Camarillo | featured news

Anti-Defamation League honors CLU

California Lutheran University honored for its diversity efforts.

 

Artist returns to pencils after film career

Jeff Mann, who spent years working on films such as "Star Wars" and "E.T.," has returned to fine pencil drawing, his original artwork.

 

Hard-working solo act earns fans one at a time

Christopher Paul Stelling plays Sunday night at Plaza Playhouse Theatre in Carpinteria.

 

Bill Locey's concert picks for Oct. 30 - Nov. 5

If he had a faster car, a richer girlfriend or even one with a job, here's where he'd be lurking in the back this week.

 

Fillmore Unified appoints trustee to open seat

Kelli Lynn Couse replaces John Garnica after he resigned last month when his wife was named an administrator in the district.

 

Apple TV brings iPhone-like apps to your TV

It turns out that Apple's streaming-TV box — aptly named Apple TV — isn't just for streaming anymore. Its latest incarnation, which ships this week, offers on the big screen just about anything you could previously only do on an iPhone or iPad.

 

2 injured during small fire at Ventura school

Two people sustained minor injuries after a small fire in the cafeteria of a Ventura elementary school Thursday morning, officials said.

 

Frustrations aired on Camarillo Springs hillside

As the rainy season nears, city officials said at Wednesday's Camarillo City Council meeting that they expect to approve plans next week to shore up the hillside in Camarillo Springs.

 

17 seconds of terror in 2012 office shooting

The Homeland Security Department missed clear warning signs of a disgruntled federal agent's descent toward violence and could have intervened before he started a gun battle resulting in his own death and the serious injury of another agent inside a government office building in southern California.

 

Last-minute Halloween party idea: Go Hollywood

The history of fun and frightening movies is long, from early horror films like “Phantom of the Opera” and “Bride of Frankenstein” to the current “Goosebumps.” Television, too, is full of scary fare, from “The Walking Dead” to “American Horror Story.” So why not use this trove of screen images and characters to create a monstrously fun Halloween party?

 

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