Folded Hills Pope Challenge – Finals
The Folded Hills Pope Challenge Final takes place on Sunday, May 12 at 3:00 pm at the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club!
The Folded Hills Pope Challenge Final takes place on Sunday, May 12 at 3:00 pm at the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club!
Concluding their 65th Anniversary, The Santa Barbara Symphony will close the season with Romeo & Juliet and Dvořák Symphony No. 8 on May 11th at 8:00 pm and May 12th at 3:00 pm at the Granada Theater.
A dozen teenagers will take to the stage to perform solo renditions of rock-and-roll covers, backed by Santa Barbara rock star Michael Andrews as a core musical mentor as well as music educator Sio Tepper and vocal coach/AHA! facilitator Mariangelica Duque. Celebrate 20 years of AHA!, a local nonprofit that fosters social and emotional intelligence
Become part of the solution... Take the domestic violence advocacy certification!
PFLAG Santa Barbara May Chapter Meeting - All are welcome. We will be offering "An Extra Helping of Support, Acceptance and Understanding". There will be lots of time for sharing and discussion.
Telescope Tuesday at Camino Real Marketplace
The Santa Barbara Council of Charitable Gift Planners will host Tiffany Goodall, MBA on May 14, 2019, who will “The Effect of the New Tax Laws on Charitable Gifts and Gift Planning”.
Energy drives our world and our economy and the majority of that energy comes from oil and gas. MIT Enterprise Forum this Wednesday, May 15 at the Rockwood Women's Club.
Colleen Reardon (Professor of Music, University of California, Irvine) will present a talk titled "A Tenor’s 'Voice' on the Periphery: Cesare Grandi and the Siena Production of Farnaspe (1750)" on Wednesday, May 15, 2019 from 3:30-4:45 pm in Music Room 1145. Sponsored by UCSB Music History and Theory Forum.
CHIMERA is a science fiction play set in 2050 that centers around a love triangle and an artificially intelligent firefighting cyborg named AICH#805. Entertaining the fate of human existence in an era of climate change, the play discusses technological innovations that move us closer to “the singularity”—the moment when super-intelligent machines evolve without human assistance—as we simultaneously grapple with the more immediate threat of environmental collapse. Our main characters must reconcile the past and save humanity before being expelled from planet Earth.
This presentation will explore what it means for people from Mustang, Nepal, including those who have migrated to New York, to care for each other, steward a homeland across time and space, remake home elsewhere, and confront distinct forms of happiness and suffering through these movements. How do people honor and alter their shared responsibilities and senses of connection to people and place through migration? How do different generations abide with each other, even when they struggle to understand each other? Craig recruits the Himalayan/Tibetan concept of khora—the embodied act of circumambulation as well as a Buddhist philosophical principle that reflects the nature of desire, interdependence, and cyclic existence—to theorize cycles of mobility and patterns of world-making between Nepal and New York. She will interrogate the ways in which migration impacts the bodies and heart-minds of individuals and households as well as how shifts in physical geographies at once reflect and are shaped by understandings of sacred geography that give meaning to land and lineage, up close and from a distance.
Sienna R. Craig is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. Her publications include Healing Elements: Efficacy and the Social Ecologies of Tibetan Medicine (2012); Horses Like Lightning: A Story of Passage through the Himalaya (2008); Mustang in Black and White, a collaboration with photographer Kevin Bubriski (2018); and a forthcoming monograph, The Ends of Kinship: Himalayan Communities between Nepal and New York. Craig enjoys writing across genres, from narrative ethnography to creative nonfiction, fiction, children’s literature, and poetry.
Sponsored by the IHC’s South Asian Religions and Cultures Research Focus Group, Dalai Lama Endowment, and Division of Humanities and Fine Arts
Become a beekeeper with confidence, skill, and a compassionate heart. Class on May 15th at 6:30 p.m.
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