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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22 - OCTOBER 28, 2009 VOLUME 14, NO.85
Natalie Anne Innocenzi, 16, is captured in the moments following the announcement made Tuesday morning at Tournament House in Pasadena proclaiming the Arcadia teenager Rose Queen for 2010. Innocenzi, who attends Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy is the 92nd Rose Queen and will preside over the 121st Rose Parade on New Year’s Day. For more photos and details of the announcement see page 13. -Photos by Terry Miller
Arcadia’s Natalie Innocenzi Selected as 2010 Rose Queen
City Pride at Stake: Delay May Risk Integrity of Baldwin Adobe BY BILL PETERS
This photo shows the adobe structure and the attached Baldwin annex that served as the home of Arcadia’s first mayor. Elias J. “Lucky” Baldwin occupied this home from 1875 to his death in 1909. The photo was taken in 1939, nine years before the property became (subsequently) the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden. - Photo from the Arcadia Public Library collection
As you read this, the adobe structure located on the grounds of the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden in Arcadia continues to deteriorate. And its condition is of grave concern to many at the County, Arboretum volunteers and a growing number of Arcadians. Believing that the adobe might actually crumble, a group of Arcadians have begun to rally support for a project to restore not only
the adobe, but rebuild Elias J. “Lucky” Baldwin’s homestead, an effort they see as returning the founder and first mayor of Arcadia to his rightful place in the City’s history. Within the walls of the adobe, Baldwin signed city incorporation papers in 1903 and it is the place he died in 1909. The city’s history took a jolt when research turned up a shocking piece of news: the adobe in the historic collection at the Los Angeles Coun-
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Hundreds Turn Out for Health Reform Rally Twenty-Fifth Annual Fall Food & Wine Festival Vigil Held at Pasadena City Hall Monday
-Photo By Terry Miller
In an event celled “Remembering The Faces”, 150 plus area residents representing various interfaith Pasadena-area congregations marched and held vigil to mourn the 45,000+ people who die every year for lack of affordable health care. These local citizens, who believe that the health insurance system is broken and in need of reform, gathered at Pasadena City Hall Monday night and listened to speakers including a local doctor named Donald Thomas, who practices at Huntington Hos-
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Benefits Huntington Hospital’s Trauma Unit
-Photo By Terry Miller
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A Terrible Thing: Strangled Woman Delivered to Monrovia P.D.
Caruso to Drop Lawsuit against City, Westfield
BY SUSAN MOTANDER
It had been a relatively quiet Friday night for the Monrovia Police Department. Then Guillermo Marinero, 28, walked into the lobby and told the desk personnel, “I think I did a terrible thing.” Marinero had parked his car in front of the station and inside was Theresa Cardoza, his girlfriend. She had been strangled. Monrovia Police officers attempted to revive the 28 year old even using the Automatic External Defibrillator unit now regular equipment for the department. Monrovia Fire Department paramedics continued the attempt to revive the young woman to no avail. She was pronounced dead. Marinero was arrested. On Tuesday he was arraigned on one count of first degree murder with the enhancement alleging the “personal use of a deadly weapon” according to Sgt. Jim Gates of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Homicide Bureau. Among other things Marinero told police, he indicated that the argument with Cardoza had taken place in the 2400 block of South Myrtle Avenue in the unincorporated section south of Monrovia.
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Harbicht: Developers Guilty of Misusing Environmental Laws BY SAMEEA KAMAL
According to a letter sent to the city by the Westfield Vice President, the corporation has decided to withdraw its request to convert 13,500
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Yet Another Lawsuit Beleaguers Against Sierra Madre PD Ja son Jensen, 4 6, is seeking damages in federal court after a Sierra Madre police officer shot him. The incident occurred in the back of a vehicle officers impounded not realizing there was a person inside. The officer, Henry Amos was caught by surprise when he found Jensen sleeping in the back of the hatchback after the vehicle had been towed to the Sierra Madre Police dept. Amos fired his service weapon at Jensen as
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