Riverside Magazine

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RIVERSIDE CITY LIFE & FINE LIVING MAGAZINE DECEMBER 2013 - JANUARY 2014 In the giving spirit New place, great eats Holidays & Heroes Landmark’s light touch Seasonal happenings

description

When seen from a vantage point atop Mount Rubidoux, downtown Riverside is beautifully illuminated every night of the year. It brightens up even more during the holiday season for the Festival of Lights at the Mission Inn. Of course, the city has other shining stars – namely residents who volunteer to help their neighbors. We call them “Heroes of Giving.”

Transcript of Riverside Magazine

RIVERSIDECITY LIFE & FINE LIVING

m aga z i n e d e c e m b e r 2 013 - j a n ua ry 2 014

• In the giving spirit• New place, great eats

Holidays & Heroes

• Landmark’s light touch• Seasonal happenings

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SOB-RiversideMag-Winner.pdf 1 11/13/13 4:46 PM

Fox Performing Arts Center, 3801 Mission Inn Avenue, Riverside Tickets available at Fox Box Office (951) 779 9800 and Ticketmaster. For full show information, visit foxriversidelive.com.

FOXPerforming Arts Center

Riverside, California

December 12

The Righteous Brothers’

Time of My LifeSoul & InspirationUnchained MelodyYou’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’

BILL MEDLEY

Special GuestDarlene Love

December 28

He’s a RebelDa Doo Ron Ron

He’s a Fine BoyChristmas (Baby

Please Come Home)

December 20

Special Holiday Film Screening

December 7

LA SIERRA UNIVERSITY

Sounds of the Season

December 8

HOLIDAY SPECIAL

MASTERS OF HARMONY

2013 National TourCELEBRATE THE HOLIDAY SEASON AT THE FOX

November 30

Riverside County Philharmonic

Holiday Magic

FEATURES12 EVERYDAY HEROESTrue heroes come in all forms. Some defend our country on battlefields overseas, while closer to home others leap into burning buildings to save both people and property. Still others are in the community every day doing something good for their neighbors. Meet five of Riverside’s Heroes of Giving.

22 UPWARD MOBILITYMuch like any other neighborhood, everything’s not perfect in Casa Blanca. But residents are pulling together to make their corner of Riverside a better place — and the results are showing.

27 A NEW WINNERHeroes Restaurant & Brewery may be new in town, but its owners aren’t new to the restaurant business. After opening successful locations in other cities, Nick Montano and Jack Franklyn liked what they saw in Riverside and picked a downtown location for their latest venture.

34 INN THE SPIRITWhen it comes to holiday light displays, they don’t get much bigger than the one at the Mission Inn Hotel & Spa — with a crew of 20 working 10 weeks to make it all happen. Duane Roberts, who owns the landmark, says it’s his gift to the community.

decemb er 2013 - january 2014 • VOLu me 6 , I S Su e 6

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B R o u G H T T o y o u B y :

Ron HassePuBLISHER & CEo

Don SproulMANAGING EDIToR

Jerry RiceEDIToR

Jim MaurerV.P. SALES & MARKETING

Lynda e. baileySALES DEVELoPMENT DIRECToR

Shawna FederoffRESEARCH DIRECToR

cOnTrIbuTInG WrITerS & edITOrS

Amy Bentley, Betts Griffone, George A. Paul

edITOrIaL Gr aphIc deS IGn

Steve ohnersorgen

Rick SforzaPHoTo EDIToR

phOTOGr apherS

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Tom paradis, melissa Six Jack StorrustenSALES MANAGERS

adVerTI S InG SaLeS e XecuTIVeS

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Gr aphIc arTI ST/ad cOOrdInaTOrRose Anderson

markeTInGVeronica Nair, Ginnie Stevens

LanG custom publishingFrank pine

EXECuTIVE EDIToR

joe robidouxV.P. oF CIRCuLATIoN

CoNTACT uSEditorial: 909-386-3015; fax 909-885-8741

or [email protected]: 909-386-3006; or [email protected]

Riverside Magazine is produced by LANG Custom Publishing of The Sun and Inland Valley Daily Bulletin.

Single copy price: $3.95. Subscriptions $14.95 per year. Postmaster: Send address changes to 2041 E. Fourth St.,

ontario, CA 91764. Copyright ©2013 Riverside Magazine. No part of this magazine

may be reproduced without the consent of the publisher. Riverside Magazine is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts,

photos or artwork even if accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope.

RIVERSIDEM A G A Z I N E

A PUBLICATION

PRINTED By SouTHWEST oFFSET PRINTING

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cOnnecT WITh uS !

Follow us on Twitter (@riversidemag) and Facebook (facebook.com/riversidemagazine) to be among the first to know what we’re planning for future issues. Have a question or story suggestion? Tweet us! Thank you for your support.

deparTmenTSFrom the editor 6 Mission & Market 8 Holiday events 9 Calendar 9 Music 11Seen 30 Save the date 32

Cover photo by eric reed

Travel the country and there are some spectacular light shows — times Square and the

skyscrapers of new york city, casinos along the Strip and the Freemont Street experience in las vegas.

riverside also has beautiful displays. the Festival of lights at the Mission Inn hotel & Spa — with nearly 4 million lights — gets a lot of notice during the holiday season, and rightly so. But there’s another one that happens year-round and can best be appreciated from above — from the top of Mount rubidoux.

For more than a century, countless thousands have made their way up to the summit to attend easter sunrise services on the grounds surrounding the cross. on some mornings there are so many walkers and joggers wanting to take advantage of the crisp air that the paved path leading to the top can

resemble the 91 Freeway off in the distance.

For the cover of this issue, photog-rapher eric reed and I opted to ascend Mount rubidoux at the opposite end of the day, a couple hours before sunset.

after meeting at ryan Bonaminio Park, where there’s plenty of parking, we connected with ralph nunez, the Parks, recreation and community Services director, who gave us an assist

getting all of our photo equipment and props to the desired location, near the tower and the World Peace Bridge. the landmark was built in 1925 to recognize the efforts of Mission Inn owner Frank Miller and his family.

From that vantage point, riverside spreads out below, and on a clear evening it’s a spectacular sight.

after we positioned the light stands and poinsettias, then fired off some test shots, it became a matter of waiting for the sun to set. once it did, riverside, the city, offered up its own majestic light show.

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from the editor

Jerry [email protected] @Jerryrice_Ie

riverside’s other festival of lights runs all year

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mission&marketT a l e s o f T h e c i T y b r i e f ly T o l d

Festive & bright The Mission Inn’s Festival of Lights returns Nov. 29 and Fritz Coleman,

NBC4’s popular weathercaster, will bring his Fritz’s Holiday Lights tour to the seasonal spectacular on Dec. 12. For all of the Festival highlights, don’t miss the four-page map and event guide that starts on Page 17.

The Rhythm Collision (Jan. 4)Classic cars and music by Rod Piazza & The Mighty Flyers, The Paladins and other acts come together at Fairmount Park’s American Legion Post 79. Show starts at noon. Information: 909-437-2068, www.axleshows.com

State of the City Address (Jan. 23)Mayor William “Rusty” Bailey outlines his agenda on economic development, education and other topics for the coming year during the 37th annual event at the Riverside Auditorium & Events Center.

Happenings

That’s the amount the 24-hour Give Big Riverside online donation event raised — topping last year’s tally by 70 percent. 113 nonprofit organizations will benefit from the generosity of the 3,321 donors who made contributions at www.givebigriverside.org on Nov. 12. “I’m proud to be a part of a community that

came together … to support our nonprofits and address our region’s needs,” says Shari Hunke of The Community Foundation, organizer of the event. While the single-day push has passed, the website will be active throughout the year to accept

new donations.

… and so is Madrid for the Riverside City College Marching Tigers. The musicians will be performing in the 28th annual New Year’s Day Parade in London before jetting off to Spain for the Three Kings Parade (Cabalgata Los Reyes Magos) on Jan. 5.

Both events are huge, with each attracting 500,000 spectators and worldwide TV audiences that number in the millions. As a bonus, the trip also includes performances in London’s Trafalger Square and in the ancient Spanish city of Segovia.

The Marching Tigers are regulars on the world parade stage, appearing in the Tournament of Roses seven times and the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade twice, along with a previous visit to London for the New Year’s Day parade in 2010.

— Jerry Rice

PHoTo BY JAMES oRENS / CouRTESY RCC MARCHING TIGERSThe Riverside City College Marching Tigers during their last visit to London on New Year’s Day 2010

$312,504

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december 2013 - january 2014 | riversidethemag.com | 9

calendar‘HAIRSPRAY’ THROUGH DEC. 1 – Plus-sized teen goes from social outcast to sudden star in this family friendly musical. The Box, Fox Entertainment Plaza, 3635 Market St.,

Riverside; 951-500-5569, 951-826-2427; www.riversideblackbox.com. Also: “The Sound of Music” by Riverside Youth Theatre, Feb. 28-March 9.

‘52’ THROUGH DEC. 31 – Sue Mitchell, co-founder of Riverside Personnel, displays the works she created during a 52-week ar t

sabbatical. Riverside Art Museum, 3425 Mission Inn Ave.; 951-684-7111; www.riversideartmuseum.org. Also: “About Hunger & Resilience: Photography by Michael Nye,” through Dec. 15; “The Riverside Legacy: California Plein Air Paintings Past and Present,” Dec. 21-March 30; “Women Who Ride: Photography by Lanakila MacNaughton,” Dec. 21-March 16.

SHABBAT SERVICE NOV. 29 – Bring your own menorah Shabbat service and potluck. Temple Beth El, 2675 Central Ave., Riverside; 6:30 p.m.; 951-684-4511; www.tberiv.org.

RIVERSIDE COUNTY PHILHARMONIC NOV. 30 – “Holiday Magic,” with selections from Bizet (“Farandole”), Handel (“Messiah” with the La Sierra University Chamber Singers) and Tchaikovsky (“Nutcracker: Waltz of the Flowers”). Also, the world premiere of David Fick ’s “Symphony of Carols.” Fox Performing Arts Center, Riverside; 7:30 p.m., pre-concert talk at 6:40; 951-787-0251; www.thephilharmonic.org.

ALTERNATIVE GIFT FAIR DEC. 1 – Annual event features holiday shopping for a good cause. Booths include 10,000 Villages, Heifer International, Habitat for Humanity, Green Sanctuary. First United Methodist Church, 4845 Brockton Ave., Riverside; free admission; 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; 951-683-7831; www.facebook.com/alternativegiftfair.

A CASTLE CHRISTMAS DEC. 1 – Open house and live Nativity production, with carolers, music, tours, food and beverage and festive lighting of a historic landmark. Benedict Castle, 5445 Chicago Ave., Riverside; $5 per car; 6-8 p.m.; 951-683-4241.

HANUKKAH FESTIVAL DEC. 2 – Ninth annual event, presented by Chabad Jewish Community Center. Grand menorah lighting, entertainers, magic show, candle-making, holiday gift store, hot latkes and matzah ball soup. In front of the Riverside County Historic Courthouse, 4050 Main St., Riverside; 6-7:30 p.m.; free; 951-222-2005; www.jewishriverside.com.

‘HOW THE GRINCH STOLE CHRISTMAS’ DEC. 4 – On Pointe Dance Studio’s Winter Recital performance. Riverside Auditorium and Events Center, 3485 Mission Inn Ave.; $17 through Dec. 3, $20 at the door; 951-738-9085; www.onpointedance.org.

TREE LIGHTING DEC. 6 – Holiday tree lighting and Santa’s arrival, along with performances by the Radio

Disney Road Crew, Notre Dame High School and Reid Park cheer teams and the Riverside Concert Band. Riverside Plaza, 3639 Riverside Plaza Drive; 951-683-1066; www.shopriversideplaza.com.

CARILLON RECITAL DEC. 7 – David Christensen, university carillonneur, rings in the holidays via

UC Riverside’s 48-bell carillon with a selection of festive holiday music from Germany, France, England, Spain and the United States. 900 University Ave.; 3-4 p.m.; free, $5 parking permits at the information kiosk; http://events.ucr.edu.

SANTA VISIT DEC. 7 – Canyon Crest Towne Centre, 5225 Canyon Crest Drive, Riverside; 1-4 p.m.; 951-686-1222; www.cctownecentre.com.

SOUNDS OF THE SEASON DEC. 7 – Holiday concert featuring La Sierra University musicians and singers. Fox Performing Arts Center, 3801 Mission Inn Ave., Riverside; 951-779-9800; www.foxriversidelive.com. Also: Masters of Harmony, Dec. 8; “Miracle on 34th Street,” Dec. 20.

VICTORIAN CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE DEC. 8 – Presented for the 35th year, this 1890s-style Christmas features caroling, autoharps, dulcimers, bagpipes, home-baked sweets, fresh-cut greens for handmade wreaths and mistletoe. Heritage House, 8193 Magnolia Ave., Riverside; noon to 4 p.m.; free admission and parking; 951-826-5273; www.riversideca.gov/museum.

‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’ DEC. 13-15 – Charles Dickens holiday classic as adapted by Kathryn L. Gage. Riverside Community Players Theater, 4026 14th St.; 7 p.m. Dec. 13-14, 2 p.m. Dec. 14-15; 951-686-4030; www.riversidecommunityplayers.com.

‘A GRINCHMAS CAROL’ DEC. 21 – Original musical written by Bear C.A. Sanchez and Adam Weight. The Box, Fox Entertainment Plaza, 3635 Market St., Riverside; 4 and 8 p.m.; 951-500-5569, 951-826-2427; www.riversideblackbox.com.

RIVERSIDE LYRIC OPERA DEC. 29 – “Amahl and the Night Visitors,” about a shepherd boy and his mother who witness a miracle when visited by the three wise men. The Box, Fox Entertainment Plaza, 3635 Market St., Riverside; 4 p.m.; 951-781-9561; www.riversidelyricopera.org.

HOLIDAY EVENTS

DAVID ALLAN’S ‘THE NUTCRACKER’ DEC. 14-15 – Isabel Jones, who has danced with Riverside Ballet Arts and Salt Lake City’s Ballet West Academy, will be reprising her role as the Sugar Plum Fairy in BRAVA’s presentation of the holiday classic. Matthew Cunningham, also from Ballet West, will be her Cavalier for the 1 p.m. performance on Dec. 14. Clara Blanco and Gennadi Nedvigin, guest ar tists from the San Francisco Ballet, will assume the roles for both evening performances and the Dec. 15 matinee. Landis Performing Arts Center, 4800 Magnolia Ave., Riverside; 1 and 7 p.m.; $15-$37; 800-870-6069; http://riversideballetarts.com, www.brava-ar ts.org

Isabel Jones in front of the piano at BRAVA/Riverside Ballet Arts Studios

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calendar‘THE ATTACK’ NOV. 29-30 – Screening of the winner of the Special Jury Award at the San Sebastian Film Festival. Culver Center of the Arts, 3834 Main St., Riverside; 951-827-3755; http://culvercenter.ucr.edu.

STAR PARTY NOV. 29-DEC. 1 – Riverside Astronomical Society event at GMARS in Landers. Open to non-members. 951-785-7452; www.rivastro.org.

HISTORY LECTURE DEC. 1 – “Frank A. Miller: Beliefs, Peace and Culture,” presented by Jerry Gordon. Dining Commons, La Sierra University, 4500 Riverwalk Parkway, Riverside; 11:45 a.m.; $10; 951-353-0770; www.riversidehistoricalsociety.org. Also: Casa de Anza Hotel, Jan. 26.

ARTS WALK DEC. 5 – Browse more than 20 ar t galleries, studios and museums with exhibits in various ar t mediums. Special performances, poetry, theater, hands-on ar t activities, refreshments and more. Continues the f irst Thursday of every month. Downtown Riverside; 6-9 p.m.; 951-682-6737; www.riversidedowntown.org.

‘KINETIC CONVERSATIONS’ DEC. 5-7 – Riverside City College’s annual faculty dance concert is an eclectic mix of choreography featuring new dance works in collaboration with student performers and guest ar tists. Landis Performing Arts Center, 4800 Magnolia Ave., Riverside; 951-222-8100; www.performanceriverside.org. Also: “Spamalot,” Feb. 7-16.

‘TOTALLY CARRIED AWAY & OFF THE WALL’ DEC. 6-15 – Sale featuring works by ar tists and craftspeople from throughout the Inland Empire. Pop-up boutique will feature ar twork and f ine handmade crafts, including one-of-a-kind pieces of jewelry, fused glass, textiles, mosaics, metal work, ceramics, pottery and more. Get a jump on the ar t sale during the Jolly Moose Jamboree on Dec. 5. Riverside Art Museum, 3425 Mission Inn Ave.; 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily; 951-784-7377; www.riversideartalliance.org.

AN EVENING OF KLEZMER MUSIC DEC. 7 – The band Hot Pstromi will perform Eastern European Jewish folk music for the entire family. Dessert reception follows. Riverside Temple Beth El, 2675 Central Ave., Riverside; 7 p.m.; $10-$36; 951-684-4511; www.tberiv.org.

RIVERSIDE MASTER CHORALE DEC. 8 – In concert. California Citrus State Historic Park, 9400 Dufferin Ave., Riverside; 6 p.m. wine and hors d’oeuvres, 7 p.m. concert; $25; www.riversidemasterchorale.com.

Also: Eighth annual Choral Festival, May 10; Spring Concert, May 16-17.

GODIVA CHOCOLATE PAIRING PARTY DEC. 9, 17 – Taste 10 gourmet chocolates paired with 10 wines. Winery at Canyon Crest, 5225 Canyon Crest Drive, Suite 7A, Riverside; 7-9 p.m.; $25; 951-369-9463; www.canyoncrestwinery.com.

‘THE ADDAMS FAMILY’ DEC. 12 – Musical comedy based on the bizarre and beloved family of characters created by car toonist Charles Addams. Fox Performing Arts Center, 3801 Mission Inn Ave., Riverside; 7:30 p.m.; 951-779-9800; www.foxriversidelive.com. Also: “Man of La Mancha,” Jan. 13; “West Side Story,” March 9.

NEW YEAR’S EVE DEC. 31 – 1960s and ‘70s rock ’n’ roll, heavy hors d’oeuvres, East Coast toast at 9 p.m. Fender Center for the Performing Arts, 365 N. Main St., Corona; 7 p.m.; $50 (21 and older); 951-735-2440; www.fendermuseum.com.

CITRUS HERITAGE RUN JAN. 11 – Fifth annual 5K fun run and inaugural half-marathon, presented by the The Riverside Roadrunners. Arlington Heights Sports Park, 9401 Cleveland Ave., Riverside; 8 a.m.; http://riversideroadrunners.com/citrus-heritage-run.

‘SADIE HAWKINS’ JAN. 16-18 – Abby’s been dumped by her f iancé, Doug needs a date to his high school Sadie Hawkins dance and an unlikely friendship is born. Studio Theatre, ARTS 113, UC Riverside, 900 University Ave.; 951-827-3245; http://theatre.ucr.edu. Also: “In the Heights,” Feb. 20-March 1; “Blackballin’,” April 10-19; Marylu Clayton Rosenthal New Play Festival, May 22-31; Playworks, June 4-6.

‘A SHOT IN THE DARK’ JAN. 24-FEB. 9 – A murder mystery

whodunit adapted by Harry Kurniz from the play “L’Idiote.” Riverside Community Players Theater, 4026 14th St., Riverside; 951-686-4030; www.riversidecommunityplayers.com. Also: “Intimate Apparel,” through Dec. 1; “The Jungle Book,” Feb. 21-13; “Spider’s Web,” March 28-April 13.

RIVERSIDE COUNTY PHILHARMONIC JAN. 25 – Selections include Wagner’s “Siegfried Idyll” and Haydn’s Symphony No. 103, “Drumroll.” Guest ar tist, pianist Orion Weiss. Fox Performing Arts Center, Riverside; 7:30 p.m.; 951-787-0251; www.thephilharmonic.org. Also: “In the Spotlight,” March 15; “From the Heart,” May 3.

LUNARFEST JAN. 25 – Fourth annual event celebrating the Inland Empire’s Asian/Pacif ic American cultural heritage and contributions. Arts and cultural displays, music, market, fashion, live performances, f ireworks and food. Downtown Riverside; 951-453-3548; www.lunarfestriverside.org.

RIVERSIDE RAINCROSS RUN/WALK FEB. 22 – Eighth annual 5K and Kids’ Heroes Run. Fairmount Park, 2601 Fairmount Blvd., Riverside; $25 for the 5K, $15 for the Heroes Run; 951-826-2000; www.riversideca.gov/park_rec.

RIVERSIDE DICKENS FESTIVAL FEB. 22-23 – 21st anniversary celebration of all things Dickens, with costumed characters portraying eminent Victorians and characters from his novels, musical acts and a themed marketplace. Admission is free. Mission Inn Avenue, between Orange and Lime streets, Riverside; 951-781-3168; www.dickensfest.com.

FESTIVAL OF ONE ACTS MARCH 1-9 – Eighth annual presentation. Matheson Hall, La Sierra University, 4500 Riverwalk Parkway, Riverside; free; 951-785-2241; www.lasierra.edu. Also: “Godspell,” May 10-18; Showcase, June 7.

‘MORE AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHS’ THROUGH JAN. 11 – Twelve contemporary photographers travel the United States to document the land and its people. Their photos, along with originals from photographers who worked for a Farm Security Administration program (1935-44), are the focus of this exhibit. California Museum of Photography, 3824 Main St., Riverside; 951-827-4787; http://ar tsblock.ucr.edu. Also: “Ultraviolet,” through Jan. 4; “Robert Fumagalli: Blockaded,” through Feb. 2; “Flash: Joe Piston,” through Feb. 22; “Sentry,” Dec. 21-March 22.

Dorothea Lange’s iconic “Destitute Pea Pickers in California” from 1936.COURTESY THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

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BILL

MED

LEY

music

fun facts5

Bill medley and his daughter, mcKenna medley, who also will perform in Riverside.Photo by bill Wood

As half of the Righteous brothers, bill Medley famously reached those

low bass vocal notes on the 1964 chart topper, “you’ve lost that lovin’ feelin’,” the most played radio song of all time. over the next two years, they’d notch half

a dozen more top 40 singles, including “Unchained Melody” and “(you’re My) soul and inspiration.”

the blue-eyed soul singer just put out a new effort, “your heart is Mine: dedicated to the blues.”

in advance of his Riverside show, here are five fun facts about Medley:

• During the ’60s, the Righteous brothers opened shows for the beatles and Rolling stones; Medley was a friend of Elvis Presley, and they often performed simultaneously in the same las Vegas casinos.

• “(I’ve Had) The Time of My life,” his No. 1 duet with Jennifer Warnes from 1987 film “dirty dancing,” was a triple Crown winner (Grammy, Golden Globe, oscar).

• Medley delved into country music in the mid-1980s and had

six singles chart, the biggest being “i still do” (No. 17). he also sang on Kenny Rogers’ lP, “the Gambler.”

• Besides singing the TV theme song to the 1988-90 abC sitcom “Just the ten of Us,” Medley appeared in the two-part “finally” episode on “Cheers” in 1990.

• The Righteous Brothers name was inspired by an african american serviceman who watched Medley and late musical partner bobby hatfield perform at the old El toro Marine base, then exclaimed, “that was righteous, brothers!”

Bill MedleyWith: darlene love Where: fox Performing arts Center, 3801 Mission inn ave., Riverside When: 8 p.m. dec. 28 information: foxriversidelive.com

Written by George A. Paul

12 | riversidethemag.com | december 2013 - january 2014

pHILANTHROpY

These Riverside residents are making a difference in the community

Heroesof GivinG iii

Written by Amy Bentley

Riverside is a much better place because so many people who live and work here take the time to help others. it may be a small, random act of kindness, or something much more

substantial and ongoing. Taken together, these efforts demonstrate the generous nature of the people who call riverside home.

With so many of those stories it’s impossible to highlight them all in one place, so we surveyed 10 community leaders to help us narrow the field.

Jack B. Clarke Jr., stan Morrison, debby Phillips, Jeff Pope and Michelle reyes all donate their time and talents to important causes. Because of their dedication to philanthropy, riverside Magazine is proud to recognize them as this year’s Heroes of Giving.

PHoTo By MiCaH esCaMillaOntario Reign public address announcer Jeff pope at Citizens Business Bank Arena

december 2013 - january 2014 | riversidethemag.com | 13

Heroesof GivinG iii

Jeff Pope

Jeff Pope is the kind of person who likes to help the little guys. Whenever he would see a group of teens on a corner washing cars to raise money for some cause, he’d stop by and donate $20. When he was a morning personality for KGGI 99.1-FM, Pope made it a point to announce those fundraisers on the air.

“We’d do a shout-out on the radio and show up. It’s part of being in a community,” said Pope, who worked at KGGI for 13 years before he was let go last summer following a corporate decision to, as he puts it, “go in a different direction.”

Over the years, Pope has lent his engaging voice to boost many efforts. He’s a guest speaker at school career days, gives time to emcee and announce charity events and auctions, and reads Dr. Seuss books at schools on Read Across America day.

One day he was at work when a fax arrived about a seriously injured black lab mix puppy, wrapped in a wet blanket, that had been dumped by the Santa Ana River. He aired a story about the abandoned dog and ended up adopting it after a visit to the Humane Society of San Bernardino Valley.

“Jeff possesses such genuine enthusiasm for our mission that it is contagious,” said Teri Seymour, the Humane Society of San Bernardino Valley’s general manager. “What is so unique about Jeff is his ability to make sure each and every event attendee feels included when he volunteers to emcee our fundraising events.”

A Riverside resident since 2002, Pope is looking for another radio job while working as the voice of the Ontario Reign hockey team and the Ontario Fury indoor soccer team. He also volunteers as the auctioneer when the Reign auctions game-worn jerseys as fundraisers for charity.

“If I can make a difference in the Inland Empire and it’s going to mean something to somebody and I can do it, I will,” Pope said.

Why he helps…humane society of san Bernardino Valleyhttp://hssbv.org “They have a compassion for man’s best friend, and they offer low-cost vaccinations, low-cost sterilizations. They also help save dogs that are being treated badly.”

leukemia & lymphoma society, Orange County /Inland empire chapterwww.lls.org/aboutlls/chapters/ocie “We’ve all had somebody in our lives who has been affected one way or another by leukemia or blood cancer. When you see the faces behind it, it really touches your heartstrings.”

Grass-roots community fundraising efforts“Anytime I’m asked to emcee a fundraiser, I’m there.”

Stan Morrison

For Stan Morrison, giving back to the community is his way of repaying past kindnesses.

“I’ve been around the block a couple of times and I’ve had some wonderful people help me along the way,” said Morrison, recalling some of his family’s struggles when he was growing up.

At one point, they lost their home and car and moved nine times in three years. He’s been more fortunate as an adult, and wants to pay it forward by helping organizations that either helped him or his family, or that simply do great things.

“It’s incredibly rewarding to be a part of the process of change that allows someone’s circumstances to (improve),” said Morrison, a nationally recognized basketball coach and athletics administrator. He’s currently senior vice president at Security Bank of California in Riverside.

Morrison is chairman of the board of High Five America, a San Diego-based

organization that uses basketball to combat gang violence, along with drug and alcohol abuse; and he is the board president for Olive Crest group homes. He’s also on the boards of the Inland Empire Boy Scouts of America; the Mary S. Roberts Pet Adoption Center; ARC Riverside County; the Mission Inn Foundation; Totally Mt. Rubidoux; Riverside Downtown Partnership; and The Unforgettables Foundation, which provides dignified burials for children from disadvantaged homes.

Morrison also serves on the American Diabetes Association’s Father of the Year Gala Committee for the Inland Empire and is a member of the San Diego American Diabetes Association Community Leadership Board. (Morrison’s 13-year-old grandson has diabetes.) Additionally, he’s involved with the city’s Seizing Our Destiny program, the Arrowhead Regional Medical Center Gala Committee and La Sierra University Athletics Advisory Board.LAFOnzO CARTER

14 | riversidethemag.com | december 2013 - january 2014

“I’ve had the privilege of working with Stan on a number of occasions, and I have to say that there are very few people I’ve met who are as dedicated,” said Patrick Brien, executive director of the Riverside Arts Council. “There is a positive spirit to this man that cannot help but be described as inspirational.

“Among Stan’s many gifts, it is his ability to make others feel special that truly sets him apart. Like any great player or coach, Stan makes those around him better.”

Why he helps…American Diabetes Associationwww.diabetes.org “For people who have diabetes, particularly type 1 diabetes, we have to f ind cures.”

The Unforgettables Foundationhttp://unforgettables.org “The relief provided for families through this incredible organization during one of their most traumatic life

experiences, the loss of a child, cannot be weighed in my personal experience.”

ARC of Riverside Countyhttp://arcriverside.org “As someone who coached and worked with healthy, bright and dedicated young men and women athletes for over 50 years, I felt drawn to this organization after seeing the incredible service they were providing.”

Why she helps…Riverside Community health Foundationwww.rchf.org “I really believe in their mission of providing health care to Riverside. The foundation provides a lot of medical and dental care for children.”

American heart Associationwww.heart.org “I started working with the American Heart Association because my niece who is 11 years old had heart problems. I have seen what she goes through. They do a lot of good research. People need to know that heart disease isn’t just in older people.”

pink Ribbon placewww.thepinkribbonplace.org “It’s very important to have information out there about breast cancer. I am a huge advocate for women’s health.”

Michelle Reyes

Helping others in need has always been a big part of Michelle Reyes’ life.

As a physical therapist at age 19, Reyes continued her studies and became a physician’s assistant. She now works with her husband, Dr. Joaquin Reyes, at the Reyes Medical Group in Riverside. She’s also founder of FUN by Michelle (Feel Unbelievably New), a med-spa that offers patients a wide range of non-surgical skin and body treatments.

And that’s not all. Attending church when she was younger opened her eyes to the medical needs of those less fortunate, Reyes says. She sees these needs at work in her husband’s office, where no child who comes in is turned away for vaccinations regardless of their family’s ability — or inability — to pay.

“When I was 8 years old, I knew that when I was older and got married, I needed to volunteer,” said Reyes, the mother of two children, ages 4 and 9.

Reyes serves on the board of directors of the Riverside Community Health Foundation and was on the foundation’s 2013 gala committee. She also

is on the foundation’s committee that is helping with the ownership transition for Pink Ribbon Place, a local breast cancer resource center that the RCHF took over in October. In addition, Reyes has assisted or donated time or med-spa services to help CASA Riverside, American Red Cross, American Heart Association, the Mary S. Roberts Pet Adoption Center, and charities that donate to Loma Linda Children’s Hospital.

Reyes enjoys sharing her medical knowledge and services with others. Her husband is her biggest supporter, she added.

“We love our work and along with that, for us, comes giving time and giving back to the community,” she said.

“My husband is behind me in everything I do. He comes with me, he sets up, and he takes photos. He is right there helping me.”

“It is an honor to have Michelle Reyes as a member of the RCHF board of directors,” said Dr. Dan Anderson, president and CEO of the Riverside Community Health Foundation. “I appreciate her dedication and passion to improve the lives of others, and she does it all without seeking any recognition for herself.”

PHOTO By FRANk PEREz

december 2013 - january 2014 | riversidethemag.com | 15

Why he helps…Riverside County Office of education Foundationwww.rcoe.us “Its purpose is to seek funding for programs to help young people who traditionally have been underserved. From the modeling of my parents, education is important for all children.”

Riverside police Foundationwww.riversidepolicefoundation.org“The idea is to raise funds for youth so hopefully young people don’t make the wrong decisions in life.”

Riverside County Bar Associationwww.riversidecountybar.com “The current leadership, particularly our Bar president, Jacqueline Carey-Wilson, is committed not only to being of service to the Bar but also to the general community. It’s important that the general community understand the justice system.”

Jack B. Clarke Jr.

Attorney Jack B. Clarke Jr. is following a family legacy of service and “firsts.”

He credits his parents, Jack and Elizabeth Clarke, for setting the example. Both were active in many community organizations and efforts, and his dad was Riverside’s first African-American councilman and a past president of the Riverside chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

“They modeled being engaged in the community for me. I don’t look at being involved as giving back at all. It’s more akin to trying to maintain my household. It’s just what I do,” Clarke said.

“I like being active in the community because I love the people I meet. I’m always amazed at how giving people are, at how willing they are to volunteer time and resources to try and make the community better. I learn a tremendous amount and I try to learn from every person I interact with.”

Clarke specializes in education law and public agency litigation as a partner with Best Best & Krieger LLP. He sits on the boards of the Riverside County Office of Education Foundation, a new nonprofit that raises funds for public education; the Riverside Police Foundation, which supports programs for young people; and the Riverside County Bar Association. He’s also past chairman of the Greater Riverside Chambers of Commerce (the first

African-American in the role) and past president of the UC Riverside Alumni Association. Clarke also chaired the Mayor’s Use of Force Review Panel in 1999 following the controversial police shooting death of Tyisha Miller in Riverside.

“Jack Clarke Jr. is an exemplary philanthropist who cares deeply about issues affecting the Riverside community,” said Celia Cudiamat, an executive vice president at The Community Foundation. “His work in ensuring that quality education

is accessible to all students is admirable and inspirational.”

In 2009, Clarke received the Golden “Legal Eagle” Award from the Riverside Opportunity Center, a nonprofit that helps feed and shelter the poor. In 2010, he received the Riverside County Bar Association’s James Krieger Meritorious Service Award. And in 2011, he received the Omar Stratton Award from the Riverside branch of the NAACP, the branch’s highest award.

Awards aside, Clarke said, “The thing I am most proud of is I have a loving family, my wife Sheila Clarke, daughter Chynna and son Jack Clarke III.”

Debby Phillips

The list of nonprofits and community organizations to which Debby Phillips has contributed goes back to 1974, when she was a teacher at Pacif ic Avenue Elementary School in Jurupa Valley.

In recent years, Phillips has been active in or on the board of many organizations, including the Art Alliance of the Riverside Art Museum, the Boy Scouts Inland Empire Council, Victoria Avenue Forever, Junior League of

Riverside and the Salvation Army of Riverside.

Previously, Phillips was a founding board member of the Eliza Tibbets Statue Foundation and she served on the board of the Orange Blossom Festival. She was an officer and board member for the National Charity League, she served as a Girl Scouts of America co-leader, and she volunteered with the Riverside Community Hospital Auxiliary, among other groups.

Today, Phillips continues a legacy of assisting or educating others through

two part-time jobs. She’s the general manager/consultant for the nonprofit Management Corporation at California Citrus State Historic Park, where she handles fundraising and other duties. She’s also the executive secretary for the Albert B. Cutter Memorial Trust Fund, where she handles grant requests for Riverside individuals and nonprofits that need assistance.

Giving back is a family tradition, said Phillips, who was inspired by the volunteer efforts of her parents.

“When my children were small, I did

PHOTO By JOHN VALENzUELA

16 | riversidethemag.com | december 2013 - january 2014

Why she helps…Boy scouts and Girl scoutswww.scouting.org www.girlscouts.org “They build character in people. You learn how to be trustworthy, loyal, helpful — all of those things that enable you to be a good person.”

salvation Armywww.salvationarmyusa.org “The Salvation Army helps people who are sort of down on their luck. They try to help people who are breaking through the poverty, in a very down-to-earth way.”

eliza Tibbets statue Foundation“We f inally got a statue downtown two years ago. It took 14 years. It was rewarding because it had the citrus heritage that Riverside was known for.”

it to stay involved in their lives and to be aware of the community because I didn’t grow up here. I grew up in Dallas,” said the married mother of two grown children. “The reason I continued is I work at home, so for me to get out and do things in the community is one way to network, meet people and do things.”

“Debby is one of the most detail-oriented people I know,” said Kathy Allavie, a Riverside Unified School District trustee who has served with Phillips on many organizations and committees. “Whatever job she takes on, she sees to every detail with such efficiency that everyone around her is always impressed. She is dedicated, down-to-earth and one of the best community volunteers I know.”

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Frequent Skater Cards are available for $50, good for one session Sunday through Thursday during the month of December. Cards can be purchased at the skate rink ticket booth and the Riverside Metropolitian Museum, 3580 Mission Inn Ave.

Santa’s WorkshopLocated on Main Street Riverside at 6th StreetHours of Operation:Now – December 23rd Monday – Thursday: 4 – 9 p.m. Friday: 4 – 11 p.m. Saturday: 4 – 11 p.m. Sunday: 4 – 10 p.m.December 24th: 2 – 7 p.m.Souvenir photo and photo packages with Santa will be available for purchase. Personal camera photos will NOT be allowed.

Take-Along Mapand Event Guide

Holiday Events at the Culver Center

What better way to kick off your New Year’s Eve than enjoying a classic musical film with family and friends? Come join us at the Culver Center for a screening of West Side Story, the film adaptation of the hit 1957 Broadway musical.

The film, which won 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, will begin at 6 p.m.

EXHIBITION: ULTRAVIOLET Light Installation by Hiromi Takizawa is a site-specific installation that observes the role of light in architectural and environmental spaces, and explores the artist’s Japanese heritage and her encounters of the nuances and oddities living in the West.

Prominently placed at the front of UCR Culver Center of the Arts, on Main Street Riverside, ULTRAVIOLET is presented in conjunction with the annual City of Riverside Festival of Lights through January 4, 2014.

For more information on these and other exhibitions, films and performances, including extended hours during the Festival of Lights, visit: www.artsblock.ucr.edu

You’ll leave the theater feeling dazzled by the magic of this timeless love story, and the unforgettable songs!

Tickets are $9.99 and can be purchased online at culvercenter.ucr.edu, or at the Culver Center box office.

FILM: West Side StoryDecember 31st (New Year’s Eve), 6 p.m.

Artisans Collective, a unique weekly Arts Market – Discover a creative marketplace with hand-crafted, one-of-a-kind art, jewelry, ceramics, sculpture, paintings, mosaics, garments, stationery and art demos.

Please note: Specialty holiday vendors will be on Main Street throughout

the Festival!

Santa’s Workshop

Simple Sim

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Magnolia’s

Don Carlos H

air Salon

Tamale Factory

Jon Michael Salon

Mrs. Tiggy W

inklesCitizens Business Bank (ATM

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Make-a-W

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ission BBQCurves

House of Im

portsReveille

Merle N

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Manhattan’s Salon &

SpaOur Treasure Chest

Sunshine Portrait StudioH

air Works II

Upper CrustProAbition

Coffee Bean &

Tea Leaf

Pacific Stiks

Antonious N&

W

Pizza

Salad Buzz

CBU Art Gallery

Phood on Main

MissionMartini

Elephant Thai Cuisine

MTL

Lake Alice Trading Co.

Subway

Wells Fargo (ATM)

Mario’s Place

Dragon Marsh

Doña Timo’s La Cascada

Back to the Grind

DDogs

Artworks6th Street Pilates

Square Mile

Bar & G

rill

Bella Trattoria

Casey’s Cupcakes

Mardon

Jewelers

Kelly’s Boutique

Mission Inn

Museum

Dow

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Books

Wendie

Monrroy on

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ParrottToni M

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UCR Museum

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Culver Center of the Arts

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alleria CaféRiverside Art on M

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Riverside, CA

HeroesRestaurant È

The Mission Inn Hotel & Spa

Artisans Collective, a unique weekly Arts Market – Discover a creative marketplace with hand-crafted, one-of-a-kind art, jewelry, ceramics, sculpture, paintings, mosaics, garments, stationery and art demos.

Please note: Specialty holiday vendors will be on Main Street throughout

the Festival!

Santa’s Workshop

Simple Sim

on’sG

allery of Flowers

Magnolia’s

Don Carlos H

air Salon

Tamale Factory

Jon Michael Salon

Mrs. Tiggy W

inklesCitizens Business Bank (ATM

)

Make-a-W

ishG

ram’s M

ission BBQCurves

House of Im

portsReveille

Merle N

orman

Manhattan’s Salon &

SpaOur Treasure Chest

Sunshine Portrait StudioH

air Works II

Upper CrustProAbition

Coffee Bean &

Tea Leaf

Pacific Stiks

Antonious N&

W

Pizza

Salad Buzz

CBU Art Gallery

Phood on Main

MissionMartini

Elephant Thai Cuisine

MTL

Lake Alice Trading Co.

Subway

Wells Fargo (ATM)

Mario’s Place

Dragon Marsh

Doña Timo’s La Cascada

Back to the Grind

DDogs

Artworks6th Street Pilates

Square Mile

Bar & G

rill

Bella Trattoria

Casey’s Cupcakes

Mardon

Jewelers

Kelly’s Boutique

Mission Inn

Museum

Dow

ntowne

Books

Wendie

Monrroy on

Main

ParrottToni M

ooreClothing

UCR Museum

of Photography

Culver Center of the Arts

Mission G

alleriaG

alleria CaféRiverside Art on M

ainM

P Couture

Riverside, CA

HeroesRestaurant È

The Mission Inn Hotel & Spa

Riverside, CA

The Mission Inn Hotel & Spa Presents21ST ANNUAL

Outdoor Ice RinkLocated on Main Street Riversidebetween University & Mission Inn AvenuesHours of Operation:Now – December 20th Monday – Thursday: 4 – 10 p.m. Friday: 4 – 11 p.m. Saturday: Noon – 11 p.m. Sunday: Noon – 10 p.m.December 21st – January 4th Monday – Friday: Noon – 11 p.m.December 24th: Noon – 9 p.m.December 25th: ClosedCost: $12 per session per person and $3 for skate rentals.Visit Monday and receive two ice rink admissions for $15, rentals included. Or come for Family Night Wednesday and a group of four can skate for one session for $35, rentals included.

Frequent Skater Cards are available for $50, good for one session Sunday through Thursday during the month of December. Cards can be purchased at the skate rink ticket booth and the Riverside Metropolitian Museum, 3580 Mission Inn Ave.

Santa’s WorkshopLocated on Main Street Riverside at 6th StreetHours of Operation:Now – December 23rd Monday – Thursday: 4 – 9 p.m. Friday: 4 – 11 p.m. Saturday: 4 – 11 p.m. Sunday: 4 – 10 p.m.December 24th: 2 – 7 p.m.Souvenir photo and photo packages with Santa will be available for purchase. Personal camera photos will NOT be allowed.

Take-Along Mapand Event Guide

Holiday Events at the Culver Center

What better way to kick off your New Year’s Eve than enjoying a classic musical film with family and friends? Come join us at the Culver Center for a screening of West Side Story, the film adaptation of the hit 1957 Broadway musical.

The film, which won 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, will begin at 6 p.m.

EXHIBITION: ULTRAVIOLET Light Installation by Hiromi Takizawa is a site-specific installation that observes the role of light in architectural and environmental spaces, and explores the artist’s Japanese heritage and her encounters of the nuances and oddities living in the West.

Prominently placed at the front of UCR Culver Center of the Arts, on Main Street Riverside, ULTRAVIOLET is presented in conjunction with the annual City of Riverside Festival of Lights through January 4, 2014.

For more information on these and other exhibitions, films and performances, including extended hours during the Festival of Lights, visit: www.artsblock.ucr.edu

You’ll leave the theater feeling dazzled by the magic of this timeless love story, and the unforgettable songs!

Tickets are $9.99 and can be purchased online at culvercenter.ucr.edu, or at the Culver Center box office.

FILM: West Side StoryDecember 31st (New Year’s Eve), 6 p.m.

neighborhoods

Written by Amy Bentley

Team effortResidents are pulling together to create a better Casa Blanca

Casa Blanca has come a long way since Bob Garcia was a child.

When Garcia grew up in the working-class neighborhood during the 1960s and ’70s, there were no sidewalks or curbs and probably too many bars. Even residents would admit that casa Blanca wasn’t particularly attractive.

Garcia, who was born in 1959, attended casa Blanca Elementary school until it closed in 1964 with the goal of creating more racial balance in the local schools. students were bused to several other Riverside schools; Garcia went to Victoria Elementary.

Today, casa Blanca is a more traditional neighborhood.

The bars are gone and new businesses, such as Home Depot, have come in. It looks much nicer too, with newly paved streets, curbs, water pipes, trees and other fresh landscaping. casa Blanca library was renovated in 2008, and residents worked with the city and police department to reduce crime. The old school is now part of st. anthony’s catholic church, a much-loved parish.

When the city renovated its utility center in casa Blanca, a blighted house next door was purchased and demolished. Homeowners also got into

the beautif ication effort. The city offered interested homeowners

$5,000 grants to renovate and maintain their yards, and many participated in the program, says councilman Paul Davis.

“There is a huge difference from just six years ago — not just a difference in appearance but also in attitude,” said Davis, who represents the city’s fourth ward, including casa Blanca.

bob garcia stands next to his old classroom at what used to be Casa blanca elementary school. The building is now a part of st. Anthony’s Catholic Church, below.PHoTos By laFonzo caRTER

december 2013 - january 2014 | riversidethemag.com | 23

Garcia, who is active with the Casa Blanca Community Action Group, an advocacy organization, is one of many residents who are working to make the neighborhood a better place. There’s also a Park Advisory Group that meets regularly and works with Davis and his staff.

“We’ve got a lot of history here,” Garcia said. “You’re related to many people in different ways — either as relatives, or through your long history as friends and neighbors. The elders are the ones who keep our history going. I really enjoy living here.”

Another well-known community activist, Morris Mendoza, 65, also has lived in Casa Blanca his entire life, growing up in an area that was much more rural. His grandfather owned the old Mendoza’s Market for 40 years, and the entire family worked there at one time or another. The store, at 3199

Madison St., is now El Amigo Market.Mendoza, who is retired from the U.S.

Postal Service, says many area residents have grown deep roots in the neighbor-hood, which features single-family homes with early 20th century architectural styles, especially California Bungalow.

“We have (a long) history here. Our Cinco de Mayo parade goes back 105 years,” he said.

Simona Valero, 90, recalls some of those early Cinco de Mayo parades. In fact, she served as treasurer for the event for more than 25 years — one of several volunteer positions she’s held through the years.

The parade is one example of the racial melting pot that was and is Casa Blanca. Many residents came from Mexico, including Valero’s parents, who moved to the area in 1910 along with seven of her older brothers and sisters. Valero was born in 1922 in a home on Diamond Street, a short distance from where she lives today, and when she was growing up she says her neighbors included Italian and Japanese families.

“We were very poor, but not poor in other ways because we were family,” Valero said. “My three brothers worked in the Arlington packinghouse, and my father irrigated the groves. Other families picked oranges and lemons.

We didn’t have too much, but there was always beans and rice and chili con carne. That’s how we grew up.”

Major gathering places are the Ysmael Villegas Community Center and Villegas Park, named for Staff Sgt. Ysmael R. Villegas, a Casa Blanca resident killed in combat in the Philippines in 1945 and posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor by President Harry S. Truman.

Activities, from family get-togethers to organized sports, are regularly part of the landscape at both the center and the park. Dozens of students are enrolled in the Casa Blanca Tae Kwon Do Academy, run by Anthony Rivera, and the Villegas Park Boxing Club, which is led by Rivera’s son, Roy. Those who take part in the programs don’t just learn martial arts and boxing, says the elder Rivera. Lessons they can use to get ahead in life also are part of the curriculum.

“I try to set them up for every test they will have in life, like an interview for a job. (In the future), they will have to sell themselves to an employer who is going to say, ‘You’re the man’ or ‘You’re the woman.’ I have my students at a very early age starting to learn those principles,” said Rivera, who took up martial arts when he was growing up in the late 1950s, a time when one of

‘The men of my father’s time didn’t want Casa Blanca to be called a barrio but la Comunidad de Casa Blanca.’ — Simona Valero

PHOTO BY GABRIEL LUIS ACOSTALifelong resident Simona Valero

PHOTO COURTESY Of SIMOnA VALEROCinco de Mayo celebrants gather for a group photo in 1910.

his heroes was George Reeves, TV’s Superman.

“I was the smallest kid in the whole classroom,” he recalled. “I think there was only one other kid smaller than me — and she was a girl in the second grade.”

Casa Blanca residents routinely help their neighbors in need. Each summer before the start of the new school year, students receive supplies during a giveaway at the community center. The event is organized by resident Jenny Rivera, who has been organizing it for

about a decade. Hundreds of students receive bags of supplies, and the Riverside Police Department is now a major donor, according to Garcia.

In addition, the nonprofit Casa Blanca Home of Neighborly Service has helped residents in need for many years with food assistance, early education programs and other help.

24 | riversidethemag.com | december 2013 - january 2014

PHoToS By MICaH ESCaMIllaResidents dance to the tunes of the Midnite Cruzzers during a concert at Villegas Park.

Chyenne Sanchez catches bubbles during an outdoor concert.

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december 2013 - january 2014 | riversidethemag.com | 25

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While economic and other challenges remain, improvements keep coming to the neighborhood. A sparkling new 45,000-square-foot Stater Bros. market will open mid-2014, replacing a well-used Staters next to it on Mary Street between Lincoln and Victoria avenues. A new CVS pharmacy with a drive-through is going up there too.

Another aspect of the project — part of a deal brought together with input and cooperation from Davis’ office and Casa Blanca residents — was getting Stater Bros. to purchase a nearby abandoned house, frequented by drug dealers, and having it demolished.

Additionally, Washington Park, which is next to the shopping center, is being expanded.

Valero says there is much she loves about her neighborhood. “Casa Blanca to me really is a blessed community,” she said.

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Neighborhood profilename: Casa Blanca means “white house” in Spanish. In the late 1870s, the Lockwood family lived in the area in a white-plastered adobe that was situated on elaborately landscaped property. They called their home Casa Blanca. It became a namesake for the area.History: Early residents came to the area in the late 1800s to work in the orange groves and packinghouses.area: Casa Blanca is bordered, roughly, by the 91 Freeway, Mary Street, Victoria Avenue and Jefferson Street.Residents: There are 5,675 residents, 79 percent of them are Hispanic, according to 2010 population f igures.

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december 2013 - january 2014 | riversidethemag.com | 27

Written by Betts Griffone

taste

Whether it was serendipity or just good luck, when Nick Montano met

Jack Franklyn it was the start of a very successful partnership. they each had won a cruise from a food purveyor, and it was during that trip that they met.

Montano, who was raised in upstate New York, graduated from the Culinary Institute of America. Franklyn grew up in California and brought his business knowledge and creativity to the partnership. It was a good match.

twenty-three years ago, Franklyn opened the original heroes Bar & Grill

in Fullerton — choosing the name because he wanted to honor everyday heroes, like his parents. Since then, they have started four more restaurants and each is a hit.

Now comes riverside’s turn, with the recent launch of heroes restaurant & Brewery on Mission Inn Avenue.

“the reason for the success may be because we serve good food at good prices,” Montano said. “We want to be the ‘Cheers’ of each neighborhood we serve. At any given time you’ll see businessmen and families, college students and ladies here for lunch.

“We run our businesses like a family,

and maybe our customers feel that.”heroes truly is a fun and friendly

place to go for lunch and dinner. the red brick walls and eye-catching memorabilia create a welcoming atmosphere, and it’s possible you might even see someone who could be mistaken for Norm of “Cheers” fame.

Franklyn and Montano say that each of their restaurants reflects the area where it is located.

In riverside, the décor includes a 19th century carriage that was acquired from the Nixon Presidential Library & Museum. It hangs, festively lighted, over one of the bar areas.

New restauraNt boasts hearty fare iN a fuN atmosphere

Super HeroeS

Super HeroeSWith three juicy beef patties smothered in pepper jack, cheddar and swiss cheeses, and served on an onion roll, the Big al will easily satisfy a hearty appetite.

28 | riversidethemag.com | december 2013 - january 2014

Near the ceiling at the other end of a large open dining area is an old red tractor that reflects the region’s farming industry. Old photos of family and friends adorn the walls along with period pieces of art work.

The construction, brick laying and décor were all accomplished by Montano and Franklyn and their friends and family. Professionals were called in to handle the lighting and plumbing, and months of hard work has paid off with a lively and inviting space.

While Montano was quick to say that the restaurant is not a sports bar, there

are 15 large flat-screen TVs streaming a variety of sporting events. Four more screens are hanging outside under the covered patio.

The owners’ desire to reflect the community carries over to the names

of some of the menu items. The RCC Club Sandwich and the Highlanders Chicken Sandwich are among the 21 Heroes’ Favorites listed on the large menu. There’s also the flame-broiled Red Tractor Burger, a popular choice.

Several appetizers are available including the enticing Fried Junk — zucchini, shrimp and jalapeño poppers breaded and fried and served with curly fries, onion rings, ranch dressing and tarter sauce. It’s a real guilty pleasure.

In addition, there’s an assortment of soups, salads and burgers along with a few hot dogs and sausages. After 5 p.m., diners may select from three types of steak, pastas, and specialties that include Southwest Meatloaf, an apple cider glazed Berkshire pork chop and Cajun salmon.

On Saturdays and Sundays, the weekend brunch starts at 10 a.m. While it’s not a buffet, the menu does include everything from New York steak and eggs to a breakfast burrito, with several omelettes in between.

With something for everyone, the large menu keeps executive chef Matias Fuentes very busy.

Soon, Heroes will have craft beer brewed on site by brew master John Novotny. The plan is to start with a pale ale and IPA, then begin offering three to four staples with some seasonal

‘We want to be the “Cheers” of each neighborhood we serve. At any given time you’ll see businessmen and families, college students and ladies out for lunch.’

PHOTO BY JAMeS CARBONeHeroes Restaurant & Brewery is a popular place during lunch.

december 2013 - january 2014 | riversidethemag.com | 29

selections, Montano says.Beyond the craft beer, the well-

stocked bar has more than 150 bourbons and whiskeys as well as many other spirits.

Location always is important for a restaurant, and being up the street from the Mission Inn Hotel & Spa is a good place to be – especially during the annual Festival of Lights.

“Downtown is booming with

the Fox theater and the Convention Center. We fell in love with the downtown and the building,” Montano said. “Nobody else is doing what we’re doing, so we feel it’s a good fit.”

Heroes Restaurant & Brewery3397 Mission Inn Ave., Riverside951-248-0722 http://heroesrestaurantandbrewery.comHours: Monday-Friday, 11 a.m. until close Saturday-Sunday, 10 a.m. until close

PHoto By JAMeS CARBoNeGeoff Neely presents the Southwest Meatloaf, left, and Matias Fuentes has the Salmon Salad.

Corned beef, pastrami and smoked turkey breast make this the Ultimate Reuben.

PHoto By JAMeS CARBoNeNational brews are on tap, and craft beers are on the way.

The NEW Riverside Convention Center is the area’s most advanced and accommodating venue for conferences, meetings and all-size events. From the ultra-innovative amenities to the most inviting settings — designed for maximum interaction — the Center is a triumph in form and function.

The venue is the ultimate in versatility with over 65,000 sq. ft. of state-of-the-art meeting rooms and exhibit space. Work faster and smarter with leading-edge high-speed Wi-Fi. And mix technology with tasteology, featuring our unique onsite catering — hailed by foodies for its local ingredients and creativity. Would you expect anything less from the world’s most Intelligent Community of the Year?

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30 | riversidethemag.com | december 2013 - january 2014

seen

(1) Judy Carpenter, left, Lillian Reyes-Maples, Ginger Jones, Grace Adams and RCHF President/CEO Dr. Dan Anderson (2) Emma Karidakes, left, Kylie Asam, Carol Karidakes and Mackenzie Karidakes (3) Councilman Jim Perry and his wife, Kathie (4) Gilber t Espinoza, left, Rober t Mar tinez and Steven Figueroa (5) Mike Dahdul (6) Dr. Chuck Sands and Ninfa Delgado (7) Damon Castillo, left, and Ben Johnson II (8) Ann Marie and Coucilman Andy Melendez (9) Michelle Reyes and her son, Joaquin (10) Jeff Kraus, left, Andrea De Leon, Linda and Assemblyman Jose Medina (11) Councilman Steve Adams, left, and Eugene MontanezPhotos by Chase Photography

RCHF’s Two Tickets to Paradise

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1The Riverside Community Health Foundation’s annual Two Tickets to Paradise celebration brought more than 600 supporters to the rooftop of Walter’s Automotive Group’s Porsche/Audi building for an evening of Hawaii-themed fun. The goal was to improve health-care access in Riverside, and the event raised a record $190,000. Proceeds will help expand RCHF’s Eastside Health Center and support Teen Challenge of Southern California. Information: www.rchf.org

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seen Pet Adoption Center Spay-ghetti Dinner

1Animal lovers feasted on spaghetti and Caesar salad, prepared by Giuliano’s Trattoria, during the annual Mary S. Roberts Pet Adoption Center’s Spay-ghetti Dinner, held recently at the Elks Lodge. The event raised $3,500 to help the organization provide low-cost spay/neuter assistance. Information: www.petsadoption.com

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(1) Kathy Martinez, left, Wendy Boyd, Jim Crisaf i and Harvey Long (2) Linda Fregoso, center, and Chris Manning (3) Assemblyman Jose Medina (4) Nova Camacho (5) Alysia Webb and Richard Olquin (6) Joe HowarthPhotos by Carrie Ridgway

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december 2013 - january 2014 | riversidethemag.com | 31

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Be part of the gala return of a newly re-minted downtown gem: the Riverside Convention Center. The modernized and expanded facility will open in February and Riverside Magazine is producing a commemorative coffee table book and program to celebrate this very special occasion. The magazine also will feature the grand opening in the February - March issue.

The debut of the sparkling new Riverside Convention Center will be a milestone for the city, and your business or organization will have the chance to celebrate the occasion by being featured in a pair of unique, limited-edition publications. The book and program will be distributed during a special gala and also presented to influential business and political leaders, Riverside residents and visitors to the city.

Working with the Riverside Convention & Visitors Bureau, Riverside Magazine is creating these dynamic publications that also will highlight state-of-the-art enhancements coming to the Convention Center. That information promises to be particularly useful to organizers who are planning events that will bring tens of thousands of guests to Riverside in 2014 and for years to come.

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Dec. 5 – IELLA Legal Aid annual fundraiser. Bid on sports memorabilia, spa days, local ar twork and vacation getaways during an 80-item silent auction while sipping wine and tasting appetizers at an event to benef it pro bono legal clinics held by the Inland Empire Latino Lawyers Association. Riverside County Law Library, 3989 Lemon St., Riverside; 6-8:30 p.m.; $30; [email protected]; 951-369-5846; www.iellaaid.org.

Dec. 7 – Junior League of Riverside’s 58th annual charity ball. Proceeds support the organization’s community outreach, including projects like f itRiverside. 951-683-0622, www.juniorleagueriverside.org.

Feb. 11 – 18th annual Valentine Desser t Auction, hosted by Soroptimist International of Riverside. Riverside Auditorium and Events Center, 3485 Mission Inn Ave.; 11 a.m. registration, noon lunch; http://soroptimistriverside.org.

March 1 – Soroptimist International Saturday of Service and seventh annual Live Your Dream Conference. California Baptist University, 8432 Magnolia Ave., Riverside; http://soroptimistriverside.org.

April 22 – Salute to Service Award Ceremony, presented by Soroptimist International of Riverside. Canyon Crest Country Club, 975 Country Club Drive, Riverside; noon to 1:30 p.m.; http://soroptimistriverside.org.

May 3 – Rape Crisis Center’s annual banquet auction gala. 951-686-7273, www.rarcc.org.

32 | riversidethemag.com | december 2013 - january 2014

seen

(1) Judy and Mayor Rusty Bailey (2) Margie Haupt, left, Charity B. Schiller and Sarah Mundy (3) Brandi Clarke, left, Marina Gomez, Danny Babin and Patrick Brien (4) Kelly and Gilber t Vela (5) Robbie Silver and Kelsey Robinson (6) Henry and Janet Funderburk (7) Patricia Korzec and Tom Barnidge (8) Lexi Schrimpf, left, Nicole Araiza, Kelsey Dyer, Kat Sweet, Gabriella Marin and Crystal CarreraPhotos by Micah Escamil la

Mayor’s Celebration for Arts & Innovation

Riverside’s best examples of arts, education, research and technology were front and center during the Mayor’s Celebration for Arts & Innovation, held recently at the Fox Entertainment Plaza. The event was a fundraiser for the Riverside Arts Council and the Community Arts Partnership program, which serves more than 60,000 residents. Information: www.mayorscelebrationriverside.com

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The Mission inn hoTel & spa turns into a brilliantly illuminated showplace at this time of year for the Festival of lights. With nearly 4 million lights and more than

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While it’s a stunning spectacle, that’s only part of the magic. This year’s 21st edition also includes horse-drawn carriage rides, a beautiful Christmas tree in the hotel lobby, cupcakes and other holiday

confections, appearances by santa Claus, and the world’s largest man-made mistletoe (which measures 12 feet by 8 feet).

“each Festival of lights is bigger than the one before,” says Duane Roberts, who with his wife Kelly, are the owners of the historic landmark. “The event remains free as an experience that families can enjoy together — like Disneyland but without the long lines and cost of tickets.” — Jerry Rice

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