July 26, 2018 Page 5
Pizza, Pasta & More VALENTINO S
“A Taste of Brooklyn”
Spaghetti with Meat Sauce,
Garden Salad, Garlic Bread,
Plus Tax
Restaurants
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El Segundo Restaurant Guide
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HAPPY HOUR
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Seasonal Burger
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Monday – Friday
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El Segundo Herald
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HAPPY HOUR
Craft Drinks
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Signature Sips
Seasonal Burger
All Fries
Monday – Friday
3:00-6:30 p.m.
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May 24, 2018 Page 16
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HAPPY HOUR
Restaurant Name Restaurant Name
Restaurant Name
Craft Drinks
Wine
Signature Sips
Seasonal Burger
All Fries
Monday – Friday
3:00-6:30 p.m.
Restaurant Name
Restaurant Name
Restaurant Name
#’s
1440 Bistro and Bar: 1440 E. Imperial Ave.
A Aristo Cafe: 310 E. Grand Ave.
B
Bad Sushi: 357 Main St.
Blue Butterfly Coffee Co: 351 Main St.
Beach Mex: 409 E. Grand Ave.
Big Mike’s Philly Steaks: 507 Main St.
Bread & Butter: 630 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Britt’s BBQ and Catering: 408 Main St
Brewport Tap House: 204 Main St.
C Cafe Vida: 2250 Park Pl.
California Fish Grill: 730 S Allied Way
Canton Low: 439 Main St.
Charley’s Philly Steak: 488 N.Aviation Blvd.
Chef Hannes Restaurant: 411 Main St.
Chicken Dijon: 251 Main St.
Chipotle: 307 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
D
Deluca Trattoria: 225 Richmond St.
E
East Grand Bar and Grille: 1985 E. Grand Ave.
El Gringo: 422 Main St.
El Pollo Loco: 630 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
El Segundo Beach Cafe: 12501 Vista Del Mar
El Segundo Fish: 210 E. Grand Ave.
El Tarasco: 210 Main St.
Ensenada’s Surf N Turf Grill: 310 E. Grand Ave.
F Fantastic Cafe: 410 Main St.
Farmer Boy: 2161 E. El Segundo Blvd.
Five Guys: 460 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Flemings Prime Steakhouse:
2301 Rosecrans Ave 90245
G
Grimaldi’s Pizzeria: 2121 Rosecrans Ave.
Good Stuff: 131 W. Grand Ave.
H
Hana Haru: 409 Main St.
Havana Sandwich Co.: 229 Main St.
HopDoddy Burger Bar: 830 S Sepulveda Blvd.
Houston’s: 1550 Rosecrans Ave
I
IHOP: 755 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
il Romanista: 829 N. Douglas St.
I Love Teriyaki: 130 Main St.
In - N- Out: 600 Sepulveda Blvd.
Indian Summer Grill: 958 Main St.
J Jackson’s: 2041 Rosecrans Ave.
Jersey Mike’s Subs: 530 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
K
Kagura: 403 Main St.
Kaya Sushi: 2251 E. Maple Ave.
Kings Cove: 555 N. Nash St.
L
L & L Hawaiian Barbecue: 954 N. Main St.
La Paz Restaurant: 514 Center St.
Lido di Manhattan Ristorante & Bar:
1550 Rosecrans Ave
Lil’ Simmzy’s: 850 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Little Gourmet: 117 Main St.
M
Main Street Cafe: 450 Main St.
Maki Yaki: 100 W. Imperial Ave.
Malibu Eatery: 400 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Marmalade Cafe: 2014 Park Pl.
Mandovi Indian Cuisine: 150 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Melt Gelato & Crepe Cafe: 730 Allied Way
Mendocino Farms: 840 Sepulveda Blvd.
N
Noah’s Bagels: 821 N. Douglas St.
North Italia: 840 S Sepulveda Blvd.
O
Old Town Patio: 115 Richmond St.
One Poke: 2259 E. Maple Ave
P P.F. Changs: 2141 Rosecrans Ave.
Paul Martin’s American Grill: 2361 Rosecrans Ave
Petit Cafe: 630 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Petros Kafe: 131 W. Grand
Pho Dreams: 413 Main St.
Pizza Rev: 460 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Poke Bar: 2161 E. El Segundo Blvd.
R r.e.d. Bar Grill: 222 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Richmond Bar & Grill: 145 Richmond St.
Rock & Brews: 143 Main St
Rubio’s Coastal Grill: 400 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
SS
abra Beirut Mix: 400 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Salt Creek Grille: 2015 Park Pl
Samosa House: 700 S. Allied Way
Sammy’s Woodfired Pizza and Grill:
780 S. Sepulveda
SanSai: 630 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Sausal: 219 Main St.
Shake Shack: 2171 Rosecrans Ave.
Siam Bay Thai: 130 E. Grand Ave.
Second City Bistro: 223 Richmond St.
Specialty’s Cafe & Bakery:
2101 E. El Segundo Blvd.
Sticks & Straws: 310 E. Grand Ave.
Superba Food + Bread: 830 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Sushi Avenue: 130 Grand Ave.
T Tender Greens: 2181 A. Rosecrans Ave.
The 2nd Bar and Restaurant:
760 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
The Boat: 150 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
The Habit Burger Grill: 311 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
The Hummus Factory: 204 E. Grand Ave.
The Hummus Republic: 827 N. Douglas St.
The Original Rinaldi’s: 323 Main St.
The Standard Station: 226 Standard St.
The Tavern on Main: 123 Main St.
Tin Roof Bistro: 3500 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
True Food Kitchen: 860 S Sepulveda Blvd.
Two Guns Kitchen: 321 Main St.
U
Umi by Hamasaku: 860 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
V Valentino’s Pizza: 150 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Vinny’s Pizza: 310 E. Grand Ave.
Veggie Grill: 720 S Allied Ways
W Waikiki Hawaiian Grill: 243 Main St.
Wendy’s Place: 107 W. Grand Ave.
Which Wich: 460 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
WikiWiki Hawaiian BBQ: 630 N. Sepulveda Blvd.
Restaurant Name
week
Restaurant Name
week
Restaurant Name
El Segundo
Restaurant Guide
Restaurant Name
week
Restaurant Name
RESTAURANTS
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For every advertiser that buys four ads, the El Segundo Herald will buy a
$10 gift card, from the advertiser, to give to our “Food Quiz” winner.
Advertisers to Buy Squares
Call or Email Us 310.322.1830
marketing@heraldpublications.com
Food Quiz
Email your answers (or guesses) to web@heraldpublications.com. You will
automatically qualify for our free drawing. Random emails will be picked and
the winner(s) will win a weekly gift card.
Congratulations to Drew Janner for winning last week’s drawing.
He correctly answered last week’s quiz: What is Welsh Rarebit?
Drew’s answer: Welsh rarebit is made with a tasty sauce of melted cheese plus
other ingredients and served hot after being poured over slices of toasted bread.
A cost effective way to promote your
restaurant to El Segundo residents and
businesses on a weekly basis.
You Give, We Give Back
For every advertiser that buys four
ads, the El Segundo Herald will buy a
$10 gift card, from the advertiser, to give
to our “Food Quiz” winner.
Food Quiz
Every week the Herald will publish a
restaurant or food based quiz. Readers
that email their answers (or guesses)
to web@heraldpublications.com. will
automatically qualify for our free drawing.
Random emails will be picked and the
winner(s) will get your gift card.
To Sign Up
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• DELIVERY IN LIMITED AREA AT BOTH LOCATIONS •
Voting from front page School Board from front page
primaries or fall general elections. The time
to vote is short, polling places are out of the
way, and people who either forget to register
or have moved are locked out by the rules.
That’s about to change.
Starting in 2020, when and where people vote
will be completely different. No longer will a
resident be required to vote in his or her
city. In fact, any resident of a South Bay
city -- or Los Angeles County -- can cast
a ballot or register over 11 days in any city
they choose. This innovative voter project is
expected to be in place for the Nov. 3, 2020
general election when a president and a new
Congress are chosen.
Election officials are replacing one-day
polling centers with Vote Centers, which
will be close to transit lines and worksites
where eligible county residents can walk in
and cast a ballot, according to spokeswoman
Brenda Duran with the Los Angeles County
Registrars-County Clerk’s office. A center
might be located in a storefront along a busy
boulevard like Sepulveda/Pacific Coast Highway
or a traffic artery like Aviation used by
residents of the beach cities.
A large employer, like Boeing or DirectTV,
may qualify for a Vote Center if people from
outside the business can vote there, too. “Both
types of businesses may work if they can satisfy
critical factors such as accessibility and are
convenient to voters,” Duran said.
Mail-in balloting won’t be going away in
2020. Election officials say they are determined
to remove some of the other obstacles that
keep people from exercising a basic right of
citizenship. Transportation and time to vote are
among the highest hurdles that need to come
down, which is why the Los Angeles County
Registrar of Voters and County Clerk launched
a voter-centered approach to voting, or VSAP.
The effort started nearly a decade ago.
Innovation with the election process has its
limits. A home would not qualify as a Vote
Center because it’s not accessible to enough
people, according to Duran. But the area’s
shopping malls might, if the property owners
caught the vision and agreed.
There is a time commitment for those who
do. Vote Centers must open 10 days before
the 2020 election day.
There is a formula for how many Vote
Centers South Bay cities will get. The math
goes like this:
-- Ten days before Election Day, one voting
center will be open for every 30,000 people
registered. That means a minimum of one
for El Segundo and Lawndale, and two for
Inglewood and Hawthorne.
-- Three days before Election Day, a Vote
Center will be in operation for every 7,500
eligible voters. This guarantees Inglewood
eight voting places and four for Hawthorne.
Lawndale and El Segundo, with 13,593 and
11.492 registered voters apiece, would have two.
Where those centers will be located is now
being decided. The County’s elections office is
asking the public’s help with placing the Vote
Centers. Anyone can suggest a Vote Center
location and view how the voting landscape is
shaping up across the county ahead of 2020.
Go to http://www.placeworkscivic.com/project/
lacovcpp to nominate a place and answer
a few questions about why it would make a
convenient location with good public access.
The questionnaire indicates the County wants
sites near public transportation routes and that
are handicapped accessible and offer plenty
of parking. Poll workers also need reliable
Wi-Fi service.
The longer 11-day window to cast a walk-up
ballot means fewer polling places are needed,
according to Duran. No worries – it’s a fair
tradeoff because there is more flexibility and
time to cast ballots, including Saturdays and
Sundays. County election officials expect to
have 800 to 1,000 Vote Centers up and running
for the 2020 general election. •
The Board revealed an outline of the
District’s 5-year strategic plan and noted the
full 94-page document can be viewed online.
Director of Human Resources Nora Roque
said an administrative retreat is planned for
Aug. 1, and the plan will be rolled out to
teachers at the start of the school year.
In public comments, Chris Graeber, a union
rep for classified workers, took exception to
agenda item 5, questioning administrative
positions being hired. Graber said no classified
workers are being hired, and noted that
with the November general election there
is likely to be a new state superintendent.
“Our question is,” said Graeber speaking
for the union, “there’s no money, but people
get raises? [You] say the HR department is
doing well, but we don’t see it.”
A teacher and union rep questioned hiring
practices and executive salaries, saying
employees are “severely underpaid. We are
only here to make the District better. [You]
have to make it transparent and not go back
and forth.”
A parent, Mario Sanchez, whose daughter
attends Morningside High, addressed
the Doard to express disappointment with
leadership. Sanchez asked the Board to look
into a teacher who is failing whole classes
at the high school.
A representative from Autumn Burke’s office
announced the annual Back to School and
Wellness Fair. The assemblywoman sponsors
the annual event, to be held at Crozier Middle
School in Inglewood, Aug. 11 at 10:30 a.m.
The Inglewood School Board meets once
monthly, unless otherwise noted. The next
meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Aug.
8, at 5:30 p.m. at 401 S. Inglewood Ave., in
the Dr. Ernest Shaw Board Room. •
Facilities and Maintenance staff is commended by the Inglewood School Board for a year of unprecedented improvements at schools
throughout the district.