The Wilderness Spirit Award & 16th Annual Spring Barbeque Benefit
The Wildling Museum Presents The Wilderness Spirit Award to Jean Kellogg Schuyler At The 16th Annual Spring Barbeque Benefit on April 28
The Wildling Museum Presents The Wilderness Spirit Award to Jean Kellogg Schuyler At The 16th Annual Spring Barbeque Benefit on April 28
Catch the final hours of Lara Favaretto over a glass of wine from exhibition sponsor Presqu’ile Winery
Undergraduate pianist Siyuan Zhang will present a junior Bachelor of Arts recital featuring works by Beethoven and Prokofiev on Sunday, April 28, 2019 at 7:30 pm in Karl Geiringer Hall in the Music Building. Zhang is a student of Professor Paul Berkowitz.
Siyuan Zhang is a UCSB Junior student majoring in Physics and Music Studies with an emphasis in Western Art Music. He has a particular interest in piano performance and studies under Professor Paul Berkowitz’s instruction at UCSB. Recently, he decided to pursue a Master of Music degree in Piano Performance after graduating from UCSB
The Tierney Sutton Band, comprised of 8-time GRAMMY nominated vocalist Tierney Sutton and instrumental virtuosos Kevin Axt, Ray Brinker, Trey Henry and Christian Jacob, band functions as a true collaborative unit with a rich and thematic discography. Spanning over 20 years of collaboration, the Tierney Sutton recordings have featured the same core group of consummate
The Secret Lives of Plastic: Materials, Recycling, Oceans, & Communication
Corwin Pavilion, UC Santa Barbara
Tuesday April 30, 2-5 and 7-9
http://sustech.ucsb.edu/conferences/2019-slp
More and more people are becoming aware of plastics gyres and microplastics in the oceans, cities around the world are banning plastic bags and straws, and China has stopped accepting most of the world’s plastic for recycling. Scientists, policy-makers, municipalities, industries, and countries are struggling with the positive and negative implications of plastic. Topics include interdependencies and challenges in the life cycle of plastics, from design of materials, to uses, down- and up-recycling, energy and cost trade-offs, to pollution and ocean microplastics, sustainability, and communicating the issues. This event brings together experts from universities (administrators, science/social science/humanities professors), government, non-profit agencies, and industry, and presents a fascinating and troubling film, to discuss a variety of timely questions.
Prospective home buyers can get their questions answered and connect with local real estate and lending professionals, as well as eat tacos and win prizes. RSVP at homebuyingfairs.org
Rev. Dr. Jamie Washington serves as the president and founder of the Washington Consulting Group, a multicultural organizational development firm. His workshops will provide the tools to handle and work through difficult situations while navigating the university. His lecture will take us into a deeper understanding of race, specifically how to combat structural and individual incidents of anti-blackness.
Ghana’s Electric Dreams presents the planning and wide-ranging impact of the Akosombo Dam, Ghana’s most ambitious development project. The film visits sites affected by the hydroelectric dam and by the broader vision of modernization that it represents. Historical footage and interviews with Ghanaians reveal the complexity and contradictions, unintended consequences, social inequities, rural/urban divides, and gender
A work of social realism imbued with dreamlike imagery, El Norte is a lovingly-rendered story of hope and survival, which critic Roger Ebert called "a Grapes of Wrath for our time." The film tells the timely story of Enrique and Rosa, siblings who flee persecution in Guatemala and journey north through Mexico and on to the United States with the dream of starting a new life. With immigration as one of the most pressing and polarizing issues on the national agenda, it has a renewed potency as it portrays the harrowing odyssey to the U.S. and the struggles of adapting to a new life in Los Angeles. This 35th-anniversary screening pays homage to the movie's masterful quality and enduring influence. (Gregory Nava, 1983, 139 min.)
Cup of Culture
Dawnland
Wed, May 1st, 6 PM
Film Screening/MCC Theater
Dawnland is a documentary about cultural survival and stolen children. With exclusive access and never before seen footage, it reveals the untold narrative of Indigenous child removal in the United States. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission discovers that state power continues to be used to break up Wabanaki families, threatening the very existence of the Wabanaki people. Dawnland foregrounds the immense challenges that this commission faces as they work toward truth, reconciliation, and the survival of all Indigenous peoples. Post film discussion with Chris Newell, senior advisor of the documentary. 1h 26m
Bringing fiery, fast-paced malambo to the contemporary stage, the company celebrates the unique South American tradition of the gaucho with an exhilarating percussive dance and music spectacle that offers nonstop thrills for the entire family.
Jo O'Connell will speak on Australian Native Plants for Fire Resistance and Garden Design . Santa Barbara County Horticultural Society
Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.
To use social login you have to agree with the storage and handling of your data by this website. %privacy_policy%
AcceptHere you'll find all collections you've created before.