Monday, March 29, 2010

Killer Bees take Silver Medal at State Championships,



WINNERS: American Youth Soccer Organization’s under 10 soccer team, the Killer Bees, was one of four California teams to play in the State Finals. The State Finals were March 27 in Bakersfield where they took the Silver Medal.

The Killer Bees soccer team has done something no other American Youth Soccer Organization soccer team from Hemet has done — it was going to the State Finals in Bakersfield.

“I don’t know if it’s really hit me yet,” Killer Bees coach Ramon Benz said.

The Bees — which is made up of 8- and 9-year old girls — solidified their spot among the four top teams in California when they swarmed the competition at the Southern California Section I Championship nearly one month ago.

The girls represented Orange, Riverside, San Diego, Los Angeles, and San Bernardino counties in the state finals.

Benz said the Bees’ 26-0 record was not been easy to get.

“Those wins have not come easy. We’ve had to face some tough teams,” Benz said.

He said the girls proved how badly they wanted the state championship when they braved hard rain and won despite the weather.

“We played in the rain, and our girls prevailed,” Benz said.

He said their previous game was tied 3-3 in double overtime. The game went to a shootout. After three kicks each, the teams were still tied, 6-6.

“I made a keeper change to make a psychological move, and we stopped those kicks. I thought, ‘Oh my goodness, we have a chance to do something that no one has ever done (in Hemet).’” Benz said.

Benz said he doesn’t make excuses for his girls simply because they are young.

“I don’t treat them like they are 8 or 9 and incompetent,” he said. “If you tell them they can only do something small, that’s what they will accomplish. But if you give them big hopes and dreams, that’s what they are going to accomplish. I push them.”

Benz said one of the most extraordinary things about his team is that the players are at different skill levels. He said AYSO puts teams together to make sure no team is stacked with the most highly skilled players.

At the end of each season, coaches rate their players. The following season, the players are distributed so that there are players of every skill level on each team.

“Other regions that we play don’t do this. Some of them group all of the highly skilled players on one team,” Benz said.

He said each girl adds to the success of the Bees.

For example, he has two daughters, Glory and Cherish, who play on the team. He said that, although they are sisters, they couldn’t be more different. Glory is the leader, he said.

“She’s the toughness of our team,” Benz said.

Cherish is a shy player.

“She’s the sweet one out on the field (who encourages others),” Benz said.

Meanwhile, Jocelyn Guiterrez is dangerous, said Benz.

“Everytime she has the ball, we all hold our breath because she’s probably going to score,” he said.

Benz said that dispite being young Kylee Evans shut down the opponents number 10 player from scoring any more points. "That was amazing"

Benz said Morgan Bond is the work horse. She makes plays happen, and, Benz said, although she doesn’t always get the limelight, she works her hardest.

He said his players work hard and they have heart — and that is what makes them successful.

He also said parents have played a key role in the success.

“It’s a good combination that includes the support of the parents. They support the way I coach. They allow me to push the girls,” Benz said.

He said he encourages parents to be positive with the girls.

“I tell the parents to let me be the bad guy,” Benz said.

Benz said the most important aspect of his coaching is to make the girls believe in themselves.

“What these wins mean is that we have talent and anything is possible. If you believe in yourself and you play as a team, you can do anything. When you play as a team, you’re dangerous. A team is hard to beat,” Benz said.

The Killer Bees is made up of Haylie Bustamante, Cherish, Alexia Hadad, Kylee Evans, Morgan, Jocelyn, Madelynn Smudde, Diana Alva, and Glory.

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Friday, March 26, 2010

'Ramona' Dress Rehearsal Special Saturday Only


This special dress rehearsal performance of Ramona will be open to our winter visitors and the general public.

Gates open at 12:30pm

Cost is $10.00

Out of state visitors and Canadian citizens can show their drivers license to take advantage of a free rental cushion during this performance.

Tickets can be purchased at the box office before the 2:00p.m. performance.

Box Office Hours: Tuesday thru Friday 10am ~ 4pm and Saturday 10am to 2pm

Ramona Bowl Amphitheatre
27400 Ramona Bowl Road
800-645-4465
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Monday, March 22, 2010

Dresses wanted to make ‘Prom Possible’




There’s no screening. No forms to fill out. No income requirements. No costs to pay.

All the girls have to do is pick the prom dress they like best, and it’s theirs.

Sunwest Village retirement community in Hemet is holding its second “Prom Possible,” which gives prom dresses to teenage girls.

“We had such a great response from last year, and the girls were so happy,” said Carrie Compton, an organizer of the gown drive.

The Prom Possible program relies on donations of dresses, and about 200 were donated last year — more than Compton had expected.

“I was hoping for 100,” she said.

Nearly all the dresses found a taker.

“It was usually the first one (they tried on) that would fit perfectly,” she said.

Those who want to help out can drop off gowns at Sunwest Village, at 1001 N. Lyon Ave. in Hemet, between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. any day of the week.

Prom dresses in all sizes and colors are wanted. Last year, donations came from all segments of the community, such as teenage girls who no longer needed the previous year’s dress to parents whose children had left for college.

Girls will be able to select dresses in April and May.

Compton has already been to the high schools and California Family Life Center to let teens know they have a source for dresses. And they’re invited to bring their girlfriends with them.

“I like our program because they can come at any time and they don’t have to run into their peers,” she said.

She recommends that teenagers call 925-0822 to set up a time for selecting dresses.

Having grown up in Hemet, Compton finds gratification in helping local teenagers.

“It’s nice to do something for your own community, especially kids.”

Last year, the girls were invited back for a fashion show.

“They walked down the stage and said what they were going to do after graduation,” she said.

Sunwest Village’s residents loved it, and so did the girls, said Compton, who remembers their smiles.

“They said we made prom possible for them.”

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Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Restaurant of Week-Arturo's Grill



Great Family food we have enjoyed for years that has been passed down from generation to generation.You can enjoy the relaxed atmosphere with your family.
Also the catering is excepional.

Details;
Cuisine: Mexican, American
Atmosphere: Family / Children
Reservations: Not Required, , Suggested for parties of 10 or more.
Specialneeds: Children's Menu, Booster/High Chairs, Wheelchair Access
Meal Services: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner Price Level: This restaurant's average entree cost is InExpensive
Parking: Parking on Site
Attire: Casual
General Amenities: TV, Wi-fi
Bar Info: Beer, Wines

4280 East Florida Avenue, Hemet, CA 92544-5094
(951) 927-2298‎
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Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Hemet DMV Reopens!!


Olga Moczygemba renews her driver's license.
Customers at the newly-renovated DMV office in Hemet found a new look but the same old long lines on Monday.

After being closed for about two months, the office reopened to hundreds of people renewing licenses, registering vehicles or taking driving tests.

Juan Rayas arrived at 5:45 a.m. to be first in line when the doors opened at 8.
Rayas has been trying for about a month to renew his driver's license that expires on his birthday next month.

A San Jacinto, resident, he went to the Banning office while Hemet was closed and found such long lines he decided to wait for Hemet to reopen.

New flooring and a seating are complemented by updated data cables, installed to allow the DMV's queuing customer service system to work more efficiently.

One corner of the room contains cubicles for processing driving and written tests.

The 100 chairs filled fast as customers flooded in.

Within an hour all seats were taken and Inter-Con security officer Carol Armstrong stopped people at the door because there wasn't adequate seating left.

"Sometimes it's like this all day, but I think today is busier because it just opened up again," said Armstrong, of San Jacinto.

DMV spokesman Steve Haskins said 160 customers had been served in the first two hours of operation.

"As of 10 a.m., 65 more were waiting in the office with tickets and approximately 100 were waiting to get into the building," said Haskins.

He said a lot of the wait could be avoided if people would make appointments.

Kent Inducta, of Murrieta, was one of only a handful of customers who had scheduled an appointment.

"I went online last week and researched which one was the earliest," he said.

After checking Temecula, San Diego and other offices, he found the Hemet office offered the earliest date.

He said he kept hearing about making an appointment and after seeing the line wrapped around the building he was glad he did.

According to the DMV Web site, the Hemet office reported a wait time at 10 a.m. of six minutes for those with a scheduled appointment versus one hour and 10 minutes for those who didn't.

1200 S. State Street
n
Hemet, 92543
(800)777-0133
Office Hours
Mon., Tues., Thurs., Friday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Services Provided:

Driver License and ID Card Processing

Vehicle Registration

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Thursday, March 11, 2010

Temecula Rod Run 2010


March 12th & 13th Featuring pre 1974 Vehicles
Welcome to the new Temecula Rod Run website. We hope you find it easy, informative and fun to use. Thanks to the help from Web Editors, Inc. in Temecula we have a custom website for your ease of use.

A little bit about the P & R Foundation; we are a non-profit organization founded in April of 2003 by three gentlemen that wanted to make a difference in our community and the Inland Empire in doing what they knew best, car shows. We are proud to say that the P & R Foundation Board has grown by a few members who have the same love and focus as the three gentlemen that started it all out. As being a non-profit no one is paid for all their hard work and commitment. Thanks to all the volunteers P & R Foundation was able to pledge $175,000 to the Boys and Girls Club of the Southwest County for their new club house. The Boys and Girls Club have assisted thousand and thousands of young kids and adults with their lives during troubled times. We support our United States Marines to ensure they can attend their Marine Corps Ball with a donation. The Progeria Foundation, The Veterans, Boy Scouts of America is all very near and dear to our hearts with donations.

A special Thank You to the City of Temecula for all their support, understanding and guidance over the past few years, without them our show couldn’t have been possible. To our sponsors through the years Paradise Chevrolet, Casino Pauma, and the local businesses that support and come to our events, Thank You!

Last but not the least Thank You to the Drifters Car Club members for all the dedication, hard work they do, they give up vacation time twice a year to help us, working long hours and never ask for anything. They are the Best!

Friday Night Cruise

Come visit the Temecula Rod Run for our famous "Friday Night Cruise" and see hundreds of classic vehicles from all over the country cruise Old Town Front Street. The City of Temecula locks down Old Town from Arch to Arch to allow these classic beauties to run wild. Come watch while these classic vehicles roam around, rev up their engines, honk their horns and show off their stuff like never seen before.

This show attracts thousands of automotive enthusiasts and spectator's year in and year out. Over 500 entries are accepted every year and this year we are featuring pre-1970 vehicles. The Cruising starts at 5:00pm and goes on till 8:00pm; so come to Old Town Temecula and see some of the west coast finest street rods cruising Old Town. The event is FREE to the public, music and entertainment are always a big hit, as well as great food, community vendors and much more. Do not miss the party of a lifetime.
Saturday Show & Shine

This is the day where you can get a close look at these classic vehicles and take a peek under the hoods. The City of Temecula locks down Old Town from Arch to Arch from 8:00 am till 4:00pm and during these times these classic beauties are parked waiting for you to get an up close a personal look at them.

The vehicles are freshly detailed and polished to "Show and Shine"... they are just waiting around calling out to you to come see some of the finest street rods on the west coast. As always, the event is FREE to the public. Be sure to bring all of your friends and family for a great time to remember - expect great family fun! Music and entertainment are always a big hit, as well as great food, community vendors and much more. Do not miss the family event of a lifetime.

log on to http://www.rodruntemecula.com


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Wednesday, March 10, 2010

After 72 years, note in a bottle is back in Crawford family's hands


"I knew it was his handwriting," said Dimpy Skinner. "It’s an eerie feeling."
They arrived in ones and twos and threes, by plane, by car, from Utah, from Oregon, from Santa Rosa, from other neighborhoods in Hemet. Crawfords, Kennedys, Kaelins, Hulls and Wilhelms, some carrying plates of food as if they were offerings.

All came to see the note.

Seventy-two years ago, Jack Crawford and Watson Gilmore Jr. wrote and left the message in a corked bottle in the rocky hills above western Hemet in Riverside County, near where Tahquitz High School now stands. In January, four middle school boys and a father found it. The discovery prompted an overdue reunion of Jack Crawford's relatives, including his daughter and widow.
Monday, they gathered at the home of Jack's niece, Gail Wolny, and her husband, Dennis, in anticipation of the boys handing over their discovery. Chairs were arranged in a circle in the living room of a small, older single-story house on the wide-open land dotted with horse ranches east of Diamond Valley Lake. Some of the 20 people had to stand in the dining room or kitchen.

Finally, the moment arrived. Nick DiCarlo, 12, presented the bottle to Evelyn "Dimpy" Crawford Skinner, 82, of Vernal, Utah. She had apologized for not standing to greet another visitor, citing her frailty, but when Nick held out the bottle, she rose quickly to accept it.

Phil Rico, father of one of the boys, gently unrolled the note that Skinner's husband had written as a 17-year-old and placed it in her hands. She read it silently and stoically:

Hemet, Calif.

Jan. 22, 1938

Watson Gilmore Jr. and I (Jack Crawford) on the night of Jan. 21, and 22 of 1938, at midnight climbed this hill, to dispose of "good luck charms." On the night of Jan. 22, 1938, at this same hour, we retrieved our "Good Luck Charms."

Sighned (sic) by

Jack Crawford

Watson Gilmore Jr.

P.S. Blame Foolishness!!!!

Foo + Goo

"I knew it was his handwriting," said Skinner, who remarried after Jack's death in 1973. "It's an eerie feeling."

"It's my dad's signature -- I knew that," Laurie Crawford said, noting a double-looped capital J.

Family members gave the note celebrity status, photographing if from several angles, and they snapped pictures of Nick, his brother Victor, 13, and brothers Dominic Rico, 14, and Alex Rico, 12, with Skinner.

"I think it's pretty cool that we were able to find this," Nick said.

The note in the bottle will stay in the family for a couple of months, going on the show-and-tell circuit with the family's school-age grandchildren, until it is presented to the Hemet Museum.

Crawford had driven her mother two days through rain, hail and snow for this moment, to see the note and to visit relatives they hadn't seen in 10 years. Since Crawford and her mother arrived Thursday, the days have been filled with brunches where family members caught up on each others' lives and retold old family stories, such as when Sullivan first met Jack on a train in 1944, and he offered her a seat next to him so she wouldn't have to sit on a suitcase in the aisle.

"We've been nonstop," Laurie Crawford said.

Irene Komopasek, a cousin of Jack Crawford, flew in from Salem, Ore. "I hadn't seen Dimpy in 30 years," she said. "I thought 'I have to go there. I owe it to her to be there.' "

Monday, family members pulled out albums of photos showing them and Hemet in their youth, pointing out Jack Crawford and Gilmore, who is 89 and still living in Hemet. He declined to attend Monday's gathering.

Surveying the bustle, Laurie Crawford waved her hand toward her reunited relatives.

"It (the note) did all this," she said.

The arc of her hand continued to her face, where it wiped away a tear.
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Tuesday, March 9, 2010

$100,000 Reward offered after Third attack attempt on gang officers


A bomb-sniffing dog checks the grill of an unmarked car belonging to a member of the Hemet-San Jacinto Gang Task Force on Friday. A potentially deadly device, which authorities declined to describe, had been attached to the car and fell off in the parking lot of a convenience store in Hemet.
A Hemet gang officer's vehicle was booby-trapped Friday with a device that police described as "designed to kill" -- the third assassination attempt since New Year's Eve against task force officers.

A member of the Hemet-San Jacinto Gang Task Force parked at an am/pm convenience store at Sanderson and Acacia avenues in Hemet about 8 a.m. Friday and went inside to buy coffee. When he came out, he saw a suspicious device on the pavement next to his car and called for help, Hemet police Lt. Duane Wisehart said.

"It's like war," Wisehart said, standing next to yellow crime scene tape as the device was being inspected. "Somebody's going to get lucky eventually -- or what will be unlucky for us."

Police declined to describe the device but said it was designed to kill the officer when he approached the car and got in, or when he got out, Wisehart said.

Police are not sure whether the device was attached to the plainclothes officer's black, unmarked Crown Victoria at his home or some other place where it was parked. The device was on the car when he drove to the am/pm market, and it fell off there.

"The first thing you think is if they're following you," Wisehart said. "They may be watching us as much as we're watching them."

The investigation shut down city streets for blocks in south Hemet and prompted the evacuation of several businesses near the market. Hemet police called the Riverside County sheriff's Hazardous Device Team.

Bomb technicians, one wearing a black mask, inspected the car with the aid of a bomb-sniffing dog. They determined the device was not explosive.

Hemet police will send it to the Department of Justice to be tested for fingerprints and DNA. The officer's car will be stored as evidence. Police are studying surveillance footage from the store.

"For our guys, the message is that you're not safe anywhere," Wisehart said.

The gang task force was targeted twice before -- on New Year's Eve and again last week -- at its office near the Hemet police station. After the second attack, the team moved to a new site.

In the first attack, someone cut a hole through the building's roof and rerouted a line to fill the office with natural gas, intending it to explode when a person turned on a light or computer, causing a spark.

Last week, a rolling gate was booby-trapped with a firearm that would fire a bullet at anyone opening it. The bullet narrowly missed an officer.

No suspects have been identified, but police think it may be a gang under investigation. Before the Dec. 31 incident, police had cracked down on outlaw motorcycle gangs, and a white-supremacist gang was dismantled last year. None has been linked to the attacks.

No gangs or suspects have been ruled out, Wisehart said.

Each incident is being investigated by Hemet police, the gang task force and the FBI.

"We will get them," Police Chief Richard Dana said.

Hemet police have declined to state what specific measures are being taken to protect officers. Dana said officers may seem less friendly in interacting with the public, out of concern for their safety.

The gang task force is made up of seven officers from Hemet police, the Riverside County Sheriff's Department, the district attorney's office and probation and parole departments. It is one of eight units in the county. Police have not said which officers from which agencies were involved in the incidents, but said it was a different officer each time.

Gang task force officers aren't uniformed, but wear black bullet-proof vests.

The San Jacinto Valley has about 2,000 gang members who either are locals or have moved there from Los Angeles, said Hemet police Lt. Mark Richards, a one-time task force leader.

The Riverside County Board of Supervisors last week offered a reward of up to $100,000 for information leading to a conviction in the cases.

Hemet City Councilwoman Robin Lowe said she would seek assistance from state legislators to restore staffing that the Hemet Police Department lost to budget cuts.

"This is a domestic terrorist attack on our Police Department and our community," Lowe said.

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Monday, March 8, 2010

Opera, dinner in Hemet will benefit Ramona Bowl



A night of opera will be held on March 19 in Hemet to benefit the Ramona Bowl.

The event takes place at Dattilo's Ristorante Italiano at 2288 E. Florida Ave. Cocktails begin at 6 p.m. with dinner at 7. The cost is $50 per person. Cocktail attire is requested.

Entertaining will be sopranos Michelle Caravia and Megan O'Toole, tenor Josh Shaw and pianist Paul Jarski.

RSVP is requested by March 15. Information: 951-658-3111, ext. 100.
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Saturday, March 6, 2010

Killer Bees make it to state, A San Jacinto Valley First


WINNERS: American Youth Soccer Organization’s under 10 soccer team, the Killer Bees, is one of four California teams to play in the State Finals. The State Finals are on March 27 in Bakersfield.

The Killer Bees soccer team has done something no other American Youth Soccer Organization soccer team from Hemet has done — it is going to the State Finals in Bakersfield.

“I don’t know if it’s really hit me yet,” Killer Bees coach Ramon Benz said.

The Bees — which is made up of 8- and 9-year old girls — solidified their spot among the four top teams in California when they swarmed the competition at the Southern California Section I Championship on Sunday.

The girls will represent Orange, Riverside, San Diego, Los Angeles, and San Bernardino counties in the state finals.

Benz said the Bees’ 25-0 record has not been easy to get.

“These wins have not come easy. We’ve had to face some tough teams,” Benz said.

He said the girls proved how badly they wanted the section championship when they braved hard rain and won despite the weather.

“We played in the rain, and our girls prevailed,” Benz said.

He said their final game was tied 3-3 in double overtime. The game went to a shootout. After three kicks each, the teams were still tied, 6-6.

“I made a keeper change to make a psychological move, and we stopped those kicks. I thought, ‘Oh my goodness, we have a chance to do something that no one has ever done (in Hemet).’” Benz said.

Benz said he doesn’t make excuses for his girls simply because they are young.

“I don’t treat them like they are 8 or 9 and incompetent,” he said. “If you tell them they can only do something small, that’s what they will accomplish. But if you give them big hopes and dreams, that’s what they are going to accomplish. I push them.”

Benz said one of the most extraordinary things about his team is that the players are at different skill levels. He said AYSO puts teams together to make sure no team is stacked with the most highly skilled players.

At the end of each season, coaches rate their players. The following season, the players are distributed so that there are players of every skill level on each team.

“Other regions that we play don’t do this. Some of them group all of the highly skilled players on one team,” Benz said.

He said each girl adds to the success of the Bees.

For example, he has two daughters, Glory and Cherish, who play on the team. He said that, although they are sisters, they couldn’t be more different. Glory is the leader, he said.

“She’s the toughness of our team,” Benz said.

Cherish is a shy player.

“She’s the sweet one out on the field (who encourages others),” Benz said.

Meanwhile, Jocelyn Guiterrez is dangerous, said Benz.

“Everytime she has the ball, we all hold our breath because she’s probably going to score,” he said.

Benz said Morgan Bond is the work horse. She makes plays happen, and, Benz said, although she doesn’t always get the limelight, she works her hardest.

He said his players work hard and they have heart — and that is what makes them successful.

He also said parents have played a key role in the success.

“It’s a good combination that includes the support of the parents. They support the way I coach. They allow me to push the girls,” Benz said.

He said he encourages parents to be positive with the girls.

“I tell the parents to let me be the bad guy,” Benz said.

Benz said the most important aspect of his coaching is to make the girls believe in themselves.

“What this win means is that we have talent and anything is possible. If you believe in yourself and you play as a team, you can do anything. When you play as a team, you’re dangerous. A team is hard to beat,” Benz said.

The Killer Bees is made up of Haylie Bustamante, Cherish, Alexia Hadad, Kylee Evans, Morgan, Jocelyn, Madelynn Smudde, Diana Alva, and Glory.

The team will play in the state finals on March 27.
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Friday, March 5, 2010

San Jacinto Valley's "Yesteryears"



Mary Whitney has authored books about Hemet's founding fathers and other famous people and events that profoundly shaped San Jacinto Valley history.

Her ninth offering, "Yesteryears," is dedicated to the everyday men and women who were important to the region's fabric yet received little notice other than when they were born, married or died.

The book, researched largely from the old Yesteryears columns in the Hemet News, serves up nuggets of did-you-knows from 1893 to 1989 alphabetized by subject or name and is complemented by an index.

For instance, the entry for "Covell, C.B." tells of Clarence B. Covell, a manager and cashier at Farmers and Merchants Bank for 51 years. "During his employment, he insisted on being the lowest salaried regular employee. Twelve days after his retirement, he died of a stroke -- January 1959," the book said. A subsequent entry noted the contribution from a fund he set up of $250,000 to build a library in 1971.

"That's an example of what I wanted to do," Whitney said. "Little-known people who did so much."

Whitney set out to write a book to commemorate Hemet's 100th anniversary. She decided to include "what I thought was relevant to us today and perhaps relevant to people 100 years from now."

She will speak to the Hemet Heritage Foundation on Monday at 6 p.m. at Diamond Valley Middle School, 291 W. Chambers St. in Hemet. The public is invited. Books will be available for $15.

Among the vignettes she might mention:

Hayes "Happy" Walker, who at the same time was Hemet chief of police and a bounty hunter. He was fired for allowing liquor to be sold during the Prohibition era of 1920-33.

In 1957, the California Water and Telephone Co. announced that at 11:01 p.m. on Nov. 2, all Hemet phones would be switched to a dial system from the operator system.

As many as 20 Indian settlements existed around the San Jacinto Valley or within Rancho de San Jacinto. "War and bloodshed were not uncommon," the book adds, citing the 1888 San Jacinto Register.

In 1942, $370,000 worth of dried apricots was shipped out of the valley.

Whitney's parents, Alma and Earl Hudson, who moved to Hemet in 1957, went out shopping for two hours one day and as usual, left their doors unlocked. They came to find Walton Sears, who lived a quarter-mile down the road, sitting comfortably in their home reading a newspaper.

Whitney's books

"Bring Me a Windmill"

"Valley, River and Mountain"

"Whittier, Fuller & Co."

"Vignettes of the Valley"

"Pieces of the Pas"t

"Hemet and the Brudins"

"Hemet"

"Fortunes Favor the Brave"

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Thursday, March 4, 2010

San Jacinto High School physics students compete in international exercise


Last year, the physics students from San Jacinto High School were uncontested international champions. This year, much like the world of particle physics they are studying, things were uncertain.

This was the third year in a row that a group of about 40 San Jacinto students traveled to UC Riverside for two days to learn how subatomic particles are detected, how some of them behave and how to identify several of the particles, in particular, the Z particle.

On Tuesday afternoon, the students spent about two hours in front of computer screens analyzing trails left by the particles spawned in proton collisions. They were asked to estimate the probability of Z particles decaying into other particles.
Wednesday morning, they participated in a teleconference with students from Italy, Poland, France and Portugal. The group that came closest to the accepted probability was supposed to win bragging rights. Unlike last year, when the San Jacinto group came out on top, this year's results were too close to call.

But Mark Bonnard, 53, the physics instructor at San Jacinto High School, said the most important part of the event is getting youths turned on to science.

The annual exercise has been going on in Europe for many years, Bonnard said. He learned about it three years ago. He contacted CERN, the Geneva-based scientific organization that heads the Large Hadron Collider, and was put in touch with Pedro Abreu in Portugal. Abreu is in charge of his country's participation in the student exercise.

In an effort to get his youths involved, Bonnard made a trip to Portugal, at his own expense, to meet with Abreu.

"It was a pretty hair-brained idea," he said.

His team has been competing ever since.

Elizabeth Aguilar, 16, is a junior at San Jacinto High School. She said the physics students who came to UCR have been meeting once a week after school since the school year began in order to prepare for the exercise.

'the real thing'

She was excited about being in a university setting.

"This is work a lot of college students are doing," she said of the analysis she and her fellow students engaged in. "I think it goes a bit deeper than what you would learn in a (high school) class."

That exposure is the point of participating in the exercise, Bonnard said.

His students, he said, "get to come here and it's the real thing. They see that what I'm talking about is real. It gives validity to my whole program."

It also gives them an idea of the possibilities that are open to them in the sciences, he said.

Senior Victor Adame, 17, said he had never considered pursuing a science career before taking Bonnard's physics class.

"Before, it seemed like more science fiction," Adame said of the things he has been studying. "It opened my eyes. Now I'm trying to think about going more into physics."

UCR physics professor Bill Gary, who coordinates the exercise, said so far San Jacinto is the only Inland school involved.

"We want to grow it, but principals are reluctant to let their students come for two days," he said.

Still, with the single school participating, he already has seen a payoff.

"Some of Mark's kids have matriculated here and have been in my class," he said.

He motioned to the group on hand. "In a class of 40, if you can hook one, that's great."
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Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Historic Estudillo Mansion was built by San Jacinto's first postmaster


The stately Estudillo Mansion with the white wrap-around balcony is framed by picturesque bushes, awaiting regular use.

The brick mansion, which was built in 1884, now is the location of some city events, including the annual Fourth of July Celebration. But otherwise, the mansion is not open to the public.

The home was built by Francisco Estudillo Jr., San Jacinto's first postmaster and an appointed Mission Indian agent for the federal government. In that role, he was responsible for 32 reservations in Southern and Central California.

He also was elected to the local school board and served as San Jacinto's second mayor from 1890 to 1892, according to information from the city of San Jacinto, which owns the building.

The mansion is built on land that was part of a 35,000-acre Mexican land grant given to Estudillo's father, Jose Antonio Estudillo, in 1842.

Through the years, the mansion has had several owners. It was purchased by Riverside County in 1992 because of its historical significance and value to the San Jacinto community. The building was severely damaged by the Landers-Big Bear earthquakes in June 1992. The county turned over ownership of the mansion to San Jacinto in 1997.

Since then, the house has seen improvements, including an earthquake retrofit and stabilization.

The work has been funded primarily by state and federal historic preservation grants. In late 2008 and early 2009, attention was turned to the interior, including the removal of more recent modifications to the house. Damaged plaster and missing planks also were replaced. The goal, ultimately, is to restore the house to its late 1800s heyday.

The mansion is typically only open to the public at San Jacinto's annual Fourth of July celebration. The grounds of the mansion, known as Francisco Estudillo Heritage Park, are open to the public Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily.

The San Jacinto Museum is located on the mansion's grounds, along with a picturesque water conservation garden. The garden, parking lot and other improvements were completed last spring.

The Estudillo Restoration Association sponsors a number of fundraising efforts. The group meets the third Saturday of each month at the mansion.

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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Desert Wildflowers Blooming





Spring color has erupted in the lower elevations of Anza-Borrego Desert State Park and is beginning at Joshua Tree National Park. The display, sprinkled with red chuparosa and delicate pink sand verbena, is expected to intensify in the coming weeks.

Some wildflower watchers say this spring's blooms could be less spectacular because September, October and November lacked rain needed to kick-start germination. But others disagree and say the regular blasts of winter rain will make for a better-than-average wildflower season, once the weather warms.

"We had ample rains in January. What that will do, and what we're going to see, is widespread bloom," said botanist Jim Andre, director of UC Riverside's Sweeney Granite Mountains Desert Research Center in the Mojave National Preserve. "You can't really lose this year."

Predicting the success of a wildflower season is tricky, he said, because so many factors influence the plants' behavior.

Besides rain, the flowers need warm temperatures and depend on the bank of seeds stored by each plant. Those in the Colorado Desert, which includes Anza, the Coachella Valley and the eastern part of Joshua Tree, require autumn rain, but the transition zones covering other parts of Joshua Tree, Death Valley and the Mojave National Preserve do not, he said.

Andre and other experts agree that this season could be slightly later than usual because of the winter storms.

Andre expects Joshua Tree will have one of the most spectacular displays this year. The area received 10 inches of rain in some spots, more than an average year's total. But germination could be slowed by future rain and snow because the seeds could rot or wash away, he said.
Here what's happening now:

In Anza, pockets of verbena and desert lilies are blooming outside Borrego Springs. At the peak of the season, look for carpet-like blooms of those and desert sunflowers along Henderson Canyon Road and Coyote Canyon, said Jim Bremner, who tracks sightings on his Web site, DesertUSA.com. Wildflowers to come include brown-eyed primrose, Arizona lupine, desert lavender and California trixis. The peak: now to late March.

On the warmer, low-desert side of Joshua Tree, near the Cottonwood Visitor's Center, chuparosa, bladderpod and ocotillo are starting to bloom, ranger Joe Zarki said. This month, expect to see the blooms of yuccas, nolinas, beavertail cactus, wooly marigolds, sunflowers, desert dandelions, blue-flowered heliotrope and poppies at the park and Amboy Crater. The peak: the second week of March to early April.

In the higher-elevation eastern Mojave Desert and Mojave National Preserve, blooms haven't started yet. In the next few weeks, look for desert pincushion, Canterbury bells, desert gold, Bigelow's monkeyflower and apricot mallow. Some of the best spots are the Cima cinder cones outside Baker and the Kelso Dunes. The peak: mid-March to mid-April.

In Death Valley, wildflower sprouts have started to appear in the lower elevations of the park. Though still a long way from flowering, the most growth is in the central part of the valley, lending a green tint to the alluvial fans and hillsides. Expect to see the pink blossoms of beavertail cactus, rock nettle, globemallow and Bigelow coreopsis. The peak: late March to early April.

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Monday, March 1, 2010

Ramona Outdoor Play-Back to Roots



BACK TO ROOTS

The operators of the Ramona Bowl say they are trying to reconnect with the community and focus on their core event -- the Ramona Outdoor Play -- after the venue almost went broke last year amid declining attendance and the staging of other events that failed to produce much revenue.

"Ramona" is part of the fabric of the San Jacinto Valley. Generations of Inland residents have played cowboys or Indians or volunteered as ushers or food sellers.

The play, which opened at the Ramona Bowl near Hemet in 1923, is based on a book written by Helen Hunt Jackson that illustrates the struggles of Native Americans in Southern California during the 1850s.

The venue's board of directors is bringing back service clubs to sell refreshments, eliminating events such as children's theater and battle of the bands, and has sat down one-on-one with potential donors.

Already, group ticket sales for "Ramona" are ahead of last year's pace, board President Andrew Kotyuk said, after the Ramona Pageant Association teamed on marketing with other regional attractions, including the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway and the Temecula wineries.

"It's baby steps," said Kotyuk, 34, who joined the board last June and became president in October. " 'Ramona' is going to survive. We're out to convince everybody one at a time."

That survival has not been guaranteed. The association lost $123,995 in 2007 and $158,243 in 2008, according to tax records. Officials considered canceling the 2009 performance because of financial troubles.

Attendance for the five annual performances of "Ramona" declined from 21,336 in 2000 to 9,035 in 2009. The decade's lowest attendance was 8,560 in 2008.

A $100,000 gift from the Soboba Band of LuiseƱo Indians allowed "Ramona" to be staged in 2009. Soon after, the association asked Riverside County to buy the site in Hemet for $1 and spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on renovations. But the sides could not agree on other terms, according to Verne Lauritzen, chief of staff for county Supervisor Jeff Stone.

The association used a grant last year to bring in a new operations director, Paul Jacques, and produce a battle of the bands, concerts, children's theater and a Renaissance Faire. Most were not financially successful. Although income from the Renaissance Faire exceeded projections, the event lost $50,000, Kotyuk said. A decision has not been made on its future, he said.

Many other events -- and Jacques -- will not return this year after the grant ran out.

BACK TO ROOTS

Al Cordova said he has seen positive signs.

He is president of the Ramona Bowl Music Association, which has staged summer concerts at the bowl for 63 years, though it is not affiliated with the bowl. This offseason he had been looking at new venues amid uncertainty about the bowl association's financial status.

However, he was in negotiations last week to return to the bowl, where eight of the current 10 Ramona Pageant Association board members have joined since January 2009.

"It's a healing session for everybody," said Cordova, who has volunteered during "Ramona" for 46 years. "This new group ... instead of being a commercial deal, they are trying to get back to the community roots."

Larry Minor, owner of Agri-Empire, a potato-growing giant in San Jacinto, said his grandfather was a caretaker at the bowl. Minor remembers that every town in the area used to erect a banner, businessmen grew beards and parades were staged in honor of the pageant.

"This should be one big event with the whole community behind it," Minor said.

For some, that has been difficult.
BROKEN LINKS

About a dozen years ago, bowl operators cut ties with the myriad service groups that had sold food and refreshments during performances to make money for their organizations, in favor of a single professional concessionaire.

Hal Brown, secretary of the Hemet Lions Club, said his group had the soda and water concessions, and that friends would come from out of town to visit club members and attend the play. When the Lions were let go, the friends no longer came.

"There were a lot of things that have occurred like that that have caused the community to become disconnected," Kotyuk said.

But the concessionaire's contract has run out and the service clubs will be back this spring when the bowl stages five performances April 17-18, April 24-25 and May 1. Kotyuk also reached out to the clubs this year when he asked them to help fix up the bowl.

"I think the pageant needs to do a better job of local outreach like those things," said Eric Gosch, co-owner of the Gosch Auto Group in Hemet and a longtime financial contributor to the association.

The association has found success with the personal touch.

Minor said he hadn't contributed in several years but donated $5,000 this year after a visit from board member Lori VanArsdale.

"It's a lot different when someone comes in and sits in your office, instead of sending a flier," he said.

expenses slashed

The bowl will run a leaner operation, Kotyuk said. Expenses for 2010 have been cut by 20 percent, but unlike last year, Artistic Director Dennis Anderson and the actors playing the lead roles of Ramona and Alessandro will be paid.

The events Jacques produced "were too similar" to those in Orange and San Diego counties, Kotyuk said. The play with its Native American theme, meanwhile, is not duplicated anywhere else, he said.

"Our focus now is really shifting heavily to update, modernize and expand that historical significance," Kotyuk said.

Jacques said he "was very satisfied" artistically with his productions. The Riverside resident said when the association wanted to cut back his hours this year, he decided to focus instead on teaching theater and film at three Inland colleges as well as directing "Music Man" for the Redlands Bowl and raising his children, ages 4 and 5.

The bowl association wants to increase donations and build an endowment with contributions from "Ramona" participants and attendees so it doesn't have to depend so much on ticket revenue. Kotyuk said the Soboba tribe donated $15,000 this week.

The association is shifting to a fiscal year that will run from July 1 to June 30. Kotyuk estimated expenses of $250,000 and revenues of $280,000 for the first six months of 2010, so the bowl appears to be on the right track.

"It belongs to the community," Cordova said. "If Hemet and San Jacinto lose the bowl ... it would be a major hole in the history of the community."

WHERE;
Ramona Bowl Amphitheatre
27400 Ramona Bowl Road, Hemet CA. 92544
Toll Free: 1-800-645-4465 / 951-658-3111or email: ramona@ramonabowl.com

2010 Ramona dates: April 17&18, 24& 25 & May 1

April 17 & 18 2:00 – 4:30p.m. Gates open at 11:00 a.m.
April 24 & 25 4:00 – 6:30p.m. Gates open at 1:00 p.m.
May 1 4:00 – 6:30p.m. Gates open at 1:00 p.m.



2010 Ramona Ticket Prices
Lower Level: Online: $34 for all ages*
Box Office: $32 for all ages, Locals: $19
(Local zips: 92543, 92544, 92545, 92546, 92548,
92549, 92581, 92582, 92583 and 92596)




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Upper Level: Online: Adults $34*, Box Office: $32
Online: Seniors (62+) $32*, Box Office: $29
Online: Children (-12) $21*, Box Office: $19
Local Discount: $19
Family 4-Pack: $99 Includes 4 tickets
Free Parking
One Souvenir Program



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Shaded Box Seats: Online: $49* for all ages, Box Office: $47


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Group Rates: (20 minimum) $28 for tickets only, lower level
1 free ticket for every 20 paid
Whole Enchilada package: $45 per person includes
Lower Level seating, Lion’s Club Deep Pit BBQ,
Rental cushion and free program



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* Includes all handling and processing fees

© 2010 [Subscriber] and its licensors.
Portions © 20010 Bring the Blog,
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Do not reproduce without permission.