Showing posts with label UCSB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UCSB. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Freebirds World Burrito Has Been Acquired

SB Independent

Freebirds World Burrito Chain Sold
Original Isla Vista Store Not Part of Deal

While Mark Orfalea, who operates the original Freebirds World Burrito in Isla Vista, continues to run the store he founded in 1987 while he was a student at UCSB, his co-founder Pierre Dube has just sold the chain that he founded after buying the rights from Orfalea. Freebirds World Burrito, the chain of 19 Texas restaurants, which is separate from the Isla Vista shop, has been acquired by Tavistock Restaurants LLC (a subsidiary of Orlando, Florida-based Travistock Group) which plans to add another 40 locations in the southwest. Freebirds features huge burritos built Cafeteria-style using fresh vegetables, black beans, and grilled meats.

Sunday, July 8, 2007

Ex-wife released from prison after killing her UCSB graduate student husband

KCOY (Video)

Friday, July 06, 2007
Reported by: Leana Orsua

SANTA BARBARA
The ex-wife of a UCSB graduate student who was killed in front of his apartment has been released from prison.

Jerrod Davidson was killed in Goleta nearly three years ago by his father-in-law, Philip Jones.

Jones's daughter Kelee Davidson plead guilty to two counts of perjury and accessory to murder and was sentenced to four years in prison.

She served less than two years.

"Today marks another chapter in the story of Jarod Davidson's murder because as of Monday July 11 that is the anniversary date of Jarrod's senseless and despicable murder," said Senior Deputy District Attorney Darryl Perlin.

Davidson has been ordered not to have any contact with her young daughter.

She maintains that her daughter was being molested by her ex-husband.

A charge his family adamantly denies.

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Kelee Davidson to get out of prison on Friday

KCOY (Video)

SANTA BARBARA - The ex-wife of a UCSB grad student murdered by his in-laws is expected to be released from prison this week.

Kelee Davidson was sentenced to four years behind bars for being an accessory to the crime and for lying to investigators.

Her father, Phillip Jones, admitted to shooting and killing his former son-in-law, Jarrod Davidson, in Santa Barbara during the summer of 2004.

Jones died of lung cancer in May.

His wife, Malinda Jones, is serving life in prison without parole for her role in the murder.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

UCSB Selects Developer For First Phase of Faculty Housing Project

The Olson Company has been selected to be the developer for the first phase of for-sale faculty housing on the North Campus. This phase consists of 72 units.

Full Letter

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

UCSB Students Leave Tons of Trash

KEYT (Video)

The end of the school year at UC Santa Barbara means tons of trashis being left behind by students leaving the college town of Isla Vista.

Even with extra trash pickups, there are giant piles of debris, furniture, clothing, and leftover food in front of apartment buildings.

Scavegers are picking through the trash looking for usable items.

Santa Barbara County, and the Isla Vista Recreation and Park District are stepping up cleanup efforts due to health and safety concerns.

Some of the departing students also tossed their belongings off ocean bluff balconies into the ocean.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

SBSO: Isla Vista End of Year Enforcement

Santa Barbara Sheriff's Department

The week of June 11th will mark the end of the school year for many UCSB students and Isla Vista residents. It has been referred to in the past as “couch burning week” because many Isla Vista residents will bring old furniture and personal property onto the streets and set them ablaze. The end-of-year ritual of burning couches posses a serious risk to the health and safety of all Isla Vista residents. In 2005, there were 32 reported couch/furniture fires in Isla Vista, and only one arrest. In 2006, through increased enforcement and investigative efforts, there were 31 fires and 19 arrests.

The Santa Barbara Sheriff’s Department has worked with the District Attorney’s Office to increase the penalties levied against those who commit these arson crimes. Penalties for individuals caught igniting a fire or adding fuel to a fire will include restitution for fire response, repair to damaged roadways and property, as well as fines and incarceration. UCSB is also imposing administrative sanctions against students who commit these crimes. Fueling a fire or adding material to an already burning fire is a misdemeanor violation of section 41800 of the Health and Safety code. Igniting a fire is considered Arson, a felony violation of section 451 of the Penal Code. In the past, subjects have been injured by the fires and personal property not intended to be burned has been damaged.

The Sheriff’s Department will work this week with the County Fire Department, County Solid Waste Management and Marborg Industries to identify combustible material and remove it prior to being ignited. The Sheriff’s Department will also increase uniformed and undercover patrols in an effort to identify and arrest individuals who commit these crimes.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

UCSB Draft Environmental Impact Report for the Long Range Development Plan 2007-2025

Pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act and the California Coastal Act, this Notice is to inform public agencies and the general public that UC Santa Barbara will prepare a program-level Draft Environmental Impact Report and an amendment to the 1990 Long Range Development Plan (LRDP) for the planning horizon of 2007-2025. The 2007 LRDP will present a plan for the physical development of the UC Santa Barbara campus to accommodate an on-campus enrollment level of up to 25,000 students (based on a three-quarter average headcount), and approximately 6,400 faculty and staff. The 2007 LRDP will guide capital construction and infrastructure development to accommodate a building program for this anticipated campus growth. The plan will include land recently acquired by the University. The 2007 LRDP will provide:

• Policies and locations for future development including new academic and research facilities, student, faculty and staff housing, vehicular, bicycle, transit and pedestrian circulation routes, recreation and athletic facilities;
• Policies related to sustainability; and
• Policies for protection and enhancement of coastal resources as set forth in the California Coastal Act of 1976.

UC Santa Barbara is interested in the views of your agency as to the scope and content of the upcoming Draft Environmental Impact Report relevant to your agency's statutory responsibilities. Issues to be discussed in the Report include aesthetics, air quality, biological resources, cultural resources, geology and soils, hazards and hazardous materials, hydrology and water quality, land use and planning, noise, population and housing, public services, recreation, transportation/traffic, utilities/service systems, and mandatory findings of significance.

Copies of the Initial Study are available at the Office of Campus Planning & Design on the UC Santa Barbara campus and on the 2007 LRDP website at www.ucsbvision2025.com.

The 30-day public review period will extend from Wednesday, May 23 to Thursday, June 21, 2007. The purpose of the review period is to provide the public and other government agencies an opportunity to comment on the scope of the Draft Environmental Impact Report. UC Santa Barbara will hold two public scoping meetings on Monday, June 4 at which interested parties may comment on the scope of the Draft Environmental Impact Report.

If you have questions on the Initial Study, please contact Jennifer Metz at 805-893-3820. Written comments on this Notice of Preparation and the Initial Study for the Draft Environmental Impact Report should be provided no later than Thursday, June 21, 2007 by fax to 805-893-3870 or addressed to:

Jennifer Metz, Senior Planner
UC Santa Barbara
Office of Campus Planning & Design
Santa Barbara, California 93106-1030

Saturday, June 9, 2007

On The Web: Isla Vista Weekend Getaway

Now that classes have wrapped up at UC Santa Barbara, this is the best time for a weekend getaway 90 minutes north of LA in Isla Vista.

If parties are your thing, this weekend should find Del Playa and Sabado Tarde sprinkled with farewell bashes as the kids pack up for a summer back home.

But if peace and quiet are your thing, cruise up the 101 in a week or two when pretty much everyone has cleared out leaving the sleepy college town and all its beaches available for you and yours.

And there are even pictures...

Friday, June 8, 2007

Close To Home: Arrested UCSB Student Returns

SB Independent: Yoon Choi, the UCSB student taken in by immigration agents on 5/23, returned to campus this week after posting a bond allowing her to leave the detention facility at which she was being held.

See Goleta Observer Original Post "UCSB Student Taken Away by Immigration Agents"

Thursday, June 7, 2007

UCSB Will Graduate 4,800 Students in Eight Commencement Ceremonies

UCSB Public Affairs
June 6, 2007

(Santa Barbara, Calif.) – Approximately 4,800 graduating students will take part in one of eight official commencement ceremonies scheduled at UC Santa Barbara over eight days starting June 10 and concluding June 17. The campus's commencement exercises attract an estimated 35,000 visitors to the Santa Barbara area each year.

Monday, June 4, 2007

UCSB Receives $12.5 Million Gift from Virgil Elings and Betty Elings Wells to Support Research and Innovation at the California NanoSystems Institute

UCSB Public Affiars
June 4, 2007

(Santa Barbara, Calif.) – Virgil Elings and Betty Elings Wells have made a $12.5 million gift to UC Santa Barbara to support pioneering research at the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI). In recognition of their recent gift, the new building that is home to the prestigious California Institute for Science and Innovation will be named in honor of Virgil Elings.

The CNSI is a multidisciplinary research partnership between UCLA and UC Santa Barbara established by the state in 2000 with the support of the state legislature and California industry. By exploring the power and potential of manipulating structures molecule-by-molecule, the CNSI is on its way to creating revolutionary new materials, devices, and systems that will enhance virtually every aspect of our lives – helping to drive California's economy through innovations in medical delivery and health care, powerful new information technologies, energy efficient devices, environmental improvements, and more.

The Elings and Wells gift is the largest contribution to The Campaign for UC Santa Barbara, which seeks to raise $500 million to ensure UCSB's excellence for future generations. With this recent gift, a total of $415 million has been contributed to the campaign by alumni and friends.

"UCSB is sincerely grateful to Virgil and Betty for their extraordinary generosity, we are pleased to have our building for the California NanoSystems Institute bear the Elings name," said UCSB Chancellor Henry T. Yang. "Virgil and Betty's vision for our campus began over 40 years ago, with their shared goals of scholarship and innovation in scientific and business pursuits. As a UCSB professor of physics, Virgil Elings had the foresight to bring the best science graduates and quality research and design together. This integration of science and industry proved to be a winning combination, as it is today at the California NanoSystems Institute."

Virgil Elings is a former UCSB professor of physics who made fundamental contributions leading to the scientific revolution at the nanoscale. In 1987, he co-founded Digital Instruments (DI), the first company to make the power of atomic scanning probe microscopy readily available to scientists and engineers, enabling them to view and explore nanoscale features and structures never seen before – a critical starting point in nanoscience and nanotechnology.

"Our company, Digital Instruments, was a part of the beginning of what people today call nanotechnology," said Virgil Elings. "We also made our money in Santa Barbara, and this is one of many gifts we are making to give back to the community in which we have prospered."

During their marriage, Betty Elings Wells was a real estate investor and business partner with her former husband, Virgil Elings. Together, they launched numerous entrepreneurial ventures, including Digital Instruments, where she was office manager and secretary of the corporation.

Wells said that she made the gift to UCSB to honor her former husband and mentor, the devoted employees at Digital Instruments – many of whom were UCSB graduates – , and to support the university she has been affiliated with since her arrival in Santa Barbara 40 years ago.

"Virgil has made a huge impact on the world by advancing nanoscience, and I think his name should be carried forward," said Wells. "He is a brilliant scientist, inventor, and educator who was able to accomplish what many men dream about and few make real. My desire to help fund education and research in Elings Hall is also an expression of gratitude to our employees at Digital Instruments, since the building will be dedicated to them as well. It is my hope that UCSB will continue the level of exciting research that transpired within the walls of Digital Instruments."

The CNSI building, now known as Elings Hall, stands near the eastern entrance to the campus and is the hub for nanoscience research at UCSB. The institute fosters collaborative research and builds on the substantial and collective strengths of the College of Engineering and the sciences. It also brings together innovators from California universities, industries, and national laboratories and trains the next generation of innovators and entrepreneurs.

The Elings and Wells gift will significantly advance nanoscience research at the institute as well as in engineering and the sciences. It will provide $9 million in unrestricted support to develop and implement innovative research and education initiatives and create new laboratory facilities. In addition, a $3.5 million endowment for the CNSI will generate ongoing resources to build and sustain state-of-the-art programs and to allow rapid response to new scientific and educational opportunities.

Evelyn Hu, UCSB professor of electrical and computer engineering and scientific director of the CNSI, noted that the factors leading to Digital Instruments' extraordinary success – innovation, ingenuity, hard work, dedication, and bringing together a core group of people who share a vision – "map so well onto what is underway today at CNSI."

"Virgil and Betty's gift and the confidence that it implies through its support of this new enterprise at UCSB is coming exactly at the right time, allowing us to bring nanoscience research to the next level," said Hu. "We are now well poised to launch a set of research and education programs that may define critical pathways in science and engineering for the next decade and beyond."

About the Donors

Virgil Elings and Betty Elings Wells are partners in their philanthropic support of the California NanoSystems Institute at UC Santa Barbara and several community projects, including Elings Park in Santa Barbara and the Elings Aquatic Center at Dos Pueblos High School.

Their $12.5 million gift to the campus is the largest contribution to The Campaign for UC Santa Barbara. With this recent gift, they join UCSB's Lancaster Society Leaders, which recognizes cumulative donors to the campus of $10 million and above.

In recognition of their generosity, the building housing the California NanoSystems Institute will be named Elings Hall.

Virgil Elings, who earned his Ph.D. in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was a professor of physics at UCSB for more than 20 years before he co-founded Digital Instruments (DI) in 1987 with Gus Gurley, a UCSB alumnus.

Digital Instruments had a simple goal – to make the power of scanning probe microscopy readily available to scientists and engineers, enabling them to view and explore nanoscale features and structures never seen before. That year, they constructed the first commercially successful scanning tunneling microscope. It was a critical starting point for nanoscience and nanotechnology.

DI received several awards for business and engineering excellence, including three Photonics Circle of Excellence awards and local, state, and national new product awards from the Society of Professional Engineers. In 1962, DI was ranked No. 150 in the INC 500 list of the 500 fastest growing private companies in the U.S. In 1998, the corporation merged with Veeco Instruments, a leading supplier of instrumentation for the research, semiconductor, data storage, telecommunications, and other industries. By combining the technological strengths of each company, the newly formed company added the distinction of being the world leader in 3-D surface metrology.

Elings, who holds 42 patents, served as the company's president and chairman of the board until his retirement in 1999.

At UCSB, he has been a mentor for the Technology Management Program. He has also been a guest speaker in the program's entrepreneur lecture series and in the Economics Department.

Elings, who resides in Santa Ynez, is a rancher and lavender farmer. He displays his collection of vintage and rare motorcycles and European race bikes at his motorcycle museum in Solvang.

Betty Elings Wells is a successful real estate investor and property manager in the Santa Barbara area, Iowa, and Arizona.

She earned a B.A. in history with a minor in political science from the State College of Boston, while her former husband, Virgil Elings, was completing his Ph.D. in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

After moving to Santa Barbara, Wells began her property management career in Isla Vista, building investment capital for the couple's business ventures in which she was actively involved. For Digital Instruments, the company co-founded by Virgil Elings, she was office manager and secretary of the corporation.

At UCSB, Wells served two terms as president of the Faculty Women's Club, and continues her involvement with the organization as a generous benefactor of student scholarships awarded by the club.

Betty Wells and Virgil Elings have two children, Michael and Jeffrey, who are both engineers. Michael graduated with a degree in electrical engineering from the University of Colorado, and Jeffrey was awarded a degree in mechanical engineering from UC San Diego.

Wells resides in Goleta.

###

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Immigration Raid Challenged

SB Independent: Although federal Homeland Security agents came into the apartment searching for her Iranian roommate, a UCSB student was taken into custody on Wednesday, May 23 for alleged violations of immigration law — a murky situation further muddled this week by claims of improper procedure.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Close To Home: UCSB Student Taken Away by Immigration Agents

SB Independent: Immigration and Customs Enforcements (ICE) agents arrested and took into custody a third-year UCSB student early Wednesday morning for possible violation of immigration laws.

Close To Home: Homeland Security "Visits" College Prof.

"...that on the morning of May 23, agents from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), accompanied by members of the campus police, made an unannounced “visit” to the home of a Religious Studies professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB)."

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Suicides a symptom of larger UC crisis

LA Times (Full Article): "We have had an increasing number of students with serious mental health problems while services are lacking," said UC Santa Barbara Vice Chancellor Michael Young, co-chairman of the Student Mental Health Committee. "We just don't have the appropriate level of support to have healthy campuses."

[I'm sorry, what?! There is not an appropriate level of support to have a healthy campus?! -The Observer]

Close To Home: University Will Not Act on Off-Campus Substance Behavior

Daily Nexus: The UCSB Rules and Regulation Committee convened again yesterday in a closed meeting that resulted in tie with seven votes each, thwarting proposed off-campus alcohol and drug amendments from falling into university jurisdiction.

Close To Home: UCPD Apprehends Student for Alleged Indecent Exposure

Daily Nexus: UCSB student Carlyn Lovell McDonald Jr. was arrested for allegedly exposing his genitals to a female faculty member last Thursday in the Student Resource Building.

Close To Home: Planned UCSB Autism Center Gets $940,000 Donation

SB Independent
By Chris Meagher
May 23, 2007

The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation has made a $940,000 donation for a new center on UCSB’s campus where research on Asperger’s Syndrome will be conducted. Asperger’s Syndrome is a form of high-functioning autism which makes social and communication skills more difficult. Asperger’s is found in an estimated in 500 children. The center, as part of the Gevirtz Graduate School of Education’s Koegel Autism Center, will be the first dedicated to developing treatments and finding a cure to the syndrome.

The Broad Foundation, based in Los Angeles, was started by businessman and philanthropist Eli Broad, who founded two Fortune 500 companies, and now spends his time advancing education, scientific and medical research.

“Edythe and I are pleased to create a center that will support the Koegels’ innovative research into a disorder that presents a challenge for many families around the country who live with Asperger’s Syndrome,” Eli Broad said in a statement. “We are encouraged by the work underway at UCSB, and we look forward to advancing the research and knowledge that will someday lead to a cure of this disorder, and in the interim, will enable those affected to lead more productive lives.”

Friday, May 18, 2007

On The Web: Pineapple Pie's Second Home at the Beach

It's still hard for me to believe I live on the beach! But it is truly amazing to walk out of my dorm room and watch the waves of the pacific ocean. When I am having a bad day I just go sit on one of the cliffs and just watch the sunset... cheesy but you have no idea how much stress it let out to just watch the waves. My dorm room is in a perfect spot... With a view of the lagoon and campus it also sits within a 3 minute walk from the beach. Better yet it is right nect to Isla Vista (IV) the craziest college town in the nation. I love being able to walk through IV at 2am and see tons of people still up... some may be drunk but others are just walking around. People are so friendly here too... I missed out the first 2 quarters I was here because my life was so disorganized and It sucks that it took that long to realize how awesome UCSB is! Here are some pics:

Well at least one student has some appreciation for the beauty of the South Coast, and has a view of the ocean when she wakes up in the morning. Now, what about housing for those that live here year round and clean tables in restaurants, make the beds in hotel rooms, paint houses, etc.?

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