Está en la página 1de 32

Oh, and by the way...

- The 2012 Nike US Open of Surfing will spill over from the ocean to
the sand when bands like TV on the Radio, Grouplove and Best Coast take
over the Music Stage with three nights of music in front of hundreds of
thousands of fans with each night being presented by a different brand:
Nike, Hurley, and Converse respectively. The music stage has become one
of the most anticipated programs during the Open and has grown to be the
largest free concert series of the summer.
"Every year the crowd looks forward to our music series," said James
Leitz, Senior Vice President of IMG. "And every year Nike, Hurley and
Converse bring the best bands to the beach during the US Open of Surfing.
Music, sport, beach. What more can fans ask for?"
This year's musical line-up melds the laid back surf-
vibe of rockers Best Coast with the post-punk electronic
rock sound of TV on the Radio and the alternative
stylings of Grouplove. The series will also include sets
by emerging artists White Arrows and Hindu Pirates.
"For years my brother and I have been going to the
US Open to watch the competition, so to perform and
hang with the best surfers in the world is such an honor
for me," said Grouplove's Andrew Wessen.
Known as the world's largest youth culture and action
sports festival, the Nike US Open of Surfing will feature
daily concerts Wednesday through Friday, August 1-3,
at the conclusion of the surfing competition. All concerts
are free and open to the public.
Music Schedule
Wednesday, August 1
4:30-6:30pm Converse Presents Best Coast
preceded by Walk the Moon
Thursday, August 2
4:30-6:30pm Hurley Presents Grouplove
preceded by White Arrows and Hindu Pirates
Friday, August 3
4:30-6:30pm Nike Presents TV on the Radio
preceded by Toro Y Moi
'Mr U.S. Open' Brett Simpson prepares for contest.
- - The Association of Surfing Professionals (ASP) Prime rated Nike US
Open of Surfing is set to unfold at historic Huntington Beach Pier from
July 28 through August 5 and two-time event champion Brett Simpson
(Huntington Beach, CA), 27, is poised to tackle the worlds best surfers
JULY 15, 2012 714.914.9797 hbnews1@aol.com VOL. 21 NO. 452
THE LOCAL NEWS

I
n

G
o
d

W
e

T
r
u
s
t








t
s s
t
u












W
e
r
u
TT
r
e
W
u
r
















W
d
o
















o
G
n




n








n
I




n
I




SERVING HUNTINGTON BEACH & NORTH WEST ORANGE COUNTY, CA 5901 WARNER AVENUE, #429 HUNTINGTON BEACH, CA 92649
Communi t y Cal endar - pg 11
C o m p l i m e n t a r y
C o p y
P R E S O R T E D
S T D
U S P O S T A G E
P A I D
H U N T I N G T O N B E A C H , C A
P E R M I T N O . 4 3 8

That Be Brett, This Be HB, Must Be US Open


Sushi Top... Sushi Good
50
NOW
OPEN
We invite you to visit us at the corner
of Beach Boulevard & Atlanta Avenue.
Fresh. Convenient.
Low prices everyday.
Best Coast Group Love TV on Radio
Continued on page 28
Walmart Neighborhood Market Grand Opening - September 27... see pages 16-17
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
2
3
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
4
BeachBlvdofCars.com
405 Beach Blvd. 8outh
The Huntington Beach
Blvd. of Cars
is Going on Now!
Tidal Wave
of Savings
0
% $
4,500
In Customer Cash
on Select New Models
Up to
APR Financing
on Select New Models
On Approved Credit

1 BOULEVARD - 12 GREAT MAKES - THOUSANDS OF VEHICLES

Ad prices exclude government fees and taxes, any nance charges, any dealer document preparation charge and any emission testing charge. Offers expire 7/31/12.












































































































Save
y
your next new or used car
The Beach Boulevar



even HUNDREDS, Save
u j d n f o t e r u s e r ' u o y
. xt new or used car r. With Thousands of Cars, T
d of Cars is having a summer sales event that will save you a ton on The Beach Boulevar



right now at the Beach Boulevar THOUSANDS even
, e k a m t h g i r e h t t s u
. With Thousands of Cars, T
d of Cars is having a summer sales event that will save you a ton on



right now at the Beach Boulevar
o d n a r o l o c , l e d o m
rucks, SUV of Cars, T Trucks, SUV
d of Cars is having a summer sales event that will save you a ton on



d of Cars! right now at the Beach Boulevar
. t n a w u o y s n o i t p o
s and Hybrids on sale rucks, SUV
d of Cars is having a summer sales event that will save you a ton on



d of Cars!
s and Hybrids on sale
d of Cars is having a summer sales event that will save you a ton on













































h c a


rs.com
B
fC
h t o 8 h





The Weak That Was
America: Home of the Free because of the Brave
There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order.
Dave Garofalo
Publisher
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
We all need to read this one over and over until it becomes part of who we are!
HOW TO STAY YOUNG
1) Try everything twice. On one woman's tombstone she said she
wanted this epitaph: "Tried everything twice. Loved it both times!"
2) Keep only cheerful friends. The grouches pull
you down. (Keep this in mind if you are one of
those grouches!)
3) Keep learning: Learn more about the com-
puter, crafts, gardening, whatever... Never let
the brain get idle. 'An idle mind is the devil's
workshop.' And the devil's name is
Alzheimer's!
4) Enjoy the simple things.
5) Laugh often, long and loud. Laugh until you gasp for breath. And if
you have a friend who makes you laugh,spend lots and lots of time with
HIM/HER.
6) The tears happen: Endure, grieve, and move on. The only per-
son who is with us our entire life, is ourselves. LIVE while you are
alive.
7) Surround yourself with what you love:
whether it's family, pets, keepsakes,
music, plants, hobbies, whatever.. Your
home is your refuge.
8) Cherish your health:
If it is good, preserve it.
If it is unstable, improve it.
If it is beyond what you can improve, get help.
9) Don't take guilt trips.. Take a trip to the mall, even to the next county, to
a foreign country, but NOT to where the guilt is.
10) Tell the people you love that you love them, at every opportunity.
I love you, my special friend!
11) Forgive now those who made you cry. You might not get a second chance..
And if you don't send this to at least 4 people - who
cares? But do share these thoughts with someone.
Remember! Lost time can never be found.
Be kinder than necessary, for everyone you meet is
fighting some kind of battle.
Wine does not make you FAT .... it makes you
LEAN ....(against tables, chairs, floors, walls and ugly
people.)
"Life without a God is like an unsharpened pencil - it has no point."
Current
Immigration
Laws
Stay Young
My Friends...
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
5
1) There will be no special bilingual pro-
grams in the schools.
2) All ballots will be in this nation's lan-
guage.
3) All government business will be con-
ducted in our language.
4) Non-residents will NOT have the right to
vote no matter how long they are here.
5) Non-citizens will NEVER be able to hold
political office.
6) Foreigners will not be a burden to the tax-
payers. No welfare, no food stamps, no
health care, or other government assistance
programs. Any burden will be deported.
7) Foreigners can invest in this country, but
it must be an amount at least equal to 40,000
times the daily minimum wage.
8) If foreigners come here and buy land...
options will be restricted. Certain parcels in-
cluding waterfront property are reserved for
citizens naturally born into this country.
9) Foreigners may have NO protests; NO
demonstrations, NO waving of a foreign flag,
no political organizing, NO bad-mouthing
our president or his policies. These will lead
to deportation.
10) If you do come to this country illegally,
you will be actively hunted and, when
caught, sent to jail until your deportation can
be arranged. All assets will be taken from
you.
Too strict?
The above laws are current immigration
laws of MEXICO
Sierra Owen Sage
6
Chris
MacDonald
On the road in Surf City
By Chris MacDonald, Writer/Photographer,
HB Ambassador/The Local News Columnist
The Local News
More Than 100,000
Passionate Patriotic
Parade Viewers
Celebrate the Fourth
in HB
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
T
he 108th annual Huntington
Beach Fourth of July Parade
drew more than 100,000
happy and patriotic, flag waving
people, who had the time of their
lives "cheering on" the floats,
bands, military marchers and others
in the largest event of its kind west
of the Mississippi River. "I've
never seen anything this huge
and it really makes
me proud to be an
American," said
Harvey Marks of
Selma, Alabama,
who was vacation-
ing in HB with his
wife and two sons.
Spectator Bill Stan-
ley, a World War II
infantry veteran,
said it's important
for people to forget
their problems "and
come together to
honor our country. The parade
helps do just that. It shows what a
city (and a country) is made up of-
-people from all walks of life, from
all beliefs and backgrounds--that's
what makes America great."
The bands, the music, the gleeful
shouts of onlookers, the creative,
colorful floats, the miles
of smiles make the parade worth-
while and memorable to everyone
who sees it. I don't think I've ever
seen more happiness and more peo-
ple at the parade as I was honored
again to co-hold The International
Surfing Museum Banner with my
dad. We had so much fun walking
amidst the gigantic birthday cele-
bration from Pacific Coast High-
way and down Main Street; seeing
the tons of people, shouting
friendly greetings to friends we dis-
cover in the crowd. The parade is
all about spirit and I've never seen
more spirit on Main Street. It made
me proud to be part of the Surf City
celebration honoring our country.
On the float behind our banner was
a special truck, driven by Tom Kirk-
sey, along with Famous Surfers, in-
cluding my friend, "Rockin" Ric
Fignetti (who just won two national
championships), Joey Hawkins and
David Nuuhiwa. Also on board was
my pal, Natalie Kotsch, the sweet
founder of the International Surfing
Museum, Lewis Harrison, Dave
Reynolds, Kellie Reynolds and Jodi
McKay. The float was designed in
honor of the Museum's
25th Anniversary. The
huge Silver Surfer
statue was on the back
of the float, along with
a Birthday Cake. If
you haven't been to the
Museum, please check
it out. You'll be glad
you did. It's at 411
Olive Avenue (around
the corner from the
Main Street
Starbucks) in
Downt own
Hunt i ngt on
Beach. It
features a fantastic new exhibit on
Surf Wax and there are free Surfin'
Sunday Concerts in the museum
parking lot and at Pier Plaza. You'll
see famous bands from around the
globe. Check the website,
www.surfingmuseum.org for more
info.
I'd also like to Thank the mem-
bers of the Fourth of July Board
for putting on a Spectacular
Event, a Sensational Expo at Pier
Plaza, a Splendid Parade and Fire-
works Show.
International Surfing Museum
Volunteers Chris and Craig MacDonald
carrying the banner.
Photo courtesy of Dave Reynolds
International Surfing Museum
Board Member Jodi McKay and
International Surfing Museum
Founder Natalie Kotsch.
7
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
M
ore than 125 local area youth baseball players and their parents
gathered at Huntington Beach High Schools varsity baseball field
to get the thrill of their lives at The Greatest Save Legends Youth
Baseball Clinic organized and conducted by the KinderVision Foundation.
Instructors at this FREE baseball clinic for participating kids ages 6-15 in-
cluded Angels Hall of Famer, Bobby Grich; three time Oakland As World
Series Champion John Blue Moon Odom; L.A. Dodgers World Series
Champion Team Member Tim Leary and others that provided fundamental
instruction in hitting, fielding, bunting, baserunning, throwing and pitching.
The kids and their parents also participated in The Greatest Save Commu-
nity Safety Station where they received FREE age appropriate pre-recorded
safety DVDs upon which they did personal baseball related interviews.
One of the highlights of the clinic was at the conclusion of the instruction
each participating child was able to get autographs from all of the former
MLB legends.
This event along with The Greatest Save appearances at HB Easter Egg
Hunt, Duck-A-Thon, FV Summerfest as well as future events is made pos-
sible through the annual KinderVision/The Greatest Save STARS FOR
KIDS Celebrity Benefit held every January at SeaCliff Country Club in
Huntington Beach.
For more information on the 2013 Greatest Save Golf Tournament, Jan-
uary 28th at Sea cliff CC... contact: hbnews1@aol.com
714-965-1194
www.BaciRestaurant.com
18748 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
Dance Fl oor
Ful l Pri vat e Bar
Cust omi zed Menus
~Open For Dinner Nightly~
Italian Restaurant
Baci Ristorante is not affiliated with any other
Restaurant in Huntington Beach
Available for private events,
corporate meetings, small weddings,
birthday parties, rehearsal dinners.
Can sit up to 100 people in our
Private Banquet room.
V
isit B
a
c
i
o
n
c
e
, a
n
d
y
o
u
`ll
c
o
m
e
b
a
c
k
lo
r
m
o
r
e
!
O
p
e
n
F
o
r
L
u
n
c
h
B
a
n
q
u
e
t
R
o
o
m
A
v
a
ila
b
le
E
x
c
e
lle
n
t
F
o
o
d
46
Thrill Of Their
Lives, According
To Kids
Y
es, it's true. Hundreds of Surf City
Nighters spotted a guy who
dressed and looked like "The
King" himself. Nobody could believe it.
And when he opened his mouth, there was
the Southern accent. Girls swooned, men
broke out in a big grin. Everybody wanted
their photo with him. Even little kids knew
they were in the presence of someone "big."
The popular, "Ain't Nothin'
Like Hound Dog" singing sen-
sation was gracing our Main
Street, like a down-to-earth su-
perstar. He stopped and kissed
babies (small and big), shook
hands with hound dogs, signed
autographs and made everyone
feel richer just by being near a
legend. (Even though it wasn't
"the real Elvis," the actor
looked and acted so much like
him that he generated much in-
terest in the upcoming 13th An-
nual Elvis Festival at The Orange County
Marketplace in Costa Mesa on Sunday, Au-
gust 26th, 2012 from 9am to 4pm. People
who got their picture taken with Elvis (at
various locations such as The UPS Store, a
flower vendor, Mangiamo Gelato Caffe and
Rockin Fig Surfboards), received a flyer
that said to e-mail the photo to Festival pro-
moters and receive 2 free tickets to the
event and VIP parking as well as a chance
to win valuable prizes from Downtown
Huntington Beach Merchants. Elvis is mak-
ing several other appearances, including at
Shops at Mission Viejo, Brea Downtown,
Costa Mesa, and Santa Ana. For exact lo-
cations and times, go to http://www.ocmar-
ketplace.com .
Elvis Sighting
in Downtown
Huntington Beach
Seen By Hundreds
By Chris MacDonald, Writer/Photographer,
HB Ambassador/The Local News Columnist
Steve Grabowski, Tom, Elvis and Marcus at The
UPS Store in Downtown Huntington Beach.
(left to right) Craig Ouelette, Bobby Grich, John Blue Moon Odom, Tim
Leary and Lorenzo Gray (not pictured Chris Donnells and Ray Krawczyk).
8
GRAPHIC DESIGN:
LORRAINE LARA
MARKETING COORDINATOR & CITY EDITOR:
AWARD WINNING STAFF
Rex Gerlach &
Jim Horton (Emeritus)
INTERNET SERVICES - HB PI0
SALES: ACCOUNT MANAGER:
Kevin Garofalo
MARKETING COORDINATOR
& CITY EDITOR:
Nancy Gray
GRAPHIC DESIGN:
Stacy Nunley
PHOTOGRAPHY & FREELANCE:
Chris MacDonald
CONTRIBUTORS:
Arnold Dufour, Cathy Green,
Moe Kanoudi, Jordan Kobritz,
David White
www.SurfersVillage.com
Office (714) 914-9797
A
fter three years in office he raised
taxes, increased spending, increased
the size of the federal government, saw
unemployment reach nearly 10%, appointed a
supreme court justice who was: (pro-affirma-
tive action, against the repeal of Roe V. Wade
and advocated individual rights for homosex-
uals), administered one of the largest auto
bailouts in the nation's history, had our service men and women
fight alongside Afghan rebels, intelligence operations funneled
weapons to a foreign country, he sought for a reduction in nuclear
arms and he spoke about immigration reform that
a lot of people looked at as "amnesty".
Would you vote for a second term for a presi-
dent with this resume?
OH, and before you answer... I am not talking
about Barack Obama, I am talking about Ronald
Reagan. Ronald Reagan, who's real per capita
spending far passed Obama's, who raised taxes at
least 7 times (Taxes are the lowest in 30 years
under Obama), who even though inherited an
economic recession saw unemployment reach
10%, who appointed Sandra Day O'connor to the
supreme court (she advcoated all those things
listed above), who trained and funded Afghan
rebels against their fight against the Soviet Union
(One of those funded and trained being Osama
Bin Laden), who lost track of nearly 2000 missiles to Iran in a
botched "arms for hostages" deal (Obama's Attorney General is
the first cabinet official EVER held in contempt?), who nearly
came to an agreement with the Soviet Union to abolish all nuclear
weapons and who didn't only speak of amnesty, actually gave
amnesty to nearly 3 million illegal aliens. OK, I did take a bit of
liberty with the point regarding "administered one of the largest
auto-bailouts in the nation's history". Carter in fact signed the
bail-out of Chrysler weeks before he left office, but it was Reagan
who was left to administer the bail-out.
None of this is a put down of Ronald Reagan. Anyone who
knows me knows how much respect I have for Ronald Reagan.
This is a theme you will see in many of my political discussions,
that perception is stronger than fact in the world of politics. We
see this perception battle played out in cable news everyday.
Whether it be crudely edited video to create perception like those
surrounding ACORN and the story that was painted to create the
perception that ACORN was giving legal advice to pimps and
prostitutes (They failed to show the part of the video where the
people at ACORN were only stalling those people while they
contacted the police). Or the menacing video of 3 black men
outside a polling station in 2010 who were deemed "The New
Black Panther Party" (if you ran the video longer than the 3 sec-
onds that a certain cable channel did, you would see those 3 men
simply walking past the polling station). Or the Shirley Sherrod
tapes, which tried to paint a woman trying to explain the prob-
lems with racism as a racist through improper editing. Perception
and story telling doesn't stop at improper editing it can also be
seen in "policy making". This is most abundantly clear in the
fight to create voter ID laws against "voter fraud" where statistics
show that there is about .0003% voter fraud, or the need to erad-
icate fraud in food stamps where statistics show that only about
1 penny of every dollar of food stamps is used fraudulently, or
the need to defund Planned Parenthood to save the deficit where
the total funding for Planned Parenthood is a drop in the bucket
of our yearly federal spending.
Barack Obama was recently criticized for saying that his
biggest mistake in the first 3 years of his
presidency was "...not telling the story
better..." In my opinion he is right. I
have been saying forever that creating
good policy is only half the battle, creat-
ing the right perception is the other half.
perception (noun): ...a process that
includes...the organization, identifica-
tion, and interpretation of "information"
resulting in a mental picture.
Resources: BostonGlobe.com, NY-
Times.com, WashingtonPost.com,
ThinkProgress.com, abcnews.com.
As always, if you have any questions,
comments or concerns please address
them to kevin_garofalo@verizon.net.
God bless you and God bless the
United States of America.
B
arack Obama, the 44th President of the United States,
has elicited a number of public perceptions regarding
his personality and background. As the first African-
American President of the United States, his race and culture
have played a prominent role in this, positively and nega-
tively. His relative youth (47 when elected) has alternately re-
sulted in his being praised for freshness and criticized for
inexperience. His temperament and demeanor have drawn
praise for his perceived unflappability and criticism for the
perception of his lacking emotional attach-
ment.
The left's core complaint is that he promised
to challenge the political system but worked
within it instead, never even attempting im-
portant reforms. I offer to quotes from the
President that bring into focus, perhaps, the
hypocrisy of all politics:
"If we do not change our politics -- if we do
not fundamentally change the way Washing-
ton works -- then the problems we've been
talking about for the last generation will be the
same ones that haunt us for generations to
come."
"Unless we're willing to challenge the bro-
ken system in Washington, and stop letting
lobbyists use their clout to get their way, nothing else is going
to change."
According to RT.com..."Dating back to January 2009, the
presidents palatial Washington, DC mansion has seen more
than just a few guests... The logs suggest that 1.3 million dis-
tinct visitors dropped by for more than 2 million individual
visits... The presidents most popular guests appear to be lob-
byists."
OK..so Fox says: Credibility Is Obama's Biggest Weakness
In Middle East strategy ...claiming..."Credibility is the big
problem with this presidents Middle East strategy. Mr.
Obama promised to negotiate away the Iranian nuclear threat
and failed. He promised to negotiate an Israeli-Palestinian
peace and failed.
Perhaps a few excepts from Libertarian Wayne Allyn Root
places the questions of the 2012 Presidential Election in per-
spective...edits for time and space go as follows:
*Black voters. Obama has nowhere to go but down among
this group...endorsement gay marriage alienated many black
church-going Christians resulting in 88% of their vote instead
of the 96% he got in 2008.
*Hispanic voters. Obama has nowhere to go but down
among this group. If Romney picks Rubio as his VP running-
mate the GOP may pick up an extra 10% to 15% of Hispanic
voters (plus lock down Florida).
*Jewish voters. Obama has been weak in his support of Is-
rael. Many Jewish voters and big donors are angry and dis-
appointed...predicting Obamas Jewish support drops from
78% in 2008 to the low 60s.
*Youth voters. Obamas biggest and most enthusiastic be-
lievers from 4 years ago have graduated into a job market
from hell.
*Catholic voters. Obama won a majority of Catholics in
2008. That wont happen again.
*Small Business owners. This is not good news or a voting
block for Obama.
*Blue collar working class whites. White working class
voters are about as happy with Obama
as Boston Red Sox fans feel about the
New York Yankees.
*Suburban moms. The issue isnt
contraceptionits having a job to pay
for contraception. Obamas economy
frightens these moms. They are wor-
ried about putting food on the table.
They fear for their childrens future.
*Military Veterans. McCain won
this group by 10 points. Romney could
win by 24 points.
Forget the polls. Gut instincts and
common a sense as a small business-
man tell me this will not be a victory
for a continued radical and risky so-
cialist agenda. It is perhaps a re-visit
to Reagan-Carter all over again.
perception
(noun)
the act or the
effect of
perceiving.
By Kevin Garofalo
}
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
reality
(noun)
The quality or
state of being
actual or true.
(My Opinion)
By Dave Garofalo
}
9
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
2
www.myhbgold.com
CONTACT: HBnews1@aol.com - 714.914.9797
Join Us Today - A Promotion of The Local News! 500 Mer-
chants to Sign Up - 50,000 Local Card Holders!
Your Solid Gold Savings
PREMIUM
CONSUMER
CARD
Present your HB Gold Card when paying your bill at participating merchants. Receive their best incentive offer, current specials or premium services
available only to HB Gold Card users. Go to our web site 24/7. Locate participating merchants; Hotels, Restaurants, Retailers, Entertainment and more.
Their most current promotional offers will be listed for each. Choose your participating merchant, visit them and present the HB Gold Card. Pretty Easy!
Check to see if your card Expired! Renew!
10
|

m
t

|

j

|


|
|
t
t

t

|
J
|
|

|
|

|
<

:
i
/


(
s
0
7


;
7
2

2
1
;
I
||tt||| 1|| tJ||| J ltJ|||J| 1|| t||
4t, mt J t1||J|t t|tmt
1||t|| tm)||mt||j tt\ |1it| J |||m||
t|) m||t ||1 tit|j |t|i|tt|
|4<|/ k4l 4|0/
tx || t|| |t|i|tt|
x || 1||tJ||
x || tt| ||mt 1t jJ \ tt| )) |Jj|
C
ameron Lombardo of Hunt-
ington Beach has been
named a 2012 Yokkaichi
English Fellow (YEF) and will
begin teaching English in Long
Beachs Sister City of Yokkaichi,
Japan, in August.
He was selected for the program
by the Yokkaichi City Board of
Education to serve as assistant lan-
guage teachers at the elementary
and junior high school level for
two years.
Lombardo earned a bachelor of
arts degree in Japanese and a
minor in anthropology from Cal
State Long Beach (CSULB) in
2012. During his studies at
CSULB, he spent time abroad, at-
tending Tenri University in Nara,
Japan, for six months during the
fall 2010 semester. While in
Japan, he worked as the English
Club coordinator for a middle and
high school in Nara.
Also, Lombardo has worked in
the Learning Assistance Center at
CSULB as an English as a Second
Language (ESL) specialist, help-
ing international students and ESL
students prepare for the California
State University writing profi-
ciency exam.
I am extremely interested in in-
ternationalism and want to pro-
mote mutual understanding
between the U.S. and Japan,
Lombardo said. I feel that pro-
grams like YEF are designed to
accomplish this goal. Also, I am
delighted that Ill be working in
Long Beachs sister city of
Yokkaichi and sharing my own
cultural heritage with my students
and colleagues.
Teaching in the schools
requires team teaching with
Japanese teachers in Eng-
lish, explained Jeanne
Karatsu, a board member of
the Long Beach-Yokkaichi
Sister City Association that
does the initial screening of
the applicants. The two
goals of the program are to
assist in integrating oral lan-
guage skills into the class-
room and to make the study
of English more lively and
relevant. The Yokkaichi stu-
dents score very high on the
English tests, which the
Yokkaichi Board of Educa-
tion attributes to the YEF pro-
gram.
The YEF experience also in-
cludes working as tutors, judges or
commentators for speech contests
and serving as translators or Eng-
lish speakers as needed. The pro-
gram began in 1986.
Yokkaichi, located about 20
miles from Nagoya in central
Japan, is a major port and indus-
trial complex that is also known
for its production of fine tea and
exquisite pottery.
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
W
e are at a critical point in the global fight against AIDS. The
world has made incredible progressmore than 6.6 million
people are now on life-saving treatment, up from just
100,000 in 2002but we are a long way from declaring victory. There
are still roughly 8 million people in need of treatment, and new HIV
infections outpace those placed on treatment by nearly 2:1.
New scientific data in 2011 helped change the debate on how we
fight HIV, and leading scientists now believe it is possible to see the
beginning of the end of AIDS within our lifetimes. Now more than
ever, we must recommit ourselves to achieving specific goals by 2015
that will help us bend the curve of this pandemic: end mother-to-child
transmission of HIV, provide treatment to 15 million people, and dras-
tically reduce new HIV infections.
Though these goals are ambitious, they are all achievable if we have
the broad support of donors, African governments, organizations, and
the private sector.
Since AIDS was identified 30 years ago, the United States has played a
leading role in achieving scientific progress, and in translating science into
programs. The Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR),
established by President George W. Bush and a bipartisan Congress and
thankfully continued under President Obama, has put that science into ac-
tion to save the lives of millions in the developing world. Today, President
Obama announced new prevention goals for PEPFAR.
!Sayonara
Cameron 2012
Yokkaichi
English Fellow
The Beginning
Of the End
With AIDS
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
11
P
ickleball in Huntington
Beach! Four courts have
been painted and officially
designated for Pickleball play at
Worthy Community Park, located
at the corner of 17th Street and
Main Street (1831 17th Street).
Pickleball is played on a bad-
minton court with the net lowered
to 34 inches at the center. It is
played with a perforated plastic
baseball (similar to a whiffle ball)
and wood or composite paddles. It
is easy for beginners to learn, but
can develop into a quick,
fast-paced, competitive
game for experienced
players. Designated
times: Tuesday,
Wednesday, and
Thursday 5:30
7:30 p.m., Satur-
day 8 10 a.m.
For beginners, a
limited amount
of nets and equip-
ment will be avail-
able for checkout.
More info: 714-374-
1710, and visit
www.usapa.org to learn
more about this fast-grow-
ing sport!
Adopt a Pelican
T
he Wetlands
and Wildlife Care
Center is making pelican
adoption certificates, so
if you let your friends and
family know to go to our
website www.wwccoc.org and
print the order form, fill it out,
mail it to WWCC with a check for
$25 or more they will receive a
beautiful certificate, suitable for framing. They make
nice gifts, too!
We really need all of the donations we
can get during this pelican crisis. We
appreciate all of you support.
Debbie McGuire, Wildlife Director
Wetlands and Wildlife Care Cen-
ter: 21900 Pacific Coast
Highway, Huntington
Beach, CA 92646
(714) 374-5587
Business
Huntington Beach
Senior Services
A little
commentary from
"Middle America"
THE DEBT CEILING:
* Democrats don't understand THE DEBT CEILING.
* Republicans don't understand THE DEBT CEILING.
* Liberals don't understand THE DEBT CEILING.
* NO ONE understands THE DEBT CEILING.
SO - Allow me to explain
Let's say you come home from work and find there has
been a sewer backup in your neighborhood.
Your home has sewage all the way up to your ceilings.
What do you think you should do?
Raise the ceilings or pump out the Sh---?
And, we feel sorry for those you don't get it...because
they too could be out of work soon...
election day is around the corner
Americas Debt
And counting...
12
The information contained in this column does not
necessarily reflect the opinion of The Local News.
Jordan Kobritz is a former attorney, CPA, and
Minor League Baseball team owner. He is an
Assistant Professor of Sport Management and
Sport Law at Eastern New Mexico University,
teaches the Business of Sports at the University of
Wyoming, and is a contributing author to the
Business of Sports Network. Jordan can be reached
at jkobritz@mindspring.com.
I
t may be time to prepare for Armageddon II in the
National Hockey League.
NHL owners locked out the players for the entire
2004-05 season in order to obtain a salary cap and
force a reduction of 24% in player salaries. In the
seven seasons since play resumed, league revenue
has increased by 50%, from $2.2 billion to $3.3 bil-
lion. Unfortunately, the increase in revenue has not
been uniform across the league. Teams north of the
border and those in large markets have generally
been profitable, but as many as 20 of the 30 teams,
especially those in the so-called Sunbelt, operated in
the red last year.
With the Collective Bargaining Agreement expiring
in September, the league made its first offer to the
union last week. You should forgive the players if
they foresee a return to the hardball tactics of old. The
leagues proposal included an 11% rollback in the per-
centage of revenue designated for the players, from
57% to 46%, along with a redefinition of Hockey
Related Revenue, the figure which is used to deter-
mine the salary cap. The two proposals combined
would effectively reduce player salaries by 22% from
last years figures.
The current executive director of the players union
is Donald Fehr. The hard-nosed some would say re-
calcitrant Fehr signed on as head of the NHLPA in
2010 after serving in a similar capacity with the
MLBPA for 26 years. During his tenure as head of
the baseball players union the
sport underwent a devastating
work stoppage in 1994-95 that
was incorrectly attributed to
labor when management was
almost totally to blame.
Nonetheless, Fehr was unable
to shake responsibility for a
strike that led to the loss of the
1994 pennant race and the
post-season World Series. For-
tunately for baseball, management saw the error of its
ways and embarked on a path that has led to almost
two decades of labor peace and unprecedented finan-
cial gain for the sport.
NHL owners are obviously envious of their NBA
and NFL brethren. Owners in both of those leagues
locked out their players last year, successfully reduc-
ing the players share of league revenue to roughly
50%. However, those owners share more revenue
than their NHL counterparts. In order for there to be
an agreement that avoids a work stoppage, hockey
owners must be willing to adopt greater revenue shar-
ing provisions than currently exist.
The union has set several days of meetings to re-
view the owners proposal. Players arent likely to re-
spond with a counteroffer until they receive
clarification of a number of the points included in the
owners initial offer. The nature and tone of their re-
sponse may
determine the
course of the
negotiations.
But if the
league loses
the 2012-13
season, you
wont be able
to blame it on
Don Fehr.
Jordan Kobritz is a former attorney, CPA, and
Minor League Baseball team owner. He is a Professor
and Chair of the Sport Management Department at
SUNY Cortland and is a contributing author to the
Business of Sports Network. Jordan can be reached
at jkobritz@mindspring.com
For over 11 years, Colettes Childrens
Home has provided 2,000 homeless
women & children with emergency
and transitional housing.
Their mission: Colettes Childrens Home
provides a safe and nurturing environment
where at-risk women and children can
obtain support & services needed to
achieve self-sufficiency.
(714) 596-1380
www.Heautontimorumenoss.orc T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
By Jordan Kobritz
Kobritz
on
Sports
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
Players to
Owners:
Fehr-get-about-it!
13
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
Your Surf City Chevrolet Dealer Your Surf City Chevrolet Dealer
Offer good through close of business of the date of this publication, 7/15/12-8/31/12. Offer not redeemable with any other discounts.
877-771-3956
18211 Beach Blvd.
Between Talbert and Ellis
www.delillo.com
Every Car &
Truck is
Discounted at
DeLillo Chevrolet
Every Day!
H
o
m
e
o
f
t
h
e
N
i
c
e
s
t
P
e
o
p
l
e
i
n
T
o
w
n
!
14
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7




Sushi Bar &
Tempura, Teriyaki


19171 Magnolia St, #8 Huntington Beach,
(At Garfield Ave, next to Home Depot Ctr.)
*Credit Card available (714) 962-7199
OPEN HOURS
Lunch: Monday ~ Friday: 12:00pm 3:00pm
Dinner: Monday~Saturday: 5:00pm 10:00pm
(Closed on Sunday)


Garfield Ave.

B
e
a
c
h

B
l
v
d
.




Sushi
Top





M
a
g
n
o
l
i
a

S
t
.

B
r
o
o
k
h
u
r
s
t
.
S
t
.
.


Yorktown Ave.

Lunch Special $5 off (Dine In only)
Regular price w/out Tax $15.00 or more
With this coupon. Not valid with any other offers.
Coupon can be used up to. Expires 8/31/2012

Dinner Special $7 off (Dine In Only)
Regular price w/out Tax $30.00 or more
With this coupon. Not valid with any other offers.
Coupon can be used up to Expires 8/31/2012
15
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
ITS ABOUT
SAVINGLIVES
Thats why our commitment to our patients is to provide
quality care, comprehensive services, innovative technology and
skilled physicians to meet our communitys needs.
First Accredited Chest Pain Center in Orange County
Primary Stroke Center certified by The Joint Commission
An Orange County EMS Cardiac Receiving Center
Award-winning Coronary Artery Disease Care, Heart Failure
Care and Stroke Care as recognized by The American Heart
Association/American Stroke Association
24-hour Emergency Department with surgical back up
17100 Euclid St., Fountain Valley, CA 92708
NEED A DOCTOR?
CALL (714) 979-1408 FOR A
FREE PHYSICIAN REFERRAL OR VISIT
WWW.FOUNTAINVALLEYHOSPITAL.COM
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
16
B
e
a
c
h
P
r
o
m
e
n
a
d
e
B
e
a
c
h
P
r
o
m
e
n
a
d
e
S
h
o
p
p
i
n
g

C
e
n
t
e
r
S
h
o
p
p
i
n
g

C
e
n
t
e
r
Walmart Neighborhood Market Grand Opening
Mama's on 39
21022 Beach Blvd
(714) 374-1166
www.mamason39.com/
Fresch
Electric
Bikes
21182 Beach Blvd
(714) 969-8800
www.freschelectricbikes.com
SeaLegs
Wine Bar
21022 Beach Blvd,
Suite 105
(714) 536-5700
www.sealegswine.com
Dominos
Pizza
21172 Beach Blvd
(714) 960-6511
www.dominos.com
Bikram Yoga
Huntington
Beach
21022 Beach Blvd.
Suite 201
(714) 536-7969
www.bikramyogahb.com
Las Barcas
Gourmet
Mexican Food
21032 Beach Blvd
(714) 536-2616
www.lasbarcas.com
Seaside
Tropical Fish
21162 Beach Blvd.
(714) 969-0491
www.SeasideTropicalFish.com
Sullivans
Chinese
Restaurant
21064 Beach Blvd
(714) 536-8538
The Wave
Hair Salon
21042 Beach Blvd.
(714)374-4577
Magical
Nails
21076 Beach Blvd
(714) 374-1992
Surf Side
Coin Laundry
& Fluff Fold
21068 Beach Blvd
714-362-1495
Tumbleweeds
Sports Bar
& Grill
21094 Beach Boulevard
(714) 960-2776
www.tumbleweedshb.com
Beach
Cleaners
21128 Beach Blvd
(714) 969-4773
21132 Beach Blvd
714.274-4484
www.walmart.com
PMS 285 PMS 368 PMS 1235
21082 Beach Blvd
(714) 536-1487
www.biglots.com
Avon
Beauty
Center
21168 Beach Blvd
(714) 969-6474
Special Promotion
Offers Good Thru-September 5th
Win Prizes -$AVE MONEY
Special Promotion
Offers Good Thru-September 5th
Win Prizes -$AVE MONEY
Bijan Sasounian -S & S Development
O
P
E
N
2
4
H
O
U
R
S
Mr Ps
Espresso
Italiano Caffe
21070 Beach Blvd.
(714) 960-1100
www.mrpsespressoitaliano.com
Walmart Neighborhood Market Grand Opening
17
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
B
e
a
c
h
P
r
o
m
e
n
a
d
e
B
e
a
c
h
P
r
o
m
e
n
a
d
e
S
h
o
p
p
i
n
g

C
e
n
t
e
r
S
h
o
p
p
i
n
g

C
e
n
t
e
r
Walmart Neighborhood Market Grand Opening
1) One Coupon per person, per visit, person or table
2) No Alcohol, gratuity or tax included
3) Cannot be combined with other offer
4) Expires: September 5, 2012
5) Individual Merchants may have posted additional conditions
6) Offers not applicable to prior purchased
GRAND PRIZES
Coupons Good thru 9/5/12- Drawing: 9/5/12
BIG LOTS
$100 Gift Card
MAMA'S
One Year FREEThrifty Ice Cream
1 Dbl scoop/available flavors, per week for 1-year
DOMINOS
One Year FREE Domino's Pizza
1 Medium, 2-topping Pizza / week, One Year
BEACH DRY CLEANING
One Year FREE Dry Cleaning
$100 Value Dry Cleaning
TUMBLEWEEDS
SPORTS BAR & GRILL
One Year FREETumbleweeds Hamburger
1 Hamburger / week for 1-year
FRESCH ELECTRIC BIKES
One FREE Electric Bike
SEALEGS WINE BAR
Win $100 Gift Certificate -No Restrictions
MR PS ESPRESSO
ITALIANO CAFFE
$75 Awesome Gift Basket
Coffee, Cup, Gift Card and more
SeaLegs
Wine Bar
21022 Beach Blvd,
Suite 105
(714) 536-5700
www.sealegswine.com
Las Barcas
Gourmet
Mexican Food
21032 Beach Blvd
(714) 536-2616
www.lasbarcas.com
The Wave
Hair Salon
21042 Beach Blvd.
(714)374-4577
Magical
Nails
21076 Beach Blvd
(714) 374-1992
Beach
Cleaners
21128 Beach Blvd
(714) 969-4773
Special Promotion
Offers Good Thru-September 5th
Win Prizes -$AVE MONEY
Special Promotion
Offers Good Thru-September 5th
Win Prizes -$AVE MONEY
Financed by:
Farmers & Merchants Bank
Walmart Neighborhood Market Grand Opening
$
1
,
0
0
0
.
0
0
F
R
E
E
:
$
1
,0
0
0
V
a
lu
e
O
ffe
rs
F
o
r
E
v
e
ry
F
a
m
ily
MERCHANT
OFFERS
Mama's on 39
$10 off Min. $25 Food purchase
Magical Nails
$5 off combined Manicure/pedicure/design
$5 off 15 minute massage
Avon Beauty Center
$5 off any purchase of $30 or more
$10 off purchase of $70 or more
Sullivans Chinese Restaurant
1 FREE Appetizer w/min $30 Lunch or Dinner
2 FREE Appetizers w/min $60 Lunch or Dinner
Tumbleweeds Sports Bar & Grill
$10 off any Food bill $20 or more
Surf Side Coin Laundry & Fluff Fold
$5 off Min. 10 lb. Fold
Mr Ps Espresso Italiano Caffe
20% off all purchases over $10
Beach Cleaners
25% off Min. $20 cleaning some restriction
25% off Wedding Gown Cleaning
Seaside Tropical Fish
20% off entire purchase
Dominos Pizza
$5.99 @ Two Item Min. Medium 2-item Pizza /
8-piece boneless/ chicken or 8-piece wings
The Wave Hair Salon
20% off any service
Fresch Electric Bikes
$10 off All Accessories
$50 off any New Bike Purchase
SeaLegs Wine Bar
WIN: $100 Gift Certificate
Las Barcas Gourmet Mexican Food
20% off entire order
excluding specials, Taco Tuesday's and catering
Bikram Yoga Huntington Beach
$10: One Single Class - New Students Only
20% off any regular-price class package
* Pick up Value Offers
at any of the participating Merchants
$1,000 Certificates available 7/27/12 - 8/3/12
O
ffers Valid thru 9/5/12

D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
18
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
19
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
20
Baguetier
Artisan
Bakeries
120 5th Street,#120
Huntington Beach,
CA 92648
Phone #:
714 969-1700
"Free Cookie or
Pastry (up to $3
value) with purchase
of $15 or more"
(with your Gold Card)
Real
Artisan
Coffees
Across From Shorebreak Hotel
baguetier.com
Hours:
Tues - Saturday:
7 am to 6 pm
Sunday:
9 am to 4 pm
21
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
HAPPY HOUR
MONDAY - FRIDAY
3 PM - 6 PM
$2.00 OFF COCKTAILS
$2.50 DOMESTIC DRAFTS
$3.00 IMPORT DRAFTS
May Line Up
05/11.............................The Blast
05/12...........................Soul Fresh
05/17 ...........................Jam Night
04/18..........................Soundcake
05/19 .....................................TBA
05/24 ...........................Jam Night
05/25........................Parkai Moon
05/26..........................Kenny Hale
05/31 ...........................Jam Night
06/01 .....................................TBA
06/02 .........................Those Guys
06/07 ...........................Jam Night
f
f
Subscribe
Today
The
Local
News
C











Extraordinary






















































































































winning ER is just minut d- ar w nd our a A
er v o ec er r enabling fast
ors of USC, and no t oc D
e home t e ar W . y ap ther
t includes C am tha r og pr
tionally ac er a na e o e oer a na W . e plac
nostic t ed diag anc adv













. Disc y a w es a winning ER is just minut
, including car ies ger y major sur or man y f y for man er
obotic sur e r asiv v er minimally in w o w oer minimally in ors of USC, and no
e C y y E ohen ious D estig o the pr e home t
cur -ac t or pinpoin e f e for pinpoin nif nife f yberK t includes C
ehensiv ompr , c ed edit cr tionally ac
edur oc ical pr g echniques and sur nostic t













er the v o . Disc
. diac , including car
y ger obotic sur
er with the t en e C
tion adia y in r ac cur
er e canc ehensiv
es in one edur













ange C t Or e a enc er di dier
s y h P
emor M













. ial emor oast M ange C
A | P O M L M . 0 0 8 . l - l a r r e ffe e P n a l c l
oast angeC g/Or .or e ar ialC emor












L A
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
Personal Information:
~ His full Name is: Willard Mitt Romney
~ He was Born: March 12, 1947 and is 65 years old.
~ His Father: George W. Romney, former Governor of the State of Michigan
~ He was raised in Bloomfield Hills , Michigan
~ He is Married to Ann Romney since 1969; they five children.
Education:
~ B.A. from Brigham Young University,
~ J.D. and M.B.A. from Harvard University
Religion:
~ Mormon - The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints
Working Background:
~ After high school, he spent 30 months in France as a Mormon missionary.
~ After going to both Harvard Business School and Harvard Law School
simultaneously, he passed the Michigan bar exam, but never worked as an attorney.
~ In 1984, he co-founded Bain Capital a private equity investment firm, one of
thelargest such firms in the United States .
~ In 1994, he ran for Senator of Massachusetts and lost to Ted Kennedy.
~ He was President and CEO of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games.
~ In 2002, he was elected Governor of the State of Massachusetts where he
eliminated a 1.5 billion deficit.
Some Interesting Facts about Romney:
~ Bain Capital, starting with one small office supply store in Massachusetts,
turned it into Staples; now over 2,000 stores employing 90,000 people.
~ Bain Capital also worked to perform the same kinds of business miracles again
and again, with companies like Domino's, Sealy, Brookstone, Weather Channel,
Burger King, Warner Music Group, Dollarama, Home Depot Supply, and many
others.
~ He was an unpaid volunteer campaign worker for his dad's gubernatorial
campaign 1 year.
~ He was an unpaid intern in his dad's governor's office for eight years.
~ He was an unpaid bishop and state president of his church for ten years.
~ He was an unpaid President of the Salt Lake Olympic Committee for three years.
~ He took no salary and was the unpaid Governor of Massachusetts for four years.
~ He gave his entire inheritance from his father to charity.
~ Mitt Romney is one of the wealthiest self-made men in our country but has
given more back to its citizens in terms of money, service and time than most men.
~ And in 2011 Mitt Romney gave over $4 million to charity, almost 19% of his
income.... Just for comparison purposes, Obama gave 1%, and Joe Biden gave
$300 or .0013%.
Mitt Romney is Trustworthy:
~ He will show us his birth certificate
~ He will show us his high school and college transcripts.
~ He will show us his social security card.
~ He will show us his law degree.
~ He will show us his draft notice.
~ He will show us his medical records.
~ He will show us his income tax records.
~ He will show us he has nothing to hide.
Mitt Romney's background, experience and trustworthiness show him to be a great
leader and an excellent citizen for President of the United States.
You may think that Romney may not be the best representative the Republicans could have
selected. At least I know what religion he is, and that he won't desecrate the flag, or bow down
to foreign powers, or practice fiscal irresponsibility. I know he has the ability to turn this fi-
nancial debacle that the current regime has gotten us into. We won't like all the things neces-
sary to recover from this debt, but someone with Romney's background can do it. But, on the
minus side, He never was a "Community Organizer", never took drugs or smoked pot, never
got drunk, did not associate with communists or terrorists, nor did he attend a church "for
twenty years' whose pastor called upon God to "damn America."
In November you make a choice -- between two men to lead us for the next four years!
But you know all this stuff, don't you....?
Take a Moment: Meet the Real Mitt!
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
22
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
A
ssemblyman Jim Silva issued a statement on the passage of Senate
Bill 1029 by the California State Legislature, a bill approving the ex-
penditure of billions of dollars on high speed rail (HSR).
"I am very disappointed that Democrats approved spending billions of dol-
lars the state doesn't have on the high speed rail project," said Silva. "This
shows that the disconnect between Californians and their government is at
an all-time high. It is outrageous that only weeks after voting to cut education,
cut public safety , and cut health programs, legislative Democrats have now
committed Californians to spending tens of billions of dollars on this over-
priced project."
In 2008, California voters approved $9.9 billion in bonds for initial funding
for HSR. Since then, cost estimates have varied from $34 billion to $98.5 bil-
lion, with the current estimate at $68 billion. The gap between the current es-
timated cost and the amount voters approved is $54 billion.
Assemblyman Silva's:
De-rail The Train
Pierside Gallery
16582 Gothard, Unit O
Huntington Beach, CA 92647
(Next to Deli-licious)
714-969-7979
Call for Hours
www.piersidegallery.com sales@piersidegallery.com
PIERSIDE GALLERY
ART GIFTS FRAMING
SPORTS MEMORABILIA
& AUTOGRAPHS
UP TO
80%
OFF
@
OUR NEW
GOTHARD LOCATION
H
untington Beach eatery donates more than $6K to local schools, youth organi-
zations
Huntington Beach, CA - In the past few months, Mama's on 39 has donated
$6414.29 to local schools and organizations through its "Mama's Give Back Days."
Through the program, Mama's on 39 donates back 30 percent of the proceeds when
groups enjoy the eatery on the corner of Beach Boulevard and Atlanta Avenue. The
restaurant campaign is meant to help boost school and community-oriented programs
lagging in funds and is ideal for school groups, sports, music and art programs and
others.
Give Back Days take place at least once a month with a designated organization
that is selected on a first-come, first-served basis. The program is a win-win for the
community and Mama's alike.
"I am a longtime resident and as a one-year-old restaurant here in Huntington
Beach, we are very supportive of all of our local schools, sports groups and non-
profit organizations," said owner Pete Truxaw. "We know we can help raise much-
needed funds for causes and our guests can enjoy a great meal as well."
Mama's on 39 serves fresh American comfort foods with a culinary twist - tempting
diners seeking delectable lunch, dinner fare and a unique brunch all day Saturday
and Sunday. The restaurant also serves eight Thrifty's ice cream flavors and amazing
feel-good comfort foods.
Mama's on 39 is located at 21022 Beach Blvd., corner of Beach and Atlanta in
Huntington Beach. For more information and to book a "Mama's Give Back Day,"
call 714-374-1166. For more information about the restaurant, visit www.Mama-
sOn39.com.
Mama
Does Good
23
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
Bi rth Control and
I ncreased Bl ood Cl ot
Ri sk
Tim Ryan on the Law:
A new medical study has found that women
who use birth control patches like Ortho-Evra or
contraceptive vaginal rings like NuvaRing have
a heightened risk of blood clots. The study, re-
leased last month by the British
Medical Journal, found:
Women who use transdermal
patches or vaginal rings for con-
traception have a 7.9 and 6.5
times increased risk of con-
firmed venous thrombosis com-
pared with non-users of
hormonal contraception of the
same age.
The conclusion was based on
the study of 1.6 million non-
pregnant Danish women from 2001 to 2010. The
participants in the study had no history of throm-
botic (clotting) disease or cancer. There has been
a great deal of litigation involving both birth con-
trol patches, and vaginal rings have been the tar-
get of numerous product liability suits throughout
the country.
In 2008, Johnson &
Johnson agreed to pay
more than $68.7 million to
settle the earliest cases
brought by women who claimed their blood clots
were caused by the Ortho-Evra patch. The patch
must be worn for three consecutive weeks each
month, to continuously provide hormones
through the skin and into the
blood stream. Thousands of
lawsuits, filed in both state
and federal courts, allege that
Johnson & Johnson failed to
adequately warn about the in-
creased risk of blood clots.
Stronger warnings have been
added to the products label
several times since the patch
was introduced in 2002.
NuvaRing is a vaginal con-
traceptive that releases estrogen and progestin. Its
main advantage is said to be convenience, be-
cause it can be left in place for three weeks in-
stead of taking a pill every day. The device was
originally manufactured by Organon Pharmaceu-
ticals and its affiliates. Schering-Plough Corp. ac-
quired the
Or g a n o n
entities in
2 0 0 7 .
Merck now
faces hundreds of product liability suits in state
and federal court concerning the NuvaRing de-
vice. The lawsuits allege that NuvaRing has a de-
sign defect in the dosage and type of progestin
used. Plaintiffs also claim that the manufacturers
failed to warn about side effects, including blood
clotting, pulmonary embolism, heart attack,
stroke and deep vein thrombosis.
The just-released Danish study indicates that an
increased risk of blood clots may justify a change
in which birth control products women choose to
use. The study states:
A risk of 10 per 10,000 women years implies a
risk of venous thrombosis of more than 1% over
a 10-year user period. Therefore women are gen-
erally advised to use combined oral contracep-
tives with levonorgestrel or norgestimate, rather
than to use transdermal
patches or vaginal rings.
P
La Roccos
Ii z z e i i a
"A 5!Icc nf Ncw Ynrk"
In 5urf CIty U5A
- The esl lhin pizza sIice in H..
- Oui SpeciaI Recipe cones sliaighl
fion Nev Yoik!
- We nake oui dough vilh lollIed valei.
- We seII Iizza-y-The-SIice.
- DeIiveiy vilhin 2 niIes.
- Open DaiIy fion 11 a.n. liI ve
iun oul of dough.
Thc Crust
Oui seciel is in lhe dough. Oui line
honoied iecipe foi oui fanous lhin
ciusl NeopoIilan has leen peifecled
ovei lhe yeais.
Thc 5aucc
Oui sauce is Iighl, yel spicy-sveel
vilh jusl lhe iighl heils and spices.
Thc TnppIngs
Lveiy day ve slail vilh lhe fieshesl &
finesl vegelalIes and neals. No
pieseivalives. No addilives.....jusl fiesh,
naluiaI foods, luisling vilh fIavoi.
~~~~
We onIy have one size pie - 18 Donl
even lhink aloul asking foi pineappIe
oi chicken, cause lhal ainl pizza
327 11lh Slieel, Suile 1O1, Hunlinglon each, CA 92648 - 714.374.2555
w
w
w
. !arnccnshb. cnm
VcggIc (WhItc PIzza)
080f N0M8 I80Nl
Tor|oes, s|rc|,
r||c|o|e,or|or, ros|eJ reJ
eers, |res| r||c & |res| |s||.
A.K.A. Kin Hanrcc| ...$Z9.99
100 8f0l $00l8l
Ar||c|o|e, rus|roor, rresr,
|s|| a||| r||c o|| suce...$J!.59
100 N808ll8
Sr|r||e a/ s.ory es|o & |oeJ
a/ |res| rr|r|eJ ros|eJ reJ
eers.................................J.99
F80l`8 $00l8l
Sec|| r||c o|| suce, |res|
c|oeJ |s||, rresr,
rottre||, |oeJ a/ |res|
s||ceJ |or|oes. A.K.A. Diana
8arnc|| .............................$J.99
8800`8 N0ll08l00
0e||c|ous r|co|| c|eese,
rottre||, rresr & |res| r-
||c. A.K.A. 8aro Cnap|a $J.99
F00f0 F0l90 $00l8l
Fe|ur|r |res| s|rc|, rus|roor
& rresr........................$J!.59
VcggIc w/ 5aucc
100 fll000k0
Hottre||, rresr, |ur
r||c|o|e |er|s, |res| r||c,
|||||y JresseJ a/ our er|ec||y
sesoreJ |or|o suce. A.K.A.
Piscq Pnc .........................$J.99
100 000l $0l08l
TrJ|||or| c|eese, a/ |res| s||ceJ
|or|oes, sesoreJ a/ orero &
rresr. ..........................$J.99
F0ll80808
Fe|ur|r |ur r||c|o|e |er|s,
s||ceJ ||c| o||.es JresseJ a/
ecor|ro rorro, rottre||, |res|
|s||,& sec|| r||c o|| suce.
A.K.A. Micnac| 8crnas $J!.59
$l800 F0M000f8
A sec|cu|r ||erJ o| |res|
s|rc| |e.es,c|erry |or|oes,
ecor|ro rorro, rottre||, |res|
|s|| a/ our sec|| r||c o|| suce.
A.K.A. Tcrrq Rcgcrs .....$J!.59
000080
0ur |rous c|eese |tt, A |rue
hea Yor|s Se|ec||or. .........$J1.Z5
l00 l8M00f Fl0
Peeror| a/ h0 C|eese ...$J9.99
TradItInna!
F00f0l
0ur re| |.or||e |tt!!! A.K.A.
Scng Cna ......................$J5.!5
8f00kl $00l8l
A |e||y o||er|r o| eeror|,
suse, or|ors, ||c| o||.es, |res|
rus|roor, s||ceJ reer eers &
|res| r||c..........................$J8.59
l880000`8 $00l8l
Co.ereJ a/ eeror|, re||||s,
|res| rus|roor & |res| r||c.
$J8.99
100 N0fk8
Hou||-a|er|r or||ors o|
eeror|, suse, re||||,
rus|roor, or|or, s||ceJ reer
eer & ||c| o||.es.........$J8.59
8f0K $00l8l
A |rJy o||er|r o| re||||,
suse, & eeror|. A.K.A.
Grcg Sancssain ..............$J8.99
000k N0k0 I8lNl
Peeror|, Suse, CrJ|r
Bcor, He|||| & Bcor A.K.A.
Dq|an Tang.....................$Z9.99
F8ll`8 F0lll I8lNl
Cr||| R||eye, 0r|ors, Creer Peer,
Cr||c, Prresr C|eese & hc|o
C|eese (w|||e P|e).............$Z9.99
F0ll00 88# F0fk Fl0 I8lNl
S|oa ros|eJ or| |u|| a||| our
|rous ru| & BB0 suce. A.K.A.
Ca|tin |andcrocc|.........$J8.99
TradItInna! #2
Flk8 Fl0
Co.ereJ a/ CrJ|r Bcor &
P|re|es. A.K.A. Di||icn
Auxicr .............................$o.00
l00 80l $00l8l I8lNl
Peeror|, a/ BB0 C||c|er$J8.99
00l0k0 llf000
Hr|r|eJ C||c|er, r|c| crery
A||reJo Suce, |res| |s||, rot-
tre|| & rresr. A.K.A.
8rian Daigncau||...........$J8.59
l8`8 $00l8l I8lNl
Hr|r|eJ C||c|er, reJ or|or,
|cor, rottre||, rresr &
A||reJo suce......................$J8.59
8f00 8f8ll0 Fl0
Peeror| a/ |eros, |res|
r||c & rresr (w|||e P|tt)
...........................................$J!.59
0l8f8 800f8
k89880 Fl0
Peeror| a/ rus|roor, |res|
r||c & rresr (w|||e P|tt)
..........................................$J!.59
688l8 6lfl I8lNl
Peeror|, Suse, Creer
eers, Ros|eJ ReJ Peers,
0||.es, 0r|ors & Tor|oes A.K.A
Cindq Nincn .................$Z9.99
5urf CIty 5pccIa!s
Ary 2 s||ces & eot soJ 0R Ary
s||ce a/ CrJer S|J &
eot soJ .............................$5.59
000080 80f0f $00l8l
a/ |r|es & eot soJ ............$5.59
F0lll 000080
$l08k $00l8l
a/ eot soJ
(Cr|||eJ or|ors, reer eers &
c|eese suce.) ......................$.59
ll8ll8 $80880
$80Nl00 $00l8l
a/ eot soJ (Cr|||eJ or|ors, |e||
eers, ro.o|ore c|eese, ryo
& s|cy rus|rJ.) .................$.59
"Pasta 5pccIa!s"
ForerJe He| Lsr
S|e||| a/ He|||| 0R l|||r
Suse C||c|er Pes|o a/ Perre
C||c|er A||reJo a/ Perre l|||r
Suse, A||reJo Suce a/ Perre
(A|| Ps| 0|s|es cores a/ ec
r||c |ro|s & eot soJ..) ..$.59
Party Packs
Ary 2 P|es a/ 2 Fo| w|rs 2
Cr||c Kro|s & (2) 2 L||er
SoJ .........................$19.99 + !at
"Evcryday 5pccIa!s"
00ES h0T APPLY 0h F0Ll0AYS!!
Any 1 Pie / Free
GarIic Knots
N008 $00l8l
*C|eese P|e........................$JJ.99
100808 $00l8l
*Peeror| P|e ...................$J1.!5
N000808 $00l8l
*Bror P|e ..........................$J.99
100f808 $00l8l
*C|tore a/ 2 |o|rs........$8.99
800f8.
00 08ll 11N - 10 - N00
N0 80 00l 0l 0000
N0 0l080 181`$ l1IIII
N0 00ll90fI
INll0 l Z Mll08 0ll
TradItInna! #2
TradItInna!
VcggIc (WhItc PIzza)
VcggIc w/ 5aucc
"Pasta 5pccIa!s"
"Evcryday 5pccIa!s"
N00090f 00
0l 8 FlII8 l
8 80K, l00 M0l8l0f0 lf0M
l00 lII8 008 0 l00
00M08 080k 00N 0
l0 0l l00 lII8 N0l00
08 M8k0 ll 80. 10
00ff00l l0l8, 00 08 0l
00f lII8 l l00 090
l0f Z J Ml0l08 8l
8f000 400 00f008. ll
Nlll l8k0 l00 M08l 0l l08l
M0l8l0f0 00l 80 M8k0
00f lII8 M0f0 0fl8.
k00l l00 ll0 0l l00 00K
00 0 l00 0fl90 00M0
1lF.
Orange County personal injury lawyer Timothy J. Ryan serves clients throughout California.
8072 Warner Avenue Huntington Beach, CA 92647-6000 - 714.898.4444
24
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
Dear Earth-
Talk: Weve been
hearing for years
how producing red meat
is bad for the environment while consuming it is bad
for our health. How do other types of meat, fish, dairy
and vegetable proteins stack up in terms of environ-
mental and health impacts? ~ Julia Saper-
stein, via e-mail
Not all forms of protein are created equal as to the
environmental and health implications of raising and
c o n s u mi n g
them. A 2011
assessment by
the non-profit
Environmental
W o r k i n g
Group (EWG)
found that dif-
ferent meats
and different
production sys-
tems have
varying health,
climate and
other environ-
mental im-
pacts.
The quantity
of chemical
fertilizers, fuel
and other production inputs used, the differences in
soil conditions and production systems and the extent
to which best practices such as cover cropping, inten-
sive grazing or manure management are implemented
all affect the amount of greenhouse gas emissions a
meat product is responsible for generating. To wit,
lamb, beef, cheese, pork and farmed salmon raised
conventionally (e.g. with inputs including hor-
mones and antibiotics and feed derived from crops
grown with chemical pesticides and fertilizers) were
determined by EWG to generate the most greenhouse
gases.
EWG partnered with the environmental analysis
firm CleanMetrics to assess the climate impacts via
lifecycle assessments of 20 popular types of meat,
fish, dairy and vegetable proteins. EWGs assessment
calculated the full cradle-to-grave carbon footprint
of each food item based on the greenhouse gas emis-
sions generated before and after it left the farmfrom
the pesticides and
fertilizer used to
grow animal feed
all the way
through the graz-
ing, animal rais-
ing, processing,
transportation,
cooking and even
disposal of un-
used food (since
some 20 percent
of edible meat
gets thrown away
by Americans).
According to
EWG, conven-
tionally raised
lamb, beef, cheese
and pork also
generate more polluting waste, pound for pound. Of
these, lamb has the greatest impact, followed by beef
and then by cheeseso vegetarians who eat dairy arent
off the hook. Beef has more than twice the emissions
of pork, nearly four times more than chicken and more
than 13 times as much as vegetable proteins such as
beans, lentils and tofu, summarizes EWG.
On the health front, EWG reports that eating too
much of these greenhouse gas-intensive meats boosts
exposure to toxins and increases the risk of a wide va-
riety of serious health problems, including heart dis-
ease, certain cancers, obesity and, in some studies,
diabetes.
Besides cutting out animal-derived proteins alto-
gether, the best thing we can do for our health and the
environment is to cut down on our meat consumption
and choose only organic, humane and/or grass-fed
meat, eggs and dairy. Overall, these products are the
least harmful, most ethical choices, says EWG,
adding that grass-fed and pasture-raised products are
typically more nutritious and carry less risk of bacte-
rial contamination. While best management practices
can demonstrably reduce overall emissions and envi-
ronmental harm, the most effective and efficient way
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and environmen-
tal impacts from livestock is simply to eat, waste and
produce less meat and dairy. For more information,
check out EWGs free online Meat Eaters Guide.
CONTACTS:
EWG Meat Eaters Guide,
www.ewg.org/meateatersguide.
EarthTalk is written and edited by
Roddy Scheer and Doug Moss and is a registered
trademark of E - The Environmental Magazine
(www.emagazine.com).
SEND YOUR QUESTIONS TO:
earthtalk@emagazine.com.
SUBSCRIBE:
www.emagazine.com/ subscribe;
Free Trial Issue:
www.emagazine.com/trial.
The information contained in this column
does not necessarily reflect the opinion of
The Local News.
EarthTalk

From the Editors of


E/The Environmental
Magazine
FRIDAY 05/11
9pm - Apes Ma
SATURDAY 05/12
9pm - Simple Creation/Jeff
Hershey & the Heartbeats
Sunday 05/13
9pm - Inhale & Friends
Monday 05/14
9pm - Board Night with
Originalites & Guests
TUESDAY 05/15
9pm - Karaoke
WEDNESDAY 05/16
9pm - Live and Local
THURSDAY 05/17
9pm - Comedy Night &
Acustic
FRIDAY 05/18
9pm - Bad Cop Bad
Cop/Galway Hooker Band
SATURDAY 05/19
9pm - The Unwanted
Guests
SUNDAY 05/20
9pm - Inhale and Friends
Monday 05/21
9pm - Board Night with
Originalites & Guests
TUESDAY 05/22
9pm - Karaoke
WEDNESDAY 05/23
9pm - Live and Local
THURSDAY 05/24
9pm - Comedy & Acustic
"Daily Food and Drink Features"
4 to 7pm Monday - Friday
1/2 Off All Appetizers
9 to 11pm Thursdays
Buy 2 Entrees - Get 1 Free
Saturdays and Sundays
Breakfast Served All Day
9am to 12pm $10 Bottomless Mimosas $3.50 Bloody Marys
ALL THE TIME
$2 Small Domestic Drafts $3 PBR Pints
$5 Weekly Featured Drink $10 Pitchers
e-m
ail: info@
gallagher- spub.com

for m
ore details
Gallaghers Pub and Grill
300 Pacific Coast Hwy. Ste. 113, Huntington Beach, CA 92648
entrance on Walnut St. between Main St. and 3rd St.
714.536.2422
www.gallagherspub.com
Have Your Next
Party at Gallaghers
VIP Service Plus Food
& Drink Specials
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
Play it safe - never touch
anything caught in a
power line.
If an object gets caught in a power
line, call SCE at (800) 611-1911 to
report the problem.
At Southern California Edison, an
Edison International Company, we
want to help you and your family
stay safe around electricity.
For more safety tips, visit
www.sce.com/staysafe
FOR OVER 100 YEARSLIFE. POWERED BY EDISON.
David White, a wine writer, is the founder
and editor of Terroirist.com. His columns are
housed at Wines.com, the fastest growing wine
portal on the Internet.
Wine Tasting
Among Friends
This weeks wine reviews. All wines were received as
press samples and tasted single blind.
Review: 2009 Wine Guerrilla Zinfandel Adels Vine-
yard
~ USA, California, Sonoma County, Dry Creek Valley
~ SRP: $30. Explosively aromatic dark raspberries,
chocolate, spicy oak, and
baked cherries. On the
palate, this wine is de-
lightful a plush and
velvety mouthfeel, and
enough acid to give the
wine a refreshing lift at
the end. Delicious. (92
pts.)
Review: 2010 Troon
Vineyard Zinfandel
Kubli Bench
~ USA, Oregon, South-
ern Oregon, Applegate
Valley
~ SRP: $25. An extraordinarily interesting nose, full of
fleshy fruits think the inside of a dark plum alongside
crushed blackberries and raspberries. The fruits are fol-
lowed by oak, along with a hint of slate and riverbed.
The tannins are ripe and firm and the wine is very well
structured. A dark-but-not-overripe Zinfandel, and really
delicious. (92 pts.)
Review: 2008 Quivira Zinfandel Dry Creek Valley
~ USA, California, Sonoma County, Dry Creek Valley
~ SRP: $20. The nose is quite interesting dark plums,
wild herbs (think sage and fennel), some black pepper,
and a hint of baked blackberries. The palate is plush yet
light, with great acidity. Unfortunately, a hint of alcohol
shows itself at the finish. (89 pts.)
Review: 2010 Artezin Zinfandel Mendocino County
~ USA, California, North Coast, Mendocino County
~ SRP: $18. On the nose, fresh raspberry juice, red
cherry candy, ripe pomegranate, and boysenberries,
alongside cinnamon and
sweet baking spices. A
beautifully red, restrained
nose. On the palate, the
fruits are a bit sweeter,
and this wine shows itself
as one that would defi-
nitely age. Firm tannins,
juicy acidity. A really
tasty wine. (91 pts.)
Review: 2009 Quivira Zin-
fandel Dry Creek Valley
~USA, California, Sonoma
County, Dry Creek Valley
~ SRP: $20. A dark, proto-
typical Zinfandel. Not old school, but definitely not
overripe. A dark nose of blueberries, blackberries,
and plums, followed by dark chocolate, black pepper,
and sweet, spicy oak. The palate is soft and reveals
some green notes, like sage and eucalyptus. Simple
but solid. (90 pts.)
Review: 2009 Wine Guerrilla Zinfandel Conte Vineyard
~ USA, California, Sonoma County, Russian River
Valley
~ SRP: $30. On the nose, a seductive aroma of black-
berry, rhubarb compote, pie crust, forest floor, and
sweet oak. On the palate, the fruits are much sweeter
than the nose suggests
just barely reaching
some pruniness. Solid
acidity, no noticeable al-
cohol, very well-struc-
tured. A simple but solid
Zinfandel. (90 pts.)
Review: 2009 Amapola
Creek Zinfandel Monte Rosso
~USA, California, Sonoma County, Sonoma Valley
~ SRP: $36. A beautiful Zinfandel. Fresh-from-the-farm
cherries, perfume, wild blackberries, and sweet Asian
spices. While proudly ripe, this wine isnt in your face.
The palate is lush and balanced. (91 pts.)
Review: 2010 Gracianna Zinfandel Bacigalupi
~ USA, California, Sonoma County, Russian River
Valley
~ SRP: $42. A very dark, rich Zinfandel with notes of
prune juice, sweet figs, and dark chocolate. The palate
is lighter and livelier than one would expect, but a shot
of alcohol shows itself at the end. (87 pts.)
Review: 2010 Jacuzzi Family Vineyard Primitivo Lake
County
~ USA, California, North Coast, Lake County
~ SRP: $22. A typical Zinfandel, exploding with notes
of black cherries, overripe blackberries, and coffee.
While the wine is certainly bold on the palate, its in
perfect balance and offers a rich, complex mouthfeel.
(89 pts.)
David White
On the Vine
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
25
318 Main StreetDowntown HB
714.960.9696
Margaritas By The Liter
Full Bar & Cocktails
Other Great Locations:
Long Beach
Costa Mesa
Lake Forest
Santa Ana
Huntington Park
Newport Beach
Corona Del Mar
San Clemente
Laguna Niguel
C
h
e
c
k
O
u
t
O
u
r
D
a
ily
S
p
e
c
ia
l
a
t
O
u
r
H
B

L
o
c
a
t
io
n
T
O
R
T
IL
L
A
SO
U
P W
O
W
26
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
Questions & Answers
From the Mailbag
714.536.6300
Moe News Than You Can Handle:
Main Street Eyewear Looks at Life
Through Designer Glasses
Moe Kanoudi
R
etired Army Green Beret Smokey Taylor got
his court martial this weekend and came away
feeling good about it. Taylor, at age 80 the
oldest member of Chapter XXXIII of the Special
Forces Association, was on trial by his peers under
the charge of failing to use a weapon of sufficient
caliber in the shooting of an intruder at his home in
Knoxville, TN, in December. The entire affair, of
course, was very much tongue in
cheek. Taylor had been awakened in
the early morning hours of Dec. 17,
2007, when an intrud er broke into his
home. He investigated the noises with
one of his many weapons in hand.
When the intruder threatened him
with a knife, Taylor warned him, then
brought his .22 caliber pistol to bear
and shot him right between the eyes.
That boy had the hardest head Ive
ever seen, Taylor said after his trial.
The bullet bounced right off. The im-
pact knocked the would-be thief down
momentarily. He crawled out of the
room then got up and ran out the door and down the
street. Knoxville police apprehended him a few
blocks away and he now awaits trial in the Knox
County jail. The charges against Taylor were consid-
ered to be serious. He is a retired Special Forces
Weapons Sergeant with extensive combat experience
during the wars in Korea and Vietnam. Charges
were brought against him under the premise that he
should have saved the county and taxpayers the ex-
pense of a trial, said Chapter XXXIII President Bill
Long of Asheville.
He could have used a .45
or .38. The .22 just wasnt big
enough to get the job done.
Taylors defense attorney, an-
other retired Weapons Ser-
geant, disagreed. He said
Taylor had done the right
thing in choosing to arm him-
self with a .22. If hed used a
.45 or something like that the
round would have gone right
through the perp, the wall, the
neighbors wall and possibly
injured some innocent child
asleep in its bed, he said. I believe the evidence
shows that Smokey Taylor exercised excellent judg-
ment in his choice of weapons. He did nothing
wrong, and clearly remains to this day an excellent
weapons man.
Counsel for the defense then floated a theory as to
why the bullet bounced off the perps forehead. He
was victimized by old ammunition, he said, just as
he was in Korea and again in Vietnam, when his units
were issued ammo left over from World War II. Tay-
lor said nothing in his own defense, choosing instead
to allow his peers to debate the matter. After the trial
he said the ammunition was indeed old and added the
new information that the perp had soiled his pants as
he crawled out of the house. I would have had an
even worse mess to clean up if it had gone through
his forehead, Taylor said. It was good for both of
us that it didnt.
Following testimony from both sides, Taylor was
acquitted of the charges and was given a round of ap-
plause.
Meanwhile, back in Knox County, the word is out:
Dont go messing with Smokey Taylor. He just
bought a whole bunch of fresh ammo
Smokey & the Bandit

27
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
Buy / Lease a New Vehicle from any Beach Blvd of Cars Dealer &
receive a 12 Month Official City of Huntington Beach Parking Pass...
Now that's a statement from a City that says loud and clear...
We Are Open For Business...and support our community partners.
FREE
PARKING
PASS
D
e
t
a
i
l
s
a
t

D
e
a
l
e
r
s
W
o
w
!
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
In-car Navigation
Systems Expected To
Quadruple By 2019
N
avigation systems have been
coming down in price lately,
making in-car directions more
accessible to the masses. At the same
time massive tech companies like
Apple and Microsoft have gotten into
the game as well, and as TheDetroitBu-
reau.com reports, a new study shows
that these forces are converging to
quadruple the systems by 2019.
That's another 13 million nav sys-
tems per year around the world, or 56
million units by 2019. The biggest
gains will likely take place in China,
with sales going from 355,000 to 11.8
million in a decade.
The study unsurprisingly predicts
that navigation systems will also
change considerably during that time,
going from traditional DVD-based
technology to inexpensive in-car sys-
tems and smart phone-based systems
like the upcoming Apple tech that will
be found on future vehicles from Gen-
eral Motors, BMW, Toyota, Audi and
many other OEMs.
Cheaper tech and increased competi-
tion tend to go hand-in-hand, but that
recipe could be toxic for traditional
navigation providers like TomTom and
Garmin. Such companies will need to
rely on ingenuity and smaller margins
to continue to thrive in the more com-
petitive market.
A
California transportation agency recently proposed what could
become the most unpopular tax of all time: A tax for simply
driving your car.
The Metropolitan Transportation Commission of San Francisco is
behind the idea and has said that the tax would work by installing GPS
units into cars to track the miles that they travel. The vehicle owners
would then be charged accordingly, with low-income drivers ex-
empted.
The hope is that a VMT (vehicle miles traveled) tax would cut down
on pollution and traffic congestion, while raising funds fo things like
road construction and surface repair.
Randy Rentschler, spokesman for the MTC, said that the group knew
the proposal could be a longshot and could take a long time to imple-
ment. Theoretically, it could take up to a decade before the plan would
be rolled out in full force.
"I don't want to say it's pie in the sky. A VMT charge is really an op-
tion for the future to be looked at and considered," he said.
Given the very low popularity gas taxes have been met with in the
past, the proposed driving tax seems like a very bold move. Consumers
hate frequently being reminded of taxes when they gas up, but this
VMT charge would take that to a whole new level.
The Association of Bay Area Governments is slated to analyze a
study of the proposal on Thursday.
California residents are sure to watch this one closely.
Thought You
Heard It All?
Tax On the Miles
You Drive
28
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
80lll0 80800
00ll $0000l
a part of the greater HB Union HS District
40+ Years of Service to the
Communities of Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley, and Westminster
isit www.hbas.edu
fer a fuII 8cheduIe ef 0Iasses
we're ere fer euI
80N M8l 08M08I
17231 Gothard St.,
Huntington Beach
92647
(714) 842-HBAS
( - 4 2 2 7 )
(located just south
of Warner and
OV High School)
Also offered:
Adult English as a
Second Language
Exercise (Yoga,
Dance Aerobics,
Low Impact
Aerobics, Zumba)
Brain Fitness
Program for
Older Adults
Art, History,
Personal Finance,
Home Arts,
and other
Leisure Classes
HS Diploma or
GED program
Parent Education
Parent Smart
Preschool and
Toddler Classes
(Parent Education)
We offer job training
in pharmacy
technician, computer
software, digital
media arts, medical
assisting, and other
careers and a
full-time Counselor
who can assist you
in planning for
your future.
M
y father
told me
about a
time when banking
decisions were
made over a con-
versation and
handshake. This
was a time when
relationship meant
something. As a
combined result of
evolutions in sta-
tistics, automation
of credit decisions,
and revamped leg-
islation, the influ-
ence of
relationship in a
mortgage decision
has been brought
down to zero.
Many homeown-
ers falsely assume
their current lender is the best place to go when looking for a refi-
nance. Often times, wrong. When banks make lending decisions it
boils down to three simple components: Income, Credit and Equity.
Recent legislation states banks must give the same terms to all appli-
cants with similar qualifications. Making any concession for one ap-
plicant because they are an existing client and not making the same
concessions for another equally qualified is a Predatory Lending Prac-
tice. Relationships just dont matter.
Ive had a great relationship with my bank. I would not consider
them for a mortgage at this time. When I walk into the branch to de-
posit checks or other business, I see billboard with that days mortgage
rates posted. The same rates they advertise with 1 to 1.25 points in
buy downs plus third party charges. Were typically able to obtain our
clients those same rates with 0 points and occasionally with no closing
costs. Clients can save thousands of dollars by shopping around. Usu-
ally, for those clients who want to pay the same closing costs, shop-
ping around will get rates 0.25% - 0.75% lower than what many banks
advertised. For example, 3.75% - 3.875% fixed for 30 years is a good
rate. But when other lenders are offering 3.375% - 3.5% at the same
cost, which makes more sense?
Ive also
heard some
people say
theyre will-
ing to pay a
little more
because the
assumption
is their current lender will be easier
to work with. This may be partially
true, initially. Oftentimes a current
mortgage lender already has some of
the required documentation making
the initial application simpler. The
average person saves about 20 min-
utes. Considering investing those 20
minutes to obtain the lower rate could
add up to thousands of dollars in sav-
ings over the years, it still doesnt
usually pay to use the current lender.
Even professional athletes dont
make that much as an hourly rate.
The biggest issue is time. If your
current lender is a large bank, its un-
likely your refinance will close in under 60 days. Theoretically, nim-
bler and more competitive lenders can close in under 30 days; the
additional 20 minutes spent upfront can actually save hours of work
and weeks of waiting.
It pays to shop around; especially true with programs that you only
get one shot at such as the HARP program. One of my favorite
quotes: If you dont have the time to do it right the first time, how
will you find the time to do it again?
Do Realationships Matter Anymore?
Arnaud Dufour
Arnaud Dufour
The information contained in this column
does not necessarily reflect
the opinion of The Local News.
Arnaud Dufour is a Sr. Mortgage Banker at
Newport Beach based DLJ Financial.
With more than eleven years in the industry,
Arnaud is available to answer questions in Real Estate Finance.
E-mail: adufour@dljfinancial.com
Call: 714-677-4107.
CA DRE # 01360217 NMLS# 335758
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
once again at this years mens main event.
Simpson, an elite campaigner on the ASP World
Championship Tour (WCT), has built a name for him-
self as one of the nations top surfers due to historic
back-to-back US Open of Surfing victories (2009 and
2010) and is hoping to donate another standout per-
formance this year with the support of the hometown
crowd behind him.
With the Prime status as well as Hurley and Nike
taking it to the next level, it has drawn a lot of the top
guys to come compete in Huntington Beach, Simp-
son said. It is Surf City and it means a lot for the city
when all the guys come to town and get to witness the
top guys shred there local waves. For me its my home
break so it's a very special event, you always want do
well at home and I have had great success over the
past few years.
The talented regular-footer is arguably the most fa-
miliar surfer with the Huntington Beach lineup and
Simpson is hoping to use the comfort that comes along
with competing at his local break to surpass the top
international talent in this years draw.
I think I just have the confidence and the right
equipment from surfing out there on a daily basis,
Simpson said. It makes it a lot easier knowing you
have spent a lot of time preparing and are comfortable.
Plus, being in your own bed is a huge advantage.
Simpson, currently 18th on the ASP WCT, has en-
joyed a break from elite competition after the last
event in Fiji, but is keeping his competitive skills
sharp by competing in South Africa and is hoping to
maintain his focus back to his hometown event.
Well, I am still on the grind competing over here
in South Africa, Simpson said. It makes no sense to
stop when there are good events around the globe with
great points and money. I'm in J Bay at the moment
for the 6 star and the waves are about as good as they
get. I couldn't pass up the opportunity to compete out
here again.
Simpson is one of nearly 30 ASP WCT surfers com-
peting at this years US Open of Surfing, with addi-
tional top names including defending event winner
and 11-time ASP World Champion Kelly Slater
(USA), 40, Australian icons Joel Parkinson (AUS), 31,
and Taj Burrow (AUS), 34, and the likes of elite ASP
WCT rookies John John Florence (HAW), 19, and
Gabriel Medina (BRA), 18.
Running in conjunction with the Nike US Open of
Surfing is the mens and womens ASP 4-Star Nike
US Open Pro Junior. Stop No. 3 of 5 on the mens ASP
North America Pro Junior Series and the first for the
women, the US Open Pro Junior plays a critical role
in surfers qualification campaigns for the ASP World
Junior Tour.
While the mens ASP Prime and Pro Junior events
are guaranteed to provide tons of action, the Nike US
Open of Surfing, owned and operated by IMG, a
global leader in sports and entertainment, is part of a
major action sports festival that includes skateboard-
ing, music, art and more.
Then Mayor Joe Carchio gives coveted Key to Surf
City USA to Brett
That Be Brett, This Be HB, Must Be US Open
Continued from page 1
29
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7









H
O
M
E o
f

7
1
4
.
5
3
6
.
1
1
6
0
Barbecue is our
Specialty
CORPORATE EVENTS
WEDDINGS
PARTIES
Phone: 714.536.1368
Fax: 714.536.1969
Billys Cell: 714.801.9151
(Best way to get me)
www.nakedchickencatering.com
Pizza
Salads
Pasta
Grinders
and Much
More
Sunday thru
Thursday
11AM 9PM
Friday thru
Saturday
11AM 10PM
Sunday thru
Thursday
11AM 9PM
Friday thru
Saturday
11AM 10PM
Mondays Only
BBQ Pulled Pork
Sandwich With Fries
Get 2nd for only 99
Save $6.25 with this coupon Offer expires 9-30-12
Wednesdays Only
6 Large Meat or
Cheese Ravioli
with 2 Meat Balls and Garlic Bread
Buy 1 and get 2nd for only 99

Fridays Only
Billys Large Philly
Cheese Steak Sandwich
Get 2nd for only 99
Tuesdays Only
Any 16 Large
Pizza with 3 toppings
$9.00
Thursdays Only
What The Others
Call Large 14 Pizza
4 Toppings$5.00
Saturdays Only
Any 14Specialty Pizza
5 different pizzas to choose from
$9.00
Sundays Only
FAMILY DAY:
16 Pizza with 3 Toppings
2 Orders of Spaghetti or Penne Pasta,
4 Garlic Bread & 2 Liters of Coke
$
7
.
2
5
2
n
d
9
9

$
9
S
a
v
e
$
59
9
$
2
1
9
5
S
A
V
E
1
6

P
i
z
z
a
S
a
v
e $
5
.
7
5
$
7
.
2
5
2
n
d
9
9

$
6
.
5
0
2
n
d
9
9

S
a
v
e
$
59
9
Reg. $14.75. Save $5.75 with this coupon Offer expires 9-30-12
Save $5.50 with this coupon Offer expires 9-30-12
Reg. $10.99. Save $5.99 with this coupon Offer expires 9-30-12
Save $6.25 with this coupon Offer expires 9-30-12
Reg $15.99. Save $5.99 with this coupon Offer expires 9-30-12
Reg. $27.55. Save $5.60 with this coupon Offer expires 9-30-12
No Limit
No Limit
No Limit
No Limit
No Limit
No Limit
Weekly Specials Weekly Specials
O
P
E
N
7

D
A
Y
S
Pizza
Salads
Pasta
Grinders
and Much
More
$
5
.
0
0
7
1
4
.
5
3
6
.
1
1
6
0
F
a
x
:

7
1
4
.
5
3
6
.
1
9
6
9
1
9
9
1
3

B
e
a
c
h

B
l
v
d
.

H
B


B
e
a
c
h

B
l
v
d
.

A
t

A
d
a
m
s
(
B
e
h
i
n
d

E
c
o
n
o

L
u
b
e

N

T
u
n
e
)
No Limit
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
30
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
NORM REEVES HONDA
HUNTINGTON BEACH
(
888
)
407-8362
22
405
5
ADAMS
Orange
55 57
Tustin
Mission
Viejo
Newport
Costa Mesa
.
D
V
L
B

H
C
A
E
B
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
P. C. H
.
Huntington B each
NormReevesHB.com
PRE-OWNED PRICED RIGHT
HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES





WE NEED YOUR TRADE-IN
Hondas have the best trade-in value of any make out there. Were prepared to give you the highest value for yours.

$
6,944
*
VIN#537618-986360 ONE ONLY

$
9,943
*
VIN#742920-986362 ONE ONLY

$
11,843
*
VIN#024774-986337 ONE ONLY

$
11,913
*
VIN#031461-986361 ONE ONLY

$
13,410
*
VIN#029230-986294 ONE ONLY

$
13,899
*
VIN#007756-986286 ONE ONLY

$
13,947
*
VIN#297301-986393 ONE ONLY

$
13,989
*
VIN#207258-986369 ONE ONLY

$
14,515
*
VIN#074739-986399 ONE ONLY

$
14,590
*
VIN#017269-986354 ONE ONLY

$
14,614
*
VIN#080296-986340 ONE ONLY
CERTIFIED
$
20,990
*
VIN#001272-986356 ONE ONLY
AWARD WINNING
CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED HONDAS

SE HABLA
ESPAOL
CHNG TI NI
TING VIT




































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































AW AAW AW


































AAR A WWA WA


































RD W R


































WIN IN W


































INNIN IN


































ING


































WW AAW AW
CER CERTT CER CER CERT CERT


































Fncncn cc n cc n FF
7 yyecr JJ r cc e yye y 77 7
1 00peee pp 00 555 1
WAR A WWA WA
TIFIED ED ED F T


































ng cs | ww cs 1% APk PP AA % . 1 cc w eeew ew e | cc g n
J10 ,0000m|e |mIedd e IIe m | | m 0 00 00 , 000 00 1 J
nI mechcn ccc| cnd cpp cc d n cc cc cc n cc hh cc e m n
RD W R
PRE-O R P


































k |er 44 3 menIhs, eee , ss, hh I n ee m 333 44 22 r ee || k
d p wwer Ircn wcrrcnII n cc rr r cc wwc w cc rrc rc r I r e wwe we w eeew ew e pp d
ppecrcnce nspecI een. n ee II cc e pp s n cc n cc rrc r cc e pp pp
WIN IN W
WWNED ED W OOOW OW


































n se|ecI eede|s, en cpp cc ee ss, s, | e dd ee mm cc e | e s
Iy see dec eer eer wrIIe I I rr ww r ee ||| r e || cc e dd e e ss y I
INNIN IN
ED OON HH


































ppr vved credI. II. dd e rr cc d e vve v eeev ev e rr pp pp
** **
en ee yy. yy. y pppy py ppy ee ccc e
ING
AAS AAS DDDA DA


































WE


































NEED
4 6 62 8 9 - 1 2 8 1 0 7 # N I V
. l y , 4 C L 0 . , 2 d e i t r e , C l a u n a M
i S C I IV C
A DDA N O 0 H 1 0 2
*
49 4 , 99, 1
$


































YOUR NEED
m o t u A
CR
0 2
21
$


































TR YOUR
6 4 63 8 9 - 8 4 6 8 0 0 # N I V
. l y , 6 C L 5 . , 3 d e i t r e , C c i t a m
X E R U O T S S O CR CRO
A DDA N O 0 H 1 0
*
87 9 , 21


































ADE-IN TR
e , C l a u n a M
C I IV C
2 H 1 0 2
23
$


































ADE-IN
3 1 63 8 9 - 6 8 4 0 0 7 # N I V
. l y , 4 C L 4 . , 2 d e i t r e
i S C
A DDA N O 2 H
*
6 94 , 23 23,


































Hondas have the best trade-in value of any make out there. W
WE


































Hondas have the best trade-in value of any make out there. W
NEED


































Hondas have the best trade-in value of any make out there. W
YOUR NEED


































ere prepared to give you the highest value for yours. Hondas have the best trade-in value of any make out there. W
TR YOUR


































ere prepared to give you the highest value for yours.
ADE-IN TR


































ere prepared to give you the highest value for yours.
ADE-IN


































Y VIN#029230-986294 ONE ONL VIN#029230-986294 ONE ONLY
EX CIVIC HONDA 07
Y VIN#031461-986361 ONE ONL VIN#031461-986361 ONE ONLY
ACCORD HONDA 04
Y VIN#024774-986337 ONE ONL VIN#024774-986337 ONE ONLY
Y SSE Y OD HONDA 04
Y VIN#742920-986362 ONE ONL VIN#742920-986362 ONE ONLY
2500 RAM DODGE 03
Y VIN#537618-986360 ONE ONL VIN#537618-986360 ONE ONLY
Y SSE Y OD HONDA 01


































......................................................................... EX
...................................................................... EX ACCORD
.................................................................. EX Y
................................................................. T SL SLT 2500
..................................................................... EX Y


































VIN#080296-986340 ONE ONL
06
VIN#017269-986354 ONE ONL
08
VIN#074739-986399 ONE ONL
05
VIN#207258-986369 ONE ONL
04
VIN#297301-986393 ONE ONL
09
*
410 , 13
$
.........................................................................
*
13 9 , 11
$
......................................................................
*
843 , 11
$
..................................................................
*
3 94 , 99,
$
.................................................................
*
944 , 66,
$
.....................................................................


































Y VIN#080296-986340 ONE ONL VIN#080296-986340 ONE ONLY
............................................................. L - EX Y SSE Y OD HONDA 06
Y VIN#017269-986354 ONE ONL VIN#017269-986354 ONE ONLY
....................................................................... EX CIVIC HONDA 08
Y VIN#074739-986399 ONE ONL VIN#074739-986399 ONE ONLY
.............................................................. L - EX Y SSE Y OD HONDA 05
Y VIN#207258-986369 ONE ONL VIN#207258-986369 ONE ONLY
................................................................ XLE SIENNA A OT OTA Y TO 04
Y VIN#297301-986393 ONE ONL VIN#297301-986393 ONE ONLY
........................................................................................ C t SCION 09


































$
.............................................................
$
.......................................................................
$
..............................................................
$
................................................................
$
........................................................................................


































*
14 6 , 14
$
*
590 , 14
*
15 5 , 14
$
*
9 98 , 13
$
*
7 94 , 13


































Y VIN#007756-986286 ONE ONL VIN#007756-986286 ONE ONLY
ACCORD HONDA 07
Y VIN#029230-986294 ONE ONL VIN#029230-986294 ONE ONLY
A L B HA E S


































NORM
.............................................................. L - EX ACCORD
A


































EEVES HO R NORM
VIN#001272-986356 ONE ONL
09
VIN#080296-986340 ONE ONL
*
899 , 13
$
..............................................................


































DA N EEVES HO
Y VIN#001272-986356 ONE ONL VIN#001272-986356 ONE ONLY
ERTIFIED C GX CIVIC HONDA 09
Y VIN#080296-986340 ONE ONL VIN#080296-986340 ONE ONLY


































5 57
L
VV
L
D
.
20
$
................................................ ERTIFIED


































e Orang
55
*
990 , 20


































d e i f i t r e c t c e l e s n o e l b a l i a v a g n i c n a n i f m r e t
*All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, any dealer document processing charge, any elect
OL A PPA S E
A L B HA E S
IT V G N TI
N G TI N CH


































888
(
19131 BEACH BL
N U H
NORM
P A % 9 . 1 . t i d e r c d e v o r p p a n o s l e d o m d e n w o - e r p
*All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, any dealer document processing charge, any elect
A
IT
I N


































7 0 4
)
888
UNTINGTON BEACH, H VD., 19131 BEACH BL 19131 BEACH BLVD.,
N GTO N TI N
EEVES HO R NORM
d e n w o - e r p t c e l e s n o s h t n o m 6 3 r o f g n i c n a n i f R P
ronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. *All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, any dealer document processing charge, any elect


































2 836 - 77-
92648 CA UNTINGTON BEACH,
H BEAC N
DA N EEVES HO
n a n i f 0 0 0 , 1 $ r e p h t n o m r e p 0 6 . 8 2 $ s i s l e d o m d
c i h e l v l A ronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge.


































92648
H
22
405
ADAMS
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
Costa Mesa
A
B
E
A
C
H
BB
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
H
.
C.
P. F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
/12. 31 / 7 Expires . d e c n
f b e o s o l e c r i p x s e r e f f . O e l a r s o i r o p t t c e j b u s s e l c


































F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
e Orang
Costa Mesa
rt Newpo
iejo V
Mission
ustin T
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
F
A
I
R
V
I
E
W
h c a e B n to g tin n u H
t r o h R s P % A 9 . * 1 . * 2 /1 31 / 7 s s e n i s u f b
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7
31
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
Call
Now
All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, any dealer document
preparation charge, and any emission testing charge. Financing in lieu of factory rebates for all advertised
vehicles. *Must finance through Ford Credit Motor Company to Qualify. All dealer added accessories at
retail price. Offer good through close of business Monday 02/12/12. Photos for illustration purposes only.
888-548-5527
18255 Beach Boulevard
Huntington Beach, California
32
D
i
g
i
t
a
l

C
o
p
y
:

w
w
w
.
M
y
H
B
G
o
l
d
.
c
o
m


v
i
s
i
t

S
u
r
f
e
r
s
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
.
c
o
m
T
h
e

L
o
c
a
l

N
e
w
s
,

J
u
l
y

1
5
,

2
0
1
2



h
b
n
e
w
s
1
@
a
o
l
.
c
o
m


7
1
4
.
9
1
4
.
9
7
9
7

También podría gustarte