Monday, March 7, 2011

Win $10,000 at the Reverse Drawing



REVERSE DRAWING!!!! Willie Ryan's 19th Annual event! Grand Prize $10,000 on Friday, March 11th doors open at 5:30 pm at The Country Club at Soboba Springs. SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES ABOUND! Call Marcie for details. Tickets on sale this week include a dinner for two and a chance to WIN at the Chamber office (for a $135 donation). Bring in your Silent Auction Baskets. For those in need of basket ideas, we can have plenty, just ask us. Contact the Chamber for more information.please e-mail: info@hemetsanjacintovalleychamber.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or give us a call at (951)658-3211 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (951)658-3211 end_of_the_skype_highlighting

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Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Top 4 Items associated with Short Sales with us

1) 81% successful closing rate,
2) Realizing you are only 1 of millions in this situation,
3) No out of pocket money,
4) Relocation money to help you move,

We can help you or anyone you know with a Short Sale,call or email for an appointment,

Dodie 951-533-2252 email dodie.oneal@century21.com
Tony 951-533-0363 email tony.oneal@century21.com

Friday, November 12, 2010

Victory Bell returns to San Jacinto



The Victory Bell is now in the possession of San Jacinto High School after the football team defeated Hemet 50-7 Friday. It will be painted in school colors and displayed in a case built by the school's woodshop class.


Hemet High painted and polished its treasured Victory Bell, leaving it gleaming with its trailer and frame in a color scheme of red, gold and white. It was ready for the resumption last Friday of its historic football rivalry clash with San Jacinto High.

It was polite for Hemet to bring the bell to San Jacinto in good condition, but it would have been more gracious if the paint had been orange instead of Bulldog red. The bell goes to the winner of the rivalry game. It was claimed by the Tigers on Friday for the first time since San Jacinto won in 1966.

The schools, which began the series in 1929, only had played four times since 1967 and not at all in the last half dozen years because bigger Hemet tended to dominate San Jacinto. Now that they are the same size and in the same league, the rivalry was renewed Friday. San Jacinto crushed Hemet, 50-7.

Garry Packham, the San Jacinto High principal who played for Hemet in the 1960s, said that despite its nice paint job in Hemet's school colors, the trailer and frame will become San Jacinto orange.

The bell is locked away to prevent its disappearance. The team likely will show off the bell at a San Jacinto School Board meeting. It will be displayed in a secure place in a case built by the school's woodshop class. Packham plans to host the bell for at least a few years. If Friday's lopsided contest was any indication, San Jacinto will keep it.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Ramona Bowl Electronic Waste Collection this weekend




The Green Coalition of the San Jacinto Valley will host an electronic waste recycling event on Saturday and Sunday at the Ramona Bowl parking lot, located at 27400 Ramona Bowl Road, in Hemet.

Among the items accepted will be computers, televisions, phones and other electronic waste items. Batteries, refrigerators, washing machines and light bulbs will not be accepted.

Fore more information, contact 1-877-866-0128 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 1-877-866-0128 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.

Also this weekend;

Hemet Farmers Market Saturday; visit http://www.hemetfarmersmarket.com
Soboba offers fun for all; visit http://www.soboba.com

Monday, October 18, 2010

San Jacinto High Physics connects Worldwide



Students in the physics club at San Jacinto High School listen to Thomas Ferguson, a professor of physics with Carnegie Mellon University, during a video conference call.

Web cams in a San Jacinto High School physics classroom are connecting students to scientific experts and in at least one case to a classroom of students in Israel also studying physics.

Students come in before or after school or during lunch to reap the benefits of physics teacher Mark Bonnard's summer fellowship to the European Center for Nuclear Research near Zurich, known as CERN.

Scientists there oversee the Large Hadron Collider, a high-energy particle collider that is opening a new frontier in probing matter at the sub-atomic level and understanding the vastness of the universe.

Students in the school's Particle People academic club sat in the class lab last week eating lunch and listening to professor Thomas Ferguson of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh talk about his summer work at CERN.

The scientists and educators that Bonnard met in Switzerland "see the value of getting the kids interested for the science sake," Ferguson said.

Ferguson is working on experiments with a compact muon solenoid, a particle physics detector.

"Whatever nature throws at us we hope we can measure," he told the students.

When he talked about the hunt for Higgs boson, the students knew he was discussing a particle predicted to exist but not confirmed by experiments. The Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois is hunting, too.
"They want to beat us," Ferguson said of the friendly competition to find it first.

To physicists, Higgs is like a missing link in what is called the standard model of physics, Bonnard said.

"It is a particle that is responsible for giving matter mass," he said.

"It's so cool," senior Diana Sixto said of the competition.

She said she wants to learn more about what the detector can measure. Ferguson answered one of her questions about how the detector he uses differs from one the students use to measure cosmic rays.

"I really do look forward to it," junior Marwan Abushawish said of the webcasts. "It is very enlightening."

Senior Mercedes Jimenez tries not to miss a guest speaker. She said her physics studies are "not as difficult as I thought."

Another webcast will be set up with Ferguson so that the students can ask questions.

The collider, underground near the Swiss-French border, brings people together from all over the world. In a "small world" way, it united Bonnard with a Russian from his past and Ferguson, who is a childhood friend of Diane Mitchell, of Hemet. Mitchell learned last spring of Bonnard's trip and helped arrange for them to meet.

The Russian, who Bonnard knows only as Misha, helps Ferguson with his collider research.

Now his classes start with a look at the lab's website to keep up with the research and learn more.

Students also have had webcasts twice with UC Riverside physics professor Robert Clare.

Future sessions may link the students with those in classrooms abroad, once issues like Internet connections are resolved.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Ramona Humane Society Oktoberfest Saturday



Dog agility demonstrations will return to the Ramona Humane Society on Saturday as part of its 10th annual Oktoberfest.

Pet adoptions will cost only $25 during Saturday's 10th annual Ramona Humane Society Oktoberfest.

"We have tons of puppies," said Jeff Sheppard, CEO of the San Jacinto shelter that is housing about 400 animals. "We are running out of room."

An all-new kids' zone will offer game booths and activities to keep children busy and also raise funds for the nonprofit to continue its mission of fostering the humane treatment of animals.
Sheppard said there are two big changes this year. One is that there will be no free spay or neuter vouchers given out.

"This is not fiscally viable for us right now," he said. "We gave out over 3,000 last year and it took until July for us to get done (with the operations)."

He said after the first of the year, the shelter plans to implement a pilot program for Hemet and San Jacinto residents that should help with the goal of stemming the pet overpopulation problem in our area.

The other change is that a beer garden will be offered - set up in the fenced off dog park area, across the driveway from the shelter's buildings.

"Our sponsors are very reliable and generous," said Sheppard. "Small Animal Care Center, Bank of Hemet, SJ Medical Clinic/Urgent Care and Soboba Casino are all helping us subsidize the reduced adoption fees."

He said all available animals are still vaccinated, spayed or neutered and go to their new homes with a collar, leash and other items. The revenue that is lost on the discounted adoptions is made up by the sponsors.

Last year's Oktoberfest attracted 5,200 visitors that resulted in 230 adoptions for the day. In conjunction with the ASPCA's National Adopt-a-Shelter-Dog month, adoptions after Saturday will still be discounted at $50 through October. Regular fees are about $100 and up.

Sheppard said a full force of volunteers will be on site to help process adoptions, sell raffle tickets for a state-of-the-art outdoor barbecue grill and help with children's activities.

The shelter is at 690 Humane Way (off Seventh St.) in San Jacinto. Entry is free and parking is available for $2.

The event is from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Information, 951-654-8002 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 951-654-8002 end_of_the_skype_highlighting or www.ramonahumanesociety.org

Also Saturday;
Hemet Farmers Market; visit www.hemetfarmersmarket.com
Fair at Perris Fairgrounds; visit www.socalfair.com
Soboba St. Joseph Church 100th Anniversary; visit www.soboba-nsn.gov

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Soboba Church to celebrate 100th anniversary


The Rev. Earl Henley is the pastor/chaplain of St. Joseph Mission Church, which is celebrating its centennial.

Sitting inside St. Joseph Mission Church takes some parishioners back in time to important moments in their lives and memories of family members.

The church on the Soboba Indian Reservation is celebrating the 100th anniversary of its chapel Saturday and Oct. 17 with activities open to the public, including a special Mass, which will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Oct. 17 by Auxiliary Bishop Rutilio del Riego of the San Bernardino Diocese.

The church is publishing a commemorative book to help make the community aware of the church, its purpose and activities and the culture of the Native Americans who helped build the church.

"I had catechism class here, first communion, I got married here," remembered Marian Chacon, 74, a member of the centennial planning committee. "The bus used to drop us off here after school."

In 1888, a Catholic priest established the St. Rose of Lima mission church in a wooden building. It was replaced in 1910 and renamed St. Joseph. Historic accounts indicate that St. Rose of Lima was damaged by an 1899 earthquake, and a crack in the St. Joseph church is a vestige of a 1918 earthquake.

St. Joseph has concrete walls 14 to 16 inches thick, the Rev. Earl Henley, pastor-chaplain for American Indians in the diocese, said. In the past eight years, heating, air conditioning and a stained-glass window have been added
Before the renovations, Chacon remembered a ceiling with exposed beams.

The only other 100-year-old church building in the diocese is St. Bernardine Church in San Bernardino which is celebrating its 100th birthday this year, John Andrews, director of communications for the diocese wrote in an e-mail.
The diocese has many parishes, or congregations, that are over 100 years old, including St. Anthony in San Jacinto and Precious Blood in Banning, which celebrated centennials in 1990.

St. Joseph when packed seats about 100, and Rev. Henley expects another 250 people outside who will be able to hear the Mass from an outdoor sound system. Donna Bergstrom, who is a parishioner of Our Lady of the Valley in Hemet but has experience organizing special events, is the chairperson of the centennial committee.

"Right at the go get, I felt very peaceful, very relaxed," said Henry Gonzales, 69, of San Jacinto, who considers himself the "new kid" because he started attending in 2002. "You feel very much at home in comparison to a very large church." Some people find the mission because it's across Soboba Road from the Soboba Casino.

"My dad sat in that spot," said Hector Flores, 46, whose father, Martin Flores sat in the back of the church

An in memoriam list compiled by the church committee makes a special mention of the elder Flores who died July 22. He had attended St. Joseph's since 1948, worked as custodian at Our Lady of the Valley, and prepared the alter for Mass at St. Joseph's every Sunday, including ringing the outside bell and taking up the collection plate for decades.

The younger Flores remembers sitting at the back with his parents and five siblings. "If we made any noise, there was a pinch from Mom," he said. He brings his wife and three daughters to church where they also sit in the back.