Warming Up for the Parade in Pasadena
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Pulling wool blankets and heavy overcoats around themselves, thousands of people undaunted by near-freezing temperatures camped out on the Rose Parade route overnight in a New Year’s street party that won’t end until the last float passes by today.
“What cold weather? It’s great,” Lois Hannig insisted on the eve of her 10th floral spectacular. “I love it. It’s one big, old block party. Everyone gives everybody a great big old hug, even people you don’t know.”
Her battery-operated TV still blaring strong and her navy-blue parka tightly fastened, the 58-year-old grandmother from Pasadena guarded her space on Colorado Boulevard across from the Norton Simon Museum--the spot her family has staked out every year. “We’ve got squatter’s rights,” boasted Hannig, who has been on Rose Parade sentry duty with friends since Monday.
They were among the throngs staking out choice Pasadena curb sides for a close-up view of the 99th Tournament of Roses Parade. The 60 floats, 22 marching bands and dozens of equestrian groups are expected to start moving along the 5 1/2-mile route from Orange Grove to Colorado Boulevard and on to Sierra Madre Boulevard at 8:20 a.m.
The weather forecast called for high clouds and low temperatures in the 30s today, rising in the late afternoon to about 60 degrees.
Picnic coolers, sacks of food and sleeping bags dotted stretches of Orange Grove and Colorado boulevards late Wednesday and Thursday as hard-core parade fans caught up on reading, listened to radios, watched portable TVs and consumed gallons of hot chocolate to temper the chill.
“I’ve done camping before and slept on the ground, but never on cement,” said Chris Gonzalez, a student at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena who has spent two nights on Colorado Boulevard to save sidewalk space for 12 friends. “Boy, it was cold out here. It’s an adventure. Everyone should experience it at least once in their life.”
Holding the Line
Near the intersection of Orange Grove and Colorado boulevards, where the floats make their first turn, Homer Boulin, a 43-year-old construction worker from Altadena, watched over a spot he was trying to hold for 150 of his friends and relatives. While such tactics are officially frowned upon, Boulin had used masking tape to mark off about 75 feet of curb side. He was doing it, he said early Thursday morning, “For the stupidity, for the craziness of it all.”
At the intersection, TV crews were frantically setting up cameras and lights. The parade will be televised by satellite to an estimated 350 million people around the world.
But San Bernardino resident Jose Brea, who also spent the night across from the Norton Simon Museum, prefers to view the procession from where “you can smell the flowers and feel the bands.”
“I stayed home to watch it on TV five or six years ago, and I never felt more miserable,” he said. “It was like looking through a peephole.”
Special Day
Lounging against a fence on Orange Grove Boulevard and munching on a take-out breakfast, Rose Harrera, who runs a Pasadena preschool, said the parade holds a special significance for her. Her daughter, Regina Noel, was born on Christmas Day 21 years ago. “We’ve brought her to the parade every year of her life,” Harrera said proudly. “It’s like a tradition.”
Yet another small tradition has flowered in Harrera’s years as a Rose Parade fan. Each New Year’s Eve for the last seven years a Pasadena attorney who once asked Harrera for room in her viewing area has left a case of champagne at the corner of Maylin Avenue. The attorney and his daughter will join the Harreras again this morning for the parade.
Over on Colorado Boulevard near Marengo Avenue, Joan Machin of Escondido and her sister, Pat Ludes, of Great Bend, Kan., were looking forward to sipping champagne at midnight. “I told my sister and my sister-in-law that you’ve got to see the Rose Parade once before you die,” Machin said.
“And now, we are going to die,” Ludes joked in the chill.
Mother Stayed Home
“Our 92-year-old mother will be watching from Kansas and she is going to be looking for us on TV,” said Machin. “She was going to come, but she had a cold.”
Ludes, Merk Ryan, of Salina, Kan., and their husbands drove for 2 1/2 days to get here in time for the parade. “It was snowing all the way,” Ludes said.
This morning, Pasadena police estimate that as many as 1 million spectators will view the parade and the Rose Bowl football game that follows. And like last year--when there were no major incidents except for several hundred arrests, most for public drunkenness--police expect little trouble.
“It was a very, very nice parade last year,” said Pasadena Police Lt. Lynn Froistad. “As cold as it is, we would expect a much more subdued crowd than last year’s.”
A Few Arrests
By 9 p.m. Thursday, 31 people in the parade area had been arrested for public intoxication and two for narcotics violations, according to Pasadena police officials.
Public drinking will not be tolerated, said Froistad.
“We find that people who drink too much create a lot of problems for everybody else,” Froistad said, “and we will make a concerted effort to take them off the route as early as we can.”
Anyone with questions about the parade can call a special hot line at (818) 795-9311 until noon Friday.
ROSE PARADE BUS SERVICE
Special RTD service to the Rose Parade will run as follows:
- Lines 180 and 181 from Hollywood, Los Feliz, Atwater, Glendale and Eagle Rock will begin expanded service about 4 a.m., with runs every few minutes after 5:30 a.m.
- Line 260 from Long Beach up Atlantic Boulevard will begin service at 4:49 a.m., with runs every 20 minutes or less, until 7:23 a.m.
- Line 267 will run from the El Monte station in the San Gabriel Valley every half-hour from 5:30 a.m., through Temple City and Arcadia. The Foothill Boulevard route, Line 187 from Pomona, will begin service every 10 minutes at 6 a.m.
- Line 420 will begin at the Panorama Shopping Center in the San Fernando Valley, running along Van Nuys Boulevard toward downtown, then heading onto the Pasadena Freeway for an express leg of the trip. Runs every 20 to 30 minutes begin at 5 a.m.
- Line 401 from downtown will leave Venice Boulevard and Olive Street in downtown Los Angeles every 40 minutes with express service on the Pasadena Freeway.
- Line 483 from downtown will run along Olive Street, including City Hall, through Alhambra and South Pasadena. It begins service at 2:55 a.m., running continuously after 5 a.m.
- Line 485 from downtown, which takes viewers to the midway point of the parade route on Lake Street in Pasadena, begins service from Olive Street at 6:05 a.m.
- Late risers can still see the parade by taking Line 487 from downtown beginning at 7:15 a.m. It will drop riders off near the end of the parade route, where the floats will not arrive until about 10 a.m.
The RTD urged bus riders to bring plenty of change, because regular fares will not apply to some routes:
- Lines 420 and 424 from the San Fernando Valley will cost $3 each way, with passes not accepted.
- Lines 483 and 485 from downtown will cost $1.20 each way, and passes will be accepted.
- Line 401 express from downtown will cost $1.55 each way.
For the big game later in the day, a special Line 483 bus, labeled Rose Bowl, will also be running from numerous points along Olive Street downtown, with direct service to the Rose Bowl for $3.50 each way, beginning at 9:49 a.m. and running every four to eight minutes until 12:43 p.m.
ROSE PARADE ORDER OF MARCH
1. American Guild of English Handbell Ringers
2. “A Picture’s Worth a Thousand Words,”Eastman Kodak Co.
3. Long Beach Mounted Police
4. “Tell Me a Story,” City of Torrance
5. U.S. Marine Corps Band
6. “Greetings Earthlings,” American Honda Co.
7. Gregory Peck, Grand Marshal
8. “Spring Training,” Security Pacific National Bank
9. Choctawhatchee High School Band
10. “Good Morning,” International House of Pancakes
11. American Bashkir Curley
12. “Pep Rally . . . Teamwork is the Message,” Transamerica
13. “Presenting the Royal Court,” Pasadena Tournament of Roses
14. Pasadena Area Community College District Band
15. “Air Mail,” South Pasadena
16. Arabian Group
17. “Sophisticated Rhythm,” First Interstate
18. Western Group
19. “Just Say Please,” Portland Rose Festival
20. Harriman L. Cronk, Tournament President
21. Pella Community High School Band
22. “School Days,” Kiwanis
23. “Follow the Leader,” Baskin-Robbins
24. Montie Montana
25. “Rhythm of the Caribbean,” Puerto Rico
26. John C. Crowley, Mayor of Pasadena
27. “It’s a Small World,” Bank of America
28. Pacific-10 Conference
29. USC Band
30. “Backyard Engineer,” Dr Pepper
31. Al Malaikah Temple Silver Mounted
32. “Let Us Entertain You,” Elks
33. White Horse Group
34. “Voices of Freedom,” Rand McNally
35. Valley Hunt Club
36. “Sent With Love,” F.T.D.
37. Oak Grove High School Band
38. “Mysterious Alien Creatures,” Golden State Foods
39. George Putnam
40. “Sharing the Joy of the Holidays,” City of San Bernardino
41. Big Ten Conference
42. Michigan State Band
43. “Fantasy on Film,” City of Culver City
44. Medieval Times
45. “Cultural Exchange,” Malaysia
46. Stuart Hamblen Family
47. “Party Time,” Lawry’s
48. Jefferson City Senior High School Band
49. “Say It With Roses,” Farmers Insurance
50. Fetterman & Tanner
51. “Hello, Hello!” Downey Rose Float Assn.
52. Overland High School Band
53. “Poseidon,” City of Carson
54. Santa Barbara County Silver Mounted Sheriffs
55. “The Ten Commandments,” Lutheran Laymen’s League
56. Blackstone-Millville High School Band
57. “It’s For You!” Fansteel
58. Indian Group
59. “Keeping In Touch,” Sierra Madre
60. Toms River (N.J.) High School South Band
61. “Full Speed Ahead,” City of Long Beach
62. Edward Bohlin Group
63. “Kabuki: Communication Through the Arts,” Unocal
64. “A Charles Dickens’ Christmas,” City of St. Louis
65. O’Fallon Township High School Band
66. “Building for the Future,” Huntington Sheraton
67. B Troop, Ft. Huachuca
68. “Look Whoo’s Talking,” Rotary
69. All-Ohio State Fair Youth Choir
70. “Call 911,” Alhambra
71. International Andalusian Group
72. “So Far and Yet So Near,” China Airlines
73. American Morgan Horse Assn.
74. “The Language of Laughter,” Pacific Financial
75. International Side-Saddle Assn.
76. “Communication Through the Arts,” City of Santa Ana
77. Northrop High School Band
78. “Scary Tales,” ARCO
79. American Saddlebreds
80. “You Can Always Call Home,” GTE
81. Martinez Family
82. “Proclaiming a New World,” Odd Fellows & Rebekahs
83. Lassiter High School Band
84. “British Columbia Is Calling,” British Columbia
85. National Exchange Club
86. “Be Mine,” BC & T
87. Castle High School Band
88. “Images of Hope,” American Red Cross
89. Galloping Gossips
90. “We’ve Got the Climate for Business,”City of Los Angeles
91. Tulare Union High School Band
92. “Singapore, Where the World Comes Together,” Singapore Airlines
93. Los Angeles Equestrian Center
94. “To Your Health,” Duarte/City of Hope
95. The Salvation Army Band
96. “Gift of Gab,” Carnation
97. American Miniature Horse Unit
98. “Message in a Bottle,” Oceanside
99. Vallejo High School Band
100. “The Constitution: 200 Years of Communicating Liberty,” CaliforniaBicentennial Foundation
101. Freddie Lee Mill Arabian Group
102. “Smiling Faces Going Places,” Good Sam Club
103. Mt. Carmel High School Band
104. “The World Is Not Flat,” CasaBlanca Fan
105. Palos Verdes Peninsula Peruvian Paso Club
106. Lovely Hula Hams, La Canada Flintridge
107. “Welcome to the Games of the XXIV Olympiad,” Korean-American Community
108. American Donkey & Mule
109. “Imagine That,” Cal Poly
110. Miller/Werner Arabian Group
111. “Messenger of Peace,” Glendale
112. Los Angeles All-City Band
113. “Beam Me Up, Scotty,” Arcadia Tournament of Roses
114. “The First Hello,” Burbank Tournament of Roses
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