A patriotic day
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BARBARA DIAMOND
“Freedom Is Not Free” was the theme of the 38th annual Patriots Day
Parade on Saturday.
“You don’t know how precious freedom is, until you lose it,” said
Gigi Blount, whose hometown in Belgium was occupied for four years by
the Germans in World War II. “The day we were liberated was the most
joyous moment in my life, until I met [husband] Ben.”
The parade honored those who paid the ultimate price of their
lives and those who were willing to pay the price in the service of
their country.
U.S. Marine Corps Brig. Gen. Terry G. Robling, the parade’s grand
marshal, has been awarded the Legion of Merit, the Joint Meritorious
Service Medal, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Joint Commendation
Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Navy/Marine Corps Commendation Medal
with Gold Star, the Joint Achievement Medal and the Presidential Unit
Citation. Those honors don’t come cheaply.
Patriot of the Year Bill Schuster fought in one of the bloodiest
battles of the Pacific Theater, fought by the 96th Infantry Division
in World War II. The division received the Presidential Unit
Citation. Schuster came home with a Bronze Star and 100 pounds
lighter.
Citizen of the Year Doris Shields paid her dues in legendary
contributions to the cultural life of Laguna.
“It’s sad but very true that freedom isn’t free,” said Nonthiya
Karndej, a 16-year-old exchange student from Thailand.
Parade committee President Charles J. Quilter II, a retired U.S.
Marine Corps aviator and historian, proposed the 2004 parade theme.
His wife, Ann, comes from a military family.
They know better than most the cost of freedom. His service
spanned 44 years from enlistment to re-retirement.
Ann Quilter lost her brother in 2002 in a Marine Corps training
flight. Still, she gave a thumbs up to Charlie to “unretire” and go
to Iraq in 2003 as a marine aviation historian -- knowing full well
that he’d be in a plane and flying over the combat zone at every
opportunity.
It was the second Middle East war for Col. Quilter, who had served
as a historian in Desert Storm. He was hailed as a hero when he
returned and named Patriot of the Year in the 1993 parade.
“I never even knew anyone who was in combat until Charlie Quilter
went to Iraq,” said Sandi Werthe, parade committee secretary. “We
worried enough about him to make up for it.”
Werthe’s husband, Hal, also a committee member, served in the
Korean War, but she didn’t know him then and she was too young to
really understand war when her father served in the U.S. Navy in
World War II. “What I remember was moving to Seattle from Minnesota
when I was 6 and seeing my first slug,” she said.
World War II, Korea and Vietnam are history to 2004 parade Junior
Citizens of the Year Maddy Bell and Taylor King; Laguna Beach High
School student Nicole Lim, who designed the cover of the program for
the parade; and Thurston Middle School student Danny Allen, winner of
the program essay contest.
“The cost of freedom is priceless,” Allen wrote.
Walt Forsyth served six years in the U.S. Navy in World War II,
first on a battleships and then in a submarine.
“I never considered the price too high to pay,” Forsyth said.
The price is not always paid with the same coin.
Peace activist Eleanor Henry prefers words to battleships or bombs
in the battle to preserve such freedoms as the right to free speech.
“I have vented my spleen numerous times to protest threats to
liberty,” Henry said. “In 1986, I walked from New York to Washington,
D.C. in the Great Peace March.”
Skip Leavitt, who rode in the Chamber of Commerce trolley in the
parade, patrolled the Caribbean during World War II, trolling for
German submarines.
“I didn’t pay the price that some others have,” said Cossie
Meckling, waving a hand at other members of the Beautification
Council who participated in the parade.
The council’s flower-bedecked boat, built by Es Cowman, was
appropriate. Longtime council member Harry Lawrence served in the
U.S. Navy’s amphibian forces in World War II, and former council
President “Dutch” Vanderhoof spent five years in the navy.
Parade volunteer Bill Morris remembered cruising off the Tonkin
Gulf in a missile carrier.
“It was worth it,” Morris said.
Sharon Thoresen of the Exchange Club said she benefited from her
father’s career in the military.
“He instilled in me a sense of patriotism and love of country,”
she said.
Both of Jan Hawkes’ parents were in the service.
“I grew up with war stories,” Hawkes said. “The stories prepared
me for the loss of friends in the Vietnam War.”
Hawkes, who drove the city’s most recently acquired trolley -- it
only had about 500 miles on it Saturday -- was the City Council’s
chauffeur in the parade. Passengers included city treasurer Laura
Parisi, council members Wayne Baglin and Toni Iseman, Mayor Cheryl
Kinsman and City Clerk Verna Rollinger.
There were 100 entries in the parade this year. One of the most
noticeable was the Laguna Beach Water District’s huge flag made of
balloons, suggested by district employee Andrea Watkins.
Emily Ross dreamed up the parade “to instill in our youth the love
of country and respect for the flag.” The flag has been the theme of
the parade three times -- in 1969, 1977 and 1983.
From the beginning, the parade has been a hometown project, an
all-volunteer labor of love.
The committee this year included the Col. Quilter, Nina Rietsch,
the Werthes, police Sgt. Jason Kravetz, Gavin Kentle, Beverly Hine,
Jim and Jean Law, Sande St. John, Richard Moore, Jim Gothard, Karen
Ford, Doug Miller, Anne Wood, “Diz” D’Isabella and Sonny Budd.
MIRACLES HAPPEN
A film based on a book that nobody wanted to produce in 1973, when
Laguna’s Ted Taylor wrote it, received five Emmy nominations, it was
announced March 4.
“The Maldonado Miracle” was nominated for outstanding special
direction and three acting awards for Peter Fonda, Mare Willingham
and Ruben Blades.
Oscar-nominated actress Salma Hayek directed the film. It debuted
at Robert Redford’s Sundance Film Festival and was shown Oct. 9 on
Showtime.
Paul Cooper recently won the Writer’s Guild of America Award for
Outstanding Children’s/Family Teleplay for the film.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, CA 92652; hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite
22; call 494-4321; or fax 494-8979.
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