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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 13:33
by kikibalt
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diego,

My son James (you met him) in his float tube, fishing Convict Lake.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 13:35
by Expug
Looks beautiful Frank.
What were you guys catching?
What type of fish?

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 13:52
by kikibalt
Expug wrote:Looks beautiful Frank.
What were you guys catching?
What type of fish?
Pug,

Trout, thats all you're going fine in those lakes (Eastern High Sierra's)
The water is to cold for any other fish to survive, they're good eating!

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 15:37
by dagosd2000
kikibalt wrote:Image

diego,

My son James (you met him) in his float tube, fishing Convict Lake.

Pug and Frank
Maybe one day we'll go on a fishing trip to Convict Lake and get lost and never come back. Or at least not look that hard to find our way back to civilization.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 16:09
by kikibalt
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Tom's Place, just south of Convict Lake

I shot this picture last year on opening day of the trout season

Big Rico and James

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 16:14
by kikibalt
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Opening day, April, 2007

I caught these trouts at June Lake, north of Convict lake.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 16:18
by kikibalt
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June Lake...April, 2007

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 17:09
by kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 17:10
by kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 18:33
by kikibalt
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Jimmy Carter vs Wallace "Bud" Smith
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 18:37
by kikibalt
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Pascual Perez vs Yoshio Shirai

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 18:41
by kikibalt
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Randy Turpin vs Gordan Wallace

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 18:48
by kikibalt
dagosd2000 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image

diego,

My son James (you met him) in his float tube, fishing Convict Lake.

Pug and Frank
Maybe one day we'll go on a fishing trip to Convict Lake and get lost and never come back. Or at least not look that hard to find our way back to civilization.

diego

Let me tell you, once you been there, you don't want to come home, I been going there since 1959 and I have only miss one year not going up at least once, and that was 2006 when I came down with cancer. lets do it!!

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 19:03
by kikibalt
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Packey Mcfarland & Joe Tipman
Circa..1908

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 19:13
by kikibalt
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Yours truly, James, Mike and Pops, having breakfast in Lone Pine Ca.
It was Sunday morning on our drive back to the big city.
Pops is Mike's dad.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 19:48
by Expug
kikibalt wrote:Image
Yours truly, James, Mike and Pops, having breakfast in Lone Pine Ca.
It was Sunday morning on our drive back to the big city.
Pops is Mike's dad.
Frank, if Dagos and I go fishing with you, can we bring along that guy in the background with the cowboy hat on?
Hes one of my favorites.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 19:57
by kikibalt
Expug wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image
Yours truly, James, Mike and Pops, having breakfast in Lone Pine Ca.
It was Sunday morning on our drive back to the big city.
Pops is Mike's dad.
Frank, if Dagos and I go fishing with you, can we bring along that guy in the background with the cowboy hat on?
Hes one of my favorites.
The Duke? yeah, if you can wake him up... :wink:... :P

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 19:59
by Expug
kikibalt wrote:
Expug wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image
Yours truly, James, Mike and Pops, having breakfast in Lone Pine Ca.
It was Sunday morning on our drive back to the big city.
Pops is Mike's dad.
Frank, if Dagos and I go fishing with you, can we bring along that guy in the background with the cowboy hat on?
Hes one of my favorites.
The Duke? yeah, if you can wake him up... :wink:... :P
:lol: :lol:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 20:48
by kikibalt
Jiquilpan. Land of El Gato,my wife Maria,and now Dagos. The last picture is of our home and my car. Que Bonita Es Mi Tierra!

Photos courtesy of diego


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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 21:08
by kikibalt
diego,

How many hours does it take to drive to your home in Mexico?

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 May 2008, 21:45
by dagosd2000
kikibalt wrote:diego,

How many hours does it take to drive to your home in Mexico?
From San Diego by car,probably a 48 hours. Jiquilpan is near Lake Chapala. 2 and one half hours southwest of Guadalajara.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 May 2008, 08:18
by kikibalt
Photos by diego
Paderones,Michoacan Where my wife was born on the mountain top overlooking Jiquilpan(pop.20)
The plaza in Jiquilpan.
My grandson in front of the cathouse on the edge of town.

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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 May 2008, 08:30
by kikibalt
Lola Montes, 90; influential head of Spanish dance company
By Chris Pasles, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
May 21, 2008

Lola Montes, one of the country's most renowned Spanish dancers and a frequent Southland performer over a career of more than 70 years, has died. She was 90.

Montes died at her home in Laguna Woods on Friday of complications from pneumonia, Oscar Nieto, a lead dancer with her company, said.

In 1955, Montes started her own company, the Los Angeles-based Lola Montes and Her Spanish Dancers. The troupe signed with Columbia Artists Management Inc. and toured the country for 22 years on the community concerts circuit. The company also appeared in Los Angeles and Orange County schools for more than 15 years under a cultural awareness program.

In 1974, the Lola Montes Foundation for Dances of Spain and the Americas was established, dedicated to preserving the cultural heritage of Hispanic dance and music.

"Twenty years ago, we only had to worry about getting an itinerary together," Montes told The Times in 1988. "Now, it's a whole new situation. It isn't just the dance steps. You need a certain amount of intelligence. There are grant proposals and filing fees to worry about. You either do it or you hang up your castanets."

During her influential career, Montes was the first American to work with the legendary Gypsy flamenco dancer Carmen Amaya.

"I was so green in the beginning," Montes told The Times. "I wasn't a Gypsy, so I just sat in the corner and had nothing to say. But Carmen was magic. Whenever she performed, I was always in the wings, learning and picking things up, sort of through osmosis. I was always very bright, and I was always the best in the class."

Still, she never considered herself a flamenco dancer, according to Nieto.

"She was a Spanish dancer and always modeled her style of dance on the originators of what we know now as Spanish dance -- Pilar Lopez and her sister, La Argentinita," said Nieto, who joined Montes' company in 1971.

"Flamenco is associated with the Gypsy, fiery form of dance, which Carmen Amaya really brought to the fore. Montes was associated more with the neoclassical Spanish school of dance, which was more refined. She also did regional, folk dances, classical and neoclassical dances -- in fact, the whole spectrum of Spanish and in some cases Hispanic dance."

Montes was born Feb. 5, 1918, in New York City as Gertrude Tashma. As a minor, with her father's assistance, she changed her name to Chita Tashma. She trained at the ballet school associated with the Metropolitan Opera and started Spanish dance lessons with Madame Viola, who also taught the renowned dancer Jose Greco.

Montes began dancing professionally when she was 15 after answering a call for a Spanish dancer at a Greenwich Village nightclub.

She later joined Carmen Amaya's Spanish dance company, made up mostly of Spanish Gypsies, and changed her professional name to Lola Montes. Her first husband and dance partner was troupe member Antonio Triana, one of the innovators of Spanish dance of the 20th century.

Amaya's company toured the country and in the 1940s brought the couple to California, where they stayed.

"I just fell in love with the state," Montes told the Modesto Bee in 1990. "I had opportunities here. Thank God I stayed."

She and her husband also appeared in such '40s Hollywood films as "The Gay SeƱorita," "The Lady and the Monster" and "The Bridge of San Luis Rey."

The couple divorced in the early 1950s. Several years later, Montes married Luis Eguizabal, a titled Spanish emigre who had left Spain during that country's civil war. He died in 1980.

Montes was a member of the National Endowment for the Arts and the California Arts Council, served on the Olympics organizing committee for Hispanic dance and was president of the Los Angeles Area Dance Alliance in 1985.

During her career, she received numerous professional and civic awards and mentored many young local dancers.

She gave her last performance in 2000 in a show for schoolchildren.

"Age is irrelevant," she had told the Modesto Bee a decade earlier. "I still perform with the company. Sometimes I have more energy than the younger people, but then I'm a very motivated person."

A documentary on her life and career is in production, according to Nieto.

Montes had no children. She is survived by nieces and nephews who live throughout the United States.

A public memorial will be announced.

[email protected]

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 May 2008, 09:41
by kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 May 2008, 09:44
by kikibalt
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