rose magazine dec. 25, 2011
DESCRIPTION
We offer congratulations to Grand Marshal J.R. Martinez. At 19, he was badly burned by a fire ignited by a landmine in Iraq, but recovered to have a second chance at life. And what a life! An actor, he won the latest “Dancing with the Stars” competition this fall despite twisting his ankle in a rehearsal just before the final dance-off. On Nov. 1, he was named Grand Marshal of the Rose Parade. He has been featured on the cover of People. Now Martinez shares his story with us, starting on page 45.TRANSCRIPT
ROSEPASADENA’S
PARADE2012
YouR guiDE
PAgEANTRY & gAmE
ROSE PARADETO
THE
J.R. MaRtinez War Hero, Dance Star And Now Grand Marshal
ROsE BOWL
OREgON vS.
WiSCONSiN
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Azusa Pacific University alumni are more than graduates. They are difference makers intheir businesses, classrooms, and communities. Join the thousands of other Azusa Pacificgraduates impacting the world for Christ.
APU offers 53 undergraduate majors, 37 master’s degrees, 21 credentials, 7 doctoral programs, and 5 certificates to more than 9,200 students on campus, online, and at seven regional centers throughout Southern California.
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To learn more about opportunities in Azusa, go to www.ci.azusa.ca.us or come see us.
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AZUSA
Significant activity is continuing on the construction phase of the Pasadena to Azusa leg of the Gold Line.
The first component of the Foothill Extension project to move from design to construction was I-210 Gold Line Bridge between Baldwin and Santa Anita Avenues in Arcadia. The three 110-foot deep, 11-foot diameter bridge foundations will be drilled, reinforced, and filled with concrete. The first foundation will be completed in mid-September and immediately thereafter, construction will begin on the two remaining foundation pillars. The actual bridge construction will most likely begin late in the year.
Rosedale--a brand new neighborhood that blends innovative
architecture with the warmth of home is currently under construction in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains in Azusa. Sales are brisk in the newest master planned community. Situated by the I-210 Freeway, Rosedale is minutes from Pasadena and downtown Los Angeles and features its own stop once the Gold Line light rail project is
completed in 2014. The City of Azusa offers an impressive choice of businesses, recreational opportunities and public and private schools in the immediate area. Visit Rosedale at LiveRosedale.com
The perfect place to live, work and play!
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To learn more about opportunities in Azusa,go to www.ci.azusa.ca.us or come see us.
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Azusa’s community-owned public utility, Azusa Light & Water has been providing reliable water and electric services at competitive rates for over 100 years. That’s why businesses and residents alike save money just by being located in Azusa.
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PARADE 2012
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8| ROSE | PARADE 2012
102 THE MATCHUPOregon vs. Wisconsin
104 THE DUCKSOregon Ducks take flight under Chip Kelly
106 THE BADGERSWisconsin’s Bret Bielema looks for a breakthrough win
108 BY THE NUMBERS: OREGON
109 BY THE NUMBERS: WISCONSIN
110 THE ROSE BOWLStill the crown jewel of college football
112 ROSE BOWL ROSTER: OREGON
113 ROSE BOWL ROSTER: WISCONSIN
115 LaMICHAEL JAMESOregon’s embodiment of ‘unique excellence’
116 MONTEE BALLWisconsin’s scoring machine
118 BEWARE THE SCENERYA word to the coaches about the distractions of SoCal
120 UNDER CONSTRUCTIONAn elegant facelift for the Rose Bowl
10 EDITOR’S NOTEThe editor discovers Kidspace
12 ABOUT THE COVERThe path to the Coronation
27 IT’S LEATHER WEATHERSee the best bags in town
29 THE FUTURE IS HERELocal imaginative innovators abound in education, art, music, food and floral design.
PARADE
PAGEANTRY
GAME
10282 MEET THE 2012 ROSE QUEENDrew Helen Washington
84 THE FASHIONABLE ROYAL COURTAll dressed up for a photo shoot at Kidspace
45 WAR HERO TO DANCE CELEBRITYJ.R. Martinez is the 2012 Grand Marshal 49 BANDS, HORSES, DIGNITARIES AND FLOATS Here’s the “Just Imagine...” Parade lineup
50 DIAMOND ANNIVERSARYThe first Parade flyover: Jan. 1, 1912
63 SPIRIT OF THE WESTDon’t horse around with history
DEPARTMENTS14 WHAT NEW TO DO IN 2012?Check out Go, Think and Play to find out.
20 SHOP THE BLOCKStop at the shops in nearby Eagle Rock
124 SEEN
128 INSIDERThe Rose Bowl will always be its first name.
FEATURES
Grand Marshal J.R. Martinez
Rose Queen Drew Helen Washington
Oregon vs. Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl
Headquartered here in Pasadena, OneWest is proud to be part of the
New Year’s Day tradition that is the Rose Parade. As a neighborhood bank, we’re
committed to the communities in which we operate, and we look forward to
another year of serving our local residents’ financial needs one person at a time.
Stop by a branch near you or call 877-PH-1-WEST (877-741-9378).
We’re proud to call the City of Roses
our home.
© 2011 OneWest Bank, FSB. All rights reserved.
owb.com
10 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
KEditor: Catherine Gaugh
[email protected] Editor: Claudia S. Palma
Designer: Amanda KeithAssistant Designers: Manuel Amaya, Steve Ohnersorgen
Contributing Editors: Linda Alquist, Frank Girardot, Steve Hunt, Melissa Masatani, Jerry Rice, Larry Wilson
Writers: Michael Davis, Brenda Gazzar , Catherine Gaugh, Frank Girardot, Linda Fields Gold, Richard Irwin,
Rachel Luna, Jim McConnell, Michelle J. Mills, Steve Ramirez, Robert D. Thomas, Aram Tolegian, Brittany Wong
Photographers: James Carbone, Leo Jarzomb, Walt Mancini, Watchara Phomicinda, Sarah Reingewirtz
Photo Toning: Mark Quarles
Online Editors: Daniel Tedford, [email protected] Gallindo, [email protected]
Manager, Events and Strategic Partnership: Jesse [email protected]
Sales Managers: Carla Asmundson, Brad Christopher, Lauree Sierra, Shannon Zamora
Sales Executives: Mercedes Abara, Rose Acosta, Hara Alarcon, Jesse Armendariz, Frank Bankston, Jose Luis Correa, Susan Behrens, Suky De Bellis, Carla Ford-Brunner, Francois Fundora, Robert Gonzales, Eric Grullman, Glenn Henderson, Lisa Horne, Beverly
Johnson, Chris Lancaster, Robin McDonald, Melissa Morse, Christa Morin, Rick Ochoa, Kevin Reed, Ralph Ringgold, Stephanie Rosencrantz, Racquel Sanchez,
Tanya Strohman, John Thompson, Cathie Towell, Leonor Velasquez, Candace Weber
Advertising coordinator: Kimberly EshooAdvertising Graphic Design:
Christie Robinson, lead designer/production coordinator; Pedro Garcia and Ginnie Stevens, designers
Pasadena star-newsSan Gabriel Valley News Group
Senior Editor: Steve HuntStar-News Editor: Frank Girardot
Star-News Advertising Manager: Jesse Dillon
Vice President of Sales & Marketing: Jim MaurerVice President of Operations: John Wartinger
Vice President of Finance: Kathy JohnsonVice President of Human Resources: Louise Kopitch
Copyright 2011 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
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NO
TE
Kidspace Children’s Museum.
I’ve read about it, edited calendar items and assigned photos to be taken of events there, but until we started looking around for an appropriate backdrop for the Rose Court fashion shoot for this edition of Pasadena’s Rose Magazine, I never had the occasion to visit.
The Rose Parade theme, “Just Imagine...” had our staff thinking about creativity and imagination, and one bright reporter mentioned that Kidspace was packed with fun exhibits and outdoor spaces that show kids what there is to love about science. It would be a wonderful place to celebrate the theme while featuring the members of the Royal Court, she said. After all, the court is made up of local teenagers, who probably had field trips there when they were younger.
That reporter was right. Kidspace was a wonderful location for the fashion photos of the Court. And it also was a perfect subject for our profiles of today’s innovators. (Those stories start on page 29.)
Kidspace has bounced around town since it launched in 1979, but its best home is the current one, the former grounds of the Fannie E. Morrison Horticultural Center in Brookside Park.
Morrison was a wealthy widow and philanthropist who loved flowers. In 1938, she paid for the construction of a series of greenhouses meant to be used for growing and showing flowers.
According to the Los Angeles Conservancy, its use declined after World War II, and it suffered from neglect and several fires. Sponsors of Kidspace
Children’s Museum rehabilitated the old site, transforming the three remaining old buildings into light, open-air modern rooms, and adding a modern indoor climbing tower. The renovation preserved the wondrous gardens behind it, complete with arbors, gazebos, meandering walkways and waterfalls.
Some of the most beautiful shots we took of the Queen and Princesses were staged outdoors, with the gardens as a background. The image on this page of the seven members of the Court marching together was taken along a path of wisteria vines and tall columns reminiscent of Greek architecture.
On another note: We offer congratulations to Grand Marshal J.R. Martinez. At 19, he was badly burned by a fire ignited by a landmine in Iraq, but recovered to have a second chance at life. And what a life! An actor, he won the latest “Dancing with the Stars” competition this fall despite twisting his ankle in a rehearsal just before the final dance-off. On Nov. 1, he was named Grand Marshal of the Rose Parade. He has been featured on the cover of People.
Now Martinez shares his story with us, starting on page 45.
Best wishes to all for a happy new year!
Catherine
FROM THE EDITORCatherine Gaugh
Photo by Leo Jarzomb
a tribute to education, science and fun
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Children’s HospitalCH-271
Rose Bowl Program AD.25”8.375” x 10.875”.125”4C11/25
Do you know the best hospital?For more than110 years, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles has been known for tackling
just about every heal th care chal lenge facing kids. In fact, for the third straight year,
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is one of only a handful of children’s hospitals in the nation
good enough to be ranked “Best”on the prestigious U.S.News & World Report Honor Roll.
And,we’re the only children’s hospital in California to make the list. To learn more about our
championship team of dedicated doctors and nurses, visit CHLA.org or call 888- 631-2452.
You know the best leagues for your kids.
900 — The number of young women trying out for a spot on the Rose Court over a few weeks in September.35 — The number of finalists selected from the larger group, announced Oct. 6.7 — The number of young women selected to be members of the 2012 Royal Court, presented Oct. 10.1 — The member of the Court chosen Rose Queen, announced Oct. 18. It’s Drew Helen Washington of Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy.
“I actually didn’t even hear my name being called” because there were so many people from her school yelling their support, Queen Drew said.
Tournament of Roses President Richard Jackson made it official at the Oct. 27 coronation ceremony, placing on her head the Mikimoto crown, which features six carats of diamonds and 600 pearls.— Catherine Gaugh
12 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
> Visit our blog: insidesocal.com/rose and therosemag.com
> Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/RoseMagazine
> Find us on Facebook: facebook.com/RoseMagazine
ONLINE EXTRA See more photos and outtakes from our fashion shoot with the Rose Court at insidesocal.com/rose.iPAD EDITION: The Rose Magazine Parade Edition is available for iPad. Download the free app from the App Store and get a free preview of the magazine. Download the magazine for $1.99. There’s bonus interactive content: slideshows and video.
On the cover
PHOTOGRAPHER: Walt ManciniLOCATION: Pasadena Convention Center
TURN TO PAGE 82 TO SEE OUR FASHION SPREAD WITH THE TOURNAMENT OF
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GO
AFRICAN RHYTHM
Spirit of Uganda brings to life the sounds and movements of East Africa.
The performance features melodic standing drums,
dramatic choreography, bright, layered rhythms and call-and-response vocals. Jan. 27, 8 p.m., Beckman Auditorium, Caltech, 332 S. Michigan Ave. 626-395-4652 events.caltech.edu
NEW THEATER, OLD FAVORITEPasadena’s newest theater company A Noise Within presents Michael Frayn’s joyfully out-of-control British farce “Noises Off.” Prone to personal drama, a bumbling troupe of veteran thespians ready themselves for the world premiere of a new play with the auspicious title “Nothing On.” In the process, they bring the house down — quite literally. Don’tforget to check out A Noise Within’s new state-of-the-art theater. Jan 6-15. A Noise Within, 3352 E. Foothill Blvd. 626-356-3100, anoisewithin.org
PAINTING WITH A SENSE OF HUMORIn an outdoor spectacle in the Arroyo Seco Richard Jackson will fly and crash a remote-controlled, model military jet plane filled with paint into a wall. The Jan. 21 performance and the resulting artwork relate to the upcoming site-specific interactive exhibit, “Richard Jackson: Accidents in Abstract Painting, The Armory,” that will open Feb. 11 at the Armory Center for the Arts. By creating a new series of pieces in the form of colorful toy guns and cannons that playfully spurt and shoot paint onto the gallery walls, the artist takes action painting to the next level. Performance, Jan. 21. Exhibit, Feb. 11-May 12. Armory Center for the Arts, 145 N. Raymond Ave. 626-792-5101, armoryarts.org
THE ‘ART’ OF FRIENDSHIPWhat’s more important to you — great art or good friends? In the International Tony Award-winning play “Art,” a group of friends have to set their own priorities. Their quandary begins when one of them spends a small fortune on a controversial painting. The debate heats up as each friend faces the consequences of following his own taste in art. “Art” was written by “God of Carnage” playwright Yasmina Reza. The international hit will be directed by David Lee, who has won nine Emmys. Lee has directed many of The Playhouse’s biggest hits, including “Can Can,” “Light Up the Sky” and “Camelot.” Jan. 24-Feb. 19. Pasadena Playhouse, 39 S. El Molino Ave. 626-356-7529, pasadenaplayhouse.org.
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CONSUMMATE FOLK MUSICSteve Gillette and Cindy Mangsen are consummate folk performers, combining their original songs with some gems from friends as well as traditional music. Their shows include stories about the songs, and anecdotes from their travels, and the audiences they draw tend to feel like a gathering of friends. Presented by the Caltech Folk Music Society. Feb. 25., 8 p.m., $15. 626-395-4652. folkmusic.caltech.edu
MAHLER AS A PROJECTThe flowers will barely have been stripped from the Rose Parade floats before the Los Angeles Philharmonic begins its own mammoth undertaking known as the “Mahler Project.” Music Director Gustavo Dudamel will lead the L.A. Phil and his Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela in 17 performances of Mahler’s nine symphonies from Jan. 13 through Feb. 4 at Walt Disney Concert Hall and the Shrine Auditorium. The sweeping enterprise will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the death of the great Austrian composer-conductor Gustav Mahler. Dudamel will lead every performance. The Bolivars will play four of the symphonies, the Los Angeles Philharmonic will play four, and the two ensembles will combine and join with more 800 choristers and eight soloists for the Symphony No. 8 on Feb. 4 at the Shrine Auditorium. Jan. 13 -Feb.14. Walt Disney Concert Hall, 111 S. Grand Ave., Los Angeles, $70-$163; Shrine Auditorium, 665 W. Jefferson Blvd., Los Angeles. $38-$100. 323-850-2000; www.laphil.com.
PLACIDO DOMINGO ON STAGELegendary tenor turned baritone and artistic director of the Los Angeles Opera Placido Domingo will play the lead role in Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra. It is a sad historical drama set in the 1300s’ Genoa, Italy. There’s no laughs, just tears, beautiful music, and a chance to see in performance one of the grandest stars of Los Angeles and the world. Feb. 11- March 4. Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave., Los Angeles. www.laopera.com
GOING FOR ‘THE TREATMENT’The Theatre at Boston Court in collaboration with Theatre Movement Bazaar offers the world premiere of “The Treatment,” an adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s story, “Ward 6.” In this movement-based fantasy, a physician in a remote mental hospital becomes friends with a philosophical lunatic. When the doctor’s world is turned upside down, the prescription is to make him a patient. The work studies powerful people and their captives with ironic humor, song and dance. Feb. 25-March 25. The Theatre at Boston Court, 70 N. Mentor Ave. 626-683-6883
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ELECTRIFYING PIANO TRIOSoothing and stirring, the emotive, intense Pacific Trio performs “Trio No. 1, Op. 24” by Muczynski, “Trio in A minor” by Ravel and “Trio in G minor, Op. 15” by Smetana in a Coleman Chamber concert featuring piano and strings. Jan. 22, 3:30 p.m., Beckman Auditorium, Caltech, 332 S. Michigan Ave. 626-395-4652. http://events.caltech.edu
SEDUCTIVE SCHEHERAZADE
The Pasadena Symphony offers a powerful performance of the
sensuous “Scheherazade” music of 1001 nights. Rossen Milanov,conductor of the Philadelphia
Orchestra, will also conduct anotherexotic work: Alexander Borodin’s
popular “Polovtsian Dances.” Colburn School’s rising star piano virtuoso, Esther Keel, will play theinspiring “Egyptian” Concerto of
Saint Saëns. Feb. 18, 2-8 p.m.,Ambassador Auditorium, 131 S. St. John
Ave. 626-584-8833. pasadenasymphony-pops.org
PASSIONATE CELLO
Pasadena Symphony’s acclaimed principal cellist, Andrew Shulman, performs one of the greatest concertos in history, Elgar’s impassioned Cello Concerto. The Washington Post calls Shulman’s playing “full of light and musical
eloquence.” Guest conductor David Lockington will then guide the symphony in Felix Mendelssohn’s musical postcard from the highlands, the “Scottish” Symphony. Jan. 14, 2-8 p.m., Ambassador Auditorium, 131 S. St. John Ave. 626-584-8833. pasadenasymphony-pops.org
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18 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
TH
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THOSE WACKY ELECTRONSJames P. Eisenstein, the Roshek Professor of Physics and AppliedPhysics at Caltech lectures on “Electrons in Flatland.” The stageis Flatland, a simple plane surface, and the actors mereelectrons. The drama that unfolds will include bizarre phenomena such as fractional charges, electrons bound to the voids between other electrons and even the idea that such craziness will lead us to a new means of computation. Jan. 18, 8 p.m., Beckman Auditorium, Caltech, 332 S. Michigan Ave. 626-395-4652. events.caltech.edu
EXPANDING OUR VIEW OF THE STARSJet Propulsion Laboratory’s lecture series will begin the new year with “Revealing the Hidden Universe: Translating Data into Imagery.”When we look up into the night sky, we can see just a hint of the wonders of the universe. We extend our vision with telescopes that can see farther and record colors beyond the visible spectrum. Robert Hurt, visualization scientist from the Caltech/Spitzer Science Center, will help us understand how we transform data from JPL missions, including the Spitzer Space Telescope, into images everyone can understand.Jan. 19, 7 p.m., The von Kármán Auditorium at JPL, 4800 Oak Grove Drive. Jan. 20, 7 p.m., The Vosloh Forum at Pasadena City College, 1570 E. Colorado Blvd. 818-354-0112. jpl.nasa.gov
EVERYMAN READER’S THEATER
It is 1485, and God sends an all too eager “Death” to bring “Everyman” to Judgment. Everyman is
completely surprised, and pleads for time to put his “Book of Reckoning” in order. Lance Davis is featured in this thought-provoking and charming Parson’s Nose Reader’s Theater Production. Jan. 28, 7 p.m., and Jan. 29, 2 p.m., at the Lineage Performing Arts Center, 89 S. Fair Oaks Ave. Free, but donations are welcome. www. parsonsnose.
com or 626-403-7667. Bonus: Two Moliere one-act comedies, “The Ridiculous Young Ladies” and “The Flying Doctor” will be featured at Feb. 25, 7 p.m., and Feb. 26, 2 p.m., at the Lineage.
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MUSICAL CIRCUS FOR CHILDRENThe Pasadena Symphony Association and The Americana at Brand present a free interactive event where children can learn about musical instruments and orchestras. The Pasadena Symphony Association’s Musical Circus is for children 3-8
years of age and will begin with the instrument “petting zoo” where youngsters can toot flutes, blow trumpets, pluck violins and cellos and bang on percussion instruments.
A performance with a guest musician will begin shortly
after the petting zoo. Jan. 22., 1 to 2:30 p.m., The Americana at Brand in Glendale, 889 Americana Way, Glendale. pasadenasymphony-pops.org
PLANT STORIES FOR KIDSBookworms: A Free Storytelling Program, recommended for ages 3-6, is presented at the Los Angeles County Arboretum. This indoor-outdoor program lets children and families explore the Arboretum Library and its great story trees while enjoying plant and nature stories and a take-home craft. “It Blooms Every Year: Aloes” on Jan. 4 and 18, at 10 a.m., and Jan. 21., 2 p.m. “Let Us Have Lettuce: Winter Gardening” will be presented on Feb. 1 and 15, 10 a.m., and Feb. 18., 2 p.m., Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanical Garden, 301 N. Baldwin Ave., Arcadia. 626-821-3222. arboretum.org
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Walk with us to support families with seriously ill children
throughout Southern California
April 1, 2012walkforkids.org
A 3.1 mile walk to raise funds for Ronald McDonald House Charities® of Southern California
www.rmhcsc.org
4 locations:
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By Brittany Wong
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By Brittany Wong
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When Craig Powell decamped to the Eastside from downtown six years ago, he took with him a client roster that includes a set of Stevens (Soderbergh and Spielberg) and a fresh, European-minded floral aesthetic.
Since then, Powell’s made a home for himself in this hood, creating prom corsages for high school seniors who, years later, have hired the haute horticulturist to supply blooms for their weddings.
“I’m just a kid that loves to play in dirt, so I couldn’t be happier,” Powell said, as he buzzed around his botanical boutique, Pollen, a 1,200-square-foot space filled with orchids, flowers, succulents, cacti and various other life forms.
Lately, Powell’s been championing the tillandsia caput-medusae and the similarly die-hard dischidia, air plants he talks up as the house plants of the future for their unfussy maintenance and suitability to the California climate.
Pollen’s orchids are of particular note, sourced from a greenhouse in Hawaii that Powell flies to at least once a year in order to coax and check up on clones.
The shop carries ready-made gifts, too, from undergrad-friendly Grobal self-watering planters to eco cubes filled with African dwarf frogs. Artfully arranged terrariums brim with life and come in various shapes and sizes; some hang in glass droplets, while Wardian case and apothecary varieties sit on rough-hewn tables sourced from salvaged wood and crafted by Powell himself.
In the future, the florist has his nose on creating French-perfume roses in homage to homegrown floral legend Jacob Maarse. But first, he’s adding new edibles to Pollen’s own label of home goods, including all-natural salad dressings and rich, buttery Spanish olive oils made for dipping.
W. Colorado Blvd.Pollen
2040
2040 W. Colorado Blvd., Los Angeles 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday; 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. Tuesday-Friday; 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Saturday; By appointment only Sunday.323-550-1555pollenstudio.com
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W. colorado blvd.Colorado Wine Company
2114
With most bottles hovering around the $25 mark and a staff with an uncanny ability to render hard-to-parse wine speak into plain English, Jennifer Morgan and John Nugent’s Colorado Wine Company is populist and pretense-free, a neighborly bottle shop-slash-wine bar after your own heart.
Sure, they’ve got their staple cabs and chards, but they take a certain pride in shelving off-the-beaten-path varietals and little-guy labels in their sip shop. “We like wines that don’t tick off a box,” Morgan said. “It’s really enjoyable to show people wine it never would have occurred to them to take a chance on, like a Hungarian wine or an Austrian red.”
Case in point: a Moric Blaufrankisch that Morgan describes as a mildly herbaceous light red.
Smaller production wineries repped in the racks include Black Sheep Finds, a Santa-Barbara-based winery whose Hocus Pocus and Holus Bolus syrahs get snapped up as soon as they’re delivered.
Wine accessories stray from chi-chi crystal decanters, striking a balance between functional and funny, like Han Solo ice trays and chocolate molds poached straight from Jabba the Hutt.
On any given night, newcomers, returning winos and the occasional Oxy senior with a precocious palate sidle up for the shop’s tasting flights or red or white by the glass. And if it’s not wine they’re after, there’s a back fridge full of brewskis. (Hops to it:
CoWineCo’s sudsy sister shop, Sunset Beer Company, opened in Echo Park in September.)
2114 W. Colorado Blvd., Los Angeles11 a.m.-9 p.m. Tuesday; 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Wednesday; 11 a.m.-9 p.m Thursday; 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Friday-Saturday; 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday; closed Monday.323-478-1985
SHO
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the pfc group
Peggy Fong Chen, M.B.A., CCIMColdwell Banker - Arcadia Regional Office - Executive Sales DirectorBroker Associate | MBA | Realtor® | English | Mandarin | Cantonese
[email protected], 626.208.7788 Cell
Jimmy C. Chen, Realtor, SFR, [email protected], 626-228-6789 Cell
www.LARealEstateLink.comcoldwelll Banker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the setter or obtained from public records or other sources and buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professional. this is not a solicitation if your property is currently listed with another broker.
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W. Longden Avenue, Arcadia (Baldwin Stocker)$1,850,000
5,050 SF | 20,540 Lot | 4 Bedrms | Pool + Guest House
W. Longden Avenue, Arcadia (Baldwin Stocker)$1,489,000
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Built 2009 | 1,480 SF-1,700 SF | 3 Bedrms | Near PCC
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5024 Eagle Rock Blvd. Los Angeles11 a.m.-7 p.m. Tuesday-Friday; 11-6 p.m. Saturday; Noon-5 p.m. Sunday; closed Monday.323-550-1332leannalinswonderland.com
Alice found Wonderland down a rabbit hole, but Leanna Lin’s found a bit of it on Eagle Rock Boulevard, in a sugar-coated studio/art gallery/shop that’s made shoppers squeal “kawaii!” (“cute” in Japanese) since opening more than a year ago.
“It’s perfect for me. Even in high school, when everyone else was going to parties, I’d be in galleries,” said Lin, a jewelry designer whose outsized sense of whimsy all but demanded a space.
Walls bathed in Wonderland’s signature magenta and green serve as a backdrop to a candy-colored inventory of Japanese toys and locally made fashion accessories and original art, like Unicorn Crafts’ sweets-inspired shrinky dink jewelry and Axelhoney’s fanciful illustrations.
There are cute-overload curios like Momiji message dolls packed in takeout cartons
and enough blind boxes to drive a collector mad. (No swapping Tokidoki x Marvel Frenzie boxes if you get Dr. Octopus in yours instead of Dr. Doom.)
Huggable, handcrafted Kauzbots make good-hearted gifts — each plush robot represents a different cause (childhood cancer, autism) and 10 percent of sales go to a related charity.
On top shelves, color-coordinated vintage glassware mix with ceramic animal tchotchkes, lovingly plucked from local flea markets by Lin’s mom, Mae Mei Fong.
For jewelry-making play dates, a centralized counter space brims with baubles and beads, including a few choice vintage cast-offs from Lin’s own jewelry line.
And every month, a new artist gets the Wonderland treatment: their art on a gallery wall, their prints, T-shirts or jewelry for sale and a pop-up art show where munchies-inclined art aficionados spill out the door, queuing up into lines for visiting food trucks like Lake Street Creamery, Don Chow Tacos and Frysmith.
Eagle Rock Blvd.
Leanna Lin’s Wonderland
5024
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 25
Sasha Martinus makes no bones about her Eastside affiliation. Since opening Letters from LA in the spring, the FIDM grad from Oklahoma has played curator of a carefully composed boutique heavy on local lines.
“I really can’t imagine being anywhere else in Los Angeles” she says, sipping tea under the white glow of a neon Eastside sign.
On a recent afternoon, Martinus was on a mission to find favorites, sifting through a rack full of smartly detailed dresses and slouchy sweaters. Her fingers fell upon organic pieces from Highland Park-based popomomo and a shape-shifting bandage skirt from Pasadena native Simone Gonzalez’s line, Pleasure Doing Business. With a collector’s zeal, Martinus pulled out a pair of decidedly non-mom jean-like denim from L.A.-based line Mother.
There’s a continental drift to the selection, too, from structured boots from Aussie favorite Strummer to light, leather handbags by Netherlands-based designer Ellen Truijen.
Martinus then made a beeline to a redwood cabinet that encases an expanding collection of jewelry, including bronze pieces that reference Native-American mythology from Mt. Washington’s Nikki Montoya and jagged statement pieces rendered with recycled metals and semi-precious stones by San Francisco’s Voce Keen.
On a center table, a spare Remington typewriter played a set piece among letterpress stationary, Moshi Moshi retro handsets for smartphones, candles and colorful reproductions of Bauer pottery pet bowls. The selling of the latter is left to resident shop dog Bailey.
“Whenever he’s in, he’s got to work!” Martinus says of the pup.But Bailey would have none of it; he continued to lounge on the footstool
of a cream-colored armchair.
Eagle Rock Blvd.
Letters from L.A. 5022
5022 Eagle Rock Blvd., Los Angeles 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Tuesday-Friday; 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday-Sunday; closed Monday323-340-1546shoplettersfromla.blogspot.com
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PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 27
TThe name Tiffany & Co. is synonymous wiTh luxury, which stretches across the company’s glitz and gems to encompass a line of accessories.
The Tiffany Leather Collection includes clutches, handbags and totes, as well as wallets, coin purses, gloves and men’s accessories with prices ranging from $50 to (gasp!) $17,500.
Richard Lambertson and John Truex are design directors for the line, launched in fall 2010.
“It’s a full collection for men and women that expresses a diverse assortment,” said Truex. “It’s not just about a bag.”
What makes the Tiffany Leather Collection stand out is its fashion colors: rich jewel-toned items with bold accents and metallic highlights in the same hue. Leopard prints were new this fall, and exotics, such as crocodile and ostrich, are presented in the same bold tones.
“Our design process is simple,” Truex said. “Richard and I work together very
closely on every aspect and angle of the collection. We start by talking about what we’re seeing.
“Our muses and inspirations are our friends and the colleagues we work with. Our inspiration comes from the modern women that we meet and know today, and that’s what shapes the collections of tomorrow.”
The men sit in the design studio to share their sketches, pinning them up on the walls next to fabric and leather swatches. Truex compares it to setting out puzzle pieces and then putting them together to create a pleasing scene.
The hardest part is that the designers usually work two seasons ahead, producing a fall and spring collection each year. They look at this fall’s trends to help predict what will be popular for next autumn.
This fall, the hottest style in the collection has been Genevieve, a top-handle satchel ($4,900). Luxe grain leather
made it an instant sophisticated classic and it boasts a seasonal leopard print. Another popular look is the Vivian clutch ($995-$1,295), which has pleated leather set in playful frame designs.
Traditionally, smaller bags and clutches are favored by women who want to keep things more compact. Having a removable shoulder strap is a plus, Truex said, as it takes the clutch from office to luncheon. Medium-sized and large bags will always be in demand for working women who need to carry everything for the day.
“Big bags are not out. Small bags are not out. What is important is diversity,” Truex said.
In spring, the Tiffany Leather Collection will keep the focus on being useful, but also turn on the fun with new designs and playful colors.
“It’s about as fresh as a flower coming up,” Truex said. “It’s bright, it’s cheerful and it will bring a smile to many faces.” R
Tiffany & Co.68 W. Colorado Blvd.Monday-Thursday, 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday626-793-7424; www.tiffany.com
Story by miChelle J. mills
richard lambertson and John Truex are the design directors of the Tiffany leather Collection. at right, Tiffany Genevieve ostrich satchel in light walnut, $4,900.
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It’s all in the bag(s)
leather weather
28 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
TTHE SHELVES OF THE LOVED ONE in Pasadena are now plush with vintage designer purses in styles from clutch to backpack and everything in between.
Having the perfect bag to complete an outfit is somewhat of a mission for TLO owners Hannah Metz and Elvia Lahman, who opened the store in June.
Metz, a New Yorker originally from Pasadena, and Lahman, of Altadena, met while working in the vintage department of American Apparel. While on buying trips together, they would talk about owning their own business. TLO began as a vintage wholesale company in 2009, and the women quickly started designing their own collection of lingerie.
Later, with financing through Kickstarter, a donation drive website, they were able to open the Pasadena store.
“Pasadena is so pedestrian-friendly, compared to the rest of Los Angeles,” Metz said. “It’s
already a destination for antiquers and people
looking for vintage things because of PCC and
the Rose Bowl swap meets.”
The purses all hail from a “friend of a friend”
on the East Coast who collects secondhand and
vintage designer bags.
“They brought us a large selection and we
looked through and pulled out stuff that we felt
fit with our collection, with our store and our
clientele,” Metz said. “We picked colors that
we thought fit. There’s a lot of mustards and we
have an incredible brown velvet Chanel quilted
bag that’s actually a backpack.”
The purses range in price from $300 to
$1,000.
In addition to purses and lingerie collections,
TLO offers everything vintage, from hair
barrettes to dresses. It also features a line of
dress shoes by Seychelles, a Los Angeles-based
company. R
A vintage Valentino clutch and more at The Loved One in Pasadena.
The Loved OneTuesday-Saturday, 11 a.m. -7 p.m., and Sunday, noon-6 p.m., 2 E. Holly St., 626-304-0009.www.thelovedone.net
A passion for purses pastStory by MICHELLE J. MILLS
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leather weather
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 29
WWithin sight of the Rose BoWl is a place where creativity and learning is nurtured so that children may develop a passion for science.
Kidspace Children’s Museum was first located on the campus of Caltech in 1979, and had several homes after that before its Brookside Park site was ready in 2005.
Inside Kidspace, there are many ways to play scientist. At the Shake Zone station, children push large tectonic plates together to create their own earthquakes. At Bugsy’s Diner, they learn which insects are OK to eat by reading a Creature Cuisine menu on a chalkboard. Then there’s the real life, and well-contained, beehive.
Outside is the Interpretive Arroyo, a mini-model of the Pasadena site, complete with softly moving water and native plants. There’s also a fish and turtle pond and a large spider web to climb.
“The ideal exhibit is something that has multi-
INNOVATORS: LEARNING
Kidspace plants seeds for scienceStory by Michelle J. Mills | Photos by saRah ReingeWiRtZ
parker Wright, 18 months, of thousand oaks climbs through Kidspace children’s Museum.
innovators: learning
30 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
generational appeal because, even though we do focus on children, we have an obligation to provide an environment where families can learn together,” said Michael Shanklin, the museum’s chief executive officer. “What we say at the museum is that if science makes it to the dinner table, we’ve done our job.”
Staff members seek to inspire both children and adults so they will continue conversations about science, math, art and other subjects at home.
“Kids are little scientists because they are discovering, they are experimenting, they are hypothesizing, and they are going through this process not knowing where it’s going to take them,” said Yvonne Chavez Lombardi, director of education and community initiatives.
Kidspace also is involved in outreach education and has partnerships with other venues, such as Art Center College of Design. One joint project included Art Center students working with children to create and test model cars.
“The more we can show how these matters are fully integrated in real life, the more we help set young people up for success as they think later about their careers,” Shanklin said.
Usually, subjects such as robotics and space are geared to children older than the Kidspace crowd, but JPL and Caltech have embraced the opportunity to introduce toddlers to science with space and robotics summer camps.
Kidspace will be opening a new Physics Forest this summer. It will have an outdoor setting under a canopy of trees and feature 13 exhibits and three learning areas for demonstrations in physics.
The exploration stations will include Lift Yourself Up Pulleys, where children can compare the effort needed to lift themselves off the ground using different pulleys; the Magnetic Pendulum, where visitors use small magnets to make a large metal cylinder swing; and the Tennis Ball Launcher, where children and their parents use air pressure to shoot tennis balls as high as they can.
“It will be a real joy to see it come to fruition, to see how the kids interact,” Lombardi said.
Kidspace demonstrates how science applies to life outside of the classroom and gives children a sense of clarity and confidence about scientific subjects.
“We make science less scary for kids,” Lombardi said. R
Kidspace Children’s Museum, 480 N. Arroyo Blvd. $10 admission. 626-449-9144. www.kidspacemuseum.org
Michael Shanklin, CEO of Kidspace Children’s Museum, and Yvonne Chavez Lombardi, education director, discuss the details of the museum’s plans for their Physics Forest.
innovators: learning
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 31
AA strAnge object stAnds in the corner of the neat dining room in artist Dave Lovejoy’s Pasadena Craftsman home.
It is “Introspector,” a lie detector/time machine, which is actually an assemblage artwork made of gauges, tubes and coils of wire.
Nearby is “Writer’s Block,” a case boasting an old typewriter, a word die and an assortment of other odd cast-off metal parts. In the 100-year-old garage is “Mystic Trunk,” an old steamer trunk turned transporter. Lovejoy quips that he isn’t sure if it travels geographically or chronologically.
The artist’s creations beautifully blur the line between creative genius and mad science.
“I use pieces of machines that have
already served their initial purpose,” he said. “I want my machines to look like they should do something and don’t.”
His assemblage is also a way to preserve mechanics of the past. He may change the piece’s function, but the intricacies of its mechanical workings are left intact, maintaining the fascination and value of how things were done in days gone by.
Lovejoy spends his time poking through the collection of items in his studio and seeing how different objects look together. He usually passes by the art supply store in favor of the hardware store when scouring for materials. He also spends time at estate sales, swap meets and city streets.
Dave Lovejoy Art.
626-660-6381. www.lovejoyart.
com
Story by MicheLLe j. MiLLs Photos by WALt MAncini
innovators: art
Art inventionthings that could be
32 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
AT TOP: Untitled art work.
ABOVE: Lovejoy’s “Rover.”
LEFT: Lovejoy’s “Zoetropoe.”
AT TOP: Lovejoy with his time time-travel art piece titled, “The Mystic Trunk.” Above is a detail of that piece.RIGHT: Lovejoy’s “Writer’s Block.”
innovators: art
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 33
“I am by nature a pack rat and I scavenge for things,” Lovejoy said. “I work in a building downtown that has an alley that’s constantly giving me gifts. And I live in Pasadena, which once a week has sidewalks full of old furniture and things like that. I go through life and when something catches my eye, I pick it up.”
In some ways, Lovejoy’s art is a legacy. His grandfather was a carpenter and an apartment manager. When tenants moved out, they often left broken items behind, which he would put in his garage with plans to fix them later. As a child, Lovejoy relished every opportunity to look through the piles of discarded items.
“I have a similar respect for old machinery and the patina of use of old things,” he said. “Say there’s some old chair that’s been around 50 or 60 years. The arms are worn, but it can’t be replicated. I want to honor that or feature it in a way.”
Lenses could be called Lovejoy’s signature, as they show up in most of his work and are sometimes the entire piece. He has gained notice for his installations consisting solely of hundreds of magnifying glasses, such as
“Bouble Vision,” which was shown at the Majestical Roof in Pasadena, and “Bouble Vision — Through the Looking Glass,” which is at the top of the escalator at Glendale City Center in Glendale as part of a Glendale Area Temporary Exhibitions project.
“The fun thing is you can use a lens to focus on something and call attention to it, but also by distorting the focus, putting it out of focus, you can obscure things as well,” Lovejoy said. “So you can have something that looks like the focal point, yet the image within is foggy and not clear. I enjoy playing with lenses in that way.”
Lovejoy was a ceramic artist when he and his wife Vera moved into their home six years ago. He soon realized the home’s old wiring system couldn’t support kilns. Updating the electricity would take months, so he looked over his collection of gears, lenses and other items and began putting them together with some of his finished work.
“Once I saw that people were interested in it, I started encapsulating that and creating little environments that I could take to a gallery and show someone,” Lovejoy said. R
Lovejoy’s sculpture “Introspector.”
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8 4 2 E a s t V i l l a S t r e e t P a s a d e n a , C A 91101
V i l l a G a r d e n s . o r g 8 0 0 - 9 5 8 - 4 5 5 2
l i c e n s e n o . 1976 0234 5 c oa n o . 195
MONROVIA
ARCADIA
DUARTE
AZUSA-ALAMEDA
AZUSA-CITRUS
INTRODUCING SIx NEw STATIONS IN fIVE CITIESOne line. many cOnnectiOns. Since 2003, millions of San Gabriel Valley residents, workers and visitors have utilized the Metro Gold Line light rail line to access work, school, shopping, and much more. Today, crews are hard at work designing and constructing the next 11.5 miles of the line, from the existing Sierra Madre Villa Station in Pasadena along foothills of the San Gabriel Valley.
Six new stations are planned as part of the Foothill Extension – in the cities of Arcadia, Monrovia, Duarte,
Irwindale, and Azusa – connecting future riders to many important regional destinations, including
dozens of universities and colleges, hospitals, entertainment venues and historic downtowns.
Where will it take you?
IRwINDALE
JULY 2009 Measure R – LA County’s
½ cent sales tax increase for traffic relief - takes effect, designating a minimum of $735 million for the
Foothill Extension
MARCH 2010 Metro and the Construction Authority agree to Master Cooperative and Funding Agreements, making way for the Foothill Extension
to break ground
JUNE 2010 First design-build contract awarded to Skanska USA
to build the I-210 Gold Line Bridge/Project’s ceremonial ground breaking takes place
(June 26, 2010)
JULY 2010 - MAY 2011 Skanska USA prepares design and begins pre-construction activities
for I-210 Gold Line Bridge
JULY 2011 - JULY 2012 Major construction phase for
I-210 Gold Line Bridge
JULY 2011 Second design-build contract is awarded to Kiewit Parsons
Joint Venture to build the Foothill Extension from
Pasadena to Azusa
NOV. 2011 - OCT. 2012 Design phase of the Foothill Extension
from Pasadena to Azusa and pre-construction activities
NOVEMBER 2012 Major construction begins for
Foothill Extension from Pasadena to Azusa Extension
FALL 2015 Project completion.
Construction Authority hands project over to
Metro for pre-revenue operations
GATEWAYto the
SAN GABRIELVALLEY
I-210 GOLD LINE BRIDGE
The Foothill Extension from Pasadena to Azusa is fully funded by Measure R.
JULY 2009 Measure R – LA County’s
½ cent sales tax increase for traffic relief - takes effect, designating a minimum of $735 million for the
Foothill Extension
MARCH 2010 Metro and the Construction Authority agree to Master Cooperative and Funding Agreements, making way for the Foothill Extension
to break ground
JUNE 2010 First design-build contract awarded to Skanska USA
to build the I-210 Gold Line Bridge/Project’s ceremonial ground breaking takes place
(June 26, 2010)
JULY 2010 - MAY 2011 Skanska USA prepares design and begins pre-construction activities
for I-210 Gold Line Bridge
JULY 2011 - JULY 2012 Major construction phase for
I-210 Gold Line Bridge
JULY 2011 Second design-build contract is awarded to Kiewit Parsons
Joint Venture to build the Foothill Extension from
Pasadena to Azusa
NOV. 2011 - OCT. 2012 Design phase of the Foothill Extension
from Pasadena to Azusa and pre-construction activities
NOVEMBER 2012 Major construction begins for
Foothill Extension from Pasadena to Azusa Extension
FALL 2015 Project completion.
Construction Authority hands project over to
Metro for pre-revenue operations
The Foothill Extension light rail extension from Pasadena to Azusa is well underway and will be completed in 2015. Design teams are hard at work engineering the mainline tracks, street-level crossings, bridges, stations and more. The first major component of the Pasadena to Azusa extension to move from design to construction is the I-210 Gold Line Bridge, under construction along the eastbound I-210 Freeway between Baldwin and Santa Anita Avenues. The bridge is designed as a “Gateway to the San Gabriel Valley” and is being built by Skanska USA, the design-build contractor hired by the Metro Gold Line Foothill Extension Construction Authority – the agency overseeing the project.
The Construction Authority will oversee more than $535 million in design-build contracts to complete the Foothill Extension from Pasadena to Azusa, which is expected to generate nearly $1 billion in business revenues, $40 million in tax revenues and create nearly 7,000 jobs for the region during construction alone.
This significant undertaking requires a talented and experienced team – both at the Construction Authority and to support them. “The Construction Authority is fortunate to work with world-class contractors as we plan, design and build the Foothill Extension from Pasadena to Azusa,” says Habib F. Balian, CEO of the Construction Authority. “Two prime examples are Hill International and Skanska USA.”
Hill International is the Construction Authority’s Program Management Consultant, responsible for providing day to day staffing of a wide range of project experts; while Skanska USA was hired to design and build the I-210 Gold Line Bridge. Built over an active freeway, and designed with iconic features by a world-renowned artist, this bridge project is like no other.
Stay updated on the progress of this important project: www.foothillextension.org.
Habib F. Balian, CEOMetro Gold Line
Foothill Extension Construction
Authority
ConstruCtion Completion
on traCk for 2015
“The I-210 Gold Line Bridge will not only serve as a gateway monument to the
San Gabriel Valley, but also as a symbol for the entire Gold Line extension. We’re
committed to safely delivering this project at the highest possible quality to
create a landmark for generations.” Lawrence Damore
Skanska Project Executive
www.foothillextension.org
“The Hill Team is honored to provide the Authority with program and construction
management professionals who are helping to keep this important project for the San
Gabriel Valley Community on-time and within budget. We are proud to be part of a first-class
management team.”
John SkouryProgram Manager & Vice President Hill International
An Award-Winning Team
Construction Completion 2015
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 35
EEvEn as hE fingErs a down homE tunE on his fiddle, Mark Indictor’s thoughts may be reaching to the faraway parts of the universe. The Los Angeles resident is among a surprisingly not-so-unique group of people who deftly blend their passions for science and art.
“It’s amazing how many musicians are engineers and scientists,” Indictor said. “There seems to be a similarity in the thought process for music and engineering. To understand the structure of music is kind of an engineering process. Music has time, there’s structure, there’s harmonic theory.”
Indictor worked at Jet Propulsion Laboratory from 2003-2007 and left for a job closer to home. He wasn’t happy, so he went back to JPL in March 2010 as senior staff software systems engineer.
He is responsible for the Mission Data Processing and Control System, also known as Legacy, that is being used for the first time on the Mars Science Laboratory mission that launched in November. The Legacy System takes the data received from space by the Deep Space Network and interprets, catalogs and stores it for scientists and engineers to use in monitoring and working with the mission’s spacecraft and rover.
Over the years, Indictor has also played fiddle in numerous bands, including Border Radio, Eddie Baytos & the Nervis Brothers and Hot Lips and Fingertips. He has spent the past two years in the bluegrass group, Susie Glaze & the Hilonesome Band.
Indictor grew up in Burbank and began playing fiddle when he was 6. His father was a pianist, who dropped out of conducting school at Juilliard to start a family.
“I was a geeky little kid,” Indictor said. “I had a patch over one eye and glasses and probably had a runny nose from time to time. I liked ‘Mr. Wizard’ and I played
around with locks and electricity. I would go down and buy switches and lightbulbs and batteries.”
After high school, he got a job as a singing and fiddling waiter at the Great American Food and Beverage Co. in Los Angeles. Later he attended UCLA, taking three courses his first quarter — physics, calculus and computer science. Overwhelmed, he eventually dropped out of school, but his passion for engineering led him to day jobs in the science industry.
“I’ve always been a space junkie,” he said. “I love the fact that we’re actually landing on another planet.”
Indictor waxes poetic on the immensity of the universe, stating that the more we look outward with science, the more we see inward. In physics, we talk in terms of charm, spin, possibility, things that are not quantifiable and things that change when you look at them. That starts sounding like metaphysics and, in turn, leads to God.
This spirituality rings true in Indictor’s musical life as well.
“When I play a solo, my consciousness almost becomes tunnel vision around the music as it’s coming out of me, and all of a sudden it’s no longer me playing the music, the music plays me.
“That doesn’t happen all the time, but when it does, it’s the perfection of creation,” Indictor said.
Music has its problems, of course: temperamental musicians, poor pay, odd schedules and unappreciative audiences, all which remind Indictor how good it is to have a regular day job, especially one filled with the technical aspects on which he thrives.
Yet, for Indictor, music and science have more in common than most people think.
“In music, you’re just trying to express an emotion or bring a feeling to someone or yourself and when it happens beautifully, it’s like a perfect moment. The same thing happens when you find an elegant solution to a technical problem. There’s something perfect about it. You get the same kind of feeling.” R
Mars Science Laboratory mission: jpl.nasa.gov. Susie Glaze & the Hilonesome Band: susieglaze.com.
Story by miChELLE J. miLLs
Photo by waLt manCini
fiddling around in space
innovators: music & science
36 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
JJeff Oster first studied science — biOlOgy, to be specific — but left that for music.
Now he blends the two.The trumpet and flugelhorn player
released “Saturn Calling” for his 2007 album, “True” (Resto Records). The tune features the sound of Saturn’s auroras as recorded by the Cassini spacecraft, and it won the 2008 Independent Music Award for Best New Age Song.
Oster, who composes a majority of his music with a computer, was working on a particularly heroic-sounding piece he had temporarily dubbed “Sounds of Saturn” and decided to do an Internet search for the title.
“I went to Google and I typed in ‘sounds of Saturn’ and what came back was the recording that the Cassini spacecraft did of those auroras of the planet,” Oster said. “It sounded like wind, and I thought it was just a super-cool background. I downloaded them and put them in the song.”
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency, which involves the Cassini spacecraft and Huygens Titan Probe. JPL manages the mission for NASA and designed, developed and assembled the Cassini spacecraft. The probe and spacecraft
were launched from Earth on Oct. 15, 1997, and are still exploring the universe.
All planets in our solar system produce radio signals and, in April 2002, Cassini was 234 million miles away from Saturn — close enough to collect the signals of the ringed planet’s auroras with its radio and plasma wave science instrument. The auroras, as Oster describes, sound like an eerie wind.
When the album was released, with the tune now called “Saturn Calling,” Oster began working on its publicity with a public relations company that had a relationship with JPL, which led to JPL posting his song on its website.
Then in 2009, he had the honor of playing it live to accompany a montage of Cassini images during a celebration for the people who worked on the mission.
Space and its exploration have longed intrigued humans. From Christopher Columbus to today’s astronauts, humans yearn to discover new worlds, Oster says. Space is especially interesting because, while we can all admire the heavens, very few of us will ever experience them personally. We travel to the new worlds through our scientists.
“The concept of taking a piece of metal and sending it 300 million miles away and putting it in orbit
around some planet and taking a bunch of pictures and having the pictures come back is so mind-boggling to me in terms of the technology of it,” Oster said. “The creativity of it is incredibly profound. It’s inspiring and we all benefit from it.”
Oster later used sounds from the Large Hadron Collider experiments in his tune, “Particles of God,” which is available as a MP3 single. The Large Hadron Collider is a particle accelerator in Switzerland, and is being used to find Higgs boson, or what scientists call the “God Particle.” The particles within the accelerator move too quickly to photograph, so scientists use sound to represent the decay of their explosions.
“Creating music and science and space exploration are all the processes of the discovery of the unknown,” Oster said. “When I make a song, it’s something that’s inside that I endeavor to capture using music composition to make it real and bring it into this world.
“It’s the same thing with science. When you look at a star or a planet and you want to know what’s on the planet, you have no idea. So you go inside to create something to bring it into this world.” R
SaturnA song for SaturnStory by Michelle J. Mills
cO
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tesy
ph
OtO
innovators: music from space
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 37
FFrom the seeds oF a quaint garden on the grounds of the luxurious Langham Huntington Hotel, to the tables of The Royce restaurant, Chef David Feau performs his culinary craft with passion and precision.
“I do not work,” he said. “I perform every day. It’s like being on a stage. The rush and excitement of new challenges and how each day is different than the next is what I enjoy the most.”
The son of a farmer in France, Feau (pronounced “fay-o”) has long been fascinated with fresh produce and the endless combinations he could create. This culinary foundation — combined with California’s climate and bounty of fresh produce — lends itself to Chef Feau’s philosophy of emphasizing seasonality in creating his menus.
“It’s always vegetable first, because the season is moving,” he said. “A beef is a beef and a lamb is a lamb. What you’re going to serve with it is what’s important. The seasons move fast and year after year, it’s different.”
First: the freshest vegetables
Story by miChaeL daVis
Photos by James Carbone
The Royce at the
Langham Huntington Hotel, 1401 S. Oak Knoll
Ave. 626 -585-6410. www.roycela.com
david Feau is the executive chef at the royce at the Langham huntington hotel. toP LeFt: ocean trout with cabbage. toP middLe: Lobster with curry squash.toP right: tofu with beets.
innovators: dining
38 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
Feau seems to thrive on the challenge of not only keeping up with the unpredictable nature of the seasons, but anticipating them as well. Each new dish reflects and celebrates the time of year in which it is prepared and consumed. Every ingredient is painstakingly thought out.
The Royce menu is an innovative culinary trip around the world. Combinations are broken down into Cold & Warm, Hot & Raw, Fish & Shellfish, and Meat & Poultry. It is a simple approach, yet the passion and care put into the planning, preparation and execution of his menu is complex.
Feau describes his culinary journey as “New American Cuisine via France,” where he worked alongside famed Chef Guy Savoy in Paris. Savoy then gave Feau the executive chef duties at the Bistrot de L’Etoile. Within a year, it was touted as the best bistro in Paris. That was quite an accomplishment for the young chef.
Later, Feau was named one of the six best chefs in France under 30 by Le Chef
Magazine.From there, his travels took him to
New York City. Classic French techniques merged with American tastebuds to create a new partnership.
“Are we doing French cuisine in America? Not really,” Feau said. “Eric Ripert (of Le Bernardin) brought me here and I cooked for about two weeks and put the first menu out. Eric basically said, ‘You have to change this, you have to change that, you’re not in Paris. In Paris, you can
do things this way, but here, the tastebud is a little bit different. You have to twist a little bit to make a dish successful.
“‘The New York palate and New York taste are different, and when you come to California, it’s different as well.’
“So I would say, are we doing French cuisine? No. Are we using French techniques? Yes, definitely.”
Coming to California gave Feau more challenges and expectations.
“From the north to the south, produce from around the world is growing here, which is very interesting,” he said. “I can do a Bordelaise sauce with ginger. Would I do this in Paris? Probably not. Can we do this in America? Yes, because this is what people are expecting. They are waiting for those kinds of tweaks. They want French cuisine plus — we call it New American Cuisine.
“While I’ve been here in this country, my cooking has changed direction, and this direction is to the people who are coming to dine here,” Feau said. R
“It’s always vegetable first, because the season is moving,” Feau said. “A beef is a beef and a lamb is a lamb. What you’re going to serve with it is what’s important.”
innovators: dining
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40 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
Honoring the creativity of Jacob Maarse
NNot all iNNovatioN Has to draMatically change the world. Sometimes it can simply make it a more beautiful place.
Jacob Maarse was a talented florist who not only brought new ideas to Pasadena, but also was an integral part of the Rose Parade. He opened Jacob Maarse Florists in 1966 and created the Rose Queen and Court’s bouquets, as well as provided roses for many of the parade’s floats over the years.
Maarse died on Dec. 22, 2010, at age 82. The 2012 Tournament of Roses Directors’ Trophy is dedicated in his honor.
“When he started, the design in this country was pretty standard,” said his son, Hank Maarse. “It was carnations, a few roses, gladiolas, baby’s breath. He brought in different flowers, Dutch flowers and a more European style that a lot of people hadn’t seen before.”
Hank Maarse, now the president of Jacob Maarse Florists, credits his father’s success to his passion for blooms. Money wasn’t Jacob Maarse’s priority; instead, his focus was on the quality and variety of flowers he could offer.
In addition to flowers from around the world, he also incorporated roses from his own garden into his designs. Maarse’s Sierra Madre yard currently boasts about 2,800 rose bushes. There are very few florists who grow their own roses, he says.
There are several varying stories about how Jacob Maarse
Story by MicHEllE J. Mills
Jacob Maarse Florists, 655 E. Green St., 626-449-0246. www.jacobmaarse.com.
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innovators: f lowers
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42 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
started his garden. One is that he originally bought 100 rose bushes for his wife, Clara, as a birthday present. Another story was that a bride wanted garden roses for her wedding on Catalina Island, but as roses didn’t ship well, his father planted some of his own to contribute.
Both stories continue with Maarse bringing some of his cut blooms into his shop and placing them in bowls. Customers began asking for them.
“Greenhouse roses don’t have a fragrance,” Maarse said.
But his father’s garden roses did.As demand grew, the elder Maarse
planted more bushes.“I think he probably started with 200
plants, and then it kept growing and growing,” said Maarse, who is keeping his father’s legacy flourishing both in Sierra Madre and at the florist shop.
When the garden is in season, 300 to
400 stems are cut each day, comprising 50 percent of the roses used by Jacob Maarse Florists during their bloom time.
“As soon as we prune them, everybody gets sad because we won’t have them for three months,” Maarse said.
Jacob’s favorite flower was originally the tulip, but after he planted rose bushes, they became his favorite.
Hank’s preferences, however, change with the season. He likes tulips and garden roses, as well as lilies because of their longevity and hues. He predicts that lilies will be the hot flower for 2012, and adds that a highlight will be a new variety, Gluwien, with peach petals that make it the first Oriental Lily of that color. R
Hank Maarse, president of Jacob Maarse Flowers in Pasadena, stands with a bouquet of roses.
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innovators: f lowers
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EEvEn aftEr a starring rolE on “all My ChildrEn,” making the cover of People magazine and ultimately winning TV’s “Dancing with the Stars,” Jose Rene “J.R.” Martinez worries he could be the least known grand marshal to preside over the iconic Rose Parade.
With predecessors such as John Wayne, Carol Burnett and Mickey Mouse, the former U.S. Army soldier-turned actor who was severely burned in 2003 by a land mine feels he has some big shoes to fill.
“Not a lot of people know who J.R. Martinez is, which is fine,” the 28-year-old Los Angeles resident told a small audience in front of the Tournament House on Nov. 1. “But I believe with this opportunity, it’s going to give me even more of a platform to share with the world who I am and what I’ve been able to overcome and what I stand for.”
Since that day, Martinez’s fame has exploded.
The lithe ex-soldier with an electric personality went on to jive, samba and freestyle his way to win the coveted Mirror Ball Trophy on the 13th season of “Dancing with the Stars.”
Despite suffering from a twisted ankle, he emerged victorious in ABC’s popular TV competition with dance partner Karina Smirnoff in a riveting finale that pitted him against Rob Kardashian and former talk show host Ricki Lake.
People magazine, in another major tribute, also named the motivational speaker and veterans’ advocate as one of the Men of the Year in its 2011 Sexiest Man Alive issue.
“I guess it just shows ... that despite what your physical appearance may be, when you come to accept yourself and say this is me and own it and feel confident with it, everything else takes care of itself,” he said.
Martinez considers this his second chance at life. As a U.S. army infantryman in Karbala, Iraq, eight years prior, Martinez found himself trapped in a blazing Humvee after the vehicle he was driving struck a land mine. He had been deployed to Iraq less than a month.
Assuming he was about to die, he visualized his mother, Maria Zavala, being handed an American flag as is customary at military burials. He then saw an image of a girl in a dress that he recognized from photos as his sister Anabel.
Anabel was 7 when she died in their mother’s native El Salvador before the 4-year-old Martinez could meet her.
“My sister literally spoke to me and told me I was going to be OK because Mom needed me,” he said.
As soon as that image faded, Martinez was pulled up out of the vehicle and rescued, only to lapse
into a coma for three weeks. More than 40 percent of his body had been burned. When he awoke and saw himself in the mirror for the first time, he was stunned.
At that moment, he said, he wished he hadn’t made it out of Iraq alive.
“(I was) thinking to myself, I’m 19 years old now; how am I going to live in this world being completely disfigured? How am I going to live a productive life?”
Martinez had 33 surgeries and remained in recovery at a San Antonio medical center for nearly three years. He is largely who he is today, he said, because of the love and support he was shown by his mother and his friends.
He also had a major turning point when he was asked to visit a wounded patient who had just returned from Iraq. Martinez was able to share with him what he learned and how it got better for him with time.
“Seeing how (his) mentality changed, allowed me to
J.r. MartinEz — WoundEd Warrior. aCtor. vEtEran’s advoCatE. Motivational spEakEr. tv danCing star. and noW
grand Marshal of the tournament of roses parade
Story by BrEnda gazzar
“... i believe with this opportunity, it’s going to give me even more of a platform to share with the world who i am and what i’ve been able to overcome and what i stand for.”
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46 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
J.R. Martinez, then and now: On his high school football team; in the Army, and with his mother after his accident and recovery.
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Above, J.R. Martinez as he
got the news he was to be
the grand Marshal of
the 2012 Rose parade.
At right, Martinez and
his partner karina smirnoff
are victorious on ABc tV’s
“dancing with the stars.”
the parade
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 47
say, this is a new gift,” he said. “This is why I was kept in this world, to help other people.”
Even before he reached stardom as an actor on TV’s “All My Children,” Martinez called attention to the needs of U.S. military veterans and their families. Today, he’s working with several charities including Operation Finally Home, which builds houses for wounded troops who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Iraq Star Inc., which offers free reconstructive surgery to disfigured veterans.
“Unless someone really has a troop serving in the family or has served in the family, a lot of times it’s easy for people to forget about the fact that they are taking care of our guys,” Martinez said.
For many, particularly those with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, reintegration into civilian life can be a daunting challenge.
As the country’s troops return home for good from Iraq and Afghanistan, it’s important to “step up” by helping them
understand that it’s OK to talk to someone, first and foremost, and to take the uniform off and become an “everyday person again,” Martinez said.
Much of Martinez’s strength, he said, was drawn from witnessing his mother overcome obstacles as a single parent. His father left them when he was just 9 months old.
“She always smiles, always thinks positive,” he said. “Those are the things I was able to take away from her.”
He also considers his girlfriend, Diana Jones, whom he met on the set of “All My Children,” his “other half.”
“We finish each other’s sentences, we sing the same foolish songs, tell the same foolish jokes,” he said.
“We have the same personality. We’re both stubborn as hell.”
But when they butt heads, they simply remind one another of the great relationship they have, and how connected they are in wanting to get the most out of life.
After an exhausting four months on
“Dancing with the Stars,” Martinez said
he looks forward to continuing his acting,
his motivational speaking and writing his
memoirs.
The book will go beyond his injury in
Iraq and will discuss, for example, the
things he learned in his childhood that
helped him face that life-changing incident.
He also dreams of having his own
inspirational talk show.
“Not all of us get a second chance at
life,” Martinez said.
“I feel that because I got a second
chance, I want to help people get it right
on their first chance.
“I want to pass on everything I’ve
learned, everything I’ve continued to learn
and share it with everybody ... so people
can say at the end of their first life, ‘I was
able to learn certain things. I was able to
take advantage of certain things. I never
quit. I always believed. I loved.’ ” R
First United Methodist Church Pasadena
Join US!Sunday Schoolfor all Ages9:00 amSunday Worship10:00 am
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A Community Church in theHeart of Downtown Pasadena
We are a reconciling congregation which intentionally welcomes all persons, regardless ofsexual orientation, gender, race, ethnicity, age, physical or mental capacity,education, and socioeconomic or marital status.
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48 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
Let ’ s make i t an Annual Trad i t ion
w w w. l a c s d . o r g
Sani ROSE 2012.indd 1 12/12/11 10:37:51 AM
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 49
THE PARADE“Just Imagine...” — A viewer’s guide to the
123rd Rose Parade: the bands, the floats and the equestrian units in order of appearance.
Through Page 80
Float renderings and parade order courtesy of Tournament of Roses
A banner presenting
the theme “Just
Imagine...” kicks off
the 123rd Tournament
of Roses Parade. The
artwork representing
the parade’s theme
poster is brought to
life through flowers
and other organic
materials.
TOURNAMENT OF ROSES
Just Imagine
AIR FORCE B-2 SPIRIT FLYOVERFlying over the parade route, the B-2 is air power in its purest and most elegant form. The stealth bomber has a wingspan of 172 feet, more than half the distance of a football field, and tips the scales at 175 tons. The B-2 carries a crew of two pilots, and is capable of striking anywhere in the world, either by flying directly from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, or by deploying to forward locations outside the United States. The B-2 holds the record for the longest combat mission in aviation history: 44 hours from Whiteman to targets in Afghanistan.
1
2
*
The Tournament of Roses might make late changes in the parade lineup.*
50 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
MARINE CORPS MOUNTED
Six palomino mustangs have all been adopted from the Bureau of Land Management program and trained at the Carson Prison in Nevada.
American Honda presents a 55-foot-long vision of a child’s dreamlike imagination in which anything is possible. Sheep jump over a smiling crescent moon under a fanciful starry sky, leading to dreams of candy and gingerbread castles, hot air balloons, unicorns, a favorite teddy bear — and a replica of innovative technologies including Asimo, a humanoid robot, and the HondaJet.
TThE ONly REMINDER Of C.P. “CAl”
PERRy RODgERS’ hISTORIC cross-
country flight in the Vin Fiz 100 years
ago is a simple plaque at Tournament
Park, which says: “Official Terminus of
the first transcontinental airplane flight.
Calbraith ‘Cal’ Perry Rodgers took off from
Sheepshead Bay, New York, September 17,
1911, landing here November 5, 1911.”
Shortly after his descent from the sky,
Perry climbed down from the cockpit of his
flimsy Wright brothers-constructed biplane.
He shook an ash from his trademark
cigar as Pasadena welcomed him with
open arms. Local dignitaries draped the
heroic pilot in the Stars and Stripes. Rose
Queen Ruth Palmer greeted him with a
bouquet of multicolored flowers.
As many as 20,000 people gathered to
witness the historic event, according to a
government commission detailing the first
century of human flight. In the course of
the 49-day flight, Rodgers made 69 stops and logged a total of 82 hours and four minutes in the air.
But Pasadena wasn’t Rodgers’ goal. He wanted to reach the Pacific Ocean. On Nov. 12, he took off for Long Beach only to crash eight miles short of the shore — in Compton.
After a couple weeks in the hospital recovering from broken bones and internal injuries, Rodgers tried again, ultimately attaining his goal on Dec. 10, 1911.
Cigar clenched in between his teeth,
Rodgers “taxied the weary Vin Fiz into the lapping surf of the Pacific,” 84 days after leaving New York, author Harry Lawrence wrote in his 2004 book “Aviation and the Role of Government.”
Pasadena celebrated Rodgers and the Vin Fiz at the Jan.1, 1912, Rose Parade. The celebrated pilot made the parade’s first flyover — dropping hundreds of carnations along the parade route.
Following the parade, the pilot was honored by then-President William Howard Taft with a special gold medal. R
The first flyoverBy fRANk C. gIRARDOT
4
5
3WEST COAST COMPOSITE MARINE BANDThe band has about 120 Marine musicians from the Southern California Marine Corps bands, including the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing Band from Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) Miramar; 1st Marine Division Band from Camp Pendleton; Marine Band San Diego from Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego; and Marine Corps Combat Center Band from Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms.
AMERICAN hONDA
Sweet Dreams
CO
UR
TESy
Ph
OTO
the parade
COlOR gUARD
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 51
“To The Rescue” — Cal Poly’s 64th consecutive float in the 2012 Rose Parade exhibits the “Just Imagine...” parade theme with superheroes coming to life. A helicopter falls out of the sky, buildings collapse and there’s a runaway train — no problems for the Cal Poly Heroes as they come to the rescue!
ARIZONA MINI MYSTIQUEA Miniature Horse Precision Driving Drill Team features nine American miniature horses decorated with feathers and beads pulling black two-wheeled carts.
An out-of-control flying saucer careens through a lemon grove, landing on a plateau. The unscathed and resourceful aliens respond to the misfortune by setting up a lemonade stand. The idea is that people — in this case, extraterrestrials — have it within themselves to turn their own bad luck around.
78 CITY OF SOUTH PASADENA
When Life Gives You Lemons
6CAL POLY UNIVERSITIES
To The Rescue
52 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
The Bayer Advanced “Garden of Imagination” float features more than 20,000 roses that symbolize the ideas people have. People can imagine creating a beautiful flower garden, or imagine reaching for the stars. Ideas and imagination have no boundaries. The floral pathway features the world debut of the 2012 All-America Rose Selections Award Winner, Sunshine Daydream, a new yellow rose for 2012. Riding the float will be two brothers, Bayer Advanced garden expert Lance Walheim and NASA astronaut Rex Walheim.
GRAND MARSHAL J.R. MARTINEZ2012 Grand Marshal J.R. Martinez leads the 123rd Rose Parade in a 1933 V-16 Cadillac All Weather Phaeton, one of only nine ever made. Martinez’ mother, Maria, and girlfriend, Diana, join him for this ride.
9
10BAYER ADVANCED
Garden of Imagination
ARCADIA HIGH SCHOOL APACHE MARCHING BANDThe more than 400 musicians, color guard, banner carriers, flag barriers and drum major Joel Chen won its spot in the Parade with its high marks in band competitions. This is the 15th time Arcadia’s band will march in the parade. The planned music is a march by John Phillip Sousa titled “Solid Men to the Front” along with an original piece by Frank Sullivan, “America.”
1111
the parade
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PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 53
Congratulations to the
Arcadia High School Apache Marching Band
2012 Tournament of Roses Parade Participant Arcadia High School is the “most marched” high school band in the Tournament of Roses Parade with fifteen appearances.
Arcadia High School Apache Marching Band “A Tradition of Excellence”
Directors: Tom Landes, Kevin Sherrill, Tom Forbes and Pin Chen
A special Thank You to Tom Landes, Director of the Arcadia High School Apache Marching Band for the past thirty-three years, for
enriching the lives of countless students and inspiring self-discipline, responsibility, teamwork and leadership. Best wishes on your retirement in 2012 and “thanks for the memories.”
Tom Landes, Director Arcadia High School
Apache Marching Band Arcadia, California
Photo courtesy of Khee Chan (Starfire Imaging)
Photo courtesy of Linda Chan (Starfire Imaging)
54 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
WELLS FARGO STAGECOACHStagecoaches appearing in the parade are pulled by teams of four trained horses and an outrider, as part of a multi-horse hitch where teamwork is essential. Making its sixth consecutive appearance, 2012 marks Wells Fargo’s 160th anniversary. The company opened its Pasadena office in April 1885.
12
14
13CITY OF GLENDALE
Just Imagine the Music, Fun and Freedom
“Just Imagine the Music, Fun and Freedom” is Glendale’s 98th entry in the Rose Parade. It features a happy, playful elephant leading a colorful circus calliope. At the top of the 20-foot-tall elephant is a giant floral plume with an elegant headdress, matching necklace, blanket and matching leg wrappings. Two ringmasters in top hats guide the prancing pachyderm.
AVON MARCHING BLACK & GOLDThere are nearly 300 members of the band from Avon, Indiana, including five drum majors, 24 flag bearers, 12 dancers, six banner carriers and an extensive color guard. The musicians play in several concert bands, orchestras, drumlines and jazz bands when they are at home. On the parade route is expected about 400 family members from Avon to cheer for their hometown band.
the parade
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The first issue of 2012 publishes February 12th.
Look for it around town or in your subscription of the Pasadena Star-News.
The Best Things in Life are Here!
Thank you to our readers and businesses for making Rose Magazine a growing success!
Contact us: 626.578.6300Visit us at: www.therosemag.com
1737 E. COLOR ADO BLVD. (IN THE BACK), PASADENA, CA 91106Official Seating Company & Ticket Office of the Tournament of Roses® Parade
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56 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
A girl’s limitless imagination comes to life on Kinect for Xbox 360’s first Rose Parade float, “You are the controller.” She envisions those she loves doing dance routines and playing their favorite sports. Kinect’s revolutionary technology allows people to control their entertainment with just their bodies and voices. The float’s 8-foot-tall Xbox console and 6-foot-wide Kinect sensor power Dance Central 2 and Kinect Sports: Season 2. A vivid floral ribbon brings these experiences to life, inspiring kids of all ages to “Just Imagine. . .”
HORSE CAVALRY DETACHMENTThe 1st Cavalry Division’s Horse Cavalry Detachment is the largest active duty mounted cavalry unit in the U.S. Army. It maintains the traditions forged by our country’s cavalry. Since its inception in 1972, the Detachment has appeared in eight Rose Parades.Troopers wear uniforms originating from the 1800s known as “Campaign Uniforms.” There are 14 riders and quarter horses.
1615KINECT FOR XBOX 360
You Are The Controller
the parade
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58 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
A giant “Fearless Flyer” red wagon rises high over hot lava (red chrysanthemums). The highly-detailed float is based on the classic children’s game, “hot lava,” where players must traverse a landscape without touching the ground. The 40-foot-tall and 65-foot-long animated wagon features a flag-waving teddy bear and a fan that blows air to a patchwork sail and a red bandanna that serves as the headsail. Secured to the sides of the float are Coke-bottle cannons.
18 19US BANK
Idea Factory
17 TRADER JOE’S
Hot Lava
20
21 22TOURNAMENT OF ROSESPresident Richard W. Jackson
PASADENA CITY COLLEGE HERALD TRUMPETSThe 10-member band has preceded the Royal Court float for 35 years, and this year marks director Kevin Brown’s 29th year directing the group. There are nine musicians playing the trumpets, selected from more than 80 students who auditioned, and one snare drummer, selected from 60 percussionists who tried out. All fanfares performed were either composed or arranged by Brown.
ROYAL SWEDISH NAVY CADET BANDThe band, from Karlskrona, Sweden, has 75 members, between 15 and 25 years of age, including four drum majors, four flag bearers and three banner carriers. The band is a step for young musicians who aim for a musical career in the military.
BEN DAVIS MARCHING GIANTSThe Ben Davis High School Marching Giants from Indianapolis is 250 members strong, including four drum majors, 30 flag bearers and two banner carriers. The band has traveled to Hawaii every three years since 1975. It has appeared in the Rose Parade six previous times.
The Idea Factory is a creative look at how to build just about anything. The float features a giant conveyor belt whisking flowers into a factory and transforming them into cars, homes, and a number of other interesting gadgets. The float reflects how important it is to push the envelope.
the parade
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60 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
The 2012 Tournament of Roses Rose Queen and Royal Court are presented beneath a
decorative floating bejeweled crown
canopy, sitting amid an elegant tailored rose
garden lined in boxwood hedges and delicate
ferns. Flanking the length of the float are carved
urns featuring rose and floral arrangements.
Oversized sculptured roses frame the front of
the float.
This two-part float honors Indonesia’s future and celebrates its past. The first part features a Sumatran welcome dance, followed by an intricately carved replica of Garuda, a stately, mythical bird-like creature that is the cultural symbol of Indonesia. The Garuda’s eight feathers on the tail, 17 on each wing and 45 on the neck represent the date Indonesia proclaimed its independence: Aug. 17, 1945. This is the first Indonesian Rose Parade appearance in 15 years.
24
25ODD FELLOWS AND REBEKAHS
Shining Knights Still Exist
The Odd Fellows and Rebekahs 59th Rose Parade entry, “Shining Knights Still Exist,” showcases a lone knight, a member of the three-link fraternity, Friendship, Love and Truth, aboard his loyal steed in full gallop above an ancient 17th century English crest to protect an elegant castle. The Independent Order of Odd Fellows was founded on the ideas of helping others, without reward or reimbursement.
MEDIEVAL TIMES DINNER & TOURNAMENTThe rare snowy white andalusian horses carry modern-day knights who fight for loyalty, honor and chivalry at Medieval Times shows in Buena Park.
ROSE BOWL HALL OF FAME INDUCTEESRon Dayne, Dick Enberg and George Fleming, the Rose Bowl Game Hall of Fame inductees, will ride in a 1909 Pierce-Arrow.
MINISTRY OF TOURISM & CREATIVE ECONOMIES, REPUBLIC OF INDONESIA
Wonderful Indonesia
23
26
MACY’S
Presenting the Royal Court
27
26
the parade
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 61
62 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
H
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON MARCHING BAND2830WESTERN ASSET MANAGEMENT
Imagine in America
33
31
29
32HGTV
HGTV Dream Home 2012
Pasadena-based Western Asset features on its 40-foot-tall float an impressive “tree of heroes” topped by a soaring bald American eagle. The tree’s trunk features American symbols including the Mount Rushmore National Memorial, the Statue of Liberty, the space shuttle and iconic images of a fireman, football player, soldier, educator, farmer and a mother and child. The Rose Bowl takes front stage on the float.
The HGTV float will invite viewers to imagine winning the HGTV Dream Home 2012, located just outside of Park City, Utah. The modern western ranch home nestled on the banks of the Provo River in Utah will come to life as a mobile floral display, featuring a replica of the house, complete with smoke coming out of the chimney and surroundings that include an elk, a snowman and a pair of 40-foot-tall snow-tipped evergreens.
UNIVERSITY OF OREGONSpirit squad members cheer for their team and rally crowd support
while marching along Colorado Boulevard and
later in the day during the Rose Bowl Game, “The Granddaddy of Them All.”
SPIRIT OF THE WEST RIDERS The Spirit of the West Riders is a unique equestrian unit that blends history and entertainment in an authentic representation of the men and women of various ethnic backgrounds who tamed the wild frontier of the 1840s to 1920s. A variety of quarter horses, mustang/quarter mixes and other breeds found in the Old West, in colors such as greys, chestnuts, buckskins, palominos, bays and black, appear in this entry. For more on this unit, turn to Page 63.
Seven majestic black-coated friesian horses, raised in Visalia, and a restored 1868 Landau carriage are featured in this entry, which represents the group that began the Rose Parade in 1890. The first parade featured horses and carriages decorated with brilliant flowers in a celebration of the warmth and sunshine of Southern California winters. The success of the annual event led to the founding of the Tournament of Roses Association in 1885. The Valley Hunt Club continued to participate in the parade periodically on special occasions until 1983 when the club was asked to participate in recognition of its role in the origination of the Rose Parade. The club has been part of every Parade since then.
THE VALLEY HUNT CLUB
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PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 63
CO
UR
TESY
PH
OTO
H“HORSES will EiTHER kEEP YOU in SHaPE — OR kill YOU,” Phil Spangenberger said.
The 71-year-old Leona Valley resident should know. He’s been riding for more than 50 years.
Spangenberger is the group marshal of the Spirit of the West equestrian unit set to trot in this year’s Rose Parade for the 20th time.
The group features 15 men and women representing riders from 1840 through the 1920s in authentic outfits and historically accurate gear. Their appearance is on behalf of the John Wayne Cancer Foundation.
The members of the group are “very passionate about recreating the look of the west in a very detailed and correct manner, but in a colorful way, so that it was presentable to the public,” Spangenberger said.
Some of them are trick ropers and all but one live in California.
Spirit of the West was formed in 1991 to represent the Autry Museum in the parade.
In 1999, the Spirit of the West switched sponsors; the group now rides to represent the John Wayne Cancer Foundation.
“Cancer is one of those things that
touches everybody — you’ve either lost someone dear to you or know somebody who has,” Spangenberger said. “And of course, John Wayne is the iconic American cowboy.”
The group worked with Wayne’s eldest son, Michael Wayne, until his death in 2003, and has continued its course with the actor’s youngest son, Ethan Wayne.
Spirit of the West has been in the Rose Parade every year since 1992, except for 2010, when the event cut back on some of its entries. The group was thrilled when it was invited to return in 2011 and again for
the 2012 parade.“Some horses really enjoy it. They
arch their necks and step out. They’re beautiful animals and they’re powerful,” Spangenberger said. “When a man or a woman sits the saddle well, it brings you and your heart and your mind back to the knights of old.”
Riding in the Rose Parade is “a neat thing to do,” he added. “What could be better than to saddle up and ride down the street to millions of cheering people saying, ‘Happy New Year!’? What a great way to start the year.” R
Spirit of the west takes 20th trot in ParadeBy MiCHEllE J. MillS
Shooting two Colt 45s while holding the reins in his teeth, Phil Spangenberger rides his mustang/quarter horse mix Nevada through a pistol course at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia during a show.
35
37BURBank TOURnaMEnT OF ROSES aSSOCiaTiOn
The Dream Machine
34 36Burbank’s float depicts a sleeping boy snuggled beneath a space-themed blanket. His bed is floating on clouds and his dreams are being received by the dream machine. As gears turn, shafts spin, and smoke bellows from the machine, his dream becomes reality. The machine has produced a rocket ship and a new astronaut.
UniVERSiTY OF wiSCOnSin MaRCHinG BanD
UniVERSiTY OF wiSCOnSinSpirit squad members
cheer for their team and rally crowd support for the
Badgers marching along Colorado
Boulevard and during the Rose Bowl Game.
MaYOR OF PaSaDEna Bill BOGaaRDMayor Bill Bogaard and his wife, Claire, will ride with four grandchildren — Liesl, Elisabeth, Jeremiah and Cristina — in a 1910 Pope Hartford Touring car.
64 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
40
41 DONATE LIFE
...One More Day
39 SHRINERS HOSPITALS FOR CHILDREN
Soaring for Kids
42
38
Shriners Hospitals is a health care system of 22 hospitals dedicated to improving the lives of children by providing pediatric specialty care, research, and teaching programs for medical professionals. Soaring For Kids depicts a fanciful and humorous ride featuring whimsical and fun stunts by a pair of teddy bear barnstormers.
Inspired by floral clocks and clock towers of the world, Donate Life’s ninth Rose Parade float entry carries 28 donor family members, living donors and transplant recipients reminding us all to make every day count. Six floral clocks are adorned with 64 memorial “floragraph” portraits of deceased donors, whose gifts of organs and tissues add years and quality of life to those in need of transplants. Gears run the length of the float to a 33-foot clock tower with an animated sun/moon dial marking the passing of “… One More Day.”
CALGARY STAMPEDE SHOWBAND The 180-member marching band from Alberta, Canada, dress in a Western theme, including red boots and white Stetson cowboy hats. Members are ages 16 to 21. The band, formed by the Calgary Stampede in 1971, appeared twice before in the Rose Parade, in 1997 and 2003. The Calgary Stampede will be celebrating its centennial year in 2012.
BANDA ESCOLAR DE GUAYANILLA, PUERTO RICO This 204-member group with musicians, drum majors, flag bearers, dancers, banner carriers and color guard is from a small town in Puerto Rico (Guayanilla). The band was the first Latin American band to participate in the Rose Parade in 2001; it appeared again in 2008.
LOS ANGELES UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT ALL DISTRICT HIGH SCHOOL HONOR BAND This super-sized band, known for its all-brass and percussion ensembles, is made up of more than 350 musicians, drum majors, flag bearers and banner carriers from Los Angeles district schools. Since 1973, the band has marched in 38 consecutive Rose Parades. The 2012 parade will mark its 39th appearance.
the parade
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The San Gabriel Basin is the largest federal Environmental Protection Agency Superfund site in the nation. Since the Basin was placed on the Superfund list more than 28 years ago, polluters have funded most of the cleanup, thanks largely to the WQA’s efforts. The WQA obtains government grants and reimbursements from polluters when possible so local water agencies can operate treatment plants in the San Gabriel Valley.
Since the WQA’s inception in 1993, its sponsored projects have been responsible for removing 120,000 pounds of contaminants from the San Gabriel Basin and have treated 1 million acre-feet of water - enough to fi ll the Rose Bowl about 4,000 times!
The San Gabriel Basin Water Quality Authority: Taking care of our water resources. Learn more at www.wqa.com.The California State Legislature created the
San Gabriel Basin Water Quality Authority (WQA) in 1993 to address the critical need for a local agency to coordinate and implement groundwater cleanup programs in the San Gabriel Basin. Ninety-fi ve percent of the water used in the San Gabriel Valley is from the San Gabriel Basin, a huge
underground aquifer that contains an estimated 3.5 trillion gallons of water.The WQA is directed by a seven-member board comprised of water district offi cials, city offi cials and water producers who together have more than a century of experience managing and caring for our water resources.
The WQA is leading a $1 billion effort to remove contaminants from the San Gabriel Basin and create a reliable, clean drinking water supply for future generations. The water was contaminated in the 1940s and 1950s when a variety of businesses in the Valley disposed of rocket fuel and other chemicals by pouring them on the ground. These substances seeped down into the
groundwater and in the late 1970s began showing up in wells that pumped drinking water out of the aquifer.
The WQA has established successful public-private partnerships that work together to fund and implement the cleanup of the Valley’s polluted water, while minimizing the impact on water rates.
a e age c es ca ope a etreatment plants in the San Gabriel Valley.
JAN-93 JUL-98 JAN-04 JUL-09 DEC-14
20,000.00
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60,000.00
80,000.00
100,000.00
120,000.00
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JUL-09JAN-93 JUL 98 JAN-04
The San Gabriel Basin is the largest federal Environmental Protection Agency Superfund site in the nation. Since the Basin was placed on the Superfund list more than 28 years ago, polluters have funded most of the cleanup, thanks largely to the WQA’s efforts. The WQA obtains government grants and reimbursements from polluters when possible so local water agencies can operate treatment plants in the San Gabriel Valley.
Since the WQA’s inception in 1993, its sponsored projects have been responsible for removing 120,000 pounds of contaminants from the San Gabriel Basin and have treated 1 million acre-feet of water - enough to fi ll the Rose Bowl about 4,000 times!
The San Gabriel Basin Water Quality Authority: Taking care of our water resources. Learn more at www.wqa.com.The California State Legislature created the
San Gabriel Basin Water Quality Authority (WQA) in 1993 to address the critical need for a local agency to coordinate and implement groundwater cleanup programs in the San Gabriel Basin. Ninety-fi ve percent of the water used in the San Gabriel Valley is from the San Gabriel Basin, a huge
underground aquifer that contains an estimated 3.5 trillion gallons of water.The WQA is directed by a seven-member board comprised of water district offi cials, city offi cials and water producers who together have more than a century of experience managing and caring for our water resources.
The WQA is leading a $1 billion effort to remove contaminants from the San Gabriel Basin and create a reliable, clean drinking water supply for future generations. The water was contaminated in the 1940s and 1950s when a variety of businesses in the Valley disposed of rocket fuel and other chemicals by pouring them on the ground. These substances seeped down into the
groundwater and in the late 1970s began showing up in wells that pumped drinking water out of the aquifer.
The WQA has established successful public-private partnerships that work together to fund and implement the cleanup of the Valley’s polluted water, while minimizing the impact on water rates.
a e age c es ca ope a etreatment plants in the San Gabriel Valley.
JAN-93 JUL-98 JAN-04 JUL-09 DEC-14
20,000.00
40,000.00
60,000.00
80,000.00
100,000.00
120,000.00
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68 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
44 ROTARY INTERNATIONAL
Inching Towards the End of Polio43
45
Rotary International’s 33rd consecutive entry in the Tournament of Roses Parade is “Inching Towards The End of Polio,” which celebrates the work of Rotarians worldwide to eradicate the paralyzing and deadly disease. This 22-foot-tall, 35-foot long inchworm features a doctor’s head mirror, stethoscope and medical journal. He moves through a field of flowers among dueling purple butterflies.
CALIZONA APPALOOSA HORSE CLUB Twelve equestrians dressed in handcrafted Native-American Nez Perce regalia made of elk, deer, European trade cloth, glass beads and seed beads will ride appaloosa horses with a variety of color and spotted coat patterns the breed is noted for.
CALGARY STAMPEDE SHOWRIDERSThe Calgary Stampede Showriders is a nonprofit educational and sports organization for youth ages 14 to 21 that performs at parades, rodeos, and other public events. Founded in 1980, the Showriders were created to provide non-musical support to the Calgary Stampede Showband during parades.
the parade
the parade
High Point Academy Co-Ed KINDERGARTEN THROUGH EIGHTH GRADES SINCE 1965 WASC and CAIS Accredited
ADMISSIONS INFORMATION MEETINGS
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Kindergarten - 10 a.m. First through Eighth Grades - 9 a.m.
1720 Kinneloa Canyon Road, Pasadena 91107
626.798.8989
www.HighPointAcademy.org
High Point Academy Co-Ed KINDERGARTEN THROUGH EIGHTH GRADES SINCE 1965 WASC and CAIS Accredited
ADMISSIONS INFORMATION MEETINGS
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Kindergarten - 10 a.m. First through Eighth Grades - 9 a.m.
1720 Kinneloa Canyon Road, Pasadena 91107
626.798.8989
www.HighPointAcademy.org
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PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 69
47
46 PARAMOUNT PICTURES
...100 Years of Movie Magic 48NAMCO BANDAI GAMES AMERICA INC.
Saban’s Power Rangers Samurai Video Game
THE SALVATION ARMY TOURNAMENT OF ROSES BAND The 180-member band, including flag bearers and banner carriers, will also feature 30 women playing tambourines. The Salvation Army was founded in 1865 in England as an evangelical part of the Universal Christian Church. This is the Salvation Army’s 92nd year marching in the Rose Parade.
The Megazord, towering 35 feet
above the parade route, is the focal point of the float. Surrounding the Megazord at its
base are each ranger’s animal
Zords — lion, dragon, ape, turtle and bear — which help them protect the Earth from the dark forces of the Netherworld led
by the evil Master Xandred.
Paramount’s float combines moments and images from its past, present and future. Leading the way is the World War I plane from William A. Wellman’s 1927 silent drama “Wings,” ending with the starship the USS Enterprise.
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JOIN THECAMPAIGN OF
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70 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
54 DICK VAN PATTEN’S NATURAL BALANCE PET FOODS INC.
Surf’s Up
49
52 CHINA AIRLINES
Spirit of Prosperity and Harmony
50 DOWNEY ROSE FLOAT ASSOCIATION
Enchanted Paradise
53
51
SCRIPPS MIRAMAR SADDLEBREDS Among the champion American Saddlebred Pinto and the Argentinian Hackney horses in this group are American Miniature horses, a Shetland pony and a miniature donkey. The theme is the circus, which includes a horse-drawn calliope, a swan float and two wagons. Horse breeder Michele Macfarlane first rode in the Rose Parade in 1962.
LOS ANGELES POLICE MOUNTED PLATOON The LAPD Mounted Platoon, Honor Guard and Emerald Society pipes and drums groups have combined to march together for the first time as a group. Led by LAPD Chief Charles Beck, the mounted platoon includes 11 horses and riders in the Parade. The platoon, assigned to the department’s metropolitan division, has a legacy dating back to 1851 when mounted policing arrived in Los Angeles.
“The Big Red Machine” from Crestview, Florida, has 230 marching members, including musicians, flag bearers, banner carriers and a color guard. Crestview is the oldest band in Northwest Florida, founded in 1938. In 73 years, there have been only 13 band directors.
Enchanted paradise is a magical tropical forest with an active volcano that has water sliding down the outside of the mountain. The center of the float has a giant drumming tiki god that drums a beat for the two smaller tiki to chant and move to. The giant orchids and flowers sway to the beat of the drumming.
The legendary dragon is the focal point of the float as a symbol of excellence, matchless beauty and immortality. The floral deck of this entry sits amid swirling groupings of white orchids, blue and purple iris, white roses and blue, purple and fuchsia mums to create vibrantly hued crashing waves. The dragon’s head will be animated to move side to side and up and down as it breaths smoke out of its nose.
Tillman, the skateboarding bulldog, and friends will surf on 65-foot-long waves in a 80-foot-long ocean of water on a 116-foot float. Natural Balance is going for the record as the heaviest and longest float in any Rose Parade with “Surf’s Up.”
CRESTVIEW HIGH SCHOOL BAND
the parade
SAN GABRIEL AD_FINAL ARTsize: 7.625” x 9.5”date: 10/19/10scale: file built full size w/ 1/4” bleed
72 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
56 LUTHERAN HOUR MINISTRIES
God’s Promise for All
55
58 FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP
The Unimaginable
DISCOVER CARD
The Dream Believers
59
57The Lutheran Hour Ministries 62nd Rose Parade entry reflects the religion’s vision of eternal life. A prayer garden of thousands of roses is prominently featured on the deck of the float with the stream of life where hope springs eternal flows through it. Two doves symbolizing peace are perched on top of the float with olive branches as dueling butterflies symbolizing new life float above an open Bible featuring a floral bookmark adorned by roses and a cross.
Farmers Insurance showcases a playful rendering of daily disasters. A piano hovers precariously above a dream home, while a tornado licks the roof line and a windstorm brews. These daily disasters loom like a dark storm cloud. In addition, wolves are at the door of the house.
The Discover float, “The Dream Believers,” portrays dreams coming to life. Securely tucked
in for the night, children peacefully sleep as their imaginative dreams drift into vivid 3-dimensional
images. Don’t miss the display of real fireworks as the float moves down the route.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PERUVIAN PASO HORSE CLUB RIDERSThis group of Peruvian show horses are known as “The Treasure of Peru,” and some of them will do a little dance on the parade route. Riders are in traditional garb, including straw hats with red hat bands and red ponchos trimmed in white.
MERCER ISLAND HIGH SCHOOL MARCHING BAND The 270-member band has 107 musicians playing brass instruments and 139 playing woodwinds. The high school band, previously featured in the Rose Parade in 1993 and 2006, started 30 years ago with 30 members. More than 25 percent of the students enrolled at MIHS participates in the band program. Among its alumni is the late Stanley Ann Dunham, mother of President Barack Obama.
KYOTO TACHIBANA HIGH SCHOOL GREEN BAND This Japanese band, organized as an all-female group in 1961, has 142 members, now including boys. The band’s unique marching style includes a continuous dance-style movement. It is the group’s first time in the Rose Parade.
6060
the parade
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 73
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62 DOLE
Preserving Paradise
63
61
A procession of life-like ceremonial elephants, bedecked in floral jewels and tapestries, lead the float with a sculptured tiger and two leopards joining in as tribute to Thailand’s ongoing preservation of wildlife conservation. Thailand is home to the Western Forest Complex, which has the potential to hold nearly 2,000 tigers, the largest wild tiger population in the world. Twenty Thai dancers will perform on the float as well as on the streets. Don’t miss the oversized sculptured pineapples and bananas and the real waterfalls.
COWGIRLS HISTORICAL FOUNDATION Ten marvelous quarter horses with distinctive personalities and riders dressed in vintage cowgirl costumes make up this performance team for its first march in the Rose Parade.
The Hermanos Bañuelos Charro Team dons custom-made, traditional charro suits for the 2012 Rose Parade. The group has been a member of the Association of Charros of Southern California since 1995.
HERMANOS BANUELOS CHARRO TEAM
the parade
Join our community of inspired educators and involved parents where academic excellence is just the beginning. The Barnhart experience does more than educate children, it energizes them to be life-long learners with boundless curiosity and the confidence to excel.
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 75
66 KIWANIS INTERNATIONAL
Winter Wonderland
64 CITY OF ALHAMBRA
Bearing Down the Track65
67
FRANKLIN REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL PANTHER MARCHING BAND From Murrysville, Pennsylvania, about 20 miles east of Pittsburgh, comes this 197-member band, including seven majorettes.
WAR HORSE FOUNDATION The lucky number 13 is featured in the War Horse equestrian unit, which presents many famous cavalry regiments throughout history. In the parade, a number of elegant Arabian horses will be part of the group’s representation of the cavalry of the Napoleonic Age 200 years ago. In its 10 years of existence, War Horse has appeared in or performed at more than 120 parades, civic events and charity fundraisers. This will be the third time the War Horse will be in the Parade.
A vintage 35-foot-long, 1903 locomotive
is the dominant feature on this city’s
84th consecutive Rose Parade float. The 16.6-foot-tall bear locomotive
engineer pilots the steam engine. The train’s ID number,
1903, is a nod to the incorporation date of the City of Alhambra.
A giant sleigh ride is featured in this “Winter Wonderland” float led by a 16-foot-tall white horse. Kiwanis International’s 31st Rose Parade entry reflects old-fashioned family fun amid snow and glistening trees.
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76 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
ESCONDIDO MOUNTED POSSE Fourteen horses and riders are appearing for the first time in the Parade, including a 27-year-old Morgan horse named
Peter. The Escondido Mounted Posse was chartered and formed as a reserve unit in 1948 and served to assist police officers by patrolling parks and other areas of the city
and assisting in search and rescue calls. Now the group has ceremonial and educational tasks, and rides in 15 parades a year.
68LOYOLA MARYMOUNTUNIVERSITY
Learn. Lead. Serve. LMU at 100 69
70CITY OF TORRANCE
Looking back - Moving Forward
72LA CANADA FLINTRIDGE TOURNAMENT OF ROSES ASSOCIATION
If Pigs Could Fly
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In honor of its centennial year, the university’s 55-foot float features the beautiful campus grounds, from the bluff that overlooks the Pacific to the west and the Los Angeles skyline to the east. Also featured are the infamous “kissing benches” where many LMU students have discussed and begun their futures together.
This city’s float pays homage to its 100 years of history with replicas of the iconic Irving Gill double-arched railroad bridge and an electric Red Car trolley, set amid towering palm trees, topiary trees and coloful gardens.
The three pigs have built themselves an airplane and are piloting it down Colorado Boulevard while they soar over fields of flowers. Two birds are scrambling to get out of the way. The littlest pig is hanging on for dear life and has tied some balloons to his waist for extra lift.
THE ALL LUBBOCK MARCHING BAND This Texas-sized band of 528 musicians, drum majors, banner carriers and a color guard, is the consolidation of four high school bands in Lubbock, along with four jazz bands and numerous chamber ensembles. Among the alumni of Lubbock schools is CBS Evening News anchor Scott Pelley, rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Buddy Holly and country music star Mack Davis.
PASADENA CITY COLLEGE TOURNAMENT OF ROSES HONOR BAND Students from more than 70 local area high schools are part of this year’s honor band. The unit has 235 musicians, banner carriers, drum major and majorette. The honor band has appeared in every Rose Parade since 1930.
the parade
305 South Santa Fe Avenue • Vernon, CA 90058-1714 • (323) 583-8811305 outh Santa Fe Avenue • Vernon, CA 90058-1714 • (323) 583-8811uth Santa Fe Avenue • Vernon, CA 90058-1714 • (323) 583-88114305 South Santa Fe Avenue • Vernon, CA 90058-1714 • (323) 583-8811
The City of
SSoouth Santa Fe Aveeennnue • Vernon,CA 90058-17uth Santa Fe Avenue • Vernon,CA 90058-17uth Santa Fe Avenue • Vernon,CA 90058-17SSoouth Santa Fe AAAvveeeennnnue • Vernon CA 90058 1SSo
Farmer John Meats
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Seven Up/RC Bottling Co.
Sara Lee Fresh
C. R. Laurence Company
True Religion Brand Jeans
Seven For All Mankind
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since 1905siince 11990055
78 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
74 CALIFORNIA CLOCK COMPANY
Timeless Fun For Everyone
7579
77
76 AIDS HEALTHCARE FOUNDATION
Our Champion
78SIERRA MADRE ROSE FLOAT ASSOCIATION
Colorful Imagination
The classic American-made Kit-Cat Clock is kicking off a yearlong celebration of its 80th anniversary with a Rose Parade float. Palm trees flank a three-story-high Kit-Cat Clock with its contagious smile, rolling eyes and swinging tail. Don’t miss the skateboarders riding on and off the float.
Marking the 30th anniversary of the discovery of the HIV virus, the AIDS Healthcare Foundation has dedicated its first Rose Parade float — “Just Imagine ... A World Without AIDS” — to celebrate the life of the late actress Elizabeth Taylor, who worked tirelessly for AIDS research for three decades.
This float reflects children at play and their unique ability to use imagination to create magical new worlds with swirling paint, magical hoops and fluttering butterflies.
PULASKI HIGH SCHOOL RED RAIDER MARCHING BAND From Pulaski, Wisconsin, is a 185-member group making its second Rose Parade appearance. The last time was 2007. Pulaski is home to the largest Polka Music Festival per capita in North America.
THE NEW BUFFALO SOLDIERS The New Buffalo Soldiers is a living historical reenactment group portraying the history of Company H of the 10th regiment of the U.S. Army. The primary goal of the group is to teach the American public about the roles played by African Americans in the Army. The group was founded in July 1992 by John Mapp. The Rose Parade appearance will feature 13 horses, including Missouri Foxtrotters and Tennesse Walkers.
BROKEN HORN ROPERSThe Broken Horn Ropers are a diverse, multi-generational and multicultural trick roping team. The ropers ride American quarter horses, American paint horse and palominos. Each member of the team will perform trick roping skills along the parade route, including tricks such as the “wave,” “butterfly” and the “Texas skip.” 2012 marks the group’s ninth Rose Parade appearance.
the parade
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 79
80 GIRL SCOUTS OF GREATER LOS ANGELES
What Will You Do Today?
82LIONS CLUB INTERNATIONAL
A World at Peace
81
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This two-unit float begins with a floral tribute to
100 years of Girl Scouting and asks, “What will you
do today?” Oversized sculptured yellow roses
signifying friendship complete the setting. At the center of the float is
the honored Gold Award emblem, signifying the
highest honor earned in Girl Scouts.
Lions Clubs International’s float entry presents a peaceful image of global community and humanitarian service. A white dove of peace with its 16 ½ foot wingspan carries an olive branch to the world with a message of peace.
AMERICAN FORK HIGH SCHOOL MARCHING BAND From American Fork, Utah, this 230-member group includes the marching band, a concert and symphonic band, two jazz bands and two percussion groups. It last marched in the Rose Parade in 1998. The band will honor an assistant director who was killed in a 2009 bus crash.
SILOAM SPRINGS HIGH SCHOOL BAND From Siloam Springs, Arkansas, is a 182-member group made up of the concert band, a symphonic band, wind ensemble and jazz bands. The Siloam Springs Public School band program has doubled in size during the past five years and includes one in every three students in sixth through 12th grades.
80 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
ALL AMERICAN COWGIRL CHICKS This group of glamorous trick riders might be best known
for rescuing horses to train for its indoor rodeo shows. The group has been together for more than 16 years and do as many as 85 performances a year. The 2012 Parade
will be the group’s fifth appearance.
NEEDHAM B. BROUGHTON HIGH SCHOOL BAND From Raleigh, North Carolina, is a group of about 150
marching musicians, drum majors, banner carriers and a color guard. Needham B. Broughton High School is one of the oldest of 18 high schools in the Wake County
Public School System, founded in 1929. They were last in the Rose Parade in 2008.
85
86CITY OF LOS ANGELES
Dinosaurs in L.A.’s Backyard
84 CITY OF HOPE
The Power of Hope
90 RFD TV
Happy Trails
88 KAISER PERMANENTE
Every Body Walk
89
87
“The Power of Hope” float is inspired by the City of Hope campus in Duarte where it is a leading center for research, treatment and education for cancer, diabetes and other life-threatening diseases.
At one time, dinosaurs, like the three depicted on the city’s 55-foot-long float, roamed the Earth, but what would it be like if they stomped through our backyards and gardens today? The float celebrates the recently opened Dinosaur Hall at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles.
“Happy Trails” is the RFD float celebrating what would have been Roy Rogers’ 100th birthday year. The “King of the Cowboys” is represented by a 35-foot-tall classic image of the singing cowboy.
In a whimsical floral scene of Kaiser Permanente’s “Every Body Walk” float, a daily walk is the key to healthy and fun activities. Set amid fanciful sculptured flowers and colorful animated butterflies, an adventurous caterpillar, with all 10 animated “feet” in sync, strolls with walking sick, map, and binoculars in “hands.”
PALOMINOS ON PARADE A number of equestrian units featuring a total of 100 palomino horses will appear together in front of the final float of the parade. They include The RFD Roy Rogers Riders, The Al Malaikah Shrine/Silver Mounted Patrol, the Kings County Sheriff’s Posse, the Long Beach Mounted Police, the Merced County Sheriff Posse, Santa Rosa Palomino Club and the United States Marshals Posse.
the parade
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How do you find time for all your activities? at school, i’m involved with a lot of activities. i’m on the track team, the volleyball team, as well as lots of other organizations. as to managing my time, it is about prioritizing what you want and what you want to do. i’ve always loved athletics, so that’s something i’ve always made time for. you know, sleep, homework — they just come with it.
do you feel like a role model? wHo do you look up to?my freshman year in high school, i met a girl named katy Hernandez. she was a junior, and i was a freshman, but she came up to me and she was so nice. we just clicked instantly, and we’ve been friends ever since.in my sophomore year, her senior year, she was a princess in the royal court. i’ve always looked up to her, so when she was
on the court, i knew that that’s something i wanted to do. she was such a role model for me, i wanted to grow up to be like her, i wanted to show women, just like she showed me, that you can do whatever you set your mind to. now being on the court, i truly do feel like a role model for young women because i’m showing them that their dreams and aspirations can come true if they have faith, hope and determination.
tell us about tHe cultural clubs you are involved inat my school, i am part of the multicultural club and the latin club. i’ve been a part of the latin club since freshman year. i’ve taken latin all four years of high school, so it’s a club you’re automatically in for taking latin. we educate the students of my high school on how the culture works and what we do in class because it’s a very interesting
Rose Queen Drew Helen Washington, 17, lives in Pasadena and attends Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy. She is involved in athletics and various clubs at school. She plans to pursue a career in marketing or public relations. In her free time, she enjoys going to the movies, running, playing volleyball and spending time with her friends. Her parents are Craig and Lorie Washington.
QUEEN DREW HELEN WASHINGTON
the pageantry
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 83
PH
OTO
s BY
WA
LT M
AN
CIN
I
language. It’s not spoken anymore; it is a dead language.
I’m also part of the multicultural club. This
is my first year. Last year, I realized we had
a lot of different community organization
groups at school but we didn’t have a black
student union as most high schools do, so
what I did last year with a friend is to start
a black student affiliation group, and we
did so through the multicultural club just
to make students more aware of what the
black culture is really about.
DescrIbe how you feLt the Day of the queen announcement anD you hearD your name.before the queen was announced, that morning, the girls and I had been together since about 4:30 a.m. and we actually weren’t talking about it at all. we weren’t very nervous. but then all of us kind of got nervous as
we went on stage and held hands, waiting to see who it was going to be. I did not think it was going to be me at all, I was not anticipating it. When President Jackson said “from flintridge sa...” well, that’s all I heard. all of a sudden people from my school started screaming so loud, I actually didn’t even hear my name being called.It was the most fantastic feeling of my entire life. having my school there to support me was really important and really special to me because I wasn’t only sharing it with my six new sisters on the royal court, I was sharing it with my school community and my family as well.
what were you LookIng forwarD to or are LookIng forwarD to In beIng part of the court?I’ve been privileged with the opportunity to be able to go on about 150 community events, from october through January. that’s been my favorite part because most
17-year-old girls can’t say they’re able
to see the city of Pasadena in such an
amazing way, and go to all these events.
I’ve really been able to see pasadena for
its true beauty and true light. One of my
favorite events was when we went to
gardens at the huntington. there was a
group of about 130 third-graders on a field
trip. we got to speak with them, interact
with them and it really opened my eyes to
the fact that we really are role models for
the community. They really looked up to us
and I’ve never been looked up to in such a
manner before. I felt I was really making an
impact on their lives.
one other thing I’m looking forward to is
the Lawry’s beef bowl. we get to go with
the football teams and there’s a little bit of
a rivalry going on about who can eat the
most prime ribs. I’m going for 2 ½, so that
should be fun. R
Stories by CLAudIA s. PALMA | Fashion Photography by LeO JArzOMB
The Queen and Court at the Coronation on Oct. 27. From left, Princesses sarah, Hanan, Morgan, Queen drew and Princesses Kimberly, Cynthia and stephanie in demure, yet elegant one-shoulder gowns by Tadashi shoji. That’s Queen drew in white; the princesses are in true cobalt blue.
84 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
poses at Kidspace Children’s Museum on a cool, overcast day in an INC short
turquoise jacket with a rose gold pin, INC black jeans and faux diamond stud earrings. Fashions
courtesy of Macy’s. Queen Drew’s hair style and makeup done by Amadeus Salon and Spa in
Pasadena.
QUEENDREW
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 85
Preferred Florist of the Tournament of Roses®
86 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
is in an INC boysenberry turtleneck, Anne Klein
black skirt and American Rag black military
coat. Note the gold medallion and the Glitz belt, to be worn slightly
off center. Fashions courtesy of Macy’s. Hair and makeup by
Amadeus Salon and Spa in Pasadena.
PRINCESS CYNTHIA
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 87
is ready for the cold weather in an American Rag black military coat with faux fur collar, tall Karen Scott boots and
INC black jeans. Fashions courtesy of Macy’s
Hair and makeup by Amadeus Salon and Spa
in Pasadena.
PRINCESS MORGAN
88 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
Her evening look includes an INC black
lace overlay dress, black cashmere
cardigan sweater, black suede shooties,
a Mikimoto pearl necklace and small
bag. Fashions courtesy of Macy’s
Hair and makeup by Amadeus Salon and
Spa in Pasadena.
PRINCESS SARAH
Spectacular home tucked away behind the private gates, set on almost 1.5 acre lot. This exquisite custom estate with over 8,300 sq. ft., is an exceptional, newly built in 2004. Smart home Crestron system with Lutron lighting. Breathtaking panoramic views to Rose Bowl, Mt. Wilson, downtown LA, ocean views on a clear day, and city lights. Unparalleled 300-degree unobstructed views from every room. Enjoy the 4th of July BBQ with eye level views of fireworks at the Rose Bowl. 6 bedrooms, 8 bathrooms, fabulous open floor plan. 5 fireplaces, formal living room with 24-foot high ceilings and large windows for view. Media/home theatre with surround sound system, library, office, salt water pool and spa with waterfall. Master suite has 2 wings of his and her own bathrooms, fireplace, gym, walk-in closets, fireplace, and huge balcony that looks out to a vast city view. 4 air conditioning/heating units, 9 chandeliers, unique crown molding in each room. Central vacuum, 240 volt charging station for electrical cars. Custom flooring, cabinets, front and back staircase.
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92 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
PRINCESS MORGAN ElIzA DEvAuDTell us abouT some of your school involvemenTs.at school, i have been involved with our student body government as a prom commissioner. it was so much fun because i was able to
express my creative talent by setting up the prom, and decorating and organizing everything. i am also the founder and president of our school’s first Dance club. it was really fun to bring dance to la canada high school and share it with my fellow students.
you have some experience as a princess, how is being on the Rose couRt DiffeRent from ThaT?i am also a princess on the miss la canada court. it’s a very similar concept to the rose court, however on a much smaller scale. being a princess on that court, i have an opportunity to get involved in my community. mainly we attend events such as mixers, chamber meetings and ribbon-cutting ceremonies for new stores. i love being on the rose court because it really has given me an opportunity to say i am more involved with my community. i have already attended so many events, and from now through January, and a little after, we will be attending more than 165 events. There aren’t even 165 days in that time span! We really have dedicated our time and effort into this program. i’m so honored and happy to be able to connect with people in the community and learn more about it.
wheRe have you tRaveleD anD wheRe woulD you like to tRavel to next anD Why?Two summers ago, i was fortunate to have the experience of traveling to switzerland because my father and his family are from switzerland. i also learned french in a two-month language immersion program. it was so incredible. i learned so much more than just the language, i learned about the culture and more about my heritage and where i come from and it was really a gift that i will cherish for the rest of my life. my dream destination is barcelona or madrid in spain. i would love to go there because there is something about the latin culture i am so drawn to. i feel they have an exciting zest for life and i really would like to be a part of that as well as see the history. i think it would be incredible to be able to travel there.
PRINCESS CYNTHIA MEGAN lOuIEwhat has it been like being on the couRt? so far being on the royal court, i’ve had a really amazing time bonding with all these wonderful “sisters.” i’ve only had an older brother, so i never knew what it was like to have a sister. so it’s been real fun.
Tell us abouT your brush WiTh fashion.i am a member of the bp (brass plum ) nordstrom fashion board, which really expresses my love for fashion and all the different styles and it actually made
me really appreciate all the wonderful, beautiful clothes that we get from our sponsor, macy’s. in my spare time, i design my own backpacks that i use at school.
what aRe you looking foRwaRD to in the futuRe?i’m looking forward to going to law school or pursuing a major in marine biology. over the past summer, i did a marine biology study program in mexico where i got to snorkel with whale sharks and sea lions. That was my true test to know if it’s what i really love, and i had an amazing time. That’s what i really want to do with my life, i want to discover new species of fish, but of course, going to law school would be more promising and successful.
PRINCESS SARAH NICOlE zuNOhow Do you feel connecteD to PasaDena?residing in the neighboring community of highland park, i feel a strong tie to the city of pasadena because my family and i established traditions early on. one of the things we would do, the night before the rose parade, would be to walk down orange Grove boulevard and look at all the different floats. this was my way of taking a memory, a little piece of the parade with me, to keep with me the rest of my life. That’s what led me to initially try out and to the position i’m in today.
wheRe Do you get youR musical talent?ever since i was a little girl, i felt a strong appreciation for music. That led me to initially try to teach myself how to play a couple songs on the piano. i wanted to learn how to dance, so i taught myself, watching videos from youtube, different moves here and there. that led me to really gain confidence in myself in everything that i do, to really continue to persevere. now i’m the co-president of my school’s Glee club. it’s taught me to be comfortable with who i am, in my own skin and i’m not afraid to express myself using my own voice.
talk about being on the Royal couRt.being on the rose court is an incredible opportunity. it’s not something that i initially saw myself being a part of, but since i broke through the barrier and was able to become a princess, i hope my sisters would take from that that they have everything they need inside of themselves just as i did. and not only is that a message that i want my sisters to remember, it’s a message i want other girls in my community to take with them as well, because if i can do it, so can they.
Rose Princess Morgan, 18, lives in La Canada Flintridge and attends La Canada High School.
Rose Princess Sarah, 17, lives in Highland Park and attends Benjamin Franklin High School.
Rose Princess Cynthia, 17, attends La Salle High School and resides in La Canada Flintridge.
the pageantry
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PRINCESS KIMBERLY VICtoRIa oStILLERWhat does a smile represent to you?For the past three years, I have actually worked at a dentist’s office and orthodontist offices, and that’s what i hope to pursue after college. i’ve always enjoyed smiling and i think the gift of a smile is the best gift you can give someone. i hope to provide children and adults with beautiful smiles.
What is your favorite type of cuisine? any favorite restaurants?i enjoy trying new restaurants. my favorite type of food is mexican food. a bean and cheese burrito is always a great meal for me.
What is your dream travel destination? i’ve been very fortunate and had the opportunity to travel around the world. i visited europe on a family vacation, which was wonderful. there’s lovely architecture and a lot of historical places that i visited. this past summer, i went to tanzania, africa, for three weeks where i participated in an international leadership and community service program. that was one of my most memorable trips because i volunteered in a local school orphanage and taught children english.
What is your favorite part about being on the royal court? i’m so fortunate to have this opportunity and so thankful to be a member of this great group of young women. i really enjoy the events where we interact with the youth in the community because i think those events really exemplify our duty on the royal court as role models to young girls and boys.
PRINCESS StEPHaNIE GRaCE HYNESWhat is it you like about horse riding? i’ve been riding horses for about eight years now. i started riding western in a horse riding drill team. i own a horse now, her name is princess and i’ve been riding her for about six years.
hoW important has your faith and church been in your life? i’m really involved with my church, lake avenue church in pasadena. i’m a part of the high school youth group. i sing in the worship services. i was home-schooled, so my church was a lot of my social network. i’ve just really become close to my church family.
talk about your summer trip.this summer, i took a trip to new orleans with my church youth group. there was a group of about 35 high school students and we all helped rebuild houses that have been destroyed or damaged by hurricane katrina. We actually teamed up with the st. bernard project, which is a locally based organization in New Orleans that helps rebuild the houses and helps provide financial support to families who were hurt by the hurricane even so many years after.
hoW do you feel about being on the royal court? ever since i was little, being on the royal court has been such a dream of mine. it’s such a tradition in pasadena itself, so to be on the royal court this year is like a dream come true.
PRINCESS HaNaN BuLto WoRKutell us about volunteering at a hospital. ever since i was younger, i was very interested in science and pursuing the medical field. I had the opportunity to volunteer at huntington hospital, which is in my area, and during the summer, i volunteered in the pediatrics department. Wanting to be a pediatrician, i felt like this provided me with a great experience and it was an honor to be able to interact in my community in this way.
What do you like to Write about? When i was younger, my mom would encourage reading so she prohibited cable tv. she ordered book after book after book. i eventually took out two library cards to be able to read twice as many books, and this is what inspired my passion for writing. i also write for the pasadena chronicle, which is my school newspaper.
What are you looking forWard to in the future?i’m very excited to pursue my medical degree. i am interested in science, so i hope to major in biochemistry and pursue medical school. after achieving that goal, i want to work overseas in third world countries, hoping to give back a little bit to my community.
What does your younger sister think about you being on the court? in addition to the six sisters i have here (on the court), i have a younger sister. she’s entering high school next year so she’s excited to be seeing what we’re doing in the community, and i’m sure she’ll be trying out for the court one year. it’s been very interesting to involve my family as we’ve attended the parade every year and watch the court go by.
Rose Princess Stephanie, 18, attends Maranatha High School and lives in Pasadena.
Rose Princess Kimberly, 17, attends Flintridge Preparatory School and lives in Altadena.
Rose Princess Hanan, 17, is from Pasadena and attends Pasadena High School.
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Pho
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is in a Calvin Klein colorblocked dress, black Alfani black
pumps and Charter Club purple drop earrings. The black petal bolero is from INC, the pearl
necklace from Mikimoto and the black bag is from Fossil. Fashions courtesy of Macy’s. Hair and makeup by
Amadeus Salon and Spa in Pasadena.
PRINCESS KIMBERLY
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Southern California’s Evolving Landscape: The Photography of Helen Lukens Gaut (1872-1955)on view thru Feb. 26, 2012
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pauses at the Kidspace domino table in an INC
pink and black mesh top, an Anne Klein black skirt, black tights and Material Girl black flats. Fashions
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PRINCESSSTEPHANIE
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wears an INC black short sleeve top with drape
collar, an Alfani leopard print skirt and black
suede shooties. Over her shoulder is a black
cashmere cardigan. Fashions courtesy
of Macy’s. Hair and makeup by Amadeus
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PRINCESS HANAN
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R
the game
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REdEMPTIOn.That’s the theme for the 98th Rose Bowl
Game.On one side, you have Big Ten champion
Wisconsin, which has thought of nothing but making up for a 21-19 setback to Texas Christian University last New Year’s Day in the Arroyo Seco.
Then there’s Pac-12 champ Oregon, which arguably has had the best three-year stretch in its history. But the Ducks also have failed to find Bowl Championship Series glory, losing in the Rose Bowl to Ohio State two years ago and then to Auburn in the BCS title game in Glendale, Ariz. last January.
Both teams will look to erase those
memories on Jan. 2 when they square off in the Granddaddy of Them All at 2:10 p.m. in Pasadena.
“I think every year each team is different, and there are a lot of players that played on our (2009) team against a good Ohio State team that aren’t here any longer,” said Oregon coach Chip Kelly, who is 33-6 in three seasons with the Ducks. “We lost 23 or 24 seniors from last year’s team that played in the national championship, so I think every year’s different.
“We don’t look at what transpired in the past to be motivation of where to go in the future. We know we’re playing against an outstanding team, and we’re going to give it our best effort and our preparation to
get down there and see what we can do against Wisconsin.”
The match-up is a contrast in styles.Oregon (11-2), with its spread-option
attack, is new wave; Wisconsin (11-2), using a basic I-formation and its usual mammoth offensive line, is old school.
The Ducks have been an offensive juggernaut under Kelly, averaging nearly 45 points per game since 2009, while scoring at least 40 points in 27 of 39 games.
Their leader is All-American running back LaMichael James, a Doak Walker award finalist for the second consecutive season after rushing for 1,646 yards and 17 touchdowns.
But Oregon’s prowess doesn’t end
Story by STEvE RAMIREz
Oregon players celebrate their victory over the UCLA Bruins during the Pac 12 Championship Game.
regon vs. isconsin98th Rose Bowl Game is all about redemption
PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 103
there. It also includes quarterback Darron Thomas, who has passed for 2,493 yards and 30 touchdowns, and speedster De’Anthony Thomas, who has accounted for 1,011 yards and 14 touchdowns between rushing and receiving.
Wisconsin hopes to slow down the Ducks’ attack with All-Big Ten players Chris Borland at linebacker and Aaron Henry at defensive back.
“(It’s) like opposite ends of the spectrum,” Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema said. “They want to run as many plays as they can and we want to slow it down the best we can. It will be fun in that world.
“But you have LaMichael James and all he brings to the table and with (him and the Badgers’) Montee Ball, you have two of the premier running backs in the world of college football on the same field. When we get to Jan. 2nd, it will be very, very special.”
Wisconsin relies on Ball, who was arguably the top running back in the country, ending the regular season with a nation’s best 1,759 yards and 32
touchdowns. The junior also had 255 yards receiving for six scores and comes into the Rose Bowl Game with 38 touchdowns, which is one off the national record set by Pro Football Hall of Famer Barry Sanders.
But there’s more to the Badgers than Ball. Their other key option is quarterback Russell Wilson, a transfer from North Carolina State who added another variable to Wisconsin’s arsenal — the ability to to scramble. Wilson has thrown for 2,879 yards and 31 touchdowns. But his ability to stretch out plays made the Badgers very dangerous to opposing defenses.
“Number one, they have a great scheme and really understand how to attack you and will make you pay for not being sound defensively,” Kelly said. “If you want to gang up and stop their running game with Montee Ball, then they’re putting the ball in Russell’s hands and throwing to Nick Toon (822 receiving, nine TDs) and those other guys.
“... A team that’s multi-dimensional like Wisconsin really presents the ultimate problem for you on the defensive side of
the ball. You kind of follow scores during the year when it just seems like it’s a pinball number sometimes when you’re watching Wisconsin games.”
Oregon will try to contain the Badgers with a stout defense led by first-team All-Pac-12 players Dion Jordan on the defensive line, Josh Kaddu at linebacker and Eddie Pleasant in the secondary.
But both coaches believe this one could come down to whoever has the ball last. Either way, one team will be able to redeem itself.
“For us to be rewarded the opportunity to play Oregon and everything that they stand for is truly special,” Bielema said. “As a coach, you just wanted to live in the year that you’re in, and everybody wants to draw comparisons to other years, but you really truly embrace it and enjoy the opportunity you have on a year-to-year basis.
“This year takes us back to Pasadena and one of the greatest environments in the world of college football.” R
Wisconsin celebrates after they won against Michigan State during the Big 10 Conference Championship Game.
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U
the game: OregOn Ducks
University of oregon football coach chip Kelly arrived in Eugene as a relative unknown.
Today, the New Hampshire native might be the most-recognizable figure in the state.
Kelly, in just his third season as head coach, has transformed Oregon’s culture, winning three consecutive Pac-12 titles while also directing arguably the top scoring offense in the country.
He also has the Ducks in the Rose Bowl Game for the second time in three seasons. They will face Big Ten champion Wisconsin in the 98th Granddaddy of Them All on Jan. 2 in Pasadena.
“I don’t really think that way about what we’ve accomplished before,” said Kelly, who was New Hampshire’s offensive coordinator when former Ducks coach Mike Bellotti lured him west for the same position prior to the 2007 season. “It’s about living in the moment and being part of this group, and I’m really, really proud about what this group has accomplished.”
The director is Kelly, who has orchestrated some prolific offenses in his 13 seasons as a college coach.
Kelly, 33-6 in three seasons in Eugene, including 27-2 in the Pac-12, was offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for eight seasons at New Hampshire. In seven of those eight,
the Wildcats averaged more than 400 yards per game of total offense. They also averaged 30 points per game in four seasons.
That success has followed him to Oregon, where he spent 2007 and ‘08 as offensive coordinator before succeeding Bellotti as head coach prior to the 2009 season.
Oregon, using Kelly’s spread-option attack, has averaged nearly 45 points per game while scoring at least 40 points in 27 games, including 10 of the team’s 13 games this season.
“I’m a big fan of Chip Kelly’s,” former UCLA coach Rick Neuheisel said. “I don’t know of a finer job that’s been done in college football over the last couple of years than the job Chip’s done. He went to the Rose Bowl in year one and the national championship in year two (and another Rose Bowl) in year three.
“I don’t know how many times ESPN College GameDay has been in Eugene but it’s been a lot. He’s done a magnificent job.”
This season’s road back to Pasadena was very similar to Oregon’s path two years ago.
The Ducks, like in 2009, lost their opener, this time a 40-27 setback to No. 1 Louisiana State before reeling off nine consecutive victories, including a 53-30 victory over then No. 4 Stanford. Oregon
earned a trip to Pasadena with a 49-31 victory over UCLA in the inaugural Pac-12 title game on Dec. 2.
But Kelly said the roots of his team’s success this year were set last January, a day after the Ducks lost to Auburn, 22-19, in the 2011 Bowl Championship Series title game.
“I talked to our guys on Jan. 11,” said Kelly, who is still looking for a victory in a BCS game. “It started with a small group of seniors and a group of guys that had played before.
“But (the players) really set the tone in the offseason. They set the tone in the summer. (This season) is about (the players). They understand what it’s about because they’ve played in it. They showed the guys the way.”
Now, Kelly and Oregon hope to top it off with a victory over Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl, which will give them that elusive BCS game victory.
But is it a must-win?“Not based on the two previous (BCS)
losses,” Kelly said. “But that’s our whole mindset going into it. We don’t look at it and say, ‘Let’s take this one.’
“I think our guys are going to go out there and compete, and not based on anything that happened in the past. I say this a lot, but we’re a forward-thinking operation. We have a chance to play one more time.” R
Story by steve ramirez
Ducks take f light under Kelly
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n
the game: wisconsin badgers
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NOw THAT wISCONSIN HEAd COACH BRET BIElEMA has proven effective in getting the Badgers to the Rose Bowl Game, the only thing standing in the way of him approaching the status of his predecessor Barry Alvarez is winning a Granddaddy of Them All for himself.
This year’s game will mark Wisconsin’s second consecutive trip to Pasadena. Last year the Badgers fell to TCU, 21-19, in a thriller.
On Jan. 2, Wisconsin will face another test in Pac-12 champion Oregon.
Wisconsin (11-2) punched its ticket to this season’s Rose Bowl by beating Michigan State in the inaugural Big Ten championship game on Dec. 3. The Badgers put themselves in position to play for the conference championship after winning their final four regular-season games.
“For us to come back from two losses that were very difficult to deal with and to battle ourselves back and play in the Big Ten championship game ... to earn us the right to play in the Granddaddy of Them All, the Rose Bowl, and to be a part of everything that it is, is truly, truly special,” Bielema said.
Now Bielema’s focus is on winning the
big one. Wisconsin’s loss last year to TCU was tough to swallow. The Badgers rallied from a 21-13 deficit to pull within 21-19 on Montee Ball’s late touchdown run. Quarterback Scott Tolzien’s pass into the end zone on the two-point try was knocked away, however.
Bielema is 60-18 overall and 2-3 in bowl games since taking over for Alvarez in 2006. Alvarez won three Rose Bowls in his 25 seasons at Wisconsin.
For Bielema to get the breakthrough bowl win that would elevate his status in Madison, he will have to figure out a way to slow down an Oregon attack that features running backs LaMichael James and Kenjon Barner. The Ducks also have a dangerous quarterback in Darron Thomas.
“Obviously, Chip (Kelly) and Oregon like to score at a very rapid rate, and we like to hold the ball and score as often as possible for the most amount of time,” Bielema said. “It’s a very unique situation, and something that we’re excited about.
“Obviously, because of the exposure that Oregon’s had over the last couple of years playing three straight BCS games, I’ve watched them quite a bit. It’s a tremendous challenge, obviously, fast-paced. The great thing about this bowl game matchup is it’s
kind of like the direct opposites of offensive philosophy.”
Bielema served as defensive coordinator under Alvarez before taking on head coach after the 2005 season. Bielema got his start in coaching in 1993 at his alma mater, Iowa. After nine years under Hayden Fry and Kirk Ferentz, he moved on to Kansas State, where he served as co-defensive coordinator under Bill Snyder.
Wisconsin’s success under Bielema cannot be understated. Only 41, Bielema has proven to be one of the game’s brightest young coaches.
The Badgers have been to bowl games each year in the Bielema era, but a win in a BCS game like the Rose Bowl would obviously take things up a notch.
And there would be no better way to do it than by beating a Pac-12 champion.
“I think for us to have a traditional Pac-10/Big Ten matchup and for both programs to be on the scale they are right now, for us to be in two back-to-back BCS games and Oregon being three speaks volumes about where the two programs are at in the world of college football, and the players too,” Bielema said. “You’ve got some of the premier players in the world of college football.” R
Story by ARAM TOlEGIAN
Bielema looks for breakthrough bowl win
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T
the game
The Rose Bowl Game has wiThsTood The TesT of Time.
For all the national championship-or-bust mentality of today’s college football world, the Granddaddy of Them All still stands above all but the Bowl Championship Series national title game on an annual basis.
In the era of the BCS, the Rose Bowl is still the crown jewel of college football.
Part of that is history and tradition. But another factor is intriguing matchups, and we have a pretty good one come Jan. 2.
The draw for the 98th Rose Bowl Game, which pits Pac-12 champion Oregon against Big Ten champ Wisconsin, is a contrast of styles.
In one aspect, the Ducks and Badgers are very similar. They both do it with offense, featuring two of the more productive scoring machines in the country, each putting up pinball-like numbers each week during the season.
But it’s their approach that’s different.On one side, you have coach Chip
Kelly’s Ducks, who are new wave, generation next. They beat you the modern way — with speed and athleticism, using an offensive scheme — the spread option — that exploits both traits to their fullest.
Oregon, since Kelly’s arrival at offensive coordinator in 2007 and then promotion to head coach in 2009, has lit up scoreboards up and down the West Coast, averaging nearly 45 points a game during the past
three seasons and scoring at least 40 points in 27 of 39 games.
This year, they feature speed demons LaMichael James at running back, Darron Thomas at quarterback and De’Anthony Thomas at receiver.
On the other side is Wisconsin, which is old school.
Coach Bret Bielema’s Badgers don’t try to fool you. They simply line up and try to run over you. Their offensive line averages more than 300 pounds per man. Hiding behind the behemoths is quick junior running back Montee Ball and athletic quarterback Russell Wilson, who can beat you with his arm or feet.
But while Wisconsin has a look of a traditional Big Ten team with that run-first mentality, these Badgers come at you at an alarming rate. They scored at least 40 points in nine of the 13 games this season, including hanging a nice 42 on Michigan State to win the inaugural Big Ten championship game.
Even long-time television broadcaster Keith Jackson, who covered the Rose Bowl for ABC Sports from 1989-2006 and is credited with giving the annual classic its beloved nickname Granddaddy of Them All, is impressed.
“I’ve characterized the quickness and speed of the Oregon team is like going rabbit hunting barefoot,” Jackson said. “I
don’t know if the Badgers can do that. But I will tell you one thing, they’ll give it a go. The history of that school is, ‘You got us this time, but we’ll get you the next time.’
“They’ll be there against Oregon. These are guys who are stronger than you are, more stubborn than you are and they don’t care how fast you can run. They think they can still (catch you). ‘Come on boys, let’s go play.’”
This matchup also might be classified as the Redemption Bowl. There’s no doubt that Oregon, which is 33-6 over the past three years, and Wisconsin, winners of 22 of its last 26, might also be two of the better teams to not win a BCS bowl.
The Ducks, despite all their success, have yet to win in January, losing the 96th Rose Bowl Game to Ohio State two years ago and the BCS title game to Auburn last season. Wisconsin lost 21-19 to Texas Christian in last year’s Arroyo Seco clash.
For me, all of this makes the 98th Rose Bowl a must-see.
It might even be the best matchup of the bowl season, which includes the Fiesta Bowl between No. 3 Oklahoma State and No. 4 Stanford (which I wouldn’t be surprised if it turned into a Cardinal rout), and the BCS title game between No. 1 LSU and No. 2 Alabama, which could be another 9-6 snoozer.
One thing is certain, the Rose Bowl, like last year, will likely be decided in the final minute, and points will be aplenty.
Could you ask for anything more? R
Rose Bowl still crown jewel of college football
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PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 115
iStory by Steve RamiRez
if you aSk the expeRtS, many believe lamichael JameS will play just one more football game for the University of Oregon — the 98th Rose Bowl Game in Pasadena.
But not even the junior, considered by some a possible first-round pick in the 2012 NFL Draft, knows the answer. He says he is too much in the now, looking only at Jan. 2 when the Ducks square off against Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl Game.
“I love the fans,” said James in response to their chant of “One more year, one more year” following Oregon’s 49-31 victory over UCLA in the Pac-12 championship game. “They support me through thick and thin. The most important thing to me is my teammates. Those guys are always supporting me.
“Just being with my teammates each and every day, I cherish that. I’m blessed to be a part of a team like this. That’s what I think about. I don’t think about one more year; I think about the next day.”
James, who could surpass Wisconsin’s Ron Dayne as college football’s career rushing leader, is arguably the most-prolific player in Oregon history. He has run for 4,923 yards and 52 touchdowns in three seasons, including 1,646 yards and 17 touchdowns this season for the Ducks (11-2).
He is the first Oregon player to be a consensus All-American, earning the honor in 2010, and only the second Duck to be named a repeat member of the AFCA All-America team. He won the Doak Walker Award, which goes to the top running back, in 2010 and was a finalist this season.
But for Oregon, James’ value goes behind numbers that can be obtained on the football field.
“He’s special,” Oregon coach Chip Kelly said. “I think you watch what he does in
the classroom, you watch what he does in the community, it’s not just a football thing with him.
“It’s the way he lives his life. It’s what I want our football team to be like and I think he epitomizes that. He’s this university. I think our president said once — and I really truly believe this — this university is about unique excellence. That’s what this young man is about. He’s about unique excellence.”
Part of that is James’ attitude, which this year was tested when he missed two games after injuring an elbow during the middle of the season.
Instead, it just made him work harder. But not so much for himself, but for his teammates.
“I want to be the best player I can, in all aspects of the game,” James said. “I don’t want to let myself or my teammates down in any way, so I stay determined to constantly push myself to the next level.
“My teammates help motivate me because they stay on top of me, push me, and encourage me to do better.”
James responded by giving his best efforts when it counted most. He had 143
yards and three touchdowns in a 53-30 victory over Stanford that gave the Ducks the leg up in the race for the Pac-12 North title. He had 142 yards and a score in the win over rival Oregon State that clinched the North title, then followed that up with 219 yards and three touchdowns in the victory over UCLA in the Pac-12 title game.
Now he hopes to add to those numbers in a Rose Bowl victory. Nothing could be bigger for the Ducks. Besides wanting to end their three-game BCS bowl game losing streak, a Rose Bowl win would be Oregon’s first since the Ducks beat Pennsylvania, 14-0, in 1917.
And if the 98th Rose Bowl is James’ last hurrah in college football, he said he believes he can look back and smile.
“It means a lot (to win three Pac-12 titles),” he said. “Reach for the sky. I think for us, it really starts at practice. Coach Kelly does an amazing job getting us going, getting the best out of us.
“We’re really young (this season). That’s not an excuse. If you come out here and work hard each and every day, the things that are happening right now will happen. It will all take care of itself.” R p
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oregon’s embodiment of ‘unique excellence’
LaMichaeL JaMesthe game: OregOn Ducks
116 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
MStory by ArAm TolegiAn
monTee BAll hAs cArved ouT A nice spoT on The lisT of outstanding running backs who have toted the ball for the Wisconsin Badgers.
That’s what scoring a Big Ten-record 38 touchdowns in a single season and being a Heisman Trophy finalist as a junior will do for you.
Ball, the nation’s leading rusher this season with 1,759 yards, has scored at least two touchdowns in each of his last 12 games. He can add to his legend by helping Wisconsin get a victory over Pac-12 champion Oregon in the 98th Rose Bowl Game on Jan. 2 in Pasadena.
Great running backs and Wisconsin go hand in hand. Some of the very best Badgers made their names in the Rose Bowl, like 1999 Heisman Trophy winner Ron Dayne, who led Wisconsin to Rose Bowl wins in ‘99 and 2000.
Ball almost had a Rose Bowl win of his own last season. The 5-foot-11, 210-pounder scored a late touchdown to pull the Badgers within 21-19 of TCU in last year’s game, but Wisconsin failed on the two-point conversion and lost the game. Still, Ball finished with 132 yards on 22 carries.
This year, Ball and the Wisconsin won’t be sneaking up on anybody. Oregon coach Chip Kelly said he knows exactly what his team is in for trying to stop Ball and Badgers quarterback Russell Wilson.
“If you want to gang up and stop their running game with Montee Ball, then they’re putting the ball in Russell’s hands and throwing to Nick Toon and those other guys,” Kelly said. “Usually when you’re playing a team, you’re hoping that they’re one-dimensional. It makes it easy for you. ... But a team that’s multi-dimensional like Wisconsin really presents the ultimate problem for you on the defensive side of the ball.”
Ball won’t have all the running back headlines to himself in this year’s matchup. Oregon’s LaMichael James, a Heisman finalist last year, also figures to garner plenty of attention and very well could upstage Ball.
“LaMichael James and all he brings to the table with Montee Ball, you have two of the premier running backs in the world of college football on the same field,” Wisconsin head coach Bret Bielema said. “It’s going to be a unique challenge and one that we’ll embrace the opportunity to prepare for it. When we get to Jan. 2nd, it will be very, very special.”
It hasn’t always been easy for Ball to find carries at Wisconsin. As a freshman, he was behind an All-American in John Clay.
Last year, Ball also shared time with James White. Ball was still able to lead the team in rushing in 2010 and with Clay out of the picture this season, there was no question about his role.
What truly separates great running backs from those who are merely good is that they get stronger as the game or season progresses. Ball has done exactly that, rushing for 906 yards in Wisconsin’s last five games — all Badger wins.
With the NFL likely to come calling in the offseason, the Rose Bowl may be Ball’s last chance to elevate himself in the conversations about all-time greats like Dayne. Given the way Ball has performed down the stretch, don’t put it past the Wentzville, Mo. resident to do just that. R
Wisconsin’s scoringmachine
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D“DAMN the eNtIre PACIfIC oCeAN!”
With those words University of Pittsburgh football coach Jock Sutherland angrily departed Pasadena on Jan. 2, 1930.
Sutherland’s previously unbeaten Pitt Panthers had lost the previous day, 47-14, to USC in the Rose Bowl. It wasn’t just losing, or losing big, that irked Sutherland. It was how it unfolded.
The Pitt football contingent arrived in Southern California in mid-December to begin preparations for the game. A victory over Howard Jones’ Trojans would vault the Panthers to No. 1 on most season-ending bowls, the ultimate finish in those days prior to the Bowl Championship Series.
Sutherland opted to give his players a day off prior to starting game preparations. For a fellow famous for telling his teams that “they must refuse to make a mistake” it was an ill-advised move.
One of Pitt’s starting linemen — and in those days players played on both offense and defense — decided to take a trip to the beach. And there he stayed, through the two weeks of practices, through the game, and through Pitt’s day of departure.
Southern California beaches retain much of their beauty, but you can only imagine how attractive they were in 1930. Especially if you had just come from cold, dark, gloomy Pittsburgh. To find a sunny, warm spot in the middle of winter — with the world’s largest heated pool only steps away — proved too much of a temptation for the lad, who never did return to the Steel City.
The next time Sutherland brought a team to Pasadena, in 1933, there were no trips anywhere except an occasional potty break, and even then those were rare occasions, always monitored by Sutherland’s assistants.
“Hold your tongue and your bladder!” Sutherland ordered his players while driving them through 12- to 14-hour practice sessions at a remote park in a tiny village called Anaheim.
No matter. Isolationism and strong bladders weren’t enough as the Panthers were once again thumped
by USC, 35-0.Sutherland Paranoia turned out to
be a common ailment among Eastern coaches bringing their teams to the Rose Bowl.
“Local teams have a touchdown advantage in the Rose Bowl,” claimed the late Michigan coach Bo Schembechler. “Their kids are used to these surroundings. Our kids from Ann Arbor are too starry-eyed to play good football.”
And he should have known, since his Wolverines lost eight of the 10 Rose Bowl games he coached.
Or, in the undying words of long-time U of M radio play-by-play guy Bob Ufer: “Damn! I can’t believe we’re going to lose another one of these (blankety-blank) games!”
Distractions abound in SoCal, and they aren’t limited to the great weather. Alabama lost Johnny Mack Brown, its star quarterback, back in 1926 when Johnny marched off to the Hollywood movie studios instead of trekking back to Tuscaloosa. A few years earlier, one of Harvard’s top players skipped the train trip back to Boston, for the simple reason he had met, fallen in love and married a Pasadena gal. All this in a matter of two weeks.
Coaches like Schembechler and Ohio State’s Woody Hayes fought a valiant but losing fight against the sirens of the Southland.
And, speaking of Anaheim, the advent of Disneyland didn’t help. On its traditional visit to that magical spot in 1972, Ohio State lost one of its top
defensive backs when he slipped exiting Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride and pulled a hammy.
OSU’s Hayes envisioned himself as the second coming of General Patton, but ironically never felt at ease in Patton’s hometown. Woody had a particular aversion to the L.A. press corps, who refused to preface their questions with “Sir.”
Things finally boiled over during the Buckeyes’ 42-17 Rose Bowl loss to USC in 1973, when Hayes slugged a L.A. Times photographer who forgot to say “please” before he said “cheese.”
The following season, USC coach John McKay decided to add to Hayes’ discomfort by sending him a large package of full-color travel brochures, describing each and every one of Southern California’s scenic wonders. Befitting both men’s competitive nature, the package was sent postage due.
That year, Hayes extracted revenge with a 42-21 beat-down of the Trojans. In the run-up to the game in post-game hubbub, Woody never once mentioned the brochures. Their whereabouts became clear after the game — when McKay found the package sitting on his car in the Rose Bowl parking lot, with a scrabbled note attached containing a novel but impractical suggestion for their use.
Fortunately for Pasadena sensibilities, Hayes saved his absolute worst behavior for non-Rose Bowl games, finally getting fired after punching an opposing player during the 1978 Gator Bowl.
With the advent of television, the Internet and a generally less provincial outlook on life, SoCal’s distractions have gradually played less and less a role in Rose Bowl outcomes.
But nature remains a potent force. The San Gabriel Mountains are beautiful this time of year. So are the deserts. And the beaches.
Beware Wisconsin. It’s tough to play football with your head in the clouds. R
beware Wisconsin, distractions abound in SoCal
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120 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
Story By Brenda Gazzar | Photo by WaLT ManCInI
Aa Three-year Makeover prICed aT $160 MILLIon is now underway at the 89-year-old Rose Bowl stadium.
The three-phase project, which started in January 2010, includes tripling the number of premium or high-end seats, which officials say should help pay for the improvements. It also includes doubling the number of concession areas, increasing the number of restrooms and widening up to 12 entry tunnels to help reduce the stadium’s exit time from about 30 minutes to 17.
The renovation will “preserve one of the most historic and important facilities in college football - actually in America,” while enhancing the experience for fans, said Bill Hancock, executive director of the Bowl Championship Series.
The video board on the north side has already been demolished and has been replaced by a state-of-the-art LED board more than double its size.
During the last UCLA football season, fans were able to experience the new south historic score board, four newly widened tunnels behind the south end Court of Champions and additional aisles at the south end.
Funding for the renovation is primarily coming from proceeds from bonds issued by the city, in addition to cash from the city, the Tournament of Roses and UCLA.
As part of the financing plan, UCLA has
agreed to play its home games at the Rose Bowl through 2042, while the TofR has agreed to stage the Rose Bowl Game there through at least 2043.
“We’re here to provide our support to make sure this bowl maintains the position as the most elite post-season collegiate football game in the world,” said Richard Jackson, president of the Tournament of Roses Association, at the groundbreaking ceremony on Jan. 10, 2010.
UCLA is one of the few universities across the country that does not have an on-campus football stadium.
“We don’t have an on-campus stadium to call our home, but we certainly do have a home,” UCLA Athletic Director Dan Guerrero said of the Rose Bowl.
Andrea Van de Kamp, director of the Rose Bowl Legacy Campaign, said the group has already raised $3 million dollars in private donations and aims to raise up to $22 million more to plug gaps in financing and for additional stadium enhancements.
The project, which was born with a $12 million gap, is now facing about a $20 million financing shortfall.
The stadium, home of the oldest and most renowned post-season college football bowl game, earned its coveted National Historic Landmark status in 1987, a distinction many in this proud city would be loathe to lose.
While the project team is trying to protect
as much of the original stone terracing and landscaping around the stadium’s perimeter, some of it will be lost to make way for the deepening and widening of the new press box, the name of the structure containing premium seating.
The terracing and plants “was part of (Bowl architect) Myron Hunt’s original concept to make the outside of this very simple structure look softer and a little more welcoming,” said Sue Mossman, executive director of Pasadena Heritage, the preservation group involved in the planning.
All plants that are removed during the project will be stored and either replanted or replaced with other plants.
The concourse fence also will be pushed out farther in some areas, creating more space there and making the fence more of an oval shape like the Rose Bowl itself.
The Rose Bowl field will resemble its original elliptical shape that it lost when low-tiered seats were added and the field’s corners were altered to accommodate World Cup soccer events.
“I think it’s a remarkable success,” Mossman said of the project’s effort to preserve the stadium. “We’re not grumbling at anything at this point. Although its sad to see some of these things go, it’s much more important to have a successful Bowl to create new life for the Rose Bowl for the next 88 years.” R
rose Bowl’s 3-year renovation under way
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PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 121
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The Bawdy ElectricGuests helped raise funds for Litfest Pasadena during “Singing for the Bawdy Electric” at Castle Green in Pasadena on Oct. 20. Top, from left: Mary Boldgett, Nancy Monk and Lainnie Capouya. Above left: Tom Coston, president of the Light Bringer Project, and author Denise Hamilton. Above right: Jervey Tervalon and Mariah Young.
Celebrating ChildrenHathaway-Sycamores honored Tim and Kathy MacDonald, top photo, and Parsons Corporation during the “Celebrating Children” awards reception on Sept. 22. With the MacDonalds is Erin Kuhlman. Above: Renee LaBran with Sonia Singla and her husband, Neil Singla, who hosted the celebration.
Pasadena to ParisThe annual benefit for the Pasadena Museum of History was held on Sept. 24. Top, from left: Rosey Bell, Pasadena Chief of Police Phillip L. Sanchez, and his wife, Deborah Sanchez, and Lena Kennedy. Above, from left, honorees Jane and Dan Armel and Sally and Stephen Mann.
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A Noise WithinA Noise Within’s Inaugural Opening Night Gala in Pasadena on Oct. 29. Above, from left: David DiCristofaro and John and Andrea Van de Kamp. Below, from left: John Rabe and Pasadena Mayor Bill Bogaard; Geoff Elliott and Julia Rodriguez-Elliott.
Celebrating ChildrenJulie Pernecky and her parents Sally and Bob Pernecky, top, were honored during Pasadena’s Ronald McDonald House’s annual SHINE gala fundraiser at the Langham Huntington Hotel in Pasadena on Nov. 5. Above, from left: Jeff Arnett, Alison and Harlan Thompson, and Hilary Crahan.
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PARADE 2012 | ROSE | 127
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128 | ROSE | PARADE 2012
AAT leAsT The self-sTyled sTArs haven’t gone above the title of the feature.
It’s the Rose Parade Presented by (name of car manufacturer), and not vice-versa.
It’s the Rose Bowl Game Presented by (name of some corporation in ALL CAPS, though I don’t even know what said corporation sells or makes, and I’m not going to Google it).
Because, like the services provided by Google, the grand Pasadena Tournament of Roses is, as Steely Dan sings of a Sunday in TJ: “cheap — but it’s not free.”
Somebody is paying for those millions of Ecuadorean roses that you can stand on the curbside, gratis, and try to catch a whiff of aroma from.
If you’re sitting comfortably in the grandstands for the parade, you’re paying. Be glad — or, as a hopeless homer about things Pasadena, let me be glad — that it’s mostly local folks who build the bleachers and sell the tickets, so those dollars stay right here.
Otherwise, like a day spent tiptoeing through the tulips, so many of the ever-bigger series of events making up the TofR can indeed be had without cost. Or, if you’re at the football game, at much less cost and with much more fun than at an NFL whoop-dee-do.
Realizing that, the sharp business minds making up so much of the Tournament of Roses volunteer leadership have turned to some of the nation’s best marketing experts to lead the association’s tiny paid staff.
The free market will pay plenty, even in this economy, to be associated with such a perfect brand. Perhaps knowing that they never will be allowed to get their names first, a la the (name of processed corn chip) Fiesta Bowl, makes the sponsorship even more attractive.
The last big cheese the Tournament hired to head up its paid sponsorship efforts was a whiz in the corporate, media and sports worlds. He knew everyone. He’d had
titles as fancy as the decision-makers at the big international
businesses that pay to be associated with the Tournament.
Landed some big accounts. Didn’t work out in the end.
Had the shortest tenure I know of for any TofR CEO.
It’s tough out there, and up there. Tough to get the suits
to pay for those petals and pigskins.
Plus fans don’t want to see a game in our old Rose
Bowl, they say, so we Pasadenans are forking out $160
million for that major renovation project you’ve noticed if
you’ve been down in the Arroyo Seco.
Back when William Leishman thought up the joint and
got it built, in the ‘20s, the whole shooting match cost a
quarter-million dollars.
But the luxury boxes we built just 20 years ago aren’t
luxurious enough for the corporate executives from (names
of large multi-nationals) who can pay the piper. And,
actually, they aren’t luxurious enough for anyone. Built with
fewer amenities than a HoJo in Lubbock.
You might have noticed that this place Where Happy
New Years Begin messed up.
We’re celebrating the calendar turning to 2012 on the
wrong day. And just when it was perfect for we working
stiffs from the 99 percent who like the fact that Jan. 1 falls
on a Sunday, so that our paid holiday is Monday, which
would have made for a nice sleep-in after all the festivities,
with the TofR cushioned right in the middle of a big
weekend.
Would have been swell. Not to be. Happens every
seven years in this town. It’s a church thing. Hard to get
parishioners into the pews when there’s a big parade and a
great football game.
The corporate names and their bucks might make you
think Pasadena has changed a lot in the 122 years of these
festivities. And that is where you’d be wrong. R
Larry Wilson is public editor of the Pasadena Star-News and the San Gabriel Valley Newspapers.
how we pay for all our funBy lArry WIlsON
INSI
DE
R
PasadenaAutomobile Dealers
Association
Pasadena Automobile Dealers Who Support The City of Pasadena
TOYOTA & SCION PASADENA
3600 E. Colorado Blvd.
626.795.9787www.ToyotaPasadena.com
THORSON MOTOR CENTER BUICK GMC TRUCK
3456 E. Colorado Blvd.
626.795.8851www.ThorsonMotorCenter.com
VOLKSWAGEN PASADENA
130 N. Sierra Madre Blvd.
866.626.3402www.VWPasadena.com
RUSNAK VOLVO
2025 E. Colorado Blvd.
626.577.6661www.RusnakOnline.com
626.405.0900
SYMES CADILLAC & SAAB3475 E. Colorado Blvd.
626.795.3381www.SymesPasadena.com
LAND ROVER PASADENA
3485 E. Colorado Blvd.
626.795.2995www.LandRoverPasadena.com
HONDA OF PASADENA1965 E. Foothill Blvd.
626.683.5888www.HondaOfPasadena.com
RUSNAK Audi • Bentley • Rolls Royce • PoRsche • JAguAR
267-337 W. Colorado Blvd.
626.229.2718www.RusnakOnline.com
ENTERPRISE RENT-A-CAR1890 East Colorado Blvd. • www.enterprise.com
VALLEY VISTA SERVICESWaste Disposal and Recycling Division
17445 E. Railroad St., City of Industry 91748800-442-6454 • www.valleyvistaservices.com
Serving the communities of Bassett, Hacienda Heights, South San Jose Hills and Valinda.
The winter months are approaching and the weather is cooling so it is the time to cut back on watering your lawn and outdoor plants. Cooler temperatures and shorter daylight hours contribute to lower water needs. Turf grasses also go dormant during winter to prepare for the springtime growing season.
Watering too much is the cause of many common plant problems. During the colder, damper winter months it may even be time to stop watering your lawn all together for a while. A good rain may even eliminate the need for watering for as long as two weeks.
Overwatering literally drowns plants, rotting the roots and inhibiting nutrient absorption. You can check how well your soil retains moisture by digging into the root zone with a garden trowel. If the soil feels moist there is no need to water. Wait a day or two and check the soil again.
Water runoff is water that spills over onto your curbs, driveway and other areas you did not intend to water and it does not help your lawn or plants! Stop watering whenever runoff occurs, especially on slopes or on compacted, dry soils. Consider watering on timed cycles, a few minutes of water followed by a break and then another few minutes of watering, to allow moisture to soak into the ground. Avoid watering when it is windy to reduce evaporative loss and to prevent water being blown onto hardscaped areas such as sidewalks and driveways that don’t need water. You can have healthier plants, save money on water bills, and conserve precious water by learning to give your lawn and garden the right amount of water and no more. Figuring out how much water your lawn and garden really need during anytime of the year is easy with the Watering Index and Calculator found athttp://www.bewaterwise.com/calculator.html
Wintertime Means Less Watering
USGVMWD ROSE 2012.indd 1 12/12/11 10:40:09 AM
Fairy tales can come true!Macy’s congratulates the new Queen and her Royal Court on their crowning moment.
As the proud offi cial sponsor for the 2012 Royal Court, Macy’s invites you to celebrate with us and receive a special gift card* ® Department at our
Pasadena on Lake Avenue and Paseo Colorado locations.
Stephanie HynesCynthia Louie
Morgan DevaudKimberly Ostiller
Sarah ZunoHanan Worku
Rose PrincessRose PrincessRose PrincessRose PrincessRose PrincessRose Princess
The 2012 Rose Queen®, Drew Washington, and her Royal Court
Stephanie Hynes Rose Princess(from left to right)
Events subject to cancellation. *Must bring ad with you to Macy’s Pasadena on Lake Avenue and Macy’s Paseo Colorado to receive gift card. One per customer, while supplies last.