Patriotic pageantry
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Barbara Diamond
Roy Marcum had no idea what he was starting when he chaired the first
Laguna Beach Patriots Day Parade in 1967.
“The parade was Emily Ross’ idea, but I am the one who went to the
City Council,” Marcom said Saturday at the 37th annual parade. “She
had talked to other groups, but no one was interested. I happened to
be president of the Exchange Club that year, and when she called us,
I said, ‘Let’s have coffee.’”
Marcum didn’t expect that a cup of coffee would lead to a
cherished Laguna Beach tradition that would still be going strong
almost four decades later.
“I felt lucky to get one parade going,” Marcum said.
Ross’s idea was to show reverence for the American flag and raise
patriotic fervor.
The absence of a U.S. Marine Corps band in the parade this year
was a mute reminder that U.S. troops may be marching off to war, not
down the streets of Laguna.
The 2003 Patriot of the Year, Don Black, has been there and done
that. The Patriot of the Year is selected for gallant or meritorious
service to the country in time of war or national emergency. Black
was awarded three Distinguished Flying Crosses and three Air Medals
for his service to his country in World War II.
Other honorees are selected for service to the community. This
year the Parade Committee honored Fire Captain Eugene “Diz”
D’Isabella as parade Marshal, a former U.S. Marine before beginning a
46-year career of service to the city.
“There is no such thing as an ex-Marine,” said Parade Committee
President Charles Quilter, a retired Marine pilot and Patriot of the
Year in 1993, when he returned from Desert Storm.
Marilyn and Les Thomas were honored as 2003 Citizens of the Year,
and Liz Nelson and Nathan Greene as Junior Citizens of the Year.
Cory Westerhaver, 17, is a second-generation winner of the parade
program cover contest. Her mother, Michelle Herrick, designed the
program in 1979. Marissa Hoffman, 12, wrote the winning essay.
“She is the first girl ever to be chosen,” teacher Gay Pivaroff
said.
High school students Claire Vogel, Scott Brown, Henry Plant and
Hunter Poler filmed the parade, starting in the staging area at 7
a.m. Although times and dates have yet to be announced, the broadcast
will be shown on Cox Cable Channel 30. The parade committee
contributed to the purchase of film and batteries.
It has been financed and produced all these years by donors of
time and money. Funding includes a grant from the city, donations and
revenue from ads in the parade program.
“Freedom’s Promise” was the theme of this year’s parade. It was
dedicated to the seven astronauts who died in the space shuttle
Columbia explosion in January.
There were 94 entries in the parade. The U.S. Marine Corps Mounted
Color Guard, which had been pulled from the lineup because of
possible war with Iraq, was able to participate at the last minute.
Awards are presented at a post-parade luncheon, held this year at
Tivoli Too.
GRAND MARSHAL’S AWARD:
Pageant of the Masters. The entry included a church and Paul
Revere on a horse in full gallop. About 60 costumed pageant
volunteers and staff followed the float, titled “One if by Land, Two
if By Sea.” It must have been quite a sight as they walked from the
Festival grounds to the parade staging area at the Laguna Beach
Unified School District parking lot.
Not many along the parade route recognized Pageant Director Diane
Challis Davy dressed as a young male of the Revolutionary era.
“She told me, rain or shine, they were coming to the parade, no
matter what,” entry chairwoman Sandi Werthe said.
The parade has been rained out only once, in 1985.
PRESIDENT’S THEME AWARD:
California Regiment of Young Marines from Apple Valley.
COMMUNITY SERVICE FLOATS:
1 -- Bahai Faith 2 -- Volunteer Clowns of Orange County
3 -- South Coast Medical Center
YOUTH FLOATS:
1 -- Friends of the Sea Lion
2 -- Tustin Young Marines
3 -- Boys and Girls Club of Laguna Beach
COMMERCIAL FLOATS:
1 -- Pageant of the Masters.
2 -- Ken’s Jewelry, with Monika Sorce’s dog, Boomer, seated on a
swing in the back of the flower-decorated truck, wearing a $2,500
necklace and a $600 bracelet.
3 -- Haster Grove Nursery, their first time in the parade, almost
a year to the day since they opened for business, on March 1, 2002 in
Laguna Beach.
NOVELTY COMMUNITY SERVICE:
1 -- Top of the World/El Morro elementary schools’ honors chorus
2 -- South Coast YMCA parent/child programs
3 -- The Laguna Beach Garden Club
COMMERCIAL NOVELTY:
1 -- First Team Nolan Real Estate
2 -- Waste Management’s trash can drill team
MILTARY COLOR GUARD-OVER 21:
1 -- First Marine Division Assn. of Orange County
2 -- Continental Marines
3 -- Laguna’s American Legion Post 222.
COLOR GUARD-UNDER 21:
Tustin Young Marines, which also won the Marching without Weapons
category.
FIRST-PLACE BANDS:
South Coast Scots Drum and Pipes
Laguna Beach Elementary School
Mar Vista High School from Imperial Beach won in the Large School
Marching Band category and the Drum Major with Mace category.
Drum Major, Military honors went to Oak Avenue Middle School,
which also won Middle School Drill Team, Auxiliary Middle School and
Larger Middle School Band categories.
Barstow Middle School and Los Angeles Lutheran High School won in
the Small Band categories.
Mar Vista Middle School won the Band Sweepstakes.
Laguna Beach High School hosts the band competition and is not
eligible for an award.
VEHICLE AWARDS:
ANTIQUE AUTOS:
1. 1931 Ford Model A deluxe coupe, entered by Orange County
Chapter of American Revolution
2. 1926 Model T delivery truck, entered by Ralphs Grocery Co.
3. 1932 Chevrolet panel truck, used for local deliveries by La Rue
de Chocolate in Peppertree Lane, driven in the parade by Philo Smith
CLASSIC CARS:
1. 1957 pink Ford T-Bird, known as Lola, entered by Sue Marie Spa
2. 1954 Packard convertible, entered by the Laguna Beach
Beautification Council
3. 1935 Dual Windshield Phaeton, entered by the Board of
Education, driven by owner El Hatheway
CONTEMPORARY CARS:
1. 1966 VW 21-window deluxe van, entered by the Thurston Middle
School Wave Riders surf club
2. 1973 Buick convertible, entered by First Team Nolan
3. 1964 Studebaker Golden Hawk, entered by the Laguna Beach
chapter of Soroptimists International
MILITARY VEHICLES:
1. Military Vehicle Owners of Orange County entry
2. Burma Jeep, entered by the Laguna Beach Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 5868
3. Military Vehicle Owners of Orange County entry
PARADE NOTES:
Each year there seems to be more vehicles in the parade. Military
Vehicles was a new category this year.
Parade Committee President Quilter and his wife, Ann, rode in a
1937 maroon Packard convertible, perched on the seat, which was
protected by a faux mink throw. “It was sweet,” Quilter said. But
there was no room for daughter Emily, parade horse marshal, who
trotted alongside the car.
Patriot of the Year Black, drove a 1966, red Mustang convertible
that he has owned for 37 years -- as long as the parade has been in
existence. His passengers were grandson, Max, and Black’s daughters
Kim and Dale, both of whom drove the Mustang when they were in
school. Hot.
As he has for 37 years, Grand Marshal D’Isabella drove the city’s
classic Seagrave fire engine, but near the beginning of the parade
this time, rather than at the tail end, a long-time tradition. Both
are retired now.
Coastline Pilot Editor Alicia Lopez, office manager Kathryn Delp
Dew, advertising executive Jamie Tirado and reporters/columnists
Susie Harrison and Barbara Diamond were chauffeured by Thalia Street
Surf Shop owner Jim Cocores in his 1950 Ford Woody.
Philip LeBon, 12, was a parade passenger for the third time in a
screaming yellow Stutz Bearcat with a right-hand steering wheel. Dad,
David Le Bon owns the stylish car.
George Nelson of Fawn Memories was at the wheel of his 1946 Woody,
one of the vehicles in the Beautification Council’s flotilla. Council
President Jan Osborne, Secretary Dutch Vanderhoof and Treasurer Joy
Dickerson rode in the award-winning 1954 Packard convertible, owned
by Myrna Cowman. Chair Ora Sterling was in a 1966 Plymouth. Costumes
worn by the council members were made by Cossie Mechling 13 years ago
for a Woman’s Club entry, which won the President’s Award.
Passengers in the pink Lincoln Continental entered by the Cecile
Brunner shop all featured pink hats created by third-generation
milliner Mary Carolyn Rowe. Regan Caraher, 4, dubbed the Rose of
Peppertree Lane, was one of the passengers, as was her grandmother,
Diane Smith, owner of Peppertree Lane.
Joe Masella rode with Police Chief James Spriene in a police car
driven by Capt. Paul Workman. Joe wore his uniform and the badge
presented to him by the chief in February 2001 and sat with the chief
on the reviewing stand.
Motorcycle Officers Robert Gifford and Tony White were the point
guards for the parade on their Kawasakis.
Police Department volunteers Luci Berkowitz, Irv Kaufman, Janet
Munday, Judy Wittensten and Jay Rubin participated in the parade. Les
and Marilyn Thomas, active in the COP program, would have ridden with
them if they hadn’t been selected Citizens of the Year.
Dylan Metzler was among the Police Explorers who helped with crowd
control. He has been an explorer for eight months and wants to pursue
a career in law enforcement.
Police Sgt. Greg Bartz has been on duty for 28 parades.
Mayor Toni Iseman and City Council members Cheryl Kinsman and
Elizabeth Pearson and City Treasurer Laura Parisi traveled the parade
route in a city trolley, driven by Transit Department supervisor Jan
Hawkes.
Chamber of Commerce President Ken Delino and chamber
representatives chose last summer’s Free Shuttle for their
conveyance.
The Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion Flag Team put up
about 60 flags along the parade route.
A Patriot of the Year has been honored since Spanish-American War
veteran Herman Miller was selected in 1981.
Bree Burgess Rosen won the High Heel Award by a stiletto. It was
no contest.
“Hey, if I can dance in these, I can parade in them,” said Rosen,
who carried the banner for the No Square Theatre entry.
Yes, it is only in Laguna.
The all-volunteer Laguna Beach Patriots Day Parade Assn. accepts
donations. Mail checks to P.O. Box 5147, Laguna Beach, CA 92651.
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at 494-4321.
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