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Vol. 13, No. 14 | Thursday, July 11, 2013 www.thelighthousenews.

com
THIS ONES FOR YOU
BUCN Brandi Jaco-McLaren of
Naval Base Ventura County lets
her 1-year-old daughter, Athena,
get her first peek at a horse.
The Dalmatian nearly gets a dog treat from Virgil Steele, but handlers
would stop Steele seconds later. The Dalmatian freely roamed the
crowd as the Clydesdales were being groomed and prepped for their
stroll through the NEX parking lot.
Photos by AndreA howry / Lighthouse
A crowd forms as the Budweiser Clydesdales get hitched up for a stroll around the Port Hueneme Navy
Exchange, part of a customer appreciation event Saturday, June 29. Story, photos, Pages 16-17.
The one-day-a-week furlough
is now under way, with an esti-
mated 5,000-plus civilians at Na-
val Base Ventura County (NBVC)
experiencing a 20 percent cut in
hours and pay for the next 11
weeks.
The furlough took effect the
week of July 8. It was up to indi-
vidual commands to decide what
day each week affected civilians
would be prohibited fromcoming
to work.
Because of the furlough, the
Port Hueneme Commissary is
now closed Mondays, and the
Seabee Museum is closed Sun-
days and Mondays.
In addition, the Naval Branch
Health Clinic Port Hueneme is
no longer accepting primary care
appointments past 4 p.m., al-
though this is due to a combined
impact of the furlough and an
unrelated staffing shortage.
Civilian furlough
goes into effect
The Dallas Cowboys are forgoing
their autograph signing at Naval
Base Ventura County, Point Mugu, in
favor of three Military Appreciation
Days during their upcoming training
camp in Oxnard. Page 3
Capt. Larry Vasquez, left,
commanding officer of Naval Base
Ventura County, laughs with Capt.
Dave Sasek after presenting him
with his end of tour military awards
during Saseks retirement ceremony
June 28 at the Seabee Museum.
Page 8
BU2 Thad Dodds of NMCB 3 uses
a router on the plaque hes creating
for the Senior Community Garden in
Oxnard. Page 7
WHATS INSIDE
BU2 Gafayat Moradeyo juggled
deployments and family to earn her
MBA. Page 12
Windshield decals on privately
owned vehicles are no longer re-
quired and will no longer be
issued for access to Naval Base
Ventura County (NBVC) and
other Navy installation.
Drivers are reminded to keep
the following documentation on
hand at all times: current drivers
license, current registration, cur-
rent proof of insurance, current
California emissions certificate if
required and, for motorcycle rid-
ers, proof of motorcycle safety
training.
Windshield decals no longer needed
see deCals, page 22

By Captain Larry Vasquez


NBVC Commanding Offcer
The LighThOuse is puBLished aT NO COsT TO The gOVerN-
meNT eVery OTher Thursday By The sTar, Of CamariLLO,
Ca. The sTar is a priVaTe firm iN NO way CONNeCTed wiTh
The deparTmeNT Of defeNse Or The uNiTed sTaTes NaVy,
uNder wriTTeN CONTraCT wiTh NaVaL Base VeNTura
COuNTy. The LighThOuse is The ONLy auThOrized CiViLiaN
eNTerprise Newspaper fOr memBers Of The u.s. NaVy,
CiViLiaN empLOyees, reTirees aNd Their famiLy memBers
iN The VeNTura COuNTy area. CONTeNTs Of The paper are
NOT NeCessariLy The OffiCiaL Views Of, NOr eNdOrsed By,
The u.s. gOVerNmeNT, aNd The deparTmeNT Of defeNse,
Or The deparTmeNT Of The NaVy aNd dO NOT impLy eN-
dOrsemeNT ThereOf. The appearaNCe Of adVerTisiNg iN
This puBLiCaTiON iNCLudiNg iNserTs aNd suppLemeNTs,
dOes NOT CONsTiTuTe eNdOrsemeNT Of The deparTmeNT
Of defeNse, The u.s. NaVy Or The sTar, Of The prOduCTs
Or serViCes adVerTised. eVeryThiNg adVerTised iN This
puBLiCaTiON shaLL Be made aVaiLaBLe fOr purChase, use
Or paTrONage wiThOuT regard TO raCe, COLOr, reLigiON,
sex, NaTiONaL OrigiN, age, mariTaL sTaTus, physiCaL
haNdiCap, pOLiTiCaL affiLiaTiON, Or aNy OTher NON-meriT
faCTOr Of The purChaser, use, Or paTrON. if a ViOLaTiON
Or rejeCTiON Of This equaL OppOrTuNiTy pOLiCy By aN ad-
VerTiser is CONfirmed, The puBLisher shaLL refuse TO
priNT adVerTisiNg frOm ThaT sOurCe uNTiL The ViOLaTiON
is COrreCTed. ediTOriaL CONTeNT is ediTed, prepared
aNd prOVided TO The puBLisher By The LOCaL iNsTaLLa-
TiON puBLiC affairs OffiCes uNder The auspiCes Of The
NaVaL Base VeNTura COuNTy puBLiC affairs OffiCe.
COmmaNdi Ng Offi Cer
Capt. LaRRY VaSQUEZ
Chi ef sTaff Offi Cer
CmdR. SCott LoESChkE
COmmaNd masTer Chi ef
CmdCm thomaS CYR
puBLi C affai rs Offi Cer
kImBERLY GEaRhaRt
Li ghThOuse edi TOr
andREa howRY
lighthouse@navy.mil
805-989-5281
fi Nd us aT:
facebook.com/
NavalBaseVenturaCounty
puBLi sher
maRGIE CoChRanE
adVerTi si Ng deparTmeNT
437-033
N aVa L B a s e V e N T u r a C O u N T y
please submit your questions or comments to Lighthouse editor andrea howry at lighthouse@navy.mil
800-221-sTar (7827)
Ask the
Captain
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Question: With the civilians taking a 20 percent
pay cut due to the furlough, money is going to be very
tight. Could you open the galley so affected employees
have a cheap, local meal option? It would be great for
morale and our budgets.
Answer: Civilians are critical to the Navys mis-
sion, particularly here at Naval Base Ventura County
(NBVC), where nearly two-thirds of the workforce are
non-military members. I know that the furlough, which
is affecting thousands here at NBVC, is a major blow
to budgets and morale. I value your input and your
dedication to the nation, and I thank you for your sug-
gestion.
However, it is not within my authority as an instal-
lation commander to authorize civilians to use the gal-
ley. CNICINST 4061.1 outlines authorization to mess
in ashore galleys, such as the facilities at Point Mugu
and Port Hueneme, and civilian employees are not
authorized, with very few exceptions. Special meals are
one of those exceptions and have been suspended due
to budgetary constraints. The Naval Supply Systems
Command Food Service Management publication 486
goes one step further, saying that opening galleys to
feed civilians is contrary to the congressional intent
for funding the feeding of Sailors.
I know that Department of Defense civilians across
the country are bearing a heavy burden during the cur-
rent budget crisis while we all work to ensure the con-
tinued success of our nations armed forces. We have
gotten through other hardships, and we will weather
this one as well. Thanks for your continued service to
our nation.
Do you have questions or suggestions? You can
submit them via this forum at lighthouse@navy.mil, on-
line using the COs Suggestion Box at http://cnic.navy.
mil/ventura/index.htm or at www.Facebook.com/Na-
valBaseVenturaCounty. You can also follow NBVC on
Twitter at www.twitter.com/NBVCCalifornia and keep
up on the latest news and events.
Why cant furloughed civilians eat at the galley to save money? w
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CommunityCalendar
GOSPEL EXPLOSION:
5 to 7 p.m., Seabee
Chapel courtyard. Bring
a picnic dinner and
enjoy gospel music performed by
local groups, including NBVCs own
The Anointing. Story, Page 6.
13
back-tO-SchOOL
brIGadE: 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m., NBVC Port
Hueneme Fleet &
Family Support Center. Children of
eligible families can pick up a free
backpack and school supplies.
Registration required. Sponsored
by Operation Homefront. Story,
Page 5.
20
July
VacatION bIbLE
SchOOL: 9 a.m. to
noon through Friday,
Seabee Chapel,
NBVC Port Hueneme.
Information: 982-4358.
15
PaPEr PLaNE
cONtESt: 1 to 4 p.m.,
Seabee Museum;
continues Aug. 17
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Visitors are
invited to build a paper plane in
the museum, then take part in the
contest the next day. Information:
982-5165.
16
MILItarY aNd
VEtEraN EXPO:
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
Camarillo Parks and
Recreation Auditorium, 1605 E.
Burnley St., Camarillo. Free for
all military personnel, veterans
and their loved ones. Learn
about education benefits and
how to enroll in Veterans Affairs
healthcare programs, attend a
mini job fair, and see equipment
displays. Information: Military411.
24
August
The Dallas Cowboys are returning to
Oxnard for their summer training camp,
but this year, there will be no autograph
signing session at Naval Base Ventura
County.
Instead, the Cowboys have established
three Military Appreciation Days during
their monthlong training camp when
military personnel in uniform or with
proper identification can park for free in
the VIP parking lot and sit in a special
designated viewing area.
Admission to the training camp itself
is free to everyone.
The Military Appreciation Days are
Thursday, Aug. 1; Tuesday, Aug. 6; and
Tuesday, Aug. 13. Football practice begins
at 4 p.m. each day.
The training camp is near the River
Ridge Golf Course, at the corner of Vine-
yard Avenue and Ventura Road. The VIP
Cowboys schedule Military Appreciation Days
They replace autograph
session in Mugu hangar
PhOtO bY Mc1 JOhN P. curtIS / NMcb 5
ET1 Duvon Thomas throws CE1 Michael Baxter to the ground during a Marine Corps Martial Arts Program (MCMAP) green belt qualification
course June 28. After more than 70 hours of training, 15 Seabees assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 5 completed
the third course in MCMAP and received their green belts while deployed to Camp Shields in Okinawa, Japan. NMCB 5 is currently
supporting Navy and joint forces throughout U.S. Pacific Command.
MARTIALING FORCES
See COWBOYS, PAge 22
Asimulated crash of an E-2CHawkeye
into a hangar at Naval Base Ventura
County (NBVC) Point Mugu, will take
place at 1 p.m. Thursday, July 11, drawing
emergency vehicles from all over Ventura
County.
We want to let people know that this
is only an exercise, said Robert Huether,
the installation training officer for
NBVC.
This is a large-scale joint exercise, he
explained, involving 21 victims, includ-
ing four mannequins representing fatalities
and 17 people in moulage props and
makeup that look like injuries, from bro-
ken bones to bleeding heads to punctured
abdomens.
The exercise calls for an immediate re-
sponse fromthe Federal Fire Department
Local agencies to take part in July 11 base disaster drill
See eXeRCISe, PAge 22
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By MC1 (SW/AW) Chris Fahey
NMCB 3
Naval Mobile ConstructionBat-
talion(NCMB) 3welcomedits new
commanding officer during an of-
ficial change of commandceremo-
ny June 27 at Naval Base Ventura
County (NBVC) Port Hueneme.
Cmdr. Gordon Meek III, previ-
ously the public works officer at
Naval Submarine Base New Lon-
don, Conn., relieved Cmdr. Scott
P. Raymond, who will remain
aboardNBVCas the chief of staff
for Naval Construction Group
(NCG) 1.
WhenI got wordthat I was cho-
sentotake commandof NMCB3,
I was immediately humbled and
excitedat beingaffordedsucharare
andmeaningful opportunity,said
Meek. As we prepare todeploy to
the Pacific region, its anhonor for
me toleada battalionthat is ready,
focusedandcapable of strengthen-
ing those friendships weve spent
the past 70 years helping culti-
vate.
RaymondreceivedaMeritorious
Service Medal fromCapt. Rodney
Moore, deputy commander of
NCG 1 and commander of the
30thNaval ConstructionRegiment.
Moore servedas guest speaker, and
afterward, Raymondaddressedthe
nearly600Seabees of NMCB3for
a final time.
The last fewyears have certain-
ly flown by, said Raymond. Al-
though there are some great take-
aways when looking at the
contributions we made aroundthe
globe during deployments, Ive al-
ways measured success by the
growth of those in our team. I can
honestly say that NMCB 3 has
grown both professionally in their
skills and abilities and as a unit
committed to each others suc-
cess.
The battalion is preparing for a
deployment later this summer.
Change of command ceremony takes place at NMCB 3
Photos by MC1 Chris Fahey / NMCb 3
Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 3s new commanding
officer, Cmdr. Gordon Meek III, left, is officially welcomed to command
by Capt. Rodney Moore, deputy commander of Naval Construction Group
1 and commander of the 30th Naval Construction Regiment.
Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 3s outgoing commanding
officer, Cmdr. Scott P. Raymond, passes the battalions command
pennant to the new commanding officer, Cmdr. Gordon Meek III, during
an official change of command ceremony June 27.
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5
Moving every 2.9 years often means
learning a new culture with every move.
Every state, every county, every school
district has different ways of doing
things.
If you are new to Naval Base Ventura
County, here are some tips and bits of
information that may be helpful:
Class assignments
Typically, elementary schools post class
assignments in the front of the school the
week prior to schools start. Middle
schools will typically hand out the stu-
dents schedules the first day of school,
and some may have an orientation day
one week prior. High schools will usually
have a student schedule pick-up day the
week prior to schools beginning a day
of the week assigned to each grade level.
School supplies
If you were not given a suggested
school supply list when you registered your
student, you may be able to find a list on
the schools website or posted in the school
office window. However, teachers may
have their own suggestedschool supply
list. The best option may be to buy some
of the basics pencils, pens, college-ruled
notebook paper, a sturdy backpack and
be prepared to run out to the store the
first day of school with a school supply
shopping list.
Supplemental programs and
extra-curricular activities
Many supplemental programs have been
cut from school programs. Many elemen-
tary schools no longer have gym class, art
class or music and band. Those that do
usually pay for the programs through par-
ent fundraising and community founda-
tions.
This doesnt mean that your child will
not have the opportunity to participate in
physical education, art or music. Typi-
cally, the regular classroom teacher will
integrate it into the daily curriculum. Stu-
dents in middle school and high school
will have gym class required, and art or
music will often be an elective course.
Sports and extra-curricular activities are
offered at the middle schools and high
schools.
Dress code
Dress codes vary within the districts
here in Ventura County. Some elemen-
tary and middle schools have a uniform
requirement. Others, including high
schools, have dress code policies that for-
bid certain clothing items. Many middle
schools and high schools do not allow
clothing that promotes a professional
sports team. However, many will encour-
age college-team clothing; some allow it
every day and others encourage it on cer-
tain days. It is best to check with your
students school on policies.
If you have questions about local schools,
call the NBVC school liaison officer at 805-
989-5211 or email monica.james@navy.mil.
Things to know about local school policies
School
connection
with Monica
James
Once again, Operation Homefront
is bringing its Back-to-School Brigade
to Naval Base Ventura County
(NBVC), equipping 350 youngsters
with free backpacks and supplies.
Distribution will take place from10
a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, July 20, in the
Fleet &Family Support Center, Bldg.
1169, NBVC Port Hueneme.
In addition to a backpack, each
child will receive a binder, one package
each of colored pencils and crayons,
two erasers, two packages of lined pa-
per, two glue sticks, a bottle of hand
sanitizer, a highlighter, a pencil pouch,
a pencil sharpener, 12 pens, two pock-
et folders, a ruler, twospiral notebooks,
a package of markers and 12 wooden
pencils.
Registration is required. To qualify,
the parent must be active duty military,
an activated Reserve or Title 10 feder-
ally activated National Guard in pay
grades E1-E6. Children of wounded
military personnel, active duty or re-
tired and of any rank, also qualify.
To register, visit operationhome-
front.net/California.
Backpack giveaway set
9

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Seabee Chapel
Port Hueneme
Building 1433
Phone: (805) 982-4358
Protestant
Sunday worship service: 9 a.m.
Choir rehearsal: Tuesday, 6 p.m.
Catholic Mass
Sunday: 11:15 a.m.
Confession by prior appt.: 10:45 a.m.
Wednesday: 11:30 a.m.
Confession by prior appt.: 11 a.m.
Christian Bible Studies
Womens Bible Study: Tuesday,
10 a.m., Book of I Samuel;
Wednesday, 9:30 a.m., Sacred
Parenting. Childcare provided.
Mens Bible Study: Thursday, 11:30
a.m., Walking with God in the
Desert. Lunch provided.
Soup Fellowship Study: Sunday, 5
p.m., Behold Your God. Potluck.
Catholic Religious Education
Pre-K through high school
Tuesdays, 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Chapel of Faith
Point Mugu
Building 121
Phone: (805) 989-7967
Protestant
Episcopal service: 11 a.m.
Catholic Mass
Sunday: 9 a.m.
Confession by prior appt.: 8:15 a.m.
Thursday: 11:30 a.m.
Confession by prior appt.: 11 a.m.
Chaplains serving NBVC
Lt. Cmdr. Jeffrey Han
Command Chaplain
Lt. Lesa Welliver
Staff Chaplain
Father Antony Berchmanz
Catholic Priest
Worship schedule
I recently came across this heartwarming
slice-of-life story about a hard-working
single momwhodhada roughday at work,
and suddenly her world was made OK
again when she was greeted by her little
boy at home.
She shares her story:
Today, my 8-year-old son hugged me and
said, You are the best mom in the whole
entire world!
I smiled and sarcastically replied, How
do you know that? You havent met every
mom in the whole entire world.
My son squeezed me tighter and said, Yes
I have. You are my world.
Just like that hard-working mother, most
of us have to juggle work, family, bills to
be paid or whatever else all at the same
time. Because of the fast-paced life we all
live, it is easy tofocus our attentiononthese
things that always demand our attention.
If we live life this way long enough, it will
rob us of what is truly important in life.
If our current jobandeconomic situation
gets tougher, it means we have toworkeven
harder so we can get through our financial
challenges. For most of us, this will trans-
late into spending more time at our jobs,
looking for more work or thinking about
new ways to make ends meet.
The sad Catch-22 is that we do this be-
cause we care for our loved ones, yet at the
same time we may lose sight of the very
ones we are all trying to fight for.
I want to remind everyone of this impor-
tant truth: Never lose sight that you are
already the most important person in
someones eyes. God already cares for you
and your loved ones more than you can
possibly know.
Second, please take care of yourself
physically, emotionally, mentally and spir-
itually. By taking better care of yourself,
you will be a better person for your family.
You will also be much better prepared for
any possible drastic changes in your life.
Sometimes people will have to make dra-
matic changes in their lives when things are
not going well professionally or financial-
ly: leaving and moving to another place for
work; having to leave a job much earlier
than planned, etc. Eventually the tough
times will pass. But it is much harder to
have a do over on a broken relationship
in the process.
Your faith, family and loved ones in your
life are things that are truly worth fighting
for. Dont let the distraction and lifes side-
shows rob you of what is truly precious.
Remember, you are already the most im-
portant person is someones life right
now.
May God protect and bless us all great-
ly!
Dont ever forget that you mean the world to somebody
By Andrea Howry
Lighthouse
Beautiful music rarely comes from the
anxiety and stress of waiting for a ship-
ment to arrive.
But in the case of a keyboard in transit
and a Seabee who filled her musical crav-
ings by sitting down at the piano in the
Seabee Chapel at Naval Base Ventura
County (NBVC) Port Hueneme, the end
result is a Gospel Explosion.
At 5 p.m. Saturday night, July 13, pia-
nist Builder 3rd Class Courtney Russ of
Local group will sing at July 13 gospel concert
Photo by AndreA howry / Lighthouse
Five of the seven-member gospel group, The Anointing, gather outside a recent rehearsal
at the Seabee Chapel. They are, top row from left, CECN Joshua Williams of NMCB 3,
AE3 Jeff Dieujuste of VAW-116, BUCN C.J. Werts of NMCB 3, and, bottom row from left,
BU3 Courtney Russ of NMCB 3 and Theresa Dieujuste. The group will be one of three
performing at the Saturday, July 13, Gospel Explosion from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Seabee
Chapel courtyard.
Chaplains
corner
with Lt. Cmdr.
JeffreyHan
Commandchaplain
See GOSPeL, PaGe 21
90
In youi community
Family and
OB/GYNCaie
!ort Hueneme
821 L. !ort Hueneme Rd.
fAMILY CAE (805) 652-4267
Mou. |ri. 9.00 a.u. 5.00 p.u.
KA8LAM0S Su IDI0MA
we accep ros p||.ae aud rauaed ca|e |usu|auce p|aus, |uc|ud|u
Ved|ca|e, 'C/N, 'ecu|e Fo||.ous, Ved|Ca|, 'ea.|ew aud 1kICAk.
^s a parl o lhe Couuuuily Meuorial heallh Sysleu,
lhe Ceulers provide access lo slaleolhearl heallhcare
lechuologies al Couuuuily Meuorial hospilal.
Services avaiIabIe
at the Port hueneme
Center for famiIy heaIth
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Photo by AndreA howry / Lighthouse


BU2 Thad Dodds shows the rough sketch of the command coin plaque hes creating for
the Seabee plot at the Senior Community Garden in Oxnard.
By Andrea Howry
Lighthouse
Wood shavings fly as Builder 2nd Class
ThadDodds leans over his router andmakes
headway on a round plaque that will soon
grace the Seabees plot at the Senior Com-
munity Garden in Oxnard.
When I heard we needed a sign, the first
thing I thought was command coin, says
Dodds, a nine-year Seabee assignedtoNaval
Mobile Construction Battalion 3.
Soa commandcoinit will be. Inthe center
will be two lilies and the words, Honoring
the courage of the militarys commitment,
withthewords Naval BaseVenturaCounty
alongthetopperimeterandEst. 2013along
the bottom.
Theplaquewill bemountedontheexterior
wall of the Oxnard fire station next to the
garden, whichis along-termcommunityrela-
tions project of theReligious Ministries Team
at the base.
Earlier this year, the teamcleanedupwhat
was then an overgrown garden and helped
rehabilitate some of the 17 plots. They took
ononeof theplots inthenameof theSeabees
andplantedcucumbers, strawberries, redon-
ions, peppers, tomatoes, basil, mint andother
producethatwill soonbeharvested, withmuch
of it going to the local food bank.
The plot needed an identification marker,
and thats where Dodds came in.
Ima carpenter,he explains.
As a child, he was always creative and ar-
tistic, but he focusedonpaint andclay. Wood
was not his medium.
I hated it,he says with a laugh.
But thenhe joinedthe Navy andbecame a
builder. Andwhenhis wife, Bethany, became
pregnant withConnor, now2, Dodds decided
to build his son a crib.
SoIgotsomenewtoysandIbuiltConnors
crib,Dodds says.
Oncethatwasfinished, hebuiltathree-quar-
ter scale Jeep out of plywood as a prop for a
VacationBibleSchool inSanDiego. Thenext
year he built a replica of a 1930 biplane.
Andnow, inadditiontothegardenplaque,
hesworkingonan8-foot-highhot airballoon
for the Vacation Bible School here.
Iget aticklishhairandboom! Istart build-
ing,he says.
Headmits that beforehestarts inonaproj-
ect, an untouched chunk of wood can be in-
timidating.
Oh yeah, I always freak out when I start
somethingnew,he said. But Godhelps out
that way.
The plaque is just over 33 inches in diam-
eter. Dodds searchedtheInternet for themost
beautiful flower he could find and settled on
a lily. Hell stain part of the plaque a deep
ebony; the rest will remainlight, coveredwith
only a natural stain.
He finds aninner joyinworking onvolun-
teer projects.
It benefits me as muchas anyone else,he
says.
Hes alsoconfident hecanfinishtheproject
before he deploys at the end of the month.
WithGodswill,hesays, anythingispos-
sible.
Seabee carves garden plaque

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By Kimberly Gearhart
NBVC Public Affairs
More than 200 people gathered Friday,
June 28, to say farewell to Capt. David
Sasek, former chief staff officer of Naval
Base Ventura County (NBVC) who is re-
tiring after 26 years of military service.
Although his official retirement date is
Oct. 1, the ceremony at the U.S. Navy
Seabee Museum marked the end of his
official duties as a Naval officer and the
beginning of his life as a civilian.
Sasek graduated with merit from the
U.S. Naval Academy in 1987, embarking
on a career that would take him around
the globe. He served in Operations Desert
Shield and Stormand led Seabees in Gulf-
port, Miss., during Hurricane Katrina,
becoming first responders to the disaster
that devastated the Gulf Coast.
During his tenure, Sasek earned the re-
spect of his fellow officers and mentors,
two of whomchose to speak on his behalf
during the ceremony.
Retired Rear. Adm. Jack Buffington,
who hand-selected Sasek as his aide dur-
ing his tour as the head of Navy Facilities
Engineering Command, came to see Sasek
retire and tell a fewstories about Saseks
early career.
After meeting Sasek as a young lieuten-
ant in Yokuska, Japan, Buffington se-
lected him as his aide.
When Dave showed up, well thats
when my problems started, Buffington
joked, drawing laughter from Sasek and
the audience. My previous two aides
could sweet talk the ticketing office into
giving us free flight upgrades. Dave
wouldnt do that, so I had to get used to
riding back in trash class.
Although full of jokes about Sasek as
a young officer, Buffington ended with
praise for the man that young officer be-
came.
Its been a tremendous opportunity to
know him. I drove through 1,700 miles of
hot weather and desert just to be here at
your retirement. Its a tremendous honor
to serve with you, Dave, Buffington
said.
Guest speaker retired U.S. Navy Capt.
JimCowell, who had also supervised Sasek
in the past, added to the praise and the
humor.
Nicole, Im sure leading Team Sasek
has been a challenge, he said, addressing
Saseks wife. I know because I used to
have the job of leading Dave.
Calling Sasek a man of integrity and
conviction, Cowell told of a lieutenant
not afraid to deliver bad news, willing to
stand up to his leaders in the name of
doing whats right, and a good friend
whose example was and is worth fol-
lowing.
The ceremony a traditional, often
ritualistic event marking the importance
of the officers service and the beginning
of his life as a civilian was as marked
by strong emotion and humor as the
speeches given by the special guests.
As part of the ceremony, officers rep-
resenting every rank Sasek held during
his service ceremonially passed a U.S.
Flag from hand to hand while Cmdr. Jim
Brown, master of ceremonies, read Old
Glory,tearing up and pausing during the
emotional ritual.
Its dusty in here. Allergies, he joked
with the crowd afterward. That one gets
me every time.
Many others shared his reaction, in-
cluding Sasek, who became visibly emo-
tional when he passed the flag to his
wife.
The flag I just presented to you, the
last time it flew was over my camp in the
desert in a foreign land in time of war,
he explained. I really look forward to
hoisting that flag over our home together
and spending many peaceful hours enjoy-
ing the view from our front porch.
After a smile, Sasek noted that although
he has nailed down his next job at Pep-
perdine University, settling on a place to
live has been a struggle.
We know it will be somewhere in Ven-
tura County, Sasek explained.
At the close of the ceremony, Sasek read
his own retirement orders, which detach
him from NBVC to his home of selec-
tionsomewhere in Ventura County.
Man of integrity and conviction retires after 26 years
Photo by MC1 Chris Fahey / NMCb 3
Retired Navy Capt. Jim Cowell shares a laugh with Capt. David Sasek, the former chief
staff officer of Naval Base Ventura County whose retirement ceremony was held June 28
at the Seabee Museum.
Nearly 40 years ago, Dave
Sasek was a wild 9-year-old kid,
youngest of five children and
the only son of a single mother
living in Northern California.
I was in desperate need of
some positive male influence,
Sasek said, noting that his mom
signed him up for Big Brothers
Big Sisters. As a single mom
withfive kids, it was like a circus
at home sometimes.
After a fewfalse starts, Sasek
was matchedwithStewart Mar-
tin, an enlisted Sailor with no
kids but a personal understand-
ing of what it means to need a
role model.
I lived in five different foster
homes growing up, Martin
said. WhenI was onshore duty
withthe Navy, I hada lot of free
time, and I wanted to share it
with a youngster that needed
it.
Martin taught Sasek respon-
sibility and how to do house-
workandyardwork. They made
pancakes withMartins wife and
got dirty working in the garden.
Martin took Sasek bowling and
took him on ships and around
the medical center where he
worked, introducing him to a
worldof strong role models and
leaders.
In the end, Martin wound up
planting the seed that led to
Saseks Navy career.
Ill bet you didnt knowthat,
Stewart, but youre the reason I
became an officer, Sasek said.
I told you I wanted to growup
and be just like you, be in the
Navy like you. You told me that
if I joined, I hadtobe anofficer.
I had to go to the academy and
be an officer.
And Sasek did.
I knowwithout a doubt that
I wouldnt be where I amtoday
without Stewart, Sasek said.
Martin came to Saseks in-
duction day at the U.S. Naval
Academy. A quarter of a cen-
tury later, he came to see Sasek
retire.
Martin, who retired fromthe
Navy as a command master
chief, could not be more proud
of Sasek, or more surprised at
the credit Sasek gives him.
I didnt realize it at the time,
howmuch influence one person
could have on a child, Martin
said. But I wasnt about to
walk away. Im so proud of
him.
Sasek thanks Big Brother for seeing him through
Photo by MC1 Chris Fahey / NMCb 3
Stewart Martin became David Saseks
mentor when they met through the Big
Brothers Big Sisters program when Sasek
was 9 years old. They have remained close
all these years, with Martin attending both
Saseks induction day at the U.S. Naval
Academy and his retirement ceremony
Friday, June 28.
90
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By Jillian Alexander
NMCRS
There are many variables to consider
when adopting a pet. Owning an animal
isnt just about loving and caring for it.
There are also expenses that come along
with it food, grooming, toys and vet-
erinarian visits.
Within the military community, an
additional expense is the cost of moving
with your animal.
These expenses vary depending on
whether your Permanent Change of
Station (PCS) is within the continental
United States or overseas. Airlines have
different restrictions about the size and
weight of the pet, different carrier
guidelines and different ticket prices.
Check your airlines policy regarding
the number of pets theyll accept and
whether the animals can be flown dur-
ing extremely hot or cold weather.
Moving across the country or around
the world can be a stressful experience,
but adding a cat or dog to the process
can make the experience even more
complicated. Preparation can help re-
duce the stress level. Check with your
veterinary office to find out what is
needed for a PCS. Find pet-friendly
hotels. Compare airline prices. Start
this process as soon as you learn that
youre PCSing, and set some money
aside for unforeseen expenses.
If you are PCSing with a pet but
arent sure how it will affect your bud-
get, and to find out what services are
available to you, contact the Navy-Ma-
rine Corps Relief Society at 805-982-
4409.
Hidden costs of having a pet
Volunteers from Naval Base Ventura
County are needed to help with the Pooch
Parade, a Sunday, July 21, event at SanBue-
naventura State ParkinVentura that teach-
es people about pet adoptions and pet
care.
Thirty volunteers are needed to help set
upandbreakdowndisplays, fill water buck-
ets for the dogs, hold leashed dogs while
their owner register, help guests and work
as parking attendants. Shifts are from 6:15
to 9:15 a.m. or from3:15 to 6:15 p.m. Civil-
ian attire is authorized, and a free T-shirt
and food will be provided.
The Canine AdoptionandRescue League
(C.A.R.L.) puts on the Pooch Parade every
year to provide information about vaccina-
tions, grooming, training, the importance
of spaying and neutering and the need for
pet adoptions. There are dog contests, dem-
onstrations, a community dog walk, a pet
expo and a silent auction.
To sign up or for more information, con-
tact Air Traffic Controller 2nd Class Jer-
maine Whitley at 989-8521 or email himat
jermaine.j.whitley@navy.mil.
Volunteers needed
for Pooch Parade
The NMCRS Office is open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday.
It is located in the NBVC Port Hueneme Welcome Center, 2600 Dodson St.,
Suite 1. Information: 982-4409.
The NMCRS Thrift Store is open from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Mondays and
Wednesdays and is located in Bldg. 829, at the corner of Harris Street and 15th
Avenue, NBVC Port Hueneme. The store is currently seeking donations of
clothes, household items, sporting goods, books, toys, movies and certain uni-
form items. Furniture and used baby carseats cannot be accepted.
A free Budget 4 Baby class is scheduled for Aug. 13 from 10 to 11 a.m.
Check out the newNMCRS Facebook page at www.facebook.com/NMCRS-
Ventura.
NMCRS calendar of events
90
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By Andrea Howry
Lighthouse
About two weeks before a battalion or
a squadron returns from deployment, the
welcome-home signs start popping up.
Those signs will lookfreshlater this sum-
mer when Naval Mobile Construction Bat-
talion (NMCB) 4 comes home, thanks to
the NMCB 4 Family Readiness Group
(FRG) and the American Red Cross.
Saturday morning, June 22, about two
dozen spouses and Red Cross volunteers
met at Bolles Field to spruce up the well-
worn signs and paint some new ones.
Theyve been around the block, FRG
President Corinna Savage said of the doz-
en knee-high bee signs that usually line a
block of 23rd Avenue at NBVCPort Hue-
neme just before the Seabees come home.
Savage, whose husband is Chief Builder
SeanSavage, organizedthe paint party. The
Red Cross donated the plywood and paint,
worth about $250, said Curt Stahl, the Ser-
vice to Armed Forces coordinator for the
American Red Cross of Ventura County.
Its money very well spent, he said.
Two other Red Cross volunteers, Ofelia
and Fred Rodriguez, stayed the morning
to help paint.
While most of the volunteers were wives
and a few children one husband
joined in. Equipment Operator 2nd Class
Sean McCartney of Naval Construction
Group 1 took part in the project while his
wife, Equipment Operator 2ndClass Susan
McCartney is deployed with NMCB 4.
Theyve been married for three years.
This is our first deployment, although
we met on deployment in Guam,McCart-
ney said. Now I can start counting the
days instead of the months.
Onthe other endof the spectrumis Mar-
garet Henske, whos been married to Chief
Equipment Operator Scott Henske for
nearly 12 years and is going through her
ninth deployment.
Im used to it, she said.
Henske enjoys the FRGmeetings, which
organizers describe as the social arm of
the battalion or, as Savage put it: Were
the fun part.
The FRG meets monthly for a party, a
barbecue, a guest speaker or a movie. This
group recently held its over the hump
picnic to note the halfway point in the de-
ployment.
Were here to offer support and boost
morale,Savage said. We also disseminate
information to families.
Allison Woodward, the treasurer of the
group, said the FRG has offered her a lot
of support as she gets used to the military
lifestyle. She and her husband, Lt. Billy
Woodward, have been married two years,
and they have an 11-month-old son, Ever-
ett.
We celebrated our second anniversary
in April, and he wasnt here, she said, de-
scribing some of the many difficult times
Navy spouses must learntodeal with. And
our son was only 6 months old when he
left. He wasnt even rolling over yet.
They Skype weekly andshare photos and
videos.
And Woodward goes to FRG meet-
ings.
That way, she said, I know Im not
alone.
FRG gets ready to welcome home Seabees
Allison Woodward and her 11-month-old son,
Everett, attend the sign-painting party June
22. Woodward said the Family Readiness
Group has helped her cope when her
husband, Lt. Billy Woodward, is deployed.
EO2 Sean McCartney of Naval Construction
Group 1 helps paint welcome-home signs as
a member of the Family Readiness Group for
Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 4. His
wife of three years, EO2 Susan McCartney,
is deployed with the battalion, which is
expected to return home later this summer.
Photos by AndreA howry / Lighthouse
Ofelia and Fred Rodriguez, longtime Red Cross volunteers, help members of the Naval
Mobile Construction Battalion 4 Family Readiness Group repaint welcome-home signs.
The Family Readiness Group (FRG) of
Naval Mobile Construction Battalion
4 is seeking donations of laundry
detergent, dryer sheets, toilet paper,
bottled water and non-perishable
snacks for the 180 Single Sailors who
are returning home with the battalion
later this summer. The FRG creates
welcome-home kits for the Sailors
and leaves them in their barracks so
theyre greeted with something when
they walk in the door. For information,
email nmcb4frg@gmail.com.
Donations needed
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11
The Naval Branch Health Clinic
(NBHC) Port Hueneme will be closed
July 30 from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. because
of staff training.
The clinic, including the pharmacy,
will reopen at 1 p.m. that day and re-
main open until 4:30 p.m.
NBHC clients are advised to do the
following while the clinic is closed:
If an emergency occurs some-
thing that could result in possible loss
of life, limb or eyesight call 911.
For urgent care authorization if you
are ill that morning and cannot wait to
be seen, contact the medical or dental
officer of the day at NBHCPoint Mugu
at 805-989-8815 or 805-989-8816.
Visit the pharmacy July 29 or wait
until after 1 p.m. July 30.
For more information please call Lt.
Alisha Berry, department head of Ad-
ministrative Services, NBHCPort Hue-
neme, at 805-982-6370 or email Alisha.
Berry@med.navy.mil.
Clinic closed morning
of July 30 for training
Sign-ups are being taken for the four
remaining junior golf camps at the Sea-
bee Golf Course, Naval Base Ventura
County (NBVC) Port Hueneme.
The classes, designed for youngsters 8
to 16 years old, are being held Tuesdays
and Thursdays, July 16 through Aug. 1,
and Aug. 6 through Aug. 22. Each Tues-
day and Thursday has morning classes
from 10:30 a.m. to noon or after-
noon classes from 1 to 2:30 p.m.
The camps are $25 per student. They
focus on driving, pitching and putting.
Equipment is provided.
Registration forms are available at the
clubhouse. For more information, call
982-2620.
Junior golf camps set
By JoAnna Delfin
Joint Region Marianas
and CM2 Joshua Norrick
NMCB 5
PITI, Guam Sailors, personnel from
Naval Facilities Engineering Command
(NAVFAC) Marianas, Soldiers from the
84th Engineering Battalion and Seabees
assigned to Naval Mobile Construction
Battalion (NMCB) 5 joined family and
friends who gathered June 20 to com-
memorate the 10-year anniversary of the
passing of Vicenta Chargualaf Peredo,
affectionately known as Seabee Betty,
at Guam Veterans Cemetery.
Born in 1934 in the village of Yona,
Seabee Betty established a relationship
with service members in the 1950s and was
a temporary mother and friend to thou-
sands of Seabees until her death in 2003.
She hosted welcome and farewell parties
for each Seabee battalion stationed on the
island and fostered a family spirit among
the commands and island community.
Capt. John Heckmann, NAVFACMar-
ianas commanding officer, recalled his
memories of meeting Seabee Betty and
discussed the significance of remembering
who she was.
Commemorating the 10th year since
Seabee Bettys passing is an opportunity
to celebrate a life and legacy that really
demonstrates the very essence of the wel-
coming Guam culture that we know and
love,he said. We honor her memory not
only in our remembrance of her life, but
also by emulating her actions in the kind-
ness we show to others.
Debbie Peredo, Seabee Bettys daughter,
spoke at the memorial.
All the kids were excited because Sea-
bee Betty was the only one who could
bring all of the military to the village,
said Debbie. All they needed was three
big buses and maybe two convoy trucks,
and we would have about 200 of them
[Seabees] sitting at Seabee Bettys place
having a feast.
Equipment Operator 1st Class Joshua
Harr, assigned to NMCB 5, recalled his
deployment to Guamin 2002 with NMCB
40 when he went to a fiesta at Seabee
Bettys.
It was amazing,Harr said. The whole
battalion loaded into the old five-ton
cargo trucks and drove into the hills.
When we arrived at Seabee Bettys house,
it seemed like the entire village was out
there to greet us.
It was a good feeling to be part of
that.
Since Bettys passing, her daughter has
taken on the title Seabee Debbie. With
the help of her family, she has continued
the legacy her mother created six decades
ago.
It is an honor and a blessing to carry
on the legacy of our dearly beloved moth-
er,Debbie said. I would like to carry on
my moms legacy forever and to celebrate
her life with my Seabees and the rest of
my armed forces.
Seabee Betty remembered on Guam
Photo by CM2 Joshua a. NorriCk / NMCb 5
Soldiers assigned to the 84th Engineering Battalion share a laugh with EQCM Frank Palmer
of Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 5 and Seabee Debbie, Debbie Peredo,
following a June 20 remembrance ceremony in Piti, Guam, for Peredos mother, Seabee
Betty.
From the 1950s on, she
made U.S. military feel
welcome, appreciated
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By Andrea Howry
Lighthouse
Gafayat Moradeyo knew that trying to
earn a masters degree while serving in the
military wasnt going to be easy.
It had been 10 years since shed earned
her bachelors degree in her homeland of
Nigeria, and trying to study while working
full-time and running a household with a
husband and a 2-year-old looked daunt-
ing.
But shed already proven to her doubt-
ing sister that she could manage a family
and a career, so why not this?
Making the decision to do it wasnt
hard, says Builder 2nd Class Moradeyo,
whos nowwithNaval ConstructionGroup
1, homeported at Naval Base Ventura
County (NBVC) Port Hueneme. Getting
it done and sticking with it, that wasnt
easy. Several times Id ask myself, Why
did I even start this? But I knew I had to
finish it, and I did.
It took three years, but on July 27, Mo-
radeyo will be in Long Beach to graduate
magna cumlaude with a 3.8 grade point
average and be presented with a mas-
ters degree in business administration,
with a concentration in project manage-
ment, from Trident University Interna-
tional.
In those three years she deployed twice
to Afghanistan once as crew leader of
the detail that would make history by be-
ing the first all-female team of Seabees to
carry out a construction project fromstart
to finish and she would have another
baby, a son now 6 months old.
Trying to get the work done in Af-
ghanistan and being pregnant during that
last class those were the two hardest
parts,Moradeyo said. My husband just
kept telling me, You can do this. So I just
did it.
Moradeyo reached her five-year mark
in the Navy in May, at which time she re-
enlisted for another six. Shes hoping a
masters degree will help in her efforts to
become an officer, and she hopes to even-
tually serve overseas as a liaison between
government entities. She is fluent in Yo-
ruba, one of three major languages spoken
in Nigeria.
Moradeyo grew up in an environment
where education was valued and sought.
Her father, a pharmacist, advocates con-
tinuous learning, and three of her closest
friends in high school nowhave their doc-
torate degrees.
She went straight into college after high
school and earned a bachelors in mass
communications when she was 21.
In 2007, the family moved to Illinois,
but Moradeyo soon joined her sister in
Texas, where it was warmer. It was her
brother-in-law who suggested the Navy
and her sister laughed at the idea.
Moradeyo didnt think it was funny. Her
Juggling deployments and family, Seabee earns MBA
Photo by AndreA howry / Lighthouse
BU2 Gafayat Moradeyo, right, of Naval Construction Group 1, talks with Rochelle Goitia, an
education services specialist with the Navy College, about her successful three-year effort
to earn a masters degree in business administration.
See Degree, PAge 13
9

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husband was in England, shed just had
a baby and her father was insisting she
get a job. In fact, it was her father who
talked to the recruiter first.
It was all very good motivation, Mo-
radeyo recalls. So six months after my
baby was born, I started boot camp.
Two years after that, encouraged by her
chain of command, she approached the
Navy College to get information on a
masters degree. Eight months into the
program, she deployed to Afghanistan
with Naval Mobile Construction Battal-
ion 4.
There was very little computer access,
she recalls. I was only taking one class,
but it was all online. There was a lot of
research and a lot of writing, but there
were so many people wanting to use a
computer, and you had to consider
them.
At Bagram Airfield, whenever possible,
she would pay for longer computer ac-
cess.
You make do with whatever connec-
tion there is, she said. It can be
done.
Rochelle Goitia, an education services
specialist with the Navy College Office
at NBVC Port Hueneme, said Tridents
coursework is primarily essays. There are
no standardized tests that allowfor guess-
work.
You either know it or you dont, she
said.
Moradeyo knew it: She ended up with
all As and one B.
Goitia said the degree cost $9,000 over
the three-year period. The Navy wrote
the check through its Tuition Assistance
program.
Moradeyos family will be in Long
Beach for the commencement, including
her husband, who works in the jail com-
missary and will be entering the Ventura
County Sheriff s Academy in October,
and their children.
Also in the audience will be her sister
from Texas, the one who doubted Mo-
radeyo could juggle a family and a ca-
reer.
I told her at the time, Im going to
show you, Moradeyo said.
Then she grins.
National University has become the
third school with an office and classrooms
at Naval Base Ventura County (NBVC).
It joins the University of LaVerne, which
has had a presence on base for 44 years
and is housed at NBVC Point Mugu, and
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University,
also at Point Mugu.
Albert de la Rocha, center director of
operations for the Oxnard campus, said
that even in this age of online classes and
textbooks, theres still a place for a physi-
cal classroom and a flesh-and-blood in-
structor who can look at a student and
see enlightenment and understanding or
confusion and defeat.
With education, its important to see
it in someones eyes, he said.
National Universitys classrooms are in
the Navy College Office, Bldg. 104 nick-
named the White House facing 23rd
Avenue at NBVC Port Hueneme.
Admissions adviser Samantha Stewart
is based there full time. Classes will start
in October.
The school is offering two on-site pro-
grams this fall. Classes leading to a gen-
eral associates degree will be offered from
5:30 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
and classes leading to a masters in public
administration will be taught at the same
time Mondays and Wednesdays.
For more information, stop by the White
House or call 805-433-5687.
National Univ.
opens office
aboard NBVC
Photo by AndreA howry / Lighthouse
Admissions adviser Samantha Stewart goes
over class offerings with Albert de la Rocha,
center director of operations for the Oxnard
campus, in National Universitys classroom
area in the Navy College Office at Naval
Base Ventura County, Port Hueneme.
CoNtiNUed from 12
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14
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Calling it a world-class facility that
looks fabulous, Capt. Larry Vasquez,
commanding officer of Naval Base Ven-
tura County (NBVC), cut the ribbon
Monday, July 1, on the newly remodeled
Needham Theater at NBVC Port Hue-
neme.
The grand opening would come a few
days later when the Needham hosted a
Sunday, July 7, sneak preview of Pa-
cific Rim.
For the first time, the audience could
enjoy air conditioning in the theater, and
they could buy snacks Icees included
in a state-of-the-art lobby boasting
high-definition digital screens advertis-
ing the offerings and upcoming fea-
tures.
You cannot tell the difference be-
tween this and any theater out in town,
Vasquez said during the ribbon-cutting
ceremony.
The Needham closed in mid-Decem-
ber for the $1.7 million interior renova-
tion that brought the 44-year-old build-
ing up to code and improved the
interior environment. Restrooms are
now accessible to people who use wheel-
chairs, and the staircases leading to the
second floor have wooden handrails.
In addition, carpeting and fixtures
were replaced, and the stage lighting was
made more energy efficient.
Vasquez noted that plans and financ-
ing were arranged before what he called
todays trying times.
We couldnt execute this today, he
said.
CO cuts ribbon at
remodeled theater
Photo by AndreA howry / Lighthouse
Capt. Larry Vasquez, commanding officer of Naval Base Ventura County, prepares to cut
the ribbon on the newly remodeled Needham Theater during a ceremony Monday, July 1.
Looking on are officials from the building contractor and Morale, Welfare and Recreation,
including Deborah Williams, site manager for Community Support Programs.
Upto100 childrenfromNaval Base Ven-
tura County can attend a one-day football
camp on base because the Port Hueneme
Commissary took first place in a sales con-
test put on by the Defense Commissary
Agency.
Heisman Trophy winner Matt Leinart, a
USCstar whos nowa free agent after play-
ing quarterback for the Arizona Cardinals,
HoustonTexans andOaklandRaiders, will
lead the camp Saturday, July 20. Its for
youngsters 10 to 18 years old.
The camp is operated by ProCamps,
which has developed, marketed and oper-
ated sports camps and related events for
professional athletes since 1998.
The commissary won the contest based
onaspecial displaylast November that hon-
ored the USO. The display was created by
Terry Avalos, unit manager of the Military
Division for Acosta Sales & Marketing.
Beingapatriot at heart, buildingdisplays
to honor God, country and troops is my
goal,Avalos said. Winning means confir-
mation the message got out as intended.
For informationonthe time andlocation
of the camp, call the commissary at 982-
2400.
Commissary wins July 20
football camp for NBVC
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16
By Andrea Howry
Lighthouse
Hundreds of people came to the Port
Hueneme Navy Exchange Saturday, June
29, to get up close and personal with the
eight massive Budweiser Clydesdales that
star in the brewerys beloved football- and
holiday-season ad campaigns.
But more than once, the young upstart
stole the spotlight.
Yeah, theyre nice, but wheres the
dog? was heard more than once and
the spunky Dalmatian didnt disappoint,
roaming around the edge of the crowd as
handlers harnessed the horses and got
them ready to parade around the NEX
parking lot at Naval Base Ventura Coun-
ty, Port Hueneme.
The Clydesdales and their faithful com-
panion were the stars of an NEX Cus-
tomer Appreciation Event that also fea-
tured 1,000 free bratwursts, samples of
energy drinks and wines, and drawings for
merchandise ranging from a popcorn pop-
per and beach cooler to a Kindle Fire and
a bicycle.
This is our way of saying thank you,
said General Manager Anna Esguerra.
The crowd started forming shortly after
the air-conditioned horse trailers pulled
into the side parking lot. Handlers opened
the large doors, and the horses soon poked
their heads out, eyeballing the gawking
humans.
I didnt know anything about this, said
a stunned Steelworker 2nd Class Sheldon
Smith of Naval Mobile Construction Bat-
talion 3.
Luckily, he said, he always carries a
camera with him, and he spent the next
hour snapping close-ups of the regal ani-
mals.
Handlers were peppered with questions
as they unloaded the Clydesdales, groomed
them and began rigging them up to the
shiny red wagon.
How much do they weigh?
Answer: They average a ton, with the
largest one topping out at 2,300 pounds.
How old are they?
Answer: They average 10 years.
One mom took the question-and-answer
exercise to another level, quizzing her three
youngsters.
If there are eight horses and four legs
on each, how many legs are there total?
asked Kristi Kisling, whose husband is
Fire Controlman 1st Class Richard Kis-
ling with Naval Surface Warfare Center,
Clydesdales visit base, but dog steals the show
Scotty Gray, faciilities manager for the Port
Hueneme NEX, cooks some of the 1,000
bratwursts that were available for free during the
event.
The Dalmatian takes his place as the wagon goes on display for the crowd.
Handlers prepare one of the eight Clydesdales for his jaunt through the parking lot.
Photos by AndreA howry / Lighthouse
Posing in front of the Budweiser Clydesdales was a popular pastime at the Saturday, June 29, NEX Customer Appreciation Event, which also featured free bratwursts and merchandise giveaways.
See NeX, Page 17
Colton Beardsley, 2, asks his father, BU1 Adam
Beardsley of 1st Naval Construction Regiment,
why he cant ride the horses. w
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The Dalmatian takes his place as the wagon goes on display for the crowd.
Photos by AndreA howry / Lighthouse
Posing in front of the Budweiser Clydesdales was a popular pastime at the Saturday, June 29, NEX Customer Appreciation Event, which also featured free bratwursts and merchandise giveaways.
At least two of the Clydesdales are eager to go.
Port Hueneme Division.
Meanwhile the Dalmatian, who had his
breakout role in 2008 in a Super Bowl
XLII commercial in which he trains a
Clydesdale to the theme of Rocky, made
the rounds.
He found a good friend in Virgil Steele,
an Oxnard resident visiting his father, a
retired Army veteran of the Korean War
who was spending a week vacationing on
base. Steele owns three dogs and always
carries dog treats. It didnt take long for
the Dalmatian to figure that out, and
Steele was just getting ready to share when
one of the handlers stopped him.
Budweiser brought the Dalmatian into
its ad campaign in 1950. The Clydesdales
go back to the end of Prohibition.
The Budweiser Clydesdales made their
first-ever appearance on April 7, 1933,
the Budweiser website states. A gift from
August A. Busch, Jr. and Adolphus Busch
to their father in celebration of the repeal
of Prohibition, the presentation of the
original two six-horse hitches of cham-
pion Clydesdales moved father, sons and
drivers to tears. The phrase crying in your
beer was officially coined shortly there-
after.
Athena Jaco-McLaren wasnt driven to
tears, but the 1-year-old was clearly in awe
of the huge animals.
Shes never seen a horse before, said
her mom, Builder Constructionman Bran-
di Jaco-McLaren of NBVC.
Edith Slaght had seen horses but never
Clydesdales. She was only a few feet away
as they were being hitched to the wagon.
I love football, said the spouse of
Chief Firecontrolman Daniel Slaght of
NAVSEA. Thats how I know them.
It took nearly an hour for the handlers
to hitch up the team and start them on
their walk to the NEX parking lot. The
crowd, now numbering about 200, fol-
lowed, and more joined as the horses
started their loop, the Dalmatian perched
next to the driver.
Once they were back in front of the
NEX, they stayed put for more than an
hour, posing for photos.
But a photo wasnt enough for 2-year-
old Colton Beardsley.
Arms outstretched, he looked puzzled
as his dad, Builder 1st Class Adam Beard-
sley of 1st Naval Construction Regiment,
held him tight.
He wants to go for a ride, the father
explained.
NeX event a hit
CoNtiNued from 16
18
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Help when you need it.
The Fleet & Family
Support Center
Dawn Reid has been named the first vic-
tim advocacy support specialist for the
Sexual Assault Prevention and Response
(SAPR) program at Naval Base Ventura
County.
Reid, who came on board April 30, says
she is excited about her new position be-
cause it will allow her to increase her role
as a victim advocate, a field in which she
has a decade of experience.
Sexual assault is a crime of power and
control,she said. Whensomeone has been
violated in that way, its important for the
victimto feel, to knowthat they are in con-
trol of this part of their process. The im-
portance of this and the impact it has on
their healing and recovery cannot be over-
stated.
Reid will be working under the direction
of Julie Whirlow, the sexual assault resource
coordinator for the base. The SAPR pro-
gram is run through the Fleet & Family
Support Center (FFSC).
A 21-year resident of Ventura County,
Reid said she is thrilled to be involved with
the military community again; she was
raised in an Air Force family.
Reid brings to the base 10 years of direct
sexual assault prevention and response ex-
perience. She was previously with Interface
Children and Family Services, where she
focused on the prevention of child sexual
abuse. For seven years, she managed the
agencys My Body Belongs to Me pro-
gram.
As a SAPRvictimadvocacy support spe-
cialist, Reid serves as the primary initial
point of contact for victims of sexual as-
sault and works with all intervening agen-
cies as an advocate for the expressed inter-
est of victims. She provides 24/7 support
for victims immediate needs, including as-
sessing all safety concerns and providing
victims with information on available re-
sources both within the military and in the
community.
She is a confidential resource for victims
who are seeking SAPR services.
Although the position of a victim advo-
cacy support specialist is newtoNBVC, the
SAPRprogramis well-established. In 1994
the U.S. Navy became the first branch of
the military to have a dedicated programto
respond to sexual assaults. Initially that
programwas named Sexual Assault Victim
Intervention (SAVI). In 2005 the Depart-
ment of Defense Sexual Assault Prevention
and Response Office was created. The Na-
vys programtransitioned to SAPRin 2009
and has since continued to provide 24/7
response capability and prevention educa-
tion.
Reids position gives victims an addi-
tional avenue to seek support services after
they experience any type of unwanted
sexual contact. Victims alsohave the option
of seeking services throughspecially trained
volunteer active duty victim advocates by
calling the NBVCSAPRResponse Line at
805-218-9370, the base SARC at 805-207-
5309, or the DoDSafe Helpline, which is a
confidential hotline that offers support and
information from anywhere in the world.
Support through the DoD Safe Helpline
can be obtained by calling 877-995-5247 or
by visiting www.safehelpline.org.
Reid can also be reached 24 hours a day
at 805-746-1538.
Base hires victim advocate in sexual assault program
Dawn Reid has been named the first victim
advocacy support specialist for the Sexual
Assault Prevention and Response (SAPR)
program at Naval Base Ventura County.
Toll-free appointment scheduling ser-
vice: 1-866-923-6478, call 24 hours a day,
seven days a week. Personal, marital, fam-
ily counseling; financial management;
spouse employment; transition assistance;
relocation assistance; life skills workshops
are available at the Fleet and Family Sup-
port Center. NBVC Point Mugu, Bldg.
225 next to the chapel, 989-8146; NBVC
Port Hueneme, Bldg. 1169 behind NEX,
982-5037.
All classes at Port Hueneme unless oth-
erwise noted. Call 982-5037 for more in-
formation. Child care option available
with prior registration.
Career Support and Retention
(Register for TAP classes with your
Command Career Counselor)
Transition Assistance Program
GPS: Mondays-Fridays, 7:30 a.m. to 4
p.m. daily, July 15-19, Aug. 5-9, Aug.
12-16. Higher education optional track
available July 30-31, 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Register via Command Career Coun-
selor.
Federal Resume: Learn about re-
sumes, relevant websites and application
process for federal jobs. Thurs., July 25,
9 to 11 a.m.
Advancement Preparation: Do you
need help preparing for the enlisted ad-
vancement exam? We teach you test-tak-
ing tips and study skills to improve your
chances of success. Wed., July 17, 9 to
11 a.m.; Wed., July 31, 9 to 11 a.m.,
Point Mugu.
Interview Skills: Prepare for your job
interview, learn about the interview pro-
cess, conduct a mock interview and
more. Thurs., July 11, 9 to 11 a.m.;
Wed., July 24, 2 to 4 p.m.
Are you LinkedIn?: Using LinkedIn
for your job search. Great networking!
Tues., July 23, 1 to 2:30 p.m.
Excel Basics: Learn how to use Mi-
crosoft Office Excel 2007 software for
both personal and professional use.
Tues., July 16, 1 to 3:30 p.m.
Writing the Perfect Resume & Cov-
er Letter: Learn cutting-edge resume and
cover letter techniques to successfully
present your skills. Wed., July 17, 1 to
3 p.m.; Tues., July 30, 10 a.m. to
noon.
Power Point Tips & Tricks: Learn
how to create basic presentation using
Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007.
Thurs., July 18, 9 to 10:30 a.m.
Spouse & Family Employment:
Learn important job search skills, re-
sume basics and more! Thurs., July 18,
noon to 1 p.m.
Excel Intermediate: Learn advanced
shortcuts, formulas, charts, referencing
and more using Microsoft Office Excel
2007. Thurs., July 25, 1 to 3:30 p.m.
VA Paperwork Assistance: Hands-on
assistance in filing, reopening or appeal-
ing your VA claim. Active duty, veter-
ans, widows, walk-ins welcome! Wed,,
July 24, 9 a.m. to noon.
Deployment Readiness
IA Family Connection: Whether this
is your first or 21st experience with de-
ployments or IAs, join others and meet
with spouses of deployed service members.
Share your knowledge of how to thrive
during this experience. Thurs., July 11,
noon to 1 p.m.
Exceptional Family Member
General information: 982-2646.
EFM Overview: The Exceptional
Family Member Program(EFMP) serves
military families with special needs, in-
cluding medical, dental, mental health,
developmental or educational issues. The
program ensures families are assigned to
areas where they can access necessary re-
sources. Mon., Aug. 12, 10 a.m. to noon,
Point Mugu.
EFMP Point of Contact Training: As-
ContinuED on 19
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Help when you need it.
The Fleet & Family
Support Center
sist each command in developing mission
readiness for Sailors who support a loved
one with special needs. Tues., Aug. 13,
10 a.m. to noon, Point Mugu.
EFMP Special Needs Network: Get
together with other EFMP members to
share information and support. Wed.,
Aug. 14, 10 a.m. to noon, Point Mugu.
Relocation Assistance
General information: 982-3726.
Smooth Move: Make you PCS move
easy, simple and smooth. Learn about
your entitlements from the experts.
Thurs., July 18, 1 to 3 p.m.
Married to the Military: Newly mar-
ried to the Navy? Learn about military
benefits, family programs, Navy jargon
and customs. Wed., July 24, 9 to 11
a.m.
New Parent Support
Hello Baby Workshop: Introduction
to New Parent Support Program. Get
important info on TRICARE, NMCRSs
Budget for Babies workshop, seatbelt
safety and more! Infants welcome. Thurs.,
Aug. 1, 5 to 7:30 p.m.
Brand New Baby (2-part Thursday
series): 45 Reasons why babies cry and
how to soothe your newborn. Aug. 8 and
15, 6 to 7 p.m.
Infant Massage: Connect with your
baby. Massage improves digestion, brain
development and sleep routines. Fri., Aug.
9, 1 to 2:30 p.m.
New Mamas Support Circle: For ex-
pecting mamas and mamas with babies
015 months old. Information, education
and support. Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. No registration needed. Just
stop in!
Toddler Playgroup: Hands-on devel-
opmental activities for toddlers 18 months
to 4 years and caregivers. Promote social-
ization skills and motor development.
Thursdays, 10 to 11 a.m., Midway Es-
tates.
Life Skills
General information: 982-3102.
Stress Management 101: Learn to
tackle stress and build your stress stamina.
Develop the skills and tools to more ef-
fectively manage your response to stress-
ors. Tues., Aug. 6, 11 a.m. to noon.
Assertiveness: How to Express Your
Ideas & Stand Up for Yourself (4-part
Tuesday series): Learn how to express
your ideas and stand up for yourself at
workandinrelationships. Aug. 13 through
Sept. 3, 3:30 to 5 p.m.
Financial Management
One-on-one financial counseling avail-
able. Topics include money management,
home buying, car buying, retirement plan-
ning and financial planning for deploy-
ment. Call 989-8844 for appointment.
Free Food Distribution
Saturday, July 20, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
Bldg. 19, near the Pleasant Valley Gate
on NBVC Port Hueneme behind Print
Shop on the loading dock. Bring a laundry
basket to carry your items. Food items
vary frommonth to month. One issue per
family. Bring LES; income guideline state-
ment available at distribution site. Eligibil-
ity: Active duty E-6 and below or spouse;
E-7 with two or more dependents; or a
custodian of a child who is a family mem-
ber of active duty personnel on deploy-
ment.
For information, please call Sandy Lyle,
command liaison, at 982-3159 or e-mail
sandra.lyle@navy.mil.
coNtiNueD FRoM 18
90~~
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By Delaney Rodriguez
NSWC PHD
The African American Focus Group
(AAFG) at Naval Surface Warfare Center,
Port Hueneme Division (NSWC PHD),
hosted a Juneteenth celebration June 18
featuring guest speaker Walter Jackson, an
author and personal growth expert and the
co-owner of Self Awareness Trainings.
The event began with welcoming and
opening remarks from Michael Gibbons,
AAFGchairperson, and Capt. Burt Espe,
NSWCPHDcommanding officer, discuss-
ing the importance of Juneteenth.
It is about people of all races and reli-
gions joining hands to acknowledge a time
in our history that shaped and continues
to influence todays society, Espe said.
Todays purpose is to celebrate African
American freedom and to encourage re-
spect for all people.
Juneteenth represents June 19, 1865,
whenslaves across America learnedof their
freedom. Althoughthe EmancipationProc-
lamation was issued on Jan. 1, 1863, it took
more than two years for the news to reach
across the country. Today, the festival com-
memorates African American freedom,
emphasizing education, achievement and
the power to overcome. It is a day, a week,
and in some areas a month, marked with
celebrations, guest speakers, picnics and
family gatherings.
Jackson stated that people are enslaved
by their own thoughts and ideas; however
everyone has the ability to free themselves
fromtheir chains. To do this, one must use
the Power Principles used by superstar
athletes, including self-coaching and posi-
tive self-talk.
Jackson learned these lessons through
several personal losses and hardships in his
life. Throughout his speech, he spoke about
his hardships growing up in a house filled
with anger, losing both his best friend and
his future in sports through a high school
car accident, and, years later, losing his
father due to a violent tragedy. But because
of the support andstrengthof those around
him, including his mother after his fathers
tragic death and the love of his wife, he
learnedthe importance of the Power Prin-
ciples.
Theres a spirit inside of everyone,
Jackson said, to help you participate and
to win in life. When life knocks you down,
you need to be like an athlete; pick yourself
up and just keep going.
Following Jacksons speech, attendees
were invited to close the celebration by
sharing in authentic cuisine typically as-
sociated with Juneteenth festivities.
NSWCPHD, locatedat Naval Base Ven-
tura County, is the Navys premier in-ser-
vice engineering and logistics center and
has been in existence for 50 years.
NSWC PHD commemorates Juneteenth with guest speaker
Photo by Delaney RoDRiguez / nSWC PhD
Honorary speaker Walter H. Jackson, center, poses with Michael Gibbons, left, chairperson
of the African American Focus Group at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme
Division (NSWC PHD), and Capt. Burt Espe, NSWC PHD commanding officer, after the June
18 Juneteenth event.
Approximately 65 percent of all De-
partment of Defense household moves
occur between May 15 and Aug. 1.
What can you do to ensure a smooth
move? Plan!
The Naval Supply Systems Command
is offering the following advice to anyone
getting ready for a move:
With the decline in moving companies
capacity and Department of Defense
budget cuts, the sooner you start working
with the local Personal Property Office,
the greater your chance of getting the
desired pack-out date.
Dont wait until a week or two before
the desired pack-out date to complete the
process at www.move.mil. Enter all your
data and paperwork as soon as possible.
For Navy information on getting started
with the move process, go to www.navsup.
navy.mil/household.
Another tip is to organize your house
and belongings. Go through all your
rooms and boxes from the last move to
make sure you still need the items. If it
hasnt been worn or used in the last year,
do you still need it?
Sort your items by the type of ship-
ment: household shipment; unaccompa-
nied baggage, if authorized; profession-
al gear; and what is going in your suitcase
or car. By sorting, you may find out what
needs to be sold, donated or disposed of.
Keep in mind that if you exceed your
authorized weight allowance it can be
expensive!
Heres a look at two of the most com-
monly used household goods terms and
what they mean:
Household shipment: This is your
main shipment. It includes furniture,
dishes, washer and dryer, barbecue grill,
outdoor furniture, childrens play furni-
ture and most of your clothes.
Unaccompanied baggage, if autho-
rized: This is the small shipment of items
that you will need to survive until your
big household shipment arrives. This is
normally only authorized with overseas
orders. Items to include would be enough
kitchenware and dishes to use daily (not
your china), crib, clothes, some uniforms,
some DVDs (but not your entire library),
etc.
Moving advice from NAVSUP
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9

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NavalMobileConstructionBattalion(NMCB)
3 will join the other six members of The
Anointingandperforminagospel concert in
the Seabee Chapel courtyard. Families are in-
vited to bring a picnic dinner and enjoy two
hours of gospel music. A group from Port
Huenemes Evangelistic Missionary Baptist
Church and a Los Angeles choir, Kingdom
Sown, will alsoperform.
Hopefully were starting a tradition,Russ
said. This couldbecome anannual event.
Russ grewup in Corsicana, Texas, and has
played piano since she was 7 years old. It was
nearlyayearagothat shegrewimpatient wait-
ingfor her keyboardtoarrive andmeandered
intotheSeabeeChapel, hopingsomeonewould
let her spendafewminutes onthe piano.
Ineededtojust freemymindandplay,she
said. Religious Programming Specialist 2nd
Class Royce Jones heard what Russ could do
andsoonaskedif she wouldbe willingtoplay
during aSundayservice.
Jones begansingingwithRuss andbrought
inafriend. Lateron, apastorssonstoppedby.
Then a married couple joined in, and about
three weeks ago, The Anointing became offi-
cial.
The other vocalists include:
Aviation Electricians Mate 3rd Class Jeff
Dieujuste of Carrier Airbone Early Warning
Squadron(VAW) 116.
Dieujustes wife of three years, Theresa.
ConstructionElectricianConstructionman
Joshua Williams of NMCB3.
Builder Constructionman C.J. Werts of
NMCB3.
Builder3rdClassEricCampbell of NBVC,
a percussionist as well as a vocalist.
Williams sanginachurchchoir inNewOr-
leans until Hurricane Katrina uprooted him
andhis family. TheymovedtoTexas, andWil-
liams kept singing, even after joining the
Navy.
Werts, the son of a pastor from Winston-
Salem, N.C., plays brass instruments and
sings.
The Dieujustes, who met in high school in
NewJersey, havebeentogether for eight years,
andbothhave sung inchurchchoirs.
About three months ago, Jones transferred
to Naval Air Station North Island, but that
hasntslowedanythingdown.Shepracticeswith
the groupover conference calls.
It sounds nice, Russ said. Seabees can
do!
continued from 6
Gospel concert July 13 at chapel
Periodically, the Preventive Medicine
Division of Naval Branch Health Clinic
Port Hueneme receives complaints about
bedbugs. These pesky little critters were
recently discovered again in one location
on Naval Base Ventura County, and the
infested area was sprayed and the problem
eliminated.
Bedbugs, often considered to be a sign
of filth and disease, are springing up in
the cleanest of places.
Bedbugs live in dark cracks and crev-
ices of furniture, especially mattresses and
couches. No bigger than an apple seed,
they are small and ugly, with dark brown,
oval-shaped bodies that appear flat from
the top.
While they can feed on any warm-blood-
ed organism, bedbugs have a penchant for
humans. Their bites look like teeny mos-
quito bites, so it often takes awhile to real-
ize that those itchy spots arent your aver-
age mosquitos summer meal.
do bedbugs spread disease?
Bedbugs should not be considered a
medical or public health hazard. They are
not known to spread disease, but they can
be an annoyance because their presence
may cause itching and loss of sleep. Some-
times the itching can lead to excessive
scratching that can sometimes increase the
chance of a secondary skin infection. Bite
marks may take as long as 14 days to de-
velop in some people, so it is important
to look for other clues when determining
if bedbugs have infested an area. These
signs include:
Exoskeletons after molting.
Bedbugs in the fold of mattresses and
sheets.
Rusty-colored blood spots caused by
the blood-filled fecal material that they
excrete on the mattress or nearby furni-
ture.
A sweet musty odor.
How did i get bedbugs?
Bedbugs are experts at hiding. Their
slim flat bodies allow them to fit into the
smallest of spaces and stay there for long
periods of time, even without a blood
meal. Bedbugs are usually transported
from place to place as people travel. They
hitchhike in the seams and folds of lug-
gage, overnight bags, folded clothes, bed-
ding, furniture and anywhere else where
they can hide. Most people do not realize
they are transporting them as they travel
from location to location, infecting areas
as they travel.
How are bedbugs treated and prevented?
The best way to treat a bite is to avoid
scratching the area. Apply antiseptic
creams or lotions and take an antihista-
mine. Bedbug infestations are commonly
treated by insecticide spraying. If you sus-
pect that you have an infestation, contact
your landlord or professional pest control
company that is experienced with treating
bedbugs.
The best way to prevent bedbugs is to
regularly look for signs of an infestation.
Bedbugs are difficult to deal with and re-
quire a combination of thorough and
repeated surveillance, preparation prior
to treatment, chemical treatment and pest
proofing. Non-chemical control in-
cludes:
Washing all clothes and linens sus-
pected of infestation in hot water, then
transporting themin sealed bags for chem-
ical treatment.
Cleaning thoroughly, especially along
edges and moldings and within bed frames
and drawers, and disposing of the vacuum
bag in a sealed plastic bag and removing
it from the home immediately.
Eliminating all clutter and removing
and inspecting all belongings from the
bed, closets and drawers. Pay close atten-
tion to any cracks or seams in the bed,
curtains and cloth straps within the bed
frame.
If its a heavy infestation, mattresses
and fabric items may have to be discard-
ed.
If you have questions, call Naval Branch
Health Clinic Port Hueneme Preventive
Medicine at 982-6358, 6313 or 6316 or
visit the Navy Environmental and Preven-
tive Medicine Unit Five website at http://
www.nepmu5.med.navy.mil.
Health clinic offers tips on dealing with pesky bedbugs
Bedbugs should not be
considered a medical or
public health hazard.
They are not known to
spread disease.
90~
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that serves NBVC, five engines from
across Ventura County, three ambulanc-
es, a Life Flight helicopter and a medical
examiner.
Under the scenario, an E-2C Hawkeye
from Carrier Airborne Early Warning
Squadron (VAW) 113, carrying a crew of
four and 4,000 pounds of fuel, takes off
fromPoint Mugu for landing practice but
collides with a flock of birds. Out of con-
trol, it crashes into Hangar 34, where
people are working on both the upper
and lower floors. The aircraft and the
hangar erupt into flames and fill with
smoke.
The exercise will test response times,
accuracy in triage, patient tracking and
other elements of an air disaster.
Exercises like this help us to be better
prepared and better able to limit injuries
to personnel and damage to facilities,
Huether said.
There have been two air crashes in three
years involving NBVC Point Mugu. In
May of 2011, a civilian tanker jet carry-
ing 150,000 pounds of fuel crashed on
takeoff, with its crew of three walking
away virtually unscathed. One year later,
a contractor flying a Hawker Hunter jet
on a fighter-training mission crashed into
a field near California State University
Channel Islands as he was returning to
the Point Mugu airstrip. The pilot, the
only one on board, was killed.
CONtiNued frOm 3
exercise will simulate air crash at NBVC Point mugu
parking lot will be located off Vineyard
Avenue. Check-in for all military person-
nel will be in the VIP and Corporate Day
check-in tent.
Military personnel and their immediate
family members will be assigned to a spe-
cial location so they can watch practice,
and theyll be honored during the event.
The designated area holds only 500
people. When capacity is reached, remain-
ing military personnel will be directed to
the general admission area.
All military personnel in uniform or
with military ID will also receive a 15
percent discount on concessions and mer-
chandise sold on site.
The Cowboys arrive in Ventura Coun-
ty July 19. Practice begins Sunday, July
21. The team leaves Aug. 16, and there
are several days in between when they
dont practice because theyre playing
preseason games.
For a complete schedule, look up
Training Camp Scheduleon the left side
of the home page at www.dallascowboys.
com.
CONtiNued frOm 3
Cowboys to honor military
Random gate checks and traffic stops
will be conductedtomake sure drivers have
that documentation, said Cmdr. Chris
Kenefick, base operations officer.
After Sept. 11, 2001, access to military
installations required the presentation of
an identification card or valid credential.
The windshield decals, issued by the De-
partment of Defense, were not intended to
be used for base access, only to serve as
proof that the car was registered and in-
sured.
Were more interested in the identifica-
tion of the people inside the car, not the
car itself, Kenefick said.
The Air Force was the first branch to
stop issuing the decals. Some Army instal-
lations have followed suit. The Marines still
require them; Navy personnel who remove
their decals will need to stop at Pass & ID
if they need to enter a Marine facility.
Kenefick added that its up to the indi-
vidual car owner whether to scrape off the
current decal.
Theres no requirement for people to
take it off, he said.
The decals haddrawncomplaints through
the years from people who feared they
made their car a target outside the gates of
military installations.
decals can go
CONtiNued frOm 1 w
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23
Friday, July 12
7pm: 42 PG13
9pm: Scary Movie 5 R
Saturday, July 13
2pm: Scary Movie 5 PG13
4pm: G. I. Joe: Retaliation PG13
7pm: Evil Dead R
Sunday, July 14
2pm: The Host PG13
4pm: Oblivion PG13
Friday, July 19
7pm: G. I. Joe: Retaliation PG13
Saturday, July 20
2pm: The Host PG13
4pm: Tyler Perrys Temptation PG13
7pm: The Big Wedding R
Sunday, July 21
2pm: The Croods PG
4pm: 42 PG13
All base movies are FREE. Authorized patrons include active duty and dependents, reservists, retirees, and DoD civilians.
Listings are subject to change without notice. For up-to-date movie listings, please call the MWR Movie Line at (805) 982-5002.
July 11 - July 21, 2013
Thursday, July 11
7pm: Star Trek: Into Darkness PG13
Friday, July 12
7pm: Fast & Furious 6 PG13
9:20pm: The Hangover 3 R
Saturday, July 13
2pm: Now You See Me PG
5pm: Fast & Furious 6 PG13
8pm: The Hangover 3 R
Sunday, July 14
2pm: After Earth PG13
5pm: Fast & Furious 6 PG13
Thursday, July 18
7pm: Now You See Me PG13
Friday, July 19
7pm: After Earth PG13
9pm: The Purge R
Saturday, July 20
2pm: Man of Steel PG
5pm: Now You See Me PG13
8pm: This is the End PG13
Sunday, July 21
2pm: After Earth PG13
5pm: The Internship PG13
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Announcements
100-170
To our advertisers:
Please check your ad the frst
day and report any issues
promptly. Classifed ads are
charged using an agate line
measurement. Visible lines are
larger for readability and add
enhancement, hence billable
lines may be more than what is
visible to the reader.
105
Found/Lost
LOST blk Shepherd/Lab mix,
w/ gold brows, male, very
friendly, name RJ, in the
vicinity Rhonda St., Ox.
Sat 6/29. Needs meds for
heart murmur.Terribly
Missed. 805-822-2213
REWARD $300 VCS332540
105
Found/Lost
Lost Shih Tzu
She has short hair on her
body and long hair on
her face and head with
ponytail on top. She is
white; light brown;
brown and beige with off
black ears. If you have
found or seen my baby
Please be a good person
and return her to me. I
am in a wheelchair and
hard of hearing and she
is my comforter and
ears. I miss her so much
and her toys are a
constant reminder that
shes not home with me.
There will be a $100.00
reward with no questions
asked. Or please call the
number on her collar.
In the vicinity of Third
Street and Lupita Street,
Oxnard May 22, 2013
(805)204-6146
VCS330568
115
Greetings
$CASH$ FOR OLD
Guitars, Basses,
Amps, Banjos,
Ukes, Mandolins,
etc. 805-981-7196
VCS332314
150
Special Notices
TAX
DEDUCTABLE
DONATIONS
NEEDED
Clothing, housewares,
electronics, books,
accessories, etc.
Help improve the lives
of individuals with
developmental disabilities.
Call The Arc Foundation
Thrift Stores to
schedule a pick-up
800-228-1413
Also ask us about are estate
services and vehicle
donation program.
VCS332322
Merchandise
200-297
204
Antiques And
Collectibles
ALL CASH
BUYING
All U.S. Silver, Gold
and Copper Coins,
Large & Small Collections.
Foreign Coins. Medals -
Tokens. Gold Jewelry
Broken or unwanted Gold
Jewelry. Scrap Gold
& Silver. Dental Gold.
Sterling Flatware
Watches
1211 Maricopa, Ojai
40 Years Buying
805-646-4904
VCS331645
BUYER of OLD COINS
Coin Collections
Silver & Gold Coins
TOP $$$ PAID
I BUY TOY TRAINS
Old BB CARDS, Old TOYS.
Jeff 805-302-7104 VCS331291
204
Antiques And
Collectibles
BUYING
Coins 1964 & Older
Dimes - $1.15
Quarters - $2.87
Halfs - $5.75
Dollars - $17.00 & up
C.C. $$ - cased $135
Coin Collections
Gold Coins - Call
Gold Scrap
Mexico Wanted
Sterling Pieces
Pocket Watches
Indian Baskets
Free Appraisals
805-646-2631
VCS332114
Buying Estates
TOP DOLLAR
PAID!
old Oriental antiques,
Chinese or Japanese,
jewelry gold, silver &
diamonds, silver flatware,
watches, coins, old
documents, civil war
items, autographs, old
Hollywood photographs,
and posters, old postage
stamps and envelopes, old
art, artifacts, Indian
baskets, swords.
Ill buy one item or
the whole collection
805-300-2308 VCS332111
CASH PAID FOR
VIOLINS,
VIOLAS, CELLOS
Wanted in any cond.
805-644-4750
VCS331946
$ CASH PAID $
Planning
an Estate
or garage sale?
Call Us-Get More
We come to you
Buying antiques &
fine estate items:
fine jewelry and
costume jewelry,
sterling flatware
& serving pieces,
perfume bottles,
figurines, Lladro,
furn & lots more
Call Carol Now!
818-521-6955
Established 1984.
All of Conejo, Camarillo,
Vta County VCS331859
204
Antiques And
Collectibles
GOLD HAS
PASSED $1700
DOLLARS
AN OUNCE
We Are The
**LARGEST**
Buyers Of Scrap
GOLD!
GOLD CHAINS
BRACELETS
DIAMONDS
LARGE DIAMONDS
ROLEX WATCHES
SWISS WATCHES
GOLD COINS
We Pay Up To
Spot Prices!
GOLD CROWNS
SILVER COINS
SILVER CHAINS
WE PAY CASH
NOW TOP $$$$
4255 East Main St.
Ste #18, Ventura, CA 93003
805-650-0444
(MAIN & TELEPHONE)
NERCES FINE
JEWELRY
VCS331918
NEED CASH?
BUYING GOLD
Paying $18.00 per gram for
14 carat. 805-646-2631
VCS332113
Older Costume
Jewelry Wanted
and Older Items.
* CASH PAID *
Lynell 805-794-3590
VCS331870
WANTED: Swords, Japanese
& Civil War, German
daggers, antique weapons,
military. CASH. All Asian
Antiques Chinese/Japanese.
(818)992-4803 VCS331639
204
Antiques And
Collectibles
WE BUY GOLD
& SILVER
We Honor All
Competitors
Coupons!
110% Price Match
Guarantee*
Gold Silver
Coins Flatware
Paper Money
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
EXTRA
30% BONUS*
Must present coupon.
Redeemable in stores only. Not
applicable for coins, paper
money and bars. Cannot be
combined with any other offers
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Thousand Oaks, Camarillo,
Oxnard, Moorpark,
Ventura, Simi Valley
Open 7 Days
877.465.3676
*call stores for details
VCS331858
207
Appliances
ALL MAJOR APPL
*Save Money & Time*
FREE Service Call w/repair
in Ventura Co.
FREE Appliance Pickup.
Save on repairs and sales
during the economy crisis.
Washers, Dryers, Heaters,
Refrigerators, Ovens Gas
& Electric, Microwaves
35 Years Exp. Vta Co.
Victor 805-302-1866
VCS332112
From
$99.00
Repair &
Sales
Ad Refrigeration
** FREE ESTIMATES **
Refrigerators, walk-in
coolers, ice machines, etc
Will Pick Up Dead Refrig,
and All Appliances!
805.816.7169
VCS331853
VCStar.com/garagesales
Online garage sale map.
Every Friday P.M.
REFRIGERATOR Hotpoint
top freeze, wht, 4-5 yrs new,
clean, very good cond $175.
805-671-9852 VCS331644
WASHER/DRYER Kenmore
$300/pair. Refrigerator $175.
All very good condition.
805-671-9852 VCS331643
Washer & gas dryer($500),
Refrigerator($450). All 4
yrs old., xlnt cond, must
sell. 805-407-5293 VCS332630
213
Boutiques
VINTAGE for the benefit
of S.P.A.R.C. Clothes,
Collectibles, Glassware,
Furniture, etc.
805-525-1749 VCS332178
219
Cemetery Lots
IVY LAWN
Ventura 1 plot, Sec H, plot
621, space 4, incl trans
fee $4,700.00
(805)302-9319
VCS330914
221
Commercial
Equipment
PALLET RACK SALE
Upright $49+ Beam $12+
SHELVING Steel & Wood
2x4x 6, 8 or 10 $69+
WHSE LADDERS $89+
805-532-1103 VCS332237
227
Exercise Equipment
TREADMILLS Display and
Floor models, excellent
condition, $250 - $400.
(805)671-9852 VCS331640
233
Furniture/
Household Goods
Affordable
Sectionals & Sofas
Custom Sized
Pottery Barn inspired styles
and more, local mfr
showroom factory direct
sectionals sized by the inch
with your measurements.
Hard to fit spaces our
specialty. Best prices,
quality & selection.
Sectionals from $799.
805-302-2138 VCS331887
PLACE A
CLASSIFIED
AD FOR
FREE!
The Lighthouse offers
free classifed ads for
property and personal
items offered by active
duty and retired military,
civil service and dependent
personnel within Naval
Base Ventura County.
All free ads are 20 WORD MAXIMUM.
Paid classified advertising available for remaining
categories and non-eligible personnel.
Submissions:
Submit your 20 WORD MAXIMUM free or paid classified
advertisements with your contact information including
phone and email via one of the following:
Fax: (805) 437-0466
Email: classifieds@vcstar.com
Tel: (800) 221-7827 (M-F 8 a.m.5 p.m.)
Mail: The Lighthouse Classifieds
P.O. Box 6006, Camarillo, CA 93011
Deadline:
All classified ads must be received by 5 p.m.
Wednesday a week prior to publication.
Motorcycles
Merchandise
Miscellaneous Wanted
FREE ads for the following categories:
Pets Free to good home
Roommate Wanted
Lost & Found
Automobiles & Trucks
classieds
Lighthouse
BRAND NEW
Queen Orthopedic
Pillowtop Mattress Set
Never used, still in plastic
w/warr.Retails $699, sell $160.
All Sizes Available!
805-830-3314 VCS332234
BUNK BED Like New,
twin over full-folds into
couch, $299. 805-529-6607
VCS332027
Find new&used cars.
Browse
a directory of regional new housing
communities. Visit VCSHOMES.com

Createyour ownadonIine
at VCSWHLS.com
Antiques?
vcstar.com/ads
800-221-STAR(7827)
BUYIT.
SELLIT.
FINDIT.
Access
stories and features about new housing
communities. Visit VCSHOMES.com
Positivelyfor you.
To subscribe, call
1-800-221-STAR
Positivelypunctual.
Local news.
Every morning delivered to your doorstep.
News about your community.
PositiveIy
pertinent.
Positivelyfor you.
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274
Medical Equipment
& Supplies
3 Wheel Pride Celebrity
Scooter, 350 lb capacity,
11 mi range, head/tail
directional lights, 6 mph,
new batteries, soft
suspension, front basket,
owners manual, wide
adjustable swivel seat,
5 star rating, new cond,
MSRP $2,635, Sac $1,450/obo.
3 Wheel GoGo Scooter,
transportable, disassembles
into 4 lightweight
components, 275 lb capacity,
3.5 mph, front basket, swivel
seat, new batteries, new
condition, used once. MSRP
$1,275, Sacrifice $800/obo.
Hoyer Patient Lift,
450 lb capacity, collapsible
base, adjustable sling,
new condition.
MSRP NEW $1,125,
Sacrifice $450/obo.
Power Wheelchair
used once, MSPR $2,550
Sacrifice $1,300 obo
**** CASH ONLY ****
RMC MEDICAL
Buy Sell Rent Repair
805-647-1777
VCS331855
275
Miscellaneous
For Sale
Boxes for moving
only 75 each
250. Used. 805-487-2796
www.riteboxinc.com
VCS332331
CATS CRADLE Thrift Shop
Open Wed. thru Sun 11a-6p
Clothes, jewelry, books/etc.
4160 Market #11, Vta.
805-642-4228 VCS331861
CEMETARY PLOTS AT
PIERCE BROTHERS
VALLEY OAKS CEME-
TARY located in the
Garden of Gethsemane
plot 400 sites A&B $8300
each
marina@calneva.org
(661)242-5336 VCS331320
WE PICK UP & RECYCLE
all Major Appliances.
Help Save our Planet. Call
805-671-9569 VCS331642
281
Pool/Spa Supplies
SPA/HOT TUB
DELUXE 2013 MODEL.
Neck jets, therapy seat,
warranty, never used,
can deliver, worth $5950,
will sell $1950. Call
818-785-9043 VCS332087
297
Wanted To Buy
BUYING
JUNK
CARS
TOP
$ $ $ $ $
PAID
UP TO
$1,000
Running or
Not Running
Licd Dismantler
pickthepart.com
(805)
933-5557
VCS332181
I BUY HIGH-END
RANGES AND
REFRIGERATORS,
805-671-9569 VCS331641
WANTED ALL TYPES
OF FISHING EQUIP.
antique through modern,
saltwater, fresh water,
fly fishing, cash paid.
661-513-4637 VCS331781
WE WILL BUY
YOUR
VEHICLE
Licensed & Bonded
Dealer.No smog required.
WWW.
TRADEINSDIRECT.COM.
2219 E Thousand Oaks
Bl.#205 .Thousand Oaks
Ca. 91362 FREE
appraisal and offer to buy.
tradeinsdirect@
sbcglobal.net
(805)496-2967
VCS332326
Pets &Supplies
300-315
310
Cats/Dogs
Supplies/Services
A Private
Foundation Has
Rescued Dogs
For Adoption
JB
1.5 yr old male Flat
Coat Golden mix, 75lbs.
Inky
9 mo. old female
Brussels Griffon mix,14lbs.
Nellie
3 yr old female
Red Aussie mix 56lbs.
Aiden
3-4 yr male
Golden Retriever 51lbs.
Visit our website
for pics
samsimon
foundation.org
or call
(310)457-5898
VCS331679
Cats & Kittens $125.00!
Sat & Sun 11-5 @ PetCo/Vta
& PH, 4160 Market & Donlon
805-485-8811 VCS331860
DACHSHUNDS AKC $500
661-769-8807 or 661-333-4697
www.aaapuppydogs.com
VCS331290
DOG Cairn Terrier
Male, Adorable Cairn
Terrier puppies, pure
bred and registered. 8
weeks old, 3 available,
all males. $500.00
(805)216-7634 VCS332588
DOG English Bulldogs
Males & Females, AKC-
Lots of colors and mark-
ings. 4 males, 4 females
$1,800.00 (661)809-5049
VCS331125
DOG German Shepherd
AKC Male, 4 males.
9wks. Health Guarnt.
DDR lines desertlake-
shepherds.com $1,000.00
(661)349-4129 VCS332587
ENGLISH BULLDOG
PUPPIES (3), 10 weeks old,
blue and brindle.
AKC Registered, $1,500/ea.
805-813-7022 VCS332200
310
Cats/Dogs
Supplies/Services
English Bulldog
Puppies
Rare colors, excellent
upbringing, vet exam &
health guar., pics & refs
to e-mail. Appts weclome.
Great prices of $800-$1,000.
To great home.
818-631-7556
VCS331549
ENGLISH BULL TERRIER
(Target dog), puppy, 6 mo,
black & wht, female,
papers, all shots, Annie,
$800 805-390-4863
VCS332079
FREE light brown curly
Terrier/Pug mix cute, aprx
1 yr old, 29 lbs, male, $117
spent for shots/exam/flea
care. Free to a good home.
805-486-8381 ext 0 at Regal
motel Sun.-Fri. VCS332514
HAVANESE Really cute and
fun puppies. Male & Female.
www.myplayfulpuppy.com
805-320-1246 VCS332548
ITs SUMMER TIME!
Lots of little dogs at
S.P.A.R.C., corner of 7th
and Santa Barbara St. in
Santa Paula. Come on down
and take your pick!
805-798-4878 VCS331925
* * * MASTIFF * * *
Brindle, neutered male,
friendly, loyal. 805-798-4878
VCS332179
** Pitties Pitties Pitties **
All sizes all colors all
temperant. Come on down
to Santa Paula Animal
Rescue Center.
Lets make a deal and
make a dog a part of
your life.
805-798-4878 VCS332629
PUG Rare AKC blacks,
Ready Now! These gorgeous
sweet, tiny pug babies are
simply exquisite in
animated, brilliantine black!
Shots, 2yr. GarNtee, 20yrs
exp + 45 champs in
pedigree! Trained & Social.
Delivery incl. $1,475. Call
805-320-4834 for the pug of
your dreams! VCS331662
Purebred AKC LAB
PUPPIES! black, 2 male
1female, $500, dewclaw
& first shots, mom & dad
on premises, Ready July 12
805-732-4520 VCS332564
SHIH TZU-POO, male,
22 months, neutered, all
shots, have to let go,
adorable & loving. $300/obo.
805-483-6430 VCS331704
YORKIE AKC BEAUTIFUL
PUPPIES. Male & Female.
Microchipped.
www.myplayfulpuppy.com
805-320-1246 VCS332535
Employment
500-585
540
Help Wanted
Automotive
DIESEL TECH
FORD Certified.
Immediate opening. Fax
resume to: 805-983-0905 or
call for confidential
interview
805-983-6512
Vista Ford of
Oxnard
VCS332696
Customer Service/Order
Entry Clerk position with
small business in
Newbury Park. Full time,
full benefits, need
computer, typing,
organizational & attention
to detail skills. Please
email resume to:
margaret@rmcontrols.com
VCS332108
IMMEDIATE OPENING
Growing company
seeking a
P/T Bookkeeper
Responsibilities included
but are not limited
to:Reconcile credit card
and Petty Cash accounts.
Monthly Bank Reconcilia-
tions. Ability to handle
A/P and A/R duties in-
cluding collections and
customer correspon-
dence.
Qualifications:Accounting
degree reqd w/ a min of
4 yr exp w/ QuickBooks
Premier Manufacturing
software & Excel is
reqd. Fluent in Spanish.
For more info check out our ad
on Monster.Com or
send resumes to:
laura@smppet.com
VCS332519
IMMEDIATE OPENING
SALES & CUSTOMER
SERVICE
COORDINATOR
Responsibilities included
but are not limited to:
Manage sales database,
prepare email blast &
marketing info. Detail
work will be reqd to co-
ordinate tradeshows &
work along w/ customers,
vendors & distributors.
Qualifications:3 yrs + in-
side sales exp, Microsoft
office proficient, Xlnt
written & verbal skills
For more info check out our ad
on Monster.Com or
send resumes to:
laura@smppet.com
VCS332520
540
Help Wanted
BOOKKEEPER
Working with senior
management to create
performance reports, sales
reports and expense reports
from data and analyse
information to aid business
decisions
Managing accounts
receivables
Help processing
payroll, calculating
commissions & salaries
Managing internal
invoicing
Inventory control
management
Reconciling sales
reports with bank
statements to ensure
accuracy
Implement systems to
maintain orderly
accounting processes
Position is within a fast
growing company with
plenty of room for personal
growth. Candidate must be
a team player with a
positive attitude and willing
to learn and be flexible.
Job is based in office in
Ventura, Monday - Friday
7am-4pm.
Position includes PPO
Health Insurance fully paid
by company for employee
and discounted rates for
family and cell phone.
Salary +/- $3400 per month
Please email resume to:
patrick@mrrootersb.com
VCS332557
CUSTOMER SERVICE
ASSISTANT
Full Time Hourly Rate:
$15.18 - $19.37
Excellent benefits &
CalPERS pension plan
Continuous Until Filled
GOLD COAST TRANSIT
301 East Third Street,
Oxnard, CA 93030
at www.goldcoasttransit.org
VCS332075
TRANSIT OPERATIONS
SUPERVISOR
Salary Range:
$4,008 - $5,608 / mo.
Excellent benefits &
CalPERS pension plan
GOLD COAST TRANSIT
301 East Third Street,
Oxnard, CA 93030
at www.goldcoasttransit.org
VCS332077
540
Help Wanted
Computers - Principal App
Dvlpr (Camarillo, CA)
Dsgn, dvlp sftwr compnnts
using .NET Framework 4.0,
C#, ASP.NET, MVC3, DO-
JO, WCF, LINQ, Visual Stu-
dio 2010, Winds 2008 Srvr,
Prfrm data anlys, in SQL,
PL/SQL, Oracle 11g d-base
Tchnlgis. Reqd MS in Comp
Sci or Engg (any) w/1 yr
exp as above or as a sftwr
dvlpr/ engg, prog anlyt,
proj leadr or bach degr w/ 5
yr exp. Resume to Auto-
matic Data Processing, Inc
c/o Creative Effects, Inc
403B Central Ave, Ceda-
rhurst, NY 11516 Job Ref
158 VCS331185
Las Virgenes Municipal
Water District
Systems Analyst
$6,428.07 - $8,356.57/mo.
APPLY BY: 7/10/13
(818) 251-2100 EOE
www.lvmwd.com
VCS332092
Field Technician Oil
& Gas Inspections
Seeking Self-motivated
full-time field technician
to conduct environmental
inspections at oil and gas
facilities. Must have oil
field experience. Good
DMV, Must pass random
drug test. $32k+ DOE+
Benefits.
www.avantienvironmental.com
Send resume to
recruit@avantienv.com
VCS332547
Gen Engineering
Contractor is
seeking a Foreman
exp in Concrete
work, must be
knowledgeable &
adept at reading
plans. Call
805-981-9409
VCS332517
Turning Point
Foundation, a
non-profit agency,
has an opening for a
Finance & Operations
Director.
For more
information visit:
www.turningpoint
foundation.org
VCS331977
540
Help Wanted
University Glen Corporation
at CSU Channel Islands
Chef de
Cuisine
Salary Range:
$3500 - $4000/ mo
Minimum Qualifying
Exp: Equivalent to 4 yr exp
as a Chef de Cuisine in a col-
lege or university dining pro-
gram, small to mid-sized hotel,
dinner house or country club
setting including the supervi-
sion of the kitchen staff is re-
quired. Exp working w/ a
diverse clientele assisting in
the development of menu &
event options ensuring a high
level of customer satisfaction
is req. Familiarity w/ a Univer-
sity or Higher Education envi-
ronment is preferred. Upscale
food service preparation spe-
cific to catering is desirable.
To apply & more info go to:
http://www.csuci.edu/
hr/employment.htm
VCS332213
University Glen Corporation
at CSU Channel Islands
Pizza 3.14
Food Services
Manager
Salary Range:
$2500 - $3000/ mo
4 yr college or university de-
gree in hotel/restaurant mgmt,
culinary arts, food sciences &
nutrition, business admin, a
Chefs Certificate from a recog-
nized culinary institution, or a
related field preferred. Candi-
dates w/ a combination of edu-
cation & a strong food service
background will also be con-
sidered.
4 yrs food service mgmt in-
cluding responsibility for plan-
ning, P&L compliance &
oversight, food preparation &
supervision of personnel in a
food service operation. Knowl-
edge of pizza operations in-
cluding production techniques
& product development is
strongly desired.
Knowledge of facilities mgmt &
exp in college/university envi-
ronment desirable.
To apply & more info go to:
http://www.csuci.edu/
hr/employment.htm
VCS332214
Healthcare
Med Asst needed for busy
ortho surgeon. Based in
T.O. w/ local travel. Must
be exp.Fax 818-901-6642 or
kfelice@scoi.com
VCS332461
Healthcare
Thousand Oaks ortho
inst.Seeks Pat. Benefits
Coord.(eligibility) Must
be exp.Fax 818-901-6642 or
kfelice@scoi.com
VCS331973
Positivelyfor you.
News of the Weird-Every Friday inTime Out
PositiveIypecuIiar.
Browse through a directory of
regional newhousing communities.
Look inVCSHomes every Saturday andSunday
Stroll thebeach-VCStar.com/beachcam
PositiveIy
panoramic.
Positivelyfor you.
Local resources 805Moms.com
PositiveIy
parenting.
Positivelyfor you.
Search for available jobs.
vcstar.com/jobs
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....NOTICE....
California law requires that
contractors taking jobs that
total $499 or more (labor and
materials) be licensed. State
law also requires that contrac-
tors include their license num-
bers on all advertising. Check
out your licensed contractor by
calling the Contractors State
License Board at:
1-800-321-2752
Acoustic Ceilings
RemovalsResprayPaint
1 Day Svc. FREE Est. !
www.keysacoustic.com
Mike 805-208-6281
lic# 416345 VCS332364
Air Conditioning/
Heating
AIRE COMFORT INC.
Residential HVAC
Design, Installation, Svc/Rpr
BBB A+ Accredited Bus
www.trustlink.com member.
Serving Vta Co for 8 years
Free Inst Est./ $65 Svc Call
*** 805-797-9968 ***
Lic #877321 VCS332037
Auto Repair
Specializing in: Acura
Honda Nissan Toyota
The Independent Shop
of Choice.....
37 Taylor Ct., T.Oaks
805-373-9895
VCS331864
Cabinets
Cabinet Refacing
Highest quality workmanship
& materials. 35 years exp.
Call now for free estimate +
a great job at a great price!
805-527-2631
Lic#341411 VCS332191
Carpentry
VCStar.com/garagesales
Online garage sale map.
Every Friday P.M.
35 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
All Interior and Exterior
Repairs!
Doors, termite damage,
wood siding, patio covers,
wood decks, fences, garage
shelving, painting.
Small Jobs and
Seniors Welcome.
Call John 805-320-4931
Lic#757278 VCS331551
Carpentry
SIGNATURE FINISH
CARPENTRY, INC
Moldings Doors
Cabinets Hardware
SignatureFinishInc.com
805-558-0551
BondedInsuredLicensed
Lic#948934 VCS332242
Carpet Cleaning
Lees Maintenance
Powerful Truck Mount
Carpet Steam Cleaning
Upholstery / Rugs
*3 Rooms...$60
*Pet odor/Scotch guard
*Tile grout clean/Polish
*Floor strip/ Wax
*Complete House clean
805-987-3071 VCS332082
Carpet Repair
CARPET REPAIR,
CLEANING &
REINSTALLATION
Stretching Patches
Carpet to Tile
Carpet Rescue
805-483-0899
(Lic #787080) VCS331865
Computer
Services
On-Site Computer Repair
Service for home and
businesses. Apple and PC.
Repairs, Service, Virus
and Spyware removal,
New PC Setups, iPhones
etc. 15 yrs exp.
Local, call for appt:
805-443-0900 VCS331866
Onsite PC Support for
Home or Office
Computer Repair, Service
& Upgrades. Virus, Spyware
& Adware Removal.
Data Recovery. 13 years exp
Support@pctoc.com
805-465-6640
VCS331524
Concrete Work
Find new& used cars.
vcswheels.com
CLARK & SONS
CONCRETE
Driveway/RV PadPatios
Pool Decks Sidewalks
No Job Too Small
805-583-0480
LIC#408242 VCS330399
VCS332382
Concrete Work
Escobar Concrete
Reasonable rates,
No job too small.
patios, block/retaining
walls, brick, stucco, pavers
tile, driveways stamp,
foundations, sea walls.
Robert 805-890-2198
Bobby 805-607-1387
Lic #819035 VCS331492
Construction
RECESSION
RATES
For all your home
improvement & more.
Fast, Free Estimates
creatbldr@verizon.net
805-382-0464
818-312-2308
Lic#342943 VCS332232
Doors
TIMS CUSTOM
DOORS
Over 200 Styles
French Swing Sliders, All
Brands, Locks. Hardware,
Moldings. Wholesale Prices.
25 Years Experience!
(805) 527-5808
Lic #724376 VCS331459
Dry Wall
ALL-PHASE
DRYWALL
No Job Too Small
All Your Drywall Needs!
40+ Years Experience
Competitive Rates
805-701-3108 Lic #955634
VCS332685
Electrical
Contractor
Conejo Valley
Electric
Lighting Specialist
Recessed & Landscape
Anything Electrical!
Family Owned
* FREE Estimates *
SERVICE CALL $50
Cool off whole house, Attic &
Gable Fan Specialists.
Supply a ceiling fan & we
will install it for you. $149
We install ALL
Wall Mount, Flat Screen
TVs, Speakers & Network
Systems.
Will Beat Anyones Price!
805-497-7711
818-259-4055
www.conejoelectric.com
Lic#922260 VCS332240
JEFF WARD
ELECTRIC
*LED Lighting*Remodels
*Trouble Shooting *Free Est.
805-648-3184
Ins/Lic#648300 VCS332702
Fencing
JOSES
FENCES
Wood Fences & Gates. New
or Repairs Vinyl Fencing &
Wrought Iron. Chainlink.
Block Walls. Best Prices.
Prof Installation
Free Est/Senior Discounts
805-443-3817 or
805-483-5699
Ins/Lic#798198 VCS332698
SYV FENCING
All types of wood fencing,
gates and repairs.
Ken 805-944-8047
Free Estimates!
Lic. & Bonded Lic. 864603
syvfencing@hotmail.com
VCS332197
Gardening
HANDIEST MEN
Two Brothers
Electrical, Plumbing, Tile,
Drywall, Texture, Paint,
Stucco, Carpentry.
FREE HOME INSPECTION
with service call.
Mark 805-236-2143
Insured/Bonded VCS332008
JJS GARDENING
Landscaping General
Cleanups Haul Trash
Sodding & Seeding Tree
Planting and Pruning
Stump Removal.
Good Prices!
* FREE Estimates *
805-760-2204 ; 805-986-0370
Lic#1119461 VCS332479
PERMAGREEN
Intensive Lawn Care
Complete landscape.
Mow & Edge
Specials!
Sprinkler/Lawn install.
Stamped Concrete,Driveway
Tree Removal & Pruning
or Planting. Demo & Haul.
FREE ESTIMATES!
805-630-9252
Lic# 842019 VCS331706
Handypersons
Buy it. Sell it. Find it.
vcstar.com/ads
A WOMAN
IN TRADE
Home Repairs
Complete Kitchen Bath
Remodeling Custom
Cabinets & Refacing
Wood Work/Molding
Tile, Paint, Drywall
Plumbing, Electric,
Lighting Reasonable/Clean
Lynn 805-487-7709
Lic#285372 VCS332684
CHUCK STOUT
HANDYMAN
All Trades:
Plumbing, Tile, Electric,
Drywall, Painting, Windows,
Framing & Carpentry.
30 + years in Conejo Valley
FREE Estimates
805-499-2860
Lic# 771801 VCS332244
Handypersons
EXPERIENCED
AUSTRALIAN
HANDYMAN
Carpentry, Plumbing,
Electrical, Construction
& Remodeling.
Automotive & odd jobs.
805-216-4919
VCS331789
H & S Home
Repair
Plumbing
Electrical
Roofing Concrete
Flooring Painting
Kitchen & Bath
805-641-2222
(Lic #642719) VCS332236
lights plumbing
doors carpentry
locks cabinets
painting
Tim Voorhees 527-5808
LIC #724376 VCS331458
PARAMOUNT
Heating,Plumbing,Electrical
Painting, Drywall, Stucco,
Carpentry, Windows, Doors,
Landscaping & Hauling.
FREE Est & Sr. Discounts
No Job Too Small!
Richard 805-815-8745
Lic#086358 VCS331646
Hauling
ALS
HAULING!
7 Days-FREE Estimates!
(805)485-9334
Tree/HedgeTrim and
Chain Saw
Yard Rototilling
Garage Cleanups
Appliance Removal
* Will Haul Big or Small *
Lic. 94-06169 VCS331871
BROTHERS
HAULING
Any Handyman
Job Trash/Yard
Clean-up Garage
Clean-up Chain
Saw jobs Concrete
& Dirt Removal
We Haul Anything
Free Estimates
(805)405-7909
VCS330483 VCS332089
CJ HAULING
* Real Estate Clean Up
* Jacuzzi Removal
* Yard & Garage Clean Up
* Fence Removal
* Concrete, Demolition
Debris & More
FREE Estimate Anytime!
805-252-3836
VCS332192
Hauling
Titos Hauling
& Fences
LANDSCAPING
TREE REMOVAL
GREAT PRICES!
Any Demolition
Garage/Yard
Clean Ups
Concrete Work
Wood Fences
Jacuzzi Removal
New Lawn
Sprinklers
SENIOR DISCOUNTS
Cell (805)890-3239
VCS316043 VCS331537
House Cleaning
HOUSECLEANING over 20
years exp. Excellent, fast
efficient & thorough work
at modest prices, and...
I DO WINDOWS
and gutters. I also love
to help the elderly as needed.
Have xlnt references.
805-201-8585 VCS331629
Maid In America
Housecleaning
Services
Paul Lopez
Owner/Operator
23 Years Serving the
Conejo Valley
(805)499-7259
Lic/Bonded/Insured
(#08033) VCS331293
Lees Maintenance
Professional
Complete Clean
HouseStoreBuilding
JanitorialConstruction
Move in/out
Regular/onetime
Carpet-Truck Mounted
Windows/Blinds/Wallwash
Floor strip/wax/Tile grout
Kitchen/Bathroom clean
987-3071
Service local since 1986
VCS332083
Landscaping
JOSES
LANDSCAPE
& Tree Service
New Lawns New Sprinkler
System & Repairs
Tree Removal & Pruning
Concrete & Masonry Work
Pavers Installation
All Your Landscape Needs
Free Est. / Senior Discounts
(805)443-3817
(805)483-5699
Ins/Lic#798198 VCS332700
Paint Contractor
AAA Pacific Coast
Construction
Kitchen & Bath Remodels
Paint & Drywall Specialist
Interior/Exterior Painting
Acoustic Removal/
Retexture
Reasonable Rates
FREE ESTIMATES
WE DO IT ALL !!
Guaranteed Quality Work
Call Matt 805-443-4608
Lic# 579047 VCS331631
ANGELO LORENZO
Custom Painting
Residential & Commercial
Repaints
Remodel/New Construction
Stucco/Drywall
AngeloLorenzoPainting.com
Call for FREE Estimate
Office 805-581-0268
Cell 805-795-1528
Lic#465487/Insd VCS332188
DONE RIGHT
PAINTING
Quality Since 1989
Contractor.....
does his own work.
Lots of Referrals!
All work guaranteed
Residential
Full Preparation
* FREE ESTIMATES *
805-522-1698
Lic/Ins #575354 VCS331648
GRAND ILLUSIONS
PROFESSIONAL
PAINTING
Interior ExteriorCustom
DrywallStuccoWood
RepairProfessional Quality
Work All Work Guaranteed
Neat, Clean & Reliable.
Senior Discounts for Free
Est. call Tim 805-910-5833
lic# 957454 VCS332324
PAINTING
C & R WEST COAST
SERVICES
Comml & Residential
Interior & Exterior
Free Estimates!
Quality @ Reasonable Rates
805-647-4900
Insured/Lic635809 VCS332231
Plumbing
ACROWN
PLUMBING
Drain Clean/Repair.
Leak Repair. Fixture Install.
Hydro-Jetting. Plumbing
Remodels. Repipes. New
Construction 24 hrs/7 days
805-526-4125
818-612-0413
Lic #921281 VCS331713
Roong
JLG ROOFING
DBA Gils Roofing Co.
New Roof, Re-Roof,
Flat Roof, Woodwork
Owner on every job!
Free Estimates!
All Work Guaranteed!
www.JLGRoofing.com
805-816-9414
Lic #885763
Insured/Workers Comp.
Accepting Visa/MC/Discover
VCS332285
Roong
Fast & Dependable
Quality Work
(805)487-8189
www.ericksonsroofing.com
Free Estimates.Insured
Lic #734346 VCS331460
ROOFING
SERVICES
Specializing in all types of
roofing and roof repairs.
Tile, shingles, flat roofs.
Modified roofs.
Dryrott repair & painting.
All work guaranteed
Ask us about a
roof tune-up.
no job too small.
Owner works on all jobs
Senior Discount 10%
Free estimates
All work guaranteed
24 hour services
33 years experience
Ask for Bill
805-428-7651
VCS332444
Find a home.
ROOFING
SERVICES
Specializing in all types of
roofing and roof repairs.
Tile, shingles, flat roofs.
Modified roofs.
Dryrott repair & painting.
All work guaranteed
Ask us about a
roof tune-up.
no job too small.
Owner works on all jobs
Senior Discount 10%
Free estimates
All work guaranteed
24 hour services
33 years experience
Ask for Bill
805-428-7651
VCS331783
Screens
SCREEN
MACHINE
*** FREE Estimates ***
Mobile -We come to you!
Window Screens
Retractable Doors Special
Sliding Screen Doors
Pet Screen/Pet Grilles
Check Us Out on YELP.
805-530-0333 or 818-744-0184
VCS331294
Sprinklers
BOBLETTS
SPRINKLER SVC
*Repairs *Timers
*Trouble Shooting
*System Tune-Up
*Upgrade Existing
Systems
805-804-7785 VCS331614
Positivelyfor you.
PositiveIypersonaIities.
Parade- Every Sunday
Celebrities, stories, healthtips,
andAsk Marilynvos Savant-
Guinness Hall of Fame highest IQ.
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Healthcare
Occupational Therapist - Ojai
Ojai Valley Community Hospital an affiliate of
Community Memorial Hospital is a non-profit,
community-based acute care facility dedicated to serving
the 35,000 plus residents of the Ojai Valley.
Our 103-bed facility, which includes a continuing care
center, is fully accredited by Det Norske Veritas (DNV),
and licensed by the California Department of Health
Services. In addition we also operate a primary care
clinic in the Ojai Valley -- The Oak View Family Practice
Clinic and the Keeler Center for the study of Headache.
We provide inpatient, outpatient, and skilled nursing
services for mostly primary and secondary care needs.In
addition we operate a 24-hour standby
emergency room facility.
Our staff is committed to providing exceptional care and
comfort to each patient within our facility. Our highly
trained staff of physicians, nurses, management, and
volunteers work closely together to ensure the best in
health care services.
Ojai Valley Community Hospital offers excellent
benefits, such as Medical, Dental, Vision, Life, and AD&D
insurance. We also offer a comprehensive Retirement
plan, flexible spending accounts, paid time off, and a
variety of other great benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of
excellence, please take a moment to discover more about
what its like to work at
Community Memorial Health System.
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
Full-Time, Regular Part-Time and/or Per Diem Position
Available
Interprets the physicians prescriptions, evaluates the
patients level of function to determine plans and assists
in diagnosis. Recommends appropriate treatment
activities to achieve therapeutic objectives, ensuring
consistent approaches are carried out. Communicates
with the treatment staff concerning specific and total
treatment aims and written reports of patients
evaluations and progress.
Qualifications:
Required:
Must have current Occupational Therapist License
Current CPR Certification
VCS332506
Healthcare
*Cardiovascular Tech/Radiology Tech - Per Diem
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of
Los Angeles, Community Memorial Hospital is a 242 bed
non-profit, acute care facility, committed to provide
quality patient care in an environment that promotes
clinical excellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership
development. At our facility, our employees share their
enthusiasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a
comprehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending
accounts, paid time off and a variety
of other great benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of
excellence, please take a moment to discover more about
what its like to work at Community
Memorial Health System.
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
Assists physicians in the Interventional and Endovascular
Services department with invasive procedures in the
Cardiac Cath Lab, Electrophysiology Lab, and
Interventional Radiology Lab. Interacts with doctors,
nurses, and other members of the healthcare team within
scope of practice to achieve optimal patient care for
patients undergoing procedures in the IES department.
Must be able to perform scrub tech duties including
prepping the sterile field; familiarity with sterile
instruments, wires, devices, and practices; maintenance
of sterility during procedures; and patient
interaction and communication
Qualifications:
Graduate of accredited Cardiovascular Technology or
Radiology Technology program or equivalent work
experience. RCIS strongly preferred; Radiology Tech
license is preferred; CPR & ACLS required. Must be able
to perform scrub duties. Must have solid knowledge of
EKG and cardiac arrhythmias. Must be able to respond
to call within 30 minutes or less.
VCS332494
9

999#
C|M0 oers au excelleul salary aud beuel package or
ullliue euployees lo iuclude. paid liue o
(vacaliou, holiday, sick liue), heallh iusurauce, peusiou
plau, 41k, aud couliuuiug educaliou.
PIease emaiI resumes to hicoIeta Weeks at
hicoIeta.Weeks@ventura.org or fax to
(831) 649-8286
Physician (|ull Jiue)
Respousibililies will iuclude
lhe provisiou o uedical care
lo lhe iuuale populaliou,
overseeiug lhe care aud
lrealueul perorued by P^'s
& |NP's aud workiug closely
wilh lhe Medical 0ireclor aud
Prograu Mauager lo acililale
lhe delivery o care lo lhe
iucarceraled palieul populaliou.
RN Nursing
5upervisor/
Facility Coordinator
|ullliue. Respousibililies
iuclude assisliug lhe Prograu
Mauager wilh recruilueul,
scheduliug uurses 24/7, liaisou
wilh lhe Sheri's 0eparlueul,
iupleueul lhe 0ualily
^ssurauce Prograu, iuservice
lraiuiug aud procureueul o
pharuaceulicals aud supplies.
Requireueuls. Musl have
al leasl 1 year o supervisory
experieuce aud 1 year o
uursiug experieuce iu au
acule care selliug
Registered Nurse
with Psychiatric
CertiHcation
Peroru coupreheusive
physical/psychialric
assessueuls, iuiliale lrealueul
plaus, respoud lo uedical
aud/or psychialric euergeucies,
uedicaliou aduiuislraliou,
provide palieul aud sla
educaliou.
LC5W/NFI
Musl be a sel slarler aud
be able lo uucliou iu a asl
pace euvirouueul. Excelleul
couuuuicaliou skills,
Experieuced iu uauagiug
psychialric euergeucies, Proveu
experieuce uauagiug ueulally
ill palieuls, abilily lo leach aud
couducl group aclivilies or
ueulally ill palieuls.
Licensed Vocational Nurses
Respousibililies iuclude
lrauscribiug orders, uedicaliou
aduiuislraliou, lrealueuls,
blood draws, aud rouliue
uursiug dulies.
1he Ieader in correctionaI heaIthcare, has immediate openings at
the ventura County etention faciIities for the foIIowing positions:
Healthcare
Clinic RN Supervisor - Centers for Family Health Airport
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of Los An-
geles, Community Memorial Health System is a 242 bed
non-profit, acute care facility, committed to provide
quality patient care in an environment that promotes
clinical excellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership devel-
opment. At our facility, our employees share their enthu-
siasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a com-
prehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending ac-
counts, paid time off, and a variety of other great
benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of excel-
lence, please take a moment to discover more about what
its like to work at Community Memorial Health System.
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
Provides professional nursing care to Patients in support
of medical care as directed by medical staff and pursuant
to objectives and policies of the hospital. Organizes and
Coordinates patient care planning with other hospital dis-
ciplines. Reports to the Coordinator and interfaces with
Front Office and Back Office staff to assure patient flow
in the Back Office of the clinic.
Qualifications:
Associates degree (ADN) required, BSN preferred.
Minimum of one (1) year Nursing experience is required.
Medical Office, Clinic or Urgent Care experience pre-
ferred. Ability to communicate effectively both verbally
and in writing. Knowledge of CPT, ICD9, DNV, State
Funded Programs, HMO and Medi-Cal are preferred.
Current CA RN License, ACLS and CPR certification re-
quired. Bilingual Spanish/English is preferred. Supervi-
sion of Medical Assistants
VCS332107
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
MEDICAL
FRONT OFFICE
F/T. Exp reqd. T.O.
Fax resume to
805-496-9148 or email
acmintzmd@
earthlink.net
VCS332202
PHYSICAL THERAPIST
P/T - $31.00 - $38.65 hr
F/T - $5,373.80 - $6,69.55 mo
P/T-F/T pos w/ Vta Co
Ofc of Edu in SELPA
Dept., 11 mo yrly, Req:
Valid license as a PT w/
CA Dept of Consumer Af-
fairs. 1yr exp PT therapy
svs; exp / special needs
children 3 - 22 yrs. de-
sired. Appl/ job desc HR,
5189 Verdugo Way, Cam
805-383-1913, or apply
www.edjoin.org EOE
DEADLINE: Open Until
Filled. VCS331744
Corporate
Webmaster
We are looking for an
expd Visual Computing
expert to design & main-
tain our website & inter-
nal applications. A
proven track record of
success & innovation is
required. Minimum Re-
quirements: B.A. or
equivalent in Visual Com-
puting,1 yr exp designing
& maintaining websites &
internal applications, in-
structing others in use of
website & internal appli-
cations. Familiarity w/
current development soft-
ware & operating system
software. Mastery of Ja-
va, C++, PHP, OpenCV,
perform required tasks
w/ min supervision, will-
ing to relocate to Ventura
County, CA area, fluent
in the English language,
fluency in either Armeni-
an or Russian language
preferred but not reqd.
Send resume to
armeneloyan@gmail.com
Salary DOE
VCS332265
Landscaping
City of Simi Valley
SR TREE TRIMMER
$20.98 - $26.78/ hr, +
XLNT benefits. Requires:
equiv to completion of
12th grade w/ training in
tree maint.; 4 yrs tree &
landscape maint. exp;
tree climbing exp; & a
class A driver license.
The 1st 100 apps will be
accepted in the HR
Division until 5pm,
7/10/13. Contact HR at
www.simivalley.org.
805-583-6743 or at
2929 Tapo Canyon Rd,
Simi Valley, CA EOE
VCS332411
540
Help Wanted
Ojai Unified School District
Director, Maintenance,
Operations, Transportation
$35.38-$43.01/hr, full time -
closes 7/17/13 @ 12 Noon
Plan, organize, coordi-
nate, oversee and partici-
pate in various grounds,
custodial, construction
and transportation ac-
tivities (MOT).
www.ojai.k12.ca.us/hr
Classified Personnel
805-640-4300 X1041
VCS332492
FT Route Driver
Oxnard Dispatch is seek-
ing a route driver to pick
up donations for SFV,
Santa Barbara, Ventura
County. Experience read-
ing & following the Thom-
as Guide needed. Must be
able to lift 60 lbs, HS Di-
ploma, GED or equiva-
lent, CA drivers license
with a clean DMV record
is a must. Please email
tmcmillin@erescuemission.org
or fax to 805-385-4126.
VCS332335
PROPERTY MGR
Large prop mgmt co
seeks expd person to
manage HOAs in various
locations from Westlake
ofc. Salary, benefits &
comm. Call Don 9-5, M-F
800-729-5673 x0
VCS332636
CONEJO RECREATION
& PARK DISTRICT
Grounds Crew
Leader
Performs/leads skilled
landscape & park maint.
Req 4 yrs related exp; HS
Diploma/GED; special-
ized trng in landscape
maint, constr & repair; &
valid CA DL. Sports turf
exp. desirable. May work
weekends/holidays.
Salary Range:
$3,817-4,771/mth
Apply by: Fri, 7/26/13 @
5:00pm At:
403 W. Hillcrest Dr.,
Thousand Oaks, CA 91360
(805) 495-6471. See flyer @
www.crpd.org
DISTRICT APPLICATION
REQUIRED. Postmarks not
accepted. EOE VCS332512
F/T Admin Secretary
$3,809-$4,906/mo.5yrs exp,
strong cmptr, 60 wpm
reqd. Public agency exp
desired. See www.rsrpd.org
Rancho Simi Rec & Park
District. VCS332093
Tile Contractors
professional services
To advert|se (805) 437-0000
Full tile service including
cleaning, sealing, repairs
& new tile installations.
805-649-9451 805-648-6577
Lic #412832 VCS332070
Tile
Premier Tile & Stone
Family owned. 20 yrs exp.
in new homes & remodels
Need help with your design
or have a related question,
Pick my brain for free!
Lic#N-12-5910 Insured
805-620-2236
VCS331336
Tree Services
AFFORDABLE TREE
SERVICE
TrimmingRemoval
Stumps Firewood
Free Estimates, Payment
Options Avail. 20 Yrs Exp.
24 Hr Emergency Svc
805-532-1710
licd & insured VCS332486
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
VCStar.comhas the latest breaking news
and the most local news guaranteed.
PositiveIyup-to-date.
Positivelyfor you.

anexpert
about automaintenance
or tires.

newcars,
usedcarsand
deaIers.
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Healthcare
Program Manager - Cancer Support Program
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of Los
Angeles, Community Memorial Hospital is a 242 bed
non-profit, acute care facility, committed to provide
quality patient care in an environment that promotes
clinical excellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership
development. At our facility, our employees share their
enthusiasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a
comprehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending
accounts, paid time off, and a variety of other great
benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of
excellence, please take a moment to discover more about
what its like to work at Community Memorial Health
System.
Please apply online at www.cmhshealth.org
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
Responsible for oversight and management of the CMH
Cancer Program and Cancer Resource Center. Assures
that all national data standards which include the Califor-
nia Cancer Registry (CCR), the Surveillance and End
Results (SEER) Program, and the American College of
Surgeons (ACOS) are met and reported to be in
compliance. Oversees the accreditation process for an
approved cancer program by the ACoS Commission on
Cancer (CoC). Responsible for Cancer Conference
(Tumor Board) activities including: scheduling case
presentations for weekly conferences; communicating
conference information to Medical Staff, Radiology and
Pathology; preparation and distribution of case
summaries; and documentation of Cancer Conference
minutes. Manages the CMH Cancer Resource Center
whose services include patient navigation, social
services, cancer registry, lymphedema therapy, support
groups, cancer patient programs and complementary
therapies.
Qualifications:
Minimum of five (5) years of management experience
required. Requires full knowledge about the American
College of Surgeon, California Cancer Reporting, and
SEER Standards for Cancer Programs. Must be familiar
with research design, data analysis; and the etiology,
staging and treatments of cancer. Ability to manage
human, financial, and physical resources of the Cancer
Program and the Cancer Resource Center. Ability to
work independently and effectively handle multiple
priorities. Required to have working knowledge
regarding software applications such as C/NeXT and
advanced level of proficiency in the Microsoft office
applications such as Word, Excel, Power Point, and
Publisher. Ability to analyze, plan, organize and direct
the work of others; to establish and maintain effective
working relationships with individuals at all levels within
and outside of CMH; to communicate effectively verbally
and in writing.
VCS332106
Healthcare
*RN II - 5TH FLOOR - FT Days
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of
Los Angeles, Community Memorial Hospital is a 242 bed
non-profit, acute care facility, committed to provide
quality patient care in an environment that promotes
clinical excellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership
development. At our facility, our employees share their
enthusiasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a
comprehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending
accounts, paid time off and a variety
of other great benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of
excellence, please take a moment to discover more about
what its like to work at Community
Memorial Health System.
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
Provides general nursing care to patients in hospital by
performing the following duties; effectively plan and
communicate patient and family education. Participates
in unit based educational activities. Accurate and timely
documentation consistent with practice and hospital
policy. Explains procedures and treatments to patient to
gain cooperation, understanding, and allay apprehension
Qualifications:
Associates degree (A.D.) in Nursing required, BSN
preferred. One year Nursing experience is required.
Current CA RN License and Current BLS
certification is required.
VCS332457
Healthcare
RN II - PACU/ RECOVERY
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of
Los Angeles, Community Memorial Hospital is a 242 bed
non-profit, acute care facility, committed to provide
quality patient care in an environment that promotes
clinical excellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership
development. At our facility, our employees share their
enthusiasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a
comprehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending
accounts, paid time off, and a variety of other
great benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of
excellence, please take a moment to discover more about
what its like to work at Community Memorial
Health System.
Please apply online at www.cmhshealth.org
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
Provides pre and post-operative nursing care to patients
having inpatient and outpatient surgical services in the
Same Day Surgery and Main OR. Provides care within
scope of license Accurate and timely documentation
consistent with practice and hospital policy. Effectively
plans and communicates patient and family education.
Participates in unit-based educational activities.
Qualifications:
Associates degree (ADN) required, BSN preferred.
Pre-op and PACU experience required. Critical care ex-
perience is highly preferred. Minimum of one (1) year re-
cent med-surg acute care nursing required. Current CA
RN License - Current BLS, ACLS and PALS certifications
are required. Cross training and floating required. Must
be able to respond to call within 30 minutes.
On-Call 8 Hour Variable Shifts - Must be able to
respond to call within 30 minutes.
VCS332103
Healthcare
SR Allscripts Systems Analyst
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of Los An-
geles, Community Memorial Hospital is a 242 bed non-
profit, acute care facility, committed to provide quality
patient care in an environment that promotes clinical ex-
cellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership devel-
opment. At our facility, our employees share their enthu-
siasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a com-
prehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending ac-
counts, paid time off & a variety of other great benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of excel-
lence, please take a moment to discover more about what
its like to work at Community Memorial Health System.
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
Senior member of the Information Systems team, provid-
ing experience, knowledge and leadership to the enter-
prise-wide implementation and ongoing maintenance of
the Allscripts Enterprise EHR and Allscripts Enterprise
Practice Management, and associated applications.
Communicates directly with, and provides input to, In-
formation Systems management. Effectively communi-
cates with Physicians and Physician Office Staff.
Provides leadership, analysis, design, trouble-shooting,
testing, implementation and routine job support, as re-
quired. Provides operational support for applications in-
cluding data integrity, maintenance, training and vendor
interaction. Provides clear and concise training and docu-
mentation on operational processes. Meets with custom-
ers, internal and external, assuring documentation is
clear and understood. Leads and/or provides application
expertise for input to various committees and projects
and other members of the CMHS team. Works with end-
users on process improvement. When applicable, coordi-
nates and directs activities of, and/or provides support
for, consultants, contractors, and other Information Sys-
tem resources. Serves as the primary liaison with All-
Scripts support for problem resolution and request
activities. Responsible for data extracts, data scrubbing
and data conversions. Writes custom reports from All-
scripts Enterprise applications.
Qualifications:
Bachelors Degree or equivalent or 5 or more years expe-
rience in Healthcare. Three to five years of experience
working with Hospital Information Systems, supporting
application software, analyzing business problems,
hands-on clinical experience, and / or project manage-
ment Specialized knowledge of integrated hospital sys-
tems. Knowledge of analysis, debugging and standard
project management tools. Allscripts software support
and Microsoft office automation applications experience
is preferred. Project Management Professional
Certification desired.
VCS332104
Healthcare
RN II - PACU/ RECOVERY
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of
Los Angeles, Community Memorial Hospital is a 242 bed
non-profit, acute care facility, committed to provide
quality patient care in an environment that promotes
clinical excellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership
development. At our facility, our employees share their
enthusiasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a
comprehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending
accounts, paid time off, and a variety
of other great benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of
excellence, please take a moment to discover more about
what its like to work at Community Memorial
Health System.
Please apply online at www.cmhshealth.org
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
Provides pre and post-operative nursing care to patients
having inpatient and outpatient surgical services in the
Same Day Surgery and Main OR. Provides care within
scope of license. Accurate and timely documentation
consistent with practice and hospital policy. Effectively
plans and communicates patient and family education.
Participates in unit-based educational activities.
Qualifications:
Associates degree (ADN) required, BSN preferred.
Pre-op and PACU experience required. Critical care
experience is highly preferred. Minimum of one (1) year
recent med-surg acute care nursing required. Current CA
RN License - Current BLS, ACLS and PALS certifications
are required. Cross training and floating required. Must
be able to respond to call within 30 minutes.
On-Call 8 Hour Variable Shifts - Must be able to
respond to call within 30 minutes.
VCS332495
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
Positivelyfor you.
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practical.
News you can use from technology, food, health,
movies and relationships.
To subscribe, call
1-800-221-STAR
VCSHomes.com
Every Sunday in The Star
Homes, new homes,
apartments, rentals
and agents.
PositiveIy appeaIing.
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VCSCoupons.com
Save locally on
apparel, automotive,
entertainment
food/grocery, health
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Healthcare
RN IV WOUND CARE/ENTERSTOMAL
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of Los
Angeles, Community Memorial Hospital is a 242 bed
non-profit, acute care facility, committed to provide
quality patient care in an environment that promotes
clinical excellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership
development. At our facility, our employees share their
enthusiasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a
comprehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending
accounts, paid time off, and a variety
of other great benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of
excellence, please take a moment to discover more about
what its like to work at
Community Memorial Health System.
Please apply online at www.cmhshealth.org
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
The Inpatient Wound Care nurse will provide clinical
oversight for inpatient wound care and enterstomal
services. Consultation, educational support and staff
development activities will provide the bedside nurse
with the knowledge, skill, and competence to manage
wounds. The Wound care nurse will provide consultative
and educational services to patients, physicians, and
family members; assisting them in the management of
individual wound care needs. The Wound Care nurse will
serve as a resource to best practices for wound care
including cost effective care in the management of
dressings, supplies and specialty beds.
Qualifications:
BSN required, Masters degree preferred, Wound Care
Certification preferred. Minimum of three (3) years of
clinical experience in acute care nursing and/or
education. Good interpersonal skills and the ability to
communicate effectively orally and in writing.
Professional appearance and conduct. Current
unrestricted California RN license
and BLS certification is required.
VCS332496
Healthcare
RN IV WOUND CARE/ENTERSTOMAL
Located close to the beach, just 60 miles north of Los
Angeles, Community Memorial Hospital is a 242 bed
non-profit, acute care facility, committed to provide
quality patient care in an environment that promotes
clinical excellence and innovative leadership.
We offer some of the best benefits in the industry, along
with great career choices, training, and leadership
development. At our facility, our employees share their
enthusiasm for life as well as for helping others. As you
balance your work life with your other passions, were
there for you every step of the way.
CMHS offers excellent benefits, such as Medical, Dental,
Vision, Life, and AD&D insurance. We also offer a
comprehensive 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending
accounts, paid time off, and a variety of other great
benefits.
If you are interested in joining teams that meld quality
care and compassion to create an environment of excel-
lence, please take a moment to discover more about what
its like to work at Community Memorial Health System.
Please apply online at www.cmhshealth.org
CMHS is an EOE/AA Employer
Responsibilities:
The Inpatient Wound Care nurse will provide clinical
oversight for inpatient wound care and enterstomal
services. Consultation, educational support and staff
development activities will provide the bedside nurse
with the knowledge, skill, and competence to manage
wounds. The Wound care nurse will provide consultative
and educational services to patients, physicians, and
family members; assisting them in the management of
individual wound care needs. The Wound Care nurse will
serve as a resource to best practices for wound care
including cost effective care in the management of
dressings, supplies and specialty beds.
Qualifications:
BSN required, Masters degree preferred, Wound Care
Certification preferred. Minimum of three (3) years of
clinical experience in acute care nursing and/or
education. Good interpersonal skills and the ability to
communicate effectively orally and in writing.
Professional appearance and conduct. Current
unrestricted California RN license and BLS certification
is required.
VCS332105
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
540
Help Wanted
P/T Starter - Golf Course
($8.83-10.22/hr.) Details &
applic at www.rsrpd.org.
Exp reqd. Rancho Simi
Recreation & Park
District. VCS332090
RETAI L- COSMETI CS
STORE
ASSISTANT MANAGER
Our prestigious Interna-
tional Cosmetics Compa-
ny has an opportunity
available in our:
CAMARILLO STORE
The professional we seek
must be highly motivat-
ed, energetic, poised,
with minimum 1 year re-
tail management/sales
experience and a talent
for providing the highest
level of customer service.
We offer a highly com-
petitive salary, a compre-
hensive benefits package
as well as the opportunity
to become part of one of
the worlds leading cos-
metics companies.
Please forward or Fax
512-869-6970 resume in-
cluding salary history, in
confidence to:
Store Manager,
The Cosmetics Company
Store Camarillo Premium
Outlets, 850 Ventura
Blvd., Suite 740,
Camarillo, CA 93010 or
E-mail:
Resumes@
cosmeticscompanystore.com
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
VCS332086
SALES
TELEMARKETING
We dont care what type
of work youve done in
the past. If you have the
ability & persistence,
well train you to sell our
industrial tools and
supplies. Ventura
distributor needs six new
reps ASAP to make out-
bound cold calls to the
Marine & Truck industry.
Up to $25.00/hr, Salary+
Comm. M-F 7am-2:15pm.
Call Pat 805-644-7758
VCS332699
SECRETARY F/T for
Westlake Vlg Property
Mgmt co. Heavy ph,
typing & computer skills
a must. Call Don 9a-5p.
800-729-5673 ext 0
VCS332635
Crossing Guards P/T
$12.70/hr Immediate openings;Cross children
3x daily.All weather conditions.
City of Camarillo, 601Carmen Dr, Camarillo
805-383-5646. EEO.
www.ci.camarillo.ca.us
VCS332110
540
Help Wanted
Crossing Guards P/T
$12.70/hr Immediate openings;Cross children
3x daily.All weather conditions.
City of Camarillo, 601Carmen Dr, Camarillo
805-383-5646. EEO.
www.ci.camarillo.ca.us
VCS332109
Rentals
600-683
609
Apartments
Unfurnished
2088 W. Hillcrest Drive
NEWBURY PARK
Studio - $1,225
One Bedroom - $1,395
Dual Master - $1,725
Move-in June & receive
$500 GIFT CARD!
Renovated, f/p, all
appliances included.
Small dogs welcome.
866.462.1407
VCS331340
Camarillo
Camino Ruiz Square
1 & 2 BEDROOMS
*Call For Pricing!
INCLUDES:
washer/dryer refrig
dishwasher gas range
central a/c microwave
Open Mon-Sat 9a-6p
105 Camino Ruiz #21
Equal Housing Opportunity
877.859.3308
VCS331613
OXNARD 3bd+2ba
Beautiful New Apartments.
Full hardwood floors,
granite counter tops.
Must See! 805-402-5737
VCS331949
540
Help Wanted
Oxnard Beach
Channel Island
Village Apts
Studio $925
1+1 $1,050
2+1 $1,275
Spacious floor plans,
heated indoor pool & spa
tennis ct & gym.
Only $500 dep!!
No Application Fees
3650 Ketch Ave
(805)984-5880
VCS331562
OXNARD
BINGO!
Everybodys a
winner @ Seawind
1 Bdrm Special
$940
Elevators, gated, garage
prkg, fun social activities.
Free Bingo
ask how.
55+, Section 8 ok, no pets.
Call Carol Now 805-986-8411
VCS332416
OXNARD
DEL CIERVO
APARTMENTS
Low Deposits
OAC
1 & 2 Bedrooms
*on availability
Beautiful Grounds
BBQ Area
Pool and Jacuzzi
Tennis Courts
Close to Shopping
1905 N. H St.
805-981-4341
VCS331714
OXNARD NORTH
1+1, $1,050/mo
2+1, $1,400/mo w/garage
$1,200/mo w/out garage.
Elma 805-604-9578
VCS331719
T.O. SUMMER SPECIAL
@ MOUNT CLEF APTS
1 BD - $1,200
2 BD - $1,500/mo
www.mountclef.com
805-492-2022
VCS331536
609
Apartments
Unfurnished
T.O.
When Available
SPACIOUS
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Pool, covered prkg
and laundry room.
Easy Fwy Access.
Sorry, NO pets.
Mon-Fri: 9am-5pm
Sat: By Appt
(805)495-5520
223 Erbes Rd #101
VCS332198
VENTURA:
1+1, $900/mo.
2+1, $1,200/mo.
Vance 805-641-1776
VCS331720
VENTURA
2 bedrooms
3 bedroom twnhm
Washer Dryer,
PET FRIENDLY!
ASK ABOUT OUR
MOVE-IN SPECIAL
675 Providence Ave
866-964-9019
OPEN DAILY
VCS332282
VENTURA COUNTY
Make a Change
Tierra Vista Apts
1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms
From $1,441
Dont Forget To Ask...
About Our Great
MOVE-IN SPECIAL
Open to view
Spacious floor plans
Washer/Dryer
Pet Friendly
Full kitchen appl. Pkg.
Parking Garage/Carport
Open Daily Mon-Sun 9a-6p
Call 866-799-0390
VCS332226
VTA 1+1 newly renovated
walk to Downtown Ventura.
$1,200/mo, utils paid.
805-653-0809 VCS332199
VTA 2+1 $1100 @ Laurel &
Meta. Refurbished, quiet,
carport, water/trash paid.
No pets. 805-643-7972
VCS332645
Vta 2bd 1ba walk to down-
town, util incl, newly
renovated 805-653-0809
VCS332634
VTA 2br 2ba x-Lg units w/all
appliances, close to shopping
Some units avail for handi
capped and/or seniors. $1385
805-658-7453 VCS331960
VTA
Apts. Available for Low
Income Families.
2+1, $1,026 2+1, $1,231
All Utilities Included.
Income Guidelines Apply.
Kalorama St @ E. Thompson
805-325-1730 VCS332534
609
Apartments
Unfurnished
Commentaryandyour letters-Everyday
PositiveIy
opinionated.
Positivelyfor you.
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Time Out - Every Friday
Local and out-of-town stage,
exhibit, lm, music, restaurant
reviews and listings.
Escapes Every Sunday
Sit back and embark with
our travel section.
Positively picturesque.
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609
Apartments
Unfurnished
VTA
Apts. Available for Low
Income Families.
2+1, $1,026 2+1, $1,231
All Utilities Included.
Income Guidelines Apply.
Kalorama St @ E. Thompson
805-325-1730 VCS332218
VTA
Harbor View Villas
Luxury Apt. Homes
Fabulous Ocean Views
FREE Cable!
333 N. Kalorama St.
805-648-1760
www.gardnercompany.com
Harborview apts/gardner
management VCS331695
611
Beach & Vacation
Rentals
OXN Impeccable Executive
Seabridge Island Port
Marluna 3rd floor corner
penthouse condo. Beautiful
Marina Views. Gated.
Turn-key ready, fully
furnished with new designer
furniture: including two HD
TVs and music system. 2+2,
outdoor terrace, 30ft boat
dock, 2 car underground
parking w/storage. 2 year
lease, $2,500/mo. Must have
refs & apprvd credit. No
Pets/Smoking. Call Frank
805-455-0344 or Email:
frankcassirer1@gmail.com
VCS331373
617
Condos/Townhomes
Unfurnished
Bella Vista Condos
in Ventura
2bd+den, 2 car tandem
gar, $2,100/mo. Lease
Available August 1st.
Contact Michele
805.639.3214 or
805.766.0269
VCS332585
CAM SPRINGS 3+3 Twnhm
Pool, spa, club, gated, N/S.
1 year min lease. 884 Paseo
Serenata. $2,100/mo+
$3,100/dep. 805-482-3677 or
805-558-1178 VCS331263
vcstar.com/
garagesales
Online
garagesalemap
everyFridayp.m.
Greatbuys
arecloserthan
youthink.
617
Condos/Townhomes
Unfurnished
CONDOS/APTS
VTA West end 2+1 nr
downtown, the beach and
has easy freeway access.
New paint and carpet.
Water paid. $1150
E. Ramona
VTA Very unique 1+1.75
three story unit w/ a 2
car garage. Large private
patio off bedroom and liv
ing room. Office and sauna
on first floor, laundry
room on second floor. $2295
San Pedro
VTA 1+1 west end with
laminate floors and owner
provided washer & dryer.
Water & trash Paid. $1050
Fraser
OXN 3+2 Las Brisas unit,
close to shopping, resturan
ts & easy freeway access.
Washer,dryer & refrigera
tor included for tenants
use. Trash paid. $1695
Blackberry
OXN 2+2.5 multi-story
unit close to the beach and
harbor. Ocean views from
the living room and deck
off the 3rd floor. $2350
Mandalay Beach
OXN 2+1 downstairs unit,
close to Hobson Way
Park. Water paid. $1200
S. G St
Pt HUE 3+2.5 Las Palo
mas unit, close to the base,
resturants, shopping and
schools. Complex has pool,
spa and tennis court. $1850
Captains
Pt HUE 3+2.5 Anacapa
Walk close to school, restu
rants and the base. Walk
ing distance to the beach.
Washer, dryer and refrig
erator for tenants use.
Owner will consider a pet
w/ larger security deposit.
$2200 N. Ventura
Pt HUE 2+1 front unit,
close to base, shopping,
schools. Living room has
fireplace. Washer/dryer/
for tenants use. $1275
Pearl
CAM 2+2 Ponderosa
Creek, close to aquatic
center, shopping and
schools. Complex has pool
and is gated. Trash paid.
$1600
Via Montoya
**additional
rent/deposit required
All properties are
no pets no smoke,
one year lease
unless otherwise
specified
VCHFR.COM
805-650-2500
We are a proud
sponsor of the Pier
under the Stars
VCS331462
617
Condos/Townhomes
Unfurnished
Crossroads Investments
300 Esplanade Dr STE 580
Oxnard, CA 93036
805-485-4040
APARTMENTS
NORTH OXNARD
2+2 upstairs, carport,
coin-op, wtr & trash pd,
near school & park, $1,250.
CONDOS
VENTURA: Todd Ranch II
3+1.5 twnhouse, gar,
fenced yrd, balcony, hkup,
comm pool, clubhouse,
near school & Ventura
Aquatics Center, $1,700.
crossroads-investments.net
VCS331452
NBP 2+Loft+1.5 CONDO
2 car att gar, $1,750/mo.
GE Realty 805-496-9650
VCS332290
OXN CA Lighthouse 3+2.5,
$1,975/mo, dbl att gar, pool/
spa, gated community. Sec
8 ok, no pets. Avail 7/1.
805-207-5311 VCS332117
Port Hueneme 3+1.5
remodeled to 2+1.5, with
huge master bedroom,
near harbor, beaches,
garage with opener, newer
carpet, paint, large private
patio, country kitchen,
many utilities paid, $1295
Keith Hanson Realty
805-981-1552
VCS331830
PORT HUENEME BAY
55+ 2+1.5, bonus rm, pool,
spa, golf, excl. cond.
Avail 7/15, $1525+ sec.
805-766-8067 or 805-701-0196
VCS332434
VENTURA Must SeeTown-
house Super clean,newly
updated, quiet home ready
for you!Great locale &
ameneties. Near aquatic
ctr, running tr,shop-
ping,govt.ctr., fwys.
W/D,frig,DW,Grg,patio,clu
bhouse & pool.Looking for
a great home,this is it! No
pets please. Avail now, call
now & WELCOME HOME!
3bdrms 1full/1half baths
$1,800.00/mo (805)258-6514
VCS332374
621
Duplexes
Unfurnished
OXN SHORES DUNES
3+2, den & 2 gar, f/p.
Walk to BEACH!
$1,985 lease. 805-760-4952
VCS332504
627
Houses Unfurnished
CAM 5+4 ADOLFO GLEN
on cul-de-sac, $2,700/mo,
includes gardener. Call John
213-703-4490 VCS332247
Camarillo, 4bdrm, 2 bath,
laundry, f/p, $2400/mo call
805-729-0615 VCS332668
CAM/SOMIS 1+1 guest
house, quiet, gated, util pd,
w/d, ss appl, N/S/P.
$1400+sec 805-386-3594
VCS332388
627
Houses Unfurnished
HOUSES
VTA 2+1 west end single
story home, with new car
pet and paint, on a corner
lot, close to shopping and
schools. Water & trash
paid. $1375
Kellogg
VTA 3+2.5 single story
east end, in an estab-
lished neighborhood, close
to school and Kimball
shopping center. Large
fenced backyard. $2100
San Benito
VTA 3+2 single story
above the college, with
tiled floors thoughout,
granite counters in kitch
en. Fenced backyard,
monthly gardening
service. $2250
N. Ashwood
VTA 4+2 with granny flat
and pool. Close to schools,
shopping and easy free-
way access. Possible RV
parking. $3000
Bays
*additional deposit
required
All properties are
no pets, no smoke,
one year lease.
VCHFR.COM
805-650-2500
We are a proud
sponsor of the Pier
under the Stars
VCS331464
Newbury Park/Dos Vientos
4bd+2.5ba, bonus rm, 3 car
garage, cul-de-sac, great
schools, small pet ok. N/S.
$3,500/mo. 360-921-7567
VCS331803
OXN N. Seabreeze Gated
Community 3+2.5, 2 car gar,
newer home, xlnt condition.
$2,200/mo for furnished.
$2,000/mo for unfurnished.
Ask for Ricardo
805-797-0577 VCS332205
OXN Rent or Option to Buy
3bd+2ba, 2 car garage,
fenced yard. 805-983-9283
VCS332430
Port Hue nr CB Base, 128
West C St., $1725+ $1725
sec , 3+2, new paint/
carpet, fence back yrd,
805-340-8179 VCS332555
PT Hue 3+1, attach gar, nr
Bard/Schools/Base, lrg drive
way, nice yard, No Pets/
Smoking. $1,600/mo.
805-276-6970 or 805-844-8220
VCS331283
Simi Valley 4+2.5 + office,
beautiful 2 story home,
2727 sqft, formal din rm,
upgraded kitch w/break-
fast nook, gas f/p, custom
firepit, RV access.
$3300/mo. Avail Now.
Please Call 805-520-0527 or
805-304-1672 VCS331665
627
Houses Unfurnished
T.O. Unique 3bd, 2ba house
w/lrg parklike yard.
Great location. Avail 9/1/13
$1900/mo 951-302-3206
VCS332651
Ventura 2+1, washer & dry-
er hookups, water & elect
pd, $1250/mo 805-794-3068
VCS332391
VILLA VICTORIA
APARTMENTS
3730 Gum Tree Street #510
in Oxnard, California.
Low income
affordable units
Villa Victoria Apartments
accepting applications
3 and 4 bedrooms available
starting at $1,043.
Townhome style
apartments, two-car
garage, equipped with
washer & dryer;
complete kitchen with
dishwasher, oven range,
and refrigerator.
RentS for income qualified
applicants.
For additional
information call:
(805) 485-9081
VCS332594
VTA E. 3+2, f/p, hkups, dbl
oven, d/w, grndr, n/p, elec-
tric gar opener, 3 car drive
way, fruit trees, $2200+dep
805-525-2798 VCS332616
677
Rooms For Rent
CAM-Furn. in room:
tv, micro, refrige,
pay $360 bi-weekly,
805-857-0310 VCS332568
OJAI, $450/mo incl util,
furniture avail, cbl & inter-
net, share bath w/1 person,
full house priv. 805-490-4392
VCS332446
OXNARD ROOM FOR
RENT $200 deposit
No Pets 1bdrms 1baths
$600.00/mo (805)279-2870
VCS332569
OXN S. Rooms, w/ pvt bath,
$550/mo+dep, priv bath ,
utils paid. No smoking or
pets 805-981-4240 or
805-407-8055 VCS331934
THOUSAND OAKS
$500/mo+utilities.
Available Now!
805-492-5969 or 805-300-5969
VCS331445
VENTURA - PRIVATE
ENTRANCE & PATIO

Lrg room, Priv bath, pool.


near Govt Center. Quiet.
No pets/smoking/drugs.
Utils & Internet incld.
park in gar. $50, $650+
$650 dep. 805-477-1375
Avail Now VCS332119
VTA E House You get 2 rms
liv rm , pvt ba. Xlnt loc, nice
yd. N/S Cat? utils pd, $900
+dep 659-4686 VCS332381
WESTLAKE VILLAGE
Furnished & Unfurnished
rooms for rent. $750/mo+
$650/mo. 818-889-0102
VCS331268
Real Estate
700-874
780
Houses For Sale
Bank Repo
Sterling Hills
4+4 pool & spa, call Broker
805-901-8852
VCS332690
Homes Under $399k
FREE List w/Pics!
www.Under399.com
First Time Buyers
Why rent when
you can own?
FREE List w/Pics of
homes available for
under $2,000/month.
www.FirstTimeCA.com
Free recorded message
1-800-318-3356 ID# 1051
Michael Szakos
Lic#01473073 VCS332043
Commercial
Real Estate
875-893
885
Commercial
Industrial Rent
SIMI INDUSTRIAL
800sf - 5000sf, with office &
warehouse, roll up door,
terrific location, great
terms and pricing.
Mid Valley Properties
805-527-9632 Ext: 1
VCS331698
VENTURA Approx 14,000
sq.ft. free standing
industrial bldg. Terrific
location. Minutes to 101
Fwy.Great Price & Terms.
805-644-0941 VCS331528
VTA INDUSTRIAL SPACE
960sf - 2,125sf, with office &
warehouse, roll up door,
terrific location, great
terms and pricing.
Mid Valley Properties
805-527-9632 Ext:1
VCS331701
887
Stores/Ofces
Rent/Lease
CAMARILLO RETAIL
Santa Rosa Plaza, 650sf
to 3400 sf. David Press
(310)553-6512 VCS332182
887
Stores/Ofces
Rent/Lease
LEASE PROFESSIONAL
OFFICE 1,725/sf
Heart of the City - Busy
Downtown Redevelopment
District. High visibility & high
traffic area.
No triple net (nnn) charges!
Professional Downtown
Business Area at Entrance to
the Commercial Port.
Drive-up Curbside +
On site Parking! $1.00sf/
modified gross (no NNN)
261 Hueneme Rd.
Gary805-444-0450 VCS324902
OXNARD
Central Business District
DOW SHOPPING CTR
Retail, Office or
Restaurant. 1,440 SF Min.
5,808 sq.ft., $1.35/ft Gross.
Broker Bob
(805)963-4236
VCS331685
SIMI OFFICE SPACE
700sf - 1,000sf. Available.
Excellent terms & pricing.
Mid Valley Properties
805-527-9632 Ext: 1
VCS331699
VENTURA 300 - 2,100sqft
Office Suite. Corner of
Harbor Blvd & Spinnaker
DrIve. Great location and
minutes to 101 Fwy.
Reasonable Pricing.
805-644-0941 VCS331529
Ventura Professional
Office Space
$.95 per sq.ft. ($1,197 for
1,260 sq.ft.) Utilities pd.
@ 101 Fwy at Victoria.
Call 805-479-8284
VCS331477
VTA: 4th Floor Penthouse
1,400sqft. @ $1,750/month.
For more info visit:
www.vcstar.com & reference
VCS Number below.
805-479-8284
VCS331862
VTA OFFICE SPACE
Beautiful units from
540sf - 4,500sf. Great terms
& pricing. Now Available!
Mid Valley Properties
805-527-9632 Ext: 1
VCS331700
Recreation
900-945
909
Boats
1985 30 CHRIS CRAFT 281
Super clean in & out,
2 Mercury engines, sleeps 6,
stove, head, shwr, fridge,
radar, bait tank, GPS, 2
fish finder & much more in
Oxnard. Freshly painted
bottom. $10,000 661-724-9240
VCS331500
909
Boats
TWO JET SKIS
1200 cc, Yamaha 00
3 Seater. Forced to
sell due to divorce,
pd $26,000, asking
$9,900. Have been
garaged, xlnt cond,
ready to turn key &
go! Lots of extras
and travel trailer
included!(cf7740pm)
805-407-2828
VCS331680
922
RV Spaces for Rent
RV space for rent, in Senior
park, Simi Valley.
Avail now. 805-526-2256
VCS332687
933
Motorcycles And
Equipment
HONDA CRF 250X 2004
Excellent Condition. Low
Hours. Not Ridden Since
2008. Electric Start.
Water Cooled. $2,500/obo.
(#001954). 805-509-9519
VCS332268
Transportation
950-998
977
Auto For Sale
FORD EDGE 2010
19k miles, pearl color,
leather, loaded, like brand
new, at low book! $21,000.
(6KUU792). 805-933-9292
VCS331514
995
Wanted Vehicles
WANTED Old Race Cars,
Classics, Motorcycles:
Harley, Ducati, Porsche,
Jaguar, Austin Healy,
Ferrari, Corvette, Mustang
Camaro barracuda old
toys, auto memorabilia one
item to entire collection.
Come to you, pay in cash.
800-299-3114 or 805-495-7445
hadaparts@aol.com
VCS332196
Find new&used cars.
Yourkeyto
findingyour
nextcar.
Search
through hundreds of homes for sale
using local MLS. Visit VCSHOMES.com
VCSHomes Every Sunday
PositiveIy
appeaIing.
Positivelyfor you.
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VCS136942
All adertised prices eclude goernment fees and taes, an fnance charges, an dealer document preparation charge, and an emission testing charge. Prices good through Sunda. All items subject to credit approal and prior sale. Sale prices eclude leases.
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36000. Option To Purchase At Lease End $17298.
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Get the newspaper. Not the bill.
Discover the convenience of Star EZ Pay!
No more bills delivered to your home.
No payment dates to remember.
No more checks to write.
Call 800-221-STAR (7827) or visit vcstar.com/subscribe
90
1. Chuso M|||lury Bun||ng bono|ls uro uvu||ub|o on|y on Chuso Prom|or P|us Choc||ng uccounl. Dopos|l uccounls subjocl lo upprovu|. Wo w||| nol|y you o chungos lo your uccounl lorms uno oos.
2. o non-Chuso ATM oo churgoo by Chuso or us|ng unolhor |nsl|lul|on's ATM. sugo oos muy bo churgoo by lho |nsl|lul|on lhul owns lho ATM.
3. C|l curos nol so|o |n CT or J. C|l curo purchusos on||no uro $4.95 por curo or slunouro sh|pp|ng (sh|ps |n 5-7 bus|noss ouys).
4. A|| Homo Lono|ng prooucls uro subjocl lo croo|l uno proporly upprovu|. Rulos, progrum lorms, uno cono|l|ons uro subjocl lo chungo ul uny l|mo w|lhoul nol|co. ol u|| prooucls uro uvu||ub|o |n u|| slulos or or u|| |oun umounls.
Olhor roslr|cl|ons uno ||m|lul|ons upp|y.
Homo |ono|ng uno oopos|l prooucls ooroo by JPMorgun Chuso Bun|, . A. Mombor FDlC.
2C13 JPMorgun Chuso & Co.
Your commitment |s lo our counlry.
Our commitment |s lo you.
ExcIusive to MiIitary Servicemembers and Veterans: CHASE MILITARY BANKING
Show your quu||y|ng M|||lury lD uno opon u Chuso Prom|or P|us Choc||ng
SM
uccounl.
1
Thon, you uro onl|l|oo lo roco|vo u|| o lho
bono|ls o lh|s prom|or uccounl oos|gnoo ospoc|u||y or you, Amor|cu's bosl uno bruvosl:
o m|n|mum bu|unco roqu|romonl
o Monlh|y Sorv|co Foo
o oos on our non-Chuso ATM lrunsucl|ons ouch slulomonl por|oo
2
o oos on Monoy Oroors, Truvo|ors Choc|s, uno C|l Curos
3
D|scounls on olhor prooucls uno sorv|cos
4
Visit your nearest Chase branch or ChaseMiIitary.com
32
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