February/March 2024
RIVERSIDE ELECTRIC LIGHT PARADE
Riverside’s City Council and Mayoral Elections
How to Vote
As the clock counts down to March 5th, City of Riverside, the 12th largest city in California, is gearing up for the 2024 City Council and Mayoral elections. The upcoming general municipal election will include the offices of Mayor and City Councilmembers Wards 1, 3, 5, and 7. These elections not only help shape the future of our city but also embody the democratic spirit it upholds.
Understanding the Municipal Election
Set forth by the Riverside Charter, City of Riverside has eight elected official positions including the mayor and seven members of the City Council. All positions are non-partisan serving four-year terms and may be re-elected without limit and the City Clerk serves as the elected official in charge of all City elections. A unique aspect of Riverside’s electoral process is that it represents a blend of local and at-large democracy. The Riverside Mayor, the leader of this vibrant city, is elected atlarge by voters within the entire Riverside population, while members of the City Council are voted into office by electors in each of the city’s seven distinct wards. Registered voters may cast ballots for City Council candidates within the Ward they reside. This system ensures that the voices of Riverside’s diverse communities are heard, and decisions made are reflective of their needs and aspirations. If no candidate receives a majority of votes cast for the office, a runoff election will be held November 5, 2024. The two candidates receiving the highest number of votes in the general election shall be the candidates in the runoff election.
Your Voice Matters As the March 5, 2024 elections approach, we encourage Riverside residents to become informed about the candidates within your ward and the offices of Mayor. Your chosen city representative(s) will be your voice in City Hall and addressing issues unique to your neighborhood. The candidates aren’t just running for office; they are vying to be the advocates of our community, so make your voice heard by casting your vote. Your vote matters, and together we can shape the future of Riverside!
Online Voter Registration
To register online, you’ll need the following: •
Your California driver’s license or California identification number
•
The last four digits of your social security number
•
Your date of birth
Same-Day Voter Registration
If you find yourself registering or re-registering less than 15 days before the election, you’ll need to complete the Same-Day Voter Registration process by visiting your county elections office or a polling location in person to request a ballot.
Go Vote
You can return your ballots by mail OR at any designated ballot drop-off location or Voter Assistance Center in the county.
To learn more about voting in Riverside and the election process, visit RiversideCA.gov/Vote.
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Inland Exposures The Riversider | February/March 2024
A break in the storm reveals a snow-capped Mount San Gorgonio. Photo by Julian Jolliffe
The Riversider Magazine
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Volume 4 issue 1
February/March 2024
Riders with the Riverside Electric Light Parade take a stop at The Cheech. Photo by Julian Jolliffe
D E PA R T M E N T S 4 Inland Exposures Highlighting our best images of Riverside Photography by Julian Jolliffe 10 Love Letter To Riverside Honoring Black History Month and Ofelia Valdez-Yeager 14 Riverside's Finest Cheryl-Marie Hansberger, Ed.D 16 In Memory of Ofelia Valdez-Yeager 18 L ocal Business Raincross Gazette 20 L ocal Retailer Elements Shop 22 E astside Arthouse Tine Torres 24 H idden Gem Performing Arts at UC Riverside
C ommunity 26 RCC Career Closet 32 L ocal Hustle Cali Tardka & Jefrox Adobo 34 A rts UCR's Underground Scholars
Restaurant Review 42 Downtown Art’s Bar & Grill 44 Bar & Restaurant Guide The Riversider’s guide to all the best bars and eateries 54 Postcards From Yesterday Mount Rubidoux The Riversider Magazine
JULIAN JOLLIFFE
F E AT U R E S 28 Riverside Electric Light Parade The magical moving party 36 Historical Riverside Bound for the Promised Land The Heroic Rise of Black Riverside, 1875-Present
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Blumenthal & Moore, Inland Southern California’s pre-eminent criminal defense firm, is devoted exclusively to the defense of the accused. The firm’s trial-tested attorneys handle a range of criminal matters, from simple to complex. They are often retained in difficult cases, and defend people from all walks of the community. In every case, the client benefits from a team approach. By combining their expertise, the attorneys at Blumenthal & Moore bring more than 100 years of legal experience to every case, providing each client with the best possible defense. Virginia Blumenthal, Jeff Moore, Brent Romney and Heather Green all contribute unique strengths and perspectives, along with thorough knowledge of the court system in Riverside and San Bernardino counties. Mr. Moore and Mr. Romney are tough former prosecutors who put their experience to work in defending cases, while Ms. Green has a passion for defending those with mental health disorders – prioritizing justice for everyone, regardless of mental health status.
Founding attorney Virginia Blumenthal, known for opening the first female-owned law firm in the region, has been named one of the Top 100 trial lawyers in the United States by the National Trial Lawyers. Over time, she has received a long list of awards for her courtroom excellence and volunteer service in the community. Most recently, Ms. Blumenthal was named Best Lawyer in the Inland Empire by Inland Empire Magazine (2024); received a Champions for Justice Award from the Fair Housing Council of Riverside County (2023); received the Civil Rights Law Giant Award from the Riverside County NAACP Youth Council (2023); and received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Corona Chamber of Commerce (2023). Also in 2023, the team at Blumenthal & Moore received the Small Business Eagle Award from the Greater Riverside Chambers of Commerce – an honor that reflects a culture of excellence, experience and nearly five decades of commitment to clients.
(951) 682-5110 3993 Market Street Riverside, CA 92501 blumenthallawoffices.com
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JULIAN JOLLIFFE
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Love Letter to Riverside 2024 is well under way and has hit us by storm! The recent showers and cold weather have been surprising, but greatly needed. We hope that this cold, wet winter gives way to a gorgeously green and fruitful springtime. In honor of Black History Month, our resident historian, H. Vincent Moses, dove in deep to share with us the rich history of Riverside’s first Black families. He highlights how the Black community has persevered to become one of the largest populations in the Inland Empire. Check out this The Riversider Magazine
informative feature; some of it might surprise you, anger you, or even touch your heart, but that is what good journalism is supposed to do. It is with heavy hearts that we said farewell to one of Riverside’s finest, Ofelia Valdez-Yeager who recently passed away, leaving a huge void in many people’s lives. Ofelia was an immediate and vocal supporter of The Riversider. In classic Ofelia fashion, she reached out to us early on to tell us what she liked about our magazine, shared ideas on who and what we should focus on, and connected
us with other important Riversiders. In essence, she wanted to see a magazine focused on Riverside succeed and reassured us that we were on the right path. We are so grateful that we had the chance to not only meet her but to truly collaborate with her on our vision. We hope to make her proud and continue to highlight what she stood for.
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Brad Alewine uses his unparalleled marketing expertise to showcase your home across all media. His comprehensive marketing plan utilizing professional photography, print advertising, and on-line presence, is specially designed to get your home noticed and sold. Let Brad Alewine show you why he consistently ranks as one of the top listing agents in Riverside.
BRAD ALEWINE 951.347.8832 Brad.Alewine@Brad-Alewine.com BradAlewine.com BradAlewineGroup Brad Alewine Group DRE 01104973
Compass is a licensed real estate broker (01991628) in the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdraw without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. Exact dimensions can be obtained by retaining the services of an architect or engineer. This is not intended to solicit properties already listed.
Volume 4 issue 1
February/March 2024
Co-Publisher Alondra Figueroa alondra@theriversider.com
Co-Publisher Zach Cordner zach@theriversider.com
Design Director/Co-Founder
To advertise in
Dwayne Carter
Editor at Large Ken Crawford ken@theriversider.com
Associate Editor
Please e-mail: advertising@theriversider.com
THERIVERSIDER.COM Facebook.com/TheRiversiderMagazine
Mano Mirandé mano@theriversider.com
Copy Editor Shelby Rowe
Staff Photographer Julian Jolliffe
Marketing Director/Hypeman
@riversidermag
Jarod DeAnda
Advertising Please contact: advertising@theriversider.com
Contributors Raymond Alva, David Fouts, Eunice Hahn, H. Vincent Moses PhD, Philip Falcone
Special Thanks: Kaitlin Bilhartz, Patricia Lock Dawson, Philip Falcone, Jeremy Leyva, Shane Clark, Evelyn Cordner, Jack Amarillas, The Standerfer Family, Amber Lussier, Leslee Gaul, Liz Gurrola, Lucia Winsor, Riverside Museum, and all of our advertisers.
Distribution Kimo Figueroa, Abijah Hensley Dedicated to the memory of Aaron Schmidt 1972-2022
Facebook.com/TheRiversiderMagazine
@riversidermag
All inquiries, please contact info@theriversider.com
Published by: Riversider Media, Inc. ©2024 The Riversider Magazine 17130 Van Buren Blvd. #595 Riverside, CA 92504
On the Cover: The Riverside Electric Light Parade crew in front of the Riverside County Courthouse. Photo by Julian Jolliffe The Riversider Magazine
´ JUDITHE HERNANDEZ
Saturday, Februar y 3, 2024–Sunday, August 4, 2024 THE CHEECH MARIN CENTER FOR CHICANO ART & CULTURE OF THE RIVERSIDE ART MUSEUM
Get tickets!
PRESENTING SPONSOR:
The t i t l e o f t hi s ex hi b i t i o n i n c l u d e s t he l i n e o f p o e t r y “ B ey o n d m ys e l f , s o m e w he r e , I w a i t f o r m y a r r i v a l , ” w hi c h i s f ro m “ The B a l c o n y ” by O c t a v i o Paz , t ra n s l a t e d by E l i o t We i n b e rg e r, f ro m The Co l l e c t e d Po e m s , 19 5 7–19 87, © 19 8 6 by O c t a v i o Paz and Eliot Weinberger. Reprinted by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp. Unconquered, 2021 • Courtesy of the Artist
thecheechcenter.org • 3581 Mission Inn Avenue, Riverside, CA 92501 • @thecheechcenter
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The Riversider Magazine
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Riverside's Finest Cheryl-Marie Hansberger, Ed.D. From Riverside, For Riverside WORDS: PHILIP FALCONE PHOTO: DAVID FOUTS
There are a handful of people in Riverside who have some role—whether it be direct or indirect—in all the good things that are happening for the people and places that make this city home. Cheryl-Marie Hansberger is one of those Riversiders. A Riverside native, born at the former Riverside General Hospital (today Lowe’s home improvement store on Magnolia and Harrison Avenues), her parents were transplants from other states. Her father was a Marine and the sentiment made known to her and her older brother while growing up was, “you either go to college or go into the Marines.” When Cheryl-Marie was young, her family moved to the Arlanza neighborhood of Riverside—a neighborhood that boomed with military families from the 1950s to 1970s. The neighborhood has also historically been home to middle class and lower middle-class families. She attended a Head Start program in Casa Blanca—a neighborhood across town and in a different school district from her Arlanza home. Later, she attended Alvord unified schools including Orrenmaa Elementary, Arizona Middle, and L a Sierra High. Cher y l - Marie recount s fondly her grandmother and other family also living in Arlanza and her sadness when her famil y moved across town to the L a Sierra South neighborhood. During her childhood, her mother managed a 7/11 convenience store and Cheryl-Marie would help price merchandise, stock shelves, and clean the store—instilling in her a lifelong work ethic that has been a constant thread throughout her career. Her parents later separated, and CherylMarie lived with her father who, without income, was not able to afford to send her to college. With the help of affirmative action, Cheryl-Marie went to Cal State San Bernardino—and her brother went into the Marines. While in college, she worked two jobs and was active in campus government, Alpha Phi sorority, and mentoring younger students. Her passion for mentoring would become another common thread for the rest of her career and life. She received her bachelor ’s degree in
psychology and went on for a master’s degree at Azusa Pacific University. While in college, she heard about a fledgling college Republicans club, which led her to a lifetime of political activity. With the backdrop of a Clinton White House and a Republican-controlled Congress as she entered graduate school, Cher yl-Marie and team went on to crea te t he lar ge s t young Republican club in California. Later, she was offered a role with the San Bernardino County Republican Par t y and secured a spot in the Capital Fellows Program. She worked in Governor Pete Wilson’s education office on a statewide educational mentorship programming. Following her grandmother’s ailing health, nine months into the Sacramento fellowship, she transferred to the Inland Empire regional office to be closer to home. Around this time, she met Mike Hansberger, who af ter five years of dating would in 1999 become her husband. Mike’s family was involved in San Bernardino County politics and the two knew well the dynamics of politics and public service; a foreshadowing for what more was to come for Cheryl-Marie. Next, Cheryl-Marie left politics and shifted back to higher education, eventually becoming one of the early faculty members at Norco College. She taught leadership and oversaw student programs for the campus. Cheryl-Marie would t hen go on to gain her doc toral degre e in organizational leadership by 34 years old. One of the students in her doctoral program was the president of an international engineering firm and Cheryl-Marie was recruited to be the Vice President of Strategic Development. After being at the firm for over ten years, it was acquired by another company and Cheryl-Marie felt it was time to move on. She began sharing that she was in the market for a new job. Her lifelong friend Lou Monville, who she knew from her CSU days, connected her with Mayor Rusty Bailey who was searching for a new Chief of Staff. Longtime Chief of Staff and former council member, Maureen Kane was retiring and after interviewing with Rusty, Cheryl-Marie fit the bill. Back into the circles of politics she went!
Cheryl joined Mayor Bailey’s staff in 2015 with 2016 being his first re-election campaign. CherylMarie was instrumental in the reelection efforts, and Rusty went on to win in a landslide in the primary election, despite a field of six candidates. During her time in the Mayor’s office, Cheryl nurtured a robust internship program with dozens of local college students interning in the office each year—including a stint of time interned by the author of this article. This accomplishment is one of which she is most proud. Rusty Bailey’s second term as mayor was defined by his focus on recruiting faith-based organizations to expand housing and reduce homelessness in Riverside. Cheryl-Marie, with her strong faith and close knit relationships, became a champion of the effort. Today, she continues this work through her own church, Crest Community Church, who is partnering with Olive Crest to construct eleven homes for kids transitioning out of foster care— similar to the housing constructed at The Grove Church under the watch of Cheryl-Marie, Mayor Bailey, and others. In mid-2020, Cheryl-Marie was feeling called to ser ve outside of government and with the announcement that Rusty Bailey would not seek a third term, she began to explore her next chapter. The day Cheryl-Marie and team hosted the U.S. Secretary for Housing and Urban Development, Ben Carson, to tour The Grove Village, CherylMarie also met with the Board of Directors for Family Services Association (FSA). Right away the mission of FSA resonated with her. Founded by the Junior League sevent y years ago to combat the then-rising divorce rates in Riverside, FSA has since expanded to of fer early education, senior nutrition and housing, mental health ser vices, and to child abuse prevention, all with the motto of “Family strength is community strength.” Transcending challenges at a young age, Cher yl-Marie acknowledges that to be a fine Riversider, one must pick-up others and help them through their journey to reach self-sufficiency—this is the measure of success and this fine Riversider is doing just that.
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In Memory of Ofelia Valdez-Yeager (1947-2024) WORDS: KEN CRAWFORD PHOTO: ZACH CORDNER
The Riversider Magazine and The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture are about the same age. Our relationship with Ofelia ValdezYeager and others at The Cheech and Riverside Art Museum has been crucial to our success. If Ofelia texted me a lead, there was never a question that it was solid. She made it known that she believed in what we are doing here. Helping build a community that works for everyone and making beautiful things and recognizing them where they already exist is what we are about. Ofelia has always been a kindred spirit for us in that endeavor. Ofelia occupied a much larger space than her stature might suggest. Riverside lost a giant with her passing. Ofelia wasn't born into influence but rose to sit in seats of power on her sheer competence and determination. She didn’t wield her power like a weapon; she used her influence The Riversider Magazine
to make connections and her charisma to get the people on her side in order to build the world as she believed it ought to be. Most notably, Ofelia was dedicated to her family. She was impossibly busy and the level of dedication she had to her many engagements was no small task. I’m pretty certain that, in the dozens of events I’ve crossed paths with Ofelia, she had one or more of her children—and often a grandkid—by her side. Ofelia was dedicated to the communit y. Being Latina and an immigrant was integral to her identity. She helped found the Latino Network, an organization still making connections for Latino entrepreneurs and increasing access to resources necessary for business success. Ofelia was dedicated to beauty. She worked to bring beauty to public places. She connected those that had the skills to create beauty and
those who had the means and spaces to make it happen. During the last few years of her life, so much of her effort was given to The Riverside Art Museum and The Cheech. The Cheech wouldn't be here without her and will serve as the most conspicuous monument to her life’s work. Her loss seems unbearable and the void she leaves too large to fill but Ofelia was, as much as anything, a generator. She has been doing the work to assure that her vision for Riverside continues in her absence. She took the energy around her and used it to inspire us to join her in making this community a better place for all of us. Ofelia is not here with us anymore but her legacy lives on with the people who love Riverside and are dedicated to making it a better, more beautiful place. Thank you, Ofelia, for your friendship, your guidance, and your inspiration.
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Local Business The Riversider | February/March 2024
Raincross Gazette WORDS: KEN CRAWFORD PHOTO: ZACH CORDNER
Publisher Justin Pardee
Justin Pardee is a mile-a-minute guy. He’s a life coach, entrepreneur, educator, Poly High School football dad and, if everything goes well, publishing magnate. Justin publishes The Raincross Gazette , a digital local-section, news publication in Riverside. In every absence, there is an opportunity to fill a space. The long time paper of record in town, The Press Enterprise, was no longer serving the city well and Justin saw a need. The Press-Enterprise was a juggernaut among local papers. The local section was always a highlight. “The Press” gave us well-written, timely stories about our city and surrounding communities and it felt plugged in and relevant. Like so many other local newspapers, the internet star ted to take over much of what newspapers traditionally did. Craigslist does, for free, what the classified section was selling. It was also more nimble and searchable and simply did a better job of connecting people for the whole gamut of transactions. The Riversider Magazine
So many services provided in print are now done better on the internet. Not everything, however, is better. Actual news was taken over by chat groups and “What’s Happening in…” pages. There are benefits to the democratization of news distribution but certain things suffered. Journalists trained to obsess over accuracy and facts were marginalized, and deep-diving nuts and bolts journalism had a hard time thriving in small to mid sized markets. There are serious questions about the future of the industry. Even as I write, the LA TImes has laid off over one hundred journalists from their news department. Daily news is a tough business. Is waning readership a result of the emergence of diluted, super regional news like “Inland Empire” coverage? And, on the flip side of that, hyperlocal “neighborhood” apps that foster mostly NIMBY complaints and coyote warnings. Enter The Raincross Gazette. Justin believes in things and he believes that Riverside City Hall deserves the kind of accountability that comes only when the people are informed. He is committed
to bringing great journalism to Riverside and believes he can do it as a career and not a hobby, and he doesn’t see himself as alone on this frontier. “All across the country, local, independent online news publishers are standing up to do the work of reporting on the happenings in their communities and building audiences who follow, trust, and financially sustain them,” Justin said. Justin has a good product in The Raincross Gazette with almost 4,000 subscribers. He has only begun to tap into available “news beats.” His plans to expand into cultural and sports coverage should broaden his readership substantially. The Raincross Gazette may very well serve as a model for other cities to create comprehensive news publications in markets that exist in the gap between mass media and “why are there police driving down my street?” We suggest that you subscribe today.
To subscribe to The Raincross Gazette go to raincrossgazette.com
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2501 Prince Albert Dr | Riverside
5 B e d | 2 . 5 B a t h | 4 0 00 s q f t | B u i l t 1 9 4 7 Offered at $1,200,00
Listed By: Crystal Coleman DRE#01879574
4495 Mission Inn Ave | Riverside
5 Bed | 2.5 Bath | 3000sqft | Built 1915 Offered at $895,000
We are thrilled to announce the newest addition to our team - Crystal and Fred Coleman of "Famous Properties" from Riverside! (951) 801-0924
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Local Retailer The Riversider | February/March 2024
Elements Shop WORDS: MANO MIRANDÉ PHOTOS: ZACH CORDNER
Located on Magnolia Ave. just outside the Brockton Arcade, the Elements Shop opened its doors in September 2023 and has become a welcome addition to Riverside’s independent business community. Named after the four elements of hip hop – MC’ing, B-Boy’ing, DJ’ing, and Graffiti Art— Elements lives up to its name and offers its customers a wide selection of vinyl records, original artwork, urban apparel, and aerosol art supplies at affordable prices. Thirty-six-year-old shop owner and longtime Riverside resident Adrian Bahena’s love for hip hop began in the fifth grade when he discovered artists like Madlib, The Visionaries, and Dilated Peoples, as he dug through his cousin’s CD collection. By the time he was in high school, Bahena was faced with an important decision, as he explained, “I only had two options, but really, I only had one, either it was gangbanging or stick with hip hop, and I chose hip hop.” A d r i a n b e g a n co l l e c t i n g r e co r d s a n d experimenting with B-Boy’ing and DJ’ing on borrowed equipment from family and friends. “My senior year, my dad gave me $1,500 to buy my first car so I could start working and my friend took me to buy my first set of Technics 1200 turntables with the money instead,” he recalled. “I still have them to this day”. Bahena adapted the name DJ Soul One and organized monthly hip hop jams with his friends known as the “1212 Sessions” at Bryant Park in Riverside, as well as other locations throughout the Inland Empire and Los Angeles. His career as a DJ culminated with a performance at the Rock the Bells Hip Hop Festival The Riversider Magazine
before Bahena began working in the retail industry at apparel shops like GCS in Pomona and Active Ride Shop in Corona in his early 20’s. It was there that he not only learned the ins and outs of running a retail business, but the importance of customer service. “I just liked the whole atmosphere, especially at GCS. What more do you want, hip hop, graffiti, it was all the elements, but without good customer service, everything can fail.” Bahena worked several random jobs after leaving the retail industry but held on to his dream of one day opening a shop of his own. In February 2023, Adrian was faced with a health scare that solidified his decision to turn his dream into a reality. “I ended up getting sick and I didn’t know what was wrong with me, but honestly, I thought I was gonna die,” Bahena recalled. “I thought to myself, I don’t want to leave this earth without fulfilling my dream, so after my recovery I decided to just take that jump and open up the shop.” With the support of his family and friends, he signed the lease and opened the Elements Shop just six months later. Adrian’s lifelong love for hip hop and its culture can be felt as customers step inside the Elements Shop. In addition to its extensive inventory, the space is also used to host various events like live in-store performances, art exhibitions, and collaborations with local brands. Adrian’s goal is to give back to the culture that has given him so much throughout his lifetime, and with our support, the Elements Shop will remain a permanent fixture in the Riverside independent business community.
Owner Adrian Bahena
Elements Shop 6704 Magnolia Ave (951) 462-1029 @the_elements_shop
C E L E B R AT E W I T H U S A S
THE
MUSEUM O F RIVERSIDE CO M M E M O R AT E S I T S
100 ANNIVERSARY TH
Join us throughout 2024 to celebrate our centennial with 100 programs and events. Movie nights, workshops, Curator Conversations, community gatherings, and more are planned for this year. We are excited to share our off-site exhibition, Dear Riverside, at the Center for Social Justice and Civil Liberties, opening on July 25, 2024. Our year will culminate with a 1920s-themed gala to celebrate our birthday in style! For details, ticket purchases, and a full list of all Museum events and activities, visit us at: linktr.ee/museumofriverside The Museum of Riverside is grateful to stand on the traditional and ancestral lands of the Cahuilla, Gabrielino-Tongva, Luiseño, and Serrano peoples. The Cahuilla, Gabrielino-Tongva, Luiseño, and Serrano continue to live and thrive in Southern California.
a
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MEET YOUR LOCAL ARTIST
Tine Torres
pocketchangepopups.com The Riversider Magazine
Presented by Eastside Arthouse Written by Michelle Espino Photos by Jordan Rivera
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T
ine Torres’ dedication to freedom is evident in her exploration of diverse artistic mediums, showcasing a fearless commitment to creativity and community. Torres channels her artistic sense of self through hosting night markets, muralism, painting, mosaic assemblage, and her expressive choice of wardrobe. She attributes her confidence in art making to the constant support from her family, more specifically from her Papa and his message to “Never stop creating”. Additionally, Torres’ exposure to femme authors and philosophers in her collegiate years brought a fresh perspective towards embracing her creative spirit and how to introduce innovation within her environment. Eventually, Torres discovered a space that facilitated her pursuits, the Eastside Arthouse. There she found several artists practicing in different mediums, helping one another grow in their craft, and advocating for artists sustaining themselves through their art. In this collective she was able to grow in her own creative practices and conceive her ongoing passion, Pocket Change Pop-Ups’ Night Market. Since creating this platform which
the artist describes as a ‘vibrant community hub’, she has cultivated a community of entrepreneurs and small business owners. Torres describes this Night Market as: ‘Unique is its collaboration with gallery shows, uniting creators of many artistic backgrounds. The beauty is seeing events and communities created and dismantled in a single day, mirroring the transient nature of our time on Earth’. When asked about what Pocket Change Pop-ups has planned for 2024 Torres replied: ‘This year, Pocket
Change has an array of exciting events ahead. Experience the magic of Pocket Change Pop-Ups- where creativity meets community!’. Visit their Instagram page @pocketchangepopups or their website pocketchangepopups.com for a closer look.
EASTSIDE ARTHOUSE 4177 Park Avenue www.eastsidearthouse.studio @eastsidearthouse
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Hidden Gem: Performing Arts at UC Riverside
Come explore
Writers Week Festival, music, dance, theatre, and art exhibitions.
PHOTO: RYAN POON/UCR
For the past 47 years, the University of California, Riverside has been celebrating authors and storytellers from all over the world. The annual literary event, free and open to the public, is Writers Week Festival. This year Writers Week is set for Feb. 10 and Feb. 12-16. The event, co-sponsored by UCR Department of Creative Writing and the LA Review of Books, is the longest-running free literary festival in California. The week will honor three literary giants: Dave Eggers, Quincy Troupe, and Rigoberto González through Los Angeles Review of Books/UCR Department of Creative Writing Lifetime Achievement Awards. “Each year, we strive to bring the best of creative writing and literature into a presentation forum for all to enjoy. Our efforts combine to offer a complex living survey of contemporary literature, of creative writers, from the debut author to internationally celebrated great,” said Allison Adelle Hedge Coke, Writers Week co-director. “Writers Week was initiated 47 years ago and has always been offered as a free opportunity for the campus community, regional community, and anyone passing through who would like to attend, learn from, and be entertained with the writers of literature in all forms.” Writers are “Our culture’s ‘R&D department.’ The future is forged in literature before it arrives in the material world,” said Thomas Lutz, Writers Week co-director. “Our Lifetime Achievement Award winners are a case in point: Quincy Troupe put together an anthology of world literature with his editor at Simon & Schuster, Toni Morrison, before the first world literature course was taught at a university, before we had journals and magazines devoted to world literature, before world literature became central to the reading habits of Americans. Rigoberto Gonzalez’s ‘Butterfly Boy’ gave us a preview of our current understanding of gender and sexuality decades earlier.
The Riversider Magazine
Dave Eggers’ fiction explained the tech world to us before we knew exactly what it was. This is what Shelley meant when he said poets are the legislators of the world. We need them to imagine, and then show us, the way forward.” Writers Week will offer virtual and in-person events, with all sessions captioned and ASL translated. Visit writersweek.ucr.edu to view the complete schedule.
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Performing Arts
Performing Arts
Performing Arts
Explore what UCR has to offer: art, dance, theatre. UC Riverside has been offering unparalleled, stimulating performances for decades. Located in the heart of Inland Southern California, UCR is home to some of the most prestigious art, dance, and theatre scholars and performers.
Keep up to date on UC Riverside events at performingarts.ucr.edu UCR ORCHESTRA CONCERT
Ruth Charloff, conductor. Audiences will be serenaded with musical pieces such as SaintSaens: Cello Concerto No. 1, Brahms, Serenade No. 1, and Dvorak, Symphony No. 7. Feb. 3: 8 pm at UCR’s University Theatre Feb. 4: 3 pm at UCR’s University Theatre Admission: $10 General $8 Students/Seniors $6 Child performingarts.ucr.edu
VALENTINES CHAMBER SINGERS CONCERT
Chamber singers present their annual tribute to Valentine’s Day. Features solo performances, the full choir, and pianist Jonathan Keplinger. Feb. 12: 7 pm at UCR ARTS, 3824 Main Street in downtown Riverside. Admission: Free. performingarts.ucr.edu
Performing Arts VIETGONE
UCR’s Department of Theatre, Film, and Digital Production presents “Vietgone,” a romantic comedy by Qui Nguyen. Part history play and part memoir, this whip-smart romantic comedy is punctuated with flashbacks, pop culture references, ninja battles, and bursts of rap songs. The play offers a human-centered view of the Vietnam War and its aftermath and grapples with the enduring question, “What makes a home?” Feb. 15-24: at ARTS Studio Theatre (on campus) Admission: $15; $12 seniors and children. Parking: Lot 1, $8. performingarts.ucr.edu
UCR IS DANCING
Celebrate the incredible artistic dance talents— with original choreographic works—of UCR dance majors. DaEun Jung is the artistic director.
March 7: 7:30 pm Performing Arts March 9: 3:30 pm and 7:30 pm Admission: $15 performingarts.ucr.edu
UCR ARTS EXHIBITIONS
Located in the heart of downtown Riverside, UCR ARTS offers visitors art exhibitions, films, and much more. Current exhibitions: “Every Day We Have to Invent the Reality of This World: AI Post Photography”; “Be A Man: Richard Allen May III’s Exploration of Black Masculinity in a White Patriarchal Society” Admission: Museum admission is free; film screenings require a paid ticket. Details: ucrarts.ucr.edu/visit FREE PARKING ON NIGHTS AND WEEKENDS On weeknights, Monday to Friday from 6:00 pm–7:00 am, permits are not required when parking in Gold lots (26, 30, and 50). On weekends, starting at 12:00 pm on Fridays until 6:00 am on Monday morning, the following lots do not require a paid permit when parking in the unreserved spaces: Lot 6 Blue, Lot 13 Blue, Big Springs Parking Structure 2, Gold lots (26, 30, and 50). performingarts.ucr.edu/parking/ UC Riverside is located at 900 University Ave.
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Community The Riversider | February/March 2024
Student Gabrielle Alexander
RCC student Ariana Licea checks out the impressive inventory of clothing available to students.
RCC Career Closet WORDS: KEN CRAWFORD PHOTOS: ZACH CORDNER
Meriel Anderson-McDade helps people find jobs. She is the Employment Placement Coordinator at the Riverside City College Career Center. Her day to day is connecting students and employers. Sometimes this means an e-mail or a phone call but other times a need emerges that is a little out of the ordinary. Meriel was helping a student prepare for an upcoming interview when the student told her that they did not have appropriate clothing or any money to purchase what they needed. Meriel ended up buying the student clothes for the interview out of her own pocket at a local discount store but knew that this was going to be a recurring issue and that buying clothing for students was not a long-term solution to the problem. She approached RCC with an idea to provide a space, on campus, where students can get inter view-appropriate clothing at no cost. In January 2019, the college provided a small portable on the edge of campus and donations were sought to stock the closet. The response was overwhelming and the Career Closet was up and running. The Riversider Magazine
The Career Closet is run by RCC faculty, staff, and student volunteers carving a few hours out of their daily routines. Hundreds of students over the past five years have been fitted with dealclosing threads. Biology professor Katherine Johnson is a long-time volunteer and enjoys her time at the Career Closet. She remembered the genesis of her involvement. "After getting hired at RCC, I became aware of the newly formed career closet and decided I wanted to help out. I love clothes and fashion and the thought of helping students find outfits for job interviews sounded really fun and a great way to interact with students outside of the classroom,” she said. The Career Closet is a bit small and kinda hidden behind the Landis Performing Arts Center. The success of the Career Closet is a testament to those involved daily and to the vision and flexibility of RCC as an institution. RCC is not an academic ivory tower. It is a working college providing unique educational programs for those who intend to transition to universities, as well as those looking for specific skills in trade and craft.
Student Luke Lowry
The practical nature and nimble spirit of RCC is on full display at the Career Closet. The ability of an institution as established and as large as RCC to recognize a need and respond with a concrete and practical solution in real time is impressive. Meriel Anderson-McDade and crew embody the spirit of service to the community and have created a true gem in Riverside.
For more information go to @rcc_career_closet
RIVERSIDE CONVENTION CENTER
Southern California’s Premier Boutique Venue Contact Amy Today! (951) 346-4700 | adryver@riv-cc.com
Image by Greycard Photography
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I usually have a certain level of expectation and somewhat of an angle going into starting my research on a story. I, admittedly, didn’t know much about the Riverside Electric Light Parade (RELP) starting out. I do have a real affinity for people having a good time in public places so I planned on this being a fun story to research and write. I didn’t, however, plan on having this story affect me the way it did. This is a special event and a great group of people, and I am really glad to be able to share it with you all. Riverside Electric Light Parade is the official Riverside chapter of ELP, an organization started in Venice Beach, California by Marcus Gladney. The Venice ride was a huge success and new chapters have emerged and are scattered throughout the western United States and Hawaii. RELP is a monthly, family-oriented, public group bike ride with an emphasis on brightly lit bicycles equipped with powerful speakers for rider safety and to encourage a party-like environment. I showed up a couple of hours before the event to meet with the event organizers, John and GiGi Arnold. There were twenty or so other people there, socializing and helping each other putting lights on bikes. I introduced myself and John greeted me with a “dab” and a hug. His cordiality and kindness are ver y much the mood of the group as a whole. John told me the good vibes around RELP have a name, “Wheel Love is Free. Family. Fun.” GiGi was setting up the table with merchandise and greeting the early regulars as they arrived. I met Rodney Johnson, John’s “right hand man,” and Ian McGinley of Stacked BMX, who helps out riders with bike problems along the route. I followed John around and chatted with him while he got things ready for the start of the ride at dusk. The initial twenty participants quickly increased to a hundred or more. John told me he plans on 200 riders by ride time. It started with a dozen or so in the early rides and as word got out, the numbers increased significantly. I asked John if he thought it could get too big and he told me that mechanisms are in place to make sure that the riders respect the road and that cars are fairly warned of the mass of riders. He seemed to think they weren’t near any limit of riders that may happen. RELP has even leveraged their increase in participation into community action. John saw that he had something real happening at the rides and started to wonder, ‘how can we help touch other people while we're just out riding these bikes?’ RELP has helped feed the homeless, raised money for several local charities, invited community organizations to participate in their gatherings, and is proudly participating in the Riverside Black History Expo on February 10. John is working on The Riversider Magazine
Riverside Electric Light Parade Magical Moving Party
WORDS: KEN CRAWFORD PHOTOS: JULIAN JOLLIFFE
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The Riversider Magazine
gaining non profit organization status so donations made to RELP can be tax deductible. As the crowd really began to swell and the mood changed from “hanging out” to “let’s go!” I stayed back and watched the building action while John moved through the crowd, taking care of business as the sun started to set and the start time became imminent. I quickly found a new friend to talk with while I watched. Lee Davis, a retired LA County Typist-Clerk, happened to be next to me and I asked her how she got involved with RELP. She had retired right before COVID-19 hit and bought herself an E-Bike to keep bus y. She found riding on her own intimidating and as we all started to get out of the house as the pandemic subsided, Lee sought out groups to ride with. She participates in a few group rides each month and is a fixture at RELP. “It’s positive, it keeps me busy, and I enjoy it,” Davis told me. That’s plenty of reasons for me. I would be neglecting a ver y prominent feature of the RELP crowd if I didn’t mention the diversity of the gathered riders. There are many
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(Left to Right): RELP's Rodney Johnson, Milton Johnson, John Arnold and GiGi Arnold.
traditional pedal pushers, but I would say a fair majority of riders are riding electric vehicles of some form. One wheeled vehicles, scooters, and e-bikes are well-represented. People of all ages are also there, from young Girl Scouts selling cookies to gray haired grandparents getting out and active. RELP is notably racially diverse, as well. It doesn't seem to be manufactured, but I do think it’s an important part of what is happening at RELP. These kinds of intentional gatherings bring together people for a purpose and that purpose bumps what may divide us down the list of importance. People are here to ride. That is the primary function of RELP. People are also out to be a part
of something, to assert their space in our community and, of course, be out and seen. What RELP does is cool and people feel cool when they participate. RELP is a rolling party, it's loud and brightly lit, it takes place on public roads and in public spaces, and there is a bit of a strut in the collective step of RELP as they move through the city pulsating with sound and light. I loved hanging out with John, GiGi, and the whole squad. They have created a movement of positive energies in Riverside through a largely recreational gathering. I started by saying I didn't know much about RELP going into this and I didn’t plan on being so affected by this story. There is
something to be said about being well into middleage and having your mind blown a little. RELP is a little slice of what things should be like and I encourage you to look them up and participate. You will feel welcome and everybody can benefit from an occasional chance to strut a little. The Riverside Electric Light Parade rolls out at 5pm from 4050 Main Street on the last Saturday of every month.
For more info follow on Instagram @riversideelectriclightparade
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Local Hustle The Riversider | February/March 2024
Cali Tardka & Jefrox Adobo
Riverside's Best Home Kitchen Takeout Restaurants WORDS: EUNICE HAHN PHOTOS: RAYMOND ALVA
Samosas
Chicken Tikka Masala Fries
Cali Tardka's mother-son duo Kimi and Manu Sanghu
Picture this: You’re scrolling through restaurants on Yelp wondering what to eat for dinner when you come across a new spot. The reviews look great, the food even better, so you place an order for tonight’s takeout. You eagerly pull up to the location on their website but wait — is that someone’s front lawn? Welcome, my friend, to the world of Microenterprise Home Kitchen Operations (MEHKO), takeout restaurants run out of people’s residential homes. Ever since Riverside County adopted a bill to license these home kitchens in 2019, these eateries have enabled chefs to share their food without a commercial space and diners to experience home-cooked food with the convenience of a typical takeout order. Our team visited two of these Riverside MEHKOs: Cali Tardka and Jefrox Adobo, and I am eager to share with you all the mouth-watering dishes and love for the community we found within these homes. Cali Tardka As the first Microenterprise Home Kitchen Operation to be licensed in Riverside, Cali Tardka, run by mother-son duo Kimi and Manu Sanghu, has built The Riversider Magazine
a following around serving Punjabi fusion takeout from their home. From around 7am to 7pm each day, the Sanghu’s kitchen morphs into an orchestra of sizzling samosas and bubbling tikka masala as the family rushes to prepare and fill orders. Their buzz precedes them: Kimi, the culinary talent , and Manu, the PR-sav v y mind, have appeared on “Access Hollywood,” “ABC7,” and “The Jennifer Hudson Show” —not to mention the countless celebrity collaborations they’ve done with names like Russell Peters, Gabriel Iglesias, and Mario Lopez. What makes Cali Tardka remarkable is true entrepreneurial spirit baked into the DNA of their eatery. Selling Kimi’s food through social media in 2018 was what allowed the family to make ends meet when they were on the brink of losing their house. Then, when the Public Health Department shut them down for operating without a license, it was Kimi who called the county health department every week for six months, inquiring when Riverside would start accepting applications for MEHKOs so they could open again. While Kimi made the menu, Manu worked on
developing their social media presence, teaching himself through business podcasts and dropping out of university to devote himself to the business. After they became officially licensed in 2019, their next challenge was spreading awareness. This lead to their first viral moment after what Manu describes as a family effort to get food influencer Greg Simms from the TikTok and Instagram account @GrubWithGreg to visit Cali Tardka. “For two to three weeks we just kept direct messaging him on when he could come to Riverside and check us out,” Manu said. “We told all my cousins to just keep tagging him with ‘Go to Cali Tardka.’” Their efforts paid off when Greg sent them a DM asking to collaborate on a video that blew up to a million views by the end of the day. Now people come from all over California come to try Cali Tardka’s signature Chicken Tikka Masala Fries—crispy fries drenched in red curr y and showered in vibrant chutneys—and other offerings. And, the hype is not for naught, for not only is their food flavorful, everything they offer, from their pillowy naan bread to their handled pouches of mango lassi, is handmade.
Steamed Buns
Jefrox Adobo's Jeff and Roxanne Butiu
Beef Noodle Soup
The affection that Kimi and Manu have for feeding their community is apparent in their desire to put down roots in Riverside. The two have started scouting locations to hopefully open up a brickand-mortar spot by next year. But you don’t have to wait until then to try their food.
You can find them on Instagram @calitardka and order food that was made with a mother’s love. Jefrox Adobo Jeff and Roxanne Butiu always loved cooking. They both had degrees in restaurant management back in the Philippines, and Jeff had culinary experience working as a chef. But with full-time caregiver jobs and four children to raise, this interest remained just that—a hobby—until the two were laid off from their jobs in 2021. Suddenly, this hobby became a lifeline when the couple decided to start selling their beef noodle soup outside a local Walmart. Armed with an E-Z Up and a handwritten sign that read “Authentic Beef Noodle Soup,” the two got to work spooning
ladlefuls of dark, beefy broth over chewy knife-cut noodles for $5 a bowl. Despite having no social media presence, the aromatic soup and low price point proved to be a strong marketing tool in its own right, drawing in curious customers who would later become loyal patrons. Misfortune struck when they were informed by a coding department officer that they could not sell on the street. Thankfully, the officer also told them about the MEKHO program, and gave them information to get started with the licensing process. By 2022, they got their license, and Jefrox Adobo—a combination of Jeff and Roxanne’s names as well as a playful wink to the Tagalog word for spoiled brat—was born. Drawing upon Jeff’s diverse culinary influences, Jefrox Adobo offers customers their unique spin on Filipino cuisine. Notable dishes include their Shrimp Pancit, a brothy noodle dish bursting with seafood flavor, and the savory Beef Noodle Soup that started it all, stocked with tender pieces of beef and blanched bok choy. Through their food, the Butius have built a
committed base of customers who love what they have to offer, which allowed them to recently expand into a catering business. But despite their success, the couple don’t take anything for granted. From the customers who even made Reddit threads asking about their restaurant while they were getting their MEKHO license, to Mark Menezes from the Instagram account @MarkFromRiverside who gave them their viral big break, they are grateful for all the love they’ve received from the Riverside community and are committed to giving it back. “We have a community like we never had before. When we were caregivers, we just survived, but now we have a family and so many people who are willing to give us a hand,” Roxanne said. So, whether you’re looking for Filipino foods you already love, or just a new place to add to your takeout dinner rotation, you won’t regret ordering from Jefrox Adobo.
You can find them on Instagram @jefroxadobo.
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Arts The Riversider | February/March 2024
The UCR Underground Scholars Initiative Building a Prison to University Pipeline
(Left to Right): UCR Students Art Valles, Rocio Sanchez, Olivia Chavez, and USI Director Ismael Davila.
WORDS: MANO MIRANDÉ PHOTOS: ZACH CORDNER
Recidivism rates in the U.S. are some of the highest in the world with almost 44% of offenders returning to prison within their first year of release. In California, over 60% of individuals released from prison will reoffend within three years, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. While the circumstances of each individual case var y substantially, those released from incarceration face a multitude of obstacles and are given minimal resources when it comes to rehabilitation. With criminal background checks for employ ment , housing , and educ at ion , opportunities are even more limited for those attempting to successfully integrate themselves back into society. One of the most impactful tools in reducing the likelihood of reincarceration is education. “It has been proven that education reduces recidivism. As you increase your level of education, you are less likely to be reincarcerated. Earning a graduate degree drops it down to zero percent, and having a bachelor’s drops it to 20%,” Ismael Davila, Director of UC Riverside’s Underground Scholars Initiative (USI) explained. USI was founded at UC Berkeley in 2013 and has expanded with chapters at several UC campuses The Riversider Magazine
including UC Riverside in 2018. Its mission is to create pathways to higher education for incarcerated, formerly incarcerated, and system-impacted students. “Our goal is to build a ‘prison-to-school pipeline,’” Davila explained. “We provide transitional support, advocacy, outreach, employment assistance, and recruitment.” Davila, like the other 55 student-members currently involved in the USI program at UCR, has experienced the challenges of post-incarceration first-hand. Born in Los Angeles in 1982, his family moved to the Rubidoux neighborhood of Riverside when he was three years old. “Gangs were huge back then,” he recalled. “There was a lot of crime and drug use. I remember seeing bullet holes and graffiti all around the neighborhood as a kid.” By the time Davila was in high school, many of his friends and family were involved in gangs. “Most of the guys in my neighborhood, and especially on my street, all of them but two kids ended up in jail or prison, and I was incarcerated as well,” he said. At age nineteen, Ismael was arrested and charged with a 245(a)(1) – assault with a deadly weapon with intent to cause great bodily injury, which is a felony offense carrying a maximum sentence of up to four years.
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BLACK & WHITE PHOTOS BY UCR STUDENT HUMBERTO FLORES
He spent the following years in court before being convicted of the charge nearly three years after his arrest. As a first-time offender, Davila received an alternative sentence requiring him to wear an ankle monitor for six months, as well as probation and anger management classes. “I didn’t understand the law or the impact of having a record was going to mean for me later on in life,” he reflected. “When you’re nineteen, you’re not thinking about those kinds of things.” During the years he spent in court, Ismael enrolled in classes at Riverside Community College and worked on campus where he graduated with an associate degree in 2003. The first of his family to receive a college education, he was unfamiliar with the transfer process to continue his education and struggled to find employment after receiving the felony conviction. It was not until 2009 that Davila enrolled at Cal State San Bernardino with the assistance of a high school friend where he received a BA in Kinesiology. Ismael eventually had his charge expunged, but because it was a felony, it remained visible on his record, causing his application for a teaching credential program after graduating from CSUSB to be denied. It took nearly two years before the decision was appealed, but his criminal record w o ul d a ga in h in d e r h is o p p o r t un i t i e s f o r employment, despite having his teaching credential.
“I was offered a position at a high school and put ‘No’ where the application asked about my record, assuming it was expunged,” Davila explained. “When they found out, they accused me of lying on the application and I was let go.” Davila returned to RCC where he worked in student ser vices and youth outreach, which included an organization for formerly incarcerated students called Transitioning Minds. “At the time, there wasn’t an opportunity for me to become director of the program,” he said. “But, the students I worked with actually encouraged me to apply for a similar position at UCR.” In June 2022, Davila became director of the USI program at UCR, as he jokingly added, “It was the only time having a record actually helped me get a job.” His personal experience with postincarceration rehabilitation not only made him an ideal candidate for the position but allowed him to provide valuable insight to its members. In the spring of 2023, USI hosted a community event at The Barn on UCR’s campus, which featured an art exhibit showcasing the works of several USI members and other ar tists impacted by incarceration. One of its attendees was Maryana Carreon, program associate at The Cheech Center for Chicano Art in downtown Riverside. “She saw the show and was really impressed by the artwork,” Davila recalled. “She said to
me, ‘What if we were to do something like this at The Cheech?’” Months later, Carreon’s idea became a reality when she received approval to host an exhibit at The Cheech in collaboration with USI. “Uncaged Perspectives ” will debut on Thursday March 7, 2024, to coincide with the monthly Riverside Artswalk and will be shown through June 9. The exhibit features sixteen pieces by USI members and several local artists centering on the impact of the carceral system on communities, families, and individuals in the Inland Empire. The exhibit will not only provide a first-hand look into the realities of those personally affected by incarceration but serves as a symbol of hope for the thousands who continue to struggle with its lasting impact. With the assistance and services provided by programs like the Underground Scholars Initiative, the guidance and dedication of individuals like Ismael Davila, and the support of community institutions like The Cheech, that spark of hope will continue to shine brighter.
"Uncaged Perspectives" exhibition opens at The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture on Thursday, March 7th.
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Historical Riverside The Riversider | February/March 2024
Bound for the Promised Land The Heroic Rise of Black Riverside, 1875-Present WORDS: H VINCENT MOSES, PHD
“ Oh, who will come and go with me? I am bound for the Promised Land.” On Jordon’s Stormy Banks I Stand, 18th century Baptist/Methodist hymn, lyrics by Samuel Bennett, 1787
After decades of planning, in October 2022, Rose Mayes' dream for Riverside finally came true. The Civil Rights Institute of Inland Southern California had just opened across from the Riverside Main Library on Mission Inn Avenue. Cate and I were privileged to curate the inaugural exhibition, for the opening, Still, I Rise: The Black IE Fight for Justice. Sponsored by the Riverside African American Historical Society, the exhibition marked nearly one -hundred-f if t y year s of the formidable presence of Black Riverside. As you read my column, the CRI is busy digitizing the exhibition for posterity. With that, Let ’s look back at the heroic rise of this community and how it overcame significant obstacles to reach its prominence in the 21st century.
Klan Violence, Jim Crow, and the Promise of Riverside The Klan riders, dressed in their fear-inducing white robes and pointy hoods, dragged a Black neighbor from his home in the dead of night, stripped him, chased him down the road, tied him to an oak tree, and viciously flogged him with a bullwhip. This was not an isolated incident in Georgia or other states of the Deep South. By 1875, Robert Stokes, a Georgia freedman, had had enough. Offered the opportunity by a white family, Robert came with them to Riverside, the birthplace of the Washington navel orange enterprise. Stokes prospered mightily in this fledgling orange grower’s promised land, acquiring proper t y and solid standing among the early white northern abolitionist settlers that founded the town. The Riversider Magazine
Sunday School Photograph, Second Baptist Church, Fairmount Park (c1913) The Stokes and Williams families are well represented in this group photo. Front row, left to right: Annie Mae Hill, Pearl Williams, Walter Williams, Janie Mary Stokes and husband David, Annie and Mose Bacon, Rev. & Mrs. George Williams, Annie and Robert Williams holding Robert Williams, Jr., Mary Stokes (David's Aunt), and Mrs. Chandles standing. Top row, left to right: Eudell Williams, Oscar Stokes, Cecil Estelle Stokes, Walter Stokes, William Stokes, Norman Williams, Susie Williams (Iola McCoy's mother), Trivel Williams (lola's father). Children, seated left to right: Maitland and Wilhelmina Stokes, Louise and Elsie Williams, L. Williams. Photo from the Maitland Stokes Collection.
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Historical Riverside The Riversider | February/March 2024
Constable Robert Stokes, c1885, a freedman, arrived in Riverside in 1875 with a white family from Atlanta, Georgia and became a respected property owner, hog rancher, and orange grower. Mr. Stokes was appointed Constable by the Riverside Board of Trustees by a unanimous vote. Courtesy, Museum of Riverside.
The flogged Freedman represented all Southern Blacks' plight in the aftermath of Reconstruction. Emancipation and Union victory in the Civil War, the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. Reconstruction of the South led Southern Blacks to think the Promised Land might be just around the corner. By 1878, however, the rampant return of unbridled White supremacy in the South and Southerners’ effort to ‘redeem’ the “Lost Cause” by any means necessary convinced thousands of the four million freedmen and women, like Robert Stokes, to migrate to the West. California drew them with her siren song of a “New Canaan” of unsurpassed opportunity. The West offered them a new start in an idyllic climate and offered the unheard-of prospect of home ownership, freedom of movement, and work. The promise of California was real, though challenging to achieve. In the Inland Empire (IE), Black set tlers ran headlong into White supremacy, the California Ku Klux Klan, restrictive housing covenants, employment bias, segregated schools, and redlined neighborhoods. In the face of those challenges, Lincoln Republican R i ver side of fered oppor tuni ties not of ten available in other California towns. This seemed to be the case for Robert Stokes and the earliest Black settlers, who initially lived The Riversider Magazine
Congregation of the Second Baptist Church. c1905. Courtesy, Museum of Riverside.
Orange Valley Lodge #13, Colored Masons and Eastern Star, c1915, behind the Stokes and Wiley Mercantile building housing the Lodge on the second floor. Courtesy, Museum of Riverside.
throughout the city among the general population and were held in high esteem by white Riversiders. Theirs is the heroic story of those Black community builders, the Black Press, the Black Church, and ordinary folks fighting to thrive, to build homes and businesses in the face of fierce adversity. B lack R i ver side foug ht for t he dream
throughout the 20th century and found ways to win against the odds. These Black pioneers and their heirs wielded tools homed in the crucible of anti-Black violence and Jim Crow. With those tools, they broke barriers and worked to build a more just and fair society for themselves and their children.
Rev. Frank Johnson, c1896, later Pastor of Allen Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Eastside developer, and civil rights leader. Courtesy, Museum of Riverside.
Rev. William G. Goodwin and Elizabeth Boswell orange grove wedding photo, c1898., marking their arrival in the "Promised Land."
By 1920, Black community builders established a thriving, segregated neighborhood on Riverside’s Eastside. They built businesses, non-profit service organizations, churches, and community centers.
Black Migration to Riverside: A Trickle Then a Stream, 1875-1950 Robert Stokes and the few earliest arrivals were followed in the first half of the 20th century by a steady flow of Black folk from the South. By 1920, segregation using real estate redlining and restrictive covenants in home deeds came to Riverside and drove the new arrivals into the Eastside. Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps identified the area as Cox’s Addition, encompassing most of the streets commonly populated by pioneer families: Park Avenue, Ninth Street, Tenth Street, Seventh Street, Twelfth Street, Commerce, and Sedgwick Avenue, All on the east side of the railroad tracks. The Black community gradually spread south along Victoria Avenue to the northern boundary of the Victoria Golf Course. A s l a t e a s 19 6 2 , h o w e v e r, r e s t r i c t i v e covenants in proper t y deeds prohibited the sale of houses to non-Anglos in most other parts of the city. David Stokes, one of the most success ful early Riverside orange growers, and his family on Brockton Avenue and S. H. Goodwin at Brockton and 14th Streets were notable exceptions to the rule. Built on a Rock: Riverside’s Black Community and the Fight for Justice The irony of driving Riverside’s Black pioneers into a segregated neighborhood is that it built a bedrock foundation on which to raise children and fight for fairness in the broader community. The Black Church, a Biblical pillar of fire in the Black community, represented by Allen Chapel, African Methodist Episcopal Church founded in 1875, Second Baptist Church, and Park Avenue Baptist Church, provided a place to train leaders and undergird the spiritual life of the Eastside. Together, these churches provided a bulwark of social stability and taught strong community values. They established Brotherhoods and Sisterhoods and trained the young in Sunday Schools. Newly arrived families were quickly integrated into the community through their church affiliation. Members of Allen Chapel A.M.E. brought with them to Riverside tried and valid tools for fighting for justice that they had perfected in earlier battles for fairness. This was a hallmark of the A.M.E. nationwide. Rev. Frank Johnson stood out among the members of Allen Chapel, suing the city and Park Board in 1921 to break the segregation at Fairmount Park Plunge. His effort led to a separate but equal plunge at the brand-new Lincoln Park on the Eastside, established to resolve Johnson’s suit. The new pool opened in 1924 and became a mainstay of the Eastside neighborhood. The second Baptist church gained a charter in 1900, including the Decatur, Edwards, Bryant, and Carter families among its initial members. Robert Stokes, one of the first two Black migrants to Riverside, joined the initial charter of members with his nephew David Stokes.
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Historical Riverside The Riversider | February/March 2024
The Couchers Car Club of Riverside, c2012. Courtesy Dell Roberts, pictured on the right of the photo in the yellow shirt and broad brimmed hat.
Miss Rose Mayes, Executive Director of the Riverside County Office of Fair Housing and founder of the new Civil Rights Institute of Inland Southern California, Riverside, c2022. Zach Cordner photo.
integrate in this fashion voluntarily. Today, RUSD is led by Superintendent Renee Hill, the first Black female to hold that position and to hold it with the highest integrity. While we have a long way to go to achieve total equity in public education, Riverside is a leader, and Black Riverside must receive much credit for how far we have come.
Renee Hill, first Black and first female Superintendent of the Riverside Unified School District, c2021. Zach Cordner photo.
In 1915, dissidents formed Park Avenue Baptist Church due to a disagreement among members of Second Baptist. Fourteen members, led by Rev. W. G. Goodwin, formed the first wave to leave Second Baptist to form Park Avenue Baptist. Members of Park Avenue fought the first battles against the White power structure of Riverside.
The Fight for Fair Housing and Education in the Promised Land Homeownership proved to be an almost irresistible draw for early Black Riverside. Although restricted principally to the segregated Eastside, many The Riversider Magazine
20th-centur y Black neighborhood residents owned their own homes. Nonetheless, despite the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and California laws against it, housing discrimination remains a severe problem for people of color. Rose Mayes and her Fair Housing Council of Riverside Country keep up the fight for fairness in housing. The home of abolitionist Judge John/Wesley North and Lincoln Republican Riverside retained a segregated school system until the mid-1960s when Dell Roberts and the Riverside Unified School District Board chose to institute a busing program to integrate the district voluntarily. RUSD was the first large school district to
Conclusion: Fight for a Fairer and More Equitable Riverside Black Riverside has come far since Robert Stokes arrived in the 1870s. Black Riverside has contributed mightily to making Riverside the City of Arts and Innovation for the 21st century for a hundred and fifty years. Black Riverside has produced prominent leaders in medicine, sports, education, business, the Black Press, and every other walk of life. Black R i v e r s i d e s t a n d s s t r o n g a g a i n s t o n go i n g discrimination in housing and for equity in all aspects of life in our city. Black Riverside continues the strong tradition of leadership and community building instituted by Stokes and the first arrivals to our city, which has been carried on by succeeding generations of Black leaders dedicated to creating a more perfect union. In April 2024, Rose Mayes and the African American Historical Society and MLK, Jr. Visionaries will rededicate the historic MLK Monument downtown, a marker of the greatness of Black Riverside as we approach Black History Month 2024. I proudly and humbly pledge my meager support for their effort to create a more equitable and fairer city. I hope you all will, too.
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Dining: Downtown The Riversider | February/March 2024
Beef Pot Roast
Ahi Tuna Poke Tacos
Art’s Bar & Grill Riverside’s Five-Star Dive Bar
Shrimp Cocktail
WORDS: MANO MIRANDÉ PHOTOS: ZACH CORDNER
Art’s Bar & Grill has remained relatively unchanged since it was opened by Art Conte in 1984. As guests enter through the back patio of the unassuming brick building at the corner of University and Lime, they step inside an atmosphere reminiscent of simpler times. The dimly lit bar area, adorned with leather booths and historic photos of Riverside, leads to the main dining area which provides a sense of comfort and nostalgia that makes Art’s such a unique and welcoming dining experience. Conte’s daughter Paula Jones assumed ownership of the restaurant after he passed away in the 1990’s. It was not until March 2023 that she decided to sell the family business to longtime customer and friend, Andrea Palagi, or “Dre” as he’s fondly known by his customers. Andrea’s experience in dining began as a child when his family moved to Riverside where his father, Mario Palagi, opened Mario’s Place in 1981. After his father passed away just three years later, Andrea and his two brothers helped their mother with the family business by washing dishes and bussing tables throughout high school. Because of his lifelong passion for dining, Palagi recognizes the importance of his role as the new owner of such a beloved and iconic par t of Riverside’s history. “This place is a legacy,” he explained. “It’s legendary, and I was honored to have the opportunity to carry the torch.” Aside from a few upgrades to its infrastructure, Dre has paid special attention to preserving the restaurant’s original aesthetic and upholding the reputation that Paula and her father spent decades to achieve. The Riversider Magazine
“It was beautiful to begin with as it was, there’s a vintage vibe in here,” he explained. “I want people to feel like they walked back in time, but I want them to have a more modern experience with the food and for it to be known as what we like to call, a ‘Five-Star Dive Bar.’” To achieve this, Andrea enlisted the talents of head chef Rafa Gutierrez Villaseñor, whose additions to the existing menu have quickly become customer favorites. “Eighty-five percent of the menu is still the same as what Art’s has served for decades, we’ve just upgraded the quality of some ingredients and put a little love into it,” Palagi said. The wine list was also upgraded from 4 to 25 selections and customers can choose from over 55 varieties of canned and bottled beers from around the world. Hours of operation have been extended on weekends to include live entertainment for the first time in over 30 years. A variety of genres from Jazz and Blues to Rockabilly and Reggae can be heard through the newly ins talled sound s ys tem and live streamed on TV screens throughout the restaurant – all free of charge. Business has tripled in just under a year since Palagi took ownership of Ar t ’s and his staff has grown from six to twenty employees including most of its previous staff. A s A r t ’s Bar & Grill celebrates it s 4 0 th anniversary in 2024, Palagi’s top priority is to continue its legacy and preser ve its integrity and atmosphere, or as he simply puts it, “The goal is to keep it as a go-to, casual place that offers quality food that’s affordable for everyone.”
Owner Dre Palagi
Art’s Bar & Grill 3357 University Ave (951) 683-9520 @artsbarandgrill_dtr
APRIL 27, 2024 11 AM - 7 PM
Celebrating Tradition with Musica, Cultura Y Familia!
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RIVTAMALEFEST.COM E Q D info@rivtamalefest.com | 951.235.3586
44
Bar & Restaurant Guide The Riversider | February/March 2024
AMERICAN (NEW) Pixels Bar And Eatery 3535 University Ave (951) 683-7957
ProAbition Whiskey Lounge & Kitchen 3597 Main St (951) 222-2110
The Rustik Fork Eatery
1355 E Alessandro Blvd Ste 101 (951) 656-3555
The Salted Pig
3750 Main St Ste 103 (951) 742-5664
Yard House
3775 Tyler St (951) 688-9273
BAKERIES/DONUTS American Donuts 3355 Iowa Ave (951) 329-3238
Baguette Bakery & Café 767 W Blaine St B (951) 788-5300
Baker’s Dozen Donuts 6100 Magnolia Ave (951) 369-0198
Beignet Spot 4019 Market St (951) 224-9830
Better-Be Donuts Café 1015 E Alessandro Blvd (951) 653-0166
Cakebox
3557 Main St A (951) 660-4179
Casey’s Cupcakes
3649 Mission Inn Ave (951) 328-6908
Chela’s Panadería 4022 Park Ave (951) 680-9983
Christy’s Donuts 8151 Arlington Ave (951) 977-8166
Cookie Co. Riverside 195 E Alessandro Blvd (951) 521-0846
The Cookie Plug
2915 Van Buren Blvd J1 (951) 505-0146
Cupcakes & Curiosities 3569 Main St (951) 452-6271
Delicias del Horno Bakery 3969 Chicago Ave (951) 456-9448
Donut Cravings
7132 Van Buren Blvd (951) 789-8324
Donut Tyme
5225 Canyon Crest Dr (951) 788-5043
Donut Queen
5501 Mission Blvd (951) 369-8797
Dunkin’ Donuts
18641 Van Buren Blvd (951) 384-2882
Dunkin’ Donuts 4922 La Sierra Ave (951) 777-8377
Freshh Donuts 781 W Blaine St (951) 682-5648
P.S. I Crepe You
6095 Magnolia Ave (951) 742-5167
Isabella’s Cupcakes & More 5225 Canyon Crest Dr #28 (951) 782-9200
Linda’s Donuts 3950 Pierce St (951) 351-8288
Lindmair Bakery 9230 Magnolia Ave (951) 688-2131
Lola’s Bakery
4026 Chicago Ave (951) 683-1219
Miss Donuts & Bagel 3962 University Ave (951) 787-0193
Mochinut
1242 University Ave (951) 534-0756
Mr. Blue’s Donuts
19009 Van Buren Blvd Ste 123 (951) 780-3188
Nothing Bundt Cakes
3639 Riverside Plaza Dr #502 (951) 787-1885
Ochoa’s Mexican Bakery 10330 Arlington Ave #3 (951) 359-8128
Ortiz Bakery
421 Iowa Ave #A (951) 787-9138
Pepe’s Panaderia 3511 Madison St (951) 353-8801
Rainbow Donuts 3758 La Sierra Ave (951) 688-7889
Randy's Donuts
Law’s Restaurant
River Ranch Bar & Grill
Riverside Cookie Shoppe
Shooters Sports & Grill
Smoke & Fire Social Eatery
Simple Simon’s Bakery & Bistro
Sire Restaurant
Spirit of Texas BBQ
BARS/LOUNGES
Stagecoach
3519 Van Buren Blvd (951) 588-5678 6737 Brockton Ave (951) 686-6374
3639 Main St (951) 369-6030
Star Donut
5145 Jurupa Ave #H (951) 530-8006
Steve’s Donuts
7201 Arlington Ave Ste C (951) 323-7153
Uncle Chuang’s Bakery 3740 Iowa Ave #109 (951) 275-8800
Urban Dripp
3750 University Ave #175 (951) 742-5949
US Donuts
4786 La Sierra Ave (951) 352-1893 3720 Sunnyside Dr (951) 823-0797
Winchell’s Donut House 1705 University Ave (951) 682-8834
Woodcrest Donuts
19510 Van Buren Blvd Ste F7 (951) 653-5054
Yvette’s Bakery 6729 Indiana Ave (951) 742-5541
Yum Yum Donuts 3247 Arlington Ave (951) 683-5489
9640 Indiana Ave (951) 354-7021
10226 Indiana Ave (951) 785-9588
6440 Magnolia Ave (951) 683-7473
Downtown Experiment 3601 University Ave (951) 355-2606
Lake Alice Trading Co 3616 University Ave (951) 686-7343
Locals Public House 285 E Alessandro Blvd (951) 780-1800
Mezcal Ultra Lounge 3737 Main St Ste 100 (951) 333-8558
The Brickwood 3653 Main St (951) 352-2739
The Lobby
3730 Main St (951) 742-5020
3750 University Ave, Ste 125 (951) 742-5585 5225 Canyon Crest Dr #9 (909) 542-9054 3965 Market St (951) 462-1117
3775 Tyler St. Unit B (951) 602-1940
BREAKFAST DINERS & CAFES Amy’s
10635 Magnolia Ave (951) 689-0296
Brandon’s Diner
10246 Indiana Ave Ste A (951) 359-3617
Brandon’s Diner 9646 Magnolia Ave (951) 637-2782
Brandon’s Diner Jr Of City Hall 3900 Main St (951) 778-2588
Cafe Le Reve
The Menagerie
141 E Alessandro Blvd Ste 10A (951) 215-0007
The Presidential Lounge
5225 Canyon Crest Dr Ste 40 (951) 784-2233
3581 University Ave (951) 788-8000 3649 Mission Inn Ave (951) 784-0300
Crest Cafe
Daily Brew Coffee House
VIP Nightclub & Restaurant
2955 Van Buren Blvd (951) 352-7477
W. Wolfskill
5620 Van Buren Blvd (951) 352-2690
3673 Merrill Ave (951) 784-2370
Flo’s Farmhouse Cafe
BAR & GRILLS
4281 Main St (951) 374-1176
Art’s Bar & Grill
BBQ
17950 Van Buren Blvd (951) 789-8843
Charley Rokk’s Authentic Texas BBQ
Kountry Folks
3357 University Ave (951) 683-9520
Duke’s Bar & Grill
3221 Iowa Ave (951) 248-1143
Events Sports Grill
10560 Magnolia Ave #A (951) 352-2693
Fire Up Grill
3750 University Ave (951) 289-9071
Flat Top Bar & Grill
17960 Van Buren Blvd (951) 780-0114
Hotz Kitchen & Cocktails 3720 Mission Inn Ave (951) 782-3212
Joe’s Bar & Grill
10909 Magnolia Ave (951) 637-3931
5145 Jurupa Ave (951) 774-0039
Cowboy Burgers & BBQ 5573 Arlington Ave (951) 977-9454
Dickey’s Barbecue Pit
3540 Riverside Plaza Dr Ste 314 (951) 683-9700
Gram’s BBQ
3527 Main St (951) 782-8219
Messi Soul Kitchen
4270 Riverwalk Pkwy #104 (951) 588-6252
Mongolian BBQ
1242 University Ave STE 7 (951) 686-0702
Joanna’s Cafe
3653 La Sierra Ave (951) 354-0437
Soup Shoppe
6712 Magnolia Ave (951) 781-4710
The Riverside Airport Cafe 6951 Flight Rd (951) 688-3337
Rodeo Cafe
17136 Van Buren Blvd (951) 780-0388
BREWERIES All Points Brewing Co. 2023 Chicago Ave Unit B8 (951) 213-6258
Carbon Nation Brewing 9860 Indiana Ave, Unit 19
Euryale Brewing Company 2060 Chicago Ave Ste A-17 (951) 530-8865
Packinghouse Brewing Company 6421 Central Ave Ste 101-A (951) 333-9261
Route 30 Brewing Company
9860 Indiana Ave Ste 19 (951) 776-7083
Route 30 Tap Room 3740 Mission Inn Ave
Stone Church Brewing & Bistro 3737 Main Street (951) 233-0323
Thompson Brewing 9900 Indiana Ave (951) 289-7533
BURGERS Baker’s Drive Thru 2221 Main St (909) 884-5233
Baker’s Drive Thru 6686 Indiana Ave (909) 884-5233
Baker’s Drive Thru 1300 Blaine St (909) 884-5233
Baker’s Drive Thru
Farmer Boys
3303 Madison St (951) 351-9700
2585 Canyon Springs Pkwy (951) 656-6500
BurgerIM
10920 Magnolia Ave Unit 105 (951) 441-8868
BurgerIM
1201 University Ave #110 (951) 783-9555
Chris’ Burgers 407 Iowa Ave (951) 781-8542
Cowboy Burgers & BBQ 5573 Arlington Ave (951) 977-9454
Dairy Queen
8610 California Ave, Suite 101 (951) 343-4075
Farmer Boys
3400 University Ave (951) 680-0900
Farmer Boys
2901 Iowa Ave (951) 782-9003
Tastea
11130 Magnolia Ave Unit C (951) 588-8138
Tim Boba
Johnny’s Burgers
HK BBQ House
Bolcupop
Toasted
Johnny’s Burgers
Ho Choy’s
The California Lounge
Twee Coffee
Mission Burgers
Ho Ho
Coffee Court Bistro
Krak Boba
MGM Burgers
Hong Kong Fastfood
4825 La Sierra Ave (951) 688-1000 3394 Madison St (951) 687-3599 4606 Pine St (951) 682-7272 1691 Main St (951) 276-1744
Monty’s Good Burger 3605 Market Street (213) 915-0257
Nikko’s Burgers
9295 Magnolia Ave STE 112 (951) 352-7290
Original Tommy’s
7504 Mission Grove Pkwy S (951) 780-4201
R Burgers
5980 Van Buren Blvd (951) 358-9203
R Burgers
Slaters 50/50
Burger Boss
3375 Iowa Ave (951) 823-0700
Bobaloca
Baker’s Drive Thru
10737 Magnolia Ave (951) 689-1294
Boba Fiend Tea House
Greedy Cat
9910 Magnolia Ave (951) 688-2471
1666 University Ave (951) 784-4350
Boys Burgers
1299 University Ave #104-E (951) 686-2182
George’s Drive-In
10225 Magnolia Ave (909) 884-5233 5396 Mission Blvd (909) 884-5233
Frice Szechuan Restaurant
3750 University Ave Ste 125 (951) 742-5585
Smash Papas 3605 Market St
Star Burgers
7207 Arlington Ave (951) 689-5050
Zorba’s Restaurant 450 Iowa Ave (951) 686-5830
Zorba’s Express 770 University Ave (951) 787-0094
CHINESE Big Sky Bistro
1575 University Ave Ste A (951) 328-1688
Canton Chinese Food 1756 University Ave (951) 684-6126
China Wok Inn
5771 Mission Boulevard (951) 680-9810
Chen Ling Palace 9856 Magnolia Ave (951) 351-8511
Chinatown
10935 Magnolia Ave (951) 785-6197
1400 University Ave Ste 108 (909) 655-7235 3740 Iowa Ave #102 (951) 777-1368 10352 Arlington Ave (951) 785-1188 3511 Madison St (951) 637-2411 1490 University Ave (951) 686-2223
Jade China
2712 Canyon Springs Pkwy (951) 653-9200
Little Beijing Chinese Fast Food 5800 Van Buren Blvd (951) 509-1188
Lucky Wok
2995 Van Buren Blvd (951) 688-2888
Monark Asian Bistro
5225 Canyon Crest Dr #64 (951) 683-1073
Mr. China Express
8451 Colorado Ave #8301 (951) 687-8967
Mr. You
19530 Van Buren Blvd G7 (951) 653-1740
Peking Restaurant 11170 Magnolia Ave (951) 687-4822
Olivia's HB Cafe
3940 University Ave (951) 534-0984
Wok In Kitchen
5050 Arlington Ave #101 (951) 343-7888
COFFEE/TEA/JUICE 7 Leaves Cafe
1201 University Ave Ste 101 (951) 530-8666
Arcade Downtown 3870 Main Street (951) 266-6839
Arcade Coffee Roasters 3672 Chicago Ave Ste A (951) 266-6839
Arcade Coffee Roasters
5225 Canyon Crest Dr. Ste 17A (951) 266-6839
Back to the Grind 3575 University Ave (951) 784-0800
19009 Van Buren Blvd (951) 789-8646 3605 Market Street (951) 595-4513 3649 Mission Inn Ave (951) 784-0300 3607 10th St (951) 328-0866
Coffeecito House 3882 12th St (951) 405-4599
Condron Coffee
3696 Sunnyside Dr (951) 880-3354
Crave Coffee & Tea 3590 Central Ave (951) 289-9436
Daily Brew Coffee House 2955 Van Buren Blvd (951) 352-7477
Ding Tea
1575 University Ave Ste E (951) 429-9706
Flavor Theory
11090 Magnolia Ave (951) 977-9698
Goodwin’s Organics Cafe 191 W Big Springs Rd (951) 682-2667
JUJUBAR
19040 Van Buren Blvd (951) 780-0224
Kung Fu Tea
3678 Central Ave Ste 102 (951) 254-9609
Kraemer’s Coffee Bistro 6734 Brockton Ave (951) 686-4400
Lift Coffee Roasters
2060 Chicago Ave Ste A10 (951) 742-7413
Molinos Coffee
3660 Mission Inn Ave (951) 276-7147
Nekter Juice Bar
5225 Canyon Crest Dr Ste 7B (951) 224-9842
R&B Tea
1889 University Ave Unit 105 (951) 462-4142
Sharetea
10920 Magnolia Ave Ste 103 (951) 406-5165
TRA Boba & Snack
3740 Iowa Ave Ste 103 (951) 530-8536
1450 University Ave Ste N (951) 462-1929 6160 Arlington Ave Ste C9 (951) 977-9847 9344 Magnolia Ave (951) 335-0599 3907 Chicago Ave Ste B (951) 742-5341
DELI/SANDWICHES Backstreet Restaurant 3735 Nelson St (951) 683-6650
Butch’s Grinders 4602 Pine St (951) 781-8511
Cheba Hut
3505 Market Street Ste 101 (951) 777-1117
Diane’s Deli
2900 Adams St #B1 (951) 689-2900
D’Elia’s Grinders
2093 University Ave (951) 683-7380
D’Elia’s Grinders
9009 Van Buren Blvd (951) 780-3354
European Intl Market &Deli 7120 Indiana Ave G (951) 274-9100
Firehouse Subs
10080 Magnolia Ave (951) 588-8785
Jimmy John’s
3747 Central Ave Ste 102 (951) 779-0010
Jimmy John’s
4270 Riverwalk Pkwy Ste 122 (951) 977-9672
Jimmy John’s
10277 Magnolia Ave (951) 354-2149
M & M Deli
1960 Chicago Ave #D1 (951) 684-6861
My Hero Subs 355 Iowa Ave A (951) 784-7370
RiverCrust Deli
6235 River Crest Dr Ste F (951) 656-8145
Subs & Spuds
5225 Canyon Crest Dr Ste #83a (951) 369-1491
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Bar & Restaurant Guide The Riversider | February/March 2024
The Sub Station
3663 Canyon Crest Dr (951) 683-4523
Tummy Stuffer 1159 Iowa Ave O (951) 369-1266
The Upper Crust Sandwich Shoppe 3573 Main St (951) 784-3149
FILIPINO Jefrox Adobo
2561 Grambling Way (951) 314-5075
Nanay Gloria
10959 Magnolia Ave (951) 977-8831
Cherry On Top
3560 Riverside Plaza Dr (951) 213-6018
Cherry On Top
19009 Van Buren Blvd Ste 125 (951) 780-0800
Cold Stone Creamery 9867 Magnolia Ave Ste C (951) 637-0920
Dairy Queen
8610 California Ave, Ste 101 (951) 343-4075
Dairy Queen
6665 Magnolia Ave (951) 684-6280
Frostbites Crepes & Frozen Delights
FRENCH
10347 Magnolia Ave (951) 352-4903
Le Chat Noir
La Michoacana
3790 9th St (951) 786-9266
GERMAN European International Market & Deli 7120 Indiana Ave G (951) 274-9100
HAWAIIAN Ohana Cravings
3740 Iowa Ave, Ste 104 (951) 742-5555
Ono Hawaiian BBQ
3961 Chicago Ave 951) 248-9142
Mixies Ice Cream & Cookies 3605 Market St (951) 595-4520
Spoonful Yogurt Café
4270 Riverwalk Pkwy #120 (951) 729-5882
Toi Moi Italian Ice & Juice Shop 10181 Hole Ave (951) 343-4146
Yogurtland
3531 Madison St (951) 351-0888
1242 University Ave Ste A (951) 683-1950
Ono Hawaiian BBQ
Yogurtland
3540 Riverside Plaza Dr #324 (951) 328-1988
3510 Tyler St #104 (951) 772-0229
Ono Hawaiian BBQ
INDIAN
2721 Canyon Springs Pkwy #101 (951) 656-6188
Park Ave Polynesian Restaurant 4038 Park Ave (951) 344-1090
ICE CREAM/FROZEN YOGURT Afters Ice Cream 1201 University Ave
Baskin-Robbins 7024 Magnolia Ave (951) 682-3131
Canyon Crest Ice Cream & Water 5225 Canyon Crest Dr #27 (951) 675-7385
The Riversider Magazine
Bombay Stores 1385 W Blaine St (951) 788-3042
Cali Tardka
9212 Sunridge Drive (951) 376-0566
Gandhi Indian Cuisine
1355 E Alessandro Blvd #205 (951) 653-4147
India Sweets & Groceries 779 W Blaine St (951) 784-7400
Mantra Indian Cuisine 10359 Magnolia Ave (951) 417-4539
Masala Mischief
223 University Ave Ste 150 (951) 224-9692
Namaste Indian Kitchen
First Class Pizza & Pub
Amagi Sushi
Punjab Palace Cuisine of India
Lava Coal-Fired Pizza
Big Tuna
Mamma Mia Restaurant and Bar
Fuego Hibachi
6061 Magnolia Ave (951) 275-5316
1766 University Ave (951) 686-9968
ITALIAN/PIZZA Aloha Pizza & Pasta 755 W Blaine St (951) 788-8830
Antone’s Italian Food 4125 Sunnyside Dr (951) 682-5900
Antonio Pizza
195 E Alessandro Blvd (951) 776-1888
Antonious Pizza Cafe 3737 Main St (951) 682-9100
Bella’s Pizza
5196 Arlington Ave (951) 351-3131
Blaze Pizza
3540 Riverside Plaza Dr (951) 789-3212
Blaze Pizza
10920 Magnolia Ave Suite 107 (951) 474-5855
Bricks & Birch
3605 Market Street #5 (951) 500-7776
Capone’s Pizza
7207 Arlington Ave F (951) 689-3520
Dave’s New York Style Pizza
1490 University Ave #102 (951) 787-9900
DeMatteo’s Pizza 7030 Magnolia Ave (951) 682-6198
Dematteo’s Woodcrest
18590 Van Buren Boulevard (951) 429-7317
D’Caesaro Pizza & Italian 6160 Arlington Avenue C4 (951) 687-0777
Enzo’s Pizza
10170 Indiana Ave (951) 351-2375
Farfalla’s Cucina Italiana 5250 Arlington Ave (951) 354-5100
Fast 5 Pizza
5300 Arlington Ave (951) 977-9090
Fast 5 Pizza
4290 Riverwalk Pkwy (951) 354-7900
1725 Spruce St Suite #101 (951) 823-0238
10971 Magnolia Ave (951) 729-5555
4270 Riverwalk Pkwy (951) 343-0201 3750 Main St (951) 742-5039
Marcello’s Pizza & Pasta
Joe’s Sushi Japanese Restaurant
Marcello’s Pizza & Pasta
Kotsu Ramen & Gyoza
Mario’s Place
The Lowkey Poke Joint
783 W Blaine St (951) 781-9996 6519 Clay St A (951) 681-9797
3646 Mission Inn Avenue (951) 684-7755
MOD Pizza
9555 Magnolia Ave (951) 353-1929
3522 Madison St Ste 101 (951) 299-8889 11860 Magnolia Ave (951) 299-7699
Mokkoji Shabu Shabu
3444 Arlington Ave (951) 374-5255
1575 University Ave Ste B (951) 905-4007
New York Pizza Co
Momo Sushi
The Old Spaghetti Factory
Ohana Sushi
3570 Van Buren Blvd (951) 688-4000
3191 Mission Inn Avenue (951) 784-4417
Papa Joe’s Pizza
5115 Jurupa Ave B3 (951) 680-9090
Papa Joe’s Pizza 10555 Indiana Ave (951) 688-1188
Pietro’s Italian Cuisine 6788 Brockton Ave (951) 784-1310
The Pizza Place...
18955 Van Buren Blvd (951) 780-5588
Romano’s Chicago Pizzeria 285 Alessandro Blvd (951) 780-7399
Scratch Pizza
4950 La Sierra Ave #8 (951) 359-2023
Shakey’s Pizza Parlor 5941 Van Buren Blvd (951) 689-7700
Tower Pizza
3375 Iowa Ave (951) 518-4300
University Pizza Company 1201 University Ave #116 (951) 823-0630
Viano’s Restaurant 16810 Van Buren Blvd (951) 780-3000
1889 University Ave #108 (951) 781-3838
JAPANESE/POKE RAMEN/SUSHI
Fiesta Pizza
AhiPoki
6110 Van Buren Blvd (951) 353-8007
19510 Van Buren Blvd Unit F6 (951) 656-8144
3540 Riverside Plaza Dr STE 310 (951) 530-8255
9844 Magnolia Ave (951) 999-9123 195 Alessandro Blvd Ste 8A (951) 789-0443
Oishii Sushi
6133 Magnolia Ave (951) 784-2550
Ooka Sushi & Hibachi Steak House
3525 Riverside Plaza Dr #200 (951) 779-0099
Otsuka Ramen & Bar
10949 Magnolia Ave (951) 353-9888
Poke Bar
3740 Iowa Ave (951) 405-8233
Poke Bistro
3375 Iowa Ave Ste K (951) 394-8580
Pokilicious Riverwalk
4290 Riverwalk Pkwy #306 (951) 376-1377
Ramen Okawari
3740 Iowa Ave #104 (951) 680-9411
Rohey’s Wok & Grill
4294 Riverwalk Pkwy (951) 359-5272
Saku Ramen 3643 Main St (951) 742-5849
Silverlake Ramen 3775 Tyler St (951) 934-9160
Soho Ramen Riverside 3605 Market St (951) 595-4528
Sumabi
3530 9th St (951) 823-0278
Sushi Asahi
2955 Van Buren Blvd Suite #D2 (951) 637-1313
Sushi Ok
5228 Arlington Ave (951) 689-8054
Sushi Okoku
10380 Magnolia Ave (951) 343-2225
Sushi R91
1630 Spruce St (951) 682-1323
Sushi Station
19029 Van Buren Blvd #115 (951) 789-0068
Sushi Times
1400 University Ave Ste A101 (951) 777-1037
Sushingon
6060 Magnolia Ave (951) 224-9590
Taiyos Sushi & Poki 11120 Magnolia Ave (951) 343-1112
Teriyaki Plus
7120 Indiana Ave (951) 788-8337
Tomo 7 Sushi
5519 Van Buren Blvd (951) 343-5991
Top Grill
5225 Canyon Crest Dr Ste 94 (951) 530-8668
Vanilla Fish
5225 Canyon Crest Dr Ste 55 (951) 777-1950
Zen Street
3600 Central Ave #1 (951) 683-3648
KOREAN Chimak House
11120 Magnolia Ave, Unit A (951) 343-1120
Manna Grill
1201 University Ave #110B (951) 530-8033
Kimchichanga
1995 University Ave (951) 684-9800
Koreana Grill
10051 Magnolia Ave Ste A1 (951) 688-9000
Saet Byul Asian Market 9555 Magnolia Ave (951) 637-5652
Wang Cho Korean BBQ 3639 Riverside Plaza Dr (951) 788-8889
MEDITERRANEAN Elias Pita
1490 University Ave Ste 103 (951) 686-6800
Fufu’s Mideast Grill 3605 Market Street (951) 595-4527
Georgie's Mediterranean 5225 Canyon Crest Dr Ste 57 (951) 823-0440
Greek Street Grill
3312 La Sierra Ave Ste 103 (951) 352-0801
The Halal Guys
1201 University Ave, Ste 102 (951) 742-7656
Kabob House
10901 Magnolia Ave (951) 353-9711
Lucky Greek
3887 Merrill Ave (951) 686-2621
Panini Kabob Grill 1298 Galleria at Tyler (951) 352-6318
Brandon’s Diner Jr Of City Hall 3900 Main St (951) 778-2588
Mi Lindo Apatzingan
Castaneda’s Mexican Food
Joe Aguilar’s Templo Del Sol
Morena's Mexican Cuisine
Castañeda’s Mexican Food
Juan Pollo
Chilitos Mexican Grill
Kalaveras
Cielito Lindo
Kimchichanga
Casa Mota
8151 Arlington Ave (951) 352-7383 6751 Indiana Ave (951) 786-0996
1450 P University Ave (951) 786-0996 3847 S Pierce St Ste F (951) 509-1002 10277 Arlington Ave (951) 352-3214
Costa Delmar
4561 La Sierra Ave (951) 588-8798
9799 Magnolia Ave (951) 376-1269
MEXICAN
El Fogon Mexican Grill
7614 Evans St (951) 368-4583
Anchos Southwest Grill & Bar 10773 Hole Ave (951) 352-0240
765 Blaine St (951) 782-8959
El Habanero
6160 Arlington Ave (951) 343-5868
El Ojo De Agua
2115 University Ave (951) 779-6293
El Patron
3204 Mission Inn Ave (951) 777-1131
Antojitos Mexicanos La Ribera
El Silencito
4773 Tyler St Ste 2d (951) 353-1852
1091 Center St (951) 312-6542
Armando’s Mexican Food
El Torito
4294 Riverwalk Pkwy Ste 200 (951) 343-5896
3639 Riverside Plaza Dr Ste 526 (951) 684-6816
Ay Mi Pa
El Trigo
3775 Tyler St #1B (951) 729-6174
Azteca Market
5125 Jurupa Ave A2 (951) 530-8791
4155 Park Ave (951) 787-6937
Estrella Taqueria Lounge 3635 University Ave (951) 999-4323
Bajio Mexican Grill
Fire Up Bar & Grill
3760 9th St (951) 786-9573
3750 University Ave (951) 289-9071
Birrieria Little Tijuana
Fish Taco Xtreme
12702 Magnolia Ave Unit 25 (951) 268-6895
16960 Van Buren Blvd Ste D (951) 800-9061
Birrieria Xolos
Fuego 360 Rotisserie Chicken
9696 Magnolia Ave (951) 376-1226
3737 Main St Ste 100 (951) 888-2240
Ixtapa
151 E Alessandro Blvd (951) 789-0211
8201 Arlington Ave (951) 359-7560
Ahumadas Mexican Grill
Mezcal Cantina Y Cocina
Miches De La Baja
El Chapala Seafood Restaurant
8151 Arlington Ave Ste O (951) 406-1215
3812 Pierce St (951) 353-2272
Habanero Mexican Grill
Cactus Cantina
Sam’s Pita & Kabab
Acapulco Pollo
Green Taco
3866 La Sierra Ave (951) 456-3705
2472 University Ave (951) 224-9145
4093 University Ave (951) 777-1132
1365 University Ave (951) 682-6562 6055 Magnolia Ave (951) 683-3513 1690 Spruce St (951) 742-5761 1995 University Ave (951) 684-9800
1242 University Ave Ste 5 (951) 742-5633 9948 Magnolia Ave (951) 688-0908
3457 Arlington Ave Ste 106 (951) 266-6333
Mr. Taco
2435 Main St (951) 682-4020
Mr. Taco
18590 Van Buren Blvd (951) 776-9900
Olivia’s Mexican Restaurant 9447 Magnolia Ave (951) 689-2131
La Bufadora Baja Grill
Palenque
La Bufadora Baja Grill
Pepitos Mexican Restaurant
497 E Alessandro Blvd Ste B (951) 776-2881 5650-52 Van Buren Blvd (951) 687-7237
La Cruda Mariscos 6733 Indiana Ave (951) 777-0862
Las Campanas
3649 Mission Inn Ave (888) 326-4448
Las Nuevas Islas 4920 Jackson St (951) 772-0020
Little Green Onions
3737 Main St (951) 888-2240
5225 Canyon Crest Dr Ste 42 (951) 783-9444
Pepito's Mexican Restaurant 8845 Trautwein Rd (951) 776-8262
Placita
1805 University Ave (951) 405-8730
Quesadilla Dave's & Cantina
6723 Brockton Ave (951) 328-1273
3678 Central Ave, Ste 107 (951) 742-5579
Los Cabos Tacos
Ramiro’s Cocina
11840 Magnolia Ave (951) 352-2653
9418 Magnolia Ave (951) 354-6146
Los Fredo’s Mexican Food
Ranchito Tacos Al Carbon
9111 Magnolia Ave (951) 525-3411
2995 Van Buren Blvd Ste A1 (951) 359-8646
Los Novillos Market
Rancho La Perla
2650 Main St (951) 530-8893
3700 Van Buren Blvd Ste 109 (951) 688-8682
M Taco
Retro Taco
Maria’s Mexican Kitchen
Rico’s Tacos El Primo
17028 Van Buren Blvd (951) 780-2034
1788 University Ave Ste 102 (951) 782-9610
Mariscos El Camaron Loco
Rodrigo’s Mexican Grill
3340 Mary St (951) 682-3882
3848 La Sierra Ave (951) 687-2280
Mercado Don Juan #3
El GoGo's Taco Shop
4111 Main St (951) 784-7135
3375 Iowa Ave (951) 787-9292
3744 Main St (951) 742-5606
19530 Van Buren Blvd Ste G6 (951) 656-0304
47
48
Bar & Restaurant Guide The Riversider | February/March 2024
Señor Baja
6033 Magnolia Ave (951) 369-5720
Sushingon
6060 Magnolia Ave (951) 224-9590
Taco Station
4088 Mission Inn Ave (951) 782-8226
Tacos La Piedad
3522 Madison St Ste 104 (951) 578-0892
Tacos Y Más
10203 Hole Ave (951) 687-1344
Taqueria Azteca
5959 Arlington Ave Ste E (951) 509-3670
Taqueria 2 Potrillos 10088 Magnolia Ave (951) 588-8772
Taqueria Mi Ranchito 4724 La Sierra Ave (951) 352-0528
Taqueria Tomateros 9164 Magnolia Ave (909) 257-1545
The Tamale Factory 3663 Main St (951) 342-3023
Tijuana’s Tacos
8151 Arlington Ave (951) 343-7777
Tina’s Mexican Food 2421 University Ave (951) 686-1524
Tio’s Mexican Food 19009 Van Buren Blvd Ste 124 (951) 780-7776
Tio’s Tacos
3948 Mission Inn Ave (951) 788-0230
Tony’s Mexican Food 3870 Chicago Ave (951) 788-4410
Tony’s Mexican Grill 9670 Magnolia Ave (951) 729-6141
Tuxies Juices
6030 Magnolia Ave Ste 3 (951) 781-1048
Yoli’s Mexican Grill
Pier 76 Fish Grill
3555 Riverside Plaza Dr Ste 108 (951) 341-9297
Rockstar Shrimp 767 W Blaine St (951) 530-8620
Shrimp Shack Cajun Fusion 3605 Market St, Ste 9 (951) 742-5558
Seafood & Crawfish 10173 Magnolia Ave (951) 359-5999
Star Crab
10051 Magnolia Ave (951) 977-9440
3225 Market St (951) 801-7104
STEAKHOUSES
Zacatecas Cafe
Duane’s Prime Steak & Seafood
3767 Iowa Ave (951) 683-3939
PAKISTANI Al-Karam Pakistani Cuisine
3457 Arlington Ave Ste 101 (951) 742-5610
Mirchi Restaurant 1385 W Blaine St (951) 400-2825
SEAFOOD California Fish Grill
3649 Mission Inn Ave (888) 326-4448
Flat Top Bar & Grill
17960 Van Buren Blvd (951) 780-0114
THAI Angel Thai Cuisine 6736 Brockton Ave (951) 788-1995
Best Thai Cuisine 1735 Spruce St F (951) 682-4251
10920 Magnolia Ave Suite 101 (951) 405-6880
Gra Pow
Market Broiler
Monark Asian Bistro
3525 Merrill Ave (951) 276-9007
497 E Alessandro Blvd #D (951) 780-1132 5225 Canyon Crest Dr #64 (951) 683-1073
Morefire Thai
2955 Van Buren Blvd #F1 (951) 359-1331
Riverside Thai Kitchen 7755 California Ave (951) 729-6675
Royal Orchid Restaurant
9791 Magnolia Ave (951) 354-6100
TK Thai Cuisine
11860 Magnolia Ave Ste T (951) 509-3701
VEGETARIAN/VEGAN Goodwin’s Organic 91 W Big Springs Rd (951) 682-2667
La Sierra Natural Foods 11550 Pierce St (951) 785-2563
Monty’s Good Burger 3605 Market Street (213) 915-0257
Oasis Vegetarian Café 11550 Pierce St (951) 688-5423
Veg & Go
1201 University Ave Ste #115 (951) 213-6233
VIETNAMESE/PHO 5 Stars Pho Restaurant
4950 La Sierra Ave (951) 772-0700
Pho 81
Pho Star Bowl
10051 Magnolia Ave (951) 299-8130
Phở Vinam Restaurant
1201 University Ave #107 (951) 784-4290
2995 Van Buren Blvd Ste A13 (951) 977-8869
WINE BARS/WINERIES
Phở 99
3653 Main St (951) 352-2739
4557 La Sierra Ave (951) 688-2671
Pho Anh
5646 Van Buren Blvd (951) 977-9889
Pho Anh Hot Pot & Crayfish 10271 Magnolia Ave (951) 729-6668
Pho Anh Hot Pot & Crayfish
231 E Alessandro Blvd (951) 215-0585
Pho DJ
5180 Arlington Ave (951) 354-2799
Pho Ha
10185 Magnolia Ave (951) 354-8918
Pho Ha #7
1820 University Ave #101 (951) 680-0790
The Brickwood
Canyon Crest Winery 5225 Canyon Crest Dr Ste 7A (951) 369-9463
Mario’s Place
3646 Mission Inn Ave (951) 684-7755
“ The Best Donuts in the Inland Empire located here in Downtown Riverside” 3750 University Ave #175 Riverside, CA 92501 (951) 742-5949 Website: urbandripp.com Instagram: @urbandrippdonuts
OPEN EVERYDAY Mornings: Monday through Sunday 7am to 12pm Evenings: Thursday through Sunday 5pm to 10pm Family Founded Owned & Operated
Riverside's #1 breakfast & lunch spot!
Open Everyday 6:30am to 2pm Live Music Every Sat. & Sun. 10am-1pm Open all day Friday from 6:30am - 9pm 6951 Flight Road Riverside, CA 92504 951-688-3337 riversideairportcafe.com @theriversideairportcafe
Chicken Fried Steak & Half Order
Bacon Cheeseburger & Mini Sliders
Full Sandwich & Half w/ Soup
Bonjour French Toast & Half Order
EMPOWERING YOUR DRIVE IN
2024 Unleashing
the Power of Electric Vehicles
with Riverside Public Utilities Rebates
It’s a new year, and there’s no better time to embrace change and revamp the way we approach our daily routines. Riverside Public Utilities is excited to offer Electric Vehicle (EV) rebates for ecoconscious individuals. Discover how these rebates save you money with incentives up to $1000 for the purchase of qualified used electric or plug-in hybrid vehicles and additional rebates for residential chargers. By choosing an electric vehicle, you’re not just getting a new ride; you’re making a choice that aligns with a future of cleaner air, reduced carbon emissions, and energy efficiency. Take a purposeful drive into the new year and explore the Electrify Riverside EV rebates.
ELECTRIFY Learn more about our Electrify Riverside EV rebates by visiting
RIVERSIDE RiversidePublicUtilities.com/Rebates ELECTRIFIQUE RIVERSIDE
54
Postcards From Yesterday The Riversider | February/March
Mount Rubidoux Circa Early 1900s COURTESY OF CHRIS NAPOLITANO COLLECTION JULIAN JOLLIFFE
2024
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The most capable in-house printing facility in the Inland Empire Check out our PORTFOLIO
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RIVERSIDE 951.682.2005 ■ CORONA 951.737.1820
KEM
Saturday, March 30
Pedro Fernández
Colter Wall
Friday, February 16
Saturday, February 17
Ron White
Killer Queen - A Tribute To Queen
Te Doy La Vida Tour USA
The Little Songs Tour
Friday, March 15
Featuring Patrick Myers as Freddie Mercury
Godsmack
Los Ángeles Azules
Tuesday, April 9
Friday, April 12
ZZ Top
Joe Satriani and Steve Vai
Vibez Tour: An Intimate Evening of Music
Friday, April 26
Tickets available at Ticketmaster.com Learn more at HarrahsSoCal.com Must be 18 or older to attend shows. Entertainment subject to change or cancellation. Must be 21 or older to gamble and attend events. Know When To Stop Before You Start ®. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER. Owned by the Rincon Band of Luiseño Indians. Managed by HCAL, LLC. ©2024, Caesars License Company, LLC. All rights reserved.
The Riversider Magazine
Saturday, March 16
El Amor De Mi Vida Tour
Satch/Vai US Tour
Friday, May 10