Thanks for letting All-stars shine As...
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Thanks for letting All-stars shine
As a father of a son on the AAA All Stars, a AAA manager and
member of the Board of Directors for Laguna Beach Little League, I
wanted to thank you for your coverage of both All-star teams.
Your wonderful coverage will go along way to help us build the
baseball program in town for our kids.
MICHAEL MAXSENTI
Laguna Beach
Little Leaguers should all be considered stars
Your front page spread of the 2002 Laguna Beach Little League
Dream Team was probably as annoying a front page as I’ve ever seen.
While acknowledging those 13 youngsters are no doubt fine players,
the elevating of these kids above the rest of the players in Laguna
takes away from what the heart of Little League should be about.
First of all, there are no doubt a dozen other kids talent wise
who for various reasons are not included.
The selection process is arbitrary at best with favoritism often
playing in.
I know. I coached youth baseball in Laguna for 10 years and
selecting the best of the best is always an exercise of conflicting
opinions.
Let me give you my All-Stars. They are the kids who patiently sat
on the bench while the better players played the entire game. They
are the kids who never missed practice, no matter how much they
played. They are the kids who helped the coach bag the equipment
after games. They are the kids who love baseball no matter what their
talent level was.
When I coached, there was a sign on the outfield wall of Riddle
Field that read: “Remember, They Are Just Kids.” I suggest the
Coastline Pilot remember that important motto also.
JAY GRANT
Laguna Beach Little League
Coach 1985-1995
Laguna Beach
Thank you veterans for your service
Lagunans Earl Brown, Vern Spitaleri and Ben Blount were honored
Thursday, July 18 for their part in the liberation of France during
World War II.
They were joined by 72 other veterans of the greater Los Angeles
area who received certificates, plaques and tribute at ceremonies
held at the Petersen Museum in Los Angeles.
The event was sponsored by the French government and private
French citizens to express their appreciation for the USA’s role in
bringing freedom back to France in 1944.
All three served in the Normandy campaign. Brown with the Army’s
First Infantry Division, Spitaleri with Naval Amphibious Forces
(Landing Craft Infantry) and Blount with the Army’s First Amphibious
Special Brigade.
This was the first of many “Thank You America” programs in cities
across the USA ending in New York. Brown, Spitaleri and Blount are
members of Laguna’s Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5868.
BEN BLOUNT
Laguna Beach
Village Entrance project of no importance
The entrance project (“Village entrance concept chosen” Coastline
Pilot, July 19) should not even be on a list let alone on the top of
a list.
As far as I’m concerned this project is of zero importance. Laguna
has its own charm and does not need an entrance project.
The money would be better used re-landscaping weak areas of
Heisler Park or other city parks. The money should only be spent on
improving the quality of life for the residents of Laguna, not for
someone’s ego trip idea of an entrance project.
RICHARD SILVER
Laguna Beach
Call for caution ignored by city
On June 28 this paper published my letter headlined “Time to Keep
Pedestrians Safer.”
It asked the city to put up a sign “Watch out for traffic behind
you!” at the intersection of Broadway, Acacia Street and Cliff Drive.
Do you think any city official would have called and said, “Gus,
thanks for alerting us to this problem?”
I invite our city officials to watch Festival visitors crossing
this intersection while walking down Broadway without being aware of
cars racing up Cliff Drive behind them.
How much would it cost to put up such a sign and stripe the
crossing?
Far less than litigation at taxpayers’ expense (as in the case of
the pedestrian killed at Cliff Drive and Rosa Bonheur) -- when my
letter will be put in evidence by lawyers that the city was
forewarned and negligent.
GUS MATHIEU
Laguna Beach
Thanks for attending to signal glitch
After a long, long wait, Caltrans installed new traffic signal
lights on Broadway at Beach. LANO was appreciative, as this was to
have been a much-needed improvement.
In the past, there was the hazard of driving or walking down the
hill on Beach and not knowing whether or not it was safe to enter
Broadway where oncoming traffic would either stop, slow down or keep
coming and cause more accidents and near misses. Soon after the
lights were activated a new problem appeared: bumper-to-bumper
traffic jams on lower Beach. We knew that traffic volume in all areas
of Laguna was unusually heavy this summer, but could the new signal
be a factor?
A little study and analysis suggested that the timing of the
signals may have been a cause. At the city’s request, Caltrans
returned to the site on July 9 and adjusted the timing of the signal
lights. As a result we find that traffic flow is much improved and
the blockage on Beach has been much reduced.
Heavy traffic continues especially Downtown and on Broadway and
Coast Highway, but Beach is now just another well-traveled street and
not the catastrophe it was. We are grateful to our city and to
Caltrans for supporting and achieving the improvements on Broadway at
Beach and for quickly coming to the rescue when the flow stopped and
some fine-tuning was necessary.
DON KNAPP
Laguna Beach
A husband’s thanks for gift of life
Two and a half years ago my wife, Marcia, donated a kidney to me.
Many times, each and every day, I am awed by the realization that one
of Marcia’s organs literally keeps me going, not to mention the
magnitude and clarity of her present to me. Nice way to appreciate
each day of your life a little bit more, huh?
You hear people say that a disease or ailment was, “the best thing
that ever happened to me.” I can only agree with that quote when it
is preceded by “living through this disease and now feeling great was
... “ When friends ask me how I feel, my response is “grateful.”
I don’t know whether it is the second chance or that I literally
received parts of Marcia, but it does seem that I listen better, am
more compassionate and thoughtful (at least I think so).
At no time has marching out to buy a Harley or feeling compelled
to climb a mountain before it’s too late occurred to me. I am just so
much more appreciative of other people and all of those mundane,
typical daily life events -- how could I not be. Being able to enjoy
so many things were previously such a struggle for me is so exciting.
The handful of medication that I take twice a day somehow seems
like a privilege that only the healthy and living are able to do. I
actually look forward to it -- another reminder of how lucky I am.
I hope that you can see why I want to share with others the love
that I have for Marcia. On July 10 we celebrate our 30th wedding
anniversary and July 22 it is her birthday. I am very proud of her.
GARY SANSERINO
Laguna Beach
One solution to campsite shortage
According to Rusty Areias, director of California State Parks,
there is a shortage of 10,000 to 15,000 campsites statewide.
A great opportunity exists at Crystal Cove State Park, on the
ocean side of the Pacific Coast Highway. North of Historic Crystal
Cove District to Pelican Point sits Crystal Cove State Park flat land
that could be divided into 1,000 campsites.
Common sense says build 1,000 campsites if there is a shortage of
campsites in California.
Areias needs to focus on the property north of the historic
Crystal Cove District to help satisfy the shortage of campsites
statewide.
JACK GLAVIN
Laguna Beach
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