Day of the patriot
Barbara Diamond
The mournful notes of “Taps” sounded Sunday as folks at the annual
Patriots Day Parade brunch stood in silent tribute to the Columbia
astronauts, who perished Saturday.
“We start on a moment of sadness,” committee President Charles
Quilter II said.
Astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who walked on the moon in 1969, served as
the parade grand marshal in 1987, when he lived in Emerald Bay. The
37th annual parade on March 1 will be dedicated to the memory of
Aldrin’s fellow astronauts who failed to return to earth.
Laguna’s Patriots Day Parade began in 1967, the dream come true of
the late Emily Ross. Ross wished for a parade that would “instill in
our youth a love of country and respect for the flag.”
She solicited the assistance of the members of Laguna’s Patience
Wright Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, of which
she was a member, and the Laguna Beach Exchange Club to make her
dream a reality.
Ross moved to Placerville in 1978, but returned to Laguna in 1979
to ride in one last parade, wearing the 129-year-old shawl her sea
captain grandfather had given her grandmother as a wedding present.
Ross died on Memorial Day 1989, at age 97. The parade lives on.
It has been said by more than one person that Laguna Beach needs
to hire another city to watch the parade because so many townspeople
participate. All the members of the parade committee volunteer their
services.
The theme of this year’s parade is Freedom’s Promise.
“It is the obligation of the present generation to honor the
reasons our forefathers came here,” Quilter said, “and sometimes to
fight for them.”
The Marine Corps Color Guard and Band normally in the forefront of
the parade will be absent this year, called to arms.
“Marine musicians and color guards also have combat duties,”
Quilter said. “Our thoughts and prayers will be with them.”
Every one of them a patriot
Each year, the parade committee honors a Laguna Beach Patriot of
the Year, one who has served the nation gallantly or meritoriously in
time of war or national emergency.
Quilter, a former U.S. Marine Corps pilot who has served as parade
committee president for four of the past five years, was honored as
Patriot of the Year in 1993 after his return from Desert Storm. At
the brunch Saturday, Quilter displayed the Distinguished Flying Cross
awarded his late father, also a Marine Corps pilot.
The 2003 Patriot of the Year, Don Black, was awarded three of the
crosses.
“In the annals of air transport flying, no operation was more
hazardous than the aerial lifeline from Assam, India to southwest
China, over the towering Himalaya mountains from 1943 to 1945.”
Quilter said. “About 1,000 died, and nearly 600 aircraft were lost.”
A standard tour of duty over what was called “the hump” was 650
flying hours, about 60 to 80 round trips, assuming one survived.
Black flew more than twice that number of hours, including 250
missions over “the hump,” search and rescue missions over Burma and a
daring raid in upper Burma in 1944.
Beside the three Distinguished Flying Crosses, Black was awarded
three Air Medals.
Almost 90 people attended the brunch, at which Black was honored
along with the 2003 grand marshal, Citizens of the Year, Junior
Citizens of the Year, the program cover artist and program essay
winner.
Eugene “Diz” D’Isabella has probably participated in more Patriot
Day parades than anyone else in town. He has driven the fire
department’s beloved 1931 Seagrave at the tail end of all 36 previous
parades.
This year, he will lead it as grand marshal.
A painting of a Seagrave was presented to him Sunday,
serendipitously found by parade committee members Sandi and Hal
Werthe at a fair in Northern California and framed by committee
member Grant McCombs.
In 1955, while serving in the U.S. Marine Corps, D’Isabella was
tapped to portray one of the Marines in the Pageant of the Master’s
recreation of Felix De Weldon’s sculpture of the Flag Raising at Iwo
Jima. He was charmed by the town, more so by cast member Ann Margaret
Hill. They married that December.
Released from duty in January 1956, D’Isabella took a job with the
Laguna Beach Unified School District as a driver and mechanic, the
trade that had earned him sergeant’s stripes in the Marine Corps.
He was assigned to the most difficult route, up Temple Hills Drive
(pre-Park Avenue), because the district figured he would know how to
nurse the brakes on the steep hillside.
He volunteered with the fire department, which also took advantage
of his mechanical skills, assigning him to drive the department’s
first purpose-built equipment, the Seagrave Suburbanite pumper
engine.
D’Isabella became a full-time member of the department in 1964 and
for the next 20 years he was its only mechanic. He was promoted to
captain in 1968, named Fireman of the Year in 1978 and was awarded
Orange County’s prestigious Father Sammon Award in 2001.
D’Isabella retired in December 2002, after 46 years of service to
the city.
The Citizen of the Year Award is given to people who have made
significant efforts or contributions on behalf of the people of
Laguna Beach.
“The [parade committee] is pleased to honor Marilyn and Les
Thomas, who have given many thousands of hours to civic, humanitarian
and religious causes,” Quilter said.
They serve as board members and block captains of Neighborhood
Watch. Both are active in Music in the Park Inc., a nonprofit group
that works with the city to bring free concerts to Bluebird Park and
other venues, and active in South Shores Church.
Les Thomas is active in No Square Theatre and the Festival of Arts
and chairs the city’s Arts Commission and the Laguna Beach Alliance
for Arts.
Junior Citizens of the Year are selected by the staff and faculty
of Laguna Beach High School based on significant accomplishments in
scholarship, leadership, athletics and community service.
Liz Nelson is vice president of the 2003 class and was a peer
counselor. She is a member of Safe Rides Club and the Environmental
Academy, a cheer leader, an avid photographer and surfer.
Nelson is president of Rotary’s Interact Club, which does local
and international service projects. Last year, she worked at Casa
Hogar Orphanage in Mexico and with the La Playa Center here in Laguna
Beach, which assists Hispanic families.
Nathan Greene also is active in the Surfriders Club and serves as
its water treatment manager. He is co-president of the Drama Club and
recipient of a MACY -- the high school equivalent of an Oscar -- for
his performance in “How to Succeed in Business ... .”
He participated in “Splash” for seven years.
In 2001, Greene went to Argentina as a field service student. Last
summer, in attended the National Student Leadership Conference in
Washington, D.C.
Marissa Hoffman, 12, a sixth-grader at Thurston Middle School, won
the 2003 Essay Contest. Her entry will be printed in the program. She
is a student of Gay Pivaroff’s Laguna Arts Class.
Cory Westenhaver, 17, created the cover art for the program.
Westenhaver is a member of Laguna Beach High teacher Peter Tiner’s AP
Art Studio. Art by her mother, Michelle Herrick, was on the cover in
1979.
The parade is being filmed and narrated by Laguna Beach High
School students Scott Brown, Claire Vogel, Henry Plant and Hunter
Poler. It will be aired on Cox Cable.
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