A walk on familiar ground
Mike Sciacca
Michele Turner has been a fixture on Main Street for most of her 49
years.
As 25-year owner of the Sugar Shack Cafe, a friendly,
family-themed haven for surfers and locals alike, Turner knows just
about everybody who passes through her restaurant’s doors.
Everybody in the surf community knows Turner, too.
“Michele does a lot for the youth involved with the surfing
community,” said Aaron Pai, owner of Huntington Surf and Sport, which
sits just down the street from the Sugar Shack. “She does a lot of
unselfish things for these kids, speaks out at functions and steers
them in the right direction.”
Today at 10 a.m., the lifelong Huntington Beach resident will be
immortalized on Main Street when her name is added to the Honor Roll
at the 2003 Huntington Beach Surfing Walk of Fame ceremony.
The event, which celebrates its 10th anniversary today, will be
held in front of Jack’s Surfboards and includes the induction of six
others into the Surfing Walk of Fame, including Chuck Linnen who has
been named Local Hero for 2003.
“I’m still somewhat speechless,” Turner said of the honor. “I’ve
lived my whole life in Huntington Beach, so this is a thrill. I
thought they were kidding when I first heard about the honor roll.”
Don MacAllister, one of the Walk of Fame’s 10 board of directors,
said the selection of Turner was a natural.
The Honor Roll is the only category chosen by the Walk of Fame
board of directors.
“Michele has probably fed every surfer who has come into town,
sometimes for free of charge, too,” MacAllister said. “She has the
biggest heart in the world. I’m there six days a week for breakfast
and I’ve seen her in action. She was a logical choice for the honor.”
The criteria for the Honor Roll consideration takes into account a
potential recipient’s important contributions to the sport of surfing
and its culture.
In addition to today’s ceremony, a 176-page coffee table book,
filled with numerous photos of Walk of Fame inductees past and
present, will be sold to the public for the first time, MacAllister
said.
A look at the six people who will be inducted today in the
Huntington Beach Surfing Walk of Fame:
SURF PIONEER
Mike Doyle
(*Nominees achieved surfing fame as a respected surfer or pioneer
in the year before major championships. Candidates must be at least
50 years old, or deceased.)
Raised in the South Bay area, Doyle spent his early years with the
influential surf crew known as the 22nd Street Gang.
As a teenager in the 1960s, he began surfing Malibu, but in the
winter of 1959 he traveled with a small group of California surfers
to the North Shore, helping pioneer what has become an
often-taken-for-granted annual migration for surfers.
An apprentice to Dale Velzy and Greg Noll, he began shaping balsa
boards in 1959.
Doyle won his first Ironman competition in San Diego in 1960 and
was a surfer poll winner in 1964.
SURF CHAMPION
Martin Potter
(*Nominees must have held a world championship, world-class event
titles specific to Huntington Beach, or both.)
The native of Durban, South Africa won his first pro contest at
the age of 15, beating fellow countryman Shaun Tomson en route to the
title. He served notice on the pro tour with an epic showing at the
1982 Pipe Masters at 17.
Potter was among the top surfers during the 1980s and his
approach, especially where aerials were concerned, proved to have
heavy influence on the new generation of surfers such as Kelly
Slater, Matt Archbold and Christian Fletcher.
His universal appeal in the surfing community was due to his
radical mix of power and style.
“Pottz” was a wire-to-wire Assn. of Surfing Professionals tour
world championship winner in 1989, winning by the widest margin in
the association’s history.
WOMAN OF THE YEAR
Marge Calhoun
(*A nominee can be any female who meets the qualifications in any
of four categories: surf champion, surfing culture, local hero or
surfing pioneer.)
Calhoun, born in Hollywood, was a competitive swimmer and diver
who had trained for the 1940 Olympic Games that never materialized
due to World War II.
She surfed Topanga Canyon in the 1950s on a surfboard given as
Christmas gift by her husband. From that beginning, Calhoun went on
to become an inspiration to a generation of young women who aspired
to surf despite a chauvinistic 1960s-era surf culture.
Calhoun was in her 30s when she won the 1958 Makaha international
title riding a 10-foot Velzy balsa, a board she still has today.
She was a co-founder of the U.S. Surfing Assn., an influential
surfing organization in the 1960s.
SURF CULTURE
Larry “Flame” Moore, Tom “Y” Morey
(*Inductees are nominated from the arts or industry and must have
helped create and define surfing culture.)
Larry “Flame” Moore
Moore has served as photo editor for Surfing magazine for nearly
three decades. His photographs have graced the cover of the magazine
43 times since 1976.
As editor, he has groomed and mentored some of surfing’s most
celebrated photographers, including Dan Merkel, Aaron Chang, Jeff
Hornbaker, Bob Barbour and Chris Van Lennup.
Moore became an influential pioneer in terms of new surf spots
when he discovered Todos Santos and Isla Natividad, both off the Baja
coast.
His latest exploration came in January 2001 when he researched and
spearheaded a ground-breaking, big-wave assault on the Cortes Bank,
considered to be a notorious open ocean reef, which is 100 miles off
the Southern California coast.
Tom “Y” Morey
While his contributions to surfboard design may go down as some of
the greatest in history of the sport, Morey is credited with hosting
the first professional surfing contest: the 1965 Tom Morey
Invitational Nose Riding Championships, held at C-Street in Ventura,
was won by Corky Carroll.
He partnered with Mike Doyle in the 1970s to create Morey/Doyle
soft boards, the world’s first rigid, soft-skinned surfboards and
will forever be remembered as the creator of one of the most popular
surfing devices invented -- the Morey boogie board.
LOCAL HERO
Chuck Linnen
(*Nominees must have lived in Huntington Beach for at least 10
years, graduated from the Huntington Beach Union High School
District, been a finalist in the surf champion category, contributed
to Huntington surfing culture, been a surfing pioneer in the city or
a past champion at the annual Huntington Beach City Championships.)
Linnen, who rode his first wave back in 1954 on a Hobie, is still
a successful competitive surfer.
He competed in his first U.S. Championships in 1959, held in his
hometown of Huntington Beach. He was a men’s finalist at the 1958
Oceanside Invitational, a finalist at the 1961 world contest held at
Makaha, competed at the 1964 world contest in Peru and was runner-up
at the Malibu Masters event in 1973.
Linnen was among the first wave of California surfers to travel to
the North Shore in the early 1960s.
Linnen, a high school teacher in Irvine, retired from teaching in
2002.
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