Barbara, Courthouse, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101, withinthirty (30) days from the date of first publication of this notice, or if you received personal ormailed notice, thirty (30) days from the date on which you received personal or mailed notice,whichever is earlier. Identify the claim with the applicable case number as stated below. Youmust serve an endorsed copy of your claim on the District Attorney of Santa Barbara County,1112 Santa Barbara Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101 within thirty (30) days of filingyour claim in Superior Court. You may obtain a form for making a claim, entitled “Claim OpposingForfeiture”, Form MC-200, from the Clerk of the Court.
The failure to timely file a verified claim stating an interest in the property in the SuperiorCourt and timely serving an endorsed copy thereof on the District Attorney will result in theproperty being declared forfeit to the State of California and distributed pursuant to the provisionsof Health and Safety Code section 11489 without further notice or hearing.
Case No. 2011-33938. On May 14, 2011, Santa Barbara Police Department agents seizedSEVEN THOUSAND FOUR HUNDREDAND 00/100 DOLLARS ($7,400.00) in U.S. Currencyfrom Tyler Bretz at 1438 Las Positas Place, CA, in connection with a controlled substanceviolation of §11359 of the California Health & Safety Code. The seized property has an estimatedor appraised value of $7,400.00.
Case No. 2011-7925. On June 18, 2011, Santa Barbara Sheriff Department agents seizedSEVEN HUNDRED THIRTY FOUR AND 00/100 DOLLARS ($734.00) in U.S. Currency fromJoseph Messineo at 351 South Patterson, CA, in connection with a controlled substance violationof §11359 of the California Health & Safety Code. The seized property has an estimated orappraised value of $734.00.
Case No. 2012-26922. OnApril 15, 2011, Santa Barbara Police Department agents seizedSEVEN HUNDRED THIRTY FIVE AND 00/100 DOLLARS ($735.00) in U.S. Currency fromDavid Lemmons at 100 Harbor Way, in connection with a controlled substance violation of§11360 of the California Health & Safety Code. The seized property has an estimated or appraisedvalue of $735.00.
Case No. 2012-34272. On May 17, 2012, Santa Barbara Police Department agents seizedFOUR THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED EIGHTY FIVE AND 00/100 DOLLARS ($4,285.00) inU.S. Currency from Tony Carriedo at 425 W. Padre Street, #E14, CA, in connection with acontrolled substance violation of §11351 of the California Health & Safety Code. The seizedproperty has an estimated or appraised value of $4,285.00.
Case No. 2012-34272. On May 17, 2012, Santa Barbara Police Department agents seizedTWO THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED SIXTY SIX AND 00/100 DOLLARS ($2,966.00) in U.S.Currency from Alfonso Mora Garcia at 918 Alphonse St, CA, in connection with a controlledsubstance violation of §11352 of the California Health & Safety Code. The seized propertyhas an estimated or appraised value of $2,966.00.
3x5.85
NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETINGCITY COUNCILJune 19, 2012
6:00 P.M.
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC MEETING TO CONSIDER THEUPDATE OF THE CITY’S DEVELOPMENT IMPACT FEESAND TO ACCEPT THE ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE2009/2010 and 2010/2011 FISCAL YEARS.
NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that the City Council of the Cityof Goleta will conduct a public meeting to accept the annualDevelopment Impact Fee Program report for the 2009/2010and 2010/2011 fiscal years and to revise the City of Goletadevelopment impact fees to reflect the adjustments providedfor in the City’s Ordinances.
HEARING DATE AND TIME:Tuesday, June 19, 2012 at 6:00 PM
PLACE: City of Goleta, City Council ChambersCity Hall
130 Cremona Drive, Suite BGoleta, CA 93117
DOCUMENT AVAILIBILITY: The annual report for the Cityof Goleta Development Impact Fee funds and the revisedfees for the Development Impact Fee Programwill be availablefor public review and may be obtained on and after June 3,2012 at the City of Goleta, 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta,CA 93117.
Publish: Santa Barbara Daily Sound – June 2, 2012
2X3.7
FOR GREATER GLORY (R)Daily - 1:30 4:45 8:00
MARVEL’S THE AVENGERSDaily - 4:15 (PG-13)
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Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 9
She has $158,975 cash onhand.Hodge raised $195,013
during the last reporting peri-od, for a total of $338,416. Hehas $132,246 in the bank.Most of Hodge’s money —
about 75 percent — comesfrom out of the senate districtand largely from the Bay Areaand Sacramento.Jackson has made hay of
the fact that Hodge has beenable to get so much moneyfrom corporations outside ofhis district, but not muchfrom within. Hodge is mar-ried to Fiona Ma, a SanFrancisco lawmaker andAssembly Speaker ProTempore.Assemblyman Das
Williams said Jackson willovercome the out-of-commu-nity, big-business moneyfunding Hodge.“We as a community will
make sure she prevails, nomatter how many folks from
Sacramento pour money intonegative attacks against her,”Williams said.Williams worked for
Jackson when she was in thestate Assembly.“She stood out for her
sense of ethics, never chang-ing a position because of thepressure against her,”Williams said. “She stood outfor her constant advocacy forour community’s values andpriorities, quality of educa-tion and protection of theenvironment.”No matter what happens on
Tuesday, Jackson said shewill be fine with the outcome.A cancer survivor, she putspolitics in perspective. Shetells the story of how as a girlshe loved to play baseball, butthe Little League in Boston
where she grew up at the timedidn’t allow girls to play. Soshe took up tennis instead.But it taught her that she
had to stand up for what shebelieved in, and that it wasn’tgoing to be handed to her.“I will fight for this com-
munity,” Jackson said. “Inbaseball it’s one batter at atime. One run at a time. Wecan turn this state around.There has to be a willingnessto try everything and we needto reinvigorate the state.”On the campaign trail,
Jackson has been criticized byStoker and Hodge as beingout of touch with the businesscommunity. They have saidthat lawmakers such as herhave been responsible for thestate’s current budget crisisand that if elected she will
only make it worse.They frequently say that
she’s pro-taxes, rather thanwanting to make cuts. Stoker,for example, is for a two-tiered pension system;Jackson is not.“The biggest difference
between me and her is thatmy entire focus has been onjobs creation and turningaround the economy,” Hodgesaid. “We have to look at reg-ulatory reform in California.There’s a need for a pinpointfocus on jobs.”Hodge said Jackson’s talk
of green jobs isn’t intellectu-ally honest.“When you talk about
green jobs you are talkingabout a sector that hasn’tshown up,” Hodge said. “It’sa political gimmick. It’s notreal. My focus is on real jobsthat will move California in agreener way.”Hodge also dismissed
Jackson’s criticisms that hegets his money from outsidethe district. He said it doesn’tmatter.“I don’t try to raise money
here in the district,” Hodgesaid. “I don’t have a lot of themoney connections downhere. The fact is that I had apassion and an idea. Abouttwo years ago I started talkingabout whether there is roomin the Democratic Party forsomeone who wants to createjobs in the community.”Hodge, who is supported
by fire and building and tradeunions, said he is a fighter forthe middle-class.“I have 300 donors who
have donated $25, who don’tshow up in the campaignreports,” Hodge said. “I amnot going to be walkingaround in Oxnard and askingpeople for a check.”Hodge also pointed out
that trial attorneys have spent
more than $100,000 in inde-pendent expenditures onJackson, so she shouldn’t becriticizing Sacramento groupsgetting involved in the cam-paign.At a Thursday night forum,
Stoker said, “Ms. Jackson hasnever seen a tax proposal shedidn’t support.”Stoker also wants state
government to lay off thou-sands of people to help bal-ance the budget. Jackson saysthat government leaders needto be creative and look at rais-ing money, rather then justslashing the budget.“The government isn’t the
enemy,” Jackson said. Thegovernment is us. We canmake it whatever we want itto be.”
10 Saturday, June 2 2012 Daily Sound
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JACKSONFROM PAGE 3
‘We as a community will make sureshe prevails, no matter how manyfolks from Sacramento pour moneyinto negative attacks against her.
-ASSEMBLYMAN DAS WILLIAMS
‘I don’t try to raise money here inthe district. I don’t have a lot ofmoney connections down here. Thefact is that I had an idea and apassion.
-SENATE CANDIDATE JASON HODGE
Pages_JUN_02_DS :Layout 1 6/1/12 3:21 PM Page 10
Daily Sound Saturday, June 2 2012 11
Sudoku #3
Easy Sudoku Puzzles, Book 6
For more puzzles, visit www.krazydad.com
4 7 8 2 35
3 1 9 2 71 3 5 4 9
4 25 2 6 4
8 4 9 1 717 6 8 3 4
Fill in the blank squares so that each row, each column and each3-by-3 block contain all of the digits 1 thru 9.If you use logic you can solve the puzzle without guesswork.Need a little help? The hints page shows a logical order to solve the puzzle.Use it to identify the next square you should solve. Or use the answers pageif you really get stuck.
© 2005 KrazyDad.com
BEGINNER EXPERT
Answers Easy Sudoku Puzzles, Book 6
For more puzzles, visit www.krazydad.com
Sudoku #18 9 4 6 33 9 6 7 2 1 85 1 3 8 2
5 9 41 8 3 5 7 2 9 4 6
8 5 13 6 7 2 8
2 4 5 8 6 3 16 1 3 9 5
2 7 5 1
5 4
4 6 7 9
7 6 1 3 8 2
2 6 4 9 3 7
4 5 1 9
9 7
8 2 4 7
Sudoku #26 7 5 1 37 4 1 6 2 8
5 1 8 3 4 99 7 5 8
5 3 4 8 18 1 6 2
4 1 8 9 2 38 3 7 5 9 65 2 9 6 1
9 8 2 4
3 5 9
2 6 7
1 6 2 3 4
9 7 6 2
3 4 9 5 7
6 7 5
2 1 4
4 3 8 7
Sudoku #36 1 5 9
9 2 8 6 7 3 4 15 4 6 8
6 2 7 88 3 7 9 1 5 6
9 7 8 3 12 5 3 6
4 3 5 6 7 8 9 29 1 2 5
4 7 8 2 3
5
3 1 9 2 7
1 3 5 4 9
4 2
5 2 6 4
8 4 9 1 7
1
7 6 8 3 4
Sudoku #44 9 6 25 6 2 9 4
8 7 9 4 61 6 7 3 5 28 2 5 4 7 1 3
3 9 1 2 4 88 4 1 3 9
3 2 6 4 74 2 5 6
1 3 7 8 5
3 8 1 7
2 5 3 1
4 8 9
6 9
7 5 6
6 7 5 2
5 9 8 1
9 1 3 7 8
Sudoku #59 5 2
8 1 3 2 72 7 1 4 6 5 9 81 9 2 4
8 6 9 2 15 3 9 7
6 9 8 2 7 5 4 14 9 5 1 3
5 1 3
3 6 4 7 8 1
9 5 6 4
3
3 7 8 6 5
7 5 4 3
4 2 6 1 8
3
8 7 2 6
2 4 6 7 8 9
Sudoku #64 9 77 2 6 1 95 1 8 3 9 4 28 6 1 4 7 5 3
27 4 3 5 9 6 15 3 4 7 2 8 94 8 6 1 3
1 7 5
3 8 6 2 1 5
5 4 3 8
7 6
9 2
3 9 5 1 6 8 7 4
2 8
6 1
9 7 2 5
8 2 6 9 3 4
Sudoku #77 3 5 9 11 6 3 8
5 4 7 6 8 18 7 9 5 2 6
4 8 75 4 3 2 8 9
4 3 1 5 9 61 6 7 4
8 7 4 1 2
8 4 2 6
9 2 4 5 7
2 3 9
1 4 3
3 2 9 6 1 5
6 1 7
2 7 8
5 8 2 9 3
9 6 3 5
Sudoku #86 2 7 9 8 5
5 4 9 84 5 3 2 6
8 1 7 35 6 3 2 4 9 8 7 1
7 8 6 91 9 4 7 2
7 8 9 12 8 6 1 4 7
3 1 4
7 1 6 2 3
9 8 1 7
4 9 5 6 2
2 1 3 5 4
6 5 3 8
4 3 2 6 5
3 5 9
PREVIOUSSOLUTIONS
Answers Challenging Sudoku Puzzles, Book 6
For more puzzles, visit www.krazydad.com
Sudoku #15 1 8 7 6 2 98 6 7 2 5 39 4 3 1 7 6 82 8 3 9 1 41 2 6 4 5
5 6 8 7 2 33 2 4 6 1 5 7
8 5 7 3 1 47 9 4 5 3 8 2
3 4
9 4 1
2 5
7 5 6
3 9 8 7
4 1 9
8 9
6 2 9
1 6
Sudoku #22 4 1 9 6 3 5
9 5 4 3 8 2 11 3 7 9 66 3 7 4 5 9 8
2 9 5 8 15 8 9 6 3 2 43 1 4 8 57 5 6 3 8 9 2
4 8 7 1 5 6 3
8 7
6 7
5 8 2 4
1 2
4 7 6 3
1 7
9 6 2 7
4 1
2 9
Sudoku #35 2 1 3 7 67 6 5 8 94 9 2 7 6 1 5 31 7 8 9 2 33 5 1 6 8 4 2
4 3 5 8 1 99 3 7 4 1 2 5 6
5 9 7 4 11 4 3 9 2 7
4 9 8
3 1 2 4
8
4 6 5
9 7
2 6 7
8
8 2 6 3
6 8 5
Sudoku #48 5 3 6 7 1 4 92 9 3 7 87 4 2 6 1
2 4 1 6 9 5 71 6 4 5 2 8 39 7 5 2 3 8 14 3 6 9 56 2 8 1 45 7 3 8 4 6 1 2
2
1 6 5 4
9 8 3 5
3 8
9 7
4 6
1 7 2 8
9 5 7 3
9
Sudoku #51 9 6 3 8 4
2 3 5 4 1 76 3 4 7 8 5 2 91 5 2 3 4
4 8 6 7 5 2 36 1 8 9 5
7 1 5 4 2 9 6 32 6 1 9 3 7
8 9 3 5 7 4
5 7 2
8 9 6
1
7 9 6 8
9 1
3 2 4 7
8
4 8 5
6 1 2
Sudoku #68 4 3 9 2 62 4 7 1 5 9 81 9 6 8 37 8 4 1 2 3 95 3 9 6 7 2 1
2 7 5 9 8 4 37 1 6 5 9
9 2 1 5 3 8 43 6 4 7 8 2
7 5 1
6 3
5 2 4 7
6 5
8 4
6 1
4 8 2 3
6 7
5 9 1
Sudoku #76 5 9 3 7 4 21 3 7 8 9 54 6 5 7 8 3 12 4 7 1 99 6 3 8 2 4 77 4 9 6 88 9 2 4 3 1 65 7 8 1 2 33 6 1 2 7 9 4
8 1
2 4 6
2 9
8 6 3 5
5 1
1 3 5 2
5 7
4 9 6
5 8
Sudoku #87 1 8 4 3 9 25 6 9 7 2 3 8
2 4 6 9 8 53 1 9 8 7 6
1 7 4 2 39 8 6 2 3 5
3 5 2 1 6 42 4 9 7 3 8 16 1 8 4 7 2 5
5 6
1 4
3 1 7
4 2 5
5 8 6 9
7 1 4
8 7 9
5 6
9 3
To solve, every number 1-9must appear in each of thenine vertical columns, each ofthe nine horizontal rows andeach of the nine 3x3 box. Nonumber can occur more thanonce in any row, column orbox.
SUDOKUSudoku #3
Challenging Sudoku Puzzles, Book 6
For more puzzles, visit www.krazydad.com
4 9 83 1 2 4
84 6 5
9 72 6 7
88 2 6 36 8 5
Fill in the blank squares so that each row, each column and each3-by-3 block contain all of the digits 1 thru 9.If you use logic you can solve the puzzle without guesswork.Need a little help? The hints page shows a logical order to solve the puzzle.Use it to identify the next square you should solve. Or use the answers pageif you really get stuck.
© 2005 KrazyDad.com
For great places to eat, see the Daily Sound’s
Dining Guideevery Thursday!
For advertising rates, please call (805) 564-6001 or email [email protected]
“BOYS, BOYS, BOYS” by Cammie Wheatly
ACROSS 1 Chances of
success 5 Strong of
body and mind
9 Monastery man
14 Femme’s mate
15 Slide over a white blanket
16 Twist in order to see better
17 Ball-shaped cheese
18 About 30 percent of the earth’s surface
19 Applesauce maker’s waste
20 Bunch of boys
23 The hero usually tri-umphs in the final one
24 Mule’s sire 25 Behaves like
a brat 29 Acute 33 Ballet bends 34 Unwakable
state 36 Signs off on 37 Bunch of
boys 41 “___ Gotta
Be Me” 42 Whiting or
haddock 43 Scarlett was
one 44 Plane
maneuver 47 Pool sites
48 Half a snicker
49 Period of prosperity
51 Bunch of boys
59 Palmer of “The Boys From Brazil”
60 Hindu sacred text
61 Wartime supporter
62 Refuse to face
63 With a clean slate
64 What to do when you see red
65 Peggy Lee hit
66 Long and lean
67 Toy that goes around the world
DOWN 1 Something
wordless to read
2 County below Broward, informally
3 Western challenge
4 Characters in a popular computer game
5 Sawing logs 6 Unit of grass 7 Court figure
Ivan 8 Bit of a whirl 9 Confront 10 Look without
buying
11 Cutting remark
12 Ripe for drafting
13 Run-through 21 “In God We
___” 22 Time-saver
with locks 25 Agricultural
pest 26 Garlic piece 27 X, mathwise 28 “Didn’t I tell
you?” 29 Devilkins 30 Bookselling
partner of Barnes
31 Jolly Roger’s image
32 Class closing?
34 Blood flow blockage
35 Up there in years
38 Needing Clearasil
39 Manhat-
tan Project product
40 Thus far 45 Byron’s “_
__ Harold’s Pilgrimage”
46 Twice as spooky
47 Eye-catching haircut
49 Lake ___ Vista, Fla.
50 City in Utah 51 Bass, treble
or C 52 Queen’s
residence 53 Popular
name in Norway
54 Not a perfect circle
55 “Don’t over-do it”
56 Voice in a chorus
57 Surfeit 58 Prefix with
“glycemic”
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
Edited by Timothy E. Parker August 09, 2008
Universal Crossword
© 2008 Universal Press Syndicatewww.upuzzles.com
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Fo
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HOROSCOPES by Eugenia Last
Federer, Djokovic win at French Open(Reuters) - Roger Federer
and Novak Djokovic facedfired-up Frenchmen and parti-san crowds at Roland Garroson Friday, and took differingroutes to negotiate safely pastthem into the fourth round ofthe grand slam.Third seed and former
champion Federer looked lessthan superhuman when hehad to recover from a second-set loss to beat Nicolas Mahut6-3 4-6 6-2 7-5 on PhilippeChatrier Court.Over on Suzanne Lenglen
Court, as the sun was startingto set, top seed Djokovic hadan entertaining, though one-sided, 6-1 6-2 6-2 win overNicolas Devilder, the lowest-ranked man left in the draw at286th.The women's draw lost
third seed AgnieszkaRadwanska and former cham-pion Ana Ivanovic, seeded13th.Radwanska looked uneasy
in a 6-1 6-2 loss to 2009French champion SvetlanaKuznetsova of Russia, whileIvanovic blamed herself forbeing "flat-footed" in a 1-6 7-5 6-3 defeat by Italy's SaraErrani.Federer's survival made
one fan particularly happy.Belgian David Goffin, whostuck posters of the Swiss 16-
times grand-slam championon his bedroom wall when hewas younger, will be next upacross the court for the 2009title winner.Goffin became the first
lucky loser to reach the fourthround at a grand slam sincehis compatriot Dick Normanat Wimbledon in 1995 andalso has the distinction, at 21,of being the youngest manleft in play here."I've been watching Roger
playing on telly for so manyyears," said Goffin, who hadto be treated for a bloody fin-ger during his 7-6 7-5 6-1 winover Pole Lukasz Kubot."Roger has always been
my favorite. He has perfecttennis, perfect technique, andI like the man."Told about Goffin's hero
worship, Federer laughed andsaid: "I'm happy to hear it. It'sgoing to be an unusual matchfor me, knowing that now."The French fans played a
great part in Friday's bigmatches, encouraging Mahutto level against Federer withhis first break point of themeeting.Mahut, whose name is in
the record books after he lostto American John Isner in thelongest match ever played, atWimbledon two years ago,was delighted with himself
for unsettling Federer."It is maybe because of my
game that he wasn't able toplay better," the 89th-rankedMahut told a news confer-ence. "I was able to force himto play bad in a way."Qualifier Devilder was
also cheered wildly by thecrowd, though in his casethere were no breaks, just fiveoccasions when he managedto hold his own serve.Djokovic won over the
fans as well, joining in aMexican wave halfwaythrough the third set, thoughhis antics nearly backfiredwhen he found himself takento breakpoint.The light was fading by the
time the Serbian passedDevilder with a fierce fore-hand on the first of threematchpoints to finish off thevictory in an hour and 44minutes."The last 15 minutes was
very hard," said Djokovicwhen asked about the dwin-dling light. "But it was veryimportant for me to finish thematch today. I wouldn't like tocome back tomorrow andplay a few games."Devilder, 32, was happy
despite the defeat, saying:"The crowd was behind mesupporting me and I had tomake the most out of it. It's
going to be a great memory."Djokovic, looking for a
French Open win to completehis set of grand slam titles,will now play Italian 22ndseed Andreas Seppi, who beatnumber 14 FernandoVerdasco of Spain 7-5 3-6 6-34-6 6-2.Women's world number
one Victoria Azarenka had lit-tle trouble beating Canada'sAleksandra Wozniak 6-4 6-4,while Australian SamanthaStosur, the U.S. Open cham-pion and 2010 runner-up here,battered Russian NadiaPetrova into submission in abaseline battle to book afourth-round match withAmerican teenager SloaneStephens.German 10th seed
Angelique Kerber beat Italy'sFlavia Pennetta 4-6 6-3 6-2and will now face CroatianPetra Martic, who has dis-posed of 29th seed AnabelMedina Garrigues and num-ber eight Marion Bartoli sofar.Second seed Maria
Sharapova needed little morethan an hour to flatten Japan'sAyumi Morita 6-1 6-1 in thefinal women's second-roundmatch, delayed fromThursday.
SPORTS
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12 Saturday, June 2 2012 Daily Sound
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OUR CLOSED SALES THIS YEAR TO DATE ADDRESS PRICE AGENT TYPE SALE TYPE
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