Mind game.Pool Rules, a showcase of artistic concerns regarding the riding of pools, debuted recently at Hurley in Costa Mesa Costa Mesa (kŏs`tə mā`sə), city (1990 pop. 96,357), Orange co., S Calif., on the Pacific south of Santa Ana; inc. 1953. It is a transportation, residential, and light industrial center. . The overly overflow crowd reveled in art and pool arcane by such verticalists as Pat Ngoho Pat Ngoho (pronounced [noh-hoh]) is a living California artist who came of age in an area of West Los Angeles known as Dogtown. As a youth, Ngoho rode his skateboard and associated with the notorious Z-Boy gang. , Skip Engblom Skip Engblom was one of the co-founders of the Jeff Ho/Zephyr Surf Shop in Santa Monica, California. Engblom helped to create the Zephyr Surf Team and the Zephyr Competition Team, aka Zephyr Skate Team aka Z-Boys. , Desiree Astorga, Gary Owens Gary Owens (born Gary Altman on May 10, 1936) is a disc jockey and voice actor born in Mitchell, South Dakota. His polished baritone speaking voice generally offers deadpan recitations of total nonsense, which he frequently demonstrated as the announcer on , Grant Fukuda, Hosoi, Brannon, Olson, Arab, Chicken, Hackett, Charnoski, Bellmar, PK, BK, Henderson, Alva, Chicken, and many others. Fellow participants Steve Alba, Duane Peters, Mofo and Spidey all played and sang collaboratively, fronting the aptly-named Powerflex Five. Bob Hurley appeared pleased to have generated this mayhem and hinted of future installments, perhaps occurring in places like San Diego, San Francisco, and Australia. Dennis Telfer had once achieved infamy Notoriety; condition of being known as possessing a shameful or disgraceful reputation; loss of character or good reputation. At Common Law, infamy was an individual's legal status that resulted from having been convicted of a particularly reprehensible crime, rendering him by building skateboards that allegedly appeared to have utilized cannabis leaves in their construction. Having learned those lessons well, Dennis went on to greatness over at Sector 9. And Joel Tudor, who once rode for Think for over 10 years during which he "couldn't decide what kind of board he wanted," has apparently finally made up his mind. The result of all this greatness is said to be a Tudor 9 model with a rolling tray recessed into the bottom. Will retailers embrace this malefactory? And has Tudor also now embraced the Marley cross of martyrdom? |
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