Rose Magazine

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GRAND MARSHAL Meet ‘Sully’ Sullenberger, hero pilot of Flight 1549

A CUT ABOVE THE REST

PARADE

2010

magazine

ROSE PASADENA’S

ROSE BOWL

Oregon and Ohio State in ‘The Granddaddy of Them All’

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ULTIMATE GUIDE

Everything to see and do on Colorado Blvd. and beyond

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THE PARADE | THE PAGEANTRY | THE GAME




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Cross the bridge to a prosperous New Year. The legendary Rose Parade celebrates the beginning of the New Year. It’s a tradition that East West Bank is proud to be a part of. Headquartered with a full-service banking center in the heart of Pasadena, East West Bank is the largest independent bank in Southern California. Our strength and success come from people and businesses in the community that have placed their faith in us. To find out what financial opportunities lay ahead for you in the New Year, visit us in Pasadena or at any one of our 111 California branch locations. Join us today as we celebrate the tradition of the Rose Parade, welcoming in a bright and promising 2010.

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Pulling Together L e t ’ s

A l l R e c y c l e

The Sanitation Districts of Los Angeles County Since 1990, the Sanitation Districts of Los Angeles County have offered a special Christmas Tree Recycling Program as part of the green waste recovery program at the Puente Hills, Scholl Canyon, Calabasas Landfills and Downey Area Recycling & Transfer (DART).This program is provided at no cost to registered cities and unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County. Last year, this successful program collected over 350,000 trees for recycling as landfill cover, mulch, and compost. You can do your part by removing all plastic containers, metal stands and bars, ornaments, and as much tinsel as possible. Flocked trees or trees coated with a fire retardant are acceptable. Contact your city’s recycling coordinator for more information or call our 24-hour Christmas Tree Recycling Program Hotline at (562) 908-4288, extension 2449.

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WE ARE READY FOR SOME FOOTBALL



IT'S TIME FOR A...

LOS ANGELES FOOTBALL STADIUM

Los Angeles is rich in sports history and tradition. While we can claim some of the most legendary athletes, storied franchises, world class facilities and great moments in sports, it’s been fifteen years since the last professional football game was played in Los Angeles. Los Angeles Stadium will be a state-of-the-art facility, home to a professional football team and the place where the next chapter in our proud sports history will be written.


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“Sports are a part of the fabric of every great city. The Los Angeles Stadium will create jobs, economic opportunity, pride and put the professional football spirit back in the greater Los Angeles Community.” –Ed Roski, Jr.

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www.LosAngelesFootballStadium.com


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Los Angeles Stadium The stadium is designed to accommodate 75,000 fans, with 12,500 club seats, 176 luxury suites and on-site executive offices, practice and game day facilities for our new professional football franchise. It can be expanded to 80,000 seats to enable Los Angeles to host the Super Bowl.


Design Maximizes the Game Day Experience The stadium is designed to have the finest amenities for the general admission fan and the corporate and individual suite and club seat holder. The stadium, team facilities and the nearly 3 million square feet of entertainment, retail and restaurants will be themed around the professional football league and will create a destination for all visitors to Los Angeles from around the country and the Pacific Rim.

Perfect location Los Angeles Stadium is the ideal location for the next Southern California franchise. It is centrally located in the heart of the greater Los Angeles region. This strategic site is within a one hour drive of 15.5 million people with convenient access to freeways, mass transit and parking. It is the one place that works for all of Southern California!


“It’s about time we get a football team back to Los Angeles...the importance of this stadium goes way beyond football and way beyond sports, because it creates 18,000 jobs at a time when we really need jobs.” - Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger


Stadium Statistics

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Personal banking is back in the neighborhood. At OneWest Bank, expect a full range of financial solutions customized to fit your lifestyle – from convenient checking and savings options to home loans up to $10 million. We invite you to experience exceptional banking, one person at a time.

Stop by your local branch or call 1.800.600.6405 today. www.owb.com Š 2009 OneWest Bank, FSB Registered trade/service marks are property of OneWest Bank, FSB and /or its subsidiaries. FDIC insured. Not all applicants will qualify for financing. Make sure you understand the loan program you choose, and that its features meet your specific financial needs.


magazine FEATURES 20 INSIDER 10 questions for incoming TofR head R. Scott McKibben

22 PEOPLE PLEASERS It takes people to put on a great parade. Meet some of the best

BEST BETS 102 GO

Grand Marshal ‘Sully’ Sullenberger at the controls

Mushroom blooms, author appearances and the best of the art scene

63 SHADES OF GRAY

108 THINK

32 FLIGHT DECK

The Royal Court goes noir at Pasadena Central Library

76 ROSE BOWL Oregon vs. Ohio State: Breaking down ‘The Granddaddy of Them All’

97 THE DOO DAH DAY There’s only one rule: There are no rules, when it comes to Doo dah

106 HOPPING MAD Inside the quirky Bunny Museum

110 ASTRONOMICAL The scientific year in review

DEPARTMENTS 120 SHOP Block shopping on Green Street, a pop-up gem and Pasadena’s own Rodarte

128 EAT ‘Top Chef’ winner Michael Voltaggio’s takes command of the kitchen at Langham’s The Dining Room

14 | ROSEPARADE2010

The Large Hadron Collider, interstellar photographs and a design revolution

144 PLAY The Wine Detective is on the case

58 97 110 128 144


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470 West Walnut, Pasadena Call 626.577.1660 for Holiday hours Exhibit admission: $5; children under 12 free www.pasadenahistory.org


magazine

ROSE

VOLUME 2, ISSUE 1

Publisher: Steve Lambert steve.lambert@inlandnewspapers.com Editor: Pia Abelgas Orense pia.orense@sgvn.com Assistant Editor: Evelyn Barge evelyn.barge@sgvn.com Calendar Editor: Emma Gallegos emma.gallegos@sgvn.com

Contributing Editors: Catherine Gaugh, Hector Gonzalez, Steve Hunt, Larry Wilson Photo Editor: Bernardo Alps Writers: Lafayette C. Hight, Jr. Richard Irwin, Claudia S. Palma, Jim McConnell, Michelle Mills, Steve Ramirez, Eric Terrazas, Stacey Wang, Janette Williams Photographers: Keith Birmingham, Leo Jarzomb, Walt Mancini, Watchara Phomicinda, Eric Reed, Sarah Reingewirtz Copy editors: James Figueroa, Peter Fullam, Kate Kealey, Mark Kougher, Jim Zvonec Designers: Evelyn Barge, Mary Roy, Pia Orense Photo toning: Mark Quarles, Chris Core Advertising Manager: Jesse Dillon Sales Executives: Mercedes Abara, Rose Acosta Hara Alarcon, Susan Behrens, Alyssa Bertness, Tamara Casanave, Jose Luis Correa, Mary Dingledine, Sherry Frank, Francios Fundora, Rosie Gallardo, Sonya Gibson, Bethany Gilbert Jones, David Grant, Lissa Horne, Beverly Johnson, Candace Klewer, Patty Knebel, Gerhard Kramer, Chris Lancaster, Jennifer Lopez, Diana Martinez, Robin McDonald, Tim Mohawk, Rick Ochoa, Karyn Porter, Irene Ramirez, Ralph Ringgold, Stephanie Rosencrantz, Racquel Sanchez, Margie Sevillano, Melissa Six, Tanya Stroman, Chris Stathousis, John Thompson, Andrea Vega, Leonor Velasquez, Candace Weber, Stephanie White-Wynn Sales Assistants: Peter Barrios, Kim Eshoo, Amanda Settlage Advertising Graphic Design/ Production Coordinator: Christie Robinson Advertising Graphic Design: David Abrego, Pedro Garcia, Mary Roy, Kathy Cox Turteltaub

CONTACT US: Editorial: (626) 962-8811, Ext. 2669 or Ext. 2472 therose@sgvn.com Advertising: (626) 578-6300, Ext. 4466 jesse.dillon@sgvn.com 911 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91109 www.therosemag.com Copyright 2010 Rose Magazine. No part of this magazine may be reproduced without the consent of the publisher. Rose Magazine is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts, photos or artwork even if accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Printed by Southwest Offset Printing

16 | ROSEPARADE2010 PasStarNews_Rose_NYDAY_outline.indd 1

12/10/09 4:52:49 PM


NOTE FROM THE EDITOR

Heroes in our lives PIA ABELGAS ORENSE

FOR FOUR HOURS ON NEW YEAR’S DAY, THE WORLD SEES A PARADE OF BEAUTIFUL FLOATS AND A MORNING GLOWING with Southern California’s gorgeous sunshine. To us who live and work in Pasadena and the San Gariel Valley, we see beyond the parade and pageantry. We know the Tournament of Roses is about communities and the hundreds of volunteers who put in countless hours of hard work. To us, this parade celebrates people. Not celebrities. Just ordinary folks who give so much to their communities without need for fame or reward. Any one of has the potential to be a hero. Sometimes it takes one unexpected moment, one millisecond in a day that drastically changes the course of people’s lives. This year’s grand marshal, Capt. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger III, had one of those grand transformations. By the afternoon of Jan. 15, 2009, he was no longer a quiet, unassuming pilot from Northern California. He had become a hero to the world. Sometimes a heroic act changes the course of history. The Tuskegee Airmen being honored by the West Covina Rose Float Foundation defended not just freedom and democracy during World War II. They fought for the freedom and civil rights of every person in America. And then there are those selfless moments that affect one person in such a profound way that it

ROSE magazine

causes a “pay it forward” motion. Ask anybody whose life has been affected by organ donation, particularly those participating in Donate Life’s float, and they will tell you that good things do come out of tragedy. For the Tournament of Roses, the heroes are the people who work behind the scenes. You’ll meet some of them in this issue — from a volunteer who puts petals on floats to the committee chairman who ensures the parade goes according to schedule. One volunteer describes the process as “madness” — she says it fondly, of course. And we, the staff of the Rose Magazine, can attest to that madness. We wanted to re-create the float-building process by translating a digitally designed page into a threedimensional organic “float,” which you can see on Page 12. It took days of planning, two visits to the flower district in downtown Los Angeles, 15 solid hours of cutting and gluing flowers, several iPod playlists, and moments of intense labor tempered by bouts of giddiness brought on by exhaustion. By the 15th hour of our decorating marathon, I had fully embraced this year’s parade theme. As I looked at the co-workers I had been stuck in a small room with the whole day, our fingers dry, chapped and stained red and purple, I was overcome with gratitude that I work with wonderful folks. Truly, people make our lives “a cut above the rest.” r

PLUS: Subscribe to the Pasadena Star-News E-Edition, and read future issues of Rose Magazine electronically. Register at pasadena starnews. com

is bimonthly, but we’re online all the time. > On the Web therosemag.com > Visit our blog insidesocal.com/Rose > Follow us on Twitter twitter.com/RoseMagazine > Friend us on Facebook. Search “Rose Magazine” on facebook.com ROSEPARADE2010 | 17


SAN GABRIEL VALLEY NEWSPAPER GROUP Editor & Publisher: Steve Lambert steve.lambert@inlandnewspapers.com Senior Editor: Steve Hunt steve.hunt@sgvn.com Vice President of Sales & Marketing: Jim Maurer jim.maurer@sgvn.com Vice President of Circulation: Kathy Michalak kathy.michalak@inlandnewspapers.com Vice President of Operations: John Wartinger john.wartinger@inlandnewspapers.com Vice President of Finance: Kathy Johnson kathy.johnson@inlandnewspapers.com Vice President of Human Resources: Louise Kopitch louise.kopitch@inlandnewspapers.com Finance Director: David Silk david.silk@inlandnewspapers.com Assistant to the Publisher: Denise Varnado denise.varnado@inlandnewspapers.com Human Resources Manager: Rachel Vasquez rachel.vasquez@sgvn.com

Inland Custom Publishing Group Publisher & CEO: Fred Hamilton fred.hamilton@inlandnewspapers.com Editor & General Manager: Steve Lambert steve.lambert@inlandnewspapers.com Executive Editor: Frank Pine frank.pine@inlandnewspapers.com Managing Editor: Don Sproul don.sproul@inlandlivingmagazine.com Design & Operations Manager: Lynda E. Bailey lynda.bailey@inlandlivingmagazine.com Marketing Director: Shawna Federoff shawna.federoff@inlandnewspapers.com Advertising Design: Christie Robinson

Rose Magazine is a publication of the San Gabriel Valley Newspaper Group, which publishes the Pasadena Star-News, San Gabriel Valley Tribune and Whittier Daily News, and the Inland Custom Publishing Group, a division of the Inland Newspaper Group.

18 | ROSEPARADE2010


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INSIDER By LARRY WILSON

Ten Questions for R. Scott McKibben

Newspaperman eases into new role as TofR chief R. Scott McKibben, incoming CEO of the Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association, is executive vice president and chief revenue officer of the Los Angeles Times and a longtime newspaper publisher and executive who has worked for papers all over the country. As an undergraduate at the University of Minnesota, he wanted to coach hockey in the collegiate ranks but followed his father into newspapers instead. McKibben, 55, is already spending part of his work week in Pasadena and takes on his new post at the TofR in January. Q. As a newspaperman taking over a grand parade and game, what are the differences between journalism and pageantry plus football? A. I’m currently in a position where you control news and content and have direct involvement with advertising sales clients — and work for a private employer. Working for the Tournament of Roses as a volunteer

organization, we have far fewer sponsors, and it takes much more relationshipbuilding. Q. And the similarities? A. I think there are a lot more of these. There is a great deal of involvement with the community, particularly with the Rose Bowl. It’s very similar to the publishing of a newspaper — managing people as they weave their way in and out of the fabric of the community. The Tournament has a lot of similarities to a community newspaper. Q. How has the down economy affected the Tournament? A. In talking to folks when I was hired, I think it’s very clear that marketing and sponsorship budgets have been affected by the economy. We’re going to have to work more closely with our sponsors and look past the traditional forms of sponsorship for a different kind of client who might want to get involved with the parade and

The question is whether we have made as strong an outreach as we can to the community, and making sure that the community understands we’re all about local.

20 | ROSEPARADE2010


the game. New kinds of businesses, new kinds of environment. More service-related companies. More technology companies. Q. A Google float? A Craigslist float? A. Those are all on our list. Q. There’s been criticism of the so-called Disneyification of the parade, that it’s losing its hometown feel. Is there too much glitz in the Tournament? A. I’m not sure there’s too much glitz. The question is whether we have made as strong an outreach as we can to the community, and making sure that the community understands we’re all about local. The challenge you always face in these kinds of situations is that in order to grow, you always have to get bigger. And the perception is that you then leave some of the local feel behind. Part of my job is to make sure the people in the Pasadena area know that, while we need to grow, not for one moment have we forgotten the value of the local patrons. Q. The opening show on South Orange Grove is made only for TV — the rest of the live crowd doesn’t get to see it.

A. Television is important to our sponsors. But how do we create some additional value beyond just that one spot? That’s a challenge we face. Q. How does a CEO function differently overseeing an organization almost entirely staffed by volunteers? A.I’m not sure there are a lot of differences in the way you make decisions. What’s different is the way in which you reach out and communicate and come to a consensus by gathering opinions. Now I might get input from five or six advisers, make a call and go. In an organization built on tradition, you have to reach out and cast a wider net. You have to be a respectful good listener. There are a lot of people with long histories with this organization. Q. Has the Rose Bowl Game suffered with the occasional disappearance of the traditional Pac-10/Big Ten rivalry? A. In terms of college football in its entirety, I think it has not, because of the excitement of having the BCS national championship game. If you just want to isolate the history of the Rose Bowl, it probably has diluted it. But we still get two great teams here every

year, and I think the excitement between the Big Ten and the Pac-10 is every bit as fervent when one team doesn’t play here because they’re playing in the national championship. And this time, we’re double-hosting, and it’s the best of two worlds, the BCS championship and the Rose Bowl as well. Q. Which side are you on — continue the BCS or have a championship playoff? A. I’m opposed to the playoff system. I think that the bowl system is one of the great traditions and, more importantly, one of the great rewards for collegiate athletes, coaches, cheerleaders, fans and alumni. Collegiate athletics is all about association — and I think the plan we have now gets us to a national champion in a very fair way. Q. What’s looking to be your favorite part of this job? A. To lead an organization with this much history and tradition, and to lead it in an atmosphere of collegiate sports. R Larry Wilson is public editor of the Pasadena Star-News and the San Gabriel Valley Newspaper Group.

ROSEPARADE2010 | 21


PEOPLE THE

PARADE

ON

By Evelyn Barge and Emma Gallegos

THE DO-ITYOURSELFER

Bonnie Colcher may threaten to quit every January, but by the spring she can’t seem to avoid getting wrapped up again in float madness. What keeps the volunteer coordinator for the Sierra Madre Rose Float Association coming back? “We form a family,” she says. “Dysfunctional, maybe, but a family — and we work from that basis.” The tiny foothill community’s float is one of only six that are self-built, without the help of a commercial builder. The Sierra Madre float is financed completely through donations and fundraisers. Of the self-built floats — Burbank, Cal Poly universities, Downey, La Cañada Flintridge and South Pasadena are the others — Sierra Madre also weighs in as a lightweight in the population category. It has fewer than 12,000 residents. Raising $35,000 to build this year’s float was, at times “like wringing water from a stone,” Colcher says. And that budget is far less than what professional builders have to work with, she notes. come rain or shine A small group of volunteers works year-round in the city’s permanent float barn, and the number swells to about 300 during decoration week, the crunch time between Christmas and New Year’s Day. Colcher fields tons of calls and inquiries from out-of-towners, all hoping to put their personal stamp on a float that will ride in the Rose Parade. “Often, coming to the parade is a dream of theirs,” she says. “And then they find out they can also be involved in float-building. That makes the experience for them.” Among her float-minded colleagues, Colcher has been known to go to incredible lengths to score free flowers and other organic materials to decorate the float. The group has harvested Bird of Paradise from the Sierra Madre Woman’s Club, and appealed to the public for poinsettias to fashion the tongue of a bookworm on the 2006 parade entry. When the association was running low on fresh melaleuca — a tree with flaky bark, sometimes called paperbark — Colcher got permission from the city to collect it from Sierra Madre’s own trees. “It was very back to nature — including spiders.” The never-ending process can be exasperating. “Sometimes we want to kill each other,” Colcher laughs. But it’s always a labor of love. “Self-built (floats) are the heart of how the parade was envisioned,” she says. “We are absolutely the smallest, with the least chance of support because of the size of the community, but many years we do a bang-up job.” R 22 | ROSEPARADE2010

PHOTO BY WALT MANCINI


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At the heart of a tradition are the people who make it their own

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The Sneak Previewer Want a private viewing of the entire Rose Parade? It’s a luxury no amount of money can buy, but Laura Farber gets pretty darn close. As chair of the TofR Judging Committee, the South Pasadena resident and her team visit every float barn and decorating warehouse twice in the two days before the parade. They bring with them three VIPs: The official judges — each with a background in horticulture, design or entertainment — who will bestow winners’ trophies on the most impressive floats. The accolades are emblazoned across banners to be carried down Colorado Boulevard on New Year’s Day ahead of each award-winning float. During both judging sessions, the appraisers look at a variety of criteria, including design, floral craftsmanship, artistic merit, animation, thematic interpretation, color presentation and dramatic impact. Scores from both days are combined to determine the trophy recipients in 24 categories. “On (Dec. 30), the float is not finished,” Farber says. “Every ‘I’ is not dotted and every ‘T’ is not crossed. ... The next day, all of a sudden the (floats) have transformed into these works of art. Each builder wants to present the float the way it’s going to look when it goes down the parade route.” The full-blown presentation often includes music, dancers, out-walkers, satellite floats, moving components and the “big daddies” — pyrotechnics. “There is definitely a subjective component,” Farber says. “You’re looking at something that’s just gorgeous.” R

ON THE WEB Read more about Rose Magazine’s People of the 2010 Rose Parade www.insidesocal.com/rose

PHOTO BY SARAH REINGEWIRTZ

deciders’ decider


You do get n’t rehe to arse this.

The Timemaster of Ceremonies

man of the hours, minutes and seconds

24 | ROSEPARADE2010

The Rose Parade steps off without fail at 8 a.m. Jan. 1, but the parade before The Parade takes place the previous day, and into the wee hours of the morning. That’s when the fully constructed, fully decorated floats make their way, inch by inch, through the streets of the San Gabriel Valley and into the Pasadena staging area — and all in proper order. “Everything has to be orchestrated so they don’t come in on top of each other and create a float jam,” says Lance Tibbet, Parade Operations chairman for the Tournament of Roses. And it’s not just the floats which Tibbet and his 123member committee oversee. It’s also the marching bands, the equestrian units, the celebrities, the dignitaries, the reserve tow trucks, the White Suiters’ Honda scooters, the out-walkers and dancers — every single element that makes up the Rose Parade. “I say this sort of tongue-in-cheek, but in a way the keys of the city are turned over to me and I take over,” Tibbet, a Pasadena resident, says. “On Jan. 1, parade operations becomes the committee in charge.” This year’s parade presents its own challenges. “These days the parade is more complicated than it was even a few years ago,” he says. An extravagant opening performance will still mark the parade kickoff, but the show will also become a traveling one, entertaining parade-goers all along the route. There will be an additional finale production, Tibbet says, and two flyovers at the beginning and end of the parade. “You don’t get to rehearse this,” he says. “Everything has to be timed out perfectly.” The demands are made more pressing by a live television broadcast. “I’m very concerned about making sure that the kid from a band in Massachusetts at the end of the parade gets his time on TV,” Tibbet says. “I don’t want anyone to miss out, and I don’t want a float sponsor to lose out, either. If there are delays, you don’t try to speed things up. You give everybody their due.” R PHOTO BY SARAH REINGEWIRTZ


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The Power Couple Steve and Sindee Riboli met in October 1994, the last time the Oregon Ducks were headed to the Rose Bowl. Both of them were single parents charged with running the family business. Sindee’s father had been building grandstands on the parade route since the 1960s, even before he bought Sharp Seating, the official ticketing company for the Tournament of Roses. Steve’s great-uncle founded San Antonio Winery, the last winery standing in Los Angeles. She was the president of Sharp Seating. He was developing a plot of land on the Rose Parade route, where Kenneth Cole and The Melting Pot stand today. It was just a vacant space in development limbo, and the Boy Scouts didn’t want it for a pumpkin or Christmas tree lot. “I called the Tournament of Roses, and they gave me Sindee’s phone number,” he says. “He was bugging me to build a grandstand,” she says. “She didn’t call me back right away,” he says. The two finally met to decide on the fate of that corner on Delacey Avenue and Colorado Boulevard. “It was love at first sight,” Steve says of their meeting. “The day I met him, I knew I was going to marry him,” Sindee says. Although Sindee’s family business is intricately tied to the Rose Parade, her family also had a long tradition of doing unpaid work. Her dad had started volunteering in the 1960s, and she can remember picking up trash under the bleachers. In the year she and Steve met, she had just begun officially volunteering and she encouraged him to sign up, too. “So he wasn’t alone on New Year’s,” she explains. “She suckered me into it,” he says. He’s been volunteering ever since, and for the past eight years his family’s wine has been poured at numerous Tournament of Roses events. The two were married in 1995 and have raised five children. Steve says their marriage has worked precisely because the two are such heavy-hitters. “We’re both old-time family business, and that’s the secret to our success and our relationship,” Steve says. “We understand the commitment of working on Saturdays and Sundays — that’s common, it’s all the time.” This year, for the first time, the couple is on the same committee, and they might have a chance at spending New Year’s together. They’re one of 10 couples on the Queen and Court Committee, who escort the court to somewhere around 160 events in 2-and-a-half months. “I’m never bored,” he points out, although he says that, every now and again, he’d enjoy a little boredom. But at 8 a.m. on New Year’s Day, he can breathe a sigh of relief. “The best time is when the parade starts every year,” Steve says. “By that time, our work is 99 percent completed.” R 26 | ROSEPARADE2010

PHOTO BY ERIC REED

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It was during World War II when Charles Strutt made a promise to his young daughter: “You and I are going to ride in the parade together in a couple years.” “When your father says something to you, well, you just believe it,” says Jan Strutt Hart, now 74. Back then, though, in the midst of war, the thought of a parade — a really grand celebration — seemed out of reach. Even when the war ended in August 1945, Charles, as Tournament of Roses president, had limited time to throw together the felicitous affair for New Year’s Day, the start of 1946. “He put together a marvelous parade to celebrate the end (of war) in a very few months,” Hart says. The great U.S. Navy commander Adm. William Halsey Jr. was selected as grand marshal, and all the past Tournament presidents who’d been deprived of their own parade during the war years had special cars, so they too could travel down Colorado Boulevard and be recognized. And even though children didn’t traditionally ride in the president’s parade motorcade, father Charles kept his word. “I was sitting in the grandstand with my grandparents, and they went driving by,” Hart recalls. “They stopped and Dad called out, ‘Janie do you want to ride in the parade?’ I don’t remember what I replied, but I found myself being picked up and passed over everybody’s heads and dropped into the car” to travel the remainder of the route. As a teen, Hart tried her hand at the “cold and messy” endeavor of float decorating. “We actually made money,” she says. “We weren’t volunteers. The later (the shift) you worked, the more you were paid.” Working on the Minute Maid orange juice float, Hart and her fellow decorators felt a bit warmer than usual. “Someone added a little something to the orange juice, and everyone got a little cheerful,” she laughs. Another year, Hart worked to salvage the Mexico City float after it suffered some 11th-hour damage when a tippling driver clipped its front end. “They were bringing in bakery boxes of gardenias ... trying to remedy the situation,” she says. PHOTO BY “I guess the parade was just part of our lives — a very important part.” R WATCHARA

proud tournament ‘brat’

PHOMICINDA

The Student Ambassador It’s 6 a.m., 58 degrees outside, and Andy Chen’s teeth are chattering. That’s when he spots a group of paradegoers — in shorts. They’re from Canada, it turns out, and laugh at Chen’s suggestion that they might be cold. 28 | ROSEPARADE2010

“People come from literally all over the world,” Chen says he now realizes. And he got to talk to all of them — or, at least, a lot of them. “The most memorable thing is meeting the variety of people,” Chen says of his role last year as student ambassador for

The Tournament of Roses. “Everyone has a story to tell.” Among his many assignments were greeting and guiding folks along the parade route, and then answering questions in the post-parade float viewing area. The 18-year-old from Rosemead found the experience — a volunteer gig other teens might call “dreaded free work,” he suggests — revelatory. And he’s signed on


The Court Conductor

safety dance

PHOTO BY SARAH REINGEWIRTZ

to again participate in this year’s parade, this time as an alumnus of the Student Ambassador program. More than 45 students from area schools become ambassadors each year, says program Chairman Earl Bradley, and many of them return as volunteers in some capacity for subsequent parades or as mentors for the next wave of studentleaders.

If Alex Aghajanian is the conductor, his symphony is coordinating the social affairs of seven young women during what may very well be the busiest year of their lives. Before the Queen and Princesses are even selected, Aghajanian and the 10 members of the Queen and Court Committee know every event, every photo shoot, every step the women will take during their royal reign. “There’s a hierarchy of things that we make sure happen in order to protect the girls,” the Altadena resident says. “We’re intent on making sure it’s always a fun experience ... but safety is paramount to us.” Queen Natalie and the Royal Court will make more than 160 official appearances; For each, the committee scheduler assigns an event captain to take the reins. “Hustle sheets” outline the careful dance that must take place to assure every requirement is fulfilled. Aghajanian’s committee is unique, he says, because spouses play an integral role in its operations. (If an unmarried person is on the Queen and Court Committee, another Tournament member is assigned to assist him or her.) “You will never see a Court member by themselves,” Aghajanian says. “(Female) spouses are integral to what we do ... especially if the girls are going to some place where male members can’t go.” While driving the white Tournament escort vehicles that shuttle Court members to and from appearances, committee members follow specific traffic-navigation protocols. Some left-hand turns are forbidden, including turning across traffic onto Orange Grove Boulevard from Lockehaven Street by the Tournament House. Likewise, if a member of the Court is dropped off at her personal car, a chaperon vehicle will follow her until she arrives safely home. By virtue of the time spent together, committee members often feel as though they’ve gained seven new family members in the Queen and Princesses, Aghajanian says. It’s a role he cherishes so much that Aghajanian won’t call it a job. Nor will he describe as “difficult” the process of narrowing down a field of more than 1,100 young women to the chosen seven. “I like to call it my volunteer work,” he says. “This is something I love to do.” R

The youths even get a quick-study course in Tournament-style poise and etiquette, newfound skills they will put to use as they interact with thousands of sightseers during parade week. “These students are often the first person related to the Tournament that somebody from out of town will encounter,” Bradley says. “We try to pass along certain skills that will do them well in this capacity.

These are things A sto they can take on t o tel ry into adulthood.” l. Chen is certain the annual memories will endure at least that long. “An experience like this I will keep for a lifetime,” he says. R

ROSEPARADE2010 | 29


TRIBUTE TO GARY DISANO

A life, ‘cut above the rest’ Friends and family say the late president embodied the theme he picked for 2010 By Claudia S. Palma

In 1972, this year’s Tournament of Roses president Gary DiSano returned home to Arcadia from Vietnam, where he had finished up his stint in the Navy. DiSano was feeling down, when his neighbor Gary Hayward, who would go on to become president in 1993, suggested volunteering as a way to give back — and as a way for DiSano to re-enter the community where he had grown up. DiSano took Hayward’s suggestion to heart, and he never left the TofR community. He continued to volunteer for 37 years. He stuck with it when he and his family moved to Newport Beach and then San Juan Capistrano. He stuck with it when he was diagnosed with bone cancer 10 years ago. He stuck with it — and was named president of the 2010 Tournament of Roses — when his health took a turn for the worst earlier this year. His wife of 24 years, Sabina, said he worked up until he lost his battle with cancer on Sept. 20. “He was extremely busy, very hard working,” Sabina says. “He really worked up until the very last moment. He didn’t want to give up.” As the TofR president, DiSano chose a theme that embodied not just how he saw his beloved parade but also how his loved ones saw him — a cut above the rest, the cream of the crop. In his 62 years of life, DiSano showed passion and commitment in everything he did and was, in his own way, a cut above. “Gary lived a ‘pay it forward’ ethic that was unconditional and centered on a passion for service,” says friend William 30 | ROSEPARADE2010

Kobayashi, the Tournament’s honorary director. Kobayashi says he admired DiSano’s determination to perform his duties to properly represent the Tournament, and his work ethic was second to none. Sabina, daughters Christina and Stephanie, and son Dominic will ride in the president’s car in his honor on Jan. 1. A ride down Colorado Boulevard the DiSano family says will be bittersweet. “I will feel that he should be there,” Sabina says. But Sabina says it will be important for her to be a part of the parade this year. “In order to acknowledge his hard work for 37 years, I feel I need to do this for him because that’s what meant so much for him,” Sabina says. “And to remind people he gave his best for this Tournament.” The 2010 Rose Bowl Game also will be dedicated to DiSano. DiSano was born in Los Angeles and raised in Arcadia. The La Salle High School graduate went on to attend USC and Harvard Business School. He served in the Navy for three years. Throughout the years, he paid his dues serving on and chairing various committees before he was elected to the Tournament’s executive committee in 2002. He was named president nine months before his death. DiSano, who resided in San Juan Capistrano, was director of purchasing for Century Wheel and Rim in Montebello and RGGL Corp. in Newport Beach. He loved the ocean, running on the beach, watching USC football and tending his rose garden. “He spent endless weekend mornings

in the backyard, gardening and nursing his rose gardens,” Stephanie says. “He would leave homemade bouquets in the kitchen counter as often as they could be replaced.” He also loved Italian culture and food and traveled to Europe many times, including Germany, where his wife was from. DiSano was a family man, the type of father who would dance with his daughters, take his children to football games and share a laugh with them. “Dinner after church was always a fun activity because we kids were pent up from sitting still for an hour, so dinner was our chance to be goofy with just our dad,” says his daughter Christina. He taught her to be compassionate, she says, and how to have fun. “Whenever there was a body of water involved, he would be swimming in it and taking me along on his back for as long as he could hold his breath underwater,” she says. “It was like the two of us were dolphins.” The family believes Gary would be happy with the way the Tournament has turned out so far. “He would remind the court they are ‘beautiful young ladies’ every chance he got,” said Stephanie. “He would be absolutely honored to have a true American hero like (Chesley Sullenberger) as the grand marshal.” As a way of keeping Gary’s memory alive, Kobayashi has set up a special e-mail address for anyone who knew DiSano to share their memories of him. He will put those messages in a memory book for the family. The email address is garydisano2010@aol.com R


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PARADE

photos by walt mancini

Capt. Chesley B. “Sully” Sullenberger III will serve as the Grand Marshal for the 2010 Tournament of Roses festivities.

Grand Marshal

A pilot hero’s welcome Parade to glide over Colorado Blvd. under watch of Captain Sully By Janette Williams

When Capt. Chesley ‘Sully’ Sullenberger III, surrounded by marching bands, flower-covered floats and high-stepping horses, takes off along Colorado Boulevard on Jan. 1, it could be the second-most exciting ride of his life. For the 57-year-old former fighter pilot, the thrill of being grand marshal of the 121st Rose Parade, “2010: A Cut Above the Rest,” may rank a few notches below his wild ride of Jan. 15, 2009. Sullenberger became an overnight hero when he and his crew landed U.S. Airways Flight 1549 in the icy waters of the Hudson River in New York City, in full view of many Manhattan-ites, saving the lives of all 155 people aboard. Photographs of passengers huddled along the wings, a flotilla of rescue craft bobbing around them, left an indelible image around the world. 32 | ROSEPARADE2010

Now, almost a year later, with the world watching yet again, Sullenberger says he can’t wait to be part of what he calls “the world’s parade.” “We’ve only watched it on TV, but I always had a dream that one day we’d see it in person — and this is the way to do that,” he jokes. In the year since he hit the headlines, Sullenberger has become a frequent talk-show guest, was given the keys to New York City, wrote a book — “Highest Duty: My Search for What Really Matters,” the first of two in a $3-million deal — and went back to work, flying parttime for U.S. Airways. He even had his own parade — his hometown of Danville honored him and his wife Lorrie on Jan. 24 — and he was nominated for the “Robert Goulet Memorial Mustached American of the Year” by the American Mustache Institute. Plus, in a nod to the flock of birds


that shut down both his plane’s engines and forced the landing, there’s his namesake cocktail: The Sullenberger — two shots of Grey Goose and a splash of water. At first, he says, all the attention was “overwhelming.” Responding, he says, “didn’t come naturally — quite the opposite.” “It was a life-changing event,” Sullenberger says. “But I’m 57, I’ll be 58 in January. I had a lot of life experience to draw on and put it in perspective.” The acclaim has come with “new obligations and opportunities — I’m working harder than I’ve ever worked, including flying,” he says. “But my biggest surprise is that here we are, 10 months later, and people are still recording great interest.” Sullenberger was born and grew up in Denison, Texas, graduated from the Air Force Academy and later served as a fighter pilot from 1975 to 1980, attaining the rank of captain. He’s not the first legendary pilot to lead the 5.7-mile parade.The Apollo 12 Astronauts, Buzz Aldrin and John Glenn were all grand marshals, and dashing WWI “Ace of Aces” Eddie Rickenbacker took the role in 1957 — not to mention William “Captain Kirk” Shatner in 1994. And, Sullenberger says, he’s not even the first person born in Denison to be grand marshal. “My one connection with grand marshals is that President Eisenhower, like me, was born in Denison, Texas,” he says. Sullenberger will ride in the Rose Parade with his wife — a fitness trainer with her own San Francisco exercise show on TV — and their two children. He says he plans to “have some fun” with the whole Rose Parade and Rose Bowl Game experience, brought about by the first “good news” story of 2009. The place, timing and the way the landing happened had a lot to do with its impact, the unassuming pilot said. “At the time, people were searching for good news, a reason to feel hopeful,” Sullenberger said. “And this was a life-affirming event.” R

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Float: Jungle Cuts Group: Cal Poly Universities Parade order: 56 Interpretation of theme: Animals getting haircuts. Description: Think of a hair salon gone wild — how can you go wrong with monkey barbers trimming and styling the manes of fellow jungle animals? There’s a lot of animation, too: the monkeys are using animated scissors, the hippo is wallowing in the pond next to a live-action waterfall and a toucan is flying above the trees. Don’t miss: One giraffe channels her inner Marge Simpson with a sky-high beehive and the zebra sports a purple mohawk.

Float: Salute to the Bands Group: Farmers Insurance Group of Companies Parade order: 4 Interpretation of theme: Gives a shoutout to the marching bands participating in the parade. Description: A “parade major” playing a glimmering brass bugle is the only thing on this float. But he’s 55 feet tall and wearing a very impressive red coat, so he’s a definite standout. Don’t miss: The figure’s left arm rises to bring the bugle to his lips.

RENDERINGS COURTESY OF FLOAT SPONSORS AND THE TOURNAMENT OF ROSES

2010: A CUT ABOVE THE REST

The parade A viewer’s guide to the float entries, marching bands and equestrian teams participating in the 121st Rose Parade

Sneak peek at the floats Equestrian teams Marching bands Parade order

Through Page 47 Page 48 Page 50 Page 54

ROSEPARADE2010 | 35


PARADE

Float: Enchantment is in the Air Group: New Mexico, USA Parade order: 70 Interpretation of theme: Promoting the city as U.S.’ ballooning capital Description: The French skunk Pepé Le Pew woos Penelope Pussycat with roses and chocolates but she tries to escape on a hot-air balloon. Don’t miss: The float builder worked closely with Warner Bros. to reproduce the cartoon characters to their exact specifications.

Float: Samba Carnival Group: Jack in the Box Parade order: 13 Interpretation of theme: Carnival is known as the world’s most lavish festival. Description: Jack in the Box promises a show-stopping extravaganza and this float definitely delivers that. The main elements are a vibrant sun, two plumed cockatoos, cascading gardens and a samba band. DON’T MISS: There’s no way you’ll miss the 15-foot dancing puppets and 65 street performers.

humor Float: Scissored Wizard Group: La Cañada Flintridge Tournament of Roses Association Parade order: 63 Interpretation of theme: A pair of scissors inspired the concept for this float. Description: The float’s young designer, Emily Neilson of Walnut Creek, tells the story of a great wizard who created a giant origami dragon. He cast a spell to bring the paper dragon to life and this is the scene depicted on the float. The wizard is holding a wand and a pair of scissors, his last-ditch weapon against an origami gone wrong. Don’t miss: Everything moves, including the origami crane’s wings.

Float: Barnyard Aces Group: Burbank Tournament of Roses Association Parade order: 34 Interpretation of theme: Back in the day, a group of pilots would excite the crowd by flying through the opens doors of a barn. The Burbank association gives these barnyard aces a “10.” Description: A barnstorming pilot executes a loop and fly-through maneuver. Chickens scatter as horses peek out the windows. Don’t miss: The plane is actually flying! Mounted on its smoke trail and controlled by a “pilot” inside the barn, the plane will climb, bank left and right and perform complete 360-degree rolls. 36 | ROSEPARADE2010


Float: City of Dreams Group: City of Cerritos Parade order: 54 Interpretation of theme: The float’s Venetian look is inspired by the grand lobby of the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts. Description: The float celebrates the magic of Carnival in Venice, one of the world’s oldest celebrations. A jester towers over the scene and an ornate gondola carries masqueraded revelers. Don’t miss: Your eyes will be drawn to the jester and the gondola, but take in the rest of this Venetian street spectacle — from the mooring poles to the sculpted lamp posts.

Float: All Star Dreams Group: City of Anaheim Parade order: 60 Interpretation of theme: Since the city is hosting the 2010 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, the float

pays tribute to America’s favorite pastime. Description: The haloed “A” of the Angels baseball team looms behind a stylistic representation of the Anaheim stadium. Pennants of each professional baseball team perch atop the grandstands. Don’t miss: Major League Baseball is debuting the 2010 All-Star Games artwork on the float.

Float: Jewels of the Pacific Group: Downey Rose Float Association Parade order: 82 Interpretation of theme: The ocean off the coast of California is one of the world’s best because of its rich wildlife. Description: Three giant puffer fish and half a dozen floating jellyfish swim in an underwater scene with other creatures, including a couple of sea maidens. Don’t miss: Fish swims around coral reefs.

Float: Garden of Dreams Group: City of Torrance Parade order: 32 Interpretation of theme: Spring shows the very best in nature. Description: Birds and butterflies perch on a fountain, arbors and flowers in this English cottage garden. Don’t miss: The butterflies’ wings flutter.

Float: On Track in 2010 Group: City of Alhambra Parade order: 45 Interpretation of theme: The city uses trolleys to link its past and future. Description: In an homage to the era of trolley travel from the early 1900s to the mid 1950s, a “Red Car” carries members of the Alhambra City Council and their families. Don’t miss: The trolley sits on a track with a brick road underneath.

Float: Celebrate the Arts in Los Angeles Group: City of Los Angeles Parade order: 58 Interpretation of theme: Los Angeles is one of the world’s leading centers for arts and culture. Description: It’s a nod to L.A.’s cultural icons: Hollywood Bowl, the Walt Disney Concert Hall and Getty Center. Don’t miss: Performers on the float wear grand opera costumes and music is from the “Ride of the Valkyries.”

Float: Our Kids Group: City of South Pasadena Parade order: 49 Interpretation of theme: Every parent holds his or her kid as the best. Description: Historic icons of South Pasadena are showcased — the Rialto Theatre, Route 66 and the Red Cars of the Pacific Electric Company. Don’t miss: The float performers are from the South Pasadena Strings, the youngest orchestra ever recorded at Carnegie Hall.

COMMUNITY

Float: California Girls Group: Sierra Madre Rose Float Association Parade order: 64 Interpretation of theme: As The Beach Boys say, they “wish they all could be California girls.” Description: Girls enjoy a day of sailing, accompanied by dolphins and other windsurfers. Don’t miss: Members of the L.A. Derby Dolls roller-skate around the float. ROSEPARADE2010 | 37


PARADE

CHILDREN & FaMILY

Float: Celebrating the Adventure, Continuing the Journey Group: Boy Scouts of America Parade order: 89 Interpretation of theme: Service Description: Nature is definitely the inspiration — camping, hiking, rock climbing, canoeing, kayaking and fishing. Don’t miss: Keep an eye out for Scouts flying on a 27-foot-long zip line.

Float: Space Odyssey Group: Ronald McDonald House Charities of Southern California Parade Order: 20 Interpretation of theme: Living in space is the ultimate fantasy. Description: A space shuttle takes children (riders are children who have benefited from Ronald McDonald House of Charities) to a fantasy space station. Don’t miss: Elements of the float spin and swivel, “powered” by the eucalyptus leaf-covered solar panels

Float: Above the Rest Group: Kiwanis International Parade order: 85 Interpretation of theme: Inspiring kids to be a cut above the rest Description: The float is a multi-tiered tree house, with wooden and tire swings hanging from the tree’s giant branches. Don’t miss: A “Kids Only” sign wards off any curmudgeonly old folks from entering.

Float: Service Above the Rest Group: Rotary International Parade Order: 7 Interpretation of theme: Service above and beyond Description: A huge teddy bear, clad in a doctor’s white coat, sits in front of the pages of a medical book. Don’t miss: The bear gives a friendly wave.

Float: Family First Group: Odd Fellows and Rebekahs Parade Order: 80 Interpretation of theme: Placing family first helps children grow in life. Description: A family of birds — three adults and a pair of fledglings perch on tree branches. Don’t miss: The nest with three soon-to-hatch eggs. 38 | ROSEPARADE2010

Float: Decades of Service Group: Lions Clubs International Parade order: 8 Interpretation of theme: Dedication Description: The float is one big colorful calliope — decorated with yellow and red chrysanthemums — that plays rousing music and rides on strawflower wheels that turn. Don’t miss: Ten blind outwalkers escort the float.

Float: The Ten Commandments — Jesus Fulfilled Group: Lutheran Laymen’s League Parade order: 38 Interpretation of theme: Guiding people to live good lives. Description: The float shows significant religious elements, including the ark of the covenant, crucifixion and resurrection. Don’t miss: The parting of the Red Sea (hint: under the ark).


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Float: Quest for the Best Group: Anheuser-Busch Parade order: 71 Interpretation of theme: The pursuit of gold Description: It’s all about the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada: bobsledding, ice skating, hockey, ski jumping and other competitions. Don’t miss: Eight Clydesdale horses are doing all the work; they’re actually pulling the float.

CORPORATE

Float: Hot Doggin’ — Going for the Gold Group: Dick Van Patten’s Natural Balance Pet Foods, Inc. Parade order: 52 Interpretation of theme: Natural Balance is aiming for a Guinness World Record for longest single chassis float. Description: The float is 111 feet in length and has a 15-foot-long sculptured snowboard and a 60-foot-long ski slope where Tillman and three other dogs whoosh down. Don’t miss: For those who remember the 1977 TV series “Eight is Enough,” keep an eye out for actor Dick Van Patten.

Float: Where Winners Eat Group: Subway Restaurants Parade Order: 29 Interpretation of theme: Associates eating healthy with being a champion Description: Floragraphs showing photos of famous athletes flank a 10foot-tall rotating trophy cup. Don’t miss: Float riders are professional and amateur athletes.

40 | ROSEPARADE2010

Float: Mountaintop Majesty Group: Rain Bird Corporation Parade order: 15 Interpretation of theme: Promoting water conservation and saving an endangered species. Description: The float depicts an African rainforest, home of the endangered Mountain Gorillas. Baby gorillas swing on a branch, frolic by the waterfalls and play with their parents. Don’t miss: The float carries more than 15,000 gallons of recycled water for the flowing waterfalls and the pharmitas grass used to create the gorillas’ fur was grown exclusively for the float. Float: Look Ma — No Hands Group: Trader Joe’s Parade Order: 47 Interpretation of theme: The delighted cry of children when they let their imaginations fly. Description: It’s all about flying machines, imaginary or not. There’s an armchair pilot, couch-bound gyro operators, solo ornithopter aviator and a tri-plane wing hanger. Don’t miss: A daredevil rider clings precariously to a tilting triplane and a motorcycle rider does wheelies on his “hog.” Pigs can fly if they have wings, and the pig in this float does.

Float: FFA Today Group: RFD-TV Parade Order: 87 Interpretation of theme: Television channel pays tribute to Future Farmers of America Description: The float is a tribute to agriculture and rural America: FFA youths, a moldboard plow, a barn and a windmill. Don’t miss: The buildings and a communication satellite at the rear of the float remind viewers that farming today uses technological advances.

Float: Ship of Dreams Group: American Honda Parade order: 40 Interpretation of theme: Float salutes those who help improve the lives of children. Description: Honda’s humanoid robot, ASIMO, captains a 45-foot-tall, 75-foot-long three-masted ship. The sails carry the names of organizations that work with children and their families. Don’t miss: Pyrotechnics will “explode” from the ship’s masts and the dingy at the rear of the float.


ROSEPARADE2010 | 41

!"


PARADE

2nd Lt. O. Oliver Goodall

Angels in unfriendly skies The Tuskegee Airmen, quiet heroes of WWII, were known for protecting the American bombers they escorted on missions. At the Rose Parade, their legacy takes center stage. By Stacey Wang

Float: Tuskegee Airmen: A Cut Above Group: West Covina Rose Float Foundation Parade order: 37 Interpretation of theme: The float honors the Tuskegee Airmen. Description: The float is a tribute to the first African-American military who served the country during World War II. Some of the original members of the group, named after the airfield in Alabama where they were trained, will sit at the front of the float. Don’t miss: The planes depicted on the float are replicas of the airmen’s famous “Red Tailed” mustangs.

HEROES 42 | ROSEPARADE2010

Flying alongside bombers of the United States Army Air Corps during World War II, with tail markings the hue of a bull’s-eye, these fighter pilots were mysterious to the rest of the military. They were christened by the bomber crews as “Red-Tail Angels,” known for protecting the skies and never leaving a bomber’s side. It was a discipline insisted upon by their commander, Gen. Benjamin O. Davis Jr. — a discipline that forced them to sacrifice becoming famed flying aces so they could escort America’s bombers through their perilous missions. Yet the color of their skin, unlike the color of their plane’s tails, was unknown to the men they were protecting. The only thing that distinguished them was their willingness to stay in the fight. “In the end, this is what we became most famous for — for staying with the bombers. And it’s our legacy, too,” says retired Lt. Col. Theodore Lumpkin of the U.S. Air Force Reserves. Better known as Tuskegee Airmen, these men were the first African-American military in the U.S. Army Air Corps. They were recruited from 1941 to 1946. These “Lonely Eagles” fought a battle on two fronts — racism at home and the Axis powers overseas.


With the call of duty in their hearts, each man signed up for the Army following the bombing of Pearl Harbor. They were trained at the Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama, the reason behind their acclaimed name. The airmen were sent to fight in North Africa, Sicily and Italy in 1943-44 as the 332nd Fighter Group, which included the 99th, 100th, 301st and 302nd fighter squadrons. Lumpkin, a ground intelligence officer for the 100th Fighter Squadron, and his men were sent on a convoy across the Atlantic Ocean in 1944 to set up base near Naples, Italy. “As a Negro member of the armed forces, we had a good relationship with the Italians. In fact, it was better than in the States, to be truthful,” the 89-year-old recalls. “I think that the Italians basically did not have the same kind of attitude toward minorities. They pretty much just accepted you as an individual. This really made you feel like a weight was lifted off your shoulders because you didn’t have to always be overly careful about things,” adds the Los Angeles native. In the U.S., the airmen’s 447th Bombardment Group was assembled but never saw combat. They did, however, fight escalating racism. “We figured that we were just trying to make our mark and be good pilots, that’s all. We thought we were part of the Air Force and that eventually we would get into combat, which we didn’t because 477th was a political football,” says retired 2nd Lt. O. Oliver Goodall. The group made its third training site move to Freeman Field, Ind., where the climate of hostility worsened. The field’s Officer’s Club was split in two by Goodall’s commanding officer. Airmen were told the main club was for “whites

only” and a secondary area was for blacks. “That’s when the trouble really began,” Goodall says. The secondary club was named Officer’s Club No. 1 or, to opponents, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” In an act of rebellion, more than 100 officers entered the main club in twos and threes in April 1945. They were arrested. “When you complete your cadet training, by act of Congress, you are an officer and a gentleman. And you should be appointed any facility Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz

Tuskegee airmen and Edith Roberts, wife of Col. George Roberts, stand before West Covina Rose Float Foundation's entry.

that you go in, on any base. When (the commanding officer) decided to segregate the main Officer’s Club, we rebelled,” says Goodall, a bomber pilot who was one of the instigators of the Freeman Field Mutiny. A Southern California native, Goodall was unaware of segregation before the war. “I didn’t have any problems here,” the 86year-old says about growing up in Altadena. “I didn’t know I was colored.” It wasn’t until he was thousands of miles from his sunny home that racism became apparent. After the mutiny, court-martial proceedings were dismissed against Goodall and the other mutineers. However, it took the military 50 years to clear their records. Goodall was placed under house arrest — his activities limited only to flying, eating and sleeping. Even after the war’s end in 1945, despite their acclaimed record, the airmen faced bigotry at home and little recognition. “In October of ’45, I came back to the States to discover that the country as a whole

didn’t realize there was a black Air Force during World War II, and that there had not been much change in the country as far as their attitudes and customs,” Lumpkin says. The Red Tails continued to fly as Tuskegee Army Air Field-trained airmen until 1946. They were specially requested to serve as escorts on missions, completing 15,500 during the group’s existence. In 1948, the airmen integrated into the newly formed, unsegregated Air Force after President Harry Truman’s Executive Order No. 9981. That move established equal treatment in the military, but most of all, it marked the end of the Black Air Force. The efforts of the airmen sped desegregation along. Half a century later, the high-flying heroes no longer battle on two fronts — their campaign now takes place on the field of time. As the ranks of these speakers, role models and living legends dwindle, the Red Tails continue to fight for recognition and an increased awareness of their legacy. r

Float: America’s Pride Group: City of Glendale Parade order: 91 Interpretation of theme: The float recognizes those who serve in cut-above-the-rest professions: police, firefighters, educators, medical professionals and members of the military. Description: An American bald eagle sits on a log in the center of the float, surrounded by ferns, rocks, water and pine trees. Don’t miss: The 10 float riders are police officers, firefighters, medical professionals and soldiers, each accompanied by a young Glendale resident who aspires to follow in that career path. ROSEPARADE2010 | 43


PARADE

WORLD CULTURES

FLOAT: Taiwan’s Guardian — the Third Prince GROUP: China Airlines PARADE ORDER: 67 INTERPRETATION OF THEME: The design, the group says, is what makes the float topnotch. DESCRIPTION: The focal point of the float is Nezha, or the Third Prince in Chinese mythology, who rides on a wheel of fire over the ocean to fight a dragon. DON’T MISS: There are no animated tricks but the design is spectacular.

44 | ROSEPARADE2010

FLOAT: Dance with the Terra Cotta Warriors GROUP: Phoenix Satellite Television PARADE ORDER: 24 INTERPRETATION OF THEME: Shaanxi, China — considered by some to be the eighth wonder of the world. DESCRIPTION: Artifacts from the ancient province are shown: terra-cotta soldiers and the Big Goose Pagoda. DON’T MISS: Jigu drummers from Shaanxi perform.

FLOAT: Mexico Bicentennial GROUP: Mexico PARADE ORDER: 43 INTERPRETATION OF THEME: Celebrating the bicentennial of Mexico’s independence. DESCRIPTION: At the front of the float is the statue of the Angel of Independence with photos of Mexican heroes Miguel Hidalgo and Francisco I. Madero. At the rear is an Aztec pyramid and the Sun Stone. DON’T MISS: Thirty-six dancers from Ballet Coco perform on the street.

FLOAT: Better City, Better Life GROUP: Shanghai World Expo / Roundtable of Southern California PARADE ORDER: 74 INTERPRETATION OF THEME: Inspiration is the skyline of Shanghai. DESCRIPTION: Haibao, mascot of the Expo 2010 Shanghai China, waves from in front of the China Pavilion, the Oriental Pearl Tower, the Shanhai World Financial Center and the Jin Mao Towers. DON’T MISS: Fireworks from the buildings.


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PARADE

Float: New Life Rises Group: Donate Life Parade order: 10 Interpretation of theme: Giving life through organ donation has no equal. Description: A phoenix rises above a bed of flames, its tail feathers adorned with dozens of floragraphs of loved ones. Don’t miss: The 24 riders sitting on benches along the side of the float are all transplant recipients and family members of deceased donors.

Float: Magnificent Tales of Health Group: Kaiser Permanente Parade order: 76 Interpretation of theme: County fairs serve as the inspiration. Description: A cornucopia overflows with fruits and vegetables. A carousel takes up most of the float. Don’t miss: The eight children riding the float are Kaiser Permanente patients chosen for their exceptional spirit in the face of adversity. 1. Andrea Beltran, 16, Hacienda Heights 2. Jimmy Daniel, 16, South Los Angeles 3. D’rell Gist, 11, San Diego 4. Morgan Heflin, 18, Los Angeles 5. Haley Ishimatsu, 17, Seal Beach 6. Kirstie Quezada, 14, Corona 7. Monica Trent, 15, Simi Valley 8. Daniel Udave, 14, Los Angeles

INSPIRATION 46 | ROSEPARADE2010

New life rises, hope soars Donate Life’s floats have always sent the world the same message: For every life lost, several more can be saved. This year, the nonprofit organization’s entry uses the imagery of a soaring phoenix and personal stories to inspire hope. By PIA ABELGAS ORENSE

Floragraph: Nicholas Green, 7 Somewhere in Italy, a young man is walking around with Nicholas Green’s heart. A woman and a man are looking at their children through his eyes, and four others are living normal lives because his liver, pancreas and kidneys are working perfectly for them. Somewhere in Italy, a boy is walking around with Nicholas Green’s name. His mother is one of those whose lives were saved when Nicholas died. That was 15 years ago, and Nicholas’ example has saved thousands of lives since then. Nicholas was 7 years old when he was killed by highway robbers while he was on vacation in Italy with his family. His organs went to seven Italians waiting for transplants, one of whom was dying of liver failure the night Nicholas lost his life. The Greens’ story captivated the world, and the media attention helped put the spotlight on organ donation in Italy. Nicholas’ father, Reg Green, credits what the Italian media dubbed the “Nicholas Effect” to the substantial increase in organ donations in that country, which he says is now double the rate they were in 1994. “It is a great comfort,” Green says. “We still get e-mails from people who say their lives have been touched by this in some way or another. Many people write us to say somebody in their family died and remembering Nicholas’ story made them think of donation.” Reg Green has dedicated his life to organ donation. He has written several books, he and his wife Maggie have done interviews and speeches all over the world, and he runs the Nicholas Green Foundation full time from an office in his home in La Cañada Flintridge. A TV movie, “Nicholas’ Gift,” based on the family’s story, was released in 1998. The Greens’ lives have changed in more ways than one since the night Nicholas died. Aside from younger sister Elena, Nicholas now has 13-year-old twin siblings. “Each of us think of Nicholas every day. When he died, the house was very lonely. We all felt there was an empty place at the table — we still do,” Green says. “There’s a sense of irreparable loss. But, on the other hand, the sense that so much good came out of it puts something on the other side of the scales. There’s a solace.” Floragraph: Perlita Carrillo Celis, 2 Every April, Perla Carrillo marks three anniversaries: her son’s birthday, her daughter’s death and three strangers’ second chances at life. Seven years ago, 2-year-old Perlita suffered a brain hemorrhage the day after her brother Carlo was born — there had been no signs of the tumor growing in her brain until then. Surgery was attempted, but two days later Perlita was declared brain dead. “It was so quick,” Carrillo remembers. “My son was born, and we lost our daughter.”


At Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center, an organ donation representative talked to Perlita’s parents about the gift the little girl could give to others. Carrillo remembers thinking, “Why not?” It was something that would have made Perlita — a beautiful loving toddler who always wore a smile — happy, Carrillo says. “It was hard,” she says, “because we were donating to help others, but we thought, ‘Why? Why wasn’t it the other way around?’” Perlita’s kidneys and lungs went to two men in their 30s and to a 1-year-old boy named Isaiah. “It fills up your heart knowing there were other people you were able to help through your loved one,” Carrillo says. “From what I know, all three of them are living much better lives.” Float rider: Mina Gonzales, 57 Mina Gonzales, a 57-year-old Hacienda Heights woman who received a kidney transplant 11 years ago, calls her organ donor her angel. “He saved my life,” she says. Gonzales was placed on the transplant list after complications from hypertension damaged her kidneys. After four years, she started losing hope. Dialysis no longer worked, and fighting off an infection became a daily struggle. When she got a phone call in February 1998, she thought she was going to be told by staff at UCLA Medical Center that infection had once again set in. Instead, they told her a perfect match had been found. “Now, I don’t take anything for granted,” she says. “I thought I was going to die. I prayed ‘Dear God, let me see my son graduate from high school.’ Well, I’m going to be at my grandson’s graduation, too.” All she knows of her young angel is his first name, Carlos. Someday, she hopes to meet his family so she can thank them. In the meantime, she’s using her volunteer work as a Donate Life ambassador to make sure Carlos’ gift continues touching other people. “Me and him, we’re doing this together,” she says. Float rider: Glenn Matsuki, 58 For years, heart recipient Glenn Matsuki tried to reach his donor’s family. He sent them a thank-you letter telling them how his life had changed after the transplant, cards on every major holiday, plus one on the anniversary of his new life. He never heard from them. Someday he hopes to connect with the family, but even now, years after the transplant, he still doesn’t know how he would be able to express his gratitude face to face. “What would you tell somebody who allowed you to live?” he asks. He likely would tell them that he grieved for years for the young man who saved him when his own heart failed. Matsuki, of Long Beach, was on the transplant list for 11 weeks in 1995 after a flu rapidly progressed from an infection to congestive heart failure. After the transplant, he knew immediately that the heart placed in him was a good one. “It beat strongly,” he recalls. He has been an organ donation advocate since then. As hospital services coordinator for OneLegacy, he witnesses the transformation in grieving families once they make the decision to donate a loved one’s organs. “Out of this tragedy, families find a sense of comfort and meaning in their loved ones’ demise,” he says. “I see the transformation from grieving to seeing hope, so much good coming out of this tragic event in their ability to help people.” R

Float: Harvesting Good Health Group: City of Duarte / City of Hope Parade order: 78 Interpretation of theme: Teaching children the importance of nutrition is key to good health. Description: Children tend a sun-filled garden patch. Don’t miss: Float riders include City of Hope pediatric patients.

Float: We are the Champions Group: Bayer Advanced Parade order: 27 Interpretation of theme: Champions come to play at the Rose Bowl, the oldest collegiate bowl game in the United States. Description: The Rose Bowl Stadium is depicted as a “Championship Cup” brimming with a lush bouquet of 21 sculpted roses and orchids. Don’t miss: One of the cup’s panels shows an image of a 1911 Roman-style chariot race, which took the place of football for a few years in the early 1900s. The other three panels represent key games in the stadium’s history.

To read more about the other float riders and the loved ones honored through floragraphs and a memorial wall, go to http://donatelife-organdonation.blogspot.com/

ROSEPARADE2010 | 47


PARADE EQUESTRIAN TEAMS GROUP: United States Marine Corps Mounted Color Guard PARADE ORDER: 5 HORSES: America’s living legend “Wild Mustangs” of palomino color from the Bureau of Land Management “Adopt a Horse” program. DESCRIPTION: Since 1967, this mounted color guard, representing the Marine Corps and Marine Corps Logistics Base in Barstow, is the only remaining mounted color guard in the Marine Corps today. GROUP: Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center PARADE ORDER: 12 HORSES: Five horses and six mules. DESCRIPTION: The horses and mules are used to teach riding and packing to U.S. Marines, as well as other branches of the military and NATO forces. GROUP: Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament PARADE ORDER: 16 HORSES: Originating from the Iberian Peninsula for the region in Spain called Andalusia, the Andalusian was the “royal horse of Europe.” DESCRIPTION: Artistic and skillful pageantry paired with the horsemanship and swordplay allows Medieval Times to bring the Middle Ages to parade viewers. GROUP: Region 1 Versatile Arabian PARADE ORDER: 19 HORSES: The Arabian is the oldest and only purebred horse in the world. This breed traces its lineage to the deserts of Saudi Arabia, and the countries of Russia and Poland. DESCRIPTION: The horses and riders have many costumes, including authentic Arabian native costumes and a Victorian English Sidesaddle. GROUP: Wells Fargo PARADE ORDER: 23 HORSES: Each stagecoach is pulled by four quarter horses and is accompanied by an outrider. DESCRIPTION: Wells Fargo opened its first Pasadena office in 1885 on Fair Oaks Avenue, using brightly painted Concord stagecoaches. GROUP: Calizona Appaloosa Horse Club PARADE ORDER: 33 HORSES: The group rides Appaloosa horses with varying color coat patterns. One theory of how Appaloosas came to America is they were imported from the Near East or Spain and Mexico about 1600. The spread of the horses northward was made by the Plains Indians. DESCRIPTION: Riders and horses are costumed in authentic, colorful Nez Perce Indian Heritage parade regalia. The parade group is lead by the Native American chief in full war bonnet headdress. GROUP: The New Buffalo Soldiers PARADE ORDER: 36 HORSES: Missouri foxtrotters and Tennessee walkers are smoothgaited horses, making them comfortable to ride. Thoroughbreds were bred in England primarily for racing. Quarter horses were bred in the United States as ranch horses. DESCRIPTION: This historical re-enactment group recreates the life of Company H, 10th Regiment of the U.S. Cavalry. It educates the public about the contributions of African Americans on the American Western frontier. 48 | ROSEPARADE2010

GROUP: Victorian Roses Ladies Riding Society PARADE ORDER: 48 HORSES: Blanket pattern Appaloosas, quarter horses, Peruvian Paso DESCRIPTION: The group symbolizes the romance of the Victorian Era in the colorful costumes members wear. Each member has a “rose” moniker representing who she is in the re-enactment society. Each costume is handmade. GROUP: The Shire Riders PARADE ORDER: 39 HORSES: Like the Clydesdale, the Shire horse is descended from the “Great Horse” brought to England in 1066 by William the Conqueror. DESCRIPTION: The Shire Riders decided to form a group in 2008 to promote the Shire horses. GROUP: Amigo de Anza Equestrian Unit PARADE ORDER: 44 HORSES: The Arabian horse is one of the oldest breeds. DESCRIPTION: This color guard is a group of young women from the more than 40 who have ridden representing the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail for the National Park Service. GROUP: Western Haflingers PARADE ORDER: 51 HORSES: Haflingers originated in the high mountains and villages of the Tyrolian Alps in Europe. DESCRIPTION: The costumes are Austrian folk costumes. The men wear lederhosen and shirts. The women wear dirndls, the decorative overdress with white blouse. GROUP: Long Beach Mounted Police PARADE ORDER: 55 HORSES: Palominos DESCRIPTION: The Long Beach Mounted Police was founded in 1935.


GROUP: Valley Hunt Club Hitch & Riders PARADE ORDER: 59 HORSES: Friesian horses are a relatively rare, black-colored breed that originated in Friesland, a province of the Netherlands. Later, the breed’s agility made it sought after by riding schools in Paris and Spain during the 15th and 16th centuries. DESCRIPTION: The Valley Hunt Club was founded in 1888 as a riding group that hunted jackrabbits and other game in the Pasadena area. The club founded the present-day Tournament of Roses in 1890. GROUP: Giddy Up Gals Equestrian Drill Team PARADE ORDER: 62 HORSES: The American Quarter Horse is well known as a racehorse as well as a working ranch horse. DESCRIPTION: Going beyond traditional military drill, the Giddy Up Gals wear whimsical costumes and props. GROUP: Cowgirls Historical Foundation PARADE ORDER: 66 HORSES: The American Quarter Horse is known for its calm disposition and quickness. DESCRIPTION: Each of the costumes are vintage Western wear.

GROUP: Arizona Mini Mystique PARADE ORDER: 69 HORSES: This miniature horse comes from English and Dutch mine horses, as well as the Shetland pony. They were used to pull coal from the Appalachian mines as late as the 1950s. DESCRIPTION: The group performs close-order drills such as pinwheels, spins, pass throughs and do-si-dos. GROUP: Scripps Miramar Saddlebreds PARADE ORDER: 73 HORSES: The Pinto American Saddlebreds of Scripps Miramar are designated breed champions. DESCRIPTION: The group presents circus wagons, ballerinas, mimes, and clowns. GROUP: Painted Ladies Rodeo Performers PARADE ORDER: 77 HORSES: American Paint Horses DESCRIPTION: The Painted Ladies perform trick riding, trick roping, and dancing. GROUP: Southern California Peruvian Paso Horse Club PARADE ORDER: 81 HORSES: Often called the “Cadillac of Horses,” the Peruvian horse is intelligent.

DESCRIPTION: Riders and Peruvian Paso horses will exhibit the unique “cadillac” gait of the Peruvian horse. GROUP: Horse Cavalry Detachment/ 1st Cavalry Division PARADE ORDER: 84 HORSES: U.S. Cavalry Horses DESCRIPTION: The 1st Cavalry Division Horse Cavalry Detachment is the largest active duty mounted cavalry unit in the U.S. Army. The uniform the troopers wear originated in the early 1880s. GROUP: All American Cowgirl Chicks PARADE ORDER: 88 HORSES: Quarter horses and paints DESCRIPTION: The All American Cowgirl Chicks ride to raise hope for those suffering from cancer and other deadly diseases. GROUP: Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department PARADE ORDER: 92 DESCRIPTION: Continuing a tradition since 1850, the sheriff’s Mounted Enforcement Detail has closed the Rose Parade for the past 30 years. The deputies are volunteers who own their horses and take care of them at no expense to the county. R

ROSEPARADE2010 | 49


PARADE MARCHING BANDS Band: Conroe Tiger Band Representing: Conroe, Texas Parade order: 53 Description: The Conroe Tiger Band evolved from the school’s “swing” dance orchestra. It is celebrating its 80th anniversary. The Conroe Band is one of Texas’ Original UIL Sweepstakes Bands, winning its first Sweepstakes during the first year of organized band competition in the state in 1947. Band: Danvers High School Falcon Marching Band Representing: Danvers, Mass. Parade order: 90 Description: In 1996, the band won its first grand championship in Orlando with just 52 members. It is the only Massachusetts high school band to perform in the Tournament of Roses Parade three times. Band: El Dorado Golden Hawks Band and Color Guard Representing: Placentia Parade order: 21 Description: Since 1966, this band has had only two band directors; Don Zink for eight years and current director Richard Watson. In the past four decades, the band has grown from a Class B band to a 6A Open Division band. It has won many sweepstakes awards throughout California, as well as Hawaii and Vancouver. Band: Glendora Tartan Band and Pageantry Representing: Glendora Parade order: 86 Description: Ranked as one of the Top 10 street bands in Southern California, the Tartan Band has won more than 200 awards in the past four years. It is the six-time Grand Champion of the Los Angeles County Fair Marching Band Competition. The current uniforms were designed in the 1960s as a tribute to the 42nd Black Watch Scottish regiment.

Band name: Ohio State School for the Blind Marching Band Representing: Columbus, Ohio Parade order: 9 Description: Band members must memorize all music due to the nature of their disability. Some of the members with “perfect pitch” can identify five pitches played simultaneously on a piano. 50 | ROSEPARADE2010

Associated Press

Members of the Ohio State School for the Blind Marching Band react to news they were chosen to participate in the 2010 Rose Parade.

Ohio State School for the Blind

Quite a sight By Richard Irwin

Most people don’t like others looking over their shoulders, but members of the Ohio State School for the Blind Marching Band count on it. In fact, the small band is counting on its marching assistants to keep them on the straight and narrow along Colorado Boulevard this New Year’s Day. It will be their first appearance in the Rose Parade. “The sighted assistants use their hands on the shoulders of the musicians to guide them. Two hands on the left shoulder means left turn, two hands on the right means a right turn,” explains Tricia Mobley, a spokeswoman for the Ohio School for the Blind. The Buckeye band will not only be the smallest band to march in the famous parade, it will be the first with blind musicians. There are 68 band members, including 13 brass, 13 percussion and 11 woodwinds. The musicians are accompanied by marching assistants, volunteers who are as young as junior high school students and as old as senior citizens. “They’ve been practicing a lot; they’re ready for the big parade,” Mobley says. The marching band was formed in 2005 when Ohio School for the Deaf officials and students wanted a band at their football games. So they turned to the State School for the Blind, which already had a band playing at pep rallies and concerts. Co-directors Carol Agler and Dan Kelley turned it into the nation’s first blind marching band. Blind since birth, Kelley lent his expertise as a trumpet player, jazz musician and music teacher. The skilled conductor now leads the band and, together with Agler, developed the band’s signature drill, “Script Braille Ohio.” After the football season, the band continues to play at the home basketball games for the Ohio School for the Deaf. School officials say the Rose Parade offers them an opportunity to show the world what incredible musicians blind and visually impaired students can be. They want to serve as a role model for other students and programs. R


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PARADE

Band: Kansai Honor Green Band Representing: Kyoto, Japan Parade order: 79 Description: The band is an honor band from the Kansai area of Japan (Kyoto, Osaka, Hyogo, Nara and Wakayama) and includes college and high school students. Members wear traditional costumes and play Japanese folk music.

P h oto by S a l O l i va s

The Marching Tigers have grown from 16 members in 1984 to 210 today.

Riverside City College

Hollywood’s band by Luanne J. Hunt

With appearances in 11 countries and GUEST STINTS in more than 50 movies, TV shows, commercials and music videos, the MARCHING TIGERS OF Riverside Community College have achieved what some might call rock-star status in the world of collegiate marching bands. The fervor over the 210-piece ensemble started with its 1990 Rose Parade appearance, which led to a television commercial for the Riverside Auto Center and then a part in the box-office hit “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery.” Band: Farmers Insurance Group Since then, the RCC Marching Tigers Marching Band / Riverside City have been featured in “American Pie 2,” College Marching Tigers “Coach Carter” and “The Truman Show,” Representing: Farmers Insurance plus episodes of TV’s “Charmed,” “Gilmore Group / Riverside City College Girls,” “Boston Public” and “The Bachelor.” Parade order: 3 “We didn’t expect all of this to happen, Description: The Riverside but in a way it’s been a microcosm of three City College Marching Tigers is things — discipline, commitment and followparticipating this year as the Farmers through,” says Gary Locke, director of the Insurance Group Marching Band Marching Tigers since 1984. “If you combine and opens the show with the original those principles and then add music to the “The Flowers of the Rose Parade.” mix, you’re bound to be successful.” While Locke leads a talented group of young musicians, most marching bands do not rise to the status of the Riverside ensemble, which is sometimes referred to as “Hollywood’s Band.” “We’re really not your typical marching band,” Locke says. “We have singers and all the instruments you’d find in a rock band. That has a lot to do with our appeal and all of the opportunities that have opened up to us.” Adding to a growing list of accomplishments, the Marching Tigers will be making their fifth appearance in the Rose Parade on Jan. 1. This time, the band will be in the opening segment alongside the Farmers Insurance Group float, performing an original composition, “The Flowers of the Rose Parade.” During the march down Colorado Boulevard, they also will play Kool & the Gang’s “Celebration” and the standard “Strike Up the Band.” r 52 | ROSEPARADE2010

Band: Latin Band Pedro Molina Representing: Guatemala, Central America Parade order: 41 Description: This champion band has performed in Costa Rica, Salvador, Honduras, Belize and Mexico. It began as a very simple military-style band with coronets and drums. Over the past five years, it has made the transition to a Latin-style band. Band: Los Angeles Unified All-District High School Honor Band Representing: Los Angeles Parade order: 57 Description: The band is recognized as one of the only brass and percussion ensembles of its kind in the nation. The band is working on its goal to be a part of the next Presidential inaugural parade in Washington, D.C. Band: Marian Catholic High School Band Representing: Chicago Heights, Ill. Parade order: 14 Description: Over the past 20 years, the band has earned hundreds of awards and honors. Marian has been undefeated in the Illinois Marching Band Championships since 1980. Its parade music will have a barber theme with music from “The Barber of Seville” and the Gillette Look Sharp March. Band: Millard West High School Wildcat Marching Band Representing: Omaha, Neb. Parade order: 46 Description: The band program has 165 students. The American Music Conference has hailed the Omaha school district one of the Best 100 Communities for Music Education in America four times, most recently in 2005. Band: Ohio University Marching Band Representing: Athens, Ohio Parade order: 50 Description: The Ohio University Marching Band was founded in 1923. In 1976, they were the first marching band to present a concert in New York City’s Carnegie Hall.


BAND: Oregon Marching Band REPRESENTING: University of Oregon PARADE ORDER: 31 DESCRIPTION: The OMB is composed of more than 200 students and has performed at San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks football games and at Disneyland. BAND: Pasadena City College Herald Trumpets REPRESENTING: Pasadena PARADE ORDER: 17 DESCRIPTION: The PCC Herald Trumpeters have preceded the Royal Court for more than 35 years. They also perform for the announcement of the Queen and her Royal Court. More than 140 students auditioned for the band, which features nine trumpet positions and one snare drummer. BAND: Pasadena City College Tournament of Roses Honor Band REPRESENTING: Pasadena PARADE ORDER: 65 DESCRIPTION: The band, which consists of 235 members, has appeared in every Rose Parade since 1930. It is directed by Kyle Luck.

BAND: Pickerington Central Marching Tigers REPRESENTING: Pickerington, Ohio PARADE ORDER: 75 DESCRIPTION: This 232-member band marched in the 2009 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City. This will mark the band’s fourth Rose Parade appearance. BAND: Soddy-Daisy Marching Trojans REPRESENTING: Soddy-Daisy, Tenn. PARADE ORDER: 68 DESCRIPTION: The 154-member band will be making its Rose Parade debut.

Larson directs this 170-member band that consists of volunteers from throughout Southern California. BAND: Walton High School Marching Raider Band REPRESENTING: Marietta, Ga. PARADE ORDER: 83 DESCRIPTION: The Walton band will make its second Rose Parade appearance. BAND: Webb City High School Cardinal Pride REPRESENTING: Webb City, Mo. PARADE ORDER: 72 DESCRIPTION: The Cardinal Pride band, which features 172 members, will be appearing in its second Rose Parade.

BAND: South Kitsap High School Marching Band REPRESENTING: Port Orchard, Wash. PARADE ORDER: 61 DESCRIPTION: The South Kitsap 124member band will be making its Rose Parade debut. BAND: The Salvation Army Tournament of Roses Band REPRESENTING: Los Angeles PARADE ORDER: 35 DESCRIPTION: This year will mark the band’s 90th Rose Parade appearance. Kevin

BAND: West Coast Composite Marine Band REPRESENTING: Camp Pendleton PARADE ORDER: 11 DESCRIPTION: Chief Warrant Officer Michael Edmondson directs this 122member unit, which has marched in the Rose Parade for more than 60 years. The band is one of six organizations that has a standing invitation to participate in the Rose Parade every year. R

San Gabriel Valley Pendleton 2309 Huntington Drive San Marino 888.551.9665

South Bay Pendleton 2809 Pacific Coast Hwy Torrance 800.696.6502

Mon - Sat 10-6 | Sundays 12-5

ROSEPARADE2010 | 53


PARADE

IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE 1 2010 Theme Float, presented by Wells Fargo with supporting sponsor NAMM 2 Grand Marshal 3 Farmers Insurance Group Marching Band / Riverside City College Marching Tigers 4 Farmers Insurance Group of Companies 5 United States Marine Corps Mounted Color Guard 6 President’s Car — DiSano Family 7 Rotary International 8 Lions Clubs International 9 Ohio State School for the Blind Marching Band 10 Donate Life 11 West Coast Composite Marine Band 12 Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center 13 Jack in the Box 14 Marian Catholic High School Band 15 Rain Bird Corporation 16 Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament 17 Pasadena City College Herald Trumpets 18 Macy’s / Queen Float 19 Region 1 Versatile Arabian 20 Ronald McDonald House Charities® Southern California (RMHCSC) 21 El Dorado Golden Hawks Band and Color Guard 22 Mayor of Pasadena — Bill Bogaard 23 Wells Fargo 24 Phoenix Satellite Television 25 Ohio State University Float 26 Ohio State University Band 27 Bayer Advanced 28 Rose Bowl Game, Hall of Fame Inductees 29 SUBWAY® Restaurants

30 University of Oregon Float 31 University of Oregon Marching Band 32 City of Torrance 33 Calizona Appaloosa Horse Club 34 Burbank Tournament of Roses Association 35 The Salvation Army Tournament of Roses Band 36 The New Buffalo Soldiers 37 West Covina Rose Float Foundation 38 Lutheran Laymen’s League 39 The Shire Riders 40 American Honda 41 Latin Band Pedro Molina 42 Martinez Family 43 Mexico 44 Amigo de Anza Equestrian Unit 45 City of Alhambra 46 Millard West High School Wildcat Marching Band 47 Trader Joe’s 48 Victorian Roses Ladies Riding Society 49 City of South Pasadena 50 Ohio University Marching Band 51 Western Haflingers 52 Dick Van Patten’s Natural Balance Pet Foods 53 Conroe Tiger Band 54 City of Cerritos 55 Long Beach Mounted Police 56 Cal Poly Universities 57 Los Angeles Unified School District All-District High School Honor Band 58 City of Los Angeles 59 Valley Hunt Club Hitch & Riders 60 City of Anaheim 61 South Kitsap High School Marching Band 62 Giddy Up Gals Equestrian Drill Team

63 La Cañada Flintridge Tournament of Roses Association 64 Sierra Madre Rose Float Association 65 Pasadena City College Tournament of Roses Honor Band 66 Cowgirls Historical Foundation 67 China Airlines 68 Soddy-Daisy Marching Trojans 69 Arizona Mini Mystique 70 New Mexico, USA 71 Anheuser-Busch 72 Webb City High School Cardinal Pride 73 Scripps Miramar Saddlebreds 74 Shanghai World Expo / Roundtable of Southern California 75 Pickerington Central Marching Tigers 76 Kaiser Permanente 77 Painted Ladies Rodeo Performers 78 City of Duarte / City of Hope 79 Kansai Honor Green Band 80 Odd Fellows and Rebekahs 81 Southern California Peruvian Paso Horse Club 82 Downey Rose Float Association 83 Walton High School Marching Raider Band 84 Horse Cavalry Detachment / 1st Cavalry Division 85 Kiwanis International 86 Glendora Tartan Band and Pageantry 87 RFD-TV 88 All American Cowgirl Chicks 89 Boy Scouts of America 90 Danvers High School Falcon Marching Band 91 City of Glendale 92 Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Source: Tournament of Roses

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In case you miss it... If you can’t make it to the New Year’s Day parade, there are other chances to see the floats, bands and horses participating in the Tournament of Roses EQUESTFEST

The parade of Clydesdales, American quarter horses, Appaloosas, stallions and palominos on Colorado Boulevard is truly a magnificent sight, so it’s a shame they only play a supporting role on New Year’s Day. There is a chance, though, to catch these horses and their riders do more than just trot in formation. During Equestfest, normally held a few days before the Rose Parade, the equestrian teams showcase their signature moves — drills, dances, trick riding, roping — in a special performance at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center in Burbank. The audience also can visit the horses in their stalls after the show and talk to riders about various breeds. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Dec. 29, Los Angeles Equestrian Center, 480 Riverside Drive, Burbank, $12 (free for children 5 and under), (626) 795-4171, www.sharpseating.com. Live telecast on RFD-TV.

BANDFEST

If you’ve only seen the Rose Parade on television, you’re missing out in more ways than one. Forget the five-second sound bites of the marching bands that you can barely hear above the chatter of TV hosts. To truly appreciate the depth of talent in these groups, you have to see and hear them live. Watch these award-winning marching bands from all over the country perform three shows over two days at the football field of Pasadena City College. Keep your eye (and ear) out for the tropical rhythms of the Latin Band Pedro Molina from Guatemala. They don’t just march — they salsa to the beat of their drums. 2 p.m. Dec. 29, 10 a.m. Dec. 30, 2 p.m. Dec. 30, Robinson Stadium at Pasadena City College, 1570 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, $12, (626) 795-4171.

FLOAT DECORATING

Catch a behind-the-scenes glimpse at how the flowers, seeds, grains, bark, grasses and all kinds of organic materials are meticulously applied to the floats during the final stages of decoration. The three locations serving as the floats’ last homes before their big day open their doors so guests can meet the hundreds of volunteers who spend hundreds of hours decorating these moving masterpieces. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 28 and 29, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 30, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dec. 31, Rosemont Pavilion (700 Seco St.), Brookside Pavilion (Lot 1, south side of Rose Bowl stadium), Rose Palace (835 S. Raymond Ave.), $7 for any two visits (free for children 5 and under), (626) 795-4171.

POST PARADE SHOWCASE OF FLOATS

At the end of the Rose Parade, the floats are parked along Sierra Madre Boulevard and Washington Street for two days so visitors can see them up close and in detail. This event gets really crowded but it’s worth the opportunity to step up to the floats and see the workmanship and artistry that goes into making them. 1-5 p.m. Jan. 1, 7-9 a.m. Jan. 2 for seniors and disabled, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Jan. 2, Sierra Madre Boulevard and Washington Street, $7 (free for children 5 and under), (626) 795-4171. ROSEPARADE2010 | 55


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PAGEANTRY Queen Natalie Innocenzi

Age 17, Arcadia Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy

Q: Why did you start Alzheimer’s Awareness Week at your school? A: I started Alzheimer’s Awareness Week because my grandmother was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s about six years ago. So to see her not remember and almost forget who I am and my mom and her sisters are was very hard. I thought that instead of feeling sorry about it, I would try to do something to make a difference. Q: What is it like being the youngest on the court? A: All the girls are like my big sisters and my moms. They help me with everything. We’re not very different; we’re into the same things. We’re still applying to colleges. It’s just the number and that’s about it. Q: What do you do in your spare time? A: I like to play tennis, and right now I’m just doing a lot of homework. I like going out with friends, going to the movies, shopping. I’m a bargain shopper so definitely Marshalls, T.J. Maxx, Ross or Forever 21. Q: Has anything changed since you’ve become royalty? A: Just that I’ve gotten calls from

people I haven’t seen in years to tell me congratulations. Different things like that. Nothing has changed. I’m still a 16-yearold in high school trying to get into college and do well in school. I just now have a full-time job along with it. Q: What would be your real royal name? A: Giselle. I just think it’s really pretty.

PriNcess Michelle Van Wyk Age 17, La Cañada Flintridge La Cañada High School

Q: What’s it like doing charity work with your mom? A: It’s really fun. Our favorite event that we do is the Special Olympics. For that event, you get put in pairs, and you get assigned to an athlete. So the last time we did it, we were assigned to a track runner, and it was really cool because we both got to know him. Afterwards, instead of coming home and telling my mom about it, she was there to experience 58 | ROSEPARADE2010

Q: Is the experience what you imagined? A: No. It’s so much more. You always hear how the Tournament of Roses is like a family. You’re just like, “yeah, OK,” and you blow it off. But when you’re a part of it, it truly is a family. I’m so lucky and humbled to be given this opportunity to be a part of it.

it with me. Just having the same experiences brings us together. Q: What do you do in your spare time? A: I really like to do art in my free time. ... I work mostly with acrylics. I like working on big canvases, and I don’t like copying things; I just do whatever I want. ... Right now, I’m working on this kind of Lichtensteininspired portrait of my friend. So I kind of made her into a cartoon so it’s very ’60s retro with lots of color. Q: Does your brother tease you about being royalty? A: We went to this one dinner that had place cards, so when he sets the table, he places the one that says “Princess Michelle” in front of my place setting. He thinks it’s hysterical. I still love him. Q: What would be your royal name? A: I think Antoinette is a pretty royal name. I like my name. Michelle Antoinette. I could be like a French queen. Q: What’s up with the creepy faces between you and (Princess) June? A: June started it. ... It’s just something fun we get to do sometimes when we go out. We shouldn’t be creepy in public, I guess. It’s kind of a way for us to be silly at the Tournament House and to have a little fun. Q: What is the weirdest thing you have learned so far? A: During the tryout process, there are a lot of volunteers who kind of watch over you when you’re in the Tournament House. It turns out while you’re in the House, you’re being watched. It’s kind of like a whole judging process not to see if you’re presentable in front of the judges but if you have really good character when you’re not in front of a panel of people.


QUERIES FOR

THE COURT BY STACEY WANG

PRINCESS ASHLEY THAXTON

Age 17, Altadena John Marshall Fundamental High School

PRINCESS KATHERINE HERNÁNDEZ Age 18, Pasadena Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy

Q: Do you consider yourself a tomboy at heart? A: You know, I was when I was growing up. I was a little bit of a tomboy, but I think the biggest influence on me was sports. I was very, very into sports since I was little. I think you can be active in sports and still be a girlie girl. Q: What got you into track and field? A: Running has always been one of those family outings. Some people go to the park together, we all go out on runs. So it’s really great, when I first started to run, I got to get close to my dad. He was the one who taught me how to run basically. Q: Has anything changed since you’ve become royalty? A: A lot of things have changed. I still try to keep up with my activities. It’s difficult though. I have less time to myself and less time to sleep. But it’s been really great because I have all this experience with the Tournament. Q: What is unique about you? A: My mom being born in Mexico. It’s created a unique experience and interesting blend of cultures in my house and the way that I’ve been brought up. It’s really taught me how to look outside of my community and maybe have a more global view on things. We spend a lot of time in Mexico, and seeing the poverty there is different than anything you can see in this country. Q: What is the weirdest thing you have learned so far? A: That princesses like to eat as much as anybody else. It’s funny because all of the girls, we can be tired after a long day of training, but the second anybody mentions food, everyone lightens up. Everyone brightens up. Everyone gets excited about food.

Q: What inspires your love for music? A: I did children’s choir when I was little. My mom sings and plays the flute, and my dad plays the drums, so music has always been a part of our lives growing up. Especially musical theater, which is my favorite aspect of music. Whenever we clean the house, we blast “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.” We sing and all clean together. I grew up with it, so it just came naturally, and it’s just something I love. Q: What do you do in your spare time? A: I love to read. When I was little, when I’d get into trouble, I’d have to go to my room, and I wouldn’t be allowed to read — that was my punishment. I had to sit and do nothing. Q: Has anything changed since you’ve become royalty? A: Not really. I think it’s weird getting up in the morning and not going to school. Then, going to get pampered instead. My relationship with my friends has stayed the same. They’re really supportive but not too over the top about it. Q: Is the experience what you imagined? A: In a sense it’s what I imagined it’d be like — the glamour and all the clothes is sort of what I expected. I didn’t realize how much community service we’d be doing. We’re going to be attending over 150 community events. Q: What is the weirdest thing you have learned so far? A: I learned why white suiters wear white suits. In 1933, the city of Pasadena wanted to deny the Tournament of Roses any future parade permits because the crowds were getting insane, and there was no way to manage. They couldn’t pick out the volunteers from the crowds. There was no way to control everything so the committee members got together and decided that it would be completely insane to wear white suits on New Year’s Day, but they decided to present it to the city of Pasadena, and they thought it was a great idea.

ROSEPARADE2010 | 59


PAGEANTRY

Princess Lauren Rogers Age 17, Altadena Blair High School

Q: What got you into speech contests? A: When I was younger, when I was born, I had somewhat of a hearing disability, so I couldn’t speak very well, and I was very quiet. So when I got older, I kind of wanted to get out of that after

I had my surgery for my ears. I just wanted to develop my speaking as much as a could. ... We recently learned with our speech training that you can breathe through a straw to calm you down. Before the President’s Dinner, when all the court was presented for the first time, all the girls were doing a breathing exercise with the straws. Q: Has volunteering at Huntington Hospital changed your outlook? A: It definitely shows, when you see all the patients, it makes you very compassionate. It makes you very — I don’t want to say vulnerable — but it definitely shows you things that can happen in life. Q: What would be your royal name? A: I think Lauren is royalty enough. I mean, it’s who I am, so it’s something I want to stick by.

Princess Kinsey Stuart Age 18, South Pasadena Pasadena City College

Q: What motivates you to participate in so many activities? A: I realized that I get joy out of making other people happy, so that’s why I did a lot of the community service stuff I did. Q: Has anything changed since you’ve become royalty? A: My mom cleans my room when she visits me, without asking, and does my laundry. Other than that, no. They kind of make fun of me for it, especially my grandmother. She says, “even though you’re a princess, you’re still under my roof, and I’m the queen bee.” Q: Is the experience what you imagined? A: It’s more. I’ve been dreaming about this since I was 4 years old. ... My grandmother would send me newspaper articles about the Rose Court since I was 4. That was the main reason I moved down here to try out. And I know it was a really big long shot, but I didn’t have a clue that many girls would try out, and I didn’t really care because I knew this was something I wanted to do even if I didn’t make it past the first round. To make it to each round after that made me so much more proud of who I was. Then when I made it to the final seven, I couldn’t have be happier. This whole experience has been amazing, and it’s only going to get better. Q: What is the weirdest thing you have learned so far? A: That you can use toilet seat covers as blotters. That’s the weirdest thing I have ever heard of in my life. And now I know. 60 | ROSEPARADE2010

Princess June Ko

Age 17, Arcadia Arcadia High School

Q: What made you stay with the violin for so many years? A: I was always ingrained in classical music since I was born. ... I didn’t like the discipline that came with violin, but after being involved in it for so long, I’ve come to appreciate musicians and especially classical music artists, and it’s a really big passion of mine. Q: What would be your royal name? A: Oh, I’ve got one. Anastasia Elizabeth Bennington. That one sounds classy. Q: What is unique about you? A: I’m sort of a joker. ... And it’s great that everyone else on the court is like that, so we have great interaction with each other. Michelle, especially — we like to make creepy faces at each other. Q: Is the experience what you imagined? A: There’s not enough words in the dictionary to describe what the six girls and I are going through. Q: What is the weirdest thing you have learned so far? A: I think it’s amazing how we can still muster a lot of enthusiasm and excitement toward each other even when we have a really long day. And that really surprises me, and it’s a good thing, too.


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NextGen story

[No. 859] Walk or die. That’s what it had come down to for Lonnie Saathoff. Daily exercise was an absolute necessity for him to survive a debilitating lung disease. But farm work as a young man, then a career in construction and involvement in karate and other strenuous activities had taken a toll on his knees. For a decade, he struggled with increasing knee pain, to the point that he could no longer walk. Now in his 60s, he was left with very few options for keeping his lungs clear. Every day had become a nearly hopeless struggle. Then Lonnie turned to Methodist Hospital. Orthopedic surgeons replaced both of his knees over a three-month period and put him back on his feet. “I see so much potential for myself now,” Lonnie says. “I see a lot of hope.” Today, Lonnie is clicking off the miles in…

Read the rest of his story at www.methodisthospital.org. To attend a free hip and knee seminar, call

888-8NEXTGEN. [ 8 8 8 - 8 6 3 - 9 8 4 3 ]


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Watchara Phomicinda

Art Direction:

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Princess Michelle Van Wyk Black coat and skirt, yellow turtleneck, red plaid scarf (Opposite)

Princess June Ko After-five sheath dress, Mikimoto pearls


Queen Natalie Innocenzi Red blazer, black skirt, red plaid pumps


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Front row, left to right: Princess Ashley Thaxton, Queen Natalie Innocenzi, Princess Lauren Rogers Back row: Princess June Ko, Princess Katie Hernandez, Princess Michelle Van Wyk, Princess Kinsey Stuart

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Princess Kinsey Stuart Purple sheath dress (Opposite)

Princess Katherine Hernandez Golden spice tunic, knit leggings, black boots



Princess Ashley Thaxton Purple bohemian tunic


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Princess Lauren Rogers Python print skirt and scarf, turtleneck sweater

Online Extra See more from the Royal Court photo shoot at insidesocal .com/rose

Special Thanks Pasadena Central Library, Stylist Linda Reimers, Macy’s, Lancome



San Gabriel Basin Water Quality Authority

Bi-partisan effort by San Gabriel Valley Congressional Delegation increases Restoration Fund to $135 million

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San Gabriel Valley Congressional delegation increases authorization of the San Gabriel Basin Restoration Fund by $50 million bringing the total to $135 million. The Restoration Fund provides funding for cleanup costs associated with groundwater contamination in the San Gabriel Valley. Cleanup of the San Gabriel Basin is estimated at over a billion dollars.

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San Gabriel Valley Congressional Delegation secures $3.5 Million for groundwater cleanup The San Gabriel Basin Water Quality Authority received a $3.5 million dollar appropriation for the San Gabriel Basin Restoration Fund. The San Gabriel Basin Restoration Fund is currently authorized for $135 million. To date the Restoration Fund has received $78 million in Congressional appropriations since its establishment in December of 2000.

Greg Nordbak CHAIRMAN

Carol Montano VICE-CHAIR

Jim Byerrum TREASURER

Margaret Clark SECRETARY

Ed Chavez BOARD MEMBER

Michael Whitehead BOARD MEMBER

Bob Kuhn BOARD MEMBER

Grace Kast EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR


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Cleaning Up Our Groundwater for Future Generations

WQA Helps Fund Technology Upgrades at Local Water Treatment Facilities The Congressman David Dreier Treatment Facility, owned & operated by the San Gabriel Valley Water Company, as well as the Valley County Water District Treatment Plant and the La Puente Valley County Water District Treatment Plant received millions of dollars in state-of-the-art upgrades. Technology upgrades make long-term treatment more cost and energy-efficient.

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Alhambra Phase II The City of Alhambra has begun delivering water from their Phase 2 Treatment facility. The facility restores existing city wells by treating 7,000 gallons per minute of contaminated groundwater. The WQA partnered with the City and the San Gabriel Valley Municipal Water District on this project. The WQA provided $1.4 million for the construction of this facility.

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Photos by Getty Images

Fans of the Oregon Ducks cheer on their team during the game against Oregon State Beavers on Dec. 3.

96TH ROSE BOWL GAME

Oregon vs. Ohio State Ducks pit high-flying offense against Buckeyes’ stingy defense By Steve Ramirez

Oregon and Ohio State both bring 10-2 records and conference championships into the 96th Rose Bowl Game. Oregon lost just once in Pac-10 play and Ohio State lost just once in Big Ten action. But that’s where the similarities end. The Ducks, making their first appearance in Pasadena since 1995, are an offensive juggernaut. They come at you hard and fast. The Buckeyes, appearing in their first Rose Bowl Game since 1997, are built on defense, allowing a mere 12 points per game. Something’s got to give, and it will, beginning at 2 p.m. on New Year’s Day. “They play with such tremendous tempo and passion, and I know one thing, we’d better get in shape because they come after it and go

hard,” says Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, who has led the Buckeyes to Bowl Championship Series games six times since 2002. “They’re an aggressive style football team. You can see they love to play the game. It all gets tied together with their great skill and great talent and special teams prowess there. “I can promise you, they are lightning, and if you can win the Pac-10 — I think top to bottom, the Pac-10 is one of the most balanced and good football conferences in America — you have a great football team. We will obviously need to be at our best.” The key for the Ducks is their spread-option attack, which is spearheaded by quarterback Jeremiah Masoli. The junior from Northern California is a total offense machine, accounting for nearly 2,800 yards and 27 touchdowns. Oregon’s prowess doesn’t stop there. The Ducks also give opposing

ABOUT THE COACHES: Oregon’s Chip Kelly Page 78|Ohio State’s Jim Tressel Page 80 76 | ROSEPARADE2010


GAME

Andre Amos of the Ohio State Buckeyes holds a rose in his mouth after beating the Michigan Wolverines 21-10 on Nov. 21.

defensive coordinators headaches with running backs LaMichael James and Kenjon Barner. James has rushed for 1,476 yards and 14 TDs; Barner has 302 yards and three TDs. Also available is LaGarrette Blount. The senior was suspended for much of the season after punching a Boise State player in the season opener, but looked good in the Civil War game against Oregon State on Dec. 3. “They have speed everywhere, all the way from their people up front to the people outside and the running backs and quarterback and so forth,” Tressel says. “The quarterback is a guy who can hurt you bad with his speed and his arm. The receivers do a great job on the quick throws; they do a great job on the deep throws. ... they bring everything at you that you can possibly get ready for, and they do it at such a fast pace.” The Buckeyes counter with a defense that has allowed only 83 rushing yards per game. It’s led by first-team All-Big Ten defensive back Kurt Coleman, linebackers Ross Holman and Brian Rolle, and linemen Cameron Heyward and Thaddeus Gibson. “They have great athletes at every level (line, linebackers and secondary),” Oregon coach Chip Kelly says. “They don’t give up a lot of points, or make a lot of mistakes. “They play disciplined football. It’s really going to be a challenge. They always have guys in position to make plays. They don’t give up

a lot of big plays. It’s a great combination.” Oregon also will be challenged on defense, facing an Ohio State offense that has shown great ability to move the ball. Quarterback Terrelle Pryor leads the attack, accounting for more than 2,500 yards and 23 touchdowns. He also leads the team in rushing with 707 yards. The Buckeyes also look to running back Brandon Saine, who has rushed for 694 yards, and receiver DeVier Posey, who has 52 receptions for 727 yards. “They do a lot of multiple things,” Kelly says. “They force you to defend the whole field. They can go out of the I (formation) or go shotgun and five-wide. They use a lot of different packages. It’s really like trying to defend two or three distinctive offenses, run by the same team.” The Ducks, who have lost some key players in the secondary, will have to defend it with a unit that has given up 146 points in its last four games. But they made some key stops to get victories at Arizona against Oregon State. “It’s a great matchup,” Kelly says. “I think that’s the neat thing about bowl games is that you play teams you don’t see that much. We see Ohio State a lot on TV because of what time they (usually) play and what time we play. “I have a ton of respect for their program. I look at it as a challenge to see where we are as a team.” R

ABOUT THE QUARTERBACKS: Oregon’s JEREMIAH MASOLI Page 82|Ohio State’s terrelle pryor Page 84 ROSEPARADE2010 | 77


GAME COACH | OREGON

Ducks’ Kelly in control By Steve Ramirez

It truly pays to be lucky and good. Chip Kelly has been both, and that’s why the Manchester, N.H., native has gone from being a virtual unknown to near the top of the coaching profession in college football. Kelly, 46, will lead his Oregon Ducks in the 96th Rose Bowl Game against Ohio State on New Year’s Day. In four short years he has gone from offensive coordinator at little-known NCAA Football Championship Subdivision New Hampshire to head coach of the Pac-10 champion Ducks. Oregon athletic director Mike Bellotti was the Ducks’ head coach when Kelly came to Oregon in 2007. Bellotti said he is not surprised by Kelly’s exploits, which include creating one of the better offensive machines in college football. “It probably seemed bold” to hire Kelly, says Bellotti, himself a Division II alumnus, coaching at Cal State Chico and UC Davis. “But it was borne out of the fact that I came from Division II. I know there were a lot people out there who said, ‘Who’s this guy?’ “But I knew he could coach. I think there’s a lot of snobbery in Division I football. But I always look at who can do more with less and to me, coaching is coaching. Chip was the best coach who understood our style of football and could make us better.” The tie-in for Kelly to Oregon was Gary Crowton, whom he succeeded as the Ducks’ offensive coordinator in 2007. The two had become friends through the coaching network, and Crowton recommended his friend when he took a similar position at Louisiana State. At that time, Kelly had been offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at New Hampshire for eight years. In seven of those years, the team averaged more than 400 78 | ROSEPARADE2010

yards of total offense per game. In Kelly’s final four seasons, the team averaged more than 30 points per game. Kelly has lived up to the expectations at Oregon. The Ducks set school records in scoring and total offense in his first season at Oregon. And now, after Bellotti decided to retire, Kelly in his first year as a head coach has the Ducks in the Rose Bowl for the first time since 1995. “I have a lot of memories as a kid of the Rose Bowl,” Kelly says. “I’ve been fortunate to see it because that’s where UCLA plays their home games. But you get a feel for it when you drive down (into the Arroyo Seco). You say to yourself, ‘That’s the Rose Bowl,’ and you understand all the history of the place. “It does take a lot of work (to get there), and the way our season went, it does make it a little more special for us.” Oregon took a long and winding road to Pasadena, including running into what seemed like a major road block in a Week 1 loss to Boise State. The Ducks not only saw their high-powered offense slowed in a 19-8 setback, but the game ended with senior running back LaGarrette Blount punching a Boise State player, putting a black eye nationally on the Oregon green and gold.

But Kelly has kept the ship on an even keel. “We got a little bit older after that game,” Kelly says. “We were a young football team, and we played against a very good Boise State team, which I think doesn’t get enough credit for what they’ve accomplished. “We just matured. We haven’t changed since the beginning of the year.” But the perception has. Oregon has been one of the better teams, both nationally and in the Pac-10, winning 10 of its final 11 games. The Ducks thrashed previously seven-time defending conference champion USC, 47-20. The Trojans were No. 4 in the country at the time. The Ducks, who have scored at least 30 points in 10 of 12 games this season, then capped off the rebound by rallying to beat rival Oregon State, 37-33, in the annual Civil War game to earn a trip to Pasadena and the 96th Rose Bowl Game. “I think Chip handled it well,” Bellotti says of the season-opening loss. “There was a lot of things that could happen after it, but he kept control of the team.” “It was a negative incident, but he kept the team in line. Chip did a great job. I supported him and the end result was a Rose Bowl season and a Pac-10 championship,” he says. R


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GAME COACH | OHIO STATE

Tressel: Midas touch By Steve Ramirez

Jim Tressel wasn’t Ohio State University’s first option when it searched for a new football coach back in 2001. But he’s proven to be its best. The Ohio native, in nine seasons, has transformed one of the nation’s morenotable programs, which had become stagnant, and catapulted it back into the national limelight. Under Tressel, the Buckeyes have enjoyed its best era since the Woody Hayes’ days, advancing to a Bowl Championship Series game in six of his previous eight seasons, including winning the national title with a 31-24 upset of No. 1 Miami in the 2002 Fiesta Bowl. Ohio State has also advanced to the pseudo national title game in 2006 and 2008, losing to Florida and Louisiana State, respectively. “We’re fortunate,” Tressel says. “All that means we’ve had pretty good players. You don’t get in these games without having good players. We have a good coaching staff, and our staff works extremely hard.” The same can be said for Tressel, who has had the Midas touch in his only two head coaching positions, suffering through just three losing seasons in 25 years. Tressel came to Ohio State after 15 successful seasons at Division I-AA Youngstown State, where he was 135-57-2 in 15 seasons, and won four national titles and finished second twice. He was also national coach of the year twice. Then fate called. Ohio State had fired John Cooper and top candidates Los Angeles Raiders coach Jon Gruden and Oregon’s Mike Belotti took their names out of consideration. Tressel, who had been an Ohio State assistant from 1983-85, beat out Minnesota’s Greg Mason to become the Buckeyes’ 22nd football 80 | ROSEPARADE2010

coach and the program’s third since Hayes was fired in 1978. “I never gave coaching (anywhere other than Youngstown State) much thought,” Tressel says. “My thoughts were always on our next game. I had a wonderful time at Youngstown State. We had some good teams, and I was also athletic director there, so I was quite busy. (Coming to Ohio State) kind of just happened. It was all of sudden. (Ohio State) made a change, I interviewed, and here I am nine seasons later.” Ohio State has been stellar since. The Buckeyes come to Pasadena, their first trip since rallying to beat Arizona State in 1997, after winning or sharing the Big Ten title each of the past five seasons. Tressel also has six consecutive victories over rival Michigan, the longest such streak in the series since the 1920s. His eight-win record against the hated Wolverines ranks second at Ohio State behind Hayes. “We are really in a great place,” Tressel says of coaching in Columbus, Ohio. “One of the things I feel very responsible for is to hold up that tradition.” The Buckeyes continued it this season, winning 10 of 12 games and earning the program’s 14th trip to Pasadena. But after losing several key players from last season’s co-conference championship team, it was a work in progress.

Ohio State began the year ranked in the top 10. But the Buckeyes suffered a heartbreaking 18-15 loss to USC in week two and before putting its streak of Big Ten titles in jeopardy after losing 26-18 at Purdue in week seven. But the Buckeyes closed like a thoroughbred, securing the league title with a 24-7 victory at Penn State and 27-24 overtime win over Iowa, which clinched the Rose Bowl bid. They finished off the regular season with a 21-10 victory over Michigan. “We’ve worked really hard,” Tressel says. “We took some shots and the guys hung in there. This year was tough because we had to replace 28 seniors. But our kids just battled and I’m proud of them.” But it’s not complete yet. There’s still one more chapter left in Ohio State’s yearbook, one Tressel is looking forward to when the Buckeyes face Oregon on Jan. 1 in the Rose Bowl. “It’s a tremendous honor to compete in the ‘Granddaddy of Them All’ in the 96th Rose Bowl,” Tressel says. “It’s always one of the goals at the beginning of every football year is that you have a chance to play in that one. You can be assured you’ve had a wonderful season when you come to Pasadena.” And it’s been a wonderful ride for Tressel at Ohio State. R


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GAME QUARTERBACK | OREGON

Not-so-secret weapon Masoli a perfect fit for Ducks’ spread-option game By Steve Ramirez

Jeremiah Masoli’s coming out party was on Halloween. But the Oregon quarterback’s journey to become one of college football’s elite players has taken a lot longer. It included playing at two high schools, a stint at the City College of San Francisco, where he won a California state and national JC title, and beginning his career in Eugene, Ore. fifth on the depth chart. But throughout it all, Oregon coach Chip Kelly, one of the masterminds of the spreadoption, knew he had the right man. “For what we look for, in this offense, we want a quarterback who can run, not a running back who can throw,” said Kelly, who admitted he recruited Ohio State’s Terrelle Pryor before settling for Masoli. “There’s not a lot out there, because it’s a special skill set. We have to go high and wide to find that guy who can pull the trigger for us. “We need that guy who can throw, because sometimes in our league you’re going to have to throw 35-40 times a game for us to be competitive. Jeremiah’s done that. And there are times we want a guy who can run the ball and be tough. Jeremiah is the ideal quarterback for what we are looking for.” The Northern California native’s path to greatness didn’t come overnight. Masoli was almost an afterthought in fall camp last season, regulated to the No. 5 spot on the

Quarterback Jeremiah Masoli of the Oregon Ducks runs on the field during the game against Oregon State Beavers on Dec 3. Photos by Getty Images

82 | ROSEPARADE2010


Running back LeGarrette Blount of the Oregon Ducks breaks a tackle by Dwight Roberson of the Oregon State Beavers and runs for a touchdown.

Ducks’ depth chart. But his talent eventually emerged, and he took the controls of Kelly’s spread-option attack early in the season. “I was just trying to work myself in,” Masoli, 21, told the Portland Oregonian. “I didn’t know too many people on the team. I was just trying fit in, but I only had so much time. “This year, I’ve had spring ball, summer to get ready. I thought I was ready to have a big year.” He zoomed into the national spotlight on Oct. 31, accounting for 386 yards and two touchdowns as the Ducks overwhelmed then-No. 4 USC, 47-20. It was also the Ducks’ coming out party, and the victory put them in position to advance to Pasadena for the first time since losing to Penn State in the 1995 Rose Bowl. But more importantly, it was a win over USC, which very few teams had pulled off since 2001. “Moments like those, you’ll never get again,” Masoli said. “I mean, when you beat (USC) and fans lift you up, I don’t think I’ll ever have that kind of moment again. I definitely soaked that one in. “I was up there, man, looking at everything.” Masoli accounted for nearly 2,500 yards and 25 TDs in leading the Ducks to a 10-3 record in 2008. He followed it up this season with nearly 2,800 yards and 27 TDs. The 5-foot-11-inch, 220pounder is the perfect fit for the spread-option, which is based on reads and getting the best players on the offense in open space. He also showcased his ability in the Civil War game against rival Oregon State on Dec. 3. With the game on the line and a trip to Pasadena waiting in the balance, Kelly put it all in Masoli’s hands. On fourth-and-two from the Oregon State 32 with just over three minutes left and the Ducks clinging to a 37-33 lead, Masoli rolled right and swept around the end before running over a Beaver defensive back to get the clinching first down and earn a trip to the Rose Bowl. It was the perfect play to describe not only Masoli’s physical ability, but also his mental toughness. “I know what he’s going to do behind me,” lineman Mark Asper told the Oregonian. “Jeremiah, more than anybody, runs a certain way. He sets up defenders really well, where he moves one way and cuts back the other way. “(The defender) goes this way, and I know Jeremiah’s going to go the other way.” And now he’s going to the Rose Bowl. R

Arcadia High School and the

Arcadia Unified School District Congratulate Arcadia High School Senior

Princess June Ko 2010 Tournament of Roses Court ROSEPARADE2010 | 83


GAME QUARTERBACK | OHIO STATE

Achieving proper balance Buckeyes’ offense in rhythm because Pryor has found his By Steve Ramirez

There were times last year when Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor looked like an experienced senior capable of being one of the top players in the country. There also were instances when he looked like exactly what he was — a true freshman trying to make the adjustment from high school to NCAA Division I. Pryor has found the proper balance this season, leading Ohio State to its fifth consecutive Big Ten Conference title and the school’s 14th appearance in the Rose Bowl Game on New Year’s Day. “It’s been an interesting journey for him,” says Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, who compared Pryor with former Buckeye quarterback and 2006 Heisman Trophy winner Troy Smith. “He was kind of thrust into it last year, but he had to take over a veteran team and kind of walked the tightrope and helped them (share the Big Ten title). “This year, it’s been a whole different experience. He is supposed to be the veteran and I think he’s handled it well. I think he’s done a good job.” Pryor has been solid. The 6-foot-6-inch, 235-pound sophomore was one of the more productive players in the conference, accounting for just a little more than 2,500 yards and 23 touchdowns. “What I learned from last year, talking with coach Tressel, is maturity,” Pryor says in a video interview on TerrellePryor.com. “I had to show more poise. I can’t go out there and be out of control and start screaming at everyone to get them pumped up. “I have to be more relaxed and focused. I can’t get overhyped. As the quarterback, I just have to be laid-back and let it come to me. I have to be pumped up when I need to be, but I also have to be relaxed out there.”

Quarterback Terrelle Pryor of the Ohio State Buckeyes prepares to pass against the Iowa Hawkeyes on Nov. 14. Photos by Getty Images

84 | ROSEPARADE2010


That new attitude has resulted in solid numbers for Pryor, who has thrown for 1,868 yards and 16 TDs, while rushing for nearly 800 yards and seven TDs. The difference has been quite noticeable to the opposition. “He’s found a rhythm,� Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz told the Associated Press. “He’s more comfortable now. He’s more experienced, certainly. “He’s always been a phenomenal athlete and now he’s becoming a better quarterback, a more comfortable quarterback. And it takes time.� It’s that athleticism that made Pryor the top prize in the national recruiting wars two years ago. He was on the list for hometown favorite Penn State, Ohio State, Michigan and Oregon. But the Buckeyes won out, partly because Tressel envisioned another version of Smith, who won the Heisman and nearly got the Buckeyes a second BCS national title in the 2006. Pryor is not there yet, but he’s coming along quite nicely, Tressel says. “He just allows us to be more versatile with that added dimension,� Tressel says. “He’s a lot like Troy Smith, but he’s further along than Troy was at this stage in their careers. “At this time in his career, Troy was still on the scout team. We can do some of the things we could do with Troy because with Terrelle he can do some damage either throwing or running with the football.� Another key for Pryor is who he goes to war with. He’s surrounded by a lot of weapons — running backs Brandon Saine (131 carries for 694 yards) and Dan Herron (139 for 588) and receivers DeVier Posey (52 for 727, 7 TDs) and Dane Sanzenbacher (27 for 506, 6 TDs). Combined, they keep opposing defenses guessing. “We’ve taken some pressure off of him,� Posey told the Associated Press. “We’ve been trying to focus on team concepts and let Terrelle know that he’s our guy, that he really doesn’t have to get into too much what the media’s saying about him and the criticism. “I feel like he’s playing with no pressure now. You can see him a lot more comfortable in the pocket and he’s actually running the offense now. He’s just being more of a leader and he’s getting better and better every week.� Pryor has one more game to prove the point. It comes New Year’s Day in the Rose Bowl. R

Terrelle Pryor of the Ohio State Buckeyes throws a second quarter pass while playing the Michigan Wolverines on Nov. 21.

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GAME Historic outcomes of Rose Bowl games

Unforgettable moments By Jim McConnell

Getty Images

Brent Moss of the University of Wisconsin breaks through UCLA’s defense to score the first touchdown in the 1994 Rose Bowl. Wisconsin won 21-16.

Members of the USC Trojans celebrate after winning the Rose Bowl against the Michigan Wolverines at the Rose Bowl in 1990. USC won the game 17-10.

History can turn in a moment. Nowhere is that more evident than sports. Here are the Top 10 turning points in Rose Bowl Game history: 10. 1929: Georgia Tech 8, California 7. Cal’s Roy Riegels picks up a fumble and rumbles 60 yards the wrong way. This football faux pas leads to a game-winning safety for Tech, a 60-second spot on every movie studio’s newsreel and the Rose Bowl’s reputation as a place where anything can happen. 9. 1939: USC 7, Duke 3. In the gathering dusk, it’s Doyle Nave to Antelope Al Krueger and the Trojans stun unbeaten and unscoredupon Duke. The play secures the forward pass as college football’s great equalizer and USC’s role as a giant-killer. 8. 1947: Illinois 45, UCLA 14. The first of the ongoing Big Ten versus Pac-10 series. The Bruins came in unbeaten and boastful; Illinois had only a modest 7-2 record. But Buddy

Vince Young of the Texas Longhorns kneels after scoring a 14-yard touchdown during the third quarter of the BCS National Championship Rose Bowl Game against the USC Trojans at the Rose Bowl in 2006.

BOWL CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES ROAD TO PASADENA www.insidesocal.com/bcs The Bowl Championship Series title game will be held this year at the Rose Bowl. Follow Pasadena Star-News blogger Steve Ramirez as he counts down to the Jan. 7 championship game and writes daily updates on the top contenders.

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Young — all of 5-foot-5 — and the rest of the Illini ran rings around UCLA, the beginning of a long stretch of Big Ten dominance in the Arroyo Seco. 7. 1963: USC 42, Wisconsin 37. The first time the Rose Bowl matched No. 1 versus No. 2, this one featured a heroic comeback try by the Badgers, led by quarterback Ron VanderKellen, before the Trojans managed to hold on. More than any previous Rose Bowl, this cemented the game as a network ratings bonanza. It also marked the end of the Big Ten’s domination on Jan. 1. 6. 1966: UCLA 14, Michigan State 12. It’s still the greatest upset in Rose Bowl history. People forget just how good Michigan State was, and how undermanned the Bruins were. But Gary Beban and company rose to the occasion, and Bob Stiles made an interception for the ages to prevent a game-winning touchdown by the Spartans. 5. 1975: USC 18, Ohio State 17. One of the greatest of Coach Woody Hayes’ Buckeyes teams, but the Trojans used late-game magic by Pat Haden to pull off the upset. Haden throws to J.K. McKay for a touchdown, and then — after Coach John McKay disdains a PAT kick — somehow manages to hit Shelton Diggs in the back corner of the end zone for the winning two-point conversion.

4. 1980: USC 17, Ohio State 16. Another great OSU team falls to the Trojans, this time thanks to never-say-die Charles White, who rushes for 247 yards and the game-winning score, with 1:32 remaining. 3. 1990: USC 17, Michigan 10. For the first time, a hometown product is the hero. Muir High School graduate Ricky Ervins, who lived five minutes from the Rose Bowl and used to park cars there on Jan. 1, scores the game-winning TD for the Trojans with 1:10 remaining. The result costs Bo Schembechler’s Wolverines a national title. The irascible Bo finishes 2-8 in his trips to Pasadena. 2. 1994: Wisconsin 21, UCLA 16. Led by the pass-and-catch combo of Wayne Cook and J.J. Stokes, the Bruins amass 500 yards in total offense — and still come up short. Driving for the potential game-winning touchdown, Cook loses track of the downs and spikes the ball on fourth down. Roy Riegels would understand. 1. 2006: Texas 41, USC 38. College football’s greatest game, the Bowl Championship Series championship game, right here in Pasadena. With the national title riding on the outcome, the Longhorns’ Vince Young was not to be denied, turning in the best individual performance (467 yards in total offense) in Rose Bowl history. R

Getty Images

Texas Longhorns quarterback Vince Young during the BCS National Championship Rose Bowl Game against the USC Trojans on Jan. 4, 2006.

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Pasadena Star-News sportswriter Harlan “Dusty� Hall, way back in 1923, is credited with coining the label Rose Bowl for the game held at the Pasadena stadium.

94| ROSEPARADE2010


GAME

‘THE GRANDDADDY OF THEM ALL’

Survival of the fittest indeed BLAME IT ON CHARLES DARWIN. Those old enough to remember the flap over Darwinism in the 1920s also may remember seeing an especially ugly bug or decrepit dog and exclaiming “Look! It’s the granddaddy of us all!� The context being, if we accept Darwin’s theories we are all the offspring of some humble creature. The saying has since passed into general usage, losing its sarcastic tinge in the process. Which brings us to Pasadena and the Rose Bowl Game. There’s no debate over who came up with the label Rose Bowl. It was Pasadena StarNews sportswriter Harlan “Dusty� Hall, way back in 1923. He put together the fact the new Pasadena stadium was patterned after the Yale Bowl with the name of the tournament and came up with Rose Bowl. Like Rose Bowl, the phrase “The Granddaddy of Them All� is now a registered trademark of the Tournament of Roses. If Keith Jackson had a nickel for every time he

said it, he would be a far richer man than he is. But who stuck the tag on the game? Press-box legend has it that legendary writer Grantland Rice JIM MCCONNELL — ironically, known as “Granny� to his friends — was the first to utter the phrase in connection with the Jan. 1 gridiron gallopings in the Arroyo Seco. Others give credit, or blame, to Rube Samuelson, sports editor of the Pasadena Star-News. Still others cite Maxwell Stiles, sports editor of the Los Angeles Examiner. In reality, the phrase started making its way into print in the 1940s, in multiple sports sections on numerous occasions. What isn’t in dispute is who popularized the slogan: It was Max Colwell, Tournament of Roses manager in the 1940s and 1950s.

Colwell, who first covered the game in 1922 as a cub reporter for the Pasadena Post, knew a good thing when he heard it. Colwell also knew the Rose Bowl had indeed spawned a host of imitators. The Orange and Sugar bowls started up in 1935. The Sun Bowl followed, in 1936, and the Cotton Bowl in 1937. After that, it was a deluge of bowls, everything from the Salad Bowl to the Oil Bowl to the Potato Bowl to, more recently, the Poulin Weed Eater Bowl. Rather than disparage all this competition, Colwell embraced it. Or, more properly, adopted it. Henceforth, these other bowls were quasi-legitimate offspring of “The Granddaddy.� Eventually, TofR officials moved to copyright the slogan. Some current-day critics say the tag is appropriate, in that the game has become dull and geriatric. However, if you know your “Origin of Species,� you know “the granddaddy� got there by being both powerful and potent. All hail Granddaddy. R

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Self-portrait by Julie Klima

Julie Klima, also known as Queen Skittles, says Doo Dah isn’t about being cool or fitting in with all the crowd, it’s about feeling good about yourself. When it comes to Doo Dah fashion, she says,“instead of being conservative and not doing things because it might look dorky, do things because it’s fun.”

The other

royal court THE OCCASIONAL DOO DAH PARADE

Like the Rose Parade, Doo Dah has royalty. But instead of focusing on etiquette and proper table manners, Doo Dah’s queen and royal court revel in irreverence. Audition day is loud and crazy. Hopefuls have three minutes to display their talent and undergo questioning by a panel of judges comprised of past queens, community leaders, selected rabble-rousers and anyone willing to buy Tom Coston, Doo Dah tsar and Light Bringer Project president, a pitcher of beer. “I feel like I’m on a pirate ship and everybody’s yelling and somebody’s going to throw somebody overboard and then somehow we come out with a queen,” Coston says. In the end, three runner-ups and one queen is selected, but every one who auditions becomes part of the court. “If you want to be a princess or a prince, you just are,” Coston says. ROSEPARADE2010 | 97


THE OCCASIONAL DOO DAH

Mix and don’t match There is no such thing as a fashion faux pax when it comes to Doo Dah royalty. Think big, colorful, over the top. Pile on contrasting patterns and textures. Toss those style rules out the door — nothing is off limits. Interviews by Michelle Mills, aka Queen NAUGHTY Mickie | Royal portraits by Julie Klima, aka Queen Skittles

Title: 2008 Queen Naughty Mickie and the Royal Pup Atticus City, profession: Covina, writer How selected/talent: Five-time runner-up. Danced with three swords Attire: Queen Mickie wore the crown she was awarded at the tryouts during her reign, which was unusual as most queens create or purchase something more to their liking. Her parade gown was a glittery black bustier with copper and black ribbons paired with a jewel, sequin and glitter bedecked copper skirt boasting gold butterfly imprinted, Moroccan-hued chiffon insets and train. Royal Pup Atticus wore a matching copper cape with jewel and glitter embellishments and a faux leopard fur trim, along with his official regal insignia medallion on his collar. Inspiration: “Everything is over-thetop for Doo Dah, so I wanted my dress to express that, as well as my personality, which is outgoing and optimistic. I also wanted lots of sparkle, as you can never have too much glitter.” 98 | ROSEPARADE2010

Title: 1998 Queen Tequila Mockingbird City, profession: Hollywood, actress, vocalist, radio host, show promoter and writer How selected/talent: Queen Tequila sang “Mack the Knife” in German, as well as selections by Neil Young and Kurt Vile Attire: Self-design of pink glitter floorlength coat with gown underneath and green hair whisked up into a pompadour effect for both audition and reigning parade. “I selected my outfit from odds and ends of gowns past.” Most of her gowns have been made by Terri King, including a severe black widow 1800s mourning dress that Queen Tequila wore for a previous Doo Dah audition. One year she rode in an electric convertible in the parade attired in a matching yellow beaded Follies Bergere dress. Inspiration: “The year before I had become princess but not a queen so I decided to dress like a queen and that might change my karma.”

Title: His Royal Highness Prince Andrew, Duke of Doo Dah, Herald to the Royal Court, Sergeant at Arms and Roving Goodwill Ambassador City, profession: Pasadena, musician How selected/talent: Appointed in 1995 by Queen Sabrina, the last queen selected without an audition Attire: “I try to look crazy formal.” Prince Andrew’s basic outfit includes a military or ethno-eccentric hat, wild sunglasses, jacket and vest and dress shoes or boots. His attire has included metallic blue sportcoats, swallow-tailed jackets, plaid vests, loud cummerbunds and plaid knickers. Prince Andrew’s signature wardrobe pieces are his drinking horn and an Ethiopian cross on a ribbon, which he considers his Order of Office. The medallion was a gift from Linda BernardBaker, who introduced him to the Doo Dah Parade in the 1980s. Inspiration: “I try my best to imagine in my mind what would be best for Doo Dah Royalty every year.”


Title: 2009 Queen Skittles City, profession: Glendale, photographer How selected/talent: Dressed in a bright ruby outfit with pink and blue hair, Queen Skittles took Polaroid photos of the judges while her assistant handed them various props, including wigs and a baby mannequin arm. She finished by giving the judges their photos. Attire: For her formal portrait, she wore a blue gown graced with

multicolored fabrics and a rhinestone-bedecked bodice. Parade dress was light pink and was enhanced with rhinestones and accent fabric. Inspiration: “I was inspired by Bollywood films and by Renaissance; Victorian themes, the queens back then; and also Kristina E. King’s pillows, which are large scale with a ton of rhinestones. I basically wanted her to make me into one of her big pillows.” ROSEPARADE2010 | 99


THE OCCASIONAL DOO DAH

The other parade MISSING A YEAR HERE AND THERE (AND EVEN DOUBLING ONCE), THE OCCASIONAL DOO DAH PARADE HAS WOUND ITS WEIRD WAY THROUGH PASADENA SINCE THE LATE 1970S. Tom Coston, Doo Dah tsar and president of the Light Bringer Project, calls the Doo Dah Parade and the Rose Parade the “Other Parade� interchangeably, as they are true opposites. “I think the Rose Parade is really an entertainment or corporate-sponsored marching parade. You have straight lines, it’s organized and dedicated to putting on a show,� he says. “The Doo Dah Parade is really just made up of the people who participate in it. While there is some consistency because people return to be in it, anything could happen.� There’s no real line marking where the parade stops and its onlookers begin — the entire route becomes one big party. At Doo Dah, there are no rules. Having fun is the rule, Colton says. There is a serious side to the fun, however, as proceeds from parade entry fees and sales of T-shirt and other items support the Light Bringer Project, which provides arts education programs in the community. Its projects include Room 13 at Charles W. Eliot Middle School in Altadena and James A. Foshay Learning Center in Los Angeles, an art studio where children learn how to make, show and sell their art; Los Angeles Future Academy, a mentoring program for high school students at creative and media companies; and with Mental Health America, Expressing Feelings Through Art, in which high school students explore and express personal issues and dreams through art and writing. R Michelle Mills

100 | ROSEPARADE2010

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Every California is dependent on imported water supplies, and although we hope the winter months bring ample precipitation to us, we have to remember that water conservation should be an everyday habit.

Water Saving Tips 4 Turn your sprinklers off completely when rain is expected. 4 Adjust your sprinkler timer now for fewer watering days/times for fall’s shorter and cooler days. 4 Use a broom to clean off walkways and driveways and save as much as 50 gallons of water in just 10 minutes.

Three Valleys Municipal Water District has worked tirelessly to secure more local water supplies and

to partner with our retail water agencies to keep prices low and on track. We have succeeded in many of our efforts, but multiple years of drought, and other environmental conditions are requiring that we ask for your help. Conservation is still the best way to stretch our water supplies. Remember, if we get some rainfall, it will help our local water supply conditions, but does not solve our overall water shortage problem – Southern California receives at least 30% of its water from Northern California.

Three Valleys Municipal Water District has served the Pomona, Walnut and eastern San Gabriel Valleys as a wholesale water provider since 1950. Three Valleys Member Agencies & Areas Served: Azusa, Boy Scouts of America/Firestone Reservation, California State Polytechnic University/Pomona, City of Industry, Claremont, Covina, Covina Irrigating Co., Diamond Bar, Glendora, Golden State Water Co., Hacienda Heights, La Puente, La Verne, Mount San Antonio College, Pomona, Pomona/Walnut/Rowland Joint Water Line Commission, Rowland Heights, Rowland Water District, San Dimas, Suburban Water Systems, Valencia Heights Water Co., Walnut Valley Water Distrit and West Covina.

For more information, please call 909-621-5568 or visit our website at threevalleys.com


GO SEE HERE

We long for the days when portraiture wasn’t a skill set limited to the Sears Portrait Studio. At the Norton Simon, explore “The Familiar Face,” a revelation of the masterful work of Rembrandt van Rijn, whose reputation as a painter of portraits preceded, and centuries later still follows him. The collection of etched prints by Rembrandt are stunningly intimate, varying from the mainstream trade in portraits of politicians, heroes and scholars that was popular in 17th-century Holland. Rembrandt’s portrait prints, by contrast, didn’t have a mass-market objective; They were commissioned as personal mementos or produced as a favor to the subject. The Familiar Face is one in a series of exhibitions celebrating the profusion of Rembrandt’s works in Southern California museum collections. Through March 22, Norton Simon Museum, 411 West Colorado Blvd., (626) 449-6840, rembrandtinsocal.org and nortonsimon.org

SLICE OF WRY

In “John Sloan: a Painter’s Life,” Van Wyck Brooks published a line, written in 1911, from Sloan’s diary: “I am in the habit of watching every bit of human life I can see about my windows, but I do it so that I am not observed at it ... No insult to the people you are watching to do so unseen.” What behaviors, what mannerisms belong to you when you think no one is watching? Sloan didn’t miss a satirical beat. At the Huntington, raucous behavior and silly plot twists take center stage in “Drawn to Satire,” a selection of Sloan’s satirical etchings from the early 1900s. A truly American artist known for later capturing the energy and vivacity of street life in New York City, these etchings turn rather to illustrations Sloan crafted for the comic novels by French author Charles Paul de Kock. Expect a window into 19th century Parisian society, slapstick violence and Sloan’s signature, wry expressions. Through March 29. Chandler Wing, Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art, The Huntington, 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino, (626) 405-2100, huntington.org

FUNGAL FILES Why did the mushroom go to the party? Because he was a fungi. But why did he leave? Because there wasn’t mushroom. Endure these kinds of jokes and more, and you may find yourself drawn inexplicably into the oddball kingdom of organisms known as mushrooms and fungi. Each year, the Los Angeles Mycological Society hosts its wild mushroom fair at the Arboretum, and mushroom hunters from all over Southern California gather there to show off their rare finds and help newbies identify mystery species.The group has a great sense of self-deprecating humor (subscribe to their newsletter, The Spore Print), and welcomes the general public to bring in backyard finds for proper classifying. Because you should never eat an unidentified, wild mushroom — a case of mistaken identity can be deadly — the service is a literal life-saver. Feb. 13-14, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Los Angeles County Arboretum, 301 N. Baldwin Ave., Arcadia, (626) 821-3222, lamushrooms.org and arboretum.org

102 | ROSEPARADE2010

INTO ANOTHER, NEWER LAND

Envision an anachronistic Oedipus Rex, a homeboy in a modern kingdom — the gritty barrio of East Los Angeles. Just released from prison, Oedipus is in need of a new home. On his journey, he wrangles with a wounded queen, a three-headed born-again serpent and a road-raging king. We know the tragic fate of Sophocles’ Oedipus. Is his contemporary incarnation hardwired to the same destiny? Oedipus El Rey, opens Feb. 27, Boston Court Performing Arts Complex, 70 N. Mentor Ave., (626) 683-6883, bostoncourt.com

just drawn that way Altadena’s one-and-only Gallery at the End of the World hosts a group exhibition of comic-book and animation artists. “Characters,” of the drawn and human variety, gather for a mini-comic con right in your own backyard. Appearing, to name just a few: Marvel Comics’ Bill Sienkiewicz, “100 Bullets” cover artist Dave Johnson, fight-scene guru Jeff Johnson and L.A. underground art scenester Misha. Opening Feb. 19, 7 p.m.-midnight. Through Feb. 27. 2475 N. Lake Ave., Altadena, (626) 794-8779, galleryattheendoftheworld.com


EARLY SHEETS

‘MILLARD SHEETS: THE EARLY YEARS’ focuses on the artist’s work before World War II, as California art was rising to prominence. Here in Pasadena, we have a 1963 mural at Chase Bank on Lake Avenue and Colorado Boulevard depicting the first Rose Parade, but his subjects weren’t always so blithe. One of the exhibit’s gems is a 1933 painting “Beer for Prosperity” painted in the gloom of the Depression. The light flooding from a lonely diner casts long shadows into the street, recalling Edward Hopper’s iconic (and oftenparodied) “Nighthawks” painted 9 years later. Sheets was a prominent artist and educator who seems to have had a hand in shaping most of the art schools in the Southland. Opens Feb. 14 through May 30, Pasadena Museum of California Art, 490 East Union St., $7, (626) 568-3665, pmcaonline.org

GOOD READS

KIDSPACE HAS A FAMILY-FRIENDLY TRADITION that won’t interfere with anyone’s sleepytime. Count down to the “noon” year at 12 p.m. on New Year’s Eve. With all the prerequisites in place -- streamers, sparkling cider, music and a balloon drop -- you’ll get all the excitement of Times Square, without the freezing cold, the exhaustion, and the onlooker beside you who keeps stepping on your toe. Dec. 31, 12 p.m., Kidspace Children’s Museum, 480 N. Arroyo Blvd., (626) 449-9144, kidspacemuseum.org

ELIZABETH GILBERT, author of “Eat, Pray, Love,” discusses and signs her new book “Committed: A Skeptic Makes Peace With Marriage.” At the end of her 2006 memoir, Gilbert fell in love. The lucky man was Felipe, a Brazilian-born Austrailian whom she met in Indonesia. Though truly devoted to one another, the couple swore to never get married. Find out what swayed the wedlock skeptic. Jan. 29, 7 p.m., All Saints Church, 132 N. Euclid Ave. Ticketed event. Tickets available at Vroman’s in advance. JASPER FFORDE discusses and signs “Shades of Grey.” In a society where social standing is denoted by the ability to see certain colors, Eddie Russet of the House of Red becomes unexpectedly involved with Jane, a Grey Nightseer. It wasn’t always like this -before the Color Control Agency existed -- and what they uncover together reveals a wild world where moral guideposts are no longer black and white. Jan. 11, 7 p.m., All Saints Church, 132 N. Euclid Ave. THE PASADENA MUSEUM of California

Art is expanding its Californian take on the arts to include literature. The second author to read in this series will be author Marisa Silver, whose most recent novel “The God of War” was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for fiction. Jan. 28, 7 p.m., Pasadena Museum of California Art, 490 E. Union St., Pasadena, $7, (626) 568-3665, pmcaonline.org

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ROSEPARADE2010 | 103


GO LIFE IN ONE SQUARE INCH From 35 years of personal archival photographs, artist Erika Suderburg culled 1-inch square prints, each image dangling precipitously over the depths of obscurity. Each tiny print is grouped in categories — like Human, Light, Horizon, Topiary, Fin — that shift according to whim, time of day, wind speed, solstice orientation and flights of fancy. “Some Small Groups� is a modular piece, designed to be rearranged and reordered. Fourteen categories have been selected from a total group of 250 images for inclusion in this first-ever public viewing. Opening Jan. 10. Through Feb. 7, Offramp Gallery (private residence), 1702 Lincoln Ave., (626) 298-6931, offrampgallery.com EVERY ROSE HAS ITS NAME Hot Cocoa, Strike It Rich, About Face and Betty Boop. Feel free to judge a rose by its name — yes, those names really belong to roses — when rose hybrid master Tom Carruth delivers an illustrated lecture on “The Newest Roses.� Participants get their very own 2011 variety to take home. Jan. 14, 6:45 p.m.-8 p.m., Descanso Gardens, 1418 Descanso Dr., $20, $16 members, (818) 952-4391, descansogardens.org Then take two with Carruth as he discusses the enduring

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symbol of the rose as it intertwines with the arts-and-crafts movement. Pasadena has long been revered as the city of roses; Carruth explains why the climate is one of the best in the nation for rose gardening and suggests low-maintenance roses ideal for the area. Jan. 23, 12 p.m., Art Center Center College of Design, Ahmanson Auditorium, 1700 Lida St. SMALL MEASURES Focusing on the details is a whole different game when your canvas is only centimeters wide. Miniature painting, a genre that developed at Islamic courts in Asia between the 14th and 19th centuries, is in the midst of a modern revival. Artists in Pakistan attend the National College of Arts in Lahore to study the ancient tradition and adapt it to contemporary culture. “Beyond the Page� at the Pacific Asia Museum will feature the work of two dozen young artists who engage the miniature. Half of them were training in the tradition of miniatures; The others explore the diminutive in outside mediums like photography, textile, sculpture and installation. Delve into the vibrant art culture of Pakistan, where tradition is inseparable from modernity. Feb. 18 through June 27, Pacific Asia Museum, 46 N. Los Robles Ave., (626) 449-2742, pacificasiamuseum.org

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CAMELLIA CARNIVAL It’s a two-weekend double-header for camellias at, where else, Descanso Gardens. Home to North America’s largest camellia collection, the gardens will host both the Pacific Camellia Society Show and the Southern California Camellia Sociey Show. Both will features glorious camellia displays and experts discussing the finest of the floral bunch. Pacific Camellia Society: Jan. 16-17, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday. Southern California Camellia Society: Jan. 3031, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday Descanso Gardens, Van de Kamp Hall, 1418 Descanso Dr., La Cañada Flintridge, (818) 949-4200, descansogardens.org WRITE IT DOWN So you want to write? Or is it journal, blog or tweet? Journalist, fiction writer and teacher Paula Panich wants to teach you what “Julie and Julia” have to do with you. Julie Powell and her idol Julia Child had passion, and Panich aims to re-ignite yours in a one-day writing workshop. Any old topic — garden, food, cooking, wine, travel, herbs, hostas or Hamburg — will do. Jan. 23, 10 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Los Angeles County Arboretum, Palm Room, 301 N. Baldwin Ave., Arcadia. $60 members/$65 nonmembers. Cost includes a copy of Paula Panich’s book. Reservations required. (626) 821-4623, arboretum.org

SEE BEHIND THE SCENES...

A THREE-HOUR TOUR ... Talk about the ultimate powerwalk for foodies, Melting Pot Food Tours (not to be confused with the restaurant) takes you on a three-hour walking culinary adventure through the restaurants of Green, Union, Holly and De Lacey streets, the avenues of Fair Oaks and Raymond, and Colorado Boulevard in their Old Pasadena Food Tasting Tour. Saturdays and Sundays through March 14, 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Old Pasadena. $49 per person including all tastings. Tours limited to 15 people. Advanced reservations required. (800) 979-3370, meltingpottours.com ELVIS, THE EARLY YEARS In celebration of The King’s 75th birthday, the Grammy Museum will hold debut a new exhibit, “Elvis at 21: Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer.” As part of the exhibit opening, photojournalist Wertheimer will talk to executive director Robert Santelli about the icon. Chris Murray, the exhibit’s curator, will also be on hand. Jan. 8, doors at 7:30 p.m., program 8 p.m., Grammy Museum, 800 W. Olympic Blvd., Ste. A245, Los Angeles. Free admission with museum admission. On evenings of public programs, museum admission after 6 p.m. is $8. Reservations required. (213) 765-6830, grammymuseum.org therose@sgvn.com

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GO

Photos by Walt Mancini

Candace Frazee in the television room with hundreds of bunnies, including Roger Rabbit, Bugs Bunny and Elvis Presley.

House bunnies

At this museum, rabbits are serious business

By Emma Gallegos

When Candace Frazee greets you at the door of her homecum-museum, she will ask you to do the bunny bump with her as if you’ve done it a thousand times before. “Bunny.” She raises her index and middle finger to make bunny ears and waits for you to do the same. “Bump.” The bunny ears become a fist. She waits for you to do the same, so that she can bump your fist with hers. Welcome to the Bunny Museum, where bunny is a greeting, bunny is an adjective, and bunny is a way of life. For the past 11 years, Frazee and her husband Steve Lubanski have opened up their home as a museum to share the way of the bunny with the public. To date,

106 | ROSEPARADE2010


more than 15,000 visitors have accepted that invitation, Frazee says. To say this couple has collected every kind of rascally rabbit you can imagine isn’t exactly right — we’ll get to that in a minute — but it comes close. The couple have arranged their collection of more than 24,000 bunnies by theme, a feat recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records. There are bunnies for every occasion — not just Easter — and bunnies from all over the world. There are even bunnies on the eggs from the annual Easter egg roll at the White House, although one president’s choice still rankles Frazee. “One year George Bush had a baseball and a bat on his egg. I know he’s into T-ball, but why he couldn’t have a bunny doing T-ball or a chick or something?” Frazee asks. “Literally I’ve seen it: It’s a ball and a bat. Unbelievable.” But, fortunately for Frazee, change was in the air this year. “I’m very happy to say that Obama did a bunny, and I think his is the best,” Frazee says. There is even a shelf full of bunny impostors — other species or characters like M&Ms dressed up in bunny attire. There are bunnies on everything a home needs: salt and pepper shakers, bookends, shampoo bottles, posters, tables (plus everything you need to set the table). There are bunnies on every item, plus bunny tchotchkes and plush bunnies crammed into every corner and shelves that snake through the living room. The multiple layers of plush in their TV room — Frazee calls it an underground

bunny warren — swallows all the sound vibrations. And the third of the house with a bedroom, bathroom and office that’s closed off to the public? “It’s all bunny,” Frazee assures me. Sheets, shower curtains, everything. In the backyard is a bunny garden that feeds the real-life bunnies Frazee and Lubanski own. There is even a plant species called Cactus Bunny whose protrusion do bear a striking resemblance to bunny ears. The earthly remains of bunnies that have passed are freeze-dried and put on display in a glass case next to a photo of them. But there are some bunnies that won’t make the cut at the “hoppiest place on Earth.” After a minute, you begin to notice that most of the bunnies are happy and smiling, or at least smirking. And the museum experience stays G-rated with nary a pair of Playboy bunny ears. Although rabbits are often wily characters in folk tales, there aren’t any mean bunnies, vile bunnies or vulgar bunnies at the Bunny Museum. That’s because the criteria for entry into this museum is rigorous. “It has to be cute,” Frazee says. Frazee uses the same criteria each year when she reviews the Rose Parade entries. Most of the time, she finds a float featuring a bunny. She volunteers to work on the float that has the best — “not the biggest but the cutest” — bunny. Some of the floats donated the leftover bunny exoskeletons that served as a base for flowers and seeds to the museum. The giant bunny covered in ivy in the front yard of the museum had a previous life on a float. The collection shows no signs of slowing down. Prime bunny-buying time are the days after Easter, when there’s a fresh supply of bunny paraphernalia retailing at 25 to

50 percent of what it did in the days before Easter. But bunny-gifting for Frazee and Lubanski isn’t beholden to any season — it continues to be a daily ritual. “This is what I’ll be giving Steve tonight,” Frazee says, holding a bunny coloring book. “See, you’re laughing because you probably think ‘Oh, he doesn’t want it,’ but he does want it.” The relationship between her and Lubanski is writ into the DNA of the museum, as Frazee describes it. “It’s totally gift-giving, it’s a love story. We didn’t set out to do a museum,” Frazee says. “People can say whatever they want, but it’s between Steve and I, so we get excited when we give each other a gift.” Frazee tells the story of how the Bunny Museum came to be very matter-of-factly — as if any couple could end up with a home museum of their own based on a pet name. Boy meets girl. Boy calls her “Honey Bunny.” Boy gives girl bunny. Girl gives boy a bunny. Five years later, this boy and girl have so many bunnies they decide to open up their home to the public. Sixteen years later, their collection continues to multiply like, well, like rabbits. The primordial Honey Bunny that Lubanski gave Frazee 16 years ago on Valentine’s Day is displayed prominently in the front hallway. Honey Bunny is a plush white bunny holding a pillow that says “I Love You This Much.” Its arms are outstretched as far as they can go but after so many thousands of bunnies, it seems like a quaint gesture. Open New Year’s Day from 3-6 p.m or call the bunny phone to make an appointment. The Bunny Museum, 1933 Jefferson Drive, Pasadena, (626) 798-8848, thebunnymuseum. com. R ROSEPARADE2010 | 107


THINK

A weighty matter For those of us who don’t eke out a living in a laboratory, mass is the reason the airlines charge you more when you overpack your suitcase. For theoretical physicists, mass is still an open question when they get down to the level of the tiny particles that make up atoms. They’re not exactly sure what gives atoms their weight. There are working theories, sure, but no one has ever observed the particle — or mechanism — responsible for mass. That’s GETTY IMAGES where the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland comes in. Theoretical physics are hoping the particle accelerator (which became the world’s highest-energy accelerator in November) will produce evidence of the elusive particle in question — called either the Higgs boson particle or the “God particle” if you prefer your theoretical physics with a dash of metaphysics. But it’s hard not to find yourself thinking about the big picture, when Caltech physics professor Harvey Newman says the findings coming from the Large Hadron Collider could help physicists “address the most fundamental questions in science related to ... the nature of spacetime itself.” Go on and marinate on that for a minute, then check out “Physics at the Large Hadron Collider: A New Window on Matter, Spacetime and the Universe.” 8 p.m., Jan. 13, Beckman Auditorium, Caltech, 1200 E. California Blvd., free, events.caltech.edu

DESIGN DESIGN REVOLUTION The Design Revolution Road Show that will be rolling through the Art Center College of Design campus this February has an agenda, and the 40 objects it’s bringing in tow help make a convincing case: good design solves problems. There are solutions to first world problems, like needing to sync your iPod with your workout. But there are straws to purify the polluted water as you drink it, sharp jewelry to punch would-be attackers and affordable, custom-fit eyeglasses that use liquid to bend light accordingly. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., evening reception to follow, lecture at 1 p.m., Feb. 8, Art Center College of Design at Ahmanson Auditorium, 1700 Lida St., designrevolutionroadshow.com

DESIGN REVOLUTION ROAD SHOW

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Lives, interrupted

an exhibit at the Ruth and Charles Gilb Arcadia Historical Museum offers up a dark and lesser-known side of the city’s past for examination. In 1942, Arcadia’s Santa Anita Park was the location of a temporary assembly center for Japanese and Japanese Americans. “Only What We Could Carry: The Santa Anita Assembly Center” will present images and stories about experiences in the camps. Open through Jan. 16, Ruth and Charles Gilb Arcadia Historical Museum, 380 W. Huntington Dr., Arcadia, Free, (626) 574-5440.

Tomorrowland

Ecopolis, the six-part series created by the Science Channel that will be showing at Caltech, starts with the assumption that more of the world’s population will shift to urban centers over the next 40 years. These sprawling metropolises aren’t expected to be havens of sustainability if our technology (along with the policy to implement it) doesn’t rise to the occasion. Daniel Kammen — one of the authors for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that snagged a Nobel Peace Prize in 2007 — leads the tour through this future Ecopolis. Each segment tackles each of the new problems that will arise from these mega-metropolises. These are the mostly same problems that cities deal with today — how to find and manage our supplies of food, water, energy and the waste that’s leftover — but on a scale we’ve never dealt with before. 10 a.m., Feb. 12, Beckman Auditorium at Caltech, 1200 E. California Blvd., $5, events.caltech.edu


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THINK

A REFLECTION

THE YEAR IN ASTRONOMY The story goes that 400 years ago Galileo invented the telescope, transformed our thinking about the universe — and for that he was rewarded with house arrest. BY EMMA GALLEGOS

Galileo’s telescope on display at The Franklin Institute in Philadelphia in April 2009. AP PHOTO


Galileo’s heirs today are rewarded with tenure and Nobel Prizes, joked Michael Werner, a project scientist for the Spitzer Space Telescope. Werner was speaking at the conference hosted by the 2-yearold Keck Institute for Space Studies at Caltech in November. “Challenging the Paradigm:The Legacy of Galileo” was just one of many events the “think and do” tank hosted this year, but this one jived nicely with the International Year of Astronomy. Sure, every year is a year of astronomy in Pasadena. But the 400th anniversary of the telescope was as good a reason as any for the institute to bring in big-shot astronomers from all across the

country, Italy and even the Vatican to discuss Galileo’s legacy in politics and religion as well as science. So we’re going to take a cue from the Keck Institute and use the International Year of Astronomy as an excuse to reflect on the astronomy history being made in our backyards in 2009. Some of these astronomers are working with public money, others have raised private funding. Most are professional astronomers but some are amateurs. Some findings are hard to explain to people without doctorates, others just need a little CGI magic to turn them into next summer’s popcorn-popping perfection.

The hunt for life At the core of Kepler’s mission is a romantic quest: to find out if we’re alone in the universe. Like Goldilocks, life needs the conditions to be just so: not too hot, not too cold; not too big, not too small; but just right. Kepler blasted off in March on a mission to find out how rare or common planets like this are. For three years, Kepler will keeps its unblinking telescopic eye focused on 100,000 sun-like stars in our galaxy looking for winks or dimming that might signal the presence of one of these worlds passing by. James Fanson, the Kepler project manager at Jet Propulsion Laboratory, brags that its camera is so sensitive to slight dimming that it could notice someone passing in front of a porch light down on Earth. Other telescopes like Spitzer and Hubble will be able to do followup studies. Water, water everywhere Astronomers are discovering our solar system is a wetter place than we had previously imagined. Sept. 24 sticks out as a banner day for H2O in space. That day scientists at NASA announced they had discovered ice on Mars in much lower latitudes than they had expected. Just minutes before that, some other scientists at NASA announced that, actually, the moon had water, too. JPL’s Moon Mineralogy Mapper, Epoxi and Cassini had a hand in the many observations, confirmations and reconfirmations that in fact the molecules that make up water were all over our lunar neighbor. By the time NASA announced it had found evidence of water, the LCROSS — short for the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite — mission was already kicking into high gear. Early in the morning on Oct. 9, NASA sent a satellite to dive-bomb into one of the darkest, coldest spots on the moon that scientists think just might have been frozen for the past 2 billion years. Sure enough, when the LCROSS spacecraft hit the moon, fast as a speeding bullet, it released a plume of vapor that contained water.

Eyes on the universe What better way to celebrate the invention of the telescope than to create images that show off just how advanced the current generation of telescopes has become? To commemorate the International Year of Astronomy, three space telescopes turned their gaze toward the dynamic center of our own Milky Way, and took images all across the light spectrum. The different colors represent the different parts of the spectrum from lower-energy infrared light that all objects give off to the high-energy X-rays. The Hubble Space telescope captured near-infrared light given off in shades of yellow. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s own Spitzer captured the infrared light shown in red, while the Chandra X-ray Observatory images are represented by blue and violet. See that bright blue blob on the left there? Scientists believe it’s coming from a double star system containing either a neutron star or a black hole. NASA, European Space Agency (ESA), Spitzer Science Center, Chandra X-ray Center, and Space Telescope Science Institute

ROSEPARADE2010 | 111


AN ASTRONOMICAL FELLOW The Huntington Library announced its next science fellow would be Carolyn Porco, a planetary scientist with a knack for turning scientific discoveries in the outer reaches of the solar system into the backdrop of a great sci-fi flick. When Saturn experienced its equinox this year, a phenomenon that occurs every 15 years, Cassini captured shots of Saturn’s rings in relief. It turns out Saturn’s rings weren’t as flat as scientists had thought — some bulges were as tall as the Rockies. These weren’t rings on a faraway planet for Porco, but the scene of a kind of interplanetary traffic roadblock: “Can you imagine coming across a wall 2 ½ miles high?” It’s no surprise then that Porco is hoping that while she’s in Pasadena, she can hop on over to Hollywood where her imaging expertise could come in handy for the next great sci-fi flick. In fact, it already has. She helped director J.J. Abrams come up with one of scenes in this year’s “Star Trek,” and Porco says she was Carl Sagan’s model for Jodie Foster’s character in “Contact.” MOUNT WILSON’S CLOSE CALL The story about Mount Wilson Observatory in 2009 is about what didn’t happen. The

flames of late summer’s Station Fire did come close, the last two observatory staffers did have to evacuate and firefighters did have to pull out all the stops, lighting backfires and dropping fire retardant. Numerous odes to the observatory were penned that — had those early days of September been a little windier or had the firefighters used less aggressive tactics — could have easily served as obituaries. These odes noted the astronomical heavy-hitters the observatory attracted, including Albert Einstein and Edwin Hubble, who realized the Hubble telescope found that the universe was expanding, a realization that helped the basis of nothing less than the Big Bang Theory. But the Mount Wilson Observatory and all the history it represents did not burn to the ground. SAILING ON SUNSHINE It has long been a dream of the Planetary Society to set sail on a stream of sunlight. The group announced its plans to do so on — when else? — the birthday of its founder, Carl Sagan, Nov. 9. The society’s last attempt in 2005 went bust but since the solar sail remains an elusive goal — and since an anonymous donor stepped forward with $1 million — the privately-funded Planetary Society is ready to give it another shot.

The idea of solar sails is they’re powered by photons from the sun. These massless, energetic particles bounce off of the aluminized sails, giving them a little push that propels the spacecraft forward. Unlike wind in marine sails, solar sails don’t need a constant stream to keep moving in the vacuum of space. The sails only need a little bit of sun to get going in the beginning before the spacecraft reaches a comfortable cruising speed. Of course, the sun will be hitting the sails continuously, and each additional photon will accelerate the spacecraft. The Planetary Society crunched the numbers and estimated these spacecrafts could reach speeds of 8,700 mph after just 100 days. At that rate of acceleration, it could reach Pluto in five years. It’s not hard to see why solar sails are an attractive idea: Imagine a space mission that never has to worry about running out of gas. But first things first: the solar sail still has to get off the ground, literally. The first phase of the mission LightSail-1 is set to sail by the end of 2010. The Planetary Society hopes to send an 11 pound-spacecraft with its mylar sails that open up to 300 square feet into the earth’s orbit just to see if the theory works. The next two phases will be launched farther and farther from Earth. Next stop: the stars? R

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The Best Things in Life are Here! Since 1994, the Pasadena Star-News has published Rose Magazine to celebrate the Rose Parade, Rose Bowl and surrounding festivities. In 2009, Rose Magazine expanded to publish quarterly as an expression of Pasadena lifestyle. The success of this long standing tradition will lead 2010 with six issues! Thank you to our readers and businesses for making Rose Magazine a growing success! We will publish bi-monthly in 2010! Upcoming Features Include: Living Healthy – physically and mentally Woman of the Year Spotlight on Non-Profits The Unique - spotlighting arts & culture And as always… The first issue of 2010 publishes February 10th. Look for it around town or in your subscription of the Pasadena Star-News.

Go: Calendar and listings of events, shows & concerts. Think: Activities, events, or programs that exercise your brain. Play: Arts and culture, outdoor activities, hot spots, cool places. Eat: Dining trends, restaurant spotlights, chef’s profiles & more. Seen: Galas and events that do the community good. Contact us: 626.578.6300 Visit us at: www.therosemag.com


PHOTO BY ERIC REED


LIFE, OR NOTHING LIKE IT

BY EVELYN BARGE

It’s a quiet party, to say the least. In the back room of a decrepit, Colonial revival-style house in Porterville, Syd Schultz is sitting on the floor. So are the rest of the dozen or so guests here tonight, an accurate body count hard to establish in the obscuring darkness. Schultz is doing his best to jump-start a conversation that seems stalled before it starts, and there are no libations to ease the effort. He asks questions, prods lightly for information, but even the vacant building is more responsive with its creaks and groans. The 1920s home has belonged to a local celebrity, Edward B. Isham, former chief of police in the city. Schultz wants to know if the chief can make an appearance — it would be a real honor — at tonight’s gathering in his old home. There’s only one problem: Isham is dead.


... The mysterious, floating orbs you see in every camera frame are not grandma.

Long dead. Isham’s tenure as top law enforcement officer was in the early 1900s, when Porterville had earned a reputation as a rough-and-tumble Wild West town. Though the city has cleaned up its act — there are shockingly few saloons left among the suburban-style-wasteland sprawl — Schultz and company are hoping to find evidence that a ghost of Porterville’s past might be lurking around what must now seem like an unfamiliar town. A Pasadena resident, Schultz is

ON THE WEB Read more about the paranormal bootcamp in Porterville, and get links to local investigations headed by Schultz and his City of Angels Team insidesocal.com/rose

leading this portion of the paranormal investigation in his role with the West Coast division of The Atlantic Paranormal Society. Locally, he founded the Pasadena Paranormal Research Society and has recently branched off from that group to form City of Angels Paranormal. The group takes up private cases around the San Gabriel Valley, Schultz says, and it has investigated some haunted standards like Pasadena’s own Colorado Street “Suicide” Bridge and The Queen Mary in Long Beach. Unlike the pro-bono investigations Schultz conducts with the Pasadena group, most of the guests in Porterville are paying ones. They’ve come from all over California for what TAPS bills as a paranormal bootcamp. For $75, they’ll spend five hours learning basic ghosthunting techniques from Schultz and co-host Britt Griffith, of SyFy channel’s “Ghost Hunters” show. Then the group of

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116 | ROSEPARADE2010

about 100 is split up and shuttled out on a rotating tour of the Central Valley city’s “hot spots” of paranormal activity. An hour at each site is breakneck pace for a ghost hunt, Schultz says, but it gives the bootcampers a hint of what a real investigation might resemble. The most viscerally eerie of the bunch is the historic Zalud House, a striking brick dwelling built in 1891. Everything within the home is original; it looks exactly as it must have when the Zalud family lived, died and laid in repose there (in the parlor’s bay window alcove). The lone item brought in from outside the house is a chair, placed in an upstairs bedroom. It was in 1917 that businessman Hubert Brooks, the husband of one of the Zalud daughters, died in that chair inside the Porterville Pioneer Hotel. He was shot and killed by a woman — not his wife — for spreading unsavory gossip about her. The headline of a newspaper clipping at the time read: “IRATE BEAUTY KILLS RANCHER FOR STORIES.” The shooter was put on trial and acquitted “because it was found that (Brooks’) actions contributed to his (own) death,” according to the Porterville Ghost Society.


(Visitors to the Zalud House today can sit in the very chair, complete with bullet hole — and, reportedly, remnants of century-old blood.) The nature of Brooks’ death — sudden and violent — makes him a good candidate to reach out to during the ghost hunt. He could be suffering from what Schultz calls PTDS or “posttraumatic death syndrome.� “With some very traumatic deaths ... they don’t want to accept that they are dead,� Schultz says. “In some rare cases, they never find out that they are dead. ... Others are afraid to cross over, possibly to be judged for wrongs done in life.� So, how to reach out to a ghost, disgruntled or otherwise? For paranormal investigators, it’s a lot like any average conversation — except the other party is exceptionally quiet. There is small talk: “Do you know what year it is?� There are probing, personal questions: “So, how does it feel to be shot by a woman?� asks one bootcamper in the Zalud House. The investigation is also usually conducted in the dark, a matter of contention among some ghost hunters, who say paranormal activity is not limited

to the nighttime. Schultz says he prefers the dark for a number of reasons: there’s less ambient noise, it’s easier to see shadows and because “we all have day jobs.� Talking to (or at) ghosts is the easy part, though. Hearing, seeing or, most prized of all, capturing evidence of a paranormal response is a primary goal of any investigation. Documentation means the difference between telling someone about a ghostly encounter versus playing an audio or videotape of it, Schultz says. And in the pursuit of evidence collection, ghost hunters often become collectors of equipment, too. At the Porterville bootcamp, Schultz and Griffith say they have on display about $100,000 of equipment, including things like nightvision cameras, infrared illuminators, audio recorders and mixing boards and temperature data loggers. The bootcamp leaders give recommendations on the most useful equipment and on those that are excessive or impractical. Geiger counter? “You know what these are really good for? Finding out if your neighbors are terrorists,� Griffith dead-pans. When Schultz and his team investigate a potential haunting, they’re listening

STRANGEST PARANORMAL EQUIPMENT White-noise generator: Some ghost hunters believe spirits draw from the constant level of noise to generate a sound or voice that can be recorded. Paranormal puck: Plugs into your computer’s USB port and translates energy levels into text. Ovilus: Like the puck, only the energy field is translated into audible speech. Franks Box/The Ghost Box: Runs the gamut of AM radio frequencies, creating bytes of audio. Some believe spirits can use the sounds to form whole words and speech.

and looking for noises that can’t be attributed to human causes, drastic changes in temperature or barometric pressure, luminous anomalies, mists and smoke with no natural origin, out-ofplace shadows and, of course, translucent human forms.

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On the front steps of the Isham house, Noises most likely one group hears a to be mistaken for loud, unexplained a ghost on an bang from within its audio recording walls. Once inside however, and despite Squeaky flip-flops Schultz’ coaxing Human whispers questions, it’s utter silence — except for Nylon jackets the noises made by Growling stomachs living people as they shift positions or breathe deeply. Nary a blip registers on the K-2 meter, a device that uses flashing lights to signal a boost in electromagnetic energy. Instruments like the K-2 meter, while finicky, have a twofold purpose in the course of a paranormal investigation, Schultz points out. He and many people in the paranormal field believe ghosts have the ability to communicate through electronic devices. The K-2 meter, for example, is often used to ask yes-orno questions, where a spirit would respond by lighting up the device once for affirmative and twice for negative. But an electromagnetic field detector can also measure man-made sources for such energy. Household appliances, electrical wiring, electronic devices — they all produce EMF, and too much exposure can have harmful side-effects. “Sitting in a high electromagnetic field can make you feel ill,” Schultz says. If a client is sleeping with an alarm clock too close to his head, he may be seeing things, but it’s definitely not caused by ghosts, he says. The majority of paranormal cases that come across the desks of City of Angels investigators can likely be debunked, Schultz says. When the team takes up a case, they look for every plausible, scientific explanation and rule them out, one by one, he says. During one local investigation, the homeowners reported an unexplained cold spot in one room, every night. Schultz tested the room, and found a large chunk of insulation missing from a wall. Similarly, seismic activity could explain the glass of water jumping across a bedside table in the middle of the night, and persistent scratching noises in the walls are probably caused by rats — not demons. And if you’re using a digital camera, Griffith says, the mysterious, floating orbs you see in every frame are not grandma, but rather dust, pollen, dandruff or any other flying particle that may have crossed your path when the flash went off. Schultz’ co-founder Gil Saldana of La Crescenta is the group’s resident skeptic. (He’s also a licensed pest-control operator, which comes in handy when vermin prove to be the cause of a disturbance.) “The closest I got to a (paranormal) experience turned out to be an electrical charge; it was a poorly grounded house,” he says. “I’m described as a paranormal brick. ... When I walk in the

SCHULTZ

CARRASCO

room, everything stops.” The opposite is true for paranormal investigator Jason Carrasco. He describes himself as a 100 percent believer in the spirit world, a facet of his own Yaqui Native American tradition that’s inseparable from his day-to-day life. “I’ve always believed in spirituality, but I’ve also always had a fascination with the scientific,” he says, “with trying to validate the entities using science. Instead of conflicting, I think they can complement each other.” In his capacity as a professional mental-health therapist, Carrasco’s role with City of Angeles is to make sure incoming claims are worthwhile — particularly by ruling out psychosis or hallucinations as the cause of a “haunting.” A rigorous screening process also helps weed out the serious inquiry from the curiosity seeker. (And pranksters don’t want to slog through a probing, multi-page questionnaire and interview just to get to a punchline.) Schultz says people with serious cognitive conditions or addictions make up a small percentage of the people with whom his team interacts. “There is something about the paranormal community — it just attracts drama like you wouldn’t believe,” he says. “That’s why we have rules, like ‘Never invite a client to your own home.’ The most scary, dangerous thing you’ll encounter in this business is the living.” But that doesn’t make a person suffering from delusions any less in need of help than the woman with a poltergeist in her backyard shed, he says. “You can’t turn your back on these people, just because it’s not ghosts,” Schultz says. “You can’t say, ‘Oh, that’s not what I’m here for.’ It is what you’re here for.” “If there are other issues, how can we help?” Carrasco adds. “What services can we get them?” He’s typically able to connect an unstable client to vital medical and mental health facilities. Even when Schultz and his team believe they have a case of real paranormal activity on their hands, they approach the property owner with caution. “What we see as a hobby — as fun and exciting — for people on the other end, they are looking for serious answers,” he says. “They might sell their house, for example, or make serious financial decisions based upon what we tell them.” But some aren’t expecting to draw conclusions anytime soon. “The most fun is actually searching for (ghosts),” Saldana says. “If I never get the answer, I’ll be satisfied knowing that I tried.” Visit cityofangelsparanormal.com

I’m described as a paranormal brick. ... When I walk in the room, everything stops.

118 | ROSEPARADE2010

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Pasadena, CA 91101 ROSEPARADE2010 | 119


See more photos from shop-the-block insidesocal.com/rose

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SETTLE IN on one of The Sofa Company’s custom-crafted sectionals in the still-sparkling-new Pasadena showroom, and you may never want to get back up again. It’s partly the lure of the cozy couches themselves, but also the warm touch of the showroom’s historical framework in the 1960sbuilt Friend Paper Company building. The mid-century modern design, with instantly recognizable accordion-pleated roof and huge walls of glass, feels like an open invitation to plop down and put your feet up for a while. And, if you like the seating arrangements enough, you can bring one home with you. 100 W. Green St., 10 a.m.-8 p.m., (888) 778-7632, thesofaco.com

110

100

PHOTOS BY WALT MANCINI

110 W. GREEN ST.

Onesipkim

ANOTHER RESIDENT of the Friend Paper Company building is Kim Madolora and her sweet boutique of carefree shopping. The aura at Onesipkim is illuminatingly carefree. Madolora’s wares speak boldly for themselves amid the shop’s clean design lines, gentle pops of color and perfectly balanced spacial harmony. You’ll find worthy picks from Rachel Pally, Ella Moss, Andrea Brueckner, Trovata and more. 110 W. Green St., Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m., (626) 396-4926, onesipkim.com

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NEED A FROCK? Skip the chaos of retail on Colorado Boulevard (you know, the hoardes descending on H&M and Forever 21.) Off the beaten path — but not too far — and directly across from the De Lacey parking garage is Il Teatro, which is not a shop for opera glasses, but an exquisite women’s clothing and accessories boutique. This is where you’ll stock up on wardrobe staples and special-occasion wear that’s meant to stand the test of time. And you’ll do it all without busting through the budget you’d normally keep at those other warehouse shops. Keep an eye out for markdowns on jewelry and accessories, and get more for the money. 54 S. De Lacey Ave. (626) 796-2313

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REMEMBER WHEN your eyewear routine consisted of a trip to LensCrafters? And then you discovered Old Focals, one of those Old Pasadena gems that’s so shiny and treasured even the L.A. crowd has heard tell of its glory. We’re talking vintage; when frames were individual works of art and, now, are practically oneof-a-kind. Owner Russell Campbell is the master of repurposed glasses and shades, and he has a knack for swaying customers to try styles they wouldn’t normally pick — to rave results. Remember the last time you got an unsolicited compliment on your glasses? Well, you better get on that. Old Focals, 45 W. Green St. (626) 793-7073, oldfocals.com


SHOP

POP-UP RETRO STOP One-of-a-kind style and value at Elisa B. annex, vanishes Jan. 10 FASHION MAVEN ELISA BRULEY — that’s Elisa B., of course — has teamed up with jewelry designer Jill Pearson to transform a 1,400-square-foot space into a retro winter pop-up shop. The temporary store features new looks from Wasabi (Pearson’s line), repurposed vintage jewelry, collectibles and accessory lines. Some items are one-of-a-kind. Pearson combines vintage costume jewelry with semi-precious stones, sterling silver and gold-filled chains. More than two dozen pieces from her collection, culled from estate sales, thrift stores and the Rose Bowl Flea Market, will be sold at the annex. Pearson calls the space mid-century modern meets thrift-store chic. 24 Smith Alley, off One Colorado Courtyard. Mon.-Sat., 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Sun. noon-7 p.m. Through Jan. 10. (626) 793-7584.

122 | ROSEPARADE2010


PHOTOS BY WALT MANCINI

ON THE WEB See more photos from the Elisa B. Annex insidesocal.com/rose

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SHOP

A PIECE OF RODARTE Kate and Laura Mulleavy are the dynamic, powerhouse duo behind Rodarte, the high-fashion line founded in Pasadena, the sisters’ hometown. Their work, which took New York Fashion Week by storm in the fall, is being hailed as the most imaginitive couture offerings to come out of Southern California in some time. Their runway looks are dark, deconstructed patchworks of string and textures. But now, the Rodarte look is gaining mass-market appeal as the sisters’ line for Target hit stores Dec. 20. News of a quiet, early release at the department store’s Eagle Rock location sent local fashion bloggers into a frenzy, and celebrities have already been pictured wearing Rodarte for Target threads in the newsstand glossies. Fashion darlings, indeed, the Mulleavys reportedly got their start making fashion history out of a guest house behind their mother’s Pasadena home. (The Rodarte collection is named after their mom’s surname.) In an interview with Rachel K. Ward of Gravure Magazine, Kate Mulleavy says Pasadena had a huge influence on Rodarte’s vision. “Pasadena is an interesting place, because it is one of the older suburbs of L.A. ... A place where every house is different. For L.A. if something survives 100 years, it is a pretty big deal. In Pasadena, The Huntington Gardens is one of my favorite places in the world.” The Rodarte for Target line will be in Target stores through Jan. 31.

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EAT Q&A: MICHAEL VOLTAGGIO

Chef de Cuisine, The Dining Room About 40 days after Michael Voltaggio arrived as the new chef de cuisine at The Dining Room at The Langham Huntington Hotel and Spa, the 31-year-old made his first appearance on the Bravo show “Top Chef: Las Vegas.” During this season’s fourmonth bout, his face became familiar to millions of viewers as one of 17 chefs competing for the title, $125,000 cash and an array of prizes. At the same time he was on TV, the Los Angeles resident was in the process of revamping the menu in The Dining Room -– aptly-named for the Pasadena hotel’s dinner-only restaurant. Every menu item, from breads to desserts now reflect Voltaggio’s selfdescribed “Sophisticated American Cuisine.” The menu contains dishes like Pastrami Pigeon and Wagyu Short Ribs, which require two days to cook. It’s a small kitchen, but everything is prepared on location. A physical renovation of the restaurant, scheduled for February, will bring together the food with the ambience of the room, said Voltaggio. Prior to his arrival in Pasadena, Voltaggio was the chef de cuisine at The Bazaar by Jose Andres in Los Angeles and chef de cuisine of Charlie Palmers Dry Creek Kitchen. On Dec. 9, Voltaggio was named the “Top Chef ” winner – just ahead of his older brother Bryan – after preparing a four-course meal that included Cream of Dehydrated Broccoli, Fried Broccoli and Spot Prawn, and Fennel-Scented Squab Breast, Pistachio Cassoulet and Textures of Mushrooms. THE ROSE: I imagine you have a lot of people coming into the restaurant who are fans of “Top Chef.” CHEF MICHAEL VOLTAGGIO: The business has definitely increased since I arrived. The funny thing is that people will leave saying, ‘We came in because we saw you on TV. But we had a really great meal.’ I think it’s the food that will keep bringing them back. ROSE: You were born and raised on the East Coast, but have also lived in Florida, and in California’s Wine Country. How does that compare with your new home? CHEF MV: Pasadena has been so welcoming. I don’t know how to describe it. I feel like I’m part of a small town, even though it’s like we’re still this suburb of a huge city. ROSE: Are there major differences between East Coast and West Coast cuisine? CHEF MV: I’ve gone back and forth from the East Coast and the West Coast and I tell everybody first and foremost the same thing. It looks like the inside of a kitchen. But really, so far Southern California is one of my favorite places to live.

TOP: Top Chef contestant Michael Voltaggio preps red peppers. Voltaggio prepares his multi-course meals using molecular gastronomy. CENTER: Chef Voltaggio gets ready to pickle chanterelle mushrooms. BOTTOM: The spoon tattoo.

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CHEF MV: I like the fact that my tattoos resemble food and dining. But it’s not ‘in your face.’ It’s not like you’re a chef because you have a tattoo of a spoon on your arm. ROSE: You have a fork and knife on your hand. On your forearm is a spoon with a skull inside of it? CHEF MV: When people see (knife and fork) the first thing they ask is ‘Where is the spoon?’ I wanted an old classic spoon because I’m not a very traditional style of a chef. I wanted a traditional piece on my arm that represented the evolution of food. (I was thinking,) if I was out shopping and I was a spoon collector, what kind of spoon would I buy?

ROSE: Is anything harder to come by? CHEF MV: I think definitely out here it’s more important to pay attention to the seasons. On the East Coast, growing seasons are very short. You rely on getting produce from all over the world. A lot of the menus are based on what you are seeing in the markets. And what’s growing here. ROSE: What about the actual restaurants? CHEF MV: New York is one of the best restaurant experiences in the world. I think the demographics here definitely support more of a fine dining experience, but in a more relaxed (atmosphere). The style of food and demand for quality is still there. But it doesn’t have to be such a chore to go out to dinner because people love to go out to dinner here. ROSE: I’m sure one of the first things people may notice about you is your ink. What’s your inspiration?

ROSE: How would you describe your food to someone unfamiliar with your cooking? CHEF MV: We like to take familiar things and give them to you in a way you haven’t had them before. ROSE: What is an example from your menu? CHEF MV: We have a lamb dish with hummus tempura. The hummus is made from celery root and peanut butter and mixed with agar-agar. You get this hot, molten fritter of hummus with the lamb. You’ve had celery, peanut butter and raisins before, but not like this. It makes sense from a flavor perspective, but it’s not done in a cheesy or immature way. It’s about good foundation, good discipline to cooking, precise execution and having a little bit of fun with it. ROSE: Is 70 seats the right size for you? CHEF MV: We don’t want to be a restaurant that serves 300 people a night. The smallest offering we have right now is four

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courses. Sending 200 plates out of the kitchen, with 50 people, we want to focus on making sure that we get every single one of them executed perfectly. ROSE: How often do you get recognized on the street? CHEF MV: It happens. It’s kind of a compliment, though. People are like ‘We’re rooting for you and can’t wait to try your food.’ I’m not going to let it go to my head though. I’m going to stay as close to the stove as possible. If people are looking for me they’ll find me in the kitchen cooking dinner. ROSE: What was the first restaurant that you could really call your own? How old were you? CHEF MV: I was 24 and it was The Dining Room at The Ritz Carlton in Naples, Florida. I’ve gone full circle, in a sense, and ended up at a restaurant in a luxury hotel, very much like the first one I started in. ROSE: What is the source of your drive and your culinary passion? CHEF MV: I love what I do. I’ve never been paid to do anything else my entire life. It kind of defines me as a person. I work very hard, I don’t party very hard. I haven’t done that since the day I graduated high school. ROSE: Does this mean you are a workaholic? CHEF MV: Yes, you could be definitely put me in that category. ROSE: It’s your first season in Pasadena. Will you be attending the Rose Bowl Parade or game? CHEF MV: (Laughing) I think I’ll probably be at work. R

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Jesucita Mijares

MIJARES FAMILY RESTAURANT

Jesucita’s familia The tale of a woman, her molcajete and a Pasadena tradition that spans nearly a century By Claudia S. Palma

The story of the Mijares family starts in a small town near Los Altos de Jalisco in Mexico. The year is 1918 and a young woman named Jesucita Hernandez is grieving her husband’s death. Desperate to escape her grief, the widow packs her molcajete, a stone mortar and pestle, and travels north to California to her sister’s home in Pasadena, not knowing that her only possession will become her future family’s most treasured heirloom. Ninety-one years later, Jesucita’s story is the Mijares family’s legacy. Her restaurant, which started as a small tortilla factory from her home on Fair Oaks Avenue before moving to Palmetto Drive in Pasadena, uses the same recipes passed from one generation to another. The Mijares Mexican Restaurant is now a community landmark, a family tradition and a testament to the strength of women. MI CASA ES SU CASA Jesucita, who became a Mijares after she married fourth husband Antonio, passed away in 1988 at the age of 95. Her daughter Alice Mijares and granddaughter R-Lene Mijares de Lang run the restaurant’s two Pasadena locations. The women are proud to have kept the business in the family. “My sister, brothers all worked here,” says Alice, 78. “It was just a way of life.” Though she is semi-retired, Alice still loves stopping by the Palmetto Drive restaurant, which was also Jesucita’s home. When the Palmetto Drive property came on sale in 132 | ROSEPARADE2010

the 1930s, Jesucita looked to one of her many friends in the community to help buy the lot. “She barely spoke English and she was able to borrow money and made a deal with just a handshake,” says Mijares de Lang. The family moved to the property, which consisted of a few small homes. There, Jesucita told the community, “mi casa es su casa” or “my home is your home.” She transformed part of her home into a food stop, which Mijares de Lang likened to a “Mexicatessen with a big refrigerator and counter,” where Jesucita sold tortillas, sauces, tamales and other food. She used her molcajete to grind corn and chiles to


Mijares Mexican Restaurant on Palmetto Drive in Pasadena Photos by Eric Reed


EAT create fresh dishes. “The fire department would come by to eat, the kids from the local school came by,” Mijares de Lang says. Alice recalls helping her parents when she was young. “She was a very strong, strict person as far as getting things done,” Alice says. “She would get up early at 3, 4 in the morning and make tamales. It was about getting work done.” It was also about helping people. “She refused to not feed someone just because they couldn’t pay,” Mijares de Lang says. “I see the same spark my grandmother had in my mother.” Both Jesucita and Alice share the same passion and faith in their family and the ability to look for the positive in anything. “Grandma had a saying (in Spanish), ‘There’s nothing so tragic that good doesn’t arise from,’” Mijares de Lang says. “(Grandma and my mom) are survivors. They are not afraid to take risks.” The second location opened in 1979, a year after a fire destroyed much of the Palmetto Drive restaurant. The small food stop on Washington and Allen avenues was meant to be a temporary site while the original was being rebuilt, but when Palmetto Drive was

Alice Mijares with Trio Tesorito

ready to reopen in 1982 the family decided to keep both restaurants operating. During the two-day reopening celebration, “Grandma drank tequila and danced for two days,” Mijares de Lang recalls. Though the menu has grown from Jesucita’s original items, there is one specific thing that has never changed. “The secret, she said, was to always use the

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molino, a large volcanic-stone mill,” Mijares de Lang says. “That’s why our enchilada sauce is very good, and the tamales are very light.” Other items have been added to the menu over the years, but each new dish has a story to go along with it. The garbage burrito was created by a regular customer — “He came in and told my dad, ‘Hey Smiley, make me

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a burrito with everything but the kitchen sink,’ so my dad did,� Mijares de Lang says. Alice’s older brother created the crab enchiladas and the head chef adds new specials almost every week. “(Chef Antonio) Campos not only goes along with all the original recipes, he teaches the other cooks, and he adds to the recipes that he creates himself,� Alice says. “Campos doesn’t try to change the sauces, they go on everything, like the enchiladas. The enchiladas are the first thing to go in the buffet.� The restaurant also hosts tequila tastings and pairing events. MI FAMILIA Alice and her daughter are not the only family keeping the business going. There have been many Mijares family members that have worked at the restaurant in one way or another. “My husband (Ismael “Smiley� Recendez) worked here too,� said Alice. “He worked until a few days before he died. He was a wonderful chef — because my mother taught him.� Many family members still work there. “The key to working with family is

you have to recognize everyone has their strengths and weaknesses,� says Mijares de Lang, who left a teaching career to help her mother run the business. “And you have to allow that person to blossom in their area. Of course, you have to have good communication.� Besides blood, the Mijares have an extended family within their staff. Manager Maria Guzman and chef Antonio Campos have worked for the Mijareses for more than 20 years. “They treat me like family, they treat everyone that way,� Guzman says. “I love Tortillas are made fresh every morning at Mijares. this restaurant.� While the Mijares clan is looking forward to a huge celebration in September for the MIJARES MEXICAN RESTAURANT 145 Palmetto Drive, Pasadena restaurant’s 90th anniversary, Jesucita’s (626) 792-2763 daughter is letting family roots and a small molcajete inspire her hopes for the 1806 E. Washington St.,Pasadena future. They still make fresh tortillas every (626) 794-6674 morning and while the family has received www.mijaresrestaurant.com plenty of offers over the years to open a restaurant in other areas, Alice wants something simpler. “I think we can go back to making tortillas — in a tortilla factory,� she says. “We can do it again, we just need the space. I could see us selling our tortillas in a store in the future.� R

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EAT Cheval Blanc Bistro, 41 S. De Lacey Ave., Pasadena

DINING DIRECTORY

Places to dine and wine in Pasadena and surrounding areas REVIEWS BY MERRILL SHINDLER PASADENA CAFÉ 140 SOUTH 140 S. Lake Ave., Pasadena, (626) 449-9900. What used to be the Smith Brothers’ Crocodile CafĂŠ, given a fresh new look and a menu that mixes favorite dishes from the Croc with new creations to give the place a renewed lease on life. As a bonus, the Smiths went on an extensive pizza tour to find the best pies in America, which they say they’re replicating at 140 South — any restaurateurs who make multiple trips to Pizza Bianca in Phoenix are taking their pizza seriously. About $20 per person. CHEVAL BLANC BISTRO 41 S. De Lacey Ave., Old Pasadena, (626) 577-4141. Sensing a change in the wind, the ubiquitous Smith Brothers (Parkway Grill, Arroyo Chop House, CafĂŠ 140 South, Smitty’s) have turned their Traditional American Spitfire Grill into a French bistro in the style of Anisette and Comme Ca, with a menu of charcuterie and escargots, coq au vin and confit de canard, cassoulet de Toulouse and choucroute d’Alsace — a cuisine not represented in the Old Pasadena melting pot, much needed and much appreciated. About $40 per person. NOIR FOOD & WINE 40 N. Mentor Ave., Pasadena, (626) 795-7199. Local favorite Claud Beltran (Checkers, Cayo, Madeleines) returns to the dining scene with a modest storefront, adjacent to the entrance to the Ice House Comedy Club, with a menu of small plates built around dozens of wines by the glass, numerous flights and a menu of “cheese, charcuterie, gumbo, snacks & sidesâ€? — most sized so that they can be shared by two. About $30 per person. Reservations are recommended Thursday to Saturday. THE DINING ROOM AT THE LANGHAM The Langham Huntington Hotel & Spa, 1401 S. Oak Knoll Ave., Pasadena, (626) 568-3900. Just a few months after I wrote glowingly of Chef Craig Strong’s cooking at the most elegant restaurant in the most elegant hotel in one of the most elegant neighborhoods in Pasadena, he’s gone off to work as executive chef at the Studio Restaurant at the Montage Hotel in Laguna Beach. His replacement is “Top Chef: Las Vegasâ€? winner Michael Voltaggio,

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who was Jose Andres’ point man at Bazaar in the SLS Beverly Hills Hotel. Which translates into a new big dog in our marquis dining destination — and a new menu that bears little resemblance to what came before. Voltaggio is definitely his own man with his own style. About $110 per person. Reservation required. NAGA NAGA RAMEN 49 E. Colorado Blvd., Old Pasadena, (626) 585-8822. The décor is red and more red at this Old Pasadena ramen joint, with a large tropical fish Noir Food & Wine, 40 N. Mentor Ave., Pasadena tank, and a long shared table at which locals can gather to slurp ramen old style and ramen new style — referred to on the menu as “Revolutionary Ramen.” With nothing priced more than $8.95 (and most of the menu under that), it’s hard to go wrong at this Old Town hot bed for noodles and more noodles. About $12 per person. GALE’S 452 S. Fair Oaks Ave., Pasadena, (626) 432-6705. This casually elegant Northern Italian sits just south of Old Pasadena, in a room made comfortable by bare brick walls, friendly service and some of the best Italian in, or out, of Old Pasadena — classic dishes, classically prepared. About $30 per person. SMITTY’S GRILL 110 S. Lake Ave., Pasadena, (626) 792-9999. Americana from the Smith Brothers (Greg and Bob, who’ve brought us Parkway Grill, Arroyo Chop House and Café 140 South), in an affable setting, with a fine bar and a visible kitchen — an overnight classic for extraordinary cornbread (good luck not eating too much!), BBQ babybacks, Cobb and Louie, chicken pot pie, prime rib and braised short ribs. A fine place in which to rediscover a cuisine that too many of us have forgotten — our own. About $28 per person. MAIKOBE 45 S. Fair Oaks Ave., Old Pasadena, (626) 795-5215. A fine Japanese restaurant replaces the excellent La Huasteca in the space right next to the parking lot at the corner of Fair Oaks and Green — anchored by a stylish room that adds fire to the contention that South Fair Oaks is evolving into Pasadena’s own Little Asia. Interestingly, although there’s no actual sushi bar, there’s lots of sushi and sushi rolls as well — could this be the beginning of a trend? About $25 per person. 1810 121 W. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, (626) 795-5658. An Argentinean replaces an Argentinean in the space that for many years was home to the Gaucho Grill — and urban gauchos will still feel at home in this rustic room with its high ceiling and rough wood, and a menu of many steaks, lots of pasta, and plenty of garlic, all of which goes down well with a fine Malbec from the Auld (South American) Sod. About $25 per person. DAISY MINT 1218 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, 626-792-2999. What used to be the wonderful Sweet Garlic Thai in Monrovia, moved to the eastern edge of Colorado Boulevard (far from Old Pasadena), in a storefront decorated unlike any other Thai restaurant in town. Indeed, the eccentric American farmhouse look may leave you wondering what alternative universe you’ve tumbled into. The description on the business card as “Oriental Café” is a bit disconcerting as well — until you spot favorites on the menu like the spicy catfish, the tom yum soup and the peanut dumplings. Think of it as Thai … with a twist. About $15 per person. ROY’S 641 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, (626) 356-4066. Call it PanAsian, call it Pacific New Wave, call it Cal-Asian, call it Hawaiian Fusion — whatever sobriquet you prefer for this amalgam of cuisines, nobody


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does it better than master chef Roy Yamaguchi, who proves that you can open branches the world over without losing a smidgen of quality. This is wonderful — and wonderfully joyous — cooking, serving in a setting that feels like the hottest party in town. And the mixed drinks ain’t half bad either. About $50 per person. Reservations are recommended. AZEEN’S AFGHANI RESTAURANT 110 E. Union St., Old Pasadena, (626) 683-3310. One of only a few restaurants in SoCal offering the exotic, wonderfully flavorful and highly authentic cooking of Afghanistan, a cuisine with flavors gathered from the many nations that surround its borders, mixed with the cooking of the many ethnic groups that call Afghanistan home, resulting in a world of aushak, mantu, bulanee, kadu and gulpi, along with many kabobs served with what may be the world’s most delicious rice. About $20 per person. Reservations recommended on weekends. LA GRANDE ORANGE 260 S. Raymond Ave., Pasadena, (626) 3564444. The culinarily eclectic LGO chain of restaurants from the Phoenix area heads west to give Pasadeneans a taste of their take on tuna tartar, Brussels sprout salad and short ribs in a space carved out of what used to be the old Santa Fe Depot, right next to the Gold Line’s Del Mar stop. The overall impression is of dinner in a swanky train station — at the very least, the kids will love it. About $30 per person. Reservations recommended on weekends. EQUATOR WORLD FUSION RESTAURANT AND CAFE 22 Mills Place, Old Pasadena, (626) 564-8656. An eclectic coffee house that’s grown into an even-more-eclectic, multi-ethnic restaurant — a breathtaking space on a walking street just off Colorado Boulevard, dominated by an oversized Buddha, with rough brick walls and lots of food — making it one of the most unexpected venues for dim sum (Saturday and Sunday for brunch) in the dim sum-intensive San Gabriel Valley. About $20 per person. NOODLE WORLD 24 W. Colorado Blvd., Old Pasadena, (626) 5855885. The subtitle is “Asian Noodle House.” And that sums it up pretty well, for this is a bestiary of noodles (and more) from Vietnam, China, Thailand, Japan and a few other spots in Southeast Asia, served not just in the Asian enclave of Alhambra, but in the heart of Old Pasadena, and in San Marino as well. Proof that everybody likes their noodles. About $12 per person. MALBEC NEW ARGENTINEAN CUISINE 1001 E. Green St., Pasadena, (626) 683-0550. Not just Argentinean cuisine, but “New Argentinean Cuisine” is what you’ll find at this upbeat indoor/outdoor dining destination on a quiet section of Green Street, where the menu reflects both the sizable Italian population of Argentina with a handful of hearty pastas, and Argentinean taste for meat with skirt steak chimichurri, short ribs, rib eye and a multi-meat brochette; and don’t miss the seafood appetizer called Costa Patagonia, a dish redolent of paprika and garlic. About $35 per person.

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BUSTAMANTE ANTIQUE SHOWS

0ASADENA #ENTER s 0ASADENA #! March 5 - 7, June 4 - 6, August 6 - 8, December 3 - 5

BUSTAMANTE BOOK FAIRS

3ANTA -ONICA #IVIC !UDITORIUM s September 11 & 12 0ASADENA #ENTER 0ASADENA #! s December 4 & 5

DOROTHY EMERSON ANTIQUE SHOWS 3ANTA -ONICA #IVIC !UDITORIUM 3ANTA -ONICA #! February 19 - 21, June 25 - 27, October 22 - 24

Managed by Bustamante Enterprises, Inc. P.O. Box 637, Atwater, CA 95301 s WWW BUSTAMANTE SHOWS COM

â—? Beads

â—? Tools

â—? Books

â—? Metals

â—? Gourds

â—? Friendly Service

%AST ,IVE /AK !VENUE s !RCADIA

626.447.7753

4UES 4HURS PM s &RI PM 3AT AM PM s 3UN PM

www.beadcompany.com

COMPLETE CHARTER “Ride The Bus�

5 HOURS AT CASINOS 310-538-4211 909-620-7646

FREE PICK-UP LOCATIONS TRIP COVINA POMONA POMONA CHINO

Denny’s El Pollo Food HILLS Azusa Loco 4 Less Mc SAT U SUN U MON U TUE and 90 Rio Philadelphia Donalds O SPA RESORT CASIN

FREE $10 TRIP

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SLOT PLAY

Puente Rancho 71 Fwy. & Avenue Road & Garey Grand

7:00 7:45 8:00 8:15 AM AM AM AM

140 | ROSEPARADE2010

San Marino, California and Rimrock, Arizona - USA Coed Year Round Boarding/Day College Prep ESL Grades 6-12 and PG

(626) 799-5010 Ext. 5

2800 Monterey Rd. San Marino, CA 91108 Accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

www.SouthwesternAcademy.edu

SURROUNDING AREAS: CACAO MEXICATESSEN 1576 Colorado Blvd., Eagle Rock, (323) 478-2791. Decorated in the bright, primary colors of Oaxaca and the Mexican south, this combination cafĂŠ and market offers a wide selection of antojitos — small dishes, along with sandwiches and the namesake chocolate drink (often mixed with coffee), in a lively spot that’s become an instant hit in artistic Eagle Rock, with lots of locals showing up for a bowl of menudo on weekends — the traditional Mexican cure for a hangover. About $10 per person. NEWPORT SEAFOOD 518 W. Las Tunas Drive, San Gabriel, (626) 289-5998; 18441 Colima Road, Rowland Heights, (626) 839-1239. In the midst of an ocean of Chinese seafood houses, Newport stands out thanks to its near elegant dĂŠcor, its exceptional food — and its crowds which, on a weekend, fill the lobby, and extend out into the parking lot. Go with a bunch of good eaters, who are patient enough to wait for a hour or so. They’ll be rewarded with shrimp, crab and lobster of top-tier quality. About $30 per person. ALONDRA HOT WINGS 515 W. Main St., Alhambra, (626) 5767119; 616 W. Whittier Blvd., Montebello, (323) 722-2731. A minichain from the Long Beach area, built around Buffalo chicken wings (obviously), but also around outlandishly large sandwiches, many deep-fried things, and a wide assortment of oversized pizzas, all set against a dĂŠcor that pays homage to the Cosa Nostra and the Mafia, with special emphasis on the great gangsters of history — including a Web site section dedicated to famous wiseguys and their nefarious accomplishments. About $18 per person. MICHELLE’S PANCAKES 706 W. Las Tunas Drive, San Gabriel, (626) 293-8098. Hidden in the back of a San Gabriel mini-mall, this storefront is fabled not just for dumplings (and there are plenty of them on the menu), but also (as the name tells us) for pancakes, a signature dish from the north of China, done in a multitude of ways. Don’t miss the handmade noodles either. Or dishes as simple as the cold cucumber salad. And be prepared to wait for a table — Michelle and her pancakes are much loved in the ’hood. About $12 per person. NING JIE 413 S. Mission Drive, San Gabriel, (626) 576-2588. A tiny family-run storefront, famous for its barbecued things on sticks, and for its many lamb dishes, a clear signature of the north of China, including a lamb noodle soup that dazzles with every mouthful. Situated in the midst of San Gabriel’s historic district, directly across from the mission — take the kids and make a day of it. About $12 per person. Cash only. FONDA DON CHON 618 Shoppers Lane, Covina. (626) 332-4712. The menu says “Authentic Mexican Restaurantâ€? on it, and the title certainly fits at the cozy neighborhood favorite in the Shoppers Lane shopping zone of Covina, that offers a wide selection of well spiced dishes along with a daily buffet and a champagne buffet brunch on Sundays. About $15 per person. LUNASIA CHINESE CUISINE 500 Main St., Alhambra, (626) 3083222. Several months ago, what was Triumphal Palace turned into Lunasia, the latest of the new generation of upscale Cantonese seafood palaces, a grand room with exotic dĂŠcor, understated lighting (unusual in Chinese restaurants) and a serious selection of a la carte dim sum dishes during the day, and tanks full of live seafood at night, along with an order-in-advance special of whole suckling pig for $188, which should feed a table of ten — and give you enough pig for sandwiches for days after. About $15 per person for dim sum; about $35 per person for dinner. ZI TERESA 6717 Greenleaf Ave., Whittier, (562) 464-4744. The family that runs this Uptown Whittier Italian has been in the restaurant business since 1890, and this intimately designed storefront taste of “Little Italyâ€? with its blue lighting offers a compendium of the great dishes of yesteryear — calamari Fra Diavolo, stuffed mushrooms a hot spinach salad, lots of pastas, plenty of veal, and many dishes cooked al forno; in a part of town where classics are rare, this is a new destination for classic cooking. About $20 per person. BOLLINI’S PIZZERIA NAPOLITANA 2315 S. Garfield Ave., Monterey Park, (323) 722-7600. A classic Old World pizzeria, run by a Cordon Bleu graduate who practices his art in crust and cheese, rather than foie gras and truffles. The pies are large and larger, the crust flavored with smoke — in the world of great SoCal pizzas, this is a definite contender. About $15 per person.


THE BOILING CRAB 742 W. Valley Blvd., Alhambra, (626) 576-9368. Ground Zero for the Vietnamese-run Cajun crab house craze in Southern California (with numerous branches in the OC and Texas), this happy shack on Valley is jammed from the moment it opens till it closes many hours later with well-splattered, slap-happy locals, smashing open crabs and pulling apart crawfish and shrimp, while downing as many beers as they can. Sloppy fun for the whole family — but do be prepared to wait for a table. There are no reservations. About $35 per person. WANG’S PLACE 120 E. Lemon Ave., Monrovia. (626) 303-3701. The venerable (and much loved) Wang’s Palace has moved from busy Myrtle to more sedate Lemon, just across the street from a multiplex, adjacent to a large municipal parking lot, in the process changing from “Palace” to “Place,” definitely upgrading the look (the place verges on fancy), but still offering a menu of some of Mandarin and Szechwan favorites — if you’re in the mood for textbook versions of General Tso’s chicken, mu shu many ways, a fine hot & sour, many noodle dishes, and plenty of shrimp, you’d be hard-pressed to do better than Wang’s. About $18 per person. DUCK HOUSE 501 S. Atlantic Blvd., Monterey Park, (626) 284-3227. Also 835 W. Las Tunas Drive, San Gabriel, (626) 458-9998. Despite a menu of more than a hundred dishes, it’s the namesake duck that everyone comes here for, one of the best in town, served in the classic form not just with pancakes, but also stirfried with bean sprouts, and in duck soup. And there are treats to be found on the rest of the menu as well — this isn’t just a one-trick pony. Try the many dishes made with konnyaku, a high fiber vegetable akin to a yam, the quinoa of China. About $25 per person. SETA DINE LOUNGE 13033 Philadelphia St., Uptown Whittier. (562) 698-3355. Highly acclaimed San Gabriel Valley culinary luminary Hugo Molina (Parkway Grill et al.) returns to the cooktop with this earth tone New American in the heart of bustling Uptown Whittier — a restaurant that’s part steakhouse, part Latino, part Asian and all-Hugo, with a cozy, leather booth design by Akar Studios, and a menu built around rubs and crusts, and lots of mesquite. Bottom line: Hugo Is Back! About $45 per person. MR. V’S BAR & GRILL 14320 S. Valley View Ave., La Mirada, (562) 946-8600. An unexpected eatery in the midst of an industrial part of town south of Whittier that’s a culinary oasis for those thirsty for a properly mixed cocktail, and hungry for a seriously large chunk of beef. Actually, everything served here is large — this is a restaurant that firmly believes in the gospel of big portions/loyal following. About $50 per person. CAFÉ MASSILIA 110 E. Lemon Ave., Monrovia, (626) 471-3588. The little French restaurant that people dream of, in a space on a Monrovia side street that’s been home to a number of notable eateries over the years, offering classic French cooking of the old school — moules mariniere, salade Nicoise, loup de mer, carre d’agneau, all served in a warm, almost loving setting. About $35 per person. 101 NOODLE EXPRESS 1408 E. Valley Blvd., Alhambra, (626) 3008654. The name is odd (it’s neither at “101” anything, and it could just as well be a “Dumpling Express”), but the food is just wonderful at this easy-to-miss mini-mall eatery, with a menu of dumplings, noodles and sundry roll things that are about as good as anything you’ve ever put in your mouth, at prices too low to believe — there’s a reason there’s always a crowd waiting to get in — first-come/first-served of course. About $10 per person. Cash only. BAMBOODLES 535 W. Valley Blvd., San Gabriel, (626) 281-1226. This brightly lit, functionally designed double storefront in a San Gabriel mini-mall began with the original Bamboodles, opened by “Master Wu Guang in Guangdong Xinhui in 1979;” it’s taken 30 years for a branch to open in America, offering the house signature dish of spinachflavored cold noodles (“limited to 50 servings daily”), along with a wide assortment of handmade noodles (both hot and cold), and many dumplings, all at prices that make you want to order more, and more still. About $10 per person. PHLIGHT RESTAURANT & WINE BAR 6724 Bright Ave., Whittier, (562) 789-0578. What began as an unexpected tapas and wine bar on a side street in Uptown Whittier, has matured into what may be the best restaurant in Whittier — a fine room in which to bend an elbow at the bar, and a wide selection of small plates — Whittier’s answer to trendy Westside small plate eateries like AOC and Orris (and Vertical in Pasadena). About $30 per person.

Developing People to Lead People & Projects Positive Attitude Will Bring you a Happy New Year!

Pam Wiedenbeck Member Tournament of Roses www.plansmadeperfect.com info@plansmadeperfect.com

Rudy Cervantes Whittier, CA

Aladdin Nuthouse Authentic Mexican Home Cooking

SUPER BURRITO Delicious

W

e roast our own nuts for ultimate freshness. We carry a large variety of raw and roasted nuts and seeds, dried fruits, gift baskets, gift boxes and tins.

www.aladdinnuts.com 1647 E. Washington Boulevard Pasadena

Mon. thru Sat. 7:30am - 9pm Sunday 7:30am - 6pm

the Best

(562) 699-1957 Fax (562) 699-5917 For a complete menu visit us on the web:

www.superburritowhittier.net 11237 WHITTIER BLVD. (at Broadway) WHITTIER

626-794-7533

St. Francis High School Capuchin Franciscan College Preparatory Established in 1946

OPEN HOUSE

ENTRANCE EXAMINATION

Saturday, January 9, 2010 Noon-3:00 p.m.

For Incoming Freshmen Saturday, January 30, 2010, 8:30 a.m.

Campus Tours Workshops and Exhibits Preparing for the Entrance Exam Department Demonstrations Athletics Franciscan Influence Activities Fine Arts

Admission is based on: Academic Performance Behavior and Attendance Teacher Recommendations Standardized Testing Family Interview

Home of the Golden Knights

A Catholic Tradition of Enriching the Mind and Heart

- « ÞÊLi>ÕÌ vÕ °

200 Foothill Boulevard La Cañada CA 91011 ̓ 818-790-0325 Fax: 818-790-5542

“Simply beautiful.”

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Don’t Replace... Refinish! Countertops Bathtubs Tile Sinks Fiberglass Repair Miracle Method

®

SURFACE RESTORATION

www.miraclemethod.com or call 818-957-2177 Lic#696047

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CAREER Seeking a Career With a Future, Not Just a Job?

Forest Lawn is looking for you Requirements:

SALES POSITIONS Forest Lawn Memorial - Parks & Mortuaries is hiring for our growing Advance Planning Sales Team. If you are looking for a fast paced sales position with an industry leader, we may be the perfect career choice for you. Our Advance Planners meet with families to assist them with planning for the future by pre-planning/pre-funding their funeral arrangements and purchasing memorial property before the need arises. We are looking for ethical, motivated sales people who are fully committed to a full time career, and who possess excellent customer service skills. With nine locations in Southern California, you have broad geographical boundaries and can sell in all locations with the added bonus of working out of the office closest to where you live. We have positions available in Hollywood Hills, Glendale, Covina, Long Beach, Cypress, Cathedral City, and Palm Springs offices.

Please email resume to AFP@Forestlawn.com or phone (323) 551-5057.

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Forest Lawn Provides: UÊ*> `Ê/À> } UÊ i iÀ ÕÃÊ «i Ã>Ì ]Ê ÕÃiÃÊEÊ Vi Ì Ûià UÊ `ÕÃÌÀÞÊ i>`iÀÊ- ViÊ£ äÈ UÊ ` ÃÌÀ>Ì Ê> `Ê >À iÌ }Ê-Õ«« ÀÌ UÊ Ì V> Ê7 À Ê Û À i Ì UÊ*À `ÕVÌÃÊ> `Ê-iÀÛ ViÃÊ/ >ÌÊ ÛiÀÞL `ÞÊ ii`à UÊ i` V> ]Ê i Ì> ]Ê6 à ]Ê> `Ê viÊ ÃÕÀ> Vi UÊ*i à Ê*À }À> UÊ{䣭 ®Ê*À }À> ÊÜ Ì Ê >ÌV }Ê ÌÀ LÕÌ UÊ/Õ Ì Ê,i LÕÀÃi i Ì UÊ "

AND MORE!

Must pass background check & drug test

JOBS!

Driver Needed

Accepting applications immediately for:

Clean DMV. Previous automotive industry customer service/sales experience preferred.

Warehouse

✔Certified Forklift Drivers ✔Squeeze Clamp ✔Cherry Picker Must be able to comply with U.S. Customs requirements. Apply at 9858 Artesia Boulevard Bellflower

877-613-5627

Apply in person at 1042 W. Gladstone St., Azusa

Nursing LVN Program Multiple locations! s 7EST #OVINA s 0OMONA s 0ASADENA s 'LENDALE

Call (626) 969-5921 City Towing

AMR STAFFING

WORK Air Conditioning Co. seeking:

pasadena

Accounts Payable Start $9.50/hr DOE.

Commercial Refrigeration/ HVAC Technicians

Must be Comp. Lit., detail oriented and be able to perform well under pressure.

Clean DMV/EPA Cert. Benefits included.

Good communication skills, 10-key by touch, 40 wpm.

Call (626) 966-5401

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Call today! 1-800-NEW-CAREER or 626-960-5046 *Surgical Technology Program also available

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O


OPPORTUNITIES Sales Career

Great Jobs

La Mirada Area

37 years strong RV dealer hiring career-minded sales people. Will train the right person. Sales experience preferred. Benefits. Selling RVs is fun and lucrative!

Busy Radiology facility in Pasadena hiring for: ✔ Receptionist – Medical ✔ Customer Care – Medical ✔ Medical Lead File Clerk Full-Time with benefits includes 401k

Ref # 1270

1/1-1/14

San Fernando Valley

CALL TODAY EARN TODAY

562-921-9413

626-698-7219

877-704-6207

Directory Distributing Associates, Inc.

Bill Collector ✓Agency experience ✓Bilingual ✓Salary plus commission

Attn: Sales Manager Deliver Phone Books

Fax resume to:

Fax resume to

The Salvation Army thanks the community for all the help this Holiday Season.

Happy Holidays!

Call (626) 303-1903

Employment Full-Time Gas Appliance Technicians

Los Angeles area Starting Salary: $28.89/Hour To apply, visit our website: www.socalgas.com/careers/jobList.html

We are proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer

DON’T MISS THIS!!! #AREER OPPORTUNITIES EXIST WITH &AMILY (ERITAGE ,IFE ONE OF THE FASTEST GROWING SUPPLEMENTAL COMPANY S IN !MERICA

We offer: s ,IFETIME 6ESTED 2ENEWALS s 3TOCK /PTIONS s "ONUSES s 4RAINING AND 0RODUCTS 3ECOND TO .ONE #HANGE YOUR LIFE FOR THE BETTER

#!,, 3HANE 2OSS FOR AN INTERVIEW

909/996-5922

Reliant Recovery

Truck Tire Service

One year experience repairing & mounting heavy truck tires.

AIDES/CAREGIVERS In home care jobs for elderly, ill and disabled patients. Hourly jobs and Live-in jobs in all cities. TOP $$$! Call Now 1-800-860-1144

WALNUT, CALIFORNIA

fundraise for non-profits!

11850 E. Slauson Ave, Santa Fe Springs. Attn: Frank Calderon

Currently seeking: s Admissions & Records Systems Analyst s Sr. Toolkeeper, PT s Student Services Program Specialist s Tutorial Services Assistant II

(562) 698-9401

http://hrjobs.mtsac.edu

Apply at:

Daniels Tire Service

BE THE CHANGE YOU WANT TO SEE!

An Equal Opportunity Employer

We fundraise for the nation’s leading Cultural, Environmental, Humanitarian, Medical and Political Non-Profit Organizations. There is NO Cold Calling! We help change the world from our beautiful call center in the Mid-Wilshire/ Hancock Park area. Daytime callers work a minimum of 26 hours per week.Evening/Weekend callers work a minimum of 11 hours per week.

Donor Services Group

CALL US FOR DETAILS AND INFORMATION: Daytime, ask for Walter: 323-634-1999 x127 Evening, ask for Winona 323-634-1999 x120

Making our world a better place for over 25 years—one phone call at a time!


PLAY

THE NOSE KNOWS SLEUTH OUT AN INTOXICATING MYSTERY at the newly-opened Wine Detective. The tasting room offers 50 wines for sampling through Enomatic wine dispensers that allow you to sniff out your PHOTOS BY SARAH own clues notes. REINGEWIRTZ Individual wines are self-sampled, one ounce at a time, by using a special debit card preloaded to fit your budget. Make your selections by button, and the card is charged for the price of each ounce. Repeat the ones you love, ditch the ones you don’t — and reload the card if necessary. A small menu of cold-cut plates and Basque-style sandwiches is available. 146 S. Lake Ave., Suite 109, (626) 792-9936, www.winedetective.com

L.A. County Estate Auction

Sat., Jan 9 at 9AM Preview: 7:30am

16610 E. Chestnut Street City of Industry

Over 700 Lots Automobiles ~ Antiques Collectibles ~ Jewelry ~ Books Records ~ Electronics Household Items and more! Including items from the estate of Walter Midkiff (aka Dewey Martin), former drummer of Buffalo Springfield.

HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING CO. INC.

Rebates up to $1,500 For a Limited Time Only

$100 OFF on installation $10 OFF on repair calls $88 for service and check inspection

www.cwsmarketing.com

CLASSIC 90 PLUS® HIGH EFFICIENCY GAS FURNACES

See website for detailed listing and photos. Auctions conducted on a monthly basis.

626-442-2148

888-343-1313 ext. 256

Largest Selection of Canon Gear & Expert Advice TOO!

Family Owned & Operated Since 1948

The first bi-monthly issue of 2010 publishes February 10th.

Contact us: 626.578.6300 Visit us at: www.therosemag.com

(626) 332-1253 COME VIST OUR NEW LOCATION!

160 W. BADILLO. (1/2 Bk West of Citrus) COVINA • (626) 332-1253

www.powellcamera.com

Lic# 285626 C10,C20

Drunk Driving Defense

Don’t go to court-call us instead. Save your driver’s license.

CLEARANCE SALE STARTS JANUARY 4TH, 2010

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144 | ROSEPARADE2010

Call us for free and see if we’re the right attorneys for you.

Complimentary consultation. Call us 24/7 (626) 826-2999 (818) 500-1011 (877) 500-1014 toll free (626) 818-7400 Español www.DUI-Defense4you.com

Visa, Mastercard, Payment Plans P.J. O’Brien Law Firm 1055 East Colorado Blvd. 5th Floor Pasadena 91106 (x Wilson)


UNDYING AFFECTION LOVE. ZOMBIES. They’re both infectious, and they’re both the subject of Gallery Nucleus’ art happening “Zombies in Love.� It’s much ado about something dead. (Has the Jane Austen/zombie love affair already jumped the shark?) Gallery organizers advise bringing your beloved to the exhibit, because true love doesn’t die — or undie. The opening reception will feature a volunteer zombie walk; arrive in your finest undead state for the sake of art. The zombified also are spared the $2 cover charge. Paintings, sculptures and live performances will be showcased in the gallery, and zombie professionals from film and publishing will be signing their work. It’s all in celebration of zombie culture and V-Day. Opening Feb. 6, 7 p.m.-11 p.m. Zombie walk at 6:20 p.m., Atlantic and Main St. Exhibit runs through Feb. 22. Gallery Nucleus, 210 E. Main St., Alhambra, (626) 458-7477, gallerynucleus.com

IRS Tax Problems? Mike Habib, EA Solutions to tax problems!

Get Tax Relief Today! ✔ Audit/Appeals Representation ✔ Payroll Tax Problems

1-877-78-TAXES 877-788-2937 MyIRSTaxRelief.com

ÂŽ

STAND ON THE PRECIPICE, LITERALLY. Eaton Canyon was once named El Precipicio by Spanish settlers, as they gazed out over its sheer drops and deep gorges. And then there’s the waterfall. On the fourth Sunday of each month (except June, July and August), hike to the natural splendor that is Eaton Canyon Falls. Viewing the waterfall is an earned reward. The hike is a moderate, 3 ½ miles with plenty of boulder-hopping, several water-crossings, and the possibility of getting wet. Bring the essentials: Sturdy shoes or hiking boots, sunscreen, hat and snack. Best of all, tours of Mother Nature’s house are always free. Fourth Sunday of month, 9 a.m.-noon. Eaton Canyon Nature Center, 1750 N. Altadena Dr., (626) 398-5420, ecnca.org

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ROSEPARADE2010 | 145


UUPPER SAN GABRIEL VALLEY MUNICIPAL WATER DISTRICT

dd CCOONNSSEERRVVIINNGG W n a n D a N D A N L A L G G N IIN W A V A V T R TEERR.... R E E S S E E O N PPRR C NE e M MAAKKEE tthhe CONNECCTTIIOONN!!

plants, the y trees and to reduce h lt ea h re o e are The m ain y roots ther more health help stabilize the mount d an n io eros slopes.

Collecting and planting native seeds and tree saplings in the local mount ains ns s help your local water sup ppl plyy.. e mountain and more stable th The less erosion r it is for water to seep slopes, the easiethe aquifer and the less soil underground into ers and streams and congesting eroding into the riv the reservoirs.

Please feel free to contact the Upper District staff or your elected representative if you have any questions or comments by calling (626) 443-2297. Visit the Upper District homepage at www.usgvmwd.org.

Division 1: Dr. Anthony R. Fellow Representing all or parts of the cities of: Arcadia, El Monte, Monrovia, Rosemead, South El Monte and Temple City.

Division 2: Charles M. Treviño Representing all or parts of the cities of: Arcadia, Rosemead, San Gabriel, South Pasadena, South San Gabriel and Temple City.

Division 4: R. William “Bill” Robinson Representing all or parts of the cities of: Azusa, Covina, Glendora, Irwindale and West Covina.

ez Division 3: Ed Chavez Representing all or parts of thee cities of: Haciienda Heights, Industry, La Puente, Puuente, Avocado Heights, Basset, Hacienda ill Valinda and West Covina. Covina North Whittier, Spy Glass Hill,

Division 5: Alfonso “Al” Contreras Representing all or parts of the cities of: Azusa, Baldwin Park, Bradbury, Duarte, El Monte, Irwindale and Monrovia.


Valley Vista is proud to partner with communities who are dedicated to a cleaner environment.

VALLEY VISTA SERVICES Waste Disposal and Recycling Division 800-442-6454 • www.valleyvistaservices.com 17445 E. Railroad St., City of Industry 91748 PUSD

Pasadena Unied School District


The 2O1O Rose Queen® and her Royal Court Clockwise from front center: Rose Queen® Natalie Innocenzi, Rose Princess Katie Hernández, Rose Princess Ashley Thaxton, Rose Princess Michelle Van Wyk, Rose Princess Lauren Rogers, Rose Princess Kinsey Stuart, Rose Princess June Ko.

A NEW QUEEN IS CROWNED! Macy’s is the proud Official Wardrobe Sponsor for the 2O1O Rose Queen® and her Royal Court. To find the store nearest you, visit www.macys.com.

© 2009 Macy’s Inc. All rights reserved.


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