Saturday, January 30, 2010

DMV in Hemet Closed



The Hemet Department of Motor Vehicles office will be closed until March 15.

The office was closed for major renovation, including a new floor, installation of modular furniture, updating of the data cable system, and other improvements.

DMV officials said in a news release that the Hemet office has had no substantial renovation since it opened in 1989.

It is one of several offices slated for maintenance or repair projects during 2010.

The DMV usually schedules about a dozen office closures each year for varying lengths of time to improvement infrastructure or install equipment.

While the Hemet office is closed, the DMV recommends that San Jacinto Valley residents use the offices in Banning at 1034 W. Ramsey St., #B; Temecula at 27851 Diaz Road; east Riverside at 6425 Sycamore Canyon Blvd.; Redlands at 1659 W. Lugonia Ave.; or Palm Springs at 950 N. Farrell Drive.

DMV officials said in the news release they will move employees among the offices to accommodate customer flow.

The Hemet office has 22 full-time and six part-time employees who handle 187,000 transactions each year.

Customers may also use the mail, Web, or telephone.

Instructions for mailing license or registration renewals are included with the notifications sent out by the department.

The DMV accepts checks or money orders to renew by mail.

Online services are available 24 hours a day and include making appointments for written and driving tests, vehicle registration, and driver license renewals.

Some functions can be completed online, including choosing personalized license plates, changing addresses, and payment of fees with a debit card.

There is a fee for debit card transactions.

The Web site is at www.dmv.ca.gov.

The telephone number is (800) 921-1117 and can be used for registration and driver license renewals for customers who have their six-digit renewal identification number that accompanies the renewal notice.

Automated phone services are also available at (800) 777-0133.

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Friday, January 29, 2010

Horse-drawn hearse at San Jacinto Valley Cemetery?



Juan Molina-Soto, 75, of Lake Elsinore, is taken to the San Jacinto Valley Cemetery in style with a horse-drawn hearse. "Dad loved to play the horses, and this was his last race," daughter Laura Molina says.
The late Juan Molina-Soto took an unusual and fitting final ride Wednesday to San Jacinto Valley Cemetery.

His casket was loaded aboard an ornate, red-and-white, horse-drawn hearse that led a funeral procession of headlight-beaming cars and trucks through San Jacinto neighborhoods and on to the cemetery along Santa Fe Avenue.

Jack Gerbl, owner of San Jacinto Valley Mortuary, said he only used a horse-drawn hearse one time before, but never in the San Jacinto Valley. Carol Griese, general manager of the cemetery, said she can't recall a carriage used to bring a casket to a gravesite in San Jacinto.
Laura Molina, Molina-Soto's daughter, had a ready answer when asked at the funeral why the family chose horse transportation. "Dad loved to play the horses and this was his last race," she said.

Her father was an Orange County resident who retired to Lake Elsinore four years ago after a career as a sales manager. He succumbed to lung cancer Jan. 21 at age 75.

He spent Sundays at horserace tracks or the off-site wagering facility at the Southern California Fair by Lake Perris. Relatives in San Jacinto suggested the San Jacinto Valley Cemetery as a pretty place for a burial. Linda Molina thought it was appropriate because her father was regular at Soboba Casino too.

The horse-pulled carriage cost only a little more than a conventional hearse. George Liblin, owner of G & F Carriages in Bloomington, handled the reins. He wore a bright red coat and a black top hat and slacks. He said he provides the carriage to about 15 services a year, normally meeting a motorized hearse at the entrance of the cemetery. The company's carriage assignments included the Bachelorette television show and the Rose Parade.

Molina-Soto's casket was loaded onto the carriage a little after 1 p.m. The carriage was pulled by a pair of gorgeous, white Percheron-Morgan mix horses. Grandsons Amed Molina of Fullerton and Alexes Molina of Lake Elsinore rode on the coach.

The procession moved smoothly. Liblin said he was impressed by people who saw the funeral procession roll by. As a sign of respect, as soon as they spotted the unusual hearse, they took off their hats.

Visit the Cemetery website at http://sjvcd.org

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Thursday, January 28, 2010

Lightning P-38 to visit Palm Springs



Bob Cardin led a four-month expedition to Greenland to recover and restore Glacier Girl, a Lightning P-38 forced down in bad weather in 1942. "Doing something that had never been done before and that most thought impossible was my motivation," Cardin said.
With only seven of the planes remaining in the world, this weekend provides an opportunity to see a rare Lightning P-38 aircraft in action.

The Palm Springs Air Museum is hosting a special two-day event based around the P-38 fighter Friday and Saturday. First up is a special reception with Bob Cardin's PowerPoint presentation on the recovery and restoration of Glacier Girl Friday at 6 p.m. That specific P-38 will not be on display, but another will.

In 1942, two squads of P-38s landed on Greenland because of bad weather and low fuel. The pilots were picked up, but the planes were left behind and later buried under the snow and ice. In 1992, Cardin led an effort with 40 people to recover the planes. The team dug through 268 feet of ice to reach one of the planes and brought it up piece by piece.

Cardin said he was in Greenland on the glacier for more than four months. His favorite moment of the recovery was being able to sit in the cockpit on the surface.

"The expedition was a great adventure and very challenging," Cardin said. "Doing something that had never been done before and that most thought impossible was my motivation."

After 10 years of work, the recovered P-38, named Glacier Girl, took flight once again.

The configuration of the plane prevents Cardin from enjoying the fighter aircraft in the air.

"Unfortunately, Glacier Girl has only one seat and no provisions for passengers," he said. "So I get to watch her fly around."

Since only one plane was recovered, there is an opportunity to recover the other aircraft in the Greenland glacier.

"We can only work on the glacier during the good weather times," he said. "Simply speaking, we ran out of time."

Following the presentation there will be a meet and greet along with hors d'oeuvres and wine tasting from Middle Ridge Winery. Music will be performed by Heatwave: Jazz and Show band of the Boys and Girls Club of the Coachella Valley.

On Saturday, Cardin will repeat his presentation at 1 p.m. And there will be a flight demonstration by a visiting P-38 piloted by Jeff Harris, of Newport Beach.

Where: Palm Springs Air Museum

745 N. Gene Autry Trail

When:

Friday: Presentation and reception

6 p.m. $15-$25

Saturday: Presentation

1 p.m. $5-$12 (Children under 6 and active military free).

Information:

760-778-6262 Ext. 221

www.palmspringsairmuseum.org.


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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Western Science Center gets $150,000 from Hemet for improvements

The Western Science Center will receive $150,000 from the city of Hemet to build new exhibits at the museum and expand classrooms and laboratories.

The Hemet City Council on Tuesday approved releasing the money from its park development account, which comes from developer fees. The city had pledged a total of $1 million to the museum in 2006. The vote was 4-0. Mayor Eric McBride, at work with the San Bernardino Police Department, was absent.

The museum at Diamond Valley Lake will also use the money to build shelters against sun and rain over the instructional dig site, and to install tables and benches outside, City Manager Brian Nakamura said.

The museum has a collection of almost 1 million artifacts from prehistoric sites and offers educational activities for students. It is not owned by the city but is eligible for money because it is considered a public park within the city limits, Nakamura said.

The city has a stake in the success of the museum; Nakamura has said he envisions the museum and nearby ball fields, and perhaps someday camping and golf courses, as a destination for tourists and their dollars.

what do you think?

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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Hemet Theatre, saved from fire, is still threatened

One of the Inland Empire's oldest movie theaters has been as significant a part of growing up for San Jacinto Valley residents as their first kiss, first taste of independence and first job.

And so when Oneida Montemayor-Barrera heard a rumor that the 442-seat Hemet Theatre on Florida Avenue had burned down Wednesday, "I felt like I lost someone," she said.

But thanks to firefighters and the concrete used in its construction in 1921, the single-screen theater survived the fire that claimed three adjacent downtown businesses.

That survival, however, is threatened by new enemies: the economy and competition. The theater is paid for, but co-owners Dave Bernal and Emerson Bixby barely have enough cash to keep the heat and lights on. They spent most of their money -- about $315,000 -- on the building. And ticket sales are poor for their mixture of year-old first-run movies, black-and-white classics and cult films.

So the Hemet was put up for sale before the fire, even as the owners attempted to raise enough money to keep their childhood dream of co-owning a theater alive.

Bernal said Monday that the Hemet will be closed while smoke and water damage is repaired. He expected to receive estimates today. The fire destroyed Ellen's Nails, Elite Florist and Document Solutions, along with antiques stored by Salwa Greco, the owner of the building that houses all three shops.

Hemet Fire Chief Matt Shobert said his department received thanks from "10 different folks from 10 different walks of life." The initial investigation points to faulty wiring in the near-century-old building, he said.

Bernal said he has heard from worried Hemet patrons across the country.

"We're on the ropes," he said, "but we're hoping for a comeback."

ONE CITY, ONE SCREEN

For decades, the Hemet was the only show in town.

William Martin opened the first Hemet Theatre in 1915. After an earthquake damaged much of downtown in 1918, he constructed the current building using reinforced concrete.

Theater chain Krikorian opened a 12-plex in Hemet in 1994 and Metropolitan opened 12 screens in San Jacinto the next year. Regal now operates both. Holiday Cinemas operated three screens for years until it closed in 2000.

The Hemet, bowing to competition, showed its last movie under the Martin family ownership in 1995. Bernal and Emerson Bixby reopened the Hemet in 2004.

Rich Loomis, 73, knew Harold Martin, grandson of William Martin.

"This was the greatest place to go when we were kids," said Loomis, a former turkey rancher who still lives in Hemet. "The movies were real good, and the loges were the place all of us studs made out with our girlfriends."

He enjoyed "War and Peace," which debuted in 1956.

Montemayor-Barrera, 48, fondly remembers sitting in the ornate theater and watching "Planet of the Apes" when it debuted in 1968.

"It was the first movie I was ever allowed to go see," the San Jacinto resident said. "Being a little girl, it seemed so big to me. It seemed grand."

Her memories of the loge section, with its thick, padded recliners, are different than Loomis'.

She said sitting in the more-expensive loge offered moviegoers a certain status, but she lamented that she couldn't afford those tickets.

Tom Wilson, 57, cleaned the Hemet in the late 1960s when he was a student at San Jacinto High School.

"They had refrigerated air conditioning and it was really a pleasure to go in there," Wilson recalled.

He also remembered the heavy curtain that separated the smoking room from the rest of the theater. Touching the curtain would produce a puff of smoke, Wilson said.

TROUBLED TIMES

Although the Hemet survived the fire, the theater won't endure on sentiment alone.

To make money to keep the theater, the owners have hosted weddings, birthday parties and held screenings for groups that used them as fundraisers. Bixby, 47, who writes and produces sci-fi and social satire films, is hocking his vintage movie poster collection.

And they have brought a staple of the small screen to their screen: video games.

On Saturdays, customers can play "Left 4 Dead 2," "Modern Warfare 2," "Lego Batman" or their own video game on the theater's Xbox system and the approximate 50-foot-by-20-foot screen. The cost is $5 for 10 minutes, or $45 for an hour. Customers can also rent the theater for video games on weekdays.

"So far the response has been pretty good. The kids seem to like it," said Bernal, 44, who makes a living selling movie memorabilia and running Internet businesses.

Last Saturday, the marquee announced free gaming that day. No one showed up the first hour, and eventually a few people -- "actually a couple," Bixby said -- trickled in.

That's how it has been for the Hemet.

Before the fire, the theater was averaging 80 customers for Disney's 2009 animated movie "The Princess and the Frog," even though tickets were only $5 -- "Free if you bring Halle Berry," Bixby added.

He said 56 people turned out for "Wild Hogs," a 2007 tale about suburban biker wannabes that starred Tim Allen and John Travolta. But he lamented that only seven people showed up -- "one for each Oscar," Bixby said -- for "Lawrence of Arabia".

THE FUTURE

Bixby said before the fire that he wanted to fix some seats, improve the sound system and paint the place.

"It was built in 1921 but it looks like it was built in 1921," he said.

At the time the Martins were selling, there was talk about leasing the theater to community drama groups through an agreement with the city.

Hemet Mayor Eric McBride said last year that stage shows could help invigorate the downtown by drawing restaurants and coffee shops.

Bernal said he would like to do live events, but permits and insurance are too costly.

Recent happenings show there is hope for the Hemet, with the right plan.

Riverside's Fox Theater, built in 1929, reopened last week as a performing arts center that hosted singer Sheryl Crow on Friday. Banning's three-screen Fox Cineplex Theatres, built in 1928, was renovated in November and its owners report improved business.

Meanwhile, that "For Sale" sign sits ominously in the window of the Hemet, beneath the posters of coming attractions.

HEMET THEATRE

Address: 216 E. Florida Ave., Hemet

Phone: 951-658-7123

Web site: www.historichemettheatre.com

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Monday, January 25, 2010

Hemet starts its centennial celebration with party



Barbara-Jean Del Rico, 16, right, and Jasmine Alvarez, 14, both of San Jacinto, warm up before a performance by the Red Tail Spirit Dancers during Hemet's 100th birthday celebration Saturday. Thousands filled Front and Harvard streets throughout the day to enjoy the festivities.
As a bright sun shone on downtown Hemet during Saturday's 100th anniversary kickoff party, Linda Krupa said she couldn't help but think of the bright future she feels is just around the corner for the city.

"I believe the strength of this community is its people, and we have gone through a lot but we've always come through it in the end," said Krupa, a member of the city's centennial committee. "Times have been hard with the economy, but I think our better days are still to come."

A number of people shared Krupa's sentiments during Saturday's festivities, the start of the city's centennial anniversary of incorporation. The block party included speeches by elected officials, performances by a number of groups, street vendors, and the cameo appearance by the sun, the first in nearly a week after storms battered the region.

Thousands filled Front and Harvard streets throughout the day to enjoy the festivities, including Elizabeth Borders, one of five finalists for Hemet's Miss Centennial pageant. Borders, 19, had not been born when 130 people voted in favor of Hemet incorporating.

But she said she could feel the spirit of the town's founders in the air Saturday.

"It's really great to be here as our city turns 100," Borders said. "This is a great town and I think we can only progress."

U.S. Reps. Mary Bono Mack, R-Palm Springs, and Connie Mack, R-Fla., joined a host of state and local officials to celebrate the occasion.

Fire Chief Matt Shobert ran the anchor leg of a five-person run between Diamond Valley Lake and the Hemet Public Library, holding a baton that contained a proclamation that will be placed in the city's centennial time capsule later in the summer.

Shobert said the two-mile run was "chilly to start, but got warmer as I got into it."

"It was a very surreal experience to be here... I was honored to be a part of it," Shobert said.

Speaking about the down economy's impact on Hemet, Shobert said the centennial celebration serves as a reminder of many of the issues that faced the town's founders, Edward L. Mayberry and William F. Whittier.

The stage play "Remembering When: The Story of Mr. Whittier's Hemet," which had been presented throughout the weekend, highlighted those parallels, he said.

"We have a strong community," Shobert said. "We just have to use this down period to plan for the future, so it can be a success."

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Friday, January 22, 2010

Hemet Firefighters save Historic Theater




A blaze destroyed several downtown Hemet businesses Wednesday, but firefighters were able to save one of the city's oldest landmarks.Flames that erupted at 4:20 p.m. at the corner of Florida Avenue and Carmalita Street tore through at least three businesses, possibly four, and came within inches of the downtown Historic Hemet Theatre.

The cause of the fire was unknown. Hemet Fire Chief Matt Shobert said investigators likely wouldn't have information about the cause or damage estimates until at least today, after they had chance to get inside.

The fire started inside Elite Flowers and -- despite Wednesday's torrential rain -- quickly spread next door to a jewelry shop, Shobert said. Like many blocks in downtown Hemet, all the buildings are connected.

Bright flames danced inside the building as billowing gray-brown smoke rose high in the sky. Firefighters battled the inferno for nearly three hours, keeping the flames from the 89-year-old theater.

"After drawing our line in the sand at the theater -- all things considered, we could have easily lost this whole block," Shobert said.

Hemet and Riverside County firefighters attacked the blaze from inside the burning row of buildings for a half-hour before much of the century-old architecture became unstable. At that point, firefighters had to start using hose and ladder trucks from the street.

Dave Bernal, a theater co-owner, watched as the flames crept closer. "We're still standing. The fire is literally right next to it and they're trying to hold back the flames," Bernal said.

The attic of the theater has original movie reels, lobby tickets and old movie posters left from the original owner, he said.

"I would hate to see such a landmark be lost," Bernal said. "I feel for all the businesses affected and the families that are going to take that loss."

The theater has suffered financially for years and was recently put up for sale, Bernal said. Though the fire caused no significant damage, the theater will be closed temporarily.

At 8 p.m., however, with fire crews still at the scene, there was a sign of hope: The theater marquee remained lit up, displaying its current movie -- "The Princess and the Frog."

"I give everything to God and the Hemet firefighters for saving us and the businesses there," Bernal said. "I'm relieved the lights will shine again."

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Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Can't dampen Hope's spirit



Murrieta's Rickie Fowler will tee off at 8:57 this morning at the Palmer Course at SilverRock Resort.

LA QUINTA - Forgive the Bob Hope Classic if it doesn't have the carefree feel that it so often does.

In its 51st year, the tournament is pressing on without a title sponsor, operating on reserve funds after losing a bankrupt Chrysler from its name.

On Tuesday, PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem expressed support for the long-running celebrity pro-am during a conference call introducing the new McGladrey Classic.

"The Hope has a long history with the PGA Tour," Finchem said. "I'm very bullish about it for next year.

"In the event that we struggle with title sponsorship for another year because of the economy, we will figure out a way to bridge it and work with it for a period of time, because it's an institution on the Tour."

But even that backing didn't do much to brighten the horizon in La Quinta this week, where it's the actual weather forecast that's immediately scary. The weather report calls for rain, showers, wind and more rain over the next few days before clearing up this weekend.

Still, tournament president John Foster expressed optimism.

"We don't get real soggy out here, our courses drain pretty well," Foster said. "We'll probably get some sprinkles. The option is to play until the courses can't take it. If we lose a day, then we might go into a Monday, but it's not really a big worry, it's more of an inconvenience.

"More of a concern is the fans, if everyone hears it's flooding, no one wants to come out. It's more of a psychological problem for us."

Only twice has the tournament -- typically a showcase for the idyllic wintertime conditions in the Coachella Valley -- been delayed on account of weather. In 1978 and 1980, the five-round event ended on Monday.

The subtext to all the drama swirling around the tournament is the golf itself, which will be played on four La Quinta courses -- SilverRock Resort, La Quinta Country Club, the Palmer Private course at PGA West and the Nicklaus Private Course at PGA West.

Former Murrieta resident Rickie Fowler will play his second tournament in his rookie season, teeing off at 8:57 this morning at SilverRock.

Fowler will play in the celebrity rotation, paired today with John O'Hurley, an actor and television personality who had a recurring role in "Seinfeld" and is recognizable as the voice of the Progressive Insurance TV spots.

Defending champion Pat Perez also is back, as is Scott Verplank and Justin Leonard. David Duval returns to the tournament where he famously shot a final-round 59 to win in 1999. Arnold Palmer's grandson, Sam Saunders, makes his second PGA Tour start.

But there are no players ranked in the top 25 in the field this week, and only six -- Mike Weir, Tim Clark, David Toms, Ryan Moore, Brian Gay and Michael Sim -- rank in the top 50.

La Quinta resident Anthony Kim opted to play the Abu Dhabi Championship, as did such other top players as Camilo Villegas, Geoff Ogilvy, Sergio Garcia, Ian Poulter and Rory McIlroy.

"We're short on the top 10, but we have some great players," Foster said "We love the field. It's always interesting to see young talents like Rickie Fowler; it's going to be fun to see how they compare."

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Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Temecula museum is hub for local history - Ramona



Darrell Farnbach is president of the Vail Ranch Restoration Association, which runs the history center. Volunteers are restoring a 19th-century coach, and arranging hundreds of books in a Native American library.

Wedged into a corner plot next to the Kohl's store, a parking lot and Redhawk Parkway, the red barn that houses the Little Temecula History Center looks like the last holdout of old Temecula in a sea of suburban development.

Since it opened in June 2008, the center has attracted some 4,000 visitors.

The center is a replica of a barn, now demolished, that was originally located on a nearby portion of Vail Ranch, which once spanned more than 87,000 acres.

"This is where Temecula started," said Darrell Farnbach, president of the Vail Ranch Restoration Association, which runs the history center.

Until the railroad came through town in the 1880s, the area was the hub of Temecula, with a stagecoach route stop and the Wolf Store. American Indian rights activist Helen Hunt Jackson visited store owner Louis Wolf and his wife, Ramona, who was of American Indian descent. Ramona and the property apparently served as inspiration for the 1884 novel "Ramona," which is credited with helping the Pechanga tribe get a reservation.

From 1905, when the Vail family purchased the property, until it was sold to a land-development company in 1964, Temecula was sparsely populated cattle country.

Farnbach said the history center's mission is to educate locals about local history.

The center has been a popular destination for scout troops and summer camp groups. Displays including stage coach and covered-wagon replicas and a Model-A pickup like those that would have been used decades ago on Vail Ranch liven up local history lessons for children.

Farnbach said the association has a few loyal volunteers who help run the history center, but is looking for more.

"There's always something to do," he said.

Over the past year, volunteers have been refurbishing a 19th-century coach donated by a Wildomar resident. They have also been working to shelve and catalogue a 750-volume Native American library at the center.

The association is still waiting to see the culmination of its efforts to preserve a portion of the former Vail Ranch and surviving buildings that comprised its old headquarters. A group of Temecula residents came together in the 1990s to begin lobbying to save the site.

"We saw all the vestiges of this old ranch just being obliterated by construction," Farnbach said.

Now, a development that will include restaurants, shops, office space and historical exhibits and preserve the remaining Vail Ranch buildings on the 4-acre site is planned. Farnbach said the Pomona-based developer slated to build the project is still trying to obtain financing. It is unclear when construction might begin.

Anyone interested in volunteering at the Little Temecula History Center may call Farnbach at 951-552-3516.

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Monday, January 18, 2010

Hemet police wear new centennial badges with honor



At left are the special Hemet police badges and shoulder patches that mark the city's centennial and will be worn this year. At right are the traditional badge and patch.

Police officers in Hemet are taking a nod to the past and a look to the future out on the streets.

Officers on Saturday began wearing badges reminiscent of the days of Wyatt Earp and shoulder patches that evoke the city's past while foreseeing sunny days.

The silver-and-black badges, which feature a star on top of a circle, commemorate the city's centennial that is being celebrated this month. They will be worn this year only. The word "Centennial" graces the upper circle. A stylized "Police" is on a black background in the star's middle. At the bottom of the circle are the dates 1910-2010.

"We wanted to do something special for the year," Police Chief Richard Dana said Friday. "It looks a hundred years old."

Dana said he wanted the public to see the new badges and patches so there wouldn't be any confusion as to whether those wearing them were legitimate officers.

The chief said the department couldn't find a photo of a Hemet police badge from 1910, so a committee worked on this design.

He said the badges cost about $85 apiece and were paid for by donations from the public, the police officers association and the officers themselves.

The shoulder patches don't bear the Indian heads, peace pipe, feathers and drum that are part of the city seal. They are replaced by a depiction of the downtown Hemet train depot and, in the background, Diamond Valley Lake and the sun rising over the San Jacinto Mountains.

"We're looking at the rising sun as the future of Hemet," Dana said. "A bright future."

Seventeen people helped design the patch, which Dana said cost 87 cents apiece.

The department also plans to display photos of past police chiefs and old badges in public areas of the building this year in honor of the centennial, he said.

Voters approved Hemet's incorporation on Jan. 11, 1910, and the state signed off on the paperwork on Jan. 20.


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Friday, January 15, 2010

Playwright captures city's history



Playwright Michael Tennant directs John Guminiak, center, and Josh McLendon in "Remembering When: The Story of Mr. Whittier's Hemet." The play tells the story of how and why Hemet became a town.

Even though playwright Michael Tennant is a lifelong resident of Hemet, he wasn't sure if he was the right person to write about its beginning years for the city's centennial celebration.

He had more than 10 plays to his credit when he was approached to write "Remembering When: The Story of Mr. Whittier's Hemet."

Most of his works were historical dramas based on notable figures such as Abraham Lincoln, Jackie Robinson and Amelia Earhart.

"The first time I wrote a play for a paying audience was about nine years ago," said Tennant. "It is very artistically satisfying to see something you write come to life but it is nerve-wracking wondering how people will react."

Tennant said his latest play takes place between the years of 1885 and 1917 and tells the story of how and why Hemet became a town. He describes it as an informative historical drama with some lighter moments.

"It's such a huge responsibility trying to bring people back and tell their story," said Tennant. "One of the reasons I'm playing Mr. Whittier is that I felt like I knew him and I want to be the one to tell his story."

He said the script focuses on Whittier and Edward Mayberry and their plan to start the Lake Hemet Water Company and sell land and water to those moving into the area. He hand-picked a cast of good actors he knew well.

Josh McLendon plays Whittier's personal assistant. The 17-year-old is a student at Baptist Christian School in Hemet, which Tennant graduated from and now teaches drama and music classes.

John Guminiak plays dual roles of Sam Temple and Mayor Brown.

"I always love performing with John," said Tennant, who also directs the show. "He is definitely a specialty actor -- you bring him in and you will win the crowd."

Also in the play are Lauren Campbell and Casey Frass, both of Hemet, and Clarice Gerbl, of San Jacinto.

Tennant said books didn't provide the kind of information he needed to help him understand what the people of the past were thinking. Then he contacted local historian Mary Whitney and she shared papers from the Lake Hemet Water Company, which turned out to be his greatest resource.

"I made every effort to help him with his history, not his play, and the outcome is wonderful," said Whitney. "Most importantly Mike grasped W.F. Whittier's essence: the way he put two and two together, the way he handled people, the two sides of his development of Hemet -- first for money and then slowly out of love for what he eventually realized was his legacy."

"These people's fingerprints are still all over this town if you know where to look," said Tennant.

The play will debut at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 22 at the Hemet Public Library. Advance tickets for $30 include wine, hors d'oeuvres, a special Hemet keepsake and a first edition copy of Tennant's script. Members of the Whittier family are expected to attend.

During the Centennial Celebration ceremony on Jan. 23, the first 100 visitors to the Centennial booth at the street fair will receive free tickets to a special performance of the play later that day at the Simpson Center.

Information, www.cityofhemet.org/centennial

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2010 Elite Martin Luther King Tournament OAKS SOBOBA



JANUARY 16-18 2010... Open to all Current High School Players 2010 grads and younger
All games played @ the Oaks .. NCAA field! Stadium seating with player announcers,music between innings and field crew
4 game GUARANTEE $495 per team and 3 balls per game per team. (balls will be returned after every game).. 2-Umpires .. 7 inning games !!

awards to the champions..... ROOM FOR 8 TEAMS!

No Gate Fee and a Full Snack Bar!
Plenty of parking bring your RV Camping is OK!


Contact Info. Shawn Cell 562-841-1811 or e-mail mrbaseballdad@verizon.net to reserve your spot!

Tournament hosted by the So Cal Angels www.leaguelineup.com/socalangels

BRACKETS FOR 2010 MLK! everyone please e-mail to confirm... mrbaseballdad@verizon.net

Pool A...............................Pool B
1.So Cal Angels................1.Bishop Gorman (Las Vegas)
2.Inland Terror..................2.Colton Nighthawks
3.ABD Red Dogs...............3.Bonita Legends (san diego)
4.Valley Warriors...............4.So Cal Elite

Due to several teams game time request we have redone the BRACKETS wed.1/13/10 6:15 pm FINAL

Saturday 1/16
Pool Games
8:45 am A2 vs A3 @ oak's
11:00 am A1 vs A3 @ oak's
1:15 pm B1 vs B3 @ oak's
3:30 pm A2 vs A4 @ oak's
5:45 pm B3 vs B4 @ oak's
8:00 pm B1 vs B2 @ oak's


Sunday 1/17
Pool Games
8:45 am A4 vs A1 @ oak's
11:00 am A3 vs A4 @ oak's
1:15 pm A1 vs A2 @ oak's
3:30 pm B2 vs B3 @ oak's
5:45 pm B1 vs B4 @ oak's
8:00 pm B2 vs B4 @ oak's

Monday 1/18
PLAYOFFS 2 field locations!
Game#1 8:00 am 2seed A vs 3seed B .
Game#2 8:00 am 2seed B vs 3seed A
Game#3 10:15 am 1seed A vs 4seed B .
Game#4 10:15 am 1seed B vs 4seed A
Game#5 12:30 pm WG#1 vs WG#4
Game#6 2:45 pm WG#2 vs WG#3
Game#7 5:00 PM Championship Game WG#5 vs WG#6

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Thursday, January 14, 2010

Artist contributes to church, community





Leigh Ann Whitley started sharing her artistic aptitude with Trinity Lutheran Church a few years ago when she was asked by the pastor's wife, Connie Bunge, to develop a project.

"It was the first time I'd done glazed tile," said Whitley, who has been a member of the Hemet church since moving to the area 13 years ago.

With help from Pat Relth at All Fired Up Ceramics, Whitley created the mosaic tile display for the wall outside the sanctuary.

For her first big project, she designed and painted a mural inside the youth room. She has also painted butterflies on the windows of the Celebration Center and a grapevine border on the sanctuary walls, as well as other murals. "I enjoy the color of acrylics, and it's not as intimidating as painting on canvas," Whitley said.

Her latest creation, dedicated last month, is a mural inside the Celebration Center.

"It is very structured because Pastor John (Bunge) wanted it to look like stained glass," she said.

The Rev. Bunge became pastor at the church nine years ago. "She has been a part of our youth program for years and of course she is in charge of face painting at all of our community events," he said. "She is the artist in residence at Trinity. Her talent is apparent throughout our facility; she has an incredible vision."

The church's music director, Hattie Hedrick, has known Whitley for about three years. "Once I saw the quality of her work, I hired her to do some personal artwork for my home," Hedrick said. "I have been very pleased with her work and the praise I get as a result of her work."

She has been commissioned to paint many murals throughout the San Jacinto Valley, including at DeAnza Elementary and World Harvest Church in San Jacinto. But she paints at Trinity because she wants to.

"I enjoy sharing my gift with the church," Whitley said. "There are a lot of people here that share their gifts. When the economy is low sometimes all people have to share is their time and talent."

Inland People

Name: Leigh Ann Whitley

Residence: Hemet

Age: 48

Family: Husband Ron and daughters Jessica, 23, and Nicole, 15

Accomplishments: Known as the "artist in residence" at Trinity Lutheran Church in Hemet, Whitley has left her brush strokes throughout the San Jacinto Valley.

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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Traveler 8 being groomed in Hemet





She's calm, obedient, smart and even at 5 years old, she's majestic.

In other words, she has the ideal qualities to fill some very big horse shoes.

Her registered name is Betica, but this Andalusian filly is waiting in the wings on a Hemet ranch for her debut as Traveler, one of the most celebrated college mascots.

Trainer Diane Dodd is grooming this sweet-natured purebred to be Traveler 8, the white horse that performs at all USC home football games with a Trojan warrior astride.

The school is so serious about its good-luck symbol, the name Traveler is a registered trademark. Many fans swear that the animal's noble presence affects the outcome of games.

"I have high hopes for her," said Dodd, 48, who gives lessons, rehabilitates abused horses and works with show champions. During her 20 years in the business, she's trained one of singer Sheryl Crow's horses to become a winning trick horse.

Obviously, the reign of Traveler 8 won't be under the leadership of Pete Carroll, USC's head coach who resigned this week to become head coach of the Seattle Seahawks.

There's no way to predict when the equine heiress apparent will be ready to set hoof in the Los Angeles Coliseum, said her owner, Nadine Tilley, who keeps 28 horses at the Hemet ranch on Los Rancherias Road.

After all, the horse's gray coat must whiten, which could take years. And she must outgrow her skittishness and mature a bit. "We'll just know when she's ready," Tilley, 62, said. "Young horses can be silly and flighty and have short attention spans."

Then there's the matter of the incumbent. An active 18-year-old Andalusian gelding, owned and trained by Joanne Asman in Burbank, Traveler 7 won't be put out to pasture anytime soon, Tilley said. After all, horses can live into their 30s.

It's not merely chance or coincidence that several of the 28 horses she's raising are poised to become future Travelers. Her husband, William Tilley, 70, an accountant and USC alumnus, endowed his alma mater with $2 million four years ago to maintain the mascot in perpetuity, his wife said.

The tradition started when school officials persuaded a man named Richard Saukko, who rode his white horse in the 1961 Rose Parade, to appear at the Coliseum during USC games.

Ever since, whenever the Trojans score, the band plays "Conquest" and Traveler gallops around the arena. The breed of horse has changed over the decades, but the required color has remained white.

As part of Traveler 8's education, Dodd must expose and desensitize her to honking cars, screaming fans, aggressive children, barking dogs, blaring music and covered arenas. "I take her out of her comfort zone," Dodd said. That means street riding and lots of horse shows.

Dodd works with Betica in Hemet and at her Moreno Valley training center on Locust Avenue. She's also trying to transform another of Tilley's horses into a Traveler. This one's a 7-year-old Andalusian gelding, registered as DiMaggio, whom Dodd calls Joe.

She said it will take awhile before he's ready for prime time as Traveler.

"He can be nippy," she said.

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Monday, January 11, 2010

100 years ago today, voters brought forth a new city -- Hemet



A farm stretches across the landscape in this undated photograph of early Hemet. The construction of Lake Hemet Dam allowed mountain runoff to be used to irrigate crops.

One hundred years ago today, 177 residents went to the polls in a town that owed its existence to Edward L. Mayberry and William F. Whittier directing runoff from the San Jacinto Mountains into their Lake Hemet Dam.

The water allowed farmers to grow apricots, carrots, citrus, walnuts, grain and potatoes, and to raise cattle and establish dairies. The newly fertile land also made wealthy men of Mayberry and Whittier, owners of the Hemet Land Company, Hemet Water Company and the town bank.

Eventually, as the population grew, the town needed more sidewalks, more firefighters, a library and more schools. It also needed a way to pay for them when the founders wouldn't. The solution: a city with a built-in tax base.

So on Jan. 11, 1910, exactly 130 people -- mostly working men who hoped a new city would create more jobs -- voted to incorporate. The 33 votes against came largely from landowners who feared increased taxation, according to newspaper reports. Fourteen votes were thrown out on technical grounds, and despite that hiccup, Hemet was born nine days later when the state certified the vote.

Today, as Hemet looks ahead to its next 100 years, many of the issues would be familiar to those southeastern Riverside County pioneers: jobs and population growth, services and how to pay for them. But there are differences: Farms have been disappearing for years, and the city evolved into a retirement community that is now evolving yet again into a community of families, requiring a shift in thinking among city officials. And why, many would ask, is someone trying to blow up a police building?

"Cities live," City Manager Brian Nakamura said. "We grow, we get hurt, we feel pain. As a living organism, you have to adapt."

Marc Searl's grandparents arrived in the Hemet area in the 1880s and farmed 7,500 acres.

When Searl graduated from college with an economics degree, he took over the cattle operation. Today, that land is owned by the Metropolitan Water District and is underwater at Diamond Valley Lake.

Searl, 61, a former Hemet city councilman, now owns BJ Sporting Goods downtown on Florida Avenue.

"I was a college-educated cowboy," he said, "and now I'm a jockstrap salesman."

The city had 1,482 residents in 1920, said historian Mary Whitney, who has written seven books on Hemet. Estimates now put the population close to 80,000.

As a result, Searl said, the sense of family that binds Hemet residents and helps them work together to find solutions has eroded.

Beryl Penacho, 92, has lived on 5 acres in eastern Hemet since 1963 after moving to the city with husband Victor in 1950. The land used to be covered with apricot trees, but she pulled them out in 2000 as they died and the income diminished. The widow lives across Mayberry Avenue from Saratoga Ranch, a development of new homes.

"I don't think we have the community feeling we used to have," Penacho said. "We need to have more interest in what happens in town."

Nakamura, though in his first year as city manager, also has seen that problem.

To that end, he said, cities have a responsibility to reach out to residents on topics such as safe driving, recycling, school safety and conservation.

Nakamura said he was heartened Friday, however, when he turned out for sign-ups for the Citizens Emergency Response Team -- volunteers who assist during earthquakes or fires -- and saw 30 people apply and a waiting list of 28 more.

"I was blessed to see citizens so eager to want to help," Nakamura said. "I think it makes our community a great place to live and work and educate."

TODAY'S ISSUES

Even so, the city is showing its age.

Water and sewer pipes are nearing retirement, and the city is working on plans to replace them before they make headlines with spectacular collapses. An inadequate stormwater drainage system is being modernized with the below-ground drains that most other cities have had for years.

The city has had to close a fire station and cut positions because of the economy.

Three December incidents that police say involved gang members -- a pursuit that left a bullet hole in a police car, a young man chopped into pieces and then burned in a bonfire, and an attempt to use natural gas to flatten a gang task force building in a ball of fire -- made regional or national newscasts and reminded residents that urban ills are creeping into the city as it grows.

Nakamura characterized that spree as "blips" and said the city is focusing on reducing crime.

Of course, all those improvements take money, and just as the area sought to expand its tax base 100 years ago, the city is trying to do the same today.

Commercial and residential development, and improving transportation will all play a part and are inextricably linked.

Penacho noted the shift in development to the west in the 1970s and '80s. That's where most of the open land is, and where the city hopes to grow revenue on land that once produced food.

Industrial development would provide jobs that would allow Hemet residents to work locally instead of commute to western Riverside or Orange or Los Angeles counties, and it would encourage outsiders to move to Hemet. More rooftops would increase the need for service businesses, which would hire workers.

Highway 79 will be realigned about three miles to the west, from downtown to west of Warren road, with much of the cross traffic eliminated. The old highway will become basically a city street. The new highway, which is in the environmental review process, would bring motorists traveling from Beaumont to Temecula to San Diego through the city and provide opportunities for the types of businesses that normally sprout near offramps.

A Metrolink line -- Hemet wants stations downtown and to the west -- would make the city more attractive to visitors as well as potential residents.

A Hemet line "is part of the vision," said Riverside County Transportation Commission Project Development Director Cathy Bechtel, but as long as there's no money for it, that's what it will remain.

All would bolster the city's sales and property tax accounts, money that can be used to improve buildings and public services.

So, too, would increased use of Diamond Valley Lake, a popular fishing spot south of the city.

Nakamura said he doubts Metropolitan will ever allow water skiing or other recreational uses that could pollute the water that is delivered to San Diego. But he said he hopes camping, golf courses and other activities can be developed to complement the softball fields under construction. Those fields will host a national tournament this year that is expected to be a boon to the local economy.

Such development would "create a destination for tourism," Nakamura said. "We should have something to offer year round."

THE FUTURE

Whether it's asking the federal government for millions for rails, or asking the city for thousands for a sidewalk, there is agreement: The louder and more united the choir, the better.

Some have suggested that merging the cities of Hemet and San Jacinto -- a proposal that has generated more buzz than action -- would give the region of about 160,000 people more political clout in addition to saving money on public services.

Nakamura, while not taking a stand on a merger, said regions typically have an easier time getting federal funding than cities by themselves.

Whatever Hemet looks like 100 years from now, it will have to confront issues that today are both well-known and unimaginable.

Technology is sure to provide dazzling advances and puzzling policy issues -- Edward Mayberry and William Whittier never had to ponder flight paths at Hemet-Ryan Airport -- for residents and city leaders.

Regardless, there will be stories to tell in 2110 of those who shaped the second 100 years, just as the cowboy-turned-jockstrap salesman Marc Searl shared tales of his grandparents.

"I see a great future for the valley," he said. "Otherwise I wouldn't be here."

Centennial events

Official play

What: "Remembering When: The Story of Mr. Whittier's Hemet," a play about Hemet Water Company co-founder William F. Whittier.

When: 7:30 p.m. Jan. 22

Where: Hemet Public Library, second floor.

Cost: $30 in advance, $35 at door. Includes wine and hors d'oeuvres

Information: Wayne Disher, 951-765-2441

Kickoff celebration

What: Speeches, street fair with vendors and community groups, music on two stages on Harvard Street, child dancers, crowning of centennial queen.

When: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Jan. 23

Where: Hemet Public Library

Information: Wayne Disher, 951-765-2441

Whisker-ino contest

What: A contest will award prizes for longest, grayest, best handlebar style and best-looking mustache.

When: Winners will be announced Jan. 23 at the kickoff celebration and chosen via a vote of applause. Entries are open.

Information: Joy Ward, 951-658-4478

Baby contest

What: Babies born Jan. 20, 2010, at Hemet Valley Hospital will receive a commemorative centennial birth certificate signed by the Hemet mayor, a goody bag and a centennial teddy bear.

When: Announcement of the babies' names, arrival times and parents' names will be made at the kickoff celebration.

Information: Wayne Disher, 951-765-2441.

Relay run

When: 9 a.m. Jan. 23

What: Five runners pass a relay baton with a Hemet proclamation in it.

Where: From Diamond Valley Lake to Hemet Public Library.

Who:Hemet High running champions Raven Harrison and Meredith Beattie, Habitat for Humanity land-donor Joe Ziegler, Mayor Eric McBride and Fire Chief Matt Shobert.

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Sunday, January 10, 2010

Hemet resident drives Chargers on



The San Diego Chargers, that NFL football team that hopefully won't tank in the playoffs again this year, should pay Jeramie Duguid a promotional fee.

Duguid, a 29-year-old Hemet resident and an ultra-enthusiastic Chargers fan in good and bad years, drives what amounts to be a rolling billboard honoring his beloved team. When he heads down Interstate 15, his Ford F-250 truck with high-lift suspension is one of the most noticeable examples of Chargers spirit that game-bound fans will see.

His towering, shiny pickup already was a yellow that matched the Chargers familiar lightning bolt insignia. He added a giant, Charger-blue decal called a skin. It covers about half his truck.

The decal, which looks like a custom-paint job, outlines a big, yellow lightning bolt and displays the Chargers name and sky filled with bolts.

The theme continues on the back of his truck, where a barbecue for tailgate parties is mounted in a trailer hitch receiver. The grill was professionally painted yellow and blue with the Chargers name.

The big truck, with its oversized cab loaded with his football-loving buddies, is quite the sight when it ventures into San Diego County for a day at Qualcomm Stadium. They tailgate in the parking lot before watching the games.

"Usually people stare at you and tell you they like it," he said. "They give you the thumbs up."

Duguid was a Lakers fan until around the time he graduated from San Jacinto High School in 1998. His attention shifted south to football and the San Diego Chargers. He began buying tickets for games.

Two years ago, he bought season tickets with Albert Aguilar of Menifee, Julio Marquez of Temecula and Eddie Navarro, who operates his family's east Hemet location of Arturo's Grill. Besides their steady San Diego attendance, they have flown to Chargers away games in Pittsburgh, New England, Dallas and Kansas City.

Typically, they venture south for tailgate parties complete with steaks or Navarro's fine Arturo entrees. Duguid keeps a giant ice chest strapped inside the back of his Chargers truck along with a propane tank to fuel his barbecue.

He also carries a television and satellite dish on board so he can watch football games in the parking lot while waiting for the Chargers kickoffs.

He said he would enjoy going to the stadium to tailgate even if he couldn't get inside.

After the games, they, as Duguid calls it, "re-tailgate" for about 90 minutes while the parking lot clears out.

Duguid isn't the only one who should be paid a promotional fee. His very cute 18-month-old daughter, Sophia, wears her second Chargers uniform. She already grew out of her first uniform.

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Saturday, January 9, 2010

Police Athletic League is a program helping kids in San Jacinto


Victoria Martinez, 17, of Hemet, plays indoor soccer with Sandy Flores, 12, of Hemet, and Luis Camacho, 12, of Valle Vista, at the Police Activities League in Hemet recently.


At 17, Victoria Martinez is getting a start at counseling, which she is considering as a career and leadership as a Police Activities League volunteer while she has fun in sports after school.

On a recent Friday, children of all sizes clamored for a jersey from her and a chance to play indoor soccer at the Hemet Police Activities League drop-in after school recreation program.

She calmly divvied up the jerseys, insisting that teams had to be balanced. Then inside the dimly lit former beer distributor warehouse with a concrete floor, the fun began as Victoria, a West Valley High girls' soccer team member, kicking the first ball.

Victoria is a product of both the San Jacinto and Hemet activity leagues, called PAL for short. The free program offers elementary and middle school children a drop-in recreation program that includes sports, arts and crafts, homework tutoring, field trips, "cops and kids" events and a chance for community service. Teens help as volunteers.

Victoria said she got involved when she was 12 or 13 and living in San Jacinto.

"I used to go to the after school program at Monte Vista (Middle School), but my friend told me PAL was a real cool program," she said.

Like other children interviewed in San Jacinto, she said if it weren't for PAL, she likely would "just be at home, doing nothing." She said she might have gotten into trouble and gone "the wrong direction."

Now living in Hemet, she is on PAL's Youth Directors Council helping plan activities for the two sites. Recently, she was chosen as one of 13 members of the California PAL statewide council.

"I love being around these kids, they listen to me," she said.

Statewide there are about 8,000 children involved in PAL chapters, according to Gregg Wilson, California PAL executive director. The youth council is responsible for planning a three-day leadership training event for their peers in Sacramento and a four-day life after high school program at Cal State Fresno.

"Part of the leadership program is about giving back to the community," he said. The teens advise adult leaders about activities

"I'm proud of her. It has really set her on the right track," said Victoria's mother, Mary Martinez. "A couple of my co-workers bring their kids here because of her," she said. "They know that the kids are safe."

In the San Jacinto Valley, cities and law enforcement support PAL, with staff provided by Valley-Wide Recreation and Park District at the Hemet site on Buena Vista Street and the San Jacinto site at Sallee Park.

"They're here because they want to be here" and have fun, said Valerie Florez, executive director for the two sites. The program draws mostly from nearby schools. "I think the biggest problem we have is transportation."

Parents or guardians must register their children for the free program, which attracts almost 200 children between the two sites.

San Jacinto Police Chief William Tyler, chairman of the San Jacinto PAL board, said, "Both programs are going strong," in part due to the partnership with Valley-Wide and the counselors. "They just have a heart for the kids," he said by phone.

Police officers stop by daily to help develop positive relationships with youth and chaperone field trips, he said.

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Friday, January 8, 2010

New Riverside County animal shelter will open in San Jacinto in summer


A new Riverside County animal shelter is expected to open this summer in San Jacinto around the corner from the nonprofit Ramona Humane Society, which has housed animals from the region for years and will continue to operate as an adoption shelter.

The construction site is on South Grand Avenue just north of West Seventh Street in the city's industrial area.

The 10-building complex has separate buildings for strays that are in protective custody or isolation, and for dogs that are up for adoptions, according to Doug Austin, Riverside County Department of Animal Services operations chief for field and shelter services. Cats will have their own building with indoor and screened outdoor areas.

For the first 11 months of 2009, live impound strays, owner-surrender animals and confiscated animals from county areas or contract cities totaled 13,648 at the Ramona shelter, according to county statistics.

Some animals brought to the shelter may be transferred to a shelter operated by the nonprofit Animal Friends of the Valleys in Lake Elsinore because of where they were found, according to John Welsh, spokesman for county animal services.

The county supervisors awarded a $13.85 million construction contract to Tovey/Schultz almost a year ago. The approximately 43,000-square-foot complex of buildings will house animals from the midcounty area, including the San Jacinto Valley, Winchester and Homeland, and contract cities. Cities currently served by the Ramona shelter are Hemet, San Jacinto and Menifee.

The county currently contracts with the humane society to house animals. The cities contract with the county for field and shelter services.

The complex incorporates the latest in design aimed at keeping the animals healthy.

"Illness is the biggest challenge in kenneling any animal," Austin said. A special-coated block is being used in the construction of the building walls. Buildings have an air exhaust system so air is not recirculated. There is radiant floor heating, kennel floors that slope to drains and skylights for natural light.

"We're trying to make the cleaning process as quick and easy as possible," Austin said.

There will also be corrals outside for horses.

The working title for the facility is San Jacinto Valley Animal Campus, said Welsh. Third District County Supervisor Jeff Stone, whose district includes the shelter, will recommend a permanent name for the facility for approval by his board before the facility opens.

Animal Services Director Robert Miller expects the new shelter to open in July. He said the county facility will serve the legally mandated role of taking in strays or owner-surrendered animals and become a primary source of animals for the Ramona Humane Society as an adoption shelter.

The humane society operates an onsite spay/neuter clinic, which the county would utilize.

The humane society will continue operating its shelter on Humane Way just off Seventh Street. "We're looking at all options in animal services," said Jeff Sheppard, humane society executive director. "We'll be talking to the county and the cities."

Although Sheppard expects that some animals still may not find homes and be euthanized, "We would like to achieve that status of no-kill."

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Thursday, January 7, 2010

San Jacinto Planning Commission seeks applicants

San Jacinto is accepting applications from people interested in serving on the city Planning Commission.

The terms of incumbents Andrew Kotyuk, Andy Seitl and Russ Utz expired Oct. 31, 2009, but they will continue to serve until the City Council makes appointments at its Jan. 21 meeting.

The commission advises the council on development matters and typically meets once a month.

Applicants for the four-year terms must be residents of the city or its adopted sphere of influence, which is the area outside the city limits that the city expects to annex some day.

The application deadline is 5 p.m. Monday.

The three commissioners each had been appointed to fill vacancies created by the resignation of previous officeholders. Seitl was appointed in September 2008, Kotyuk last February 2009 and Utz last June, according to a city staff report by Rick Miller, the interim city clerk.

The other commissioners, whose terms will expire Oct. 31, are Steve Warneke and Larry Pellerin.

Applications are available at the city clerk's office or online at: www.ci.san-jacinto.ca.us

Information: 951-487-7339.

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Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Palm Springs International Film Festival


Tuesday evening got a little brighter in the Coachella Valley when the 21st annual Palm Springs International Film Festival kicked off with its awards gala at the Palm Springs Convention Center.

When stars such as Morgan Freeman and Clint Eastwood stepped out of limousines, flashes snapped and fans cheered from behind barricades across the street.

Irenne and Don Tarnowski, who winter in Cathedral City and are from Vancouver, Canada, came back to the gala for a second year to try their luck at seeing honoree Mariah Carey. They met Dustin Hoffman, Ben Stiller and Dakota Fanning at last year's gala.

"You can't do this in Toronto. You can't do this in Hollywood," Don Tarnowski said.

The gala kicked off the festival, which runs through Jan. 18 and will feature almost 200 films.

Among them is the premiere of "Shoot the Hero," by Palm Springs director Christian Sesma.

"It's great to come full circle," he said as he walked the red carpet.

He was excited to see one of his inspirations, director Quentin Tarantino, who was among the evening's honorees.

Tarantino said he had an awards area in his home and joked that he was making room for more after the acclaim of his film "Inglourious Basterds."

Diablo Cody, who was honored for "Juno" two years ago and presented Tarantino with his award Tuesday night, said the weather was another bonus of returning.

"It's really exciting, a really amazing, refreshing event," said Cody, who wrote "Juno." "I couldn't be more excited about presenting to Quentin Tarantino."

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Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Tuskegee official discusses possible cooperation with UCR's archive


As manager of the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site in Tuskegee, Ala., Deanna Mitchell said she couldn't miss this year's Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena.

West Covina's entry in the New Year's Day parade was a float honoring the Tuskegee Airmen that featured a bald eagle, two fighter planes and 16 members of the famous fighting group, including Riverside's Harlan Leonard.

Mitchell said she also didn't want to return home without visiting the Tuskegee archives at the UC Riverside library. On Monday, she spent several hours with Tomas Rivera Library's Director Ruth Jackson, surveying material from the archive and discussing possible cooperative efforts between her National Park Service museum and the university.

More than 1,000 black pilots were produced by the training program at Moton Field and Tuskegee University during World War II. The segregated program and the men's contributions while fighting for the United States went largely unrecognized for many years after the war.

Mitchell said although her visit was unofficial, she hopes ties might eventually be established between the UCR archives and the historic site.

"This is a great opportunity for us to connect," Mitchell said. "I'm very impressed with what I've seen."

The Riverside collection was started in 2004, originally as an effort to document the history of the Tuskegee veterans living on the West Coast. Now, Jackson said, the archive takes material from all over. The collection has military records, letters, documents and artifacts, including many items not stored at the national site.

"Some of the items like goggles and hats and flight jackets, we don't have," Mitchell said.

"I'm very excited about some of these new items," she added, thumbing through the pages of a booklet titled "The Tuskegee Airmen Story" for the first time. "They have kind of hit me in the face."

The UC Riverside archive is one of several, including collections at Maxwell Air Force Base, near Montgomery, Ala., and the National Archives.

"It stands side by side with the others," Mitchell said of the Riverside collection. "They've done an excellent job."

Jackson said most of the archival material has been gathered from the pilots, support personnel and their families. Because most of the veterans are in their 80s or older, time is critical.

"You have a special moment in time to get the archive," she said. "And when that moment is lost, the archive could be lost."

Gathering such material should be a cooperative effort, Mitchell said. She plans to speak to the people she works with about the need for collaboration.

"The more information we can collect," she said, "the easier it will be to reconstruct the history."

Visit library.ucr.edu/?view=tuskegee for more information on the UC Riverside Tuskegee Airmen archive.

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Monday, January 4, 2010

San Jacinto veterinarian reaches 100,000-surgery milestone


Lounging in a crate, the small mostly white dog was a bit woozy from surgery but became the center of attention as the 100,000th spay-neuter patient of Dr. Don Popa, the veterinarian for Ramona Humane Society's low-cost clinic in San Jacinto.
Dr. Don Popa, the veterinarian for Ramona Humane Society's low-cost clinic in San Jacinto, cradles his 100,000th spay-neuter patient. Popa keeps a record of surgeries he has performed in his career. He says he might perform 40 to 50 surgeries in a day, operating on both dogs and cats.

The 1½-year-old pup came to the shelter as a stray picked up in Hemet on Nov. 7. But after a party Dec. 22 for Popa, humane society supporters and staff, dog No. R133640 was headed to a new adoptive home in Riverside, according to society Executive Director Jeff Sheppard.

Popa, 53, keeps a record of surgeries he has performed in his career. He said he might perform 40 to 50 surgeries in a day, operating on both dogs and cats.

There continues to be a need to educate people about pet overpopulation. But in recent years, Popa said, "People are more willing to come in" to get their pets altered, with increased regulations and the incentive of price breaks on licenses for altered dogs and cats.

Sheppard said it has been an honor to work with Popa, whose care and dedication extends to teaching the shelter staff how to administer medications and address the needs of the animals.

Popa was born in Romania and studied at a university in Cluj. After coming to the United States in 1985, he took exams to qualify for a state veterinary license. He worked at a number of clinics in Riverside County and became a relief veterinarian at the Ramona shelter clinic about six years ago, where he now works full-time. He has specialized in spay-neuter surgery for 12 years.

Dr. Don Popa, the veterinarian for Ramona Humane Society's low-cost clinic in San Jacinto, cradles his 100,000th spay-neuter patient. Popa keeps a record of surgeries he has performed in his career. He says he might perform 40 to 50 surgeries in a day, operating on both dogs and cats.
His record day was 105 surgeries a year or two ago. "I have very good support staff and a lot of coffee and cookies," he said.

Riverside's Lorena Chavez, 24, who works in telecommunications, adopted No. R133640.

Chavez spotted her new dog on the Petfinder Web site. "Actually I was looking for a small dog, no breed in particular," she said by phone. "I saw her picture and I thought, 'She's really, really cute.' "

Chavez came to the shelter Dec. 16 to meet the dog, which reminded her of a Jack Russell terrier, a breed that can sometimes be jumpy and hyperactive, she said.

The mixed-breed dog has a curled tail with some tan and dark splotches on her face.

"I came and I played with her and she was really, really calm," Chavez said. The match was made.

Chavez had to work and missed the party, but said, "I was telling everyone at work my dog is going to be famous."

She understands the importance of spaying and neutering to control the pet population and said that when she hears friends contemplating buying a dog from a breeder, she tells them to check out the shelters first.

Chavez has a couple of names in mind for her new pet, but said, "I do want to get to know her a little" before picking a name.

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