Parade honors strong character
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BARBARA DIAMOND
America’s Heroes” will be the theme of the 2005 Patriots Day Parade,
March 5.
Police Chief James Spreine, who served his country as a U.S.
Marine, will lead the parade as Grand Marshal. Honored Patriot of the
Year Marine Lance Corporal Ed Hanke III will represent the young men
and women of Laguna Beach who have put their lives in harms way to
protect our freedom.
Don Williamson, who did yeoman’s duty at the Laguna Playhouse and
the Festival of Arts before moving up in rank as director of the
Pageant of the Masters, was named Citizen of the Year.
Junior Citizens of the Year Megan Vick and Tyler Hathaway round
out the honorees. All five will be introduced at the traditional
Parade Brunch, Feb. 6 at Tivoli Terrace. The public is invited.
Reservations are $20 and may be made by calling (494) 494-6016 or
(949) 499-9429.
Spreine began his career in law enforcement in the marines, as an
MP. The former marine -- “there is no such thing as an ex-marine” --
joined the San Clemente Police Department, then moved to Laguna Beach
as a lieutenant under the captaincy of Neil Purcell Jr. in January of
1981.
Spreine followed Purcell up the ranks, as captain, deputy chief
and chief, when Purcell retired in 1997, the same year he was honored
as Patriots Day Parade Grand Marshal.
“I have been in every parade since 1981 except one, either driving
Chief Purcell or as chief,” Spreine said. “I have seen the others who
were selected Grand Marshals and I am flattered to participate in the
parade in that capacity.”
Spreine and his wife, Linda, a lieutenant in the Orange County
Sheriff’s Department, are a two-chief family, at least until she
retires Jan. 19 as Laguna Niguel’s Chief of Police Services.
She was a sergeant in the Laguna Beach department when they began
courting.
“It was the best thing that ever happened to me,” Spreine said.
They deemed it in the best interests of department and to keep her
career unblemished by any hint of nepotism for her to leave the
department after their marriage. She signed on with San Clemente, was
bumped back to patrol and rose to sergeant before the sheriff’s
office took over the city’s policing. Starting as deputy, she again
climbed up the ranks.
“She is one of the finest law enforcement officers I have ever
known,” Spreine said.
The Spreines are building a home in Sequim, across Olympic
Peninsula from Seattle, where they will leave after Spreine joins his
wife in retirement, set for late October.
Patriot of the Year Hanke was awarded a Purple Heart in the Iraqi
War. His parents, Cathy and Ed Hanke II heard about it in a telephone
call from the military.
“Then, about 3 a.m., we got a call from Ed saying he was fine,
that he would be out for about three weeks and then back to duty,”
Hanke II said.
Hanke had two other close calls. He caught some shrapnel in his
cheek in an attack where a close friend was killed. He escaped
serious injury when digging up a cache of munitions, but it was a
near thing, his father said.
“We have had and he has had a lot of support from Laguna,” Hanke
said. “When I first heard that he was [named] Patriot of the Year, I
said that’s awful nice. He said aaah, no.
But after he though it over, he decided it was cool.
“He’s always been our adult in a kid’s body.”
The young war hero joined the Marine Corps three days after he
graduated from Laguna Beach High School in 2002. He had signed a
letter of intent as a junior.
Hanke is considering a career in the military.
He is training in urban warfare at Camp Pendleton and is due to
return to Iraq in September.
“We keep saying maybe it will be over by then,” Ed Hanke II said.
Williamson moved to Laguna Beach in 1949 and almost immediately
became involved with the Laguna Playhouse and the Festival of Arts.
“My wife, Josephine,” who died six years ago, was equally involved
in the Playhouse and was wardrobe director for the pageant for
several years,” Williamson said.
The couple had two children, a son, Douglas, who died two years
ago, and a daughter, Jenny, who lives with her father. A grandson,
Juan, and his wife Jessica and their two children, Diego and Joaquin,
live in Santa Barbara.
Williamson served as festival president in the 1960s and as
Pageant of the Master director from 1964 to 1978, when he formed
Thola Productions with his late son, building remote control cars and
boats for amusement parks.
“I was surprised when they told me I was the Citizen of the Year
because I had been out of it for so long,” Williamson said.
Maybe gone, but not forgotten.
The Laguna Beach High School staff selects the Junior Citizens.
“Each teacher submits a name and they pick from that,” said Laguna
Beach High School senior Hathaway. “They really didn’t tell me much
about why I was chosen. I was surprised.”
Hathaway is enrolled in advanced ceramics and computer graphics.
He competes on the cross country track team and on the Junior Varsity
Soccer Team and performs community service through the Laguna Beach
Presbyterian Church.
He is the son of Lori and Board of Education member El Hathaway.
Vick, daughter of Kathy Vick, is a member of the Assisteens,
Laguna Beach Assistance League’s teen auxiliary and the Laguna Beach
High School Marching Band, the Interact Club and the Girls Water Polo
Team. She is a school Breakthrough Leader and a Peer Councilor.
“What an honor,” she said of her selection as Junior Patriot of
the Year.
* 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, 92652; hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite, 22;
call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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