ROCK n ROLL DOG GANG AT FUNK PALACE

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ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE


Lilly Belle Graham is more like a child than a dog.
 Ariel Graham shares the spotlight and has finally accepted that she has a younger sister.



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Pet ContestLILLY

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AMY WACK POET

Ex-Coronado resident and Coronado High School graduate, Amy Wack, daughter of Rita and Charles Wack, was born in Florida.  Amy attended San Diego State University and spent her junior year at Oxford University, where she met her future husband, Kevin Brennan.  She then earned a Master’s Degree in Fine Arts at Columbia University.  A poet, she now resides in both Cardiff and London, England and has been Poetry Editor at Seren Publishing in Wales since 1992.

Her husband Kevin Brennan is a member of the House of Commons and plays in a “parliamentary rock band” called MP4, of which all the musicians are members of the British Parliament.

Over the years, Amy Wack Brennan has written and had published several poems and has edited many more which have won national awards.  Her poem about Buddy Holly won first prize in a contest led by Sir Paul McCartney which earned her a sizable cash prize and lunch with McCartney.

Amy’s poem about Buddy Holly  was chosen to be included in “A Poem For Buddy.”

FOREWARD

I’ve often thought that ‘Buddy’ was a good moniker for Charles Hardin Holley.  Buddy, it conjures up the image of a pal, of a friend.  Which is apt, because his music has always been a friend to me.  His songs can buck you up when you’re feeling low or even better your mood when you’re feeling great.

When we started out making music in Liverpool, Buddy’s songs made a difference.  He gave us confidence – he can do it, and he wears glasses, a particular inspiration to John, who up to then had been bumping into lampposts – and the guitar-based Buddy Holly sound certainly influenced The Beatles at the time and my melodies then and since.

Years ago, we inaugurated Buddy Holly Week as a doff of the cap to the memory of the great man and his great music.  Over the years this has become the platform for many wonderful and wacky ways of marking that memory.

We’ve had competitions for singalikes and lookalikes, we’ve had a paint a Buddy painting and contests to write a song in his style.  And now we’ve done poetry inspired by Buddy.  Good golly, it’s Holly.

It’s all been a laugh and, as I say, it’s a little way or reminding us all of the guy’s great talent.

So congratulations to all those poets who were sufficiently inspired by the man to have their work selected here for this anthology and my thanks to all of the many others who have made the effort to send in their stanzas.

It makes a great read.  Rave on!

Paul McCartney

INTRODUCTION

 Buddy Holly and I had lots in common:
we were both born in towns beginning with ‘L’,
we both wore glasses, and…and that’s about it really.

However, in the late fifties as a member of Hull University’s wildest
(and short-lived) skiffle group, ‘Tinhorn Timmons and the Rattlesnakes’,
I would strum my sawn-off broomhandle and think,
‘if only I had grown up in Lubbock instead of Liverpool,
if only I played a Fender Strat instead of a tea-chest bass,
if only I could sing and write great songs,
if only that girl in the front row…’ etc. etc.

I wanted to live fast and die young, and I failed on both counts.

It was a pleasure then to help judge the ‘A Poem for Buddy’ competition
with Tim Rice (an old friend from ‘The Scaffold’ days, who despite
producing one of our albums, went on to fame and fortune) and Chris
Meade, Director of The Poetry Society.

Out of more than 450 entries, 50 were selected for this book and there
are three prizewinners.  Our congratulations to:
First Prize: Amy Wack ‘The Crickets’
Second Prize: Mike Turner ‘Last Bus To Lubbock’
Third Prize: Grace Hughes ‘Radio—CHHL’
(joint winners) Anne Rouse ‘Expected Him In A Limousine’

Roger McGough

THE CRICKETS

Sonny’s front man tonight, his timing’s just right
and his spontaneous asides are rude, jovial and apt.

He still plucks a sturdy tune on that battered Fender Strat
(a vintage instrument, envy of all the Britpop kids),
though his beard’s more salt than pepper now
and for forty years he’s seen more road than home.

And Jerry still taps a mean beat on a snare drum,
you know, the intro to ‘Peggy Sue’?  An oddball,
no doubt, he flails away, sticks flicking, Hawaiian shirt
like a surfing accident.  And Joe B. still snaps
the fat strings on that double-bass.  He twirls that girl
like a dancer and bobs his head to the rhythm.

And they still swing, those songs, three minutes
of magic, no junk, no fifteen minute drum solos,
no techno, no modern urban, existential angst.

Just boy meets girl, mostly.  And how they evoke
their heyday, an innocent world that never was:
a pre-Vietnam, pre-Watergate, black & white world.
But no matter how many years they’ve played together,
there’s still a space centre stage taken by the ghost
of that skinny kid in a stiff suit and black horned-rims.

The Crickets have grown old while he stays forever 21
and on the Ed Sullivan Show, 1957, where he swings one hip
on a pivot, snaps his fingers in time to ‘That’ll Be The Day’.

Do they hate him sometimes – his nerd grin, that mad yodel,
his perfect, posthumous fame, at the umpteenth request
for one of those dazzling tunes?  Maybe baby.

But they don’t show it tonight.  Jerry pounds away,
Joe B. thrums and spins, Sonny laughs and gets the crowd
to sing along with ‘Rave on, rave on with me…”

Amy Wack

Amy had another poem published in another anthology called Newspaper Taxis

YELLOW SUBMARINE

From “Newspaper Taxis” available at:  www.serenbook.com

In Memoriam
Laurie Wack 1961-1983

You laughed at the tall men dropping apples
on the heads of the hapless citizens of Pepperland,
turning them to statues.  I found this cruel,
preferring the flowers that kept opening like fans
and the cartoon Fab Four adrift in the sea of green,
cracking bad puns in their miraculous submersible.

We both liked the little Nowhere Man with that
affinity of the small and shy for the small and shy.
But the manic Blue Meanies and their glove assassin
made you cover your eyes with your hands and weep.

While I, wide-eyed, gawped at the psychedelia,
uou, overwhelmed, eyes shut, soon fell asleep.
I remember the damp wisps of your blonde hair,
your face, flushed and tear-stained in the flickering dark.

Who guessed then that you would die so young?

I sometimes still feel as if you’ve abandoned me to sleep
while I’ve had to watch the whole outlandish spectacle
pass by without you.  No wonder I’m always nudging
someone to say:  “Wake up!  You’re missing this!

You’re missing the story!  You’re missing the music!”

Amy Wack

npt

ppp

kb amy

 

 

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CORONADO NEWS DESK

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For Fast Breaking Coronado, National & International News/Video

 CORONADO CLARION BREAKING NEWS BUREAU

http://coronado.patch.com/news

 Suspect: $1 Million Warrant for His Capture

http://coronado.patch.com/news

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CORONADO (CBS 8) – The News 8 CrimeFighters are helping authorities look for a suspect who could be a danger to others and himself.

Charles Richard Thomas Mozdir, 31, is wanted by Coronado police as a suspect in a child molestation case. He failed to appear in court and a $1 million warrant has been issued for his arrest.

Mozdir has reportedly threatened his victim’s family, and to take his own life. He has a handgun registered to him and has been seen with a second handgun. He may be seen with a black Labrador named Lucky.

Mozdir is 6 feet, 2 inches tall, weighs 280 pounds, has brown hair and brown eyes.

If you have any information, call San Diego Crime Stoppers at (888) 580-TIPS. If you see this fugitive, call police.

Crime Stoppers is offering a reward for information that leads to an arrest.

 

BENNY THE CAT IS MISSING

https://www.coronado-clarion.com/category/clarion-rock/

Northridge Kidnapping Suspect

May Be in San Diego: LAPD

Tobias Summers may be hiding in San Diego per Los Angeles officials.

northridgesuspect

 

Paul McCartney got kicked out of his house so he is staying with me for a few days.

He is looking for a place to rent in Coronado, so, if anyone has a room to let contact the editor at The Coronado Clarion. 

paul

ALL THE WAY FROM ENGLAND

fan

Doors Fan Chris Barth on a visit from England with Alan Graham author of I remember Jim Morrison and Before The Beatles Were Famous.

Take Flight Again In 2013… With Wings!

pauli Re-release of Paul McCartney & Wings’ groundbreaking 1976 live album ‘Wings over America’ containing bonus material (May 27th)

DVD release of the live concert film ‘Rockshow’ documenting the band’s epic ‘Wings over the World’ tour across America (June 10th)

Theatrical release of ‘Rockshow’ and an exclusive VIP premiere screening – featuring an introduction by Paul – at BAFTA (May 15th)

ARE YOU TIRED OF LONG WAITS IN THE DOCTORS OFFICE? 

Doctor Davis will visit you in the comfort of your own home.

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For Superior Healthcare in your own home,
Contact:  Doctor Davis at MD For You Mobile Practice  Tel: 619-567-7152

brain

Brain Made Transparent May Lead to Clearer Understanding

Scientists have developed a technique to make brains transparent, enabling them to see vast networks of neurons and structures for a big picture view of the organ that’s mostly studied in slices.

In a report published today in the journal Nature, researchers at Stanford University described the method that replaced fats in the brain of mice with a gel that made the organ transparent. The scientists were able to make images of the brain’s structures and see down to the cells and molecules, according to the paper.

 

 Superior Missile

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Sending a message about superior technology despite tight purse strings, the U.S. Navy this week unveiled a laser weapon that will go on a warship in the Arabian Sea next year.

The Navy said the laser can defend an American ship against incoming speed boats and aerial drones for $1 a shot, with unlimited “ammunition” from the ship’s power supply.

Seemingly a combination of Star Wars and Star Trek, the Navy’s solid-state laser beam is the diameter of a dime and can be set to “stun” or “kill.

120730-N-PO203-107 SAN DIEGO (July 30, 2012) The Laser Weapon System (LaWS) temporarily installed aboard the guided-missile destroyer USS Dewey (DDG 105) in San Diego, Calif., is a technology demonstrator built by the Naval Sea Systems Command from commercial fiber solid state lasers, utilizing combination methods developed at the Naval Research Laboratory. LaWS can be directed onto targets from the radar track obtained from a MK 15 Phalanx Close-In Weapon system or other targeting source. The Office of Naval Research’s Solid State Laser (SSL) portfolio includes LaWS development and upgrades providing a quick reaction capability for the fleet with an affordable SSL weapon prototype. This capability provides Navy ships a method for Sailors to easily defeat small boat threats and aerial targets without using bullets. (U.S. Navy photo by John F. Williams/Released)

At the low end, the high-energy beam will “dazzle” an aerial drone’s sensors, blinding it. At maximum power, the laser can send a drone down in flames, as the Navy showed in a video of tests performed off the San Diego coast last summer.

 BLUE ANGELS

blue a
SAN DIEGO, Calif. – The Navy has cancelled the remaining 2013 performances of its Flight Demonstration Squadron, the Blue Angels. The squadron will continue to train to maintain flying proficiency until further notice at its home station in Pensacola, Fla.

Recognizing budget realities, current Defense policy states that outreach events can only be supported with local assets at no cost to the government.

This is one of many steps the Navy is taking to ensure resources are in place to support forces operating forward now and those training to relieve them.

The Navy believes there is value in demonstrating the professionalism and capabilities of our Navy and Marine Corps Naval Aviation team, thus inspiring future generations of Sailors and Marines. The Navy intends to continue aerial demonstrations in the future as the budget situation permits.

 Coronado Brewer Sues Seattle Brewer Over Trademark Infringement

Seattle-based family brewer recently took issue with a Coronado beer that apparently plans to enter the Seattle and Washington market, but in doing so, The Emerald City business ended up with a lawsuit.

After Seattle-based Maritime Pacific Brewing Co. wrote in a Jan. 11 letter that Coronado Brewing Co., Inc. shouldn’t be marketing a beer called “Islander IPA” in the Seattle area and state of Washington, the Coronado brewer responded a week later by saying it had trademarks for the “Islander” term and a copy of the registration.

On Friday, Coronado Brewing Co. sued Maritime Pacific for trademark infringement.

 

 

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THE SANDMAN HAS RETURNED

Albert Sandman Avilla has returned from El Paso Texas, just in time to be at the unveiling of his newly refurbished Sandman Statue.

Welcome Back Sandman

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Posted in Spring Edition 2013 | 2 Comments

MISSING CAT

BENNY THE CAT IS MISSING..

LAST SEEN:  THIRD & ORANGE AVE. CORONADO CA. 92118 

REWARD CALL: 619-277-1552

benny

 

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METAL ANIMAL KINGDOM

metal

 

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Born in Durango, Mexico, Ricardo has lived in California for the last 25 years. He has has been creating his metal animal kingdom since the release of the movie Jurassic Park III.

His daughter’s enthusiam over dinosaurs sparked his interest in the creation of these prehistoric beasts. What started as a hobby quickly became a passion to transform metal into incredible lifelike creations. Since then, Ricardo has become a well-known sculptor/designer. One of his largest collections can be appreciated in the city of Borrego Springs, California, where thousands of people from around the world come to see what everyone is talking about. They find out it is much bigger and amazing than what they have heard.

Contact: ricardoabreceda@gmail.com

Ricardo A. Breceda  38000 Highway 79 South  Temecula, CA 92592 Tel:  (951) 236-5896

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BEFORE THE BEATLES WERE FAMOUS

A NEW BOOK BY THE AUTHOR OF  ‘I REMEMBER JIM MORRISON’ 

AFTERWORD BY NINA O’DELE

 LIMITED EDITION AVAILABLE AT AMAZON, KINDLE, AND iTUNES

FOR SIGNED COPIES GO TO:  WWW.BEFORETHEBEATLES.COM

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LIMITED EDITION HARD COPIES

LIMITED EDITION HARD COPIES 1-200  $39.50.

TO ORDER:  WWW.BEFORETHEBEATLES.COM

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MEDI-CAT

potcat

I create music for dogs (and cats soon) that relieves anxiety issues. Canine sound therapy isn’t exactly seen as a mainstream behavior solution in the pet world. I have put my reputation as a concert pianist on the line because of my deep desire to help improve the lives of dogs and cats. So, you can imagine how intrigued I was when I read about Dr. Doug Kramer, BVMS, MRCVS in Dogster. He is putting his professional veterinary career at risk to help relieve the pain and suffering of pets. He can’t legally write a prescription for cannabis, but he can give recommendations. He provides professional consultations that include instructions in how to administer cannabis to pets. I recently had the pleasure of speaking to Dr. Kramer. “My goal is to provide palliative care and prevent accidental overdoses resulting from owners’ well-meaning attempts to relieve their pets’ pain and suffering,” he said.

Dr. Kramer saw firsthand how cannabis can benefit dogs through watching his Husky dog, Niki, when she was in the late stages of cancer. “After the first dose, she was up and about. Her appetite was restored and she was able to enjoy her last months because of a homemade tincture of cannabis I created for her. The pain appeared to be controlled and her quality of life increased dramatically.”

Dr. Kramer takes his veterinary oath very seriously: “Being admitted to the profession of veterinary medicine, I solemnly swear to use my scientific knowledge and skills for the benefit of society through the protection of animal health and welfare, the  prevention and relief of animal suffering, the conservation of animal resources, the promotion of public health, and the advancement of medical knowledge.”

pot vet

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LUKE

Introducing Coronado Website Builder/Artist  Luke Utenowski.

Luke does great work for a reasonable price.

Call him at 619-942-6938

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THE BOARDING HOUSE BY CHARLES DICKENS

 

Mrs. Tibbs was, beyond all dispute, the most tidy, fidgety, thrifty little personage that ever inhaled the smoke of London; and the house of Mrs. Tibbs was, decidedly, the neatest in all Great Coram- street. The area and the area-steps, and the street-door and the street-door steps, and the brass handle, and the door-plate, and the knocker, and the fan-light, were all as clean and bright, as indefatigable white-washing, and hearth-stoning, and scrubbing and rubbing, could make them. The wonder was, that the brass door- plate, with the interesting inscription ‘MRS. TIBBS,’ had never caught fire from constant friction, so perseveringly was it polished. There were meat-safe-looking blinds in the parlour- windows, blue and gold curtains in the drawing-room, and spring- roller blinds, as Mrs. Tibbs was wont in the pride of her heart to boast, ‘all the way up.’ The bell-lamp in the passage looked as clear as a soap-bubble; you could see yourself in all the tables, and French-polish yourself on any one of the chairs. The banisters were bees-waxed; and the very stair-wires made your eyes wink, they were so glittering.

Mrs. Tibbs was somewhat short of stature, and Mr. Tibbs was by no means a large man. He had, moreover, very short legs, but, by way of indemnification, his face was peculiarly long. He was to his wife what the 0 is in 90–he was of some importance WITH her–he was nothing without her. Mrs. Tibbs was always talking. Mr. Tibbs rarely spoke; but, if it were at any time possible to put in a word, when he should have said nothing at all, he had that talent. Mrs. Tibbs detested long stories, and Mr. Tibbs had one, the conclusion of which had never been heard by his most intimate friends. It always began, ‘I recollect when I was in the volunteer corps, in eighteen hundred and six,’–but, as he spoke very slowly and softly, and his better half very quickly and loudly, he rarely got beyond the introductory sentence. He was a melancholy specimen of the story-teller. He was the wandering Jew of Joe Millerism.

Mr. Tibbs enjoyed a small independence from the pension-list–about 43l. 15s. 10d. a year. His father, mother, and five interesting scions from the same stock, drew a like sum from the revenue of a grateful country, though for what particular service was never known. But, as this said independence was not quite sufficient to furnish two people with ALL the luxuries of this life, it had occurred to the busy little spouse of Tibbs, that the best thing she could do with a legacy of 700l., would be to take and furnish a tolerable house–somewhere in that partially-explored tract of country which lies between the British Museum, and a remote village called Somers-town–for the reception of boarders. Great Coram- street was the spot pitched upon. The house had been furnished accordingly; two female servants and a boy engaged; and an advertisement inserted in the morning papers, informing the public that ‘Six individuals would meet with all the comforts of a cheerful musical home in a select private family, residing within ten minutes’ walk of’–everywhere. Answers out of number were received, with all sorts of initials; all the letters of the alphabet seemed to be seized with a sudden wish to go out boarding and lodging; voluminous was the correspondence between Mrs. Tibbs and the applicants; and most profound was the secrecy observed. ‘E.’ didn’t like this; ‘I.’ couldn’t think of putting up with that; ‘I. O. U.’ didn’t think the terms would suit him; and ‘G. R.’ had never slept in a French bed. The result, however, was, that three gentlemen became inmates of Mrs. Tibbs’s house, on terms which were ‘agreeable to all parties.’ In went the advertisement again, and a lady with her two daughters, proposed to increase–not their families, but Mrs. Tibbs’s.

‘Charming woman, that Mrs. Maplesone!’ said Mrs. Tibbs, as she and her spouse were sitting by the fire after breakfast; the gentlemen having gone out on their several avocations. ‘Charming woman, indeed!’ repeated little Mrs. Tibbs, more by way of soliloquy than anything else, for she never thought of consulting her husband. ‘And the two daughters are delightful. We must have some fish to- day; they’ll join us at dinner for the first time.’

Mr. Tibbs placed the poker at right angles with the fire shovel, and essayed to speak, but recollected he had nothing to say.

‘The young ladies,’ continued Mrs. T., ‘have kindly volunteered to bring their own piano.’

Tibbs thought of the volunteer story, but did not venture it.

A bright thought struck him –

‘It’s very likely–‘ said he.

‘Pray don’t lean your head against the paper,’ interrupted Mrs. Tibbs; ‘and don’t put your feet on the steel fender; that’s worse.’

Tibbs took his head from the paper, and his feet from the fender, and proceeded. ‘It’s very likely one of the young ladies may set her cap at young Mr. Simpson, and you know a marriage–‘

‘A what!’ shrieked Mrs. Tibbs. Tibbs modestly repeated his former suggestion.

‘I beg you won’t mention such a thing,’ said Mrs. T. ‘A marriage, indeed to rob me of my boarders–no, not for the world.’

Tibbs thought in his own mind that the event was by no means unlikely, but, as he never argued with his wife, he put a stop to the dialogue, by observing it was ‘time to go to business.’ He always went out at ten o’clock in the morning, and returned at five in the afternoon, with an exceedingly dirty face, and smelling mouldy. Nobody knew what he was, or where he went; but Mrs. Tibbs used to say with an air of great importance, that he was engaged in the City.

The Miss Maplesones and their accomplished parent arrived in the course of the afternoon in a hackney-coach, and accompanied by a most astonishing number of packages. Trunks, bonnet-boxes, muff- boxes and parasols, guitar-cases, and parcels of all imaginable shapes, done up in brown paper, and fastened with pins, filled the passage. Then, there was such a running up and down with the luggage, such scampering for warm water for the ladies to wash in, and such a bustle, and confusion, and heating of servants, and curling-irons, as had never been known in Great Coram-street before. Little Mrs. Tibbs was quite in her element, bustling about, talking incessantly, and distributing towels and soap, like a head nurse in a hospital. The house was not restored to its usual state of quiet repose, until the ladies were safely shut up in their respective bedrooms, engaged in the important occupation of dressing for dinner.

‘Are these gals ‘andsome?’ inquired Mr. Simpson of Mr. Septimus Hicks, another of the boarders, as they were amusing themselves in the drawing-room, before dinner, by lolling on sofas, and contemplating their pumps.

‘Don’t know,’ replied Mr. Septimus Hicks, who was a tallish, white- faced young man, with spectacles, and a black ribbon round his neck instead of a neckerchief–a most interesting person; a poetical walker of the hospitals, and a ‘very talented young man.’ He was fond of ‘lugging’ into conversation all sorts of quotations from Don Juan, without fettering himself by the propriety of their application; in which particular he was remarkably independent. The other, Mr. Simpson, was one of those young men, who are in society what walking gentlemen are on the stage, only infinitely worse skilled in his vocation than the most indifferent artist. He was as empty-headed as the great bell of St. Paul’s; always dressed according to the caricatures published in the monthly fashion; and spelt Character with a K.

‘I saw a devilish number of parcels in the passage when I came home,’ simpered Mr. Simpson.

‘Materials for the toilet, no doubt,’ rejoined the Don Juan reader.
– ‘Much linen, lace, and several pair
Of stockings, slippers, brushes, combs, complete;
With other articles of ladies fair,
To keep them beautiful, or leave them neat.’
‘Is that from Milton?’ inquired Mr. Simpson.

‘No–from Byron,’ returned Mr. Hicks, with a look of contempt. He was quite sure of his author, because he had never read any other. ‘Hush! Here come the gals,’ and they both commenced talking in a very loud key.

‘Mrs. Maplesone and the Miss Maplesones, Mr. Hicks. Mr. Hicks– Mrs. Maplesone and the Miss Maplesones,’ said Mrs. Tibbs, with a very red face, for she had been superintending the cooking operations below stairs, and looked like a wax doll on a sunny day. ‘Mr. Simpson, I beg your pardon–Mr. Simpson–Mrs. Maplesone and the Miss Maplesones’–and vice versa. The gentlemen immediately began to slide about with much politeness, and to look as if they wished their arms had been legs, so little did they know what to do with them. The ladies smiled, curtseyed, and glided into chairs, and dived for dropped pocket-handkerchiefs: the gentlemen leant against two of the curtain-pegs; Mrs. Tibbs went through an admirable bit of serious pantomime with a servant who had come up to ask some question about the fish-sauce; and then the two young ladies looked at each other; and everybody else appeared to discover something very attractive in the pattern of the fender.

‘Julia, my love,’ said Mrs. Maplesone to her youngest daughter, in a tone loud enough for the remainder of the company to hear– ‘Julia.’

‘Yes, Ma.’

‘Don’t stoop.’–This was said for the purpose of directing general attention to Miss Julia’s figure, which was undeniable. Everybody looked at her, accordingly, and there was another pause.

‘We had the most uncivil hackney-coachman to-day, you can imagine,’ said Mrs. Maplesone to Mrs. Tibbs, in a confidential tone.

‘Dear me!’ replied the hostess, with an air of great commiseration. She couldn’t say more, for the servant again appeared at the door, and commenced telegraphing most earnestly to her ‘Missis.’

‘I think hackney-coachmen generally ARE uncivil,’ said Mr. Hicks in his most insinuating tone.

‘Positively I think they are,’ replied Mrs. Maplesone, as if the idea had never struck her before.

‘And cabmen, too,’ said Mr. Simpson. This remark was a failure, for no one intimated, by word or sign, the slightest knowledge of the manners and customs of cabmen.

‘Robinson, what DO you want?’ said Mrs. Tibbs to the servant, who, by way of making her presence known to her mistress, had been giving sundry hems and sniffs outside the door during the preceding five minutes.

‘Please, ma’am, master wants his clean things,’ replied the servant, taken off her guard. The two young men turned their faces to the window, and ‘went off’ like a couple of bottles of ginger- beer; the ladies put their handkerchiefs to their mouths; and little Mrs. Tibbs bustled out of the room to give Tibbs his clean linen,–and the servant warning.

Mr. Calton, the remaining boarder, shortly afterwards made his appearance, and proved a surprising promoter of the conversation. Mr. Calton was a superannuated beau–an old boy. He used to say of himself that although his features were not regularly handsome, they were striking. They certainly were. It was impossible to look at his face without being reminded of a chubby street-door knocker, half-lion half-monkey; and the comparison might be extended to his whole character and conversation. He had stood still, while everything else had been moving. He never originated a conversation, or started an idea; but if any commonplace topic were broached, or, to pursue the comparison, if anybody LIFTED HIM UP, he would hammer away with surprising rapidity. He had the tic- douloureux occasionally, and then he might be said to be muffled, because he did not make quite as much noise as at other times, when he would go on prosing, rat-tat-tat the same thing over and over again. He had never been married; but he was still on the look-out for a wife with money. He had a life interest worth about 300l. a year–he was exceedingly vain, and inordinately selfish. He had acquired the reputation of being the very pink of politeness, and he walked round the park, and up Regent-street, every day.

This respectable personage had made up his mind to render himself exceedingly agreeable to Mrs. Maplesone–indeed, the desire of being as amiable as possible extended itself to the whole party; Mrs. Tibbs having considered it an admirable little bit of management to represent to the gentlemen that she had SOME reason to believe the ladies were fortunes, and to hint to the ladies, that all the gentlemen were ‘eligible.’ A little flirtation, she thought, might keep her house full, without leading to any other result.

Mrs. Maplesone was an enterprising widow of about fifty: shrewd, scheming, and good-looking. She was amiably anxious on behalf of her daughters; in proof whereof she used to remark, that she would have no objection to marry again, if it would benefit her dear girls–she could have no other motive. The ‘dear girls’ themselves were not at all insensible to the merits of ‘a good establishment.’ One of them was twenty-five; the other, three years younger. They had been at different watering-places, for four seasons; they had gambled at libraries, read books in balconies, sold at fancy fairs, danced at assemblies, talked sentiment–in short, they had done all that industrious girls could do–but, as yet, to no purpose.

‘What a magnificent dresser Mr. Simpson is!’ whispered Matilda Maplesone to her sister Julia.

‘Splendid!’ returned the youngest. The magnificent individual alluded to wore a maroon-coloured dress-coat, with a velvet collar and cuffs of the same tint–very like that which usually invests the form of the distinguished unknown who condescends to play the ‘swell’ in the pantomime at ‘Richardson’s Show.’

‘What whiskers!’ said Miss Julia.

‘Charming!’ responded her sister; ‘and what hair!’ His hair was like a wig, and distinguished by that insinuating wave which graces the shining locks of those chef-d’oeuvres of art surmounting the waxen images in Bartellot’s window in Regent-street; his whiskers meeting beneath his chin, seemed strings wherewith to tie it on, ere science had rendered them unnecessary by her patent invisible springs.

‘Dinner’s on the table, ma’am, if you please,’ said the boy, who now appeared for the first time, in a revived black coat of his master’s.

‘Oh! Mr. Calton, will you lead Mrs. Maplesone?–Thank you.’ Mr. Simpson offered his arm to Miss Julia; Mr. Septimus Hicks escorted the lovely Matilda; and the procession proceeded to the dining- room. Mr. Tibbs was introduced, and Mr. Tibbs bobbed up and down to the three ladies like a figure in a Dutch clock, with a powerful spring in the middle of his body, and then dived rapidly into his seat at the bottom of the table, delighted to screen himself behind a soup-tureen, which he could just see over, and that was all. The boarders were seated, a lady and gentleman alternately, like the layers of bread and meat in a plate of sandwiches; and then Mrs. Tibbs directed James to take off the covers. Salmon, lobster- sauce, giblet-soup, and the usual accompaniments were discovered: potatoes like petrifactions, and bits of toasted bread, the shape and size of blank dice.

‘Soup for Mrs. Maplesone, my dear,’ said the bustling Mrs. Tibbs. She always called her husband ‘my dear’ before company. Tibbs, who had been eating his bread, and calculating how long it would be before he should get any fish, helped the soup in a hurry, made a small island on the table-cloth, and put his glass upon it, to hide it from his wife.

‘Miss Julia, shall I assist you to some fish?’

‘If you please–very little–oh! plenty, thank you’ (a bit about the size of a walnut put upon the plate).

‘Julia is a VERY little eater,’ said Mrs. Maplesone to Mr. Calton.

The knocker gave a single rap. He was busy eating the fish with his eyes: so he only ejaculated, ‘Ah!’

‘My dear,’ said Mrs. Tibbs to her spouse after every one else had been helped, ‘what do YOU take?’ The inquiry was accompanied with a look intimating that he mustn’t say fish, because there was not much left. Tibbs thought the frown referred to the island on the table-cloth; he therefore coolly replied, ‘Why–I’ll take a little- -fish, I think.’

‘Did you say fish, my dear?’ (another frown).

‘Yes, dear,’ replied the villain, with an expression of acute hunger depicted in his countenance. The tears almost started to Mrs. Tibbs’s eyes, as she helped her ‘wretch of a husband,’ as she inwardly called him, to the last eatable bit of salmon on the dish.

‘James, take this to your master, and take away your master’s knife.’ This was deliberate revenge, as Tibbs never could eat fish without one. He was, however, constrained to chase small particles of salmon round and round his plate with a piece of bread and a fork, the number of successful attempts being about one in seventeen.

‘Take away, James,’ said Mrs. Tibbs, as Tibbs swallowed the fourth mouthful–and away went the plates like lightning.

‘I’ll take a bit of bread, James,’ said the poor ‘master of the house,’ more hungry than ever.

‘Never mind your master now, James,’ said Mrs. Tibbs, ‘see about the meat.’ This was conveyed in the tone in which ladies usually give admonitions to servants in company, that is to say, a low one; but which, like a stage whisper, from its peculiar emphasis, is most distinctly heard by everybody present.

A pause ensued, before the table was replenished–a sort of parenthesis in which Mr. Simpson, Mr. Calton, and Mr. Hicks, produced respectively a bottle of sauterne, bucellas, and sherry, and took wine with everybody–except Tibbs. No one ever thought of him.

Between the fish and an intimated sirloin, there was a prolonged interval.

Here was an opportunity for Mr. Hicks. He could not resist the singularly appropriate quotation –

‘But beef is rare within these oxless isles; Goats’ flesh there is, no doubt, and kid, and mutton, And when a holiday upon them smiles, A joint upon their barbarous spits they put on.’

‘Very ungentlemanly behaviour,’ thought little Mrs. Tibbs, ‘to talk in that way.’

‘Ah,’ said Mr. Calton, filling his glass. ‘Tom Moore is my poet.’

‘And mine,’ said Mrs. Maplesone.

‘And mine,’ said Miss Julia.

‘And mine,’ added Mr. Simpson.

‘Look at his compositions,’ resumed the knocker.

‘To be sure,’ said Simpson, with confidence.

‘Look at Don Juan,’ replied Mr. Septimus Hicks.

‘Julia’s letter,’ suggested Miss Matilda.

‘Can anything be grander than the Fire Worshippers?’ inquired Miss Julia.

‘To be sure,’ said Simpson.

‘Or Paradise and the Peri,’ said the old beau.

‘Yes; or Paradise and the Peer,’ repeated Simpson, who thought he was getting through it capitally.

‘It’s all very well,’ replied Mr. Septimus Hicks, who, as we have before hinted, never had read anything but Don Juan. ‘Where will you find anything finer than the description of the siege, at the commencement of the seventh canto?’

‘Talking of a siege,’ said Tibbs, with a mouthful of bread–‘when I was in the volunteer corps, in eighteen hundred and six, our commanding officer was Sir Charles Rampart; and one day, when we were exercising on the ground on which the London University now stands, he says, says he, Tibbs (calling me from the ranks), Tibbs- -‘

‘Tell your master, James,’ interrupted Mrs. Tibbs, in an awfully distinct tone, ‘tell your master if he WON’T carve those fowls, to send them to me.’ The discomfited volunteer instantly set to work, and carved the fowls almost as expeditiously as his wife operated on the haunch of mutton. Whether he ever finished the story is not known but, if he did, nobody heard it.

As the ice was now broken, and the new inmates more at home, every member of the company felt more at ease. Tibbs himself most certainly did, because he went to sleep immediately after dinner. Mr. Hicks and the ladies discoursed most eloquently about poetry, and the theatres, and Lord Chesterfield’s Letters; and Mr. Calton followed up what everybody said, with continuous double knocks. Mrs. Tibbs highly approved of every observation that fell from Mrs. Maplesone; and as Mr. Simpson sat with a smile upon his face and said ‘Yes,’ or ‘Certainly,’ at intervals of about four minutes each, he received full credit for understanding what was going forward. The gentlemen rejoined the ladies in the drawing-room very shortly after they had left the dining-parlour. Mrs. Maplesone and Mr. Calton played cribbage, and the ‘young people’ amused themselves with music and conversation. The Miss Maplesones sang the most fascinating duets, and accompanied themselves on guitars, ornamented with bits of ethereal blue ribbon. Mr. Simpson put on a pink waistcoat, and said he was in raptures; and Mr. Hicks felt in the seventh heaven of poetry or the seventh canto of Don Juan–it was the same thing to him. Mrs. Tibbs was quite charmed with the newcomers; and Mr. Tibbs spent the evening in his usual way–he went to sleep, and woke up, and went to sleep again, and woke at supper-time.

* * * * *

We are not about to adopt the licence of novel-writers, and to let ‘years roll on;’ but we will take the liberty of requesting the reader to suppose that six months have elapsed, since the dinner we have described, and that Mrs. Tibbs’s boarders have, during that period, sang, and danced, and gone to theatres and exhibitions, together, as ladies and gentlemen, wherever they board, often do. And we will beg them, the period we have mentioned having elapsed, to imagine farther, that Mr. Septimus Hicks received, in his own bedroom (a front attic), at an early hour one morning, a note from Mr. Calton, requesting the favour of seeing him, as soon as convenient to himself, in his (Calton’s) dressing-room on the second-floor back.

‘Tell Mr. Calton I’ll come down directly,’ said Mr. Septimus to the boy. ‘Stop–is Mr. Calton unwell?’ inquired this excited walker of hospitals, as he put on a bed-furniture-looking dressing-gown.

‘Not as I knows on, sir,’ replied the boy. ‘ Please, sir, he looked rather rum, as it might be.’

‘Ah, that’s no proof of his being ill,’ returned Hicks, unconsciously. ‘Very well: I’ll be down directly.’ Downstairs ran the boy with the message, and down went the excited Hicks himself, almost as soon as the message was delivered. ‘Tap, tap.’ ‘Come in.’–Door opens, and discovers Mr. Calton sitting in an easy chair. Mutual shakes of the hand exchanged, and Mr. Septimus Hicks motioned to a seat. A short pause. Mr. Hicks coughed, and Mr. Calton took a pinch of snuff. It was one of those interviews where neither party knows what to say. Mr. Septimus Hicks broke silence.

‘I received a note–‘ he said, very tremulously, in a voice like a Punch with a cold.

‘Yes,’ returned the other, ‘you did.’

‘Exactly.’

‘Yes.’

Now, although this dialogue must have been satisfactory, both gentlemen felt there was something more important to be said; therefore they did as most men in such a situation would have done- -they looked at the table with a determined aspect. The conversation had been opened, however, and Mr. Calton had made up his mind to continue it with a regular double knock. He always spoke very pompously.

‘Hicks,’ said he, ‘I have sent for you, in consequence of certain arrangements which are pending in this house, connected with a marriage.’

‘With a marriage!’ gasped Hicks, compared with whose expression of countenance, Hamlet’s, when he sees his father’s ghost, is pleasing and composed.

‘With a marriage,’ returned the knocker. ‘I have sent for you to prove the great confidence I can repose in you.’

‘And will you betray me?’ eagerly inquired Hicks, who in his alarm had even forgotten to quote.

‘_I_ betray YOU! Won’t YOU betray ME?’

‘Never: no one shall know, to my dying day, that you had a hand in the business,’ responded the agitated Hicks, with an inflamed countenance, and his hair standing on end as if he were on the stool of an electrifying machine in full operation.

‘People must know that, some time or other–within a year, I imagine,’ said Mr. Calton, with an air of great self-complacency. ‘We MAY have a family.’

‘WE!–That won’t affect you, surely?’

‘The devil it won’t!’

‘No! how can it?’ said the bewildered Hicks. Calton was too much inwrapped in the contemplation of his happiness to see the equivoque between Hicks and himself; and threw himself back in his chair. ‘Oh, Matilda!’ sighed the antique beau, in a lack-a- daisical voice, and applying his right hand a little to the left of the fourth button of his waistcoat, counting from the bottom. ‘Oh, Matilda!’

‘What Matilda?’ inquired Hicks, starting up.

‘Matilda Maplesone,’ responded the other, doing the same.

‘I marry her to-morrow morning,’ said Hicks.

‘It’s false,’ rejoined his companion: ‘I marry her!’

‘You marry her?’

‘I marry her!’

‘You marry Matilda Maplesone?’

‘Matilda Maplesone.’

‘MISS Maplesone marry YOU?’

‘Miss Maplesone! No; Mrs. Maplesone.’

‘Good Heaven!’ said Hicks, falling into his chair: ‘You marry the mother, and I the daughter!’

‘Most extraordinary circumstance!’ replied Mr. Calton, ‘and rather inconvenient too; for the fact is, that owing to Matilda’s wishing to keep her intention secret from her daughters until the ceremony had taken place, she doesn’t like applying to any of her friends to give her away. I entertain an objection to making the affair known to my acquaintance just now; and the consequence is, that I sent to you to know whether you’d oblige me by acting as father.’

‘I should have been most happy, I assure you,’ said Hicks, in a tone of condolence; ‘but, you see, I shall be acting as bridegroom. One character is frequently a consequence of the other; but it is not usual to act in both at the same time. There’s Simpson–I have no doubt he’ll do it for you.’

‘I don’t like to ask him,’ replied Calton, ‘he’s such a donkey.’

Mr. Septimus Hicks looked up at the ceiling, and down at the floor; at last an idea struck him. ‘Let the man of the house, Tibbs, be the father,’ he suggested; and then he quoted, as peculiarly applicable to Tibbs and the pair –

‘Oh Powers of Heaven! what dark eyes meets she there? ”Tis–’tis her father’s–fixed upon the pair.’

‘The idea has struck me already,’ said Mr. Calton: ‘but, you see, Matilda, for what reason I know not, is very anxious that Mrs. Tibbs should know nothing about it, till it’s all over. It’s a natural delicacy, after all, you know.’

‘He’s the best-natured little man in existence, if you manage him properly,’ said Mr. Septimus Hicks. ‘Tell him not to mention it to his wife, and assure him she won’t mind it, and he’ll do it directly. My marriage is to be a secret one, on account of the mother and MY father; therefore he must be enjoined to secrecy.’

A small double knock, like a presumptuous single one, was that instant heard at the street-door. It was Tibbs; it could be no one else; for no one else occupied five minutes in rubbing his shoes. He had been out to pay the baker’s bill.

‘Mr. Tibbs,’ called Mr. Calton in a very bland tone, looking over the banisters.

‘Sir!’ replied he of the dirty face.

‘Will you have the kindness to step up-stairs for a moment?’

‘Certainly, sir,’ said Tibbs, delighted to be taken notice of. The bedroom-door was carefully closed, and Tibbs, having put his hat on the floor (as most timid men do), and been accommodated with a seat, looked as astounded as if he were suddenly summoned before the familiars of the Inquisition.

‘A rather unpleasant occurrence, Mr. Tibbs,’ said Calton, in a very portentous manner, ‘obliges me to consult you, and to beg you will not communicate what I am about to say, to your wife.’

Tibbs acquiesced, wondering in his own mind what the deuce the other could have done, and imagining that at least he must have broken the best decanters.

Mr. Calton resumed; ‘I am placed, Mr. Tibbs, in rather an unpleasant situation.’

Tibbs looked at Mr. Septimus Hicks, as if he thought Mr. H.’s being in the immediate vicinity of his fellow-boarder might constitute the unpleasantness of his situation; but as he did not exactly know what to say, he merely ejaculated the monosyllable ‘Lor!’

‘Now,’ continued the knocker, ‘let me beg you will exhibit no manifestations of surprise, which may be overheard by the domestics, when I tell you–command your feelings of astonishment– that two inmates of this house intend to be married to-morrow morning.’ And he drew back his chair, several feet, to perceive the effect of the unlooked-for announcement.

If Tibbs had rushed from the room, staggered down-stairs, and fainted in the passage–if he had instantaneously jumped out of the window into the mews behind the house, in an agony of surprise–his behaviour would have been much less inexplicable to Mr. Calton than it was, when he put his hands into his inexpressible-pockets, and said with a half-chuckle, ‘Just so.’

‘You are not surprised, Mr. Tibbs?’ inquired Mr. Calton.

‘Bless you, no, sir,’ returned Tibbs; ‘after all, its very natural. When two young people get together, you know–‘

‘Certainly, certainly,’ said Calton, with an indescribable air of self-satisfaction.

‘You don’t think it’s at all an out-of-the-way affair then?’ asked Mr. Septimus Hicks, who had watched the countenance of Tibbs in mute astonishment.

‘No, sir,’ replied Tibbs; ‘I was just the same at his age.’ He actually smiled when he said this.

‘How devilish well I must carry my years!’ thought the delighted old beau, knowing he was at least ten years older than Tibbs at that moment.

‘Well, then, to come to the point at once,’ he continued, ‘I have to ask you whether you will object to act as father on the occasion?’

‘Certainly not,’ replied Tibbs; still without evincing an atom of surprise.

‘You will not?’

‘Decidedly not,’ reiterated Tibbs, still as calm as a pot of porter with the head off.

Mr. Calton seized the hand of the petticoat-governed little man, and vowed eternal friendship from that hour. Hicks, who was all admiration and surprise, did the same.

‘Now, confess,’ asked Mr. Calton of Tibbs, as he picked up his hat, ‘were you not a little surprised?’

‘I b’lieve you!’ replied that illustrious person, holding up one hand; ‘I b’lieve you! When I first heard of it.’

‘So sudden,’ said Septimus Hicks.

‘So strange to ask ME, you know,’ said Tibbs.

‘So odd altogether!’ said the superannuated love-maker; and then all three laughed.

‘I say,’ said Tibbs, shutting the door which he had previously opened, and giving full vent to a hitherto corked-up giggle, ‘what bothers me is, what WILL his father say?’

Mr. Septimus Hicks looked at Mr. Calton.

‘Yes; but the best of it is,’ said the latter, giggling in his turn, ‘I haven’t got a father–he! he! he!’

‘You haven’t got a father. No; but HE has,’ said Tibbs.

‘WHO has?’ inquired Septimus Hicks.

‘Why, HIM.’

‘Him, who? Do you know my secret? Do you mean me?’

‘You! No; you know who I mean,’ returned Tibbs with a knowing wink.

‘For Heaven’s sake, whom do you mean?’ inquired Mr. Calton, who, like Septimus Hicks, was all but out of his senses at the strange confusion.

‘Why Mr. Simpson, of course,’ replied Tibbs; ‘who else could I mean?’

‘I see it all,’ said the Byron-quoter; ‘Simpson marries Julia Maplesone to-morrow morning!’

‘Undoubtedly,’ replied Tibbs, thoroughly satisfied, ‘of course he does.’

It would require the pencil of Hogarth to illustrate–our feeble pen is inadequate to describe–the expression which the countenances of Mr. Calton and Mr. Septimus Hicks respectively assumed, at this unexpected announcement. Equally impossible is it to describe, although perhaps it is easier for our lady readers to imagine, what arts the three ladies could have used, so completely to entangle their separate partners. Whatever they were, however, they were successful. The mother was perfectly aware of the intended marriage of both daughters; and the young ladies were equally acquainted with the intention of their estimable parent. They agreed, however, that it would have a much better appearance if each feigned ignorance of the other’s engagement; and it was equally desirable that all the marriages should take place on the same day, to prevent the discovery of one clandestine alliance, operating prejudicially on the others. Hence, the mystification of Mr. Calton and Mr. Septimus Hicks, and the pre-engagement of the unwary Tibbs.

On the following morning, Mr. Septimus Hicks was united to Miss Matilda Maplesone. Mr. Simpson also entered into a ‘holy alliance’ with Miss Julia; Tibbs acting as father, ‘his first appearance in that character.’ Mr. Calton, not being quite so eager as the two young men, was rather struck by the double discovery; and as he had found some difficulty in getting any one to give the lady away, it occurred to him that the best mode of obviating the inconvenience would be not to take her at all. The lady, however, ‘appealed,’ as her counsel said on the trial of the cause, Maplesone v. Calton, for a breach of promise, ‘with a broken heart, to the outraged laws of her country.’ She recovered damages to the amount of 1,000l. which the unfortunate knocker was compelled to pay. Mr. Septimus Hicks having walked the hospitals, took it into his head to walk off altogether. His injured wife is at present residing with her mother at Boulogne. Mr. Simpson, having the misfortune to lose his wife six weeks after marriage (by her eloping with an officer during his temporary sojourn in the Fleet Prison, in consequence of his inability to discharge her little mantua-maker’s bill), and being disinherited by his father, who died soon afterwards, was fortunate enough to obtain a permanent engagement at a fashionable haircutter’s; hairdressing being a science to which he had frequently directed his attention. In this situation he had necessarily many opportunities of making himself acquainted with the habits, and style of thinking, of the exclusive portion of the nobility of this kingdom. To this fortunate circumstance are we indebted for the production of those brilliant efforts of genius, his fashionable novels, which so long as good taste, unsullied by exaggeration, cant, and quackery, continues to exist, cannot fail to instruct and amuse the thinking portion of the community.

It only remains to add, that this complication of disorders completely deprived poor Mrs. Tibbs of all her inmates, except the one whom she could have best spared–her husband. That wretched little man returned home, on the day of the wedding, in a state of partial intoxication; and, under the influence of wine, excitement, and despair, actually dared to brave the anger of his wife. Since that ill-fated hour he has constantly taken his meals in the kitchen, to which apartment, it is understood, his witticisms will be in future confined: a turn-up bedstead having been conveyed there by Mrs. Tibbs’s order for his exclusive accommodation. It is possible that he will be enabled to finish, in that seclusion, his story of the volunteers.

The advertisement has again appeared in the morning papers. Results must be reserved for another chapter.

Chapter two will be published in the next edition.

 

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RESCUE ME

The Coronado Clarion staff would like to honor all those kind souls who rescue pets.

Pet rescuers everywhere

Big or small

Short or tall

God Bless you

 

 

A. R. Graham

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POETIC VISIONS OF CHRIST

 Coronado resident Senator Jim Mills has written a wonderful new book entitled:

The Poetic Visions of Christ

James is, a writer, historian, and public servant, was a member of the California Legislature from 1960 to 1982. He served as President pro Tempore and Chairman of the Senate Rules Committee from 1971 to 1980. From 1980 to 1982, he was Chairman of the Board of Directors of Amtrak. Senator Mills received a B.A. degree in Social Studies and Education, and an M.A. degree in History from San Diego State College. He was a museum curator for the San Diego Historical Society and a contributing editor of San Diego Magazine before entering politics. Through his efforts to develop the San Diego Trolley, he is often credited as “the father of modern light rail in the United States;” after leaving the legislature, he chaired the Metropolitan Transit Development Board of San Diego and became an internationally-recognized consultant on public transportation. Mills is the author of several books, including The Gospel According to Pontius Pilate; Poems of Inspiration from the Masters; Memoirs of Pontius Pilate: A Novel; San Diego: Where California Began; Historical Landmarks of San Diego County; and A Disorderly House: The Brown-Unruh Years in Sacramento. He is the father of three and the grandfather of nine.

Much of the poetry in this book is the work of great poets who were also Christians; and much of it was written by great Christians who were also poets. Included in this collection are Blake, Browning, Donne, Longfellow, Lowell, Rossetti, Tennyson, and Wordsworth, as well as many lesser-known poets, illuminating the life of Christ from His birth through Resurrection.

This compilation of poetry is a gift to all who read it…. the choice of poems is magnificent as it traces the life of Christ through the eyes of the world’s great poets. The final chapter written by the author is a worthy essay in and of itself. I recommend reading it before savoring the poems that precede it! A wonderful gift from James Mills and a fabulous option as a gift to others.

THE LAMB

By William Blake

Little lamb, who made thee?

Dost thou know who made thee?

Gave thee life, and bid thee feed

By the streams and o’er the mead;

Gave thee clothing of delight,

Softest clothing, woolly, bright;

Dost thou know who made thee?

Little lamb, I’ll tell thee;

Little lamb, I’ll tell thee.

   He is called by thy name,

   For He calls Himself a lamb.

He is meek and He is mild,

He became a little child.

   I a child, and thou a lamb,

   We are called by His name.

Little lamb, God bless thee!

Little lamb, God bless thee!

 

 

 

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BEATLES 50TH ANNIVERSARY


Let me take you down, ‘cos I’m going to Strawberry Fields.
Nothing is real and nothing to get hungabout.
Strawberry Fields forever.



The Beatles changed the way the world is entertained, felt, and thought along with what is perceived of as normal so dramatically that 50 years after their founding, mention of their name still makes the headlines. On January 18, 2013, TruthDive reported, “Recording Session of The Beatles to be Recreated for 50th Anniversary.”  There are plans to recreate the Beatles’ 12-hour historic recording session with a live broadcast on national radio.

On the 50th anniversary of this famous session of the Beatles, the event, which has the Welsh band Stereophonics, chart-topper Gabrielle Aplin, and Mick Hucknall as the performers, will be aired live on Radio 2 in England. The re-creation of this historic session will also be screened on BBC4 as part of a celebration of their debut album “Please Please Me.” Most of the first album of the Beatles was recorded at Abbey Road’s Studio 2 on February 11, 1963.

NewKerala.com has also covered this story about the Beatles.  There is excitement in the air about the planned re-creation of the Beatles’ 12-hour historic recording session for broadcast live on national radio, and there are plans to substitute ‘Please Please Me’, which was recorded prior to this famous session, into the event for the purposes of the re-creation. It sounds really exciting to be able to be a part of this Beatles revival. 

 Signed Copies Of “Before The Beatles Were Famous” By Alan Graham

 Available @    www.beforethebeatles.com

Telephone Orders:  (619) 277-1552

 

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A BRIDGE TOO FAR, AN EDITORIAL

 

“The state of California is out of money,” and the Coronado Bay Bridge is in dire need of repair. 

We at the Clarion propose two options we believe will solve the problem:

  1)   Lay off some of the Caltrans executives with bloated salaries and pensions;

  2)   Close the bridge save for pedestrian traffic and bring back the ferry boats!

Posted in Spring Edition 2013 | 2 Comments

CORONADO CLARION ROCK&ROLL PET HALL OF FAME

TO ALL CORONADO PET OWNERS

Pet ContestLILLY

If you have a dog who you would like to see entered into the

Coronado Clarion Rock-Roll Hall Of Fame

Please submit a photo of your pet/pets.

A winner will be announced on the Beatles 50th Anniversary celebration and a cash prize will be awarded for 1st 2nd and 3rd place.

SEND ENTRIES TO:   www.lizardalive@yahoo.com

For Questions call:  (619) 277-1552

 

Posted in Spring Edition 2013 | 1 Comment

THE DAY THE MUSIC DIED BY ALAN GRAHAM

The Beatles Festival at the Cavern Club in Liverpool has been cancelled.

In reaction, The Coronado Clarion will hold festival in Coronado.

Al Graham

Editor Coronado Clarion

Article From The Liverpool Echo:

The Mathew Street Festival is being axed and replaced with an international music event in Liverpool. The popular city centre event attracts more than 300,000 people each year over the August Bank Holiday weekend.

But Liverpool’s Mayor Joe Anderson said that a combination of high costs and a wish to “freshen up” the city’s music calendar meant that the festival could not continue as it had for the last 20 years. He said, “We have been looking at the best option for the festival since 2010.  In previous years it has been criticized.  Each year I would come in to find dozens of emails from families saying that they had been put off going in the future because they had witnessed people fighting or vomiting or even fouling the streets.

“Looking at the financial settlement from the government and also thinking about how to get the best value for money we wanted to find a way of carrying on all the best bits of the Mathew Street Festival.  We want to keep the carnival atmosphere but we want to get away from that drunken culture.  It was hugely disappointing last year to see the number of people – particularly young people – who were drinking too much at the festival.  It was clear that we needed to do something new and protecting the free element was at the heart of that.” The new festival – to be called The Liverpool International Music Festival – will see four days of events including a concert from the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra in Sefton Park and Beatles-influenced outdoor stages on the Pier Head.

Mayor Anderson said, “The events that we put on will be free, and they will be suited to a more family-friendly audience. For us, it’s about taking the best of what we had at Mathew Street and building on that.  It will still be Europe’s biggest annual free city centre music festival.”

 

 

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HOWL

Are Dogs Howling Like Wolves?

The sound of howling dogs may remind us of wolves in the wild calling to one another.

Howling wolf

In fact, this is the more popular explanation for why dogs howl at sirens. Wolves use howling as a method of communication and as a sort of primitive form of GPS to locate one another.  Dogs, as descendants of wolves, may be expressing this instinctual behavior when prompted by the sound of a siren.  As social pack animals, dogs may be interpreting a siren—or other high pitched sounds such as a flute, clarinet, or a particular TV theme song—as communication.

Animal behaviorists and researchers point out that howling can be heard by the keen ears of wolves—and dogs—from long distances, hence making it the preferred choice of communication.

Chalk it up to pack mentality:  Some dog owners may have noticed their dog howling in response to a neighbor’s dog. This behavior can be compared to the basic “contagious” response most dogs have when they hear another dog barking.  They begin to bark themselves especially if they sense fear, danger, or a threat.

Do Sirens Hurt Dogs’ Ears?

Just as with people, a dog’s hearing ability depends on its age as well as its breed. Dogs hear a higher frequency of sounds than a person, which is why ultrasonic signals such as those used in training whistles can be heard by dogs.

This has led some to wonder if the sound of sirens actually hurts a dog’s ears. When we hear a loud sound, we tend to cover our ears with our hands to block out the noise. Are dogs howling in response to ear-splitting noise?

Veterinarians do not believe this is always the case. According to Dr. Laura Hungerford, a veterinarian and research scientist, and faculty member at the University of Nebraska, a dog isn’t always howling at a sound because it hurts his ears.

“He may associate the sound with particular events or have learned that if he howls, the noise is ‘chased’ away.”

Pain results from sounds that are much louder than the threshold of hearing. “Dogs could feel pain from sounds that weren’t painfully loud to us. Very loud sounds can hurt the ears, and if a sound seems too loud to you, it is probably more so to your dog.”

We know that dogs can hear much better than we can,  The average human hears noise on a range of 20 cycles per second to 20 rHZ, while a dog’s range of hearing is approximately 40 cycles per second to 60 rHZ.

Veterinary behaviorists point out that most dogs do not run and hide, tuck their tails, or react in such as way that would indicate they’re feeling pain due to the sound of sirens.

Why Don’t All Dogs React to Sirens?

Howling dog

While research hasn’t been conducted to determine the exact percentage of dogs who howl at sirens versus those that haven’t, it doesn’t take a scientist to figure out that dogs, like people, are simply different from one another.

Perhaps some dogs feel an intuitive need to connect with the source of the sirens believing that it is actually a pack of dogs communicating from afar. Other dogs might feel confident and secure where they are and opt to ignore the sound.

 

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LEST WE FORGET

 


IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR FALLEN HEROES

Posted in Clarion Causes, Spring Edition 2013 | 1 Comment

CUTEST PETS

Posted in Clarion Causes, Spring Edition 2013 | 1 Comment

VEG-ART

 

Before Reddit and DeviantART became the go-to havens for op art online, Italian painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo set the standard for hallucinatory portraits that left the mind reeling.

Arcimboldo was born in Milan in 1524, and began painting stained glass window designs before transitioning to portraits.

Although from far away they resemble the human face, the artist’s beautifully arranged compositions consist of fruits, vegetables, birds, books and other elaborately arranged objects. His unusual vision, exceptionally given the era of his creations, led many to believe Arcimboldo didn’t just have a fanciful mind, but was possibly mentally ill. “A fine line separates sheer imagination from uncontrolled hallucinations,” the New York Times expressed in a 2007 diagnosis of his works.

Check out his deliciously weird portraits in the slideshow below, and keep an eye out for his clever interpretations of the four seasons and the four elements. Lucky New Yorkers can spy Philip Haas’s Arcimboldo-inspired “Four Seasons” sculptures at theNew York Botanical Garden in the Bronx from May 18-October 27.

 

Posted in Spring Edition 2013, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

KIDS LETTERS TO GOD

kids k3 k2

Posted in Clarion Causes, Spring Edition 2013, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

DENNY DENT AT MORRISON THE ROCK OPERA 1982

 

When I commissioned Denny Dent to paint a mural of Jim Morrison on the billboard of Gazzarri’s night club back in 1982, he was an unknown starving artist. He had never painted in front of a crowd, and he was extremely nervous, so much so that he fainted after he left the stage.

His aspirations were to have a new set of teeth put in (he was toothless) and to go to Las Vegas and become a famous artist. He accomplished all of his goals, and his work now sells in the high-dollar range.

Denny passed away on March 29th, 2004.  He was sixty five.

Alan Graham

http://jfrichmond.com/poete.html

The Doors played Gazzarri’s on the Sunset Strip numerous times in early 1967 according to Greg Shaw’s The Doors On The Road book.  In 1982, that venue was the site of Morrison The Rock Opera put on by Alan and Anne Morrison Graham.  This photo is the back wall of the Gazzarri’s parking lot advertising that event, which I recently shared in conjunction with a story about the artist Denny Dent, who painted that wall.  In later years, the building was totally gutted and remodeled and re-opened first as Billboard Live and then as Key Club.  The point of this story is that the rock venue that stands where Gazzarri’s once stood is closing its doors in March 2013

Posted in Spring Edition 2013 | Leave a comment

HERO’S GOODBYE

 

 

In March 1993, a series of 12 bombs went off across Mumbai.

The serial blasts left 257 dead and 713 injured.  But in the aftermath, an unlikely hero emerged. According to Reuters, a golden labrador named Zanjeer worked with the bomb squad and saved thousands of lives by detecting “more than 3,329 kgs of the explosive RDX, 600 detonators, 249 hand grenades and 6,406 rounds of live ammunition.”  He helped avert three more bombs in the days following the blasts.

On the 20th anniversary of the bomb blasts, an image of Zanjeer being honored by the city’s police  has gone viral on Facebook.

The dog died of bone cancer in 2000, the Pune Mirror reported.  He was eight years old.  In the photo above, a senior police officer lays a wreath of flowers on Zanjeer as he was buried with full police honors at a widely-attended ceremony.

Mumbai’s police dog squad has been operational since December 1959, the Times of India reported. It began with just three Doberman Pinschers, who were used for tracking criminals.

A labor union leader and dog lover Dilip Mohite told Mid-Day that Zanjeer’s extraordinary detection skills deserved recognition.

“Policemen who die a martyr’s death  get accolades, but canine members go unnoticed,” Mohite told the newspaper.

Posted in Clarion Causes, Spring Edition 2013, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

OBITUARY

 

In Loving Memory of  Mary Lou Staight.

 

Posted in Clarion Causes, Spring Edition 2013 | 2 Comments

ELLIOTT ROSEWATER

 

 

 

annony

Elliott Rosewater, the reclusive Mogul Publicist, has taken up residence in Coronado.

There are no known public images of the mysterious billionaire, and he likes to keep it that way. Semi-retired now, he has only a single client Author Alan Graham and his two books,  I Remember Jim Morrison and Before The Beatles were Famous.

www.irememberjimmorrison.com

www.beforethebeatles.com

Posted in Clarion Causes, Spring Edition 2013 | Leave a comment

Clarion Summer Issue Back Cover

RESCUE CAT

Oliver: sweet

Posted in Summer Issue 2013 | Leave a comment

COUNTRY DOCTOR

 

dd

TIRED OF LONG WAITS IN THE DOCTORS OFFICE?

DOCTOR DAVIS WILL VISIT YOU IN THE COMFORT OF YOUR OWN HOME.

For Superior Healthcare 

Call: M D For You Mobile Practice 619-567-7152

Posted in Summer Issue 2013 | Leave a comment

SACRIFICE

Lesleigh Coyer, 25, of Saginaw, Michigan, lies down in front of the grave of her brother, Ryan Coyer, who served with the U.S. Army in both Iraq and Afghanistan at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia March 11, 2013. Coyer died of complications from an injury sustained in Afghanistan.

Posted in Clarion Causes, Spring Edition 2013 | Leave a comment

NO GREEN MEANIES

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Mayday 2013 Back Cover

hotel (2)

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Premier Issue – July 4, 2010

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The Thirteen Virtues

by Benjamin Franklin

Temperance: Eat not to dullness. Drink not to elevation.
Silence
: Speak not but what may benefit others or yourself. Avoid trifling conversation.
Order
: Let all your things have their places. Let each part of your business have its time.
Resolution
: Resolve to perform what you ought. Perform without fail what you resolve.
Frugality
: Make no expense but to do good to others or yourself; i.e., waste nothing.
Industry
: Lose no time. Be always employed in something useful. Cut off all unnecessary actions.
Sincerity
: Use no hurtful deceit. Think innocently and justly; if you speak, speak accordingly.
Justice
: Wrong none by doing injuries or omitting the benefits that are your duty.
Moderation: Avoid extremes. Forbear resenting injuries so much as you think they deserve.
Cleanliness
: Tolerate no uncleanliness in body, clothes, or habitation.
Tranquility: Be not disturbed at trifles or at accidents common or unavoidable.
Chastity: Rarely use venery but for health and offspring — never to dullness, weakness, or the
injury of your own or another’s peace or reputation.
Humility
: Imitate Jesus and Socrates.

Posted in Fall 2011 Issue | 1 Comment

Publisher and Editor Interview

Alan & Kimberley Graham

Publisher & Editor Interview

Al Graham, Editor of the Coronado Clarion:

“Of late, real journalism has been relegated or diminished by the need to bring in revenue, and as a consequence, advertising has become more important than news.

In the new paradigm, revenue rules; so news organizations are forced to eliminate the real costs needed to sustain a professional writer or investigative journalist.

The Coronado Clarion was established in an effort to bring back the prestige of an old time, hometown journal which features tales of old and new in our ‘Magical Kingdom By The Sea.’”

Kimberley Graham, Publisher of the Coronado Clarion:

“We wanted to give the residents of Coronado a forum to give unadulterated input into the content of our publication. It is a cross between a newspaper and a magazine so we refer to it as a ‘New-Zine.’

There will be a strict policy of zero advertising but we will do positive stories about the services and businesses which we feel offer bona fide contributions to our community.  At the Clarion, we want to promote our citizens to support its local small town entrepreneurs and business enterprises. Further, we want to encourage Coronado residents to do their shopping locally in support of our shopkeepers and restaurateurs instead of their having to depend mostly on tourism revenues.

We will also tell our own stories of personal struggle and of our fond remembrance’ s of our youth, of friends who have passed, and of the old guard who still reside here.

We will be covering human interest stories as well as feature tales that are indigenous to the Coronado population.

On behalf of the editor, Al Graham, the entire Clarion staff, and I, together we look forward to proudly serving our community.”

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Saint Teresa

By
Nina Odele


Saint Teresa of Avila, also called Saint Teresa of Jesus, baptized as Teresa Sanchez de Cepeda y Ahumada (March 28, 1515, at Gotarrendura (Avila), Old Castile, Spain – October 4, 1582, at Alba de Tormes, Salamanca, Spain) was a prominent Spanish mystic, Carmelite nun, and writer of the Counter Reformation, and theologian of contemplative life through mental prayer. She was a reformer of the Carmelite Order and is considered to be, along with John of the Cross, a founder of the Discalced Carmelites.

Forty years after her death, she was canonized, in 1622 by Pope Gregory XV, and in 1970 named a Doctor of the Church by Pope Paul VI. Her books, which include her autobiography, The Life of Teresa of Jesus, and her seminal work, El Castillo Interior (The Interior Castle), are integral part of the Spanish Renaissance literature as well as Christian mysticism and Christian meditation practices as she entails in her other important work Camino de Perfección (The Way of Perfection).

Had there been rock stars around in Spain in the 1500s, Saint Teresa of Avila would have been a major one.

She suffered greatly throughout her life. Her symbols were a heart, a cross, and a pen. She was a prolific writer, hence the pen, a fervent humanitarian, the heart, and one who suffered constant and agonizing physical pain, represented by the cross. She is also known as the patron saint of headache sufferers, a symbolization of outer turmoil causing inner pain.

“I will spend my heaven doing good upon earth.” She lived by these words even when she was suffering.

She wrote many books. She was spunky, indefatigable, and constantly at odds with those who considered her to be rebellious and dangerous. Teresa was a real activist as well. Many times, she’d have to sneak in and out of villages in the middle of the night, lest her presence cause a riot! One time, she and her fellow nuns were ordered to clean the floors of a nobleman on their hands and knees. Teresa refused on behalf of the sisters. The nobleman banished them out of their convent and they had to move on.

Recently a friend of mine was at a swap meet when she came upon an ancient Mexican guy who had a beat up wooden tray full of very old holy medals, crosses, and rosaries — some quite lovely. However, she was drawn to a beat-up, old medal on a blackened silver chain. The medal was so tarnished she couldn’t even tell what it said. But she had to have it! She took it home and polished it up. Lo and behold it turned out to be Saint Teresa!

Finding the beat-to-death medal at such a terminal is representative of faith and hope. For no matter how bashed in or beaten down, her little spirit is alive on this earth bringing solace to my friend and myself — not to mention the multitudes around the world who hold the same eternal love and respect for this powerhouse of love and endurance

Believing Catholics share an unseen bond of faith. To quote a famous song writer, “When I find myself in times of trouble, Mother Mary comes to me, speaking words of wisdom. Let it be.” In the darkest of hours, emotionally moving prayers like: Our Father, Hail Mary, or the chanting Gregorian monks’ solemn but beautiful hymns bring solace to the suffering.

A poignant coda to our story is steeped in the joy of sharing something precious. My friend, who found the blackened medal, heard of a woman Abigail Ortega of El Cajon who has been in chronic pain since childhood.  Knowing the power of faith and the power of the spirit of Saint Teresa, she gave the precious medallion to her.  The ailing woman was overwhelmed by the generosity and the level of caring from a stranger.  The awesome power of this tiny saint from 500 years ago is salubrious to all believers as displayed by this selfless and caring gesture.

Another source of relief was about to occur in Abigail’s life.  It came via the benevolence of a Catholic priest by the name of Father Brian Hayes of Holy Trinity Church in El Cajon, California.

After hearing of Abigail’s plight, the priest went to visit her.  Father Brian listened to her story of horrendous pain and her need for support and assistance. He was moved to take action immediately.

Holy Trinity Catholic Parish traces its roots to self sacrifice, hard work, and a firm faith. The church was first served by a pioneering Spanish priest, Father Anthony Urbach, who once a month road the three hours on horseback from San Diego to the parish.  For forty years, he served a 4,255 square mile area with such devotion that when he died in 1907, his funeral drew the “greatest outpouring of people San Diego has ever seen.”  Father Brian soldiers on with the same benevolence and compassion to this day.

Posted in Keeping the Faith, Premier Issue | Leave a comment

KPXI Rebel Mobile Nuclear Radio

KPXI RADIO:  It is pronounced Kay Pixie and it is a radio station like none on this earth.

It is mobile and it is rebellious.  It is raw and it is real.  It is the only nuclear-powered radio network in the entire galaxy.  The network’s signal eminates from a secret loction somewhere in our “Magical Kingdom by the Sea”.  Many interested parties have been trying to locate its transmitter, but as of this moment, they have been unsuccessful.

The announcer is Elliot Rosewater and his identity is unkown.  The editor of the Coronado Clarion is sitting in for him this week, but he leaves behind a strict list of songs that must be played in his absence.  He plays sixties classic rock, jazz, folk, and his favourite, of course, which is classical music:  Beethoven, Bach, Stravinski, et al.

He talks about all things metaphysical, of poerty, art, and literature.  He talks about the struggles of life and the magic of dreams fulfilled.

If you want to ask him a question or request a song, e-mail him at: editor@coronado-clarion.com, or call him at 619-277-1552.

Posted in KPXI Radio, Premier Issue | Leave a comment

The Highway Man


By Alan Graham

 Witnesses of the Highway Man

Faster than a speeding bullet
More powerful than a locomotive

Able to leap small buildings at a single bound
Look down the road

It’s Highway Man

And his trusty sidekick, Sheila

He has a dog named Sheila and a set of wheels that sets the hearts beating of wanderlust devotees when it cruises by.  He is well-equipped to assist motorists on the busy San Diego freeways.

His outfit is a cross between Indiana Jones and the Wichita lineman right down to the heavy-duty knee pads.  He will give you gas, water, and a cheery smile.  It is all free, no charge.  He firmly believes and lives his philosophy every day.  You will find him cruising back and forth across the Coronado Bridge or in the South Bay near the U.S.-Mexican border always on the look out for a broken-down vehicle and someone in need of his benevolent service.

He has had a few run-ins with people who took umbrage with his efforts, particularly when he admonishes an errant driver, loudly through a speaker mounted on the top of his “Hurdy Gurdy Emergency Vehicle”.

He loves to tell about the people he meets, and helps, and how he loves to see them smile when he tells them, “No charge.”  He is a man on a mission to help other humans and his reward is a simple smile coupled with a thank you.

If you see him, stop him, and give him a small donation for gas because he uses all of his own money to finance his rescue operation. Make the Highway Man smile when you do a good deed for him and the people he helps.

The Highway Man has been giving free roadside service for people in need like changing a tire, providing gas for an empty tank, and pulling over when he sees someone in need to make sure there is safety until the appropriate remedies are at hand.  He has been doing this since the 1960s and all he asks in return is that you pay the kindness forward.  A very honorable man indeed as well as his trusty sidekick, Sheila.  Hats off to you, Highway Man, you are a true hero.

Posted in Premier Issue | 3 Comments

Buddy

By A. R. Graham

Buddy does not like other dogs very much or people for that matter.  He was a one-year-old cup of sadness when he was adopted from an animal shelter and was days away from going down for the big sleep.  Buddy was no one’s buddy at all.  He rejected all contact from canine or human; either did he seek it.  He was in his own world and he was angry.  So it was futile to try to coax him or pet him because he always seemed to be saying, “Get away, you, and the horse you came in on!”

His parents often walked by our house in the evenings and I would always try to make contact with the little fellow because even though he was taciturn, he seemed to be looking for something or someone like a tracker on the hunt for a fugitive.

One day “Frankie Dog” came into our lives.  He was also a tea-cup-size Dorky with a sad little face and little beady black eyes.  He looked like a figurine more than a dog.  I was standing outside one night watching little Frankie playing on the lawn when Big Bad Buddy came by.  He took one look at Frankie and just marched right up and starting investigating, but this time, he showed no signs of anger or aggression.  He was even wagging what resembled a tail with much velocity.

Frankie liked Buddy immediately and wagged backed with Morse-code-like urgency.  They bonded instantly and Buddy never missed a chance to return.

Each time they met it was a gleeful wag-fest and much information was transmitted in dog talk.  It was a prolonged pulchritude.

When Frankie dog left us, our hearts were broken and we were riddled with inconsolable sadness.  The little soul we adored so much was gone forever and just when we thought it could not have been so sad, Buddy came by and was very upset that Frankie was not there to greet him.  For a second, the old anger in him stirred as if something precious to him was missing.  A great weary and gloomy state fell upon us all.  Both families were now grieving for Frankie and Buddy was very disturbed by the absence of his one and only friend.

Buddy still comes by every day looking for his best friend.  The very first thing he does is search all around for the lost soul dog.  He stands there as if talking to the spirit of his lost companion.  His parents indulge him in that sweet little ritual because he seems to come away from it refreshed.

I saw Buddy today.  He was taking his parents for a walk, and as usual, he was bouncing along as if on a quest or a campaign to locate something.  His little body quivers and his sawed-off tail whirls like a propeller.  He is happy to see me and I him.  He checks me out; then seems to say, “Okay!  We are done here. NEXT!!” and off he trots to the next clue.

Frankie Dog lives on even though he has left us, but you would have a hard time convincing Buddy that Frankie’s spirit is not still ever present.

Long Live Frankie Dog and Buddy Dog!

Posted in Keeping the Faith, Premier Issue | Leave a comment

Citizen X

By Alan Graham

When Citizen X landed in Coronado, California amid the turbulent times of the late sixties, he stood out from the “maddening crowd” of the local population in a very big way.

He was a 30’s-something Arizonian real estate developer who had made his mark when he was a very young man. They called him, “The Kid Builder”.   He was smart, gutsy, and even though he was still wet behind the ears, he was fearless amongst his larger and more shark like peers. His talent was and is, “the art of negotiating the deal.”  He loves to run the numbers, and he can tell you in a hot minute whether or not the deal is real and if it could fly or fail.

At the time of Citizen X’s arrival, there was a civil war raging in the mostly retirement-age community between the young people and the old guard.

The city council meeting was packed to the roof with angry teenagers who were up in arms because the older folk wanted the treasured game of baseball to be curtailed.  There was a most lovely acreage near the entrance of the NAS North Island that had been used by the avid fans of recreation, and in particular, the devotees of the all-American game of baseball.  The old guard wanted the antics to cease even though it was just an innocent game.

Some of the more ardent members of the physically fit youth were rather adept at slamming a missal like projectile across the green and into someone’s back yard.  This, along with the cheering and jeering from each team, jangled the nerves of the older folks.

A rather large piece of irony was present here due to the fact that on the base next to the green sat a landing strip.   All day long, fighter jets would practice take-offs and landings.  Monster cargo planes, AWACS, plus an assortment of old prop planes were active and noisy even into the night.  So the noise factor was irrelevant and the kids shouted down that complaint with much booing. “All we want to do is play baseball,” exhorted the pissed-off kids in the tightly packed city council chambers.

Citizen X stepped up to the microphone to speak on behalf of the kids.  His hair was long and he wore cool clothes.  He did not look like his peers in the community who wore the traditional attire of suit or sports coat.  He was out of place with older folks but very much in sync with the kids.

I watched from the back seats as he sauntered up to face the council members, some of whom were quite angry at the kids for being so boisterous in their sacred chambers.  Citizen X took one look at the red-faced officials and said, “ I feel like an anchovy in a bed of sharks.”  The stunned members laughed nervously but the kids squealed with delight. He went on in a serious tone chiding the council for being so restrictive to its youth.  “I have four children and I want them to run free and play their games.  So let’s give them a break.”

The crowd applauded, and after some deliberations, the city council relented. Forty years later, the green still stands and the locals employ and enjoy one of the very few opens spaces left in town.

X is now a senior citizen and he lives alone in a giant house on the beach.  It looks like a British stately home, well kept, and surrounded with bowers of gorgeous flowers.  He rides an old black bike to the local Starbucks every morning where he holds court with a cadre of his peers.  He sits listening patiently to the group of mostly older men.  Even though he always smiles from ear to ear, one can sense a certain sadness or an echo of loss in his soul and on his face.

Citizen X is an expert Chess player and is adept at the complex game of Backgammon; but as the old saying goes, “Lucky at chess, unlucky in love.” As if not allowing himself the private introspection needed for the peaceful resolutions one makes with oneself, he rejects this sort of pensive relief and perhaps it is again because of the fear he will show signs of weakness. He is a lonely man on an island, and within his own island, in our “Magical Kingdom by the Sea”.

Back in the Day

One morning, back in the early seventies, I saw a house for sale on Third and B Avenues.  It was a little white structure that needed a little tender loving care.  I found X jogging in the sand trying to lose some of his summer blubber from inactivity and self- indulgence. I waved to him and he jogged over to talk to me.  I told him of the deal and how much profit we could make.  He was in agreement.  He would put up the money to buy the home for cash and I would make the purchase and be responsible for the remodel and resale.  We would then split the profits 50-50 after the expenses for real estate fees and construction costs.

I went to make an offer to the owner, but on the way out of the door, I got a phone call from a local aggressive and unlikable real estate broker.  He had heard of my interests in the property and was trying to worm his way into the deal.  He would not be the last to attempt that parasitic maneuver.

I told the salesman that I was busy and perhaps we could talk tomorrow.  I went directly to the listed owner’s address in Pacific Beach and was met with a “take it or leave it” stance.  “I want 30,000 dollars in cash and that is the only deal I will accept, period.”  I called X who felt that he could get the price lowered if he had a one-on-one with her.  She was as intractable with him as she was with me.  So I told X not to push for a couple of thousand dollars because there was enough profit for us even at that price.

X figured we could make thousands more using his experience and his knowledge.  So we bought it for cash and the deal was done.

The very next evening, I was having dinner at the Chart House when the very same irritating real estate fellow approached me and said, “I am in touch with the owner and I think I can get that property for you at a great price.”  I informed the determined agent that not only had I purchased said property yesterday, but I had in fact sold it this day for a handsome profit (twice as much as X thought we could get) thus avoiding the unnecessary and obsolete service he was offering.  He gave me such a look of anger.  It was as if I had cheated him out of a deal that rightfully belonged to him.  When, in fact, the deal was made with such swiftness and stealth, it merely illuminated the vast chasm between the old paradigm, which he and his old-fashioned ways of doing business did business, and the very new one, which was us, the present, the future, and the essence of American entrepreneurship.


Posted in Premier Issue | Leave a comment

Meet Your Mayor

Casey Tanaka , Coronado Mayor

By Al Graham, Editor

Casey Tanaka is the youngest mayor Coronado has ever had.  He is smart, articulate, and personable.  He is also an educator and he brings that credential to the job of mayor which serves the community well.

His management style is based upon his belief that past history is profoundly relevant when it comes to NOT making the same fiscal mistakes.  Mayor Tanaka is also an astute politician who employs sober and reasonable responses to hot-button political issues.

After asking him about his political future or aspirations, the Mayor replies, “I am more interested in the now than in the future and I think the people who elected me expect that.

When asked a question, any question, his response is immediate and fresh — not the same old tired politically correct buzz words.  You will never find him struggling or reaching for a word.  Mayor Tanaka is fluid and thoroughly knowledgeable about all fazes of city government.

Recently, I came upon a group of political campaign signs posted on an alley fence.  The one that stood out the most to me was not a political sign at all.  It was affixed permanently  to the top of the fence and it read:  “Tanaka Lane”.

Casey Tanaka is by no means a jaded politician, he is as passionate about his mayoral duties as he is about his career as an educator.  He is a pleasant and thoughtful man who will, if he chooses to do so, go far as a politician.  In the interim, he is focused on the City of Coronado, California.  We are fortunate to have Casey Tanaka as our mayor.

Posted in People, Premier Issue | 1 Comment

Kings Fall Down, Too

By Alan Graham

He wanted to learn to surf in the Pacific Ocean at Coronado Beach.  He, unlike ordinary people, cannot simply grab a board and walk into the pounding surf because he must be escorted wherever he goes.  He is an expert pilot and an excellent horseman.  He is a man, who is both fit and trim, and loves to engage in many different sports.  That day, he had chosen to try his hand at surfing which requires that he be extremely fit so as to endure the pounding waves that were very substantial.

His escorts called the only local Coronado surf shop.  It was run by longtime resident, Bob Duryea, who was an excellent surfer himself.  They wanted to rent several surfboards for the day and requested that they be sent to NAS North Island along with an instructor.

I was in the store visiting when the call came in.  When Bob hung up the phone, he said, “That was the security detail for the Prince of Wales and he wants to learn to surf.”

Commander Bob McNeary was in charge of the Prince’s security.  The personal bodyguard was a bulky Royal marine from the Prince’s own regiment and was highly proficient in the martial arts. When Commander McNeary escorted the Prince and his bodyguard through a hole in the fence, which separated the base and the public beach, he was met by Bob, myself, and several other friends.  Bob even brought along one of his daughters, Debbie.

We were all excited to meet the royal figure and to watch him take on the powerful California surf. Bob had selected six surf boards for the royal surfer.  As they all donned their wetsuits, the Prince picked up one, and began walking toward the surf. Not so fast your highness!  The Prince and his bodyguard would need some expert instruction before he entered the big breakers and had his ego bruised.  For surely, the six-foot surf would smash them before they could even get outside the thundering waves that were slamming down hard onto the sand.

Duryea went ahead showing them how to roll under a breaking wave and then continued paddling out past the break line.  The Limey visitors followed suit and were soon bobbing on their boards as they waited for the first wave to break. The Prince jumped the gun and tried to grab the first wave, but Bob stopped him, and then showed him how the wave dissipated too soon.

It was on soon after that, when a bruiser rose behind them.  Bob yelled, “This is the one!”  All three pulled their boards into position and were soon streaking off under a huge wave.  Bob was pure art as he rode the wave all the way to the shore.  The royals did not make it halfway, as both of them fell off, and were duly bashed down under the foam. They tried again and again, but to no avail, and were soon very, very, tired.  With all the resilience of a tennis ball, they sallied forth only to have their efforts rejected by Mother Nature.

After an hour, they returned to the shore beaten and tired.  As they tried to take off their wetsuits, they found it almost impossible to lift up their arms to unzip the tight-fitting rubber.  The big bodyguard was rendered practically useless if he was needed to protect the Prince.

After a rather embarrassing struggle which only abated when the Prince helped the royal guard get unzipped.  They were both completely out of breath.  When we asked if we could take a photograph with them, they sort of groaned but posed graciously.

We had a cool series of shots of the future King of England as he surfed the golden sands of Coronado, California — one of the most beautiful places on earth. When the Prince was about to leave he posed with us all for snapshots, we recorded a piece of our and British history, a memory which still remains exquisitely indelible in the Hippocampus

We stood watching as the spent duo, now red-faced and duly fatigued, dressed and readied.  Out of thin air and with great swiftness, a heavily armed squad of security personnel burst onto the scene.  They were lead by a very serious looking man who was not military and certainly not an American.  He spoke in a hushed tone with a British accent, “Your Majesty, might I have a word.”  The Prince leaned forward to listen, and in the blink of an eye, was whisked away through the hole in the fence from where he came.

Princess Royal

We stood there looking at each other for a moment.  We were stunned.  It was as if he had been taken away by aliens.  We were in shock.  It was not until the next morning before we understood what had occurred to cause such a royal panic.

Minutes before the incident, and six thousand miles away in London, a mental patient had decided to fire six shots from a gun into the royal limousine carrying the sister of the Prince, Princess Anne.

The failed kidnapping attempt was made on March 20, 1974.  To this day, it remains the closest any individual has come to kidnapping a member of the royal family.  The incident occurred as Princess Anne and Mark Philips were returning to Buckingham Palace from an engagement.  Their chauffeur-driven Rolls Royce was blocked in the road on Pall Mall by another car.  A man, Ian Ball, jumped from the car and fired the six shots, wounding several people on the street.  Anne’s private detective jumped across to shield the princess, and then returned fire, injuring the kidnapper, who at this point had tried to gain entry to the car.  A nearby police officer gave chase and arrested Ian Ball.  He would later be imprisoned in a mental hospital.  In his pocket was a ransom note to the Queen for £3 million.  The incident prompted higher security levels for the royal family.

The intruder was subdued and order was restored, but not before Buckingham Palace issued an alert to all security forces around the world for every single member of the Windsor family to be immediately secured and sequestered until further notice.

When the local paper, which was then called the Coronado Journal, covered the story, they published a photo of the Prince at the beach posing with us locals.

 

Posted in Autumn 2021, Clarion Rock | 1 Comment

One Man and His Dog

By Alan Graham

He was blinded by shrapnel in Vietnam and now uses a seeing-eye dog for assistance to walk to the bus stop or the ferryboat which will take him across the bay to the city.  He will take his place on the bench as a superior judge in the halls of justice on Broadway in downtown San Diego.

To watch him as he performs his duties is to not be aware that he is blind because he looks at the case file in front of him.  When he speaks to the defendant or the attorneys, he looks directly at them.  He is stern when dispensing justice, but he is lenient when it is warranted.

Using his own life as an example, he questions a defendant about his lack of compliance with his probation officer.  He tells of his own youth and his companions.  “We played football and baseball.  We went swimming.  If you do things like that, you will stay out of trouble.”  He looks down at the files and then directly at the defendant.  “I will grant probation to you on the following conditions…”  What follows are certainly nothing short of “rules to follow to keep yourself out of jail.”  Even the most “Artful Dodger” would never be able to weasel his way out of the maze of conditions set by the judge.

The files he uses are in brail.  He looks as though he is reading them but he is simply running his fingers over them. Most people in the courtroom are unaware that he cannot see them at all because he does not act like a blind man.

This formidable gentleman decided to practice law when he became a civilian again.  He enrolled with several other blind students.  “It was more like an experiment,” he recalls. There was no apparatus in the school to facilitate the visually impaired.  No brail law books, no tutorials — so everything had to be cobbled together in order for them to begin their education.

All of them proudly passed the bar, and some four decades later, Judge David M. Szumowski still proudly serves the community of San Diego, California.

I asked him about his dog and how they work together.  I have often seen him walking to and from work.   One morning, he walked past my house and there were some low hanging bushes that hit him in the face.  He stopped dead in his tracks, backed up a few steps, and walked at the bushes again.  He stopped just when he reached the overgrowth, then spoke sternly to the dog.  “Here, here,” he said reaching up and grabbing the branch.  He shook it briskly making the dog repeat the maneuver again.  This time the dog halted before they reached the spot where the obstruction stood.

I told the judge that I had been standing there when the incident occurred congratulating him on his success with the animal.  I trimmed the overhanging offensive palms and I keep my eye on their growth.

After my interview with the judge, and some months since the incident, I returned home to find the very same branches protruding menacingly once again.  I will check them more often now.  When I do see other obstructions, I tell the owners about the encroachments.  The neighbors are all quite happy to comply.

In closing, I asked the judge if there was anything he wanted to say to the public about himself and his dog.  He wanted to let people know that his dog is not a pet, but that it is a working dog.  “So if you see me on the street, please do not approach me and try to pet my dog.”  I have seen parents let children walk up to these loving animals unaware that the animal is decidedly a working dog, once again, certainly not a pet.

Recently, I interviewed a prosecuting attorney who uses a wheel chair.  I asked if he had any difficulties with similar situations of access or obstructions in his daily life.  Like the judge, he was upbeat and found few obstacles.  He simply deals with life as we all do.

It is through these and similar examples that I am acutely aware of how the human spirit can be indefatigable in the face of adversity and how it can prevail with sheer force of will.



Posted in Premier Issue | 4 Comments

When Milkmen Smelled Exotically Like Vanilla Ice Cream and Cigarettes

By Suzi Lewis Pignataro


My name is Susan Maria Lewis de Pignataro.  Some of you will remember me as Suzi Lewis, others as Nancy, Barbara and John’s sister or Nancy and Jack’s daughter.  A few of you may even remember the year I was dubbed, “Suzi Breadmaker”.  I was born in Coronado in 1955 and lived there, in the home my father built, until 1973, when I traded palm trees and white sandy beaches for redwoods and rolling hills that half the year remind me of my beloved New Zealand and the other half the tawny backs of my county’s mountain lions.  I live in the town of Sonoma where I maintain a private practice in child and family therapy.  For the past twenty-five years, I have been treating traumatized children through the application of therapeutic play.  I have an Argentine husband, two sons ages sixteen and nineteen, and a fourteen-year-old Cocker Spaniel.  My son Thack is an art student living in San Francisco.  My son Hans is a junior in high school and is also an artist, as well as a very good cook.  He may be a superior bread maker, but as the only vegan in the house I am master of the bean curd.

I’ve traveled tens of thousands of miles – covering twelve countries and many of the States – and have accumulated hundreds of yarns to tell.  But some of the most important journeys and their stories come from my earliest years as a child running free in Coronado, with its doors and side gates opened invitingly to the precocious little chatterbox I used to be.  It was there that I developed the social barometer and geographic compass that I later put to good use navigating the globe and its different cultures.  It was the freedom from fear – the trust in the world as a decent and safe place filled with friendly and helpful people – that enabled me to be so bold in my adventures, both as a child and as an adult.

It is inconceivable to many of the children in my private practice that once upon a time a child could run wild without the threat of someone harming them – including their own frightened and overprotective parents.  I tell them stories of my youth, and it is as if I am reciting from a work of fiction about a paradise lost.  Even the absence of video games, iPods and computers fails to dampen their longing for a childhood like mine.

It wasn’t all ideal.  Losing my oldest sister, Nancy, when I was six and she was fourteen was devastating.  Like a piece of psychic shrapnel, her passing embedded itself deep within the body of my soul, a constant painful reminder that I survived while another died.  I felt her presence everywhere – from my bedroom, which once had been hers, to Graham Memorial Presbyterian Church, where I sang in the children’s choir as the bells tolled in her memory. But children are resilient and wounds scar over, allowing for their victims to carry on; and though I lost some of my bouncy chattiness and gained fears of ghosts and God’s “mysterious ways”, the very essence of my home town sustained and nurtured me through the next twelve years.

Someone once asked me, “What did you learn growing up in Coronado?”  I replied, “Milkmen smell exotically like vanilla ice cream and cigarettes.  Shells with critters still living inside of them will stink up your mom’s bathroom.  Never try to outrun a neighbor’s dog chasing you downhill.  Town drunks are not to be feared but rather helped onto a park bench.  Fighter jets rattle windows but never break them.  If you have chubby thighs, wash off the sand before walking home from the beach.  June bugs are scarier than water bugs. It’s comforting to have popular parents, but it can also be a pain in the butt.  The constant clang of metal against a sailboat’s mast will lull you to sleep, while the constant pong of a tennis ball will keep you up.  Waves are your friend – really. All kids are created equal – full stop.  You will desperately long for the scent of tar on pylons years after the ferries have disappeared.  Home is a beautiful garden isle floating on water; fully contained; safe; easy to explore, and hard to lose your place in.”


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Senator

By Alan Graham

Every day without fail, the “Senator” goes for a long walk, “a good stretch of the legs.”  He is quiet and unassuming, that is, until you begin a conversation with him.  He is writing a new novel called “Memoirs of Pontius Pilate”–  an intriguing title to someone like myself who studies the life and times of all biblical characters.

As a Catholic, I was educated by my mentors and teachers, the Jesuit priests, who described Pontius Pilate, the Prefect of the Roman province of Judea, as a weak man who was fearful of his Roman superiors and of the angry population.  Pilate did not want to condemn Jesus to death.  He did so reluctantly and to mitigate his underhandedness he stood in view for all to see and hear and pronounced the now-holy phrase, “Lavabo,” and washed his hands of all responsibility.

However, when I interviewed the Senator for an article to be placed in the Clarion, he had a different take altogether describing Pilate as the ultimate politician, shrewd, and not at all acquiescent.  He went on to say that his book tells of a very different “Son of God’ than the one I was taught about.  “You will learn more about Jesus Christ than you have ever known before,” he said with much authority.  So, it is with much anticipation that I await the release of “Memoirs of Pontius Pilate” by Jim Mills.

He has been called the “father” of the Port of San Diego and that’s a title that former Senator Jim Mills is proud of.  Mills is the last surviving member of the bi-partisan political team who helped found the Port District.

The Port of San Diego is a public agency, created by the state legislature in 1963 to manage San Diego harbor and the surrounding tidelands.  The agency has operated without tax dollars since 1970 and has been responsible for $1.5 billion in public improvements in its five member cities – Chula Vista, Coronado, Imperial Beach, National City, and San Diego.

He is also vigorously cause-oriented and the Mills Act is named for the Senator who sponsored the legislation over 20 years ago.  Before he became a well-respected politician, he was a noted historian, author, and preservationist.

In California, the Mills Act is legislation that lets owners of historically designated buildings reduce their property taxes in exchange for restoring and maintaining those buildings.  Each city must adopt the Mills Act.  Owners sign a ten-year, endlessly renewable legal contract with their city (or in some places, their county) stating what the responsibilities are.

The Senator goes mostly unnoticed by other pedestrians as he strolls along.  I have never seen him engage in a conversation publicly.  I saw him as a pensive man, not one prone to chit chat or waste words.  He passed by a few days ago as my wife and I were talking to a lady from Mexico.  I stopped him to let him know that I had made a cd of our interview and I went to get a copy.  When I returned, he was fully engaged in a conversation with the woman and was speaking fluent Spanish to boot.  The ultimate paradox was on display as the quiet man was now quite vocal.

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The Two-Pound Coin

By John Foskett

Norma Veronica Malins was diagnosed with breast cancer in her early sixties.  Terrified by the thoughts that she would not live very long, she set out on a quest to save enough money to go visit her brother and his family in California.  She bought a giant money tin can with a coin slot in the top which could only be opened with a can opener.  Things were going slowly for she had very little to save from her meager pension.

She saw an ad in the local paper:

“Five Hundred Pounds Cash! To anyone who can last 10 rounds with the ‘Notorious Kemo Rage’.”

Norma entered the contest which was held at the Liverpool Stadium.

Norma fought hard.  She went ten rounds with the dirty fighting prize fighter, Kemo Rage, who is renowned for hitting below the belt. He decreed that he would finish her in the fourth round by holding up his glove whilst inciting the crowd to chant, ‘ONE! TWO! THREE! FOUR!’  Then pointing to his bloodied opponent yelled, ‘Out the Door in Number Four!’”

By the end of the sixth, the tired woman was almost beaten, but mercifully the referee stepped in to break them apart.  She sat on her stool while Kemo pranced around the stage exhorting the crowd to boo and mock his tired opponent.  As she sat there beaten and afraid, she thought that this would be her last round, and further, that she would never get out of that arena of death.

Norma fought the entire fight alone — no seconds, no stool, no water, not even a towel to mop her brow.

Kemo Rage had handlers who fanned him to keep him cool.  He had lots of ringside supporters and plenty of nice, cool, clear water.

All victims of cancer know this scene very well, and even though, this writer uses a boxing metaphor in an attempt to even come close to imagining the real agony they all suffer, the story is best told by them, not us.

Notes from a diary kept by Norma Veronica Malins:
“September 28th Finally pain free, no more surgery, infection free, and I feel positive about chemo.  Can’t wait to see my grandchildren, Leon and Lolo.
Sept. 29t h Reflex at the Royal Hospital today.Sept. 30th Off to London town, longing to see the grandkids.
October 1st My daughter, Sharon is in HER 8th day of chemo, but she looks fantastic.
Oct. 2nd Lovely day today.  I still can’t believe Sharon looks so good.
Oct. 3rd Another lovely day.

Oct. 4th Even better today.
Oct. 5th A crazy day with the family.
Oct. 6th Back home, a terrible trip.
Oct. 7th Reflexology  today.
Oct. 8th Trying to be positive about Chemo.
Oct. 9th First Chemo. Terribly scared.
Oct. 10th Crippling insomnia.
Oct. 11th Insomnia but no sickness.
Oct. 12th Bowel pains and insomnia.
Oct. 13th.  Saw doctor today.  I look good and feel fantastic.
Oct. 14th Reflexology.  ( foot massage)
Oct. 15th Went to see my friend, Molly, and her husband, Christo.
They prepared a lovely meal.
Oct 16th Me with the District Nurse, sweet lady, I feel blessed.
Oct.  17th “Pump Up the Volume” my little grim humor joke for the temporary implant that had to be filled with refilled fluid periodically during Chemo.
Oct. 18th Spent the day with my favorite grandniece Amber.  I am feeling OK.
Oct. 19th Lazy day , sore throat is doing my head in.
Oct. 20th Went to the Linda McCartney Center for reflexology treatment, absolutely brilliant.
Oct. 21st The freezer broke down.  I did not get stressed out about it and I went out to look at wigs.
Oct.  22rd  Throat still bloody sore bet feel good.
Oct. 23 My hair starting to fall, soonest gone, sooner to return.
Oct 27th. Just found out that my daughter and her family are coming to visit me. I am over the moon.
Oct 28th Got spoiled rotten today, had a lovely meal at the royal Albert Dock in Liverpool.
Oct 29th The second dreaded Chemo, at least my daughter will be there with me.
Oct 31st My daughter came to visit, but was not able to bring herself to be with me for the treatment.  She has been through it herself and did not want to see it again.  It broke my heart and I cried all day.  I did not speak to her for three weeks.
November 1st Amber is here today and I am still tearful.
Nov. 2nd I am so broken hearted.  Thank God for Michelle, Phil, and Simon.
Nov. 3rd Counseling at the Sunflower Center, heavy stuff.
Nov. 4th Head strong, met Glynnis, counselor, Maria.
Nov. 5th Riverside, 10 a.m., cancelled, head massage.
Nov. 6th District Nurse, Sunflower Center, came home early, not too well.
Nov. 7th “Pump Up the Volume”—don’t feel up to it, but I will go to choir at Sunflower’s.
Nov. 8th Denize is coming, D & G, woke up at 3 a.m., insomnia awful.
Nov. 10th Ann Mockford, 10 a.m., Sunflower’s.
Nov. 11th Ria, 12-15, very important!
Nov. 12th Ladies’ Night at Sunflower’s – I can’t wait!  Facial, 2:00.
Nov. 17th Feet reflexology.
Nov. 18th Pay Day!
Nov. 19th Dentist ring up.
Nov. 20th Chemo Day – Here we go again.  I’m going alone.”

Kemo Rage has now punched himself out.  Even though Norma is beaten up, she has a determined look on her face.  Kemo tries his best to strike her again but cannot lift his arms.  The crowd boos him relentlessly and cheers wildly as Norma stands up and slowly raises her arms in triumph.

The prize was paid to number in British two-pound coins.  She counted each one carefully in front of the crowd, but mostly for the benefit of Kemo Rage, who was now incapacitated and powerless.

Norma bought a ticket on the first flight out and was soon basking in the warm glow of her family in the “Magical Kingdom by the Sea”.

All too soon she returned to Liverpool.  A great bittersweet blanket has fallen on us all.  We miss her so very much.


Posted in Keeping the Faith, Premier Issue | Leave a comment

Angel de los Dientes

By Alan Graham


A visit to the dentist strikes fear into my heart.  The very thought of the needle alone makes me wince.  I will try to get out of it altogether if possible.  A few months ago, I was enjoying a piece of hard candy when my front tooth, which had been capped 40-something years earlier by Dr. Vetter, flew out of my mouth.  I picked it up and saw that it had snapped off part of the remaining root and was badly decayed as well.  I had a very important business meeting to attend in an hour.  So I had to find a dentist within close proximity without delay.

I chose a local and rather expensive cosmetic dentist.  She fitted me in between another appointment.   Within a few minutes, I was walking out the door tooth firmly cemented in place.  I would be able to attend the meeting and my broken tooth would not be a distraction.  This was not to be.  The moment I opened my mouth to speak, my tooth almost fell out again.  I caught it, and fortunately, no one saw my embarrassed and toothless smile.

The dentist visit cost me $150 and I looked like I had never ever paid a visit to a dentist office in my life.  I called their office and gave them the what for.  I rushed back where they applied the very same inept procedure.  The moment I stepped out the door, the same tooth fell out again.  They apologized for their poor work once again.  The next morning, I received a refund check with a note that read:

Dear Sir:

We are sending a refund check to you for your last visit to our offices.  We do not feel that we can help you any further.

Thank you,

Susan Phelps, DDS

I certainly concur with their assessment of not being able to help me any further.  I would even go one better, they offered inferior work at an exorbitant rate and that they never helped me at all in the first place.

I called my regular dentist who instructed me to come into the office immediately.  I did so carrying with me the rotten root.

I call her “Angel de los Dientes” (“Angel of the Teeth”) because she is extremely great at her work.  She is so gentle that I do not even feel that long, scary-looking syringe she inserts to numb my teeth with lydocaine.  The Angel works so fast and with such precision that it is a pleasure to watch her operate.

Believe me, you are very lucky if you can find a dentist so highly qualified and so utterly dedicated to her craft.  I am indeed a very lucky man and so is anyone else who discovers her.

There are other dentists as highly qualified as my Angel de los Dientes.  You can find them all at a small practice called Easy Dental.  Their office is located at 245 25th Street, San Diego.  Their telephone number is (619) 236-9831.  Call them to schedule an appointment, and as I have said, if you are very, very lucky, you may be able meet the Angel de los Dientes there.  By the by, if you tell them that the folks at the Coronado Clarion newspaper have sent you, you will receive a special discount on top of their already affordable prices.

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Jim Morrison Exposed?

By David LeVine

True Story of Infamous Miami Concert:  Jim Morrison Miami Concert and Trial 1969-70

It was 1969, and I was a twenty-year-old photographer interested in doing special effects; the market of choice for the times was rock.  Doing rock photography meant you could be as expressive and creative as the musicians themselves. There was only one problem – all of the “action” was in L.A. and New York; and I was stuck in Miami.

At the Doors’ concert I was ushered right in.  I remember I was at the foot of the stage, the lighting was terrible (another thing that has changed).  Being a lover of available lighting, I almost never use a flash; I feel the shots are always more real that way.  The Doors started to play and boy were they bad, off-tune and all. The band started to get rowdy and the crowd soon followed, charging the stage, and almost crushing me.  Mayhem ensued and that concert went down in rock history.  I remember thinking that if I had paid $7.50 for a ticket I would have been really pissed off.

In an effort to perfect my craft, I attended every rock concert that I could con my way into.  If you showed up at the stage door with several cameras around your neck it was a given that you were a professional and the door was opened, no questions asked.  Of course, this was before they banned the audience from photographing the concert.

When I developed the film — I always souped my own stuff — it was extremely underexposed.  The light had been very low and I had only used an ASA 400 film.  I had to use chemical intensifier on the negatives to bring out the detail; I hadn’t yet perfected my push-processing technique of attaining ASA 16,000.  The shots looked great – I had one of Morrison with his hand in his pants, but my favorite was the one of him with the lamb.

Later, when I learned that Morrison had been arrested and was charged with “indecent exposure” and “lewd and lascivious conduct”, I decided to call the Miami Herald newspaper in hopes of selling some of the photos.  They weren’t interested.

Several months later, I received a phone call from Jim Morrison’s lawyer in L.A.  By way of the Herald, he had learned of my photos and was interested in them.  He bought six in all.  I can still remember the excitement I felt at selling those photos.  They brought in a whopping $65, not much even then, but I bought my first LunaPro lightmeter with the money.  And as any hardcore photographer knows, that is a big deal.  Business being completed, he then asked me what I had seen that night at the concert and if I would be interested in testifying in court.  I readily agreed.  In my eyes, the only thing he was guilty of was a “bad” concert.

As the trial date approached, I formed a plan of action.  I would show Jim Morrison my portfolio, and of course, he would hire me, I hoped.  Remember, I was desperate to get some “rock photography” work and even more desperate to get out of Miami.  So, a little fantasy went a long way.  I showed up at the courthouse, portfolio-in-hand, marched into the courtroom, and sat down.  The trial was already in progress and the last prosecution witness was on the stand.

He was saying that he saw everything, i.e., how Morrison had exposed himself.  He had been up in the lighting/projection booth at the Coconut Grove Auditorium about 300 feet from the stage with a 35mm SLR camera and a l35mm lens.  I remember thinking that he couldn’t have seen much at that distance and with such a short telephoto lens.  He was then asked if he had a picture of Morrison exposing himself and he didn’t.  His excuse was that he didn’t want to get in to trouble for taking an “obscene” photo.  Just about then, Morrison’s attorney turned around and saw me sitting in the gallery.  He started waving his arms and saying, “No, no, no.”  Apparently, I was not supposed to be in the courtroom until I was called to testify (thus my testimony would not be swayed by having heard others).  The lawyer informed the judge of my mistake and I was asked to wait outside the courtroom.  Shortly after this, the proceedings recessed for lunch.

I went to lunch with thirteen people including Morrison and his entourage.  We discussed my reaction to the last witness.  I recounted how he couldn’t have seen much from his vantage point and with the camera and lens he claimed to have.  He had also presented his proof sheets from the concert at the trial and I remarked that the size Morrison appeared on the proof sheet was the way the witness saw him through his viewfinder.  I was asked if I would testify to these facts in court.  I agreed and it was settled that I would be the first defense witness when court resumed.

Before we went back into the court room, I got the opportunity to show Morrison my portfolio and he signed two prints I had made of him at the concert.  I placed them back in my portfolio’s side pocket.  The trial then resumed.

When I was called to the stand, I took my portfolio with me.  The defense attorney went first.  I was asked if I was shooting pictures at the concert and if I had any of the pictures with me.  They wanted to see the pictures I had with me.  These were my personal prints which had been signed earlier by Jim Morrison.  I had to answer, “Yes,” but I broke out in a sweat as they took them from me.  The prints were then entered as “Exhibits E and F”.  They were then tagged by the clerk with the tags stapled to the prints.  Morrison’s attorney then produced the six prints I had sold him earlier.  I saw my opening and took it. I told the attorney that the photos I had just given him were also in the set he had just produced and that the photos now in the court’s possession were my personal photos and could I have them back.  They returned my photos signed and tagged by the court.  I hasten to think what those prints would be worth today to a collector but unfortunately they were stolen along with other of my personal effects sometime later.  Getting back to the trial, I was being asked about the testimony of the last photographer and I repeated what I had related during lunch.  My testimony was completed with the statement that though Morrison had been out of control, he had not exposed himself.

It was now time for the cross-examination.  My expertise was questioned regarding the other photographer’s equipment and subject-view ability.  I was asked if I considered myself an expert on the subject.  I paused, and said, “I was.”  “Did I hear him say ‘Fuck’?” I was asked.  “I don’t remember,” I said, “He might have.”  Picture this.  I’m sitting on the witness stand with the judge above me on my left, the jury on my right, and Morrison straight ahead.  “Did you see him make any masturbatory-t ype motions?”  I was asked.  “That depends.” I said.  “To YOU,” he asked.  “Yes,” I said.  “Well, what exactly did he do?”  “He sort of went like this.”  I said while motioning my hand as “subtly” as possible.  “I OBJECT!” said Morrison’s attorney.  “A hand motion cannot be shown in the record.”  I was asked again and repeated the motion.  The objection was repeated. “Enough of this,” the judge said, “young man, stand up.”  “Now, repeat the motion and stop your hand at the lowest point.”

Do you believe this?  A poor 20-year-old kid standing in front of all these people, looking right at Morrison, and having to repeat the same motion he was arrested for.  At the same time, they are using the same language he “might have”. Well, I guess it’s okay as long as it is not in front of the “children”; anyway, I regress. I repeated the motion stopping my hand at the lowest point (holding my hand loosely open).  The judge said, “Let it be shown in the record that his hand is opposite his belt buckle.  Now, stop your hand at the highest point.”  Way up opposite my face looking right at Morrison…  “Good show,” Morrison told me later.

The next day I returned just to follow the action.  Since I had testified already, it was okay to sit in.  Recess came.  This time, I had my camera with me for some shots.  You weren’t allowed to shoot pictures in a courtroom, I knew that. “What about taking pictures in the courtroom, during recess?” I asked.  Morrison’s attorney said, as I saw the artist doing the sketches talking to Morrison, “Go ahead.”  After the attorney responded, I started to shoot.  A moment later, I was tapped on the shoulder.  “What do you think you’re doing?” asked the bailiff.  “He said it was okay,” I responded.  “Well, it’s not.  You’re going to see the judge!”  The bailiff sat me in the jury booth.  I said, “Don’t embarrass me in front of all these people.  I don’t want to be sitting here in the jury box when court begins.  I WANT TO SEE THE JUDGE, NOW!”  “I’ll be right back!” he said as he disappeared towards the judge’s chambers.  I could have left then, but decided against “escaping”.  After all, I had done nothing wrong — I asked first.  The bailiff returned and brought me before the judge in his chambers.  “What are you going to do with these pictures?” he asked.  “They are for personal purposes,”  I said.  “I had better not see them anyplace!” he stated, being very judgelike.  “Yes, sir,” I said.

So, that’s how I got these shots.  It’s been 26 years since the “blessed event” and this is my first exhibit of the photographs.  I stopped showing them years ago.  Well, pretty exciting stuff, huh?  I eventually got away from Miami to L.A. in 1972, when I ran away with a movie star.  Now that was exciting.  But that’s another story. 

“My Daily Photograph” is David LeVine’s expression and showcase of his favorite, unique, and continuing photographs.  He features events of the particular day in history as well as noted birthdays of the day alongside a wonderful pick pic for the day.  You can subscribe to this quality service at:  www.mydailyphotograph.com

David LeVine is the “official rock/art/life photographer” for the Coronado Clarion.  He brings to us the most awesome skills of photographic genius as well as supreme computer web engineering.  We are thrilled to have him on board and will be featuring an article/interview on his career and life in the next Clarion.


To order I Remember by Alan Graham:  www.irememberjimmorrison.com

Cover art by stupendous rock photographer, David LeVine.

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The Victory Gardens

By Alan Graham

Coronado’s Own Victory Garden

In 1969, a local Coronado benefactor Frances Harpst decided to knock down some valuable commercial property on Orange Avenue and to put in an old-fashioned community garden – a victory garden of sorts.  It sat next door to the old San Diego Glass and Paint store which is now the Coronado Hardware store.

As part of the Second World War effort, the government rationed foods like sugar, butter, milk, cheese, eggs, coffee, meat, and canned goods.  Labor and transportation shortages made it hard to harvest and move fruits and vegetables to market. So, the government turned to its citizens and encouraged them to plant “Victory Gardens.”  They wanted individuals to provide their own fruits and vegetables.

Nearly 20 million Americans answered the call.  They planted gardens in backyards, empty lots, and even city rooftops. Neighbors pooled their resources, planted different kinds of foods, and formed cooperatives.

Farm families, of course, had been planting gardens and preserving produce for generations.  Now, their urban cousins got into the act — all in the name of patriotism.

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Fran’s Folly

By Fran Harpst

EDITOR’S NOTE:
There are many cute and curious tales in Coronado’s history and it is with much delight and fond remembrances that we embark on the journey into the past. Come along with me on this wonderful and nostalgic sojourn down along “Memory Lane”. — Al Graham, Editor


“Pile of junk hardly a bargain – A declaration of ‘unconditional surrender’ has been signed by a defeated taxpayer – and now the City of Coronado owns a boat.  Not much of a boat, but a boat.

Informed that his boat had broken loose from its mooring in Glorietta Bay and was impounded by the city, the owner threw up his hands and cried ‘uncle’.

He sent to the city the boat’s certificate of number and certificate of ownership – all signed – with a letter hinting that he was being crushed and ‘swindled’ by the preponderance machinery of government.

He concluded, ‘…I hope not to hear another damned single word about that pile of junk…the City of Coronado should bill Mr. Kelly (former owner) for the impoundment and all other fees due, rather than wish that pile of junk upon some other unfortunate,  for it is hardly a bargain at any price!’

So now Coronado has a boat and officials don’t know exactly what to do about it.  In fact, they’re having trouble matching the registered numbers with those on the boat impounded.

The boat, a homemade iron-sided tub of about 30 feet – a ‘stinkpotter’ as yachtsmen call power boats was anchored for years at a city mooring in Glorietta Bay.

This spring it broke loose and went ashore on the rocks but tides carried it in and out and it drifted aimlessly about the area for several weeks, a general menace to other boats.

Attempts were made by the police to have either the former owner, a John D. Kelly, or the present owner, Alarik Walton, take care of the scow.  But nothing happened and it was impounded at Coronado Marine Ways…” — Coronado Journal, Thursday, March 30, 1961 –

“Coronado Rose Adopted at $380 – The ‘Coronado Rose’ has found an owner.  Mrs. Fran Harpst of 930 Bay Circle adopted the boat for $380.  Her bid was the highest of ten offers received by the city, John Halvorsen, assistant to the city manager, said.

Mrs. Harpst has moved the 34-foot, iron-hulled cabin cruiser from its Coronado Marine Ways next door to Rask Boat Building Company.

‘I’m very glad to get rid of it,’ said Foster Bryant, Marine Ways owner who held the boat in storage for the city.”

“Mrs. Harpst was one of the few who turned out for a public auction of the boat, but she did not bid.  They city had put a $300 minimum on the sale to pay for impound and storage costs.

The highest offer made at the auction was $50, turned down by the city.  Halvorsen later called persons he thought may be interested and asked for bids.”— Coronado Journal, Thursday, May 4, 1961–

 

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Doves’ Landing

UDATE.

My dear friend Loren died last night peacefully in his bed surrounded by his loving family.

He battled bravely for ten years without a word of complaint and always with a sense of humor.

The angriest word I ever heard him ever utter was, MERCY!

Al Graham

 

Now cracks a noble heart. Good-night, sweet prince;

And flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.

-Hamlet, Act V

 

My friend, Loren, is ailing right now and has few pleasures these days.  His wife, Mary, is at his side 24/7 caring for his every need.  Always on the hunt to find something to cheer him up, she came up with an idea she thought might do the trick.  She had her son, Michael, build a large plywood platform beneath the window where Loren sits to watch the day go by.  They placed colorful wind chimes, a bird feeder, and a water bottle on the platform.

Soon there were birds descending on it as if it was a new airport runway.  One day, a couple of doves came to visit.  They ate and drank along with the robins, sparrows, cardinals, and even little humming birds all chattering happily like it was a bird social.  The doves must have called, e-mailed, or written to every single dove in San Diego County because in a matter of days, doves began moving in for good.  Today they have even established a queue or a waiting line on some power lines above the house.  They sit waiting patiently for their turn.  There are far too many of them to land all at once.  So they are orderly and organized.

One day, I got a frantic call from Mary asking me to come there immediately.  I ran outside carrying my trusty Flip camera.  When I got to the door, Mary blurted out, “Look behind you!”   I whirled around to see a very young Golden Eagle perched menacingly in a tall palm tree.  His eyes were wild and he looked poised to strike, possibly at me.  I turned on my camera and slowly raised it until his beautiful wild eyes came into view.  He stood quite still.  He seemed to settle down and was more curious than threatening.

He watched the doves, sparrows, and even young blackbirds as they engaged in a feast of seeds and fresh water.  I felt sure that soon he would swoop down and snatch up one of the birds but he just kept watching the joyful activity.

The birds played on as if there was no threat at all and soon the eagle flew away. We all marveled at the outcome and thought that our presence may have saved the lives of a bird or two.  Yesterday I received another frantic call from Mary. The eagle was there again in the very same tree.  He was there simply to observe that blissful pageant.

I never got there in time to see the eagle again, but Mary told me that he was much bigger now and more beautiful than ever.

So the bird platform sits there.  It is an unenclosed aviary inhabited by an army of feathered vertebrates. Loren watches and smiles with glee as the magnificent procession prolongs.

A  few years back when Loren was suffering many seizures, his shunt would malfunction causing him all kinds of problems. He would have hideous hallucinations that shook him up.  One night, his wife asked me to come up because he was in a panic. He imagined that a giant eagle had flown in through his window, which was closed, and that it was hiding behind a chest of drawers.  I convinced him that it had gone but he now saw it at the window again.  I said I would go outside and chase it away.  I did and then yelled to him that it was now gone.  He thanked me and I went home.

The next morning, Loren realized that the intruding eagle was not real and that I had just played along with him at the time in an effort to calm him.  He told Mary that I was a really good friend and then he belly laughed all day about it.

Posted in CLARION AUTUMN ISSUE 2013 | 1 Comment

Keeping the Faith

By Lynne Harpst Koen

When our lives are on track, all is right in our personal universe.  Good health, gatherings with friends and family, the unconditional love of our pets, et cetera.  Good times!  However, everyone gets derailed from time to time.  It’s part of life. We must learn to “man-up” — often hard to do under our own steam.  Sometimes we tend to panic and go straight to God for help — praying constantly for things to get better.  A priest once told me God answers ALL prayers, only perhaps not in the exact way we’d like Him to.  I didn’t really understand his meaning then, but now that I’ve done quite a lot of living, I get it now, loud and clear!

Personally, I’ve always felt a bit selfish praying for myself.  I have so many blessings already!  I pray for strength for everyone and everything (animals) that may be in need.  The power of prayer is limitless!  Most importantly, I offer up prayers of THANKS each and every day.  No joke.  God needs his prospers too!  I give Him a shout out whenever I can — very much a constant in my world.  When life gives me challenges, I find comfort in staying grounded — looking to the simple things rather than getting overwhelmed.  Things we tend to take for granted. I go to ground zero.  Just being alive is a biggie! Living in my own hometown, the love of my wonderful husband, tending my little garden, watching the sunset, and so on, very humbling.  It really helps put things in perspective, folks.  The trick to prayer is consistency. The rest will follow along naturally, rest assured.

The worst thing possible is to succumb to life’s low points and start feeling sorry for ourselves.  God never gives us more than we can handle.  We must trust in our faith!  He WILL give us the strength to make it through even the darkest times, but only if we truly let Him into our hearts as Lord & Savior.  It’s not as easy as it sounds to keep that faith sometimes.  I’ve had more than one crisis of faith, but with His help & our trust in Him, things always seem to work themselves out eventually.  Most people have a “higher power” they look to. Whoever it may be, it’s all good! Being Catholic, the Holy Trinity is my home team in the big ballgame that is life as we know it.  For those who are lost without a higher power, well, I pray for them too!

Miracles are abundant on a daily basis.  We simply need to choose to be open to them.  No matter how steep our hills or how low our valleys, there are always those who have it much worse than we do.  Just watch the evening news — guaranteed to cure what ails us.  OKAY, maybe not cure us completely, but it does help us feel better about your own problems!  Whatever you believe in, plan to make it work for you, not just when you’re in need, but always and forever.  Feel the positive energy surround you!  It’s all about how we live our DASH.

Lynne Harpst Koen

11/15/1957–

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FAMOUS NAVAL QUOTES

“DAMN THE TORPEDOES FULL SPEED AHEAD!” – Admiral David G. Farragut/The Civil War (Posted by L.H.K.)

“DON’T GIVE UP THE SHIP!” – Captain James Lawrence/The Naval War of 1812 (Posted by L.H.K.)

“PRAISE THE LORD AND PASS THE AMMUNITION” – Lieutenant Howell M. Forgy/Pearl Harbor (Posted by L.H.K.)

“WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND THEY ARE OURS…” – Oliver Hazare Perry/The Naval War of 1812 (Posted by K.A.G.)

“I HAVE NOT YET BEGUN TO FIGHT!” – Captain John Paul Jones/The Revolutionary War  (Posted by K.A.G.)

“THE NAVY HAS NO PLACE FOR GOOD LOSERS!  THE NAVY NEEDS TOUGH SONS OF BITCHES WHO CAN GO OUT THERE AND WIN!” Admiral Jonas H. Ingram/ 1926  (Posted by K.A.G.)

 

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SOLITUDE MOUNTAIN

By A. R. Graham

Mount Soledad sits high above the Pacific Ocean with a breathtaking 360-degree view of San Diego. A concrete cross measuring 29-feet tall and 14-foot wide was installed in 1954 as a war memorial.

As I walk around the towering concrete monolith, an air of solemn reverence is present. Five minuets earlier, an army of media had assembled to broadcast a live report about the most recent ruling from the San Francisco Supreme Court; and once again, it has been deemed, “illegal to display a religious symbol on public land.”

In 2001, a non-profit 501c corporation, Mount Soledad Memorial Association, added a memorial wall, where thousands of black granite plaques have been installed in memory of the fallen.

It is now no longer a lone cross since the wall was added. This brought a more human side to the equation. Before it was a memorial of the countless and faceless souls who died in battle. Now, the plaques tell of great heroes who sacrificed their lives for the nation. 
 
A gentle wind is blowing, and the morning sun illuminates the giant white cross. As if reciprocating in kind, it reflects billions of fragmented sun rays onto the wall below. As I descend the steps with the warm sun at my back, I am almost overcome with a great sadness at such loss. The flag’s giant shadow caresses the wall. The faces on the plaques reflect back at me telling me where, when, and how they all died.

I am sure that there will always be an effort to remove the cross; but at the same time, I feel that it will always be there beaconing high on “Solitude Mountain”.

The original wooden cross on Mount Soledad was erected in 1913 by private citizens living in La Jolla and Pacific Beach, but was stolen in 1923. Later that year, it was affixed back in the ground in Mount Soledad Natural Park only to be burned down by the San Diego chapter of the Ku Klux Klan.

The second cross was erected in 1934 by a private group of Protestant Christians from La Jolla and Pacific Beach. This sturdier, stucco-over-wood frame cross was blown down by blustery winds in 1952.

Beginning in 1989, the cross had been involved in a continuous litigation regarding its legal status. According to the interpretation of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and the “No Preference” clause of the California Constitution by the opponents of the cross, it is illegal to display a religious symbol, such as a Christian cross, on public land, as it demonstrates preference to a specific religion and thus violates the separation of church and state. Judges have sided with plaintiffs on multiple occasions and ruled that the cross is illegal and had to be removed or sold to the highest bidder. Defenders of the cross explored several options for preserving the cross. The land under the cross was eventually transferred to the federal government. Critics of the cross allege that, even if the transfer itself is legal, it does not solve the fundamental problem of the argument that the cross is not legal on any government-owned property.

The American Civil Liberties Union proposed ways to resolve the situation such as the cross may be dismantled or the cross may be sold to a third party and physically transferred off the public land. An Episcopal church, located within a few hundred feet from the present location of the cross, has agreed to place it on its property. Another option is the government may hold an auction and sell the parcel of the land with the cross to the highest bidder.
Defenders of the cross saw all these options as unacceptable and were determined to find a way to leave the cross intact in its present location. A cross has been on the site since 1913. Architect Donald Campbell designed the present Latin cross in recessed concrete with a twelve-foot arm spread in 1954. In 1998, after the sale by the city of the cross and the land it stands on to the nonprofit Mount Soledad Memorial Association, the cross was transformed into being the centerpiece of a newly erected Korean Memorial.

Original Dedication Ceremony on April 18, 1954



Besides all of its controversy, the cross and its site provides a rich part of San Diego history. Having been first used as a Memorial Park in 1914, it went onto be used by the Lindbergh’s for glider flights in the 1920s. It was part of the military’s early-warning defense system in WWII. The 29-foot cross was dedicated on April 29, 1954 to honor Korean War veterans; and has been long used by planes and ships for navigation. It was transferred to the federal government on August 14, 2006 as the National Veterans Memorial.

Mount Soledad also holds the last home lived in by Dr. Seuss. His widow, Audrey Geisel, still resides atop Mount Soledad in a lavish home that includes “The Cat in the Hat” and an observation tower that is referred to as the “Seuss House” by the locals.

There is also an urban legend that in the 1930s, a group of little people who earned money in Hollywood by appearing in movies such as The Wizard of Oz, came to San Diego where they built miniature houses on Mount Soledad. The legend gained support due to the fact that several houses were built on steep slopes overlooking the Pacific and, as you drove or walked by, it was easy to believe, due to optical illusions, created as you looked down at the houses from the road that the doors and other features were smaller than normal. If you actually walked up to the houses, it was easy to see that they were normal sized. Most of the supposed, “Munchkin Houses” have been remodeled and the effect is no longer present. “We’re off to see the Wizard, the Wonderful Wizard of Oz…”

Current status of the cross: At the beginning of our new year, 2011, a federal appeals court ruled that a veterans’ memorial featuring the 43-foot cross on Mount Soledad is unconstitutional. “The use of such is distinctively Christian symbol to honor all veterans sends a strong message of endorsement and exclusion,” wrote Judge M. Margaret McKeown for the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “It suggests that the government is so connected to a particular religion.” The decision that the La Jolla, California memorial violates the Establishment Clause reverses a lower court ruling does not determine what will happen to the cross. “This does not mean that the memorial could not be modified to pass constitutional muster, nor does it mean that no cross can be part of this,” McKeown concluded. This case has wound through the courts for two decades. Its future is still beknownst.

The Memorial Today

The memorial and cross are presided over by the Mt. Soledad Memorial Association, a nonprofit California 501(c)3 corporation, who purchased the land in 1992. Their mission statement is: To enhance and preserve the Mt. Soledad Veterans Memorial honoring veterans who have served our country and to educate the general public about service to our country and the sacrifice that veterans make to preserve the freedoms we enjoy as Americans. In August 2006, the Memorial was officially transferred to the Department of Defense and is now managed and operated by Commander, Navy Region Southwest located in San Diego, California.

The walls that have been constructed ultimately hold 3,200 black granite plaques which can be purchased by donors and engraved with the names and photos of war veterans. Currently, more than 2,700 are in place. Each plaque tells the story of a veteran’s military service or that of a group’s military service. It includes members of all military services: the U.S. Army, Navy, Marine Corps., Air Force, Coast Guard, and also the Merchant Marines who served during World War II. A large American flag flies over the Memorial. The brick pavers honor veterans and supporters as well. The Mt. Soledad Veterans Memorial is open to the public and docents are available as well as volunteer opportunities exist.

Where Thousands Gather to Honor Our Veterans


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DEFINING MOMENTS: UPON MY BLOOD

By Suzi Pignataro

He’s been watching me for about forty minutes from behind a creased and dog-eared trade copy of Don Quixote. I guess a hippie chick stirring a pot of wax over an open fire on the beach might be more captivating than a self-deluded Spaniard – especially if you’re a young dude who’s obviously a long way from home and most likely chasing after an impossible dream or two of his own. Midwestern farm boy of German extraction is my guess, judging by the Wrangler jeans, faded flannel shirt, close-cropped blond curls and naturally tanned skin. He’s long and lean with surprisingly delicate hands. Hmm…Maybe not a farm boy after all, maybe just some small-town kid hitch-hiking through California. His Converse sneakers look new, as does the Padres cap: probably threw away his cowboy boots and hat at the border.

I’ve been eyeing him, too, you see.
It’s my last week in Coronado, the town where I was born and have lived my first eighteen years. Next week, I pack up my goods in my ’67 Volvo that I’ve christened Gunnar, and caravan with my parents up Highway 101 to Sonoma County. I’m college bound.
I take orange, red, and yellow crayons out of their box, strip off the paper, and break them into bits that I drop into the melted paraffin. I stir the liquid with a wooden spoon and watch the colors swirl and bleed into each other.
“‘Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn, and – ’”
I let out a yelp and drop the spoon into the pot, splattering hot wax on my hands.

“Ooww!!!!”

With the boy trotting next to me – flustered and chanting, “CRAP-crap, CRAP-crap” to the rhythm of his footsteps – I run down to the shore, flapping my blistering hands and crying out, “AhGhee! AhGhee!” like a wounded bird. We squat at the water’s edge where I bury my hands in the cold wet sand.

The boy scrubs his face with his shirt sleeve. “I am so sorry. I should have known I’d startle you.”

He’s not from the Midwest: not with that voice, and not with quoting Shakespeare. The game is still in play in my head. I need him to keep talking.

“No sweat,” I reply. The salt stings my skin; I feel the wax tightening as it cools. “So, why Don Quixote?”

His hands flutter toward the water. Long straight fingers lightly tap the surface. He laughs. It’s almost a girl’s giggle, and one at his expense. When he looks up at me, I see his eyes clearly for the first time. They’re the color of a Greek Island cove flecked with gold coin.

“It’s comforting to find a dreamer crazier than myself, I guess,” he confesses.

Hmm…Educated, articulate, wry humor, and no discernable accent. Grew up in various parts of the country, maybe even the world.

“You’re a Navy brat,” I declare triumphantly.

The boy rocks back on his feet, which, like mine, are soaked. He hugs his knees and frowns at me. “How do you know?”

“And not just any Navy brat,” I continue, ignoring him. “One with a high ranking dad – maybe even some mucky-muck in Europe, hence the Spanish novel and Macbeth – and you’ve had some private school education.”

He eyeballs me, taking in the long expanse of patchwork velvet and lace, the black army boots, the braids framing my face, and beaded earrings dangling from my ears. He wants to be amused, annoyed or curious. He settles for curious. “I take it you are not a Navy brat.”

“Well, I’m definitely a brat,” I reply evasively. I begin to peel off the solid wax from my hands. Underneath, the skin is puckered and red.

The boy furrows his eyebrows. “You need to have that looked at.”

I wave a blotchy hand. “Nah. It’s okay.”

“No,” he persists. “You don’t want it to get septic.”

Hmm…Make that Navy surgeon of high ranking. Possibly head of a Navy hospital in…where would it be…Gibraltar? Marseilles? Where do we have Navy hospitals in Europe? Are we in Europe?

“Your dad a doctor?” I ask.

The boy shakes his head impatiently, but a smile begs to break out on that handsome face. “You lose.”

Two fighter jets roar over our heads, their wheels dropping in preparation for landing at North Island. I look up to watch, but the boy ducks his head. He seems unnerved by the planes and their bone-jarring shriek. He takes me by the elbow. “Let’s go back to your cauldron, witch.”

After tucking Don Quixote into his knapsack, the boy joins me at the fire where I demonstrate how to make sand candles. He gets a little misty-eyed when I tell him they’re a parting gift for my mother: a reminder of her daughter away at school. He confides that he didn’t leave his mother anything to remember him by when he left home.

“And where is home?” I prod, as I pour sunset colors into a mold in the sand.

The boy shrugs into himself as another jet screeches overhead. I wait patiently for its blast to pass, then observe, “You may be Navy, but you’re not naval air.”

The boy chuckles nervously. “How can you live with that?”

I return the pot to the fire and throw in more paraffin. “I can’t. Where I’m moving to has no military bases; just rolling hills and redwoods.” I look him in the eye. “So, where are you from?”

The boy watches the wax melt. “I’m taking some time off before I go to Columbia.”

“University?”

“That’s right.”

The boy didn’t answer my question, did he? Twice now, he’s evaded it. I turn and face him, digging my fists into my waist.

“Are you going to tell me where you’re from, or are you going to continue to drive me crazy?” I demand.

The boy laughs, but there’s respect in his voice when he says, “You’re something else, you know that?” He takes the spoon from me and stirs the wax. “It’s like you said: I’m a Navy brat. I’ve lived in lots of places. And for your information – because you’re dying to know – I don’t like tons of metal and weaponry flying right over my head, and my dad is not a doctor.” He extends his free hand. “I’m Jay*.”

“And I’m Suzi,” I reply. I offer my own hand. He accepts it, carefully avoiding the burns.

“Nice to meet you, Suzi.”

“Likewise, Jay.”

Jay drives a blue and white VW bus, which he insists upon using to transport me and my candle paraphernalia back home. The bus bears Virginia plates. A Navy duffle bag inscribed with the name, “J. R. Hess”, lies on the floor in the back, along with the accoutrement necessary for camping. Some sort of Native American crystal-and-bead mumbo-jumbo hangs from the rear view mirror by a circular webbing of rawhide strips. Questions percolate. This guy’s pay dirt.

“So, where did you live in Virginia?”

Jay turns the engine and signals to leave the curb. “The usual Navy brat places,” he replies absently while checking his side mirror.

“Why the Navy bag with your name on it? Are you full German?”

Jay collects his patience and directs it into his white-knuckled fists. They relax. “It’s my dad’s. We share the same name. And, no, I’m not full German. My mom’s family is Dutch and English.”

“Oh.” I flick my finger at the crystal-and-bead hanging. “And what’s with the Indian whatchamacall–”

Jay slams on his brakes as three sailors dressed in whites run right in front of us. I grunt on impact with the dashboard; my fingers grab the hanging for purchase and wrench it – along with the mirror – from the windshield. Jay yells and gesticulates. The sailors flip us off and call us “dirty hippy freaks” with jaw-dropping originality. Jay and I look at each other, then at the amputated mirror, and laugh.

“I’ve heard worse,” I say, settling back into my seat, the mirror and hanging sitting in my lap as we finally make our way down Ocean Boulevard toward the Del. “They really hassle the local girls. I mean it can get pretty scary.” I point at the Navy ships anchored just past Point Loma, the helicopters practicing maneuvers out over the waves. “This war. It’s not just being waged over in Nam. It’s being carried out here, in my own home town, between the swabbies and us.” I turn to Jay. He’s watching me with an intensity that makes me feel exposed. I look away.

He clears his throat. “Have the sailors hassled you personally?”

I grimace. “I’ll answer you if you answer me.”

“Answer you what?”

“Why do you have your dad’s duffle bag, and what are you doing in Coronado?”

We drive along the beach in silence.

I am but a tiny thread in the timeless spinning of my family’s yarn, and we are but a minor yarn in the ever-expanding fabric of the human race. Yet, without me – and those threads that came before me and will come after me – the fabric would bear a miniscule hole. Too many of those holes and the fabric would fray, unravel and fall apart into a grimy heap of unimportant tissue on a blue planet. The fabric needs my thread, my parent’s thread, my children’s thread.

All my life, I’ve wondered about my family’s contribution to the history of humankind and who I carry in my blood: Germans, but what type: Teutonic? Franconian? Angle? Saxon? Or, like Jay, Hessian? Celts, but what tribe: Strathclyde? Gael? Pict? Were we Welsh farmers always, or did we also mine coal? And when did my Scots ancestors transplant to Northern Ireland? And why?

By the time I meet Jay, my thirst for such knowledge has reached beyond my own kin. I now seek it from everyone. So, I ask questions. Sometimes, people invite me to climb their family’s tree with them, introducing me to each and every limb; other times, they push me out and I land on my ass.

I want to know the who, what, when, where, why, and how of this person called “Jay”, and who he carries in his blood.

“Jolly! Your name is Jolly?! That’s what the J stands for? What does the R stand for? Friggin’ Roger?!”

“You’ll have to excuse my daughter. She’s not exactly the queen of tact.”

We’re standing in my kitchen with my mother, who beams at Jay as if Monty Hall’s personally delivered him from behind door number three. Jay looks like he’s just licked a banana slug, and I’m fantasizing about shoving chicken guts down my mother’s polyester pants suit. All in all, it’s a weird moment.

Jay walked through my kitchen door and right into the sticky web that’s my parents’ Everything-Navy world. As soon as I introduced him to my mother – standing at the counter frosting a cake while singing along with Andy Williams on the radio – he was caught and wrapped like a prize fly. Recognition lit up my mother’s blue eyes, as she exclaimed, “Not little Jolly Hess!” Jay blushed and shuffled his feet, and gave up any hope of flight.

“No. I mean, yes. I mean, no and yes,” Jay stammers in reply to my ill-mannered question. “It’s Jerald Roger. I couldn’t — ”

“He couldn’t say his name — ‘Jerry’– as a little boy,” my mother interrupts with gusto, pointing at him with a spoonful of gloppy Ganache. “He called himself Jolly, and it stuck.”

I’m counting the seconds before the Ganache slides off the spoon and onto her fastidiously polished white sneakers.

“And just precisely how do you know this?” I ask; but I’ve already guessed the answer, and it’s pissing me off.

“Because your father and I know Jolly’s parents – Admiral and Mrs. Hess – and met Jolly at their home in Honolulu.” My mother waves the spoon and fails to notice that chocolate goo now decorates her blond head. There is a god after all. “You were eight,” she says to Jay, then turns to me. “And you were seven. Remember that time your father and I went away for a second honeymoon and left you kids with your grandmother?”

Jay doesn’t recollect meeting my parents and he apologetically admits as much to my mother. She forgives him with a laugh and a smile, and invites him not only to dinner but to sleep in my sister’s old bedroom rather than suffer another brisk night in the bus. Jay accepts, but I can see it on his face that he’d rather not be corralled by family friends.

As for me, I’m about to burst an aorta. I’m eighteen years old, and as far as my parents know, I’ve never had a boyfriend or even a date. This is because they warned me that only jocks or Navy officers’ sons – preferably one and the same – would be accepted into their good graces. With my attraction to liberal males with long hair and peace signs, I’ve had to keep my love interests a secret. The only reason my mother is fawning over Jay is because he’s NAVY. I’m pretty sure she’ll be planning our engagement party over dessert.

I abruptly excuse Jay from my mother’s clutches and lead him to the farthest corner of the back yard, where I hide the candles in the firewood bin. I turn to him, wringing my hands.

“I am so sorry about this,” I cry. “I had no idea she knew you. You don’t have to stay.”

Jay stares at our lemon tree as if it’s the Burning Bush; but there are no heavenly words of wisdom coming forth from its yellow fruit. Not even a “Hey, life’s a bitch, pal,” from the ghostly remains of our pets buried beneath its branches.

“If it’s all the same to you,” he replies after a moment, “a home-cooked meal and warm bed sound awfully good right now.”

I bury my face in my hands.

Dinner is a culinary success and a social disaster. My parents hold their own naval court from their respective places at the bow and stern of the table, while Jay squirms in his seat like a foreign dignitary keeping one anxious eye on the gangplank. My dad subjects him to a ruthless interrogation; my mom plays “good cop”. I quietly eat my beans and potatoes, praying for a swift and painless death.

“Columbia,” my dad repeats, making a face. “Why would you want to go there? It’s for bastard Commie intellectuals.”

And he’s off!

Jay coughs behind his fist, stealing a glance in my direction. I shrug back. I can’t help him. Once out the gate, there’s no holding back my father. Jay will just have to deal with it.

“I didn’t know that, sir. I’ll reconsider my options,” he remarks diplomatically. Not a bad liar; he just might survive this.

My dad lays his own fist on the table. Not a good sign. “Why aren’t you attending the Naval Academy like your dad?” he challenges, tight-throated. “If you’ve got the grades to get accepted into that hotbed of Bolshevik potheads, you’re smart enough to be a naval officer and serve your country. Don’t be an idiot.”

“Anyone for cake?” interjects my mother with false cheer. She’s worried my father is ruining her only chance at becoming true Navy aristocracy.

I stand up, grab my plate and silverware and look Jay in the eye.

“Later, Mom. We have a date.”

We sit at the shore admiring the last purple-hued breath of sunset. Everything Navy has disappeared for the time being; Coronado is once again a quiet town of locals and tourists, floating on an emerald lily pad.

We escaped my parents by car. Gunnar choked into life like a grumpy old man and reluctantly carried us to the Del. From there we walked along the water’s edge until our legs gave out, laid down an old quilt I keep stashed in Gunnar’s trunk, and fell wearily on our butts.

I’ve apologized for my father’s rudeness so many times, I’m sick of the words. I move on to a happier subject.

“I want to live on a farm, with lots of animals and a huge veggie garden,” I say. “I can’t think beyond that.”

Jay nods. “I can see it. I hope you get everything you want. I really do.”

“Thanks. And what about you?”

Jay sifts sand through his hands while carefully considering his response. He’s taking so long I grow impatient.

“What’s that impossible dream you think is so crazy?” I prod.

Without looking up, Jay replies, “Suzi, there’s something I need to tell you. I should have told you right off.”

I feel all tingly, and not in a good way. “Sure.”

Jay turns to me. He lays his hands in his lap and composes himself with a deep breath. “The bus belongs to my oldest and best friend who’s ship is coming into North Island from Nam in a couple of days. I drove it out from Virginia Beach for him.”

I laugh from relief. “That’s a good thing, isn’t it? I mean he’s coming home, right? And you got to go on a road trip before going off to college.” Then it dawns on me. “Oh, shit. I’ve been talking trash about sailors, and your best friend is –”

Jay holds up a hand and I shut up.

“He’s shipping in and I’m shipping out.”

“WHAT?!”

The clock on my nightstand says it’s 5 A.M. I stare at it and decide it’s old-fashioned – and not in a cool way. I pick it up and chuck it toward my trashcan. It clears the sides and lands on a pile of papers with a thud.

I’ve been lying awake all night carrying on a battle that leaves me spent but wired. I’ve thrown mental grenades at everyone – my parents, Jay’s parents, Jay – only to wail over their broken bodies. I’m pissed off and sad and scared. I want this fucking war to be over. Despite my pacifist leanings, I want Jay to go to Columbia to study journalism and reach his dream of becoming a war correspondent, just as he’d stated to me on the beach, the night before.

“But why put yourself through this first?” I’d yelled at him. “What’s being a sailor going to do for you that will come to any good?”

“It will give me the perspective of the men at the bottom of the ladder, rather than the one I’ve always lived with: that of the men at the top,” he explained, his voice steady and patient. “And it will help me find out if I can really handle being around war.”

“You’re just doing it for your father!” I accused. “You’re placating him!”

“Not at all,” Jay responded evenly. “If that were the case, I’d be at Annapolis right now.”

But he’s not at Annapolis, or Columbia. He’s down the hall in one of my sister’s twin beds. In a little while he’ll wake up to the travel alarm he set before turning in. He’ll enter my bathroom, use my toilet, sink and shower; dry off with the towels my mother laid out for him. Then he’ll dress in his whites, which are carefully folded in that cursed duffle bag, scrounge up some food, and leave.

“Will you eat breakfast with me and say good-bye?” he’d asked me last night, in the kitchen, as we ate the slices of cake left out for us by my mother.

I wanted to throw my plate at him. Take my fork and stab him in the arm.

“Of course,” I replied with a reassuring smile. I’m not a bad liar, either.

At dawn I give up on sleep and pad out of my room and into the den, where I’m shocked by the image of my father feeding doves in the back yard. The tenderness with which he talks to the birds and their unconditional trust in him leads me to believe I’m witnessing a daily ritual about which I knew nothing. That, and the way my father shivers against the morning cold brings tears to my eyes. Did I ever know this man? Was he ever this gentle and open with me?

I slide back the patio door, and he turns toward me so casually it’s as if he’s been waiting for me. He continues to scatter birdseed as he asks, “Did you get any sleep, honey?”

I’m unnerved by the consideration in his voice. “Um…well…you know…not really.”

He nods his head in understanding, and I hold back more tears and the urge to run to him for comfort. I can’t remember the last time he held me. Then it hits me. “Wait a minute. You know?”

“I called his dad after you two left last night,” answers my father. “I wanted him to know we had Jolly — I mean, Jay — under our care and” — my father chuckles — “to try to knock some sense into Jerry about his son going to that Commie school in New York. I have to say, I was surprised by the boy’s plan.” He looks me in the eye. “I gather so were you.”

We move back into the house and to the warmth of the den. How often do I sit with my father and talk to him in any real sort of way? Never. We’re like two porcupines unwilling to sacrifice personal comfort for a hug.

“Daddy,” I begin, shy and unsure, “is he going to be okay?”

“Honey, no one can answer that. I’ve been through two wars and was lucky never to be in harm’s way. I was in command of a destroyer in Korea. They’re big and well armed.”

Of course, it wouldn’t be an aircraft carrier. I don’t like tons of metal and weaponry flying right over my head.

“He’ll be a hell of a lot safer than most, I can tell you that,” my father concludes.

“I think he’s crazy,” I gripe.

“Well, you shouldn’t, Suzi. He’s brave, and he’s right. He does need to know how it feels to be in a war, if he’s going to write about it. I wish all these left-wing journalists had half as much courage and forthrightness as Jay has.”

I leave my father to his morning coffee. As I approach the back of the house, expletives explode from inside my bathroom. I knock on the door.

“Oh — sorry,” comes Jay’s sheepish reply. “I didn’t know anyone could hear me.”

“Hey, it’s me.”

Jay opens the door. He’s in white boxers and a T-shirt. He’s cut his thumb while changing razor blades; his blood — and the blood of every ancestor that’s come before him — runs down his raised arm.

“What?” he asks. From the way he says that one word I know he’s been up all night, too. His fear is like a wild animal frantically clawing its way out from inside his skin, desperate to escape his madness.

“I want you to tell me your family history.” I eye the razor on the counter; the open wound. “And I want us to be blood brother and sister.”

Jay takes my hand.

~ ~ ~

* All identifying information regarding “Jay” and his family has been changed.

 

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Tom Duryea

By Kimberley Graham

Tom Duryea was born into a very special Coronado family or shall I say a definite Coronado institution.  The Duryea family came to our magical kingdom by the sea in the 1960s.  They started the first surfboard shop on the island, called “Du-ray’s”, of course.  It became “the hangout” for generations of young surfers from all over the county and state.  It was also one of the first “smoothie” bars way ahead of its time.  Tommy was the only boy amongst three energetic and industrious sisters and mother, Chris.  His father, Bob, was an accomplished and renowned surfer as well as board maker.  All the great surfers of the time hung out at Du-Ray’s.  Everyone affiliated with the exciting sport of surfing knew this family.  So, for Tommy to take to water his entire life is no surprise.

Tom is now 45 years old and carries out the family tradition with professional paddleboarding.  Born in Santa Barbara, the Duryea’s moved to Coronado when he was just a young toddler.  He has lived on the island ever since and is definitely a product of his environment.  He has been surfing since he was four years old.  These days, Tom is paddling more and surfing less “– for one it is a great form of exercise.  The fact that you’re propelling yourself through the water solely by using your arms is a great feeling.  The camaraderie’s unlike surfing.  We welcome people.  The more the merrier.”  If you know anything about the surfing kingdom, the right to a wave can be quite competitive especially in overcrowded surf break locations.

For those of you who are not familiar with this exciting sport, paddleboarding is a surface water sport in which the participant is propelled by a swimming motion on a long surfboard close to the shore.  Paddleboarding began in the 1920s when a resident of New York, Tom Blake, witnessed a small boy drowning about 50 feet from the shore line.  Thinking quickly, he yanked some bark off a nearby oak tree and used it as a flotation device to save the boy.  As this was going on, a young entrepreneur witnessed the event and decided to market the “Red” paddleboard.  This is the same board used today in lifeguard tournaments on the Jersey shore.

In 1944, while restoring historic Hawaiian boards, Blake built a replica of the “olo” surfboard ridden by ancient Hawaiian “ali’i” (kings).  This became the first modern paddleboard.  Two years later, using the same board, Blake won the first mainland surf contest which integrated both surfing and paddling.  Blake would go on to break every established paddling record available and can be thought of as the “father” of the enduring sport.  His original paddleboard design remains relevant to this day.

Paddleboarding experienced a renaissance in the early ‘80s after a Los Angeles lifeguard, Rabbi Norm Shifren’s “Waterman Race” (22 miles from Point Dume to Malibu) inspired surf journalist, Craig Lockwood, to begin production on a high quality stock paddleboard known as the “Waterman”.  Shortly after, surfboard shaper, Joe Bark and Mike Eaton (of San Diego) began production and soon became two of the largest U.S. paddleboard makers.  The idea caught on big in Hawaii as well as the mainland and paddleboarding has been consistently gaining momentum and popularity.

Today, there are five very notable events for competitive paddleboarding which include:  Molokai to Oahu Paddleboard Race, the Catalina Classic, Henessey’s International Paddleboard Championship, and the Hamilton Island Cup (Australia).  Some of the notable paddleboarders are Jamie Mitchell, Kyle Daniels, Michael O’Shaughnessy, Pierce Brosnan (James Bond himself), and of course, our local Tom Duryea.

Enter our Coronado champion paddleboarder:  Tom rides a stock board which measures 12 feet in length.  He is sponsored by and rides a Joe Bark custom board he helped to design.  Duryea continues his family’s legacy by working for Custom Surf in San Diego.  When not busy designing, building, and selling boards, he spends his time preparing himself for the races.  He recently won the Catalina Classic 32-mile race from the island of Catalina back to the Manhattan Beach pier in the stock board division.  The ocean conditions off Catalina were rugged and it was 32 miles of paddling across choppy, cold water.  He finished the race in 6 hours 14 minutes winning his division for the fourth time.  This is something that has never been done before.   When asked about the best part of the race, Duryea said, “The finish – It makes all that paddling worth it the minute you touch the sand.”  The rich history of this classic makes his win that much sweeter. Tom went on to say, “This race is the benchmark from what all other paddleboard races are measured by.”

In 2006, he won the Molokai to Oahu race in the stock division in just 6 hours 59 minutes.  This is a 32-mile race as well from the island of Molokai to Oahu, Hawaii.

Duryea will be competing in the Hennessey’s World Championship race on September 25.  There will be the best paddlers from Australia, Hawaii, New Zealand, and the United States competing.  It is a ten-mile course from Mission Bay to Pacific Beach.  Tom hopes to do well in this championship race but knows it will be a tough competition.  To prepare himself for the race, our own champion paddles 12 to 15 miles on Saturdays plus pulls 5-milers during the week.

The Duryea family and we at the Coronado Clarion are very proud of this fine sportsman.  So, mark the date and come down to support our champion Coronadan paddleboarder, Tom Duryea!  Good luck, Tom!

Custom Surf
Owner:  Mike Smith
5151 Santa Fe Street, Ste. A
Pacific Beach, CA  92109
(858) 270-1147

http://paddleboard.com
(Joe Buck paddleboards)


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MANDY ‘N’ RANDY — NOT SO HAPPILY EVER AFTER

By Kimberley Graham

Several years ago, when our children were very young, there was an adorable, friendly couple who lived a few doors down from us:  Mandy ‘n’ Randy.  Mandy was a civil engineer and Randy in flight command with the Navy.  We lived happily near each other for years.  They had a precious Pomeranian and an apartment full of Winnie the Pooh memorabilia.  Randy used to frequently come out and watch the kids play engaging them with their toys and childhood innocence.  They were the only ones we ever trusted to watch our kids in an emergency.

Randy went onto begin training with the UDT teams.  One momentous 4th of July, unbeknownst to any of us, Randy began drinking very early in the morning as do most of us who live on Orange on the Fourth.  Also unbeknownst to us was that he had been thrown out of the UDT due to mental issues receiving no psychiatric care or follow-up.  As we all sat outside enjoying the parade, his ex-team members came by on a float jeering and teasing him on.  Right over the edge, Randy went (and had done so, we later found out with his wife, on many occasions).

He began marching around in the median with an American flag he had commandeered while shouting and acting a huge-bit nuts.  Then he went home and smashed out all his windows while throwing a Bouie knife into the wall.  It turns out Randy had been sleeping with an arsenal under his pillow and bed for years becoming increasingly paranoid at the same time.

Mandy ran down to get my husband’s help who approached our distraught friend very slowly.  He found Randy passed out on the floor.  After a long talk, Randy agreed to drink coffee, sober up, and quit terrorizing his Mandy and doggie.  Well, when he got down to Central Liquor with his wife to get that coffee, he changed his mind and wanted to get some more booze.  The store refused to sell him any more liquor.  Another hysterical march down the median with his American flag and deflated patriotism ensued.

Once again, Mandy ran hysterically down to find my husband, Al.  This time, Randy had gotten into his storage in the communal courtyard and was unpacking a chest of weapons and ammunition.  After this discovery, Al stealthily returned home to secure the kids, Mandy, the neighbors, and to call 911.  I was at work while all this was occurring.  The Coronado police battalion arrived to find him sitting in an armchair in front of the back door aiming a gun to any passers-by.  SWAT team was called in and the area was cordoned off.  The stolen American flag was poised next to our friend, who we always thought was “dear sweet harmless Randy”.  While my kids hugged and tried to comfort their beloved “Mandy” friend, a single shot was fired and Randy took his life.  All the neighbors were hiding and it took a long time for the exorcism of this event to occur.  Broken out windows, yellow police tape everywhere, and a devastated widow, doggie, all the neighbors, my kids, and us were left behind in the human’s ashes of a very disturbed young soldier.

When Randy was discharged abruptly from the UDT training program due to questionable mental disabilities and psychological disorders, he never received any counseling from the Navy or follow-up even though his superiors knew he was a very unstable and dangerous young man to himself and to others.  We hope this sort of treatment has been corrected for similar service people who are clearly “at risk” putting the community at large in peril.

May Randy rest in peace?

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OLD IRONSIDES — Little Known Tidbit of Naval History

Submitted by Ray Fletcher

“Good Ole Days”

The USS Constitution (Old Ironsides), as a combat vessel, carried 48,600 gallons of fresh water for her crew of 475 officers and men.  This was sufficient to last six months of sustained operations at sea.  She carried no evaporators (i.e. fresh water distillers).

However, let it be noted that according to her ship’s log, “On July 27, 1798, the USS Constitution sailed from Boston with a full complement of 475 officers and men, 48,600 gallons of fresh water, 7,400 cannon shot, 11,600 pounds of black powder, and 79,400 gallons of rum. Her mission:  “To destroy and harass English shipping.”

Making Jamaica on 6 October, she took on 826 pounds of flour and 68,300 gallons of rum.  Then she headed for the Azores, arriving there 12 November. She provisioned with 550 pounds of beef and 64,300 gallons of Portuguese wineOn 18 November, she set sail for England.  In the ensuing days, she defeated five British men-of-war and captured and scuttled 12 English merchant ships, salvaging only the rum aboard each. By 26 January, her powder and shot were exhausted.  Nevertheless, although unarmed she made a night raid up the Firth of Clyde in Scotland.  Her landing party captured a whisky distillery and transferred 40,000 gallons of single malt Scotch aboard by dawn.  Then she headed home. The USS Constitution arrived in Boston on 20 February 1799 with no cannon shot, no food, no powder, no rum, no wine, no whisky, and 38,600 gallons of water. GO NAVY!

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ANCHORS ASTRAY?

By Nina Odele

I’m proud to be a Coronado resident.  I love my Crown City and have been fortunate enough to live here most of my life.  When I was a young girl in the 1960s, Coronado was all about the Navy.  As it should be! Many of my childhood friends’ dads were Navy.  Our family had lots of Navy friends. Orange Avenue was always full of men in uniform.  Of course, back then, I wasn’t aware of exactly what the Navy actually does. We were civilian.

I have great memories of going to the pool and the movies on Base with my Navy kid pals.  It was a simple time then and even civilians could get on Base fairly easily.  My best friend worked in the commissary.  I loved going there as a teen. Great deals on the mascara I loved but wasn’t (technically) allowed to wear yet!

During the Viet Nam War, every TV news show was chocked full of war footage:  Pure carnage — Every day — Crazy stuff — Guys half blown up — Grief stricken young widows back home in the States — Children suddenly fatherless.  Sadly, I simply took it in stride as “normal.”  I had no real concept of who was getting blown up by whom or why.  I was too young.  That was grown up stuff and I was busy being a kid.

When I was in high school (GO ISLANDERS!)  The young enlisted men used to hoot and holler at us local gals everywhere we went.  Sometimes we’d get them to buy us beer with promises of meeting them down at the beach to party.  This practice was called “tapping”.  Of course, we’d get the beer, put it in our back packs, then haul on our bikes over to a friend’s house whose parents were out of town, and laugh our butts off at what suckers those Navy guys were to believe us!  Alright, I’m not proud of it, but it was what it was.

When I learned details about Viet Nam and the horrible injustices our Navy personnel endured when they came home to the States, I was incredibly shocked and humbled.  The fact that our great Country treated these brave people who had fought for our freedom abroad like monsters upon their return was beyond all reason.  Those Veterans got the shaft from the very place they were protecting.  It was ugly.  I still remember those news shows and how horrible the carnage was.  It haunts me to this day.

I cannot fathom how the men who saw it all first hand could cope once they were back home.  A great many couldn’t cope. They went crazy or committed suicide.  There was also a huge divorce rate among Navy families after the war.  Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome was epidemic due to the fact that even our own Government turned their backs on the Veterans who were so desperately in need of monetary and psychological help.

After every other war, our returning veterans were treated like kings.  I remember feeling so heartbroken for the Viet Nam era guys.  And ashamed at the powers that be for allowing such blatant neglect.  Where was “Big Brother” during all this injustice?  I had already gained a great deal of respect for the Navy by that time.  This Twilight Zone type homecoming amplified that respect ten-fold.

Last week, I read something in the local newspaper that instantly made me quite ill.  It was an article about how several Coronado residents were complaining about the “noise” from the Navy base.  Not jets, not ‘copters — the FLAG raising and lowering ceremonies!  I couldn’t believe my eyes.  Each morning at 0750, two separate locations on Base play “Reveille” with bugles.  At 0800, they raise the American Flag(s) and play the Star Spangled Banner.  Each evening at dusk, the same locations lower our Flag(s) and play “Taps.”  These ceremonies have always brought out the Patriot in me.  They also make me feel well protected and extremely thankful for my freedom.  We live somewhere in the middle of the two locations described above.  The bugles sound at the same time every day.  You can set your watch by them!  I love standing outside hearing them in “stereo.”  The fact that “several Coronado residents” are bothered enough by the bugles to complain is one thing.  These residents are most likely transplants with no respect for Navy tradition or their own freedom for that matter!

The Flag ceremonies are not a new addition to Coronado.  They are tradition and have been exactly the same as long as I’ve lived here (50 years).  The thing that bothers me the most is that our esteemed Mayor actually took these complaints seriously enough to bring the subject up at City Hall.  Shame on you Mr. Mayor.  Are you really going to tell the Navy to “keep it down” due to a few rich idiots who have nothing better to do than complain?  I think not.  In a perfect world, these whiners would be told to move (preferably out of the USA) if they don’t like it.  Sadly, this world is far from perfect.  I suggest these “citizens” take a crash course in Naval history (emphasis on the Viet Nam era “homecoming”).  Another suggestion would be for these sour few to be taken on Base and be forced to clean all the latrines with their personal toothbrushes!

The good news is that 99.9 percent of Coronado residents do have a very healthy respect for the Navy.  Even though our “Big Admirals”, who used to be everywhere are now giving way to a new generation, we honor ALL Navy personnel — past or present, living or dead.  Those who choose not to honor them should not be Coronado residents.  We don’t want them here anyway! Ironically, the Navy fights for our freedom.  And people can live anywhere they please.  It’s because of the Navy (and all branches of Military) that whiners are free to whine.  Like I said before, it’s not a perfect world.

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THE SOUND OF SILENT

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By Al Graham

I have not heard a word from my friend Silent since he was deployed in August.  He is in a hostile land defending his country, and in particular, the lives of those in combat.  He has fought many a fray; he fought and he won.  He is called when our troops are plagued by enemy sniper fire.  He is the antidote and/or the cure.

It is hot as hell in a dusty, Afghan village.  An enemy “Super Sniper” proudly wears a gruesome merit badge signifying “Top Dog” status awarded for dissembling the lives of young Americans by the score.  Today another young Marine will be felled from far off by a remorseless assassin.

Silent has been tasked to “terminate with extreme prejudice”, and he will do just that.  The hunt is on; and if past record is lived out, Silent will bring down his quarry in bulk.  Silent is also “Top Dog” in his field.  Even now after eight deployments and many close calls, he excels.  Not long ago, he lost his left hand in a training accident; and to all, it looked like the end of his career.  Silent had other ideas.  Even before he had fully healed, he was back with a determined vengeance. 

It takes two hands to do Silent’s highly specialized job.  He does it with one hand and one hook — a device he fashioned for himself from leather and steel.  At nine a.m., Silent is half buried in the ground.  He has been there for two days waiting and watching.  He tells of an unseen and foreboding presence – a just before presence of every encounter.  Hairs on the back of his neck bristle and all becomes deathly silent.  In that awesome stillness lies a tension that could smash steel, but it is encased in serene assuredness; and Silent is about to drop the curtain bringing an end to this deathly minuet.

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Reunion: For the Love of Cockers, Not Joe

By Suzi Lewis Pignataro, Kimberley Dill Graham, Lynne Harpst Koen as well as “Chester”, “Roscoe”, “Tobey”, “Lilly”, and “Sandy”

Suzi Lewis Pignataro’s Cockers:

I started working with traumatized children while at an internship in grad school, 25 years ago. I love my work; it’s a labor of love. There’s more fun and joy in it than one would think. Kids are amazing in their ability to recover.  They only need someone to keep them safe while doing it. That’s part of my job.  Another big part is helping them get back to themselves as playful, spontaneous, imaginative and funny people. I get to be all those things with them in the playroom, as well as motherly.

Chester

Our first Cocker Spaniel was a party-colored male we named Chester. We found him through a breeder. None of her clients wanted him; he was too big and had too few points to show. We couldn’t have cared less; we wanted a family dog.  Chester was a mad man. He was a loving little guy, but he was also crazy. For example, he developed a habit of licking furniture.  He would start at one end of the couch – his favorite – and lick all the way to the other end, then turn around and lick his way back to his original spot. He used to jump up on the dining room table to steal food. If he were caught in the act, he would spit out the morsel and flop on his side, feigning sleep with raspy dog snores. He was healthy until age six-and-a-half, when he suddenly developed a rare autoimmune disorder that was showing up in male Cockers: his liver identified its own cells as an enemy and literally attacked itself, killing Chester in three weeks’ time.  It was devastating.  We donated his liver to research at UC-Davis, where the school of veterinary medicine was attempting to identify the etiology of the disease in the hope of finding an eventual cure.

When Chester was five, we adopted Roscoe. He was six. He had been forfeited by his human who had become homeless.  Roscoe was rescued by Pets Lifeline in Sonoma.  I happened to be volunteering for them when he came in.  One look, and I knew he was ours to love. Chester was not as enthusiastic about Roscoe as we humans were. He pushed him into our pool a couple of times before the two of them came to some sort of understanding. Roscoe is 14 now. He has plates in his back knees, is going deaf, has arthritis and has the Cocker Spaniel ear issues – but he’s outside right now barking his head off at the pool guy, and he wakes us up every morning howling like a wolf.  He has years to go.

When Chester died, I went into a mourning that I knew could only be healed by adopting another Cocker. My husband Daniel and I drove to Berkeley where a rescued Cocker was being fostered. That was how we adopted Tobey.  Tobey had been found on the streets of Berkeley starving and injured. He weighed only 18 pounds when he was rescued.  By the time we met him, he was up to 23 – still small for a Cocker. Once we got him home, we found out the rest about Tobey.

Tobey

As a stray, Tobey must have survived on trash and textbooks abandoned by UC- Berkeley students. He ate any garbage, piece of paper or book he could sink his teeth into. I still have the children’s books whose spines he chewed. I have them in my office where the children frequently request that I read, “One of Tobey’s books”. For the first few years, if we tried to take away the thing he was not supposed to be eating he would attack us. I was bitten twice by him. We quickly developed a hostage-negotiation relationship, where Tobey kept the object in his mouth until we offered him something more delectable. He learned that other items could be used in this manner: pencils, silverware, clothing, iPods, etc. He also had an aversion to rain, most likely the result of being homeless during the winter. It rains up to 40 inches a season here. If the air so much as smelled of rain, Tobey refused to go outside. Consequently, we had to put towels in certain areas of the house where he did his business. We grew to dread winters. Carpets and the legs of tables were ruined.

Because of the book noshing, we had to Tobey-proof all of our bookcases and bedrooms. We put a baby gate in every doorway, restricting Tobey’s access to all things munchable. I have to say, our kids were exceptionally patient about all of this, as were their friends. After Tobey passed away and the gates were retired to the garage, we still “stepped over” them.  It took us weeks to stop doing that.

In the five years we had him, Tobey cost us $13,000 in vet bills. He was treated for hypothyroidism, epilepsy, mange, chronic ear infections (leading to him having his ear canals removed), total blindness, a rare disease called Pemphigus (an autoimmune disease found mostly in the tropics, in which the proteins that keep the skin knitted together break down – the skin literally breaks apart) which almost killed him, cysts that burst, and hepatitis – the disease that caused his death. He was a huge challenge, but he was our baby. It took him three years to recover from whatever horrors he experienced before being rescued. For those three years, we never knew whether Tobey would lick us or bite us. But with unconditional love, we helped him heal. He might have been a medical disaster, but he turned out to be the most loving dog I have ever known. In the last two years of his life, all he wanted was to be with us. All he wanted was to have a cuddle with his mommy and daddy. That’s how he left this world – having a cuddle.

Daniel and I have entertained the thought of trying another breed, one with fewer health issues. The truth is, we go ga-ga every time we see a Cocker. I think it would be easy for me to adopt another breed – I have had other dogs – but Daniel’s first dog was Chester. He’s only known Cockers, and Argentines are nothing if not sentimental and loyal.

Roscoe

Back to Roscoe, our 14-year-old Cocker:

Roscoe has two personalities: That of a dignified but grumpy old curmudgeon, and that of a highly sensitive and creative being. Mostly, we live with the curmudgeon. Seldom does Roscoe seek or accept affection, and often he voices his complaint about our attempts at babying him. But, on the rare occasion, he will surprise and delight us with such fancies as “bone art”, or playing soccer with the kids, or falling head over heels in love with our neighbor’s Suffolk ewe who, unfortunately, does not return his affection.

I provide therapy for young children who have been traumatized. I never considered that Roscoe could be of any help in my “playroom”. I imagined him voicing his complaints about the children’s loudness, their messiness or their attempts at giving and receiving affection. He proved me wrong. One day last winter, Roscoe’s weekly visit to my office’s acupuncturist overlapped with my first session with a severely abused and neglected six-year-old boy. The boy huddled in a corner of my room absently playing with my dollhouse, refusing to engage with me. A scratch at the door brought in Roscoe. I worried how he would react to the boy, and how the boy would react to him. At first, Roscoe did not see the boy in the corner and walked toward his favorite spot in my room near the couch; but he picked up the boy’s scent, and turned toward the corner where the boy sat with his back to us.

“Uh-oh,” I thought, imagining Roscoe growling at the child. As I moved to intervene, Roscoe did the incredible. He trotted over to the boy, a worried look furrowing his brow, and sat down next to him. Without a word or a turn of his head, the boy put his arm around Roscoe and leaned against him with a sigh.  Roscoe turned his head toward me, his eyes speaking of the sadness he felt coming from the boy. Then he turned to lick the boy’s cheek, which was tear-stained.

That was Roscoe’s first session as the boy’s therapy dog. Every week, Roscoe waited in my reception area for him to arrive and escorted him to my playroom.  Every week, he and the boy sat by the dollhouse. Roscoe positioned himself to protect the boy from unseen danger. Gradually, the boy began to create scenes in the dollhouse from his horrific past, with Roscoe and I as his witnesses.

Roscoe has since gained a reputation for being a dog capable of “sniffing out” a child’s deepest feelings, a gift he has put to good use with a dozen children.

Enter Kimberley Graham and Lilly Belle:

Frankie, my cancer recovery dog, was gifted to me on Mother’s day after a week-long hospitalization from a bad reaction to the first round of chemotherapy in my fight against breast cancer.  He was a “dorkie”, a cross between a Dachshund and a Yorkshire terrier.  He fit in one’s palm, he was so tiny.  Frankie, named after my husband’s favorite brother, went on to become the joy of my life, while I battled a yearlong struggle with two surgeries, chemotherapy, and radiation treatments.  He snuggled under the covers with me at night and followed me everywhere by day.  We even showered together.  He was my constant entertainment and the only one who could seem to bring me joy.  Two days, before this Mother’s Day, Frankie went missing.  After a month-long campaign and an oath to my healing companion that we would always search for him, we found out he was hit by a car two blocks from our home.

During that month of June, I was so distraught.  I could not be dissuaded from the constant campaign of searching for “Frankie Dog”.  On Mother’s Day, two days after he went missing, my family and friends again gifted me with a puppy.  She was a half-a-foot long blonde “miniature” cocker spaniel purchased from a popular puppy shop in Mission Valley where they sell puppies to the innocents for over a thousand dollars.  Because of my story of losing Frankie and the breast cancer survival, the store owner, gave my family a bargain.  We named her “Lil’ Something”.  Well, a bargain, she wasn’t.  Lil’ Something was not a miniature cocker spaniel.  She was a diseased puppy mill dog infested with spaghetti-sized worms among other infestations, a respiratory infection, and a definite aggression-disorder.  She would immediately growl at me when I touched her and aggressively try to bite my face.  She was not a Frankie dog.  I was so sad from losing “my baby” that I could not bring myself to bond with this puppy especially with her deposits all over my carpets that well-intended family members and guests would trot all over the house.  I was a-cleaning constantly as well as having to afford large veterinarian bills.  Plus she made sounds and had mannerisms that would make me feel Frankie’s ghost.

After a series of veterinarian appointments, medication treatments, and improvements in her diet, Lil’ Something started to grow and grow and grow.  She needed a new name.  My daughter, Ariel, said she wanted to call her “Lilly”, and Lilly she became.

Weeks passed and I began to notice my new puppy as well as the two kittens well-intentioned friends also gifted me to make me feel better.  My home had become a play fest for baby animals.  Who could not notice?  I began to pay attention to all these little varmits.  Benny, Esperanza, and Lilly – the crazy, shedding, pooping, always playing babies.  They started to creep up into my psyche and started my healing process.

Enter Lynne Harpst Koen:

Lynne Harpst and I, Kimberley Dill, grew up alongside each other, but never were really acquainted.  My husband, Al Graham, had known her well while she was growing up as he worked closely with her mother, Fran, on several projects.  We were recently introduced through him as we shared not only a deep affection for my husband, but a love of our hometown, Coronado.  After a suggestion that we have a girls’ day in which we walk our dogs on Lilly’s first dog walk, we got together.

Lynne has two rescued adoption dogs – Rockit and Boo.  They are small dogs and have known their own issues as well.  Lynne with her husband, George Koen, have salvaged these mistreated and sick dogs into healthy, happy family members.

Lilly and I arrived a bit nervous at the doorstep of the Koen’s home trepidly wondering how we would do on our first day out as a mommy and a puppy duo.  We were still not even sure of ourselves.  The door opens and Lilly on her first day on a leash enters.  Rockit and Boo excitedly approach.  Lilly starts to scream.  I have never heard any dog make that sound.  She then proceeds to pee all over the tile floor.  I picked Lilly up to comfort her and she then pee-d all over me.  While I was trying to recover from this puppy insanity, Rockit lifted his leg and pee-d all over the wall in the foyer.  Good start – all of us – on our first visit – in an effort to get to know one another.

Well, Lynne, the trooper that she is, grabbed Lilly from me wrapped her in a towel, asked her housekeeper to clean up, and escorted me outside for refreshments.  She pronounced that today is “Lilly’s Coming Out Day” and she was now officially “Auntie Lynne”.  She went on to say that her only granddaughter is named “Lilly” and the family nicknamed her “Lilly Belle”.  Now, my Lilly is officially Lilly Belle as well.  Auntie Lynne made me promise that she could treat us to a day at Wags-N-Tails with special girlie-dog puppy gifts to make both Lilly and I feel bonded.  And that is just what she did – pink baby blanket saying, “I Love My Mommy”, a special puppy dog bed, healthy puppy treats, bright pink harnass and leash, and lovely toys just for Lilly Belle.  Up until this time, she was playing with Frankie’s playthings, which would break my heart every time I heard them squeak.

Lilly and I went home officially bonded and we came out as an official puppy and mommy.  Lilly is now still growing.  She’s commanded my attention and demanded my love.  I now officially love her and I thank Frankie for being my angel – for giving me someone to help replace his loss.  He has official wings and watches over and provides stewardship trying to teach Lilly to be nicer to her mommy, who still nips and growls, but in her own way adores me.

"Lilly's Coming Out Day"

Sandy was her mother’s dog when Lynne came into the world.  She was a beautiful blonde cocker spaniel.  Lilly reminds Lynne and her brother very much of their beloved Sandy.  In a poignant e-mail and later a card, Lynne designated Sandy as Lilly’s Guardian Angel.  Sandy and Lynne also gifted me a statue of a little girl angel holding a small dog.  The plaque reads, “Always in Our Hearts”.  I, Suzie, Lynne, Sandy, Rockit, Boo, Frankie, Chester, Roscoe, Tobey, and Lilly are always in ours.

Sandy, Lilly's Gaurdian Angel

Enter Suzi and her cockers:

Suzi Lewis and I, Kimberley Dill-Graham, were best friends growing up.  We lived two blocks from one another – I, on Glorietta Boulevard and she, at the foot of the Tenth Street hill at Pomona.  We had many all-night sleepovers where we wrote love letters to The Beatles.  We shared many a wonderful childhood memory that only friends of our sort could share.  How about having a slumber party for my birthday on the night JFK was assassinated just for starters?  How about purchasing your very first album, which wasn’t The Beatles, it was by the Rolling Stones?  My favorite song was the obscure, “Just Walkin’ the Dog”.  How about sharing when you had first signs of puberty?  How about sharing when your first kiss was?  How about just sharing your dreams?  And I’ll meet you at the Village Theater, what are you wearing?  We are bonded in these memories.  We are taken back.

Suzi and I lost touch decades ago – just as we embarked upon growing up and growing away from our beloved island, Coronado.  After thirty-something years, Suzi asked to be “friends” on Facebook.  I was thrilled and responded immediately.  What brought us back together and officially bonded us were our shared feelings for the cocker spaniels, not Joe’s.  We have renewed our childhood friendship.  She is now an official contributing editor for the Coronado Clarion as her muse allows.  We welcome her and her stories as well as those of Auntie Lynne’s.

Big hugs to all of us doggie lovers and friends.

NOTE:  In honor of Frankie’s memory, we, at the Coronado Clarion with our special donors, are establishing “Frankie’s Friendly Little Dog Park” at the Ferry Landing.  It will officially open this winter, 2010 with a kickoff festival of rock n’ roll entertainment, a little dog costume competition, raffle prizes, and a Second Chance Dog Rescue adoption of little dogs as well as food and drink.

Come join us and celebrate Frankie’s memory, Lilly’s future, and the pleasure of little dogs running free safely with others.

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Speaker’s Corner

For over 150 years, every Sunday morning in London’s Hyde Park, thousands of people gather at Speaker’s Corner to discuss and debate politics and life issues.  It is a marvelous event where anyone, citizens and tourists alike, can stand up on a stage or a soapbox and speak or yell their opinions as loud as they want to.  The crowd is feisty, enthusiastic, well-informed, and much ready to engage.

We at the Clarion would like to offer a similar forum to all citizens of Coronado in print and on our website.  We urge our readers to submit letters and opinions to the Speaker’s Corner: editor@coronado-clarion.com

Al Graham
Editor


Dear Speaker’s Corner:

A few weeks ago, in a spirit of utter frustration, and after weeks and weeks of reading Mr. Kelly’s weekly column, invariably full of extremist rhetoric, I wrote a letter to the editor of the Coronado Eagle/Journal.  In the letter, I cited my belief in the right to free speech, and asked him, in the cause of fairness, to print my letter.  Of course, my letter made it to the wastebasket file.  As I have heard, so have the letters of many others.

My goal was to suggest that Mr. Kelly be more careful in his fact checking, if any, and to point out that often his passionate assertions are twisted to support his extremist ideology.  For example, he ranted against the confirmation of Elena Kagan.  Ms. Kagan is a woman who is utterly qualified to be a Supreme Court justice by most reasonable accounts.  She is praised at length and not at all like the rude, attack-dog language of Senator Jeff Sessions during the hearings.  Sessions, by the way, had also attacked Sonya Sotomayor much in the same fashion, another qualified and admirable woman.  “Alas!”  They both were confirmed.

In my rejected letter, I pointed out that Jeff Sessions was nominated to the Supreme Court a few Republican-eras back and was SOUNDLY REJECTED by both the Judicial Committee and the Senate.  His attacks on these selections are clearly related to that profound disappointment.

But when KELLY maligned the British health care system, I had to speak out.  My daughter, lives in Wales, lived in London, and has been a long-time resident of the U.K.  I was there when she bore her daughter and was amazed at the quality of the system in regards to childbirth.  It was a thoughtful and professional event.  A nurse actually visits the home of the prospective mother before her time, and then after the birth on her return home.  The nurse comes by again for another follow-up and to ask if there are any questions or if help of any sort is needed.

Later, when Amy needed an emergency heart valve operation, I was there a few days after her surgery.  She was very complimentary about the surgical excellence and the attention that she received.  Before I left California, I was actually able to speak to a nurse on her hospital floor by telephone.  The nurse spoke with me at length regarding her condition.

When Mr. Kelly called the American health care system the “best in the world”, I was compelled to quote two charts I had recently seen in Time magazine as well as the New York Times – hardly fly-by-night publications – who cited U.S. health care as 17th in the world with U.S. neonatal care, based on mortalities, as 27th.  Kelly then proceeded to knock “Obamacare” as a joke.  I then wondered if we would soon see him promoting a picture of our president with a Hitler moustache, and/or sipping tea with that party group along with the Mad Hatter.

Recently, Kelly praised the proposition policy of our state as the “will of the people”, when most “thinkers”, particularly those with a sense of law, wish duly elected legislators would serve to put forth the will of the people as our system demands — not the persons with an attitude or an ax to grind, who thrust clipboards at us asking for signatures in front of Wal-Mart or Target, in support of some emotionally based idea.

In closing, I simply have to cite a cartoon from the New Yorker showing a father and his son sitting on the floor and looking under the boy’s bed with a flashlight.  The father’s comment, “See, son, no socialists!”

Sincerely,

Rita Wack

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I Got Your Inheritance Right Here

By Vincent Garnell


When my mother died, she left a substantial inheritance to be shared between myself and my three brothers.

The day we all gathered for the reading of the will was the single most awful day of my life and my brothers that were once very close to me had now become my enemies.

My older brother wanted me to agree with them that our big family house should be sold and my other siblings agreed.  I wanted to keep the old home which was full of wonderful memories of our childhood but they felt nothing for it and its history.  To them, it was just an old building, and they wanted the money to buy new cars and condos in Hawaii.

I was so angry that they did not care about our family history.  I was so disappointed that they were not interested in preserving what was once so important to us all and was now cast aside.  My older brother claimed that he was due most of the inheritance because he had greater needs than the rest of us. He had four children and his wife was a social climber and wanted a prestigious modern house to live in.

The will was read and my older brother beamed when my mother’s wishes were read stating that he be the final word on all matters of finance and property.  He decided that he would sell the house and keep most of the profits.

When my father died a year earlier, my brother promised my mother that he would never sell the old house and that it would always remain in the family no matter what.  She left him in control of the entire estate believing that he would be true blue just like dad was throughout his life.

Mother had suffered the rigors of dementia before she died and my brother did not come to see her at all because he claimed it was too disturbing to his wife. She could not tolerate the mood swings:  happy, sad, angry.  It was all so loathsome to her, and my brother backed her to the hilt.

My mother would always ask for him:  Where was he?”  Why did he not come to her when she needed him?  I tried to get him to come to see her without his wife, but she was intractable.  She would not be coming to visit mom and she would not allow him to do so either.

Mom eventually rationalized his absence.  One morning, she suddenly announced that she wanted to go visit his grave site.  Before she died, and in her delusional state, she started telling everyone that her son had been killed in a car accident as he was on his way to visit her.

“When I die I will be buried right next to my loving son and we will be in heaven together very soon.”  She would whisper these words over and over to herself.

We did not have the heart to tell her that he was forbidden to visit.  So we just went along with her sweet fantasy.  We never tried to have her change the will because that would have broken her heart to know he was still alive but would not come to see her in the living years.

Suddenly, there were four lawyers representing four different factions.  My other two brothers did not like the idea that the older one was taking the lion’s share of the estate for himself.  They had “needs”, and like him, they were out for themselves first.

Loud and angry diatribes were hurled back and forth between them as I stood on the sidelines watching in disgust.  My once loving brothers had now turned on each other over the root of all evil.  The sin of greed stood tall and all of the evil that comes with it was now swirling around us all like some terrible leakage of raw sewage.

Suddenly, I am devoid of family as surely as if they have all left for another country far away.   Even though I am alone, I am fine with it.  They had become greedy rivals and fought viciously for “my share” leaving only the echo of the loving family I once had.  It was gone forever.  I did not care because to see them fighting like lions and tearing each other to pieces was like being in an everlasting nightmare.

The loving memories I once had are now as dead as dead flowers.  As I stand by my mother’s grave, the autumn leaves fly by in a strong wind.  I watch them as they dance across the graves and disappear out of sight.  They are gone never to return again.

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Nina’s Story

By Nina Odele.

Nina

I was born in 1957. It was in the days when good little children were seen and not heard. “Mother” would dress me up to greet her company for five minutes, then banish me to my room for the rest of the night. I thought that was perfectly normal until I got a bit older and realized that was the exception rather than the rule. It really wasn’t all Mother’s fault, though, as “Grandmother” raised her the same way — sort of. Actually, Mother was raised by nannies in Hollywood. Mother went to school with the likes of Shirley Temple and Judy Garland.

But I digress. Grandmother was from “Old School Atlanta”. She was a very proper “Southern Lady”. Grandmother’s family had a long-established history in the South. In her younger years, Grandmother was one of Mark Twain’s “Angel Fish”. Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) also spoke at Grandmother’s graduation ceremony from prep school. I have that photo hanging in the hallway. My grandfather was an

author who later became a screenwriter. The “Family” relocated from Atlanta to Hollywood when “talkies” (movies with sound) were invented.Mother passed away on April 7th of this year. We had a turbulent relationship, but we were fine at the end. The last thing she ever said to me was, “You’re a good kid.” That was the closest thing to “I Love

grandmother

You” I ever heard from her so that was just fine with me. Better than fine. All my life, whenever I told her “I Love You,” her patterned response was always, “I know.” She just wasn’t equipped to say the “L” word.

As a child growing up in Coronado, I was forced into culture at a very young age. I knew which fork to use before I even had teeth! I’m kidding, of course, but you get the point. I took a plethora of lessons: ballet, piano, cotillion, tennis, guitar, even organ (because we just happened to have one in our house.)

I was also subjected to numerous operas as a child. I was raised in an extremely strict Catholic household. When I was around 12 years old, Mother started joining all sorts of organizations. She was on the Coronado Hospital Board, USD Board, and countless other Catholic committees, too numerous to name. Mother was gone quite a lot which is when I started to rebel: typical teen antics, 70’s-style. I never did anything that anyone else wasn’t doing at the time, only I was the one who always seemed to get caught. It never failed. I was the worst liar ever. Still am, which in hindsight, I’m very happy about.

After high school, I was sent up to San Francisco for college. I’d never been north of Los Angeles. It was scary, yet very exciting. I was pre-med. I could easily handle the course load, but I had a boyfriend in San Diego who I missed terribly.

I dropped out of school after two semesters. I was promptly disowned. I somehow managed to fib my way into a job as a PBX (switch board) operator at Copley Newspapers in La Jolla. It was a good job and I liked it there but I was only 18. After about a year, I felt stuck in a rut so I went back to school. I majored in theater arts and that’s where I met my first husband.

I had absolutely no intention of getting married, but I got pregnant. So this Catholic girl had a shotgun wedding. My first daughter was born in November of 1978. I was 20 — two weeks short of 21. The marriage was a wash. It lasted two agonizing years.

I was a single mom for five years when I met my second husband. That romance was swift and very intense. We married in March of 1983 and my second daughter was born in November of 1984. Hubby No.Two was unfaithful, among other things, and we divorced in 1986. I found myself a single mom again, which was much better than being miserable. I went back to school, again, and decided to become an EMT (Emergency Medical Technician). Upon course completion, I got a job right away. Only problem was it was a graveyard shift and I had two kids. It was too much stress, so I quit. To this day, I’m glad I have all that field knowledge, as I’ve been first responder on many emergencies throughout the years. It’s very nice to know how to save a life.

The years passed by, and in 1991, I decided to move my “Girls” out to the country. We bought a small ranch in Ramona. Shortly thereafter, I joined the Sheriff’s Department. Life was good. We had horses, dogs, and even goats. Then I met my third daughter’s dad, and life took yet another turn. I got pregnant after three months of dating. I was 35 years old. I wanted my baby, but I didn’t want another marriage. I got one anyway.

My Mother the Model, Fran Harpst

That marriage lasted six years, three of which we were separated. Then Mother got very sick; so I moved back to Coronado with my youngest daughter. The older girls were already established in Ramona.

One time, I was visiting my older sister in northern California. She had mentioned to me on previous occasions that a male friend of hers had an interest in me. I usually said, “Oh, that’s nice,” and changed the subject. However, this time, I said, “Okay. Give me his number.” I’d met him several times at family gatherings over the years; only we were both

married at the time. Now we were both divorced. I had his phone number for weeks until I finally got the courage up to call him.

When we finally connected, it was like Christmas, Easter, and the 4th of July all wrapped into one. With my track record, I was hesitant, but the “real” love bug had bitten us hard. There was no denying he was “the one”. Our first date was August 11, 2006. We were married on August 11th, 2008.

Together we live a charmed life. We are blessed with five grandchildren and two more on the way — one from his side, the other from mine. Life is good, yet it’s been a wild ride to get to where we are today. We are constantly thankful for our many blessings.

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Lil’ Pumkins

By Nina Odele

When I was a little girl, I thought all grandparents had to be at least 100 years old. Maybe there was some sort of rule that they be old and wrinkled up?  Of course, that was from a child’s perspective.  Now, at 53 years old, I have four wonderful grandchildren with another on his way any day now!

I must confess that at first I wasn’t too sure about my new role as “Nana”.  It was similar to becoming a Mom for the first time — that little bit of nervousness combined with anticipation and excitement –Am I worthy? — that sort of thing. However, just like when my own children were born, “Nana-hood” came quite naturally for me.  Now I can’t even imagine not having these four wonderful kids as a part of my life.  They are walking, talking, “Blessings from Heaven!”

The circle of life is so amazing.  Mother passed away four months ago in April 2010.  Dad passed several years ago. When Mother passed it suddenly dawned upon me that now I’m officially an “orphan”.  Sounds a bit silly at my age, but it really does take some getting used to.  There are still times when I want to pick up the phone and call my parents, but then reality sets in.  I heave a huge sigh then turn to the positive.   I can “talk” to my parents anytime I want to now!  They just don’t answer back, which is not necessarily such a bad deal in Mother’s case.  We locked horns all my life, but I honestly do miss her with all my heart.

Mother loved gardening.  It was her life’s passion.  Gardening brought her the joy that nothing else could.  The last thing Mother ever planted with her own bare hands was a small crop of pumpkins.  She adored the fall season.  It was her absolute very favorite time of the year.  For whatever reason, this year’s pumpkin crop came to fruition at the beginning of August. Go figure!  The crop bore five lovely pumpkins.  Interestingly enough, the exact right amount for each of Mother’s great grandchildren to have one, even the new little one, as yet unborn.  I washed the pumpkins and brought them to the house.

Last weekend, all the grandkids were here for a visit.  I let them each choose their very own pumpkin to take home.  I also explained that Great Grandma grew those pumpkins just for them.  My grandkids are all very young still, so I’m not sure if they caught the meaning of just how extremely special those particular pumpkins are.  In any case, it warmed my heart beyond belief to see them cruising around with their brand new pumpkins.  There’s no doubt in my mind that Mother was smiling down at all of us from Heaven that day.  I thought about the whole circle of life thing. For our family, on that particular day, that circle had a color.  It was orange.

 

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Second Chance Dog Rescue

By Kimberley Graham


Recently, the Coronado Clarion staff had the great pleasure of meeting Sandra Simpson, president of the Second Chance Dog Rescue organization.  Sandra is very hard-working, conscientious, and remarkably selfless as she forwards the cause of this amazing charity.  She is a testament to humanity and what can be accomplished through perseverance coupled with a huge heart.  Together with the other selfless “rescue team” members, volunteers, and co-founders, Second Chance Dog Rescue is proof of what noteworthy and astonishing feats can be achieved.

What is Second Chance Dog Rescue?  Second Chance Dog Rescue is one of San Diego’s largest and most successful non-profit 501c3 organizations dedicated to saving homeless dogs.  The staff of volunteers rescue, rehabilitate, and re-home dogs from local shelters, owner-surrendered dogs, and dogs from Baja California, Mexico.  Once Second Chance receives a dog, their volunteer veterinarian staff provides medical care, including spaying and neutering along with any necessary rehabilitation.  The organization have saved over 1,600 dogs since they started rescue in November, 2008.

Sandra Simpson came to the United States from England in her late twenties, and rose to become one of San Diego’s top real estate agents/brokers.  Fifteen years ago, she was asked to sponsor a rescue dog at a shelter in Baja, Mexico.  Meeting the dog in person touched her heart so much, her life was changed forever.  Sandra devoted her time, money, and countless hours to helping the homeless dogs at the Baja shelter.  After a decade of volunteering with them, she decided to broaden her passion to include saving dogs and ending the misery of puppy mills in the United States as well as continuing her work in Mexico.

In the fall of 2008, along with co-founders:  Jason Cordoba, Maria Blake, and Sarah Ferrara, Second Chance Dog Rescue was formed.  The founders recognized the urgent need in our community.  “We pride ourselves on being a rescue group that is flexible and non-breed specific.  We also have the ability to rescue senior dogs as well as those with health or medical issues.”

Second Chance Dog Rescue has accomplished a true miracle.  After successfully rescuing over 1,600 dogs from euthanasia in just two short years, Second Chance has placed these animals in loving, safe, forever homes.  How has this all been possible?  Through the utilization of a team of very dedicated volunteers who bring a wealth of experience regarding canine behaviors, keen business sense, use of modern technology networking, and a philosophy of keeping the welfare of the dogs its first priority.  With the support of so many, Second Chance hopes to set a fine example while maintaining the highest standards of excellence in the dog rescue community.

This non-profit is operated solely by volunteerism with no central kennel or shelter location.  All of their dogs are in private homes, so “if it weren’t for our wonderful foster families, we wouldn’t be able to do what we do.”  Being a foster with Second Chance is a rewarding experience as you are helping to save another dog’s life!  “We can only rescue the amount of dogs that we have fosters for so we are always looking for new fosters.  We provide you with all the supplies and needed vet care – you provide the dog with love, companionship, and guidance” until they are successfully adopted or you adopt the dog yourself.

“Just as we work to find the right foster dog for you, Second Chance also works hard on finding the right forever home for our rescues.”

Sandra has personally asked the Coronado Clarion to reach out and encourage the community of Coronado to consider joining their fostering program.  Because our dog-loving citizenry, she feels we could provide wonderful opportunities for many of these unfortunate canines to prosper and have a “happy ending” life.  The more foster families on board, the more animals can be saved.  One visit to any animal shelter will, unfortunately, reveal the great need to be filled for our fellow creatures.

Sandra has two rescue dogs of her own:  Dulce and Benjie.  In truth, Sandra can be summed up in one word, and that word is, “lifesaver”.  We, at the Coronado Clarion, are partnering our resources with Second Chance in spreading the word as well as supporting their invaluable work to the canine community.

Lenahan’s Story:

I was kicked to the curb on the city street
I was no longer a puppy — she didn’t think I was “neat”

I soon found myself on my own four feet

I thought I found shelter next to a bar

The shiny lights made me think the car was far

Next thing I knew I was in a cop car

I now have a temporary pin in my leg

It hurts to walk and I hate to beg
But I need surgery soon or I will have a wooden peg

Lenahan was found one night by a loving police officer.  His little leg was broken in two.  He was crying next to a dumpster in a parking lot on the wrong side of town.  The officer took him to an emergency hospital where they put a temporary pin in his leg and cast.

We got a quote on a surgery for $3,500 to get him fixed up.  He also needs his baby teeth removed.  He is 1 years old and is a Chihuahua/Italian Greyhound mix.  Lenahan has no microchip, tag, or collar.

“If you could donate a few dollars towards his surgery, it would be greatly appreciated.  We will keep you updated on his surgery and when he gets a new home.  We are at $1,420 as of Tuesday, September 14, 2010.”

Second Chance Dog Rescue

2435 C Street, Ste. 5
San Diego, CA  92102
(619) 231-6960
Tax ID # 26-3642128

On a lighter note, Second Chance Dog Rescue is hosting its first fundraiser, the “Spooktacular” Creeps for Critters event, to be held on October 30, 2010.  The proceeds from this fundraiser will benefit our medical fund.  The Spooktacular will be held at the San Diego Country Club from 6:00 p.m. to 12:00 a.m.  Tickets are $100 and include dinner and a cocktail.  Guests must be 21 or over.  Please join us the staff of the Coronado Clarion and the wonderful dog-loving Second Chance community for lots of fun and celebration in honor of our doggies.  Come in cocktail attire or costumes.  The event is sponsored by Eastlake Village Vet Clinic.

Reserve your tickets at:
(619) 721-3647 (or)
Email:
critters@secondchancedogrescue.org

Second Chance is still in need of sponsors for the silent auction and program costs.  Silent Auction items and donations must be delivered to SCDR Headquarters by October 16, 2010.  All gifts are tax deductible to the full extent of the law.  Second Chance Dog Rescue hopes that you will join us in saving dogs by contributing to our worthy cause.

Please contact:

Maria Blake, SILENT AUCTION Coordinator
SCDR’s Creeps for Critters Charity Event
(619) 252-7081 (Cell)

(619) 239-0895 (Office)
Email:
maria@secondchancedogrescue.org

Posted in Coronado Canine, Premier Issue | 1 Comment

Blue House/Electric Car

By Al Graham

The blue house looks as if it was once used as a set for an episode of the Twilight Zone.  In reality, it really has stopped as if frozen in time, and in a wonderful time, when things were simple and people were happy.

Mike makes the coolest belly boards.  He also crafts unique jewelry, fantastic wood carvings, and he even custom makes his own bicycles.

Back in the day, Mike built an electric car.  It was an air-cooled, VW beetle.  The batteries gave it enough charge to drive to Imperial Beach and back only.  But, by god, the man was way beyond the times because today, battery-driven cars are ubiquitous on Coronado city streets

This old house is painted sea blue and has a vegetable garden in front.  There was once a big brick barbecue pit in the back lovingly built by Mike’s dad; and even though it started to crumble, Mike saved all the bricks and uses them here and there around the house.

Mike’s wife Pamela is an artist and a champion hat decorator.  She lovingly shows off the brightly colored one she won first prize for at the Hotel Del Coronado.

If Mike and Pamela were birds, they would be love birds just like the ones they keep in the front room, who incidentally have been given enough space in the living room for a thousand birds to gather.

The house is a living monument to peace and happiness and it sits like a 1960’s hippie house amidst a sea of new construction of not-so-fine houses.  Unlike their beautiful, cheerful beach cottage, these houses are built using every square inch of land leaving very little lawn or a place to grow things.

The old days are long gone but Mike and Pamela are loving custodians of a house full of tender memories.  Take a sweet walk down memory lane to a time when people were nice to each other.  A time when we built things with our own hands and the world seemed far less complex.

Memory Lane
By Al Graham

Do you recall
We sang all the while

Your afternoons they were golden
Everything had a reason.

Memory lane
No ones in pain
Time has stopped turning
Roses fragrance last forever.

Someone just called
They’re so far away
And the rain comes crying down
Bringing the dreams back to life again.

Memory lane
Is calling again
Sail there when the snow flies
All your dreams are around you.
Memory Lane…Memory Lane… Memory lane

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Take Me Out to the Ball Game

The Nicolas Avery Brown Foundation

Hi!  My name is Nicolas Avery Brown and I am a smart, precocious nine-year-old. I was born with a disability called Myotubular Myopathy.  It means that I have low-toned muscles.  I am wheelchair bound and I get sick really easy. I’ve been in the hospital over 30 times in the past seven years for respiratory issues.  I have spent most holidays in the hospital, especially in the winter.  I don’t mind so much because the hospital has room service and the nurses are really nice. My mom calls the hospital our “home away from home” and we make the best of it whenever we are there.

I don’t get to go to school anymore which makes me sad because I don’t get to hang out with my friends and take French class and go to chess club, but I get sick and have to go in the hospital because I catch sickness from other kids. My mom is home schooling me right now and I am a straight-A student.  I love to play video games and board games and watch Dragon Ball Z.  People ask me if I want to walk.  I don’t know how to answer that question because I don’t know what it feels like to walk.  I have a manual wheelchair that I use at home and a power wheelchair when I go out. I can go really fast in my power wheelchair and I like to race people.  I hope to be able to play Power Soccer on a team if I stay well.

My mom is a single mom, which means that my dad doesn’t live with us.  She works hard to take care of me and to pay the bills.  I have everything I need but sometimes I don’t get to do or have some of the things I would like because my mom can’t afford it.  We meet a lot of other kids like me.  It is hard to take care of a special needs child, especially when they are in the hospital, and to work at the same time.  My mom and I decided to start this foundation so that we could help other kids like me and families like us.

A lot of stuff isn’t covered by insurance and it would be nice to help pay for another kid’s prescriptions so they can stay well and feel good.  I wish that every kid in a wheelchair could ride horses and go to camp.  I wish that all moms and dads could have a babysitter for their kids so they can do something fun.  I wish that people have somewhere nice to stay while their kid is at the hospital.  I wish that everyone has good food and someone to talk to and hug when they are sad. I hope that The Nicolas Avery Brown Foundation can do that and more.

THE NICOLAS AVERY BROWN FOUNDATION
1523 First Street, R111
Coronado, CA 92118
619-518-9565

www.thenicolasaveryfoundation.info

Thanks to the generosity  shown by  John and Ann Widay, and their daughter, Catherine, for graciously donating luxury box Padres’ seats to Nicholas Avery Brown:  Take Me Out to the Ball Game!!!

Posted in Premier Issue | Leave a comment

Empathy

By Nina Odele

I recently inherited a Merriam Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary published in 1959, when I was two years old. This dictionary is very beautiful, leather-bound, and still in great condition.  It was my Mother’s.

We writers are an odd bunch.  Sometimes a word just sticks in our heads and the only way to stop the madness is to write about it.  Today, for me, that word is “empathy.”  I quite literally woke up this morning with that word screaming in my brain!  When I was about twelve years old, Mother and I had one of our serious talks.  I sat down in her library, my palms sweaty, wondering what I was in trouble for this time!  As it turned out, Mother actually wanted to praise me for something. She also wanted to warn me about something as well.

Getting right to the point, Mother said there are two types of people in this world — those with empathy and those without. Then she asked me if I knew what empathy meant.  I said, “No, I did not.”  She said empathy is having the God-given knack to put your self into someone else’s shoes, and therefore, gaining a caring understanding of their various predicaments.  She told me I had empathy for others, whereas she did not.  I was confused.  Was empathy a bad thing?  Mother said, “No, it’s a very good thing unless you let it take you too far.”  She went on to explain that some people will try to play the “empathy card” in order to change empathy into sympathy.  Mother then asked me if I understood what she was trying to tell me.  I nodded yes, but I was still a bit confused.  As with most things in life, this was one of those things we must experience first hand in order to fully grasp the meaning of it.

That little conversation always stuck with me, and much later on, I learned the difference between empathy and sympathy — by trial and error, mostly by error in the beginning.   I’ve unwillingly been drawn into several people’s problematic lives over the years.  Although the scary thing is when other people’s problems take precedence over your own.  It’s a vortex that is seemingly impossible to escape, sort of like trying to run away from the boogie man in a nightmare.  Your feet want to move but somehow they stay firmly planted in place.  I inadvertently sympathized when I should have empathized.

As a result, here is what I have learned: Be there for others, but don’t do their work FOR them.  This may establish a pattern of dependence that can drag on indefinitely.  Be caring, yet firm.  Let people know that they must help themselves in order to grow mentally, emotionally, and financially.  Remind people that no matter how bad things may seem, there are always others who have it much worse than they do.  Be a good friend, a shoulder to cry on, et cetera.  But don’t be a fly in the web that is someone else’s dysfunction.  It will drain your soul — guaranteed.

Now, back to Merriam Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary:  This morning, when I went to look up empathy, a tiny gift card dropped out of that exact page! On the front was a silly little Christmas elf.  It said “I’m Not Santa, But…”  Then the inside said “Merry Christmas Anyway!”  No signature.  I chuckled to myself that the dictionary was pre-book marked to the precise page I wanted. Thanks Mother!

Empathy — “Imaginative projection of one’s own consciousness into another being.”

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Lest We Forget/Salute

By A. R. Graham.

I stood by the bay near Il Fornaio restaurant on a lovely September morning watching the morning sun rise above our Magical Kingdom by the Sea.

The baritone singer could be heard from 200 yards away:   “Back in 1893, the CPO he said to me…”  As the singing drew nearer to me, I also heard a large group of other male voices echoing the sing-song lyrics:  “Back in 1893, the CPO he said to me…”  They jogged into view with the song now booming loudly across the bay.  It was a group of soon-to-be Navy chiefs led by two very athletic officers.  As they jogged by, they all paid their respects to the civilians who walked past them.  “Good morning, Sir.  Good morning, Ma’am.”

As the group passed by, it was evident that they were thoroughly tired from the arduous exercising.  Very soon there after, I thought that they had stopped for a well-deserved rest.  This was not the case at all.  For when I decided to take a closer look, I saw the men standing rigid as they were called to attention by the tough-looking officer.

“Left face,” the squad moved in perfect unison, and with just a slight pause, the officer spoke again, “and salute.”  Again, the squad in unison with a snap of the wrist followed by a crisp salute, they obeyed. 

Out on the bay, it was calm.  The buildings on the skyline were gleaming in the morning sun.  It was a magnificent day.  Now, I understood why they were saluting and why it was not just more practice.  Off to the left, a U.S. warship sailed slowly into view.  The vessel passed slowly by and the squad stood there like proud sentinels saluting until it sailed by.  The officer barked again, “Right face.  Move out!”  The squad was on the move again and the singing resumed. The ship disappeared into a slight morning mist as the perspiring chief petty officers jogged away.

I called out to the lead officer to ask him to explain why they had stopped their work-out.  He graciously took the time and said, “That vessel out there proudly displays our flag, and when we see it pass by we salute it.  In fact, we salute the flag each time we see it.”

So through this wonderful patriotic ritual displayed for all of us to enjoy, we can be very proud that we are part of the sacred observance.

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Quotes Of The Month

“The minute you settle for less than you deserve, you get even less than you settled for.” — Maureen Dowd
(Posted by A.G.)

“It’s said that the best storytellers see things through a camera lens.” — Coronado Magazine
(Posted by L.H.K.)

“Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.” — Author Unknown

“If you smile when no one else is around, you really mean it.” — Eleanor Roosevelt

“The difference between genius & stupidity is that genius has its limits” — Albert Einstein

“Life is like a ten-speed bike. Most of us have gears we never use.” — Charles Schultz

“All you need is faith, trust, and a little bit of pixie dust.” — Peter Pan

“Genius is the ability to put into effect what is on your mind.” — F. Scott Fitzgerald
(Posted by D.L.)

“When it is dark enough, you can see the stars.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson
(Posted by L.B.)

Posted in Premier Issue, Quotes | Leave a comment

Recipes — What’s Cookin’?

The Clarion Signature Cocktail

Mixed Daily by the Publisher of the Coronado Clarion
for its Thirsty Staff or Not

Three fingers Bacardi white rum
White sugar
Lime
Ice cubes
Fresh Mint
Splash pomegranate juice
Four fingers tonic water

Place white sugar in a bowl.  Slice a lime & rub the outside of a tall tumbler glass.  Sugarcoat the rim with the sugar.  Throw lime in glass with plenty of ice cubes.  Fill glass with rum, three to four fingers.  Fill tumbler almost to the top with the tonic water.  Top with a splash of the pomegranate juice & lots of fresh mint leaves.  Drink & enjoy.


Tanaka’s Ponzu Marinade

By Rocky Tanaka

A marinade for chicken or beef, especially great on rib eye steaks.  Guaranteed to melt in your mouth.  Rocky Tanaka was a chef at Peohe’s for many years.  He has since moved onto become a professional electrician leaving us all to his entertaining culinary delights at family get togethers.

Chicken or beef, marinade for 24 to 48 hours and then grill away.  Once again, this is especially yummy on rib eye steaks.

½ cup soy sauce
¼ cup key lime juice
2 Serrano chiles, chopped finely
2 tbs. fresh grated ginger
2 tbs. minced garlic
¼ cup fresh chopped cilantro

Posted in Premier Issue, Recipes | Leave a comment

The Sandman Celebrates the Arrival of his Life-Size Poster

Sandman and his Life-size Poster, life-size sandstone statue/monument to come

Posted in Premier Issue | Leave a comment

Ishy, Moshy, and God

By George KoenGeorge Koen Fishing

I’m a’going salmon fishing with my friend up north.  I left about 4:30 in the morning from San Diego.  My plane landed in Los Angeles about an hour and a half later.  After a short layover, we headed to Arcata – actually, it was McKinleyville Airport in Northern California.

We got up there and it was fogged in.  We couldn’t land at the airport.  They told us that we were going to the next airport.  That was in Redding, California.  So we flew there and landed.  When we got off the plane, they told us that the only way we could get back to the Arcata area was to rent a car and drive.  No one was happy about that.  There were about 40 of us.  I decided that I would rent a car if I could get some other people to help drive and pay for the gas.

The first guy next to me was a rabbi, probably around 28 years old.  His name was Ishy and his partner, who was another rabbi, was named Moshy.  They said they would drive, and I looked around to see if anybody else needed a ride because we had room for one more.  A Catholic school teacher said he would go and pay for the gas.  So, now we had a full car.  I found out it was $435 to rent the car for one way and we weren’t coming back, so I had to do it.

When we got in the car, Ishy tells me that he was an ex-race car and motorcycle driver and that he likes to go fast.  Well, let me tell you, that was an understatement.  We took off!  Ishy drove like a bat out of hell the whole time.  He would run stop signs unless we were in a town, then he would behave.  Bringing meaning to multi-tasking, Ishy and Mushy were texting and making phone calls the whole way while Ishy was driving at huge speeds.  It was quite a thrill, just kidding.  It was three hours through winding mountain roads all the way.

As we were on the road for a bit, I asked Ishy why he became a rabbi.  He told me that one day he was riding on his motorcycle doing wheelies down the road.  He had an accident and he went through a window of a bus killing the bus driver – not on purpose, but just being stupid.  He had an epiphany and found religion, but it didn’t slow him down a bit.

During the few hours drive, I talked to all of them about religion and asked them all several questions.  Nobody could answer any of my questions or they wouldn’t.  I told them I talk to God everyday and I ask him to reveal himself to me, but he never has.  So, I keep asking God to reveal himself on a daily basis — I tell him, even if it takes me to be in an accident and being resuscitated so I know God’s out there waiting, I’ll do it.  I told my race car holy companions that today could be just that day especially with your driving, Ishy.

I tried talking to all of them the whole time.  They were all kind of ignoring me except for the Catholic school teacher.  He was somewhat talking to me.  He told me what he did.  He had a bunch of Asian students from China that he was teaching in Eureka at the Catholic school there.

This was a-fishin’ trip that I will never forget thanks to Ishy.  I almost got to meet God.  Ishy drove like a mental patient even after he killed someone.  I thought that was strange, but he loves to race.  He was racing the whole time.  We were going way over the speed limit, probably 65 easily on these mountain roads, twisty mountain roads, with a river right down below it and a cliff.  We passed any and all traffic.  If it was in front of us, we passed it.  It was about 100 feet down to the river, at least, and we would have been dead if we went over.  Thank goodness, it was a nice day until we hit the coast.  That was to our advantage.  The roads weren’t slick.  That was also good.

Not one of these religious men was praying out loud; so, I wasn’t really afraid.  We were all hanging in there.  No one was freaked.  But we were going really fast.  We did have some of the “gods” represented; and fortunately, we all got back in one piece.  I just trusted Ishy and put my faith in him.

When we did make it to Arcata safely, Ishy and Moshy ditched me at a gas station.  I didn’t even know Ishy and Moshy were leaving.  They said, “So long.  Our partners are meeting us here.”  So, I said, “Okay.”  Me and the Catholic teacher — I think his name was Kent – I could be wrong on that.  We drove to the airport where his friends met him.  We all called in advance to have our people meet us.  My buddy, Jerry, met me when we pulled up.  So we put the car back and took off to his house.

Afterwards, I told my friends what happened and they all laughed hysterically.  If anything was going to happen, it would happen so I wasn’t afraid.  I left it all in Ishy’s hands.

The next morning, Jerry and I went fishing on the Klamath River for two days in a row.  It’s about 55 miles north of Arcata.  We caught five salmon on the first day — one was 24 pounds — I think we have some pictures here that you can see.  That was the biggest.  It was a male and that was the biggest fish I’ve ever caught.  Then we caught several in the 14-16 pounds and some a little bit smaller than that.

When we returned from our trip, Jerry’s wife, Melody, my sister-in-law, cooked the fish.  She wrapped it in foil with salt, pepper, and butter which was served with vegetables all cooked on the barbecue.  It was delicious!

Unfortunately, I didn’t bring any salmon home because I had to fly back and who knew where I would end up flying back to.  But we managed to smoke some, and I guess it was good, because I don’t have any with me.  We had some fresh for one night and cut it up into steaks.  We probably had 40 steaks of salmon.  We filleted a little bit of it and smoked ten pounds of it. Eventually, we’ll get some because my friends are coming down in about two weeks, and they said they would bring me some smoked salmon.

Well, that is the story of my trip through the mountains with Ishy, Moshy, and God; and I’m sticking to it.

Posted in Keeping the Faith, Premier Issue, Special Military Issue | Leave a comment

Diamond MoJo

By Alan Graham

“Pack up the babies and grab the old ladies and everyone goes, cause everyone knows, it’s “Brother Love’s Show”.  It might as well have been the Brother Love himself because David Sherry’s performance at Spreckels Park in Coronado, California was stunning.

Sherry does NOT impersonate Neil Diamond.  He simply pays great tribute to a great entertainer.  Most tribute bands or clone acts fall far short in their attempts to imitate the original artist and I have never seen anyone who could.

David Sherry kicks the door down in this regard because he is more than a mere entertainer.  He is absolutely immersed in his presentation of Diamond’s work, and to most of the audience, it WAS Neil Diamond on stage, not David Sherry. The real David Sherry has literally bottled the essence of the music and the spirit.  Then he dispenses it to his audience as surely as healing medicine.

Jim Morrison of The Doors took his audience on a “Trip” into an unknown realm of scary demons and monsters. David Sherry takes his audience on a fantastic sojourn into a land of peace, joy and true patriotism. Jim Morrison’s fans came back from their trip and they were forever changed. Sherry took his audience back in time to a sweet and powerful remembrance of another time and they came back with shopping bags filled to the brim with glee.

David Sherry’s website is at www.davidjsherryproductions.com

David’s next performance is at the Moonlight Amphitheater in Vista, California on October 2nd.

Posted in Premier Issue | Leave a comment

Lecinda Bennett — Woman Warrior

The Bennett Family

“Karien Bennett is a Neighbor of Mine”

By Lynne Harpst Koen

Karien Bennett is a neighbor of mine.  When we lived at 721 “J”, she was the ONLY neighbor who was ever nice to me!  She would always smile and wave.  I don’t know her personally, but I always felt a certain unexplainable connection to her.  I’d get such a warm feeling in my heart as I watched her walk her little boy to school in the mornings.

Today, God showed me our connection.  Loud and clear!  I wept as I read the Coronado story of Karien’s daughter, Lecinda, who has a cancerous brain tumor.  Clearly, I had to help my neighbors.  I met with Karein and Lecinda this morning.  Lovely ladies, both!  Lecinda is a young, vital, and gorgeous young lady.  Her grace shone through the minute I met her.  She has an incredible magnetic energy!  Her attitude towards her plight is as positive as one can possibly be under the circumstances.

The Bennett’s really need our help.  Lecinda is facing major surgery and already her insurance coverage is running thin.  Any donation is more than welcome. There’s no such thing as “too little.”  I know times are tight, so if you’re unable to donate money, please donate prayers!  The power of prayer is immense, and also tax-deductible (by God).  Let’s all get on board as a community to help Karien and Lecinda through this darkest of times.  They need a miracle.  It’s all possible with love and faith!

For updates on how Lecinda is doing and for a place where you can post a comment or memory of a good time with Lecinda for her and others to read, please visit: www.caringbridge.org/visit/lecindabennett

Please note that there is a donation link on this site, but this is not a donation for Lecinda.  It is for the use of Caring Bridge.  In order to directly make donations to Lecinda Bennett, a Pay Pal account has been set up.  The Pay Pal account is under this e-mail address: care4lecinda@gmail.com

Any other direct correspondence (donations, cards, letters, etc.) can be sent to:
Lecinda Bennett
754 “J” Avenue
Coronado, CA  92118

 

Lecinda

“Lecinda’s Story”

By Elloise Bennett

Those of you who know Lecinda would be quick to describe her as a selfless, giving, and loving woman.  She is the type of person who will surprise you with a bouquet of flowers on a special occasion, bring you chicken soup when you are sick, and give you directions when you are lost.  She is admired for her upbeat, vibrant personality, and the kindness she shares with everyone in her life.  She loves life…and is not afraid to live her dreams.  Now Lecinda faces her own challenge.

Lecinda fell ill after a seizure on July 15th of this year and was diagnosed with an “egg-sized” brain tumor in her left temporal lobe called a glioma.

Unforeseen obstacles may face us in life, yet we can certainly learn how to handle them with grace and courage, as evidenced by Lecinda’s example, and response to this challenge.  She even had the hospital staff talking about her upbeat attitude and humorous strength.  And her smile, her laughter, and her joy for life are as strong as ever.

Like others that have been struck by the current economy, Lecinda has not had full coverage health insurance since she left her job at Ralph Lauren.  Although we are waiting to figure out what the future will hold, the costs have already been overwhelming.

Publisher’s Note:  So far Coronado and the San Diego Brain Tumor Foundation through a series of donations and fundraisers have gone above and beyond in assistance for Lecinda and her medical care needs.  The continued support of our community will be greatly appreciated as the Bennett family struggle to ensure Lecinda’s recovery.

 

Annual Brain Tumor Walk

“Lecinda Bennett – Woman Warrior”

By Kimberley Graham

Who is Lecinda Bennett?  Last week, my husband and I had the great pleasure of spending some time with this vibrant, energized, one-of-a-kind, animated young woman and her mother baring the same traits.  To say Lecinda Bennett is a dynamo is not an exaggeration.  With her vivid storytelling and sharing of her plight, we became instantaneously bonded to her, her family, and their causes.  In the brief hour we spent with these remarkable women, we shared tears as well as lots of laughter.  To meet Lecinda, her mother, and the rest of her sweet family was a soul-sticking experience.  One, in which, anyone who crosses their paths will be moved by.

To watch our wonderful interview with Lecinda, please visit: www.coronado-clarion.com  

The Bennett Gals

“A Little Bit About Me”

By Lecinda Bennet

I’ve lived in different continents and different towns – and all of it was about building communities.

Born in 1980 in South Africa, I grew up in the last phases of Apartheid and had the chance to witness the beginnings of major change in my place of birth.  South Africa is a beautiful place, and a great place to originate from – because despite the hiccups in its history, it’s a place that is about roots and family.

When I was nine, my family immigrated to America – actually, to be specific, we immigrated to Coronado… a great place to land as an immigrant.  My mom, my step-dad, my sister, and I had to learn how to connect in a new world, in a new culture, and with a new language.

I started working when I was a student at Coronado High School.  I worked at Salon David Perez in University Towne Center for 8.5 years as a general manager, and learned that I love the style industry as much as I love business.  My exposure in this world helped fuel the dream that I would love to live in New York City.

But New York City needs more than work experience.  So I went back to school after a few gap years, and earned a B.S. in paralegal studies.  Armed with my diploma, I set out to the Big Apple in December, 2006.

Being an immigrant is intense, being new to New York City is insane!  But you learn the ropes, get to meet people, and develop connections.  I was lucky enough to land a job at Polo Ralph Lauren Corporate headquarters – and learned all about life in the big city, and in the interim made some amazing friends.

Life in the big city included watching the financial world implode in 2008 – and with it my own life, as I was one of the thousands of folks laid off with the turn of the tide.  But bills have to be paid, and costs didn’t drop.  Survival skills to the rescue!  My people skills, my energy, and connections had helped me to turn around an extremely part-time usher position into a position as the artists’ assistant at the Jazz Center of Lincoln Center and to become a part-time executive assistant for Stewards of Change, a consulting group that focuses on health and human services.

As the artists’ assistant, I’ve had the amazing experiences of standing in hallways watching people like Tony Bennett shake off pre-show stage jitters, watch Liza Minnelli own a room, and I would bake cupcakes for the stagehands who work harder than most people could believe.  I worked with Sting so much, he knew me by name.  He is absolutely dreamy in real life.  I love the energy, the rhythm, the people, and the jazz of the city.  It was one of the biggest parts that helped make NYC home.

As the executive assistant for Stewards of Change, I have the opportunity to help local, state, and federal governments find ways to be more inter-operable and to help people, foster children, and those in need find an easier way to work with the system.

Unfortunately, when I was diagnosed with my glioma, I had to give up my challenging and rewarding life in the Big Apple to spend my days with doctors and having tests performed.  I was promised that my positions with the Jazz Center of Lincoln Center and Stewards of Change will always be held for me and will be resumed after my recovery and my return to New York City.

Positivity

“Lecinda’s Caring Bridge Journal”

By Elloise and Lecinda Bennett

Wednesday, August 4, 2010:  Lecinda was officially diagnosed with a brain tumor only a couple weeks ago after suffering a seizure in her sleep.  She’s been with us in San Diego since just after her seizure so we as a family can be there for her and help her make sense of all this — versus via thousands of miles. She had a biopsy today – which sounds like not such a big deal for any of you out there who have had a biopsy on a lymph node or such, but this was brain surgery.  She had to have markers placed on shaved spots on her head, was taken into an OR for a couple hours, had a hole drilled into her scull, and a needle prodded into her brain to extract some tissue.

Of course, she woke up to a groggy world, and immediately said, “I think I have a headache.”  Needless to say — even the ICU staff love her!

The biopsy results should be back in a few days.  It will help us determine what type of cancer it is and what the course of treatment options are.

She’s one hell of a trooper.  She made me laugh so hard!  We were chatting somewhere between pain med dosages, and she says, “Sorry, Weza, I tried.  I’ve been looking to see if I can find you a doctor as a husband, but I don’t have my contacts in.” Pure Lecinda statement — thinking of others even when she’s strapped in a bed in the ICU!

P.S.  She’s never been sick ONE day in her whole life that led to ER or hospital time.  As always, Lecinda never does things half way!!!
–Eloise–

Tuesday, September 7, 2010:  Thank you is just a 9-letter word (yes I counted the spaces), but it means soooo much more than that.  I know I spoke about this the other day, but each day I am shown the kindness, generosity, heartfelt amazingness of families, friends, and people around the world!

As you all know, I’m patiently (well, as patiently as I am able to) waiting for my surgery date.  This afternoon I was blessed to be given my surgery date! September 28th here I come!!!

Thank you from the bottom of my heart for all of your support throughout this!
— Lecinda–

Monday, September 20, 2010:  Ever think about how meaningful something as simple as a hug is?  Well on Saturday I was just feeling weird, the positively positive was there but I just felt that I needed something extra.  So I called one of my best friends and told him I was on my way over because I wanted a hug.  (He gives the best hugs!)  I was only at his shop for a few minutes, but that hug just helped me find my center again and let my positivity come back through.

Hence the Positively Positive!  That’s how we have to look at things right?  So far it is definitely working for me!  Positivity is one of the best medicines I could have asked for!  It makes me realize that there is and will be a tomorrow!  While I have been more tired the last week, I have been trying my best to let that positivity overtake the tiredness.

In three days, I leave to go to San Francisco to start two days of Pre-Op and then the surgery!  Oh my, but the sooner I start the pre-op, the sooner I get to come back to Coronado!  Definite upside I’d say!  I’m also finding the amazing positives in this experience from start to midpoint (as I know I’m not at the end of this battle yet).  I have reconnected with friends that I might not have seen in years, realized who was truly a fair-weather friend, and who was always by my side no matter what! It has truly been an interesting journey!

Thank you for taking the time to care, share, and pray for me on this weird journey.  It is your comments, thoughts, and positive energy that is helping me remember my own positive energy.
Much Love,
Lecinda

Friday, September 24, 2010:  Hello from San Francisco!  After a slightly delayed start yesterday, flight to San Fran from San Diego was delayed, my sister and I finally made it up here.  I’m off to start my first day of Pre-Op.  Luckily I don’t have to spend the nights at the hospital during this phase at least.

I’ll do an update on how amazing the community of Coronado and the county of San Diego has been after the pre-op, as there are so many people to thank.

Thanks for all your support, prayers, love, and generally everything you guys do for me.
Hugs,
Lecinda

Saturday, September 25, 2010:  It’s incredible the technology that the medical industry have integrated into their world.  Lecinda spent yesterday doing a variety of neurological tests in something called an MSI, where they measured response times, response origins, brainwave activity, and more while she’s strapped into some sort of headgear machine.  Charts with all kinds of graphs and flickering lights, and video screens with pulsating colored globes inside the shape of a brain — kinda took me back to the days when I had harbored ideas of being a doctor.  If I’d known I could be a computer nerd and doctor all in one I would have maybe chosen a different path!

We also did a pre-op appointment for blood tests and information gathering and with folks in anesthesia so Lecinda would have a clear idea of what “awake” will really mean in the middle of her surgery.

Now it’s a beautiful San Francisco day – one of those days where you can actually see the whole San Francisco Bay without any fog!  The goal this weekend is for Lecinda to rest, to laugh, and to do the most important thing in preparation for the surgery — become mentally and emotionally ready.

Monday morning will be enough time to get back to waiting rooms and slick tiled floors.
–Elloise–

Tuesday, September 28, 2010:  It’s 10:45 m West Coast time.  Lecinda has been in the OR for just over 3 hours, but they have only been operating for about 2 hours.  She may not be done for another 6 to 8 hours.

I think they need to sell sedatives for the families waiting in the waiting room. It FEELS like every minute has 340 seconds in it and it sucks.  I will do a post as soon as I know how it went.
–Elloise–

Tuesday, September 28, 2010:  Lecinda is in the ICU tonight, resting comfortably, after almost 8 hours of surgery.  But best of all, that rest is tumor free! They were able to remove the ENTIRE tumor.  That does not mean she’s cancer free, but rather that the tumor is gone.  We need to have tests done on the tumor itself to determine exactly the next steps.  BUT, the fact that they were able to remove all of it greatly reduces the need for chemo, etc.  She did very well in the awake parts of the surgery as well — of course.  When she first woke it was a little scary.  She was clearly not making sense.  Each word was understandable, but not how she was putting them together.  It was a little freaky – Okay — a lot.  But within half an hour, she was settling down some and her “brain” was evening out to being a little more “normal” Lecinda, which included her telling me to not speak for her!  She is still showing signs of what they call “word search” and there may be some other hiccups but she’s been able to tell time, repeat phrases, and tell me to update her Facebook.  I sat with her, fed her some broth and tea, and watched her sleep.  It’s pretty silly how we take deep breaths for granted.  The next few days will be important as they watch to confirm the results as well as watch the swelling in her brain.  Swelling is standard; in fact, they said I could set my clock on it.  For the next 48 hours, her brain will swell and then it will begin to subside.  In that time, she could experience dementia and symptoms similar to what we associate with Alzheimer’s — all temporary and due to the swelling.  I’ll just standby to see what happens.

Thank you to all who have sent messages of encouragement and love all day long.  The 100-degree plus waiting room (San Francisco is having a heat wave and of course the waiting room has no air conditioning since…well, it’s San Francisco, why would you need it!) was a little easier to bear with those messages coming in!
–Elloise–

Pre-Op

Publisher’s Note:  We had a brief visit with Karien this afternoon.  Lecinda made it through a very long surgery with few complications.  The medical team were able to remove the tumor.  Lecinda will suffer some physical disorientation during her recovery from this very intense surgery.  Our positive warrior has begun the battle against what she refers to as her “egg”.  The egg is now gone and she can start the healing treatment process.  We are sure in our hearts that she will be the victor.  We send her our prayers.  I know along with her close family and friends, our community will pull together and continue to support her through this experience.

Friday, October 1, 2010:  Lecinda was released from the hospital today!  She and I are staying a couple more nights in San Francisco to allow the swelling to go down and to make sure she’s ready to travel.  Swelling is getting better — the black eye is getting better — and she’s doing great!!!!

Of course…the fact that the Walgreens where I filled her HUGE list of prescriptions was held up at gun point MOMENTS after I walked out tonight…added adventure to the day.  Life makes you laugh…
–Elloise–

 
 
Fundraiser at Il Fornaio on September 21st:  Lecinda was a wonderful hostess.  Although weary from her “egg”, she remained upbeat and had a smile on her face the whole time while entertaining her fellow townfold and friends.


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Do You Remember?

BOB’S DRIVE IN
CHAR BURGER (FIRST CHAIN PLACE IN OUR TOWN)
ORANGE JULIUS
LA AVENIDA
MEXICAN VILLAGE
BASKIN ROBBINS/31 FLAVORS
CIRCUS DRIVE-IN
SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
THE MANHATTAN ROOM
FREE BROTHERS MARKET
Non-edible cool places included:THE DEPARTMENT STORE
THE AVENUE 5 & DIME
VILLAGE THEATER
JAKE’S MENS SHOP
THE BAYBERRY TREE
CORA MART
THE IMPORT HUT
ORIENTAL ARTS
KIPPY’S
MJ BROWN (still there, but just limping)
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Art Cuts

Bow Ties and Haircuts

You can get a haircut, listen to Beatles music, and view the art hanging on the walls all around you.  There is no idle chit chat in this men’s hair salon.  It is more like a Sixties happening with all the charm and happiness of that awesome era.  I sat listening to Yellow Submarine and as the pedestrians passed by the front window, they seem to be smiling as well.  The crew, Beth, Manny, and Travis are cool and professional.  It truly is a pleasure to hang out there as our residents in the Magical Kingdom by the Sea parade by.  Get your hair cut and be transported back to the wonderful Sixties.  There’s no extra charge for this experience when you visit Bow Ties and Haircuts on Tenth and Orange Avenues.  Peace, man.

Bow Ties and Haircuts
1106 Tenth Street
(619) 435-2094

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FLIGHT SURGEON LIEUTENANT DONALD M. DILL

By Kimberley (Dill) Graham

On November 18, 1955, I was delivered into the arms of a stellar beauty queen and a dashing young medical student in the fair city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  During the day, my mother and I performed typical 1950s housewife chores and primped, in eager anticipation of our knight in shining armor’s return. We were a beautiful young family, full of promise and hope.

Jan and Don Dill had been teenage sweethearts and were now youthful adults setting out on their quest for the All-American Dream.  Deeply in love and blessed with enormous passion, the “perfect ones” were an idyllic couple.  They quickly completed our family with the addition of my two fine-looking brothers.

My parents grew up together in Ohio.  They came from similar backgrounds; their parents were restaurateurs of German and French descent.  It was a wholesome beginning, with my father a star football player and my mother a cheerleader, homecoming prom queen and beauty pageant winner.  Janet Reller and Donald Dill were the envy of their small hometown, and were the most likely to succeed in life and in the fulfillment of The Dream.

After graduating at the top of his class at Jefferson Memorial Medical School, my father interned at the hospital of the same name.  My mother was his stunningly gorgeous stay-at-home wife and mother of his three adorable children.  My parents managed on very little money, driven by the assurance of a brighter future.

In order to further his career as well as fulfill his duty to God and Country, my father joined the Navy in an officer program where he served as a Lieutenant Flight Surgeon. We were whisked away to Pensacola, Florida, where my father received his military training.  After completing a tour of duty in South America, he was commissioned to the Naval Air Station on North Island, across the bay from San Diego, California. We arrived in 1960, settling into the officers’ quarters directly across from the airstrip. It was a good life, with the guarantee of it only getting better.

North Island shared a rock-bed peninsula with the bright and sunny beach town of Coronado – the “The Crown City” or, “Emerald Isle”.  It got its name from when it was separated from the town by a channel of water dubbed “The Spanish Bight”.  When the Navy took over the island, it filled in the channel, turning North Island and Coronado into one land mass.

As kids, my brothers and I lived in a fantasyland of constant adventure as we explored every nook and cranny of North Island.  We ran wild with no cares.  We played in the “enchanted forest” behind our home (a small grove of eucalyptus trees that separated us from the rest of the world).  We climbed trees and fences.  We swam in the Officers’ Club pool every day and frequented the base’s private beach, where we built sand castles and wiggled our little toes in the warm comforting sand while eating hot greasy French Fries smothered in ketchup.  Each morning we awoke to the rumbling engines of jet fighters readying for military maneuvers.  It was a child’s paradise, rivaling any created by the likes of Robert Louis Stevenson or Daniel Defoe.

On Sundays, we went to church where my mother assisted in the Sunday school.  We always dressed to the nines, with my mother adorned in harmonizing hats or bonnets decorated with an array of flowers, bows and ribbons matching her superb coiffure.  As with all of the talented housewives of her generation, Janet found immense pleasure in creating her own hats, dresses and suits.  She took great pride in dressing us in matching outfits for all to admire, her handsome Lieutenant husband/Prince Valiant gracing her side.

After our obligatory morning at church, we attended the double feature at the base’s theater.  Every movie show began with a black and white news communiqué warning us of the Communists who, we were informed, were coming to get us.  We lived in fright of this threat.  It was very real to us, and I remember being terrified that my father would be called away to war.  That fear is still vivid in my memory.

Another crystal-clear memory of living on North Island is of President Dwight D. Eisenhower passing by our home, waving to us from inside a convertible absent of Secret Servicemen.  Life was easy then.  People were not afraid for their president’s safety.  John F. Kennedy and the tragedy of losing our president was still years away.

In 196o, after three years of base living, the Dill family continued its pursuit of the All-American Dream. Having successfully served his naval commission, my father was once more a civilian.  Dr. James Mushovic asked him to join his small family practice in Coronado.  The office was located in a very small building on the corner of Eighth Street and Orange Avenue, and was the type of practice where doctors delivered babies and made house calls.  My father readily agreed to join medical forces with “Doctor Jim”.

As there was no medical insurance in those days, people paid what they could; yet, my father never had to worry about affording repairs or paying for groceries. Dr. Mushovic and Dr. Dill knew all of their patients on a first-name basis, and knew the names of all their family members, having delivered most of them.

My parents soon began their search for our first home.  They found it in a lovely Spanish style abode at 1132 Glorietta Boulevard.  It was a two-story house  – a mansion by our standards – with a large back yard, a lanai, and a maid’s quarters over the garage.  Directly across from the home lay the Coronado Municipal Golf Course, beyond which one enjoyed breathtaking views of the exquisite Glorietta Bay and Pacific Ocean.  There were no Coronado Shores then; you really did see the ocean from our top floor, the only obstacle being the “Castle” standing guard over the town’s pristine beaches.  The Castle, of course, was the magically enchanting Hotel Del Coronado.  In that year, my parents purchased this sprawling property for the hefty sum of $13,500.

With our time on North Island come to an end, we moved into our spacious home on Glorietta Boulevard – the best street in town, in many of the locals’ opinion – and onto a new fantasy life for the Dill family, with the promise of bigger dreams coming true.  The adventures were about to begin – and surely they did.  As a young child and remembering back, this is the way I saw my life.

In progress…

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THE REMARKABLE BROWNIE CAMERA

In loving memory of my father, Max LeVine, a Pearl Harbor Survivor.


These Pearl Harbor photos were taken from a sailor who was on the USS Quapaw ATF-110.  They were found in an old Brownie camera in a foot locker and just recently taken to be developed.  What quality from 1941!

Isn’t it amazing how a film could last so long in a camera without disintegrating!  Taken over 68 years, these photos are fantastic!  Some of you would have to go to a museum to see what a Brownie camera looked like.  Here is a simple picture of what we are talking about:  

Pearl Harbor

On Sunday, December 7th, 1941, the Japanese launched a surprise attack against the U.S. Forces stationed at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii .  By planning this attack on a Sunday, the Japanese commander, Admiral Nagumo, hoped to catch the entire fleet in port.  As luck would have it, the aircraft carriers and one of the battleships were not in port.  The USS Enterprise was returning from Wake Island, where it had just delivered some aircraft.  The USS Lexington was ferrying aircraft to Midway, and the USS Saratoga and the USS Colorado were undergoing repairs in the United States.

In spite of the latest intelligence reports about the missing aircraft carriers his most important targets, Admiral Nagumo decided to continue the attack with his force of six carriers and 423 aircraft.  At a range of 230 miles north of Oahu, he launched the first wave of a two-wave attack.  Beginning at 0600 hours his first wave consisted of 183 fighters and torpedo bombers which struck at the fleet in Pearl Harbor and the air fields in Hickam, Kaneohe and Ewa.  The second strike, launched at 0715 hours, consisted of 167 aircraft, which again struck at the same targets.

At 0753 hours, the first wave consisting of 40 Nakajima B5N2 ‘Kate’ torpedo bombers, 51 Aichi D3A1 ‘Val’ dive bombers, 50 high altitude bombers and 43 Zeros struck airfields and Pearl Harbor.  Within the next hour, the second wave arrived and continued the attack.  When it was over, the U.S. losses were:

Casualties – 2,403 KIA; 1, 178 WIA; Battleships Total Loss — USS Arizona, USS Oklahoma; USS Utah; 3 others were sunk, raised, & repaired; 3 suffered light damage; Cruisers – 1, heavily damaged; 4 lightly damaged – all repaired; Minelayer, Seaplane Tender, Repair Ship, Harbor Tug – 2 sunk, raised, & repaired; 2 severely damaged, repaired; Aircraft – 188 destroyed.

 

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WOMEN IN UNIFORM

 

Nina Odele

Women have had a continuous and growing presence in the U.S. Navy throughout the 20th and into the 21st century. Women worked as nurses for the Navy as early as the American Civil War. The United States Navy Nurse Corps was officially established in 1908. Whenever international or domestic events dictated the need, the Navy expanded its opportunities for women to serve.

The first large-scale employment of women as naval personnel took place to meet the severe clerical shortages of the World War I era. The Naval Reserve Act of 1916 had conspicuously omitted mention of gender as a condition for service, leading to formal permission to begin enlisting women in mid-March 1917, shortly before the United States entered the “Great War.” Nearly six hundred Yeomen (Females) were on duty by the end of April 1917, a number that had grown to over eleven thousand in December 1918, shortly after the Armistice.

The Yeomen (F), or “Yeomanettes” as they were popularly known, primarily served in secretarial and clerical positions, though some were translators, draftsmen, fingerprint experts, ship camouflage designers, and recruiting agents. The great majority were assigned duties at naval installations in the continental United States, frequently near their homes, processing the great volume of paperwork generated by the war effort.

Yeomen (F), all of whom held enlisted ranks, continued in service during the first months of the post-war naval reductions. Their numbers declined steadily, reaching just under four thousand by the end of July 1919, when they were all released from active duty. Yeomen (F) were continued on inactive reserve status, receiving modest retainer pay, until the end of their four-year enlistments, at which point all women except Navy nurses disappeared from the uniformed Navy until 1942.

Many honorably discharged Yeomen (F) were appointed to civil service positions in the same Navy yards and stations where they had served in wartime. Entitled to veterans’ preference for government employment, they provided a strong female presence in the Navy’s civilian staff through the decades after World War I.

We could begin anywhere with the history of women in the military forces, and especially in the naval forces.  So, let’s just start with the WAVES: The U.S. Navy created a division which consisted entirely of women in the World War II era. WAVES is an acronym for “Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service”. With the word “emergency” included, it implied that women were only accepted to this all-men league in unusual circumstances of war and that at the end of such war, the women would not be allowed to continue in naval careers.

After a twenty-three year absence, women returned to general Navy service in August 1942, when Milfred McAfee was sworn in as a Naval Reserve Lieutenant Commander, the first female commissioned officer in U.S. naval history. Lt. Commander McAfee was also the first Director of the WAVES. This legendary female was also President of Wellesley College. This occurred two months after the WAAC (Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps) was established and Eleanor Roosevelt convinced Congress to authorize a women’s component of the Navy – the WAVES.

Lt. Commander McAfee

In the decades since the last of the Yeomen left active duty, only a relatively small corps of Navy nurses represented their gender in the naval service and they had never had formal officer status. Now, the Navy was preparing to accept not just a large number of enlisted women, as it had done during World War I, but female Commissioned Officers to supervise them. It was a development of lasting significance.

An important distinction between WAAC and the WAVES was the fact that the WAAC was an “auxiliary” organization serving with the Army, not in it. From the very beginning, the WAVES were an official part of the Navy, and its members held the same rank and ratings as male personnel. They also received the same pay and were subject to military discipline. The WAAC became the Women’s Army Corps (WAC) in July, 1943, giving its members military status to that of the WAVES.

WAVES could not serve aboard combat ships or aircraft. Initially, these women were restricted to duty in the continental United States. Late in WWII, WAVES were authorized to serve in certain overseas U.S. possessions, and a number were sent to Hawaii. The war ended before any could be sent to other locations.

Within their first years, the WAVES were 27,000 strong – mostly assuming clerical work. The WAVES did not accept any African-American women until late 1944, at which point they trained one black woman for every 36 white women enlisted. In 1948, with the passage of the Women’s Armed Services Integration Act, women gained permanent status in the armed services. Although, the WAVES officially ceased to exist at this point, the acronym continued to exist until well into the 1970s.

The first six enlisted women to be sworn into the regular Navy on July 7, 1948 were Kay Langdon, Wilma Marchal, Edna Young, Frances Devaney, Doris Robertson, and Ruth Flora. On October 15, 1948, the first eight women to be commissioned in the regular Navy were Joy Bright Hancock, Winifred Quick Collins, Ann King, Frances Willoughby, Ellen Ford, Doris Cranmore, Doris Defenderfer, and Betty Rae Tennant. They took their oath as officers.

The WAVES kept the homefront affairs of the U.S. Navy going while the men were assigned to ships serving around the globe. While the official song of the U.S. Navy men was “Anchors Aweigh”, the WAVES’ official song was sung in counterpoint to the men:

WAVES of the Navy,
There’s a ship sailing down the bay.
And she won’t slip into port again
Until that Victory Day.
Carry on for that gallant ship
And for every hero brave
Who will find ashore, his man-sized chore
Was done by a Navy WAVE…

Post WWII

Women in the Naval Reserve were recalled along with their male counterparts for duty during the Korean War. Nurses served aboard the hospital ship, USS Sanctuary in the Vietnam War era. Only nine non-nurse women were authorized to serve in country during this period; however, no enlisted Navy women were authorized.

Major changes occurred for Navy women in the 1970s. The first female naval officer was appointed to flag rank in 1972, Captain Alene B. Duerk. She was followed in 1976 by RADM Fran McKee as the first female unrestricted line officer appointed to this rank. During this time, women began to enter the surface warfare and aviation fields. They also gained access to officer accession programs previously only open to men. Women started to screen for command opportunities ashore.

In 1973, the Secretary of the Navy announced the authorization of naval aviation training for women. The next year, the Navy became the first service to graduate a woman pilot, Lt. Barbara Allen Rainey. In 1976, the United States Naval Academy along with other military academies first accepted women and commissioned its first female graduates in 1980. That same year, women also began attending Aviation Officer Candidate School. In 1979, the Surface Warfare Community opened to women with the first female obtaining her SWO qualification. We also saw the Naval Flight Officer program opened to women this year & Lt. Lynn Spruill became the first woman naval aviator to obtain carrier qualifications.

Three decades into the future, the Department of the Navy authorized a policy change allowing women to begin serving onboard Navy submarines. The new policy and plan is set in motion with the integration of female officers to begin early in 2012.

Today, there are over 52,000 women serving on active duty in an array of traditional and non-traditional ratings or careers in the U.S. Navy. Like their male counterparts, female enlisted sailors are expected to adhere to regulations, specific to appearance: grooming, health and physical fitness. However, some differences exist in relation to pregnancy and parenting provisions.

In the Navy, women are eligible to serve in all ratings except as a SEAL or Special Warfare Combatant-craft Crewmen. The current policy set by Congress and the Secretary of Defense excludes women from direct combat billets in the military.

NOTED NAVAL NURSES IN U.S. HISTORY

Nursing, in the sense of bedside attendance of the sick and injured, has existed in the Navy from the first. Performed by enlisted crew members, the function was increasingly formalized during the 19th Century as part of the duties of the emerging hospital corpsman rates.

Even in the early 1800s, there was a recommendation that women be employed as Navy nurses. Nothing much came of this until the American Civil War, when Catholic Sisters of the Holy Cross served in Navy facilities and on board the pioneer hospital ship USS Red Rover. This was part of a great endeavor by women during the conflict, an undertaking which led to the post-war establishment of nursing as a real profession requiring formal training – a profession both open to and dominated by women. The U.S. Navy officially established the Navy Nurse Corps in 1908.

In 1862, Sisters of the Holy Cross served aboard USS Red Rover, the Navy’s first hospital ship, joining a crew of 12 officers, 35 enlisted, and others supporting medical care. Red Rover remained the only hospital ship in the Navy until the Spanish-American War.

Loretta Perfectus Walsh (1896-1925), became the first American active-duty Navy woman and the first woman to serve in any of the United States armed forces other than as a nurse. Walsh enlisted in the U.S. Naval Reserve on March 17, 1917. She subsequently became the first woman Navy petty officer when she was sworn in as Chief Yeoman on March 21, 1917.

Captain Ruth Alice Erickson was the Director of the Navy Nurse Corps from 1962-1966. As a lieutenant in the corps, she witnessed the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. She served as chief nurse at three major naval hospitals before becoming director.

Retired Rear Admiral Frances Teresa Shea-Buckley was the Director of the Navy Nurse Corps from1979-1983. Shea joined the corps in 1951 and stayed in the Reserves when she left active duty in 1954. She earned a masters degree in nursing service administration. After returning to active duty in 1960 with a stint in Vietnam, she became the director in 1979 and became the commanding officer of Naval Health Sciences Education and Training Command as well as deputy commander of Personnel Management, Naval Medical Command.

Retired Rear Admiral Mary Joan Nielubowicz was the Director of the Navy Nurse Corps from 1983-1987. She was promoted to Commodore, in which this rank was changed to Rear Admiral in 1985. The following year the members of the Association of Military Surgeons of the United States established the Mary J. Nielubowicz Essay Award in recognition of her outstanding support and encouragement of active and reserve nurses. Retired Rear Admiral Mary Fields Hall was the Director of the Navy Nurse Corps from 1987 to 1991. She was the first military U.S. military nurse to command a hospital. She became the commanding officer at Naval Hospital, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba in 1983, and later, commanded Naval Hospital, Long Beach, California.

Rear Admiral Joan Marie Engel held the position as the 18th Director of the Navy Nurse Corps from 1994-1998. She concurrently served as deputy commander of personnel management in the Health Sciences, Education and Training Command, and later as assistant chief for Education, Training and Personnel. Engel earned the Legion of Merit, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Navy Commandant Medal, and the National Defense Medal with bronze star in her distinguished naval career.

MODERN WOMEN’S MILESTONES IN NAVAL HISTORY

1990, Rear Admiral Marsha J. Evans, USN was the first woman to command a Naval Station. She assumed command of Naval Station, Treasure Island San Francisco.

In the same year, Lieutenant Commander Darlene Iskra, USN was the first Navy woman to command a ship, the USS Opportune.

In 1993, Congress repealed the Combat Exclusion Law allowing women to serve on combatant ships.

In 1996, Carol Mutter became the first female three-star officer in the military. Patricia Tracey became the second a few months later.

In 1998, Lillian Fishburne became the first black female promoted to flag rank.

Also in 1998, Commander Maureen A. Farren became the first woman to command a combatant ship when she took command of USS Mount Vernon, an amphibious dock landing ship.

In 2001, Captain Vernice Armour, USMC earned her wings. The Department of Defense acknowledged her as the first female African American combat pilot in the military during Operation Iraqi Freedom. She completed two tours in the Persian Gulf. After leaving the Marine Corps, she became an international motivation speaker.

In 2006, Angela Salina was the first Hispanic woman Brigadier General in the Marine Corps.

Zenaida Colon, a native of Puerto Rico and the Navy’s only female Master Chief Aviation Support Equipment Technician joined the USS Bataan crew also in 2008.

On January 9, 2009, Secretary of the Navy Ray Maybus announced that women would be assigned to Ohio Class submarines. The first women are expected to report to subs this year.

WOMEN AS ADMIRALS

Rear Admiral Cynthia A. Coogan

Rear Admiral Cynthia Coogan is currently assigned as the Assistant Commander for Intelligence and Criminal Investigations. It is her responsibility to direct, coordinate, and oversee intelligence operations and activities that support all Coast Guard mission objectives, the National Strategy for Homeland Security, and National Security objectives. Throughout her career, she has received the following awards: two Legion of Merits, the Meritorious Service Medal with the Operational Distinguishing Device (five awards), 9/11 Medal, Coast Guard Commendation Medal (two awards), and the Coast Guard Achievement Medal (five awards).

Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper, USN

“A Legend in Her Own Time”, Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper dedicated her life to the Navy. As a pioneer computer programmer and co-inventor of COBOL (Common Business Oriented Language), she was known as the “Grand Lady of Software”, “Amazing Grace”, and “Grandma COBOL”. Grace’s life consisted of one success after another including significant contributions to the computer age and the Navy.

After graduating from Vassar in 1928 with a BA in Mathematics at the age of 22, she went on to Yale University where she earned a MA in Mathematics as well as Physics; only to continue her education by earning her PhD in 1934 from the same edified university. Hopper began teaching mathematics at Vassar in 1931 where her first year’s salary was $800.

When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor bringing on World War II, Grace wanted to serve her country by joining the military. The obstacles would have deterred a lesser person. She was 34, which was considered too old for enlistment, and the government had declared her occupation as a mathematics professor as crucial. Navy officials told her she could best serve the war effort by remaining a civilian. Undaunted, she managed to get special permission and a leave of absence from her teaching position at Vassar. She also wrangled a waiver on the weight requirement. Weighing in at 105, she was sixteen pounds underweight for her height of five feet six inches. Grace persevered and was sworn into the U.S. Navy Reserve in December 1943. For 43 years, she proudly served the Navy she loved so dearly.

Upon being sworn in, Hopper was commissioned a LTJG and ordered to the Bureau of Ordnance Computation Project at Harvard University. There she became the first programmer on the Navy’s Mark I computer, the mechanical miracle of its day. Hopper’s love of gadgets caused her to immediately fall for the biggest gadget she’d ever seen, the fifty-one foot long, 8 foot high, 8 foot wide, glass-encased mound of bulky relays, switches and vacuum tubes called the Mark I. This miracle of modern science could store 72 words and perform three additions every second.

In 1946, Hopper was released from active duty and joined the Harvard Faculty at the Computation Laboratory where her work continued on the Mark II and Mark III computers for the Navy. In 1949, she joined the Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation in Philadelphia, later called Sperry Rand, where she designed the first commercial large-scale electronic computer called the UNIVAC I. Grace’s love affair with the Mark I ended when the UNIVAC I (Universal Automatic Computer) won her affections. This computer system operated a thousand times faster than Mark I did.

She changed the lives of everyone in the computer industry by developing the Bomarc system, later called COBOL. COBOL made it possible for computers to respond to words rather than numbers. Hopper often jokingly explained, “It really came about because I couldn’t balance my checkbook.” She’s also credited with coining the term “bug” when she traced an error in the Mark II to a moth trapped in a relay. The bug was carefully removed and taped to a daily log book. Since then, whenever a computer has a problem, it’s referred to as a bug.

Hopper retired from the Naval Reserve with the rank of Commander at the end of 1966. She was recalled to active duty in August of 1967 for what was supposed to be a six-month assignment at the request of Norman Ream, then Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy for Automatic Data Processing. After the six months were up, her orders were changed to say her services would be needed indefinitely. She was promoted to Captain in 1973 by Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, Jr., Chief of Naval Operations. And in 1977, she was appointed special advisor to Commander, Naval Data Automation Command (NAVDAC), where she stayed until she retired.

In 1983, a bill was introduced by Rep. Philip Crane (D-Ill.) who said, “It is time the Navy recognized the outstanding contributions made by this officer recalled from retirement over a decade and a half ago and promote her to the rank of Commodore.” Rep. Crane became interested in Hopper after seeing her March 1983 “60 Minutes” interview. He’d never met Hopper, but after speaking with several people, was convinced she was due the added status of being a flag officer. The bill was approved by the House, and at the age of 76, she was promoted to Commodore by special Presidential appointment. Her rank was elevated to rear admiral in November 1985, making her one of few women admirals in the history of the United States Navy. She retired at the age of 80. It was at her retirement that she was presented the highest award given by the Department of Defense – the Defense Distinguished Service Medal – one of innumerable awards she received from both the Navy and industry.

Other awards include the Navy Meritorious Service Medal, the Legion of Merit and the National Medal of Technology, awarded last September by President George Bush. She also received the first computer sciences “man of the year” award from the Data Processing Management Association (DPMA) in 1969. Other achievements include retiring from the Navy as a Rear Admiral and the oldest serving officer at that time, and being the first woman to be awarded a PhD in Mathematics from Yale University.

Retirement didn’t slow Grace Hopper down. Shortly thereafter, she became a Senior Consultant to Digital Equipment Corporation where she was active until about 18 months before her death. She functioned in much the same capacity she did when she was in the Navy, traveling on lecture tours around the country, speaking at engineering forums, colleges, universities and computer seminars passing on the message that managers shouldn’t be afraid of change. She always placed very high importance on America’s youth. Hopper often said, “working with the youth is the most important job I’ve done. It’s also the most rewarding.” This seems perfectly natural since she spent all her adult life teaching others.

One dream Hopper didn’t fulfill was living to the age of 94. She wanted to be here December 31, 1999 for the New Year’s Eve to end all New Year’s Eve parties. She also wanted to be able to look back at the early days of the computer and say to all the doubters, “See? We told you the computer could do all that!”

Her insight into the future will stay with us even though she’s gone. Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper was laid to rest with full military honors in Arlington National Cemetery in the first month of 1992.

Rear Admiral Nora W. Tyson

Tennessee is where Rear Admiral Tyson graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1979 with a bachelor’s degree in English. She then went on to attend Officer Candidate School in Newport, R.I., receiving her commission in the U.S. Navy in December of that same year. Tyson reported for flight training in Pensacola, Florida where she earned her flight wings as a naval flight officer in 1983.

Amongst her duties was command of the amphibious assault ship USS BATAAN leading the Navy’s contributions to disaster relief on the U.S. Gulf Coast in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Rear Admiral Tyson was also deployed twice to the Persian Gulf in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. 
Tyson earned a Master of Arts in National Security and Strategic Affairs from the U.S. Naval War College in 1995.

Ashore, she served as Airborne Communications Officer Course instructor and officer in charge at Naval Air Maintenance Training Detachment 1079, NAS Patuxent River, Md. She has also completed tours on the Joint Staff as a political-military planner in the Asia-Pacific Division of the Strategic Plans and Policy Directorate; as executive assistant for the assistant to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; as director of staff for commander, Naval Forces Europe/commander 6th Fleet, and as executive assistant for the chief of naval operations. Her most recent assignment was as commander, Logistics Group, Western Pacific/commander, Task Force 73.

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FELIX THE CAT — CAMP TROUBLE

By A. R. Graham

The wealthy guests of John D. Spreckels’ once went riding across North Island hunting jackrabbits.  The land was then separated from Coronado by the ‘Spanish Bight’, a shallow channel that ran from the Pacific Ocean to the bay.  Used in the late 19th century for horseback riding and hunting by guests of the Hotel del Coronado, it was nothing more than an uninhabited sand flat.  Many famous figures have left their prints on this tiny piece of land and sand.

A division of the U.S. Cavalry once exercised their horses along its golden shores.  An English prince ran off with the wife of the base’s first commanding officer, Lieutenant Commander Earl W. Spencer, Jr.  His wife was Wallis Warfield, a prominent socialite who was to remarry twice, and finally, become Wallis Warfield Spencer Simpson Windsor, better known as the Duchess of Windsor, for whom King Edward VIII gave up his throne in 1936.

The list of American military pilots trained at North Island reads like the Who’s Who of aviation.  However, America was not the only country interested in aviation early in the twentieth century.  Six years before, the Naval Air Station was commissioned, Glenn Curtiss trained the first group of Japanese aviators at his flying school on North Island.  Among them was a Lieutenant Yamada, later the head of the Imperial Japanese Navy’s Naval Aviation arm in World War II.  North Island was commissioned as the Naval Air Station in 1917 and called Naval Air Station San Diego until 1955.  On August 15, 1963, the station was granted official recognition as the “Birthplace of Naval Aviation” by resolution of the House Armed Services Committee.

The Navy’s first aviator, Lieutenant Theodore Ellyson, and many of his colleagues were trained at North Island starting as early as 1911.  This was just eight years after Orville and Wilbur Wright flew the first manned aircraft at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.

In 1886, North Coronado Island and South Coronado were purchased by a developer to become a residential resort.  South Coronado, which is not an island but the terminus of a peninsula known as the Silver Strand, became the city of Coronado. Fortunately for the Navy, North Coronado was never developed.  Instead, Glenn Curtiss opened a flying school and held a lease to the property until the beginning of World War I.  In 1917, Congress appropriated the land and two airfields were commissioned on its sandy flats.  The Navy started with a tent city known as “Camp Trouble”.  As its name suggests, things did not always go well in the early days.  The Navy shared North Island with the Army Signal Corps’ Rockwell Field until 1937, when the Army left, and the Navy expanded its operations to cover the whole of North Island.  In 1914, then-unknown aircraft builder, Glenn Martin, took off and demonstrated his pusher aircraft over the island with a flight that included the first parachute jump in the San Diego area.  The jump was made by a ninety-pound civilian woman named Tiny Broadwick. Other aviation milestones originating at North Island included the first seaplane flight in 1911, the first mid-air refueling, and the first non-stop transcontinental flight, both in 1923.

One of history’s most famous aviation feats was the flight of Charles A. Lindbergh from New York to Paris in May 1927.  That flight originated at Rockwell Field on North Island on May 10, 1927, when Lindbergh began the first leg of his journey.

Forefathers of today’s “Blue Angels”, the three-plane “Sea Hawks” from VF-6B, the “Felix the Cat” squadron, were thrilling audiences with flight demonstrations as early as 1928.  They demonstrated the training skills of Navy fighter and bomber pilots, and on many occasions, flew their aircraft in formation with the wings tethered together.

During World War II, North Island was the major continental U.S. base supporting the operating forces in the Pacific.  Those forces included over a dozen aircraft carriers, the Coast Guard, Army, Marines, and Seabees.  The city of Coronado became home to most of the aircraft factory workers and dependents of the mammoth base which was operating around the clock. Major USO entertainment shows and bond drives were held weekly at the Ships Service Auditorium, which was later replaced by the 2,100-seat Lowry Theater.

Famous people stationed here or on ships home ported here during the war years included Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Guy Madison, future television cowboy star of the 1950s and 1960s as Wild Bill Hickok, who was at that time, Seaman Bob Mosely, a lifeguard at the NAS crews pool.  Stars like the Marx Brothers and Bob Hope appeared regularly at USO shows at the auditorium.  Two films of a bygone era were also filmed here including Hell Divers with Clark Gable in 1931 and Hellcats of the Navy with Ronald and Nancy Reagan in 1957.

In 1944, the Army Corps of Engineers filled in the Spanish Bight to allow for more construction.  North Island today is an island in name only.

Today, the Naval Air Station at North Island is part of the largest aerospace-industrial complex in the Navy.  It includes Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, Outlying Field Imperial Beach, and Naval Air Landing Facility, San Clemente Island. The complex totals 5,000 acres stretching from the entrance to San Diego Bay to the Mexican border.  North Island itself is host to 23 squadrons and 75 additional tenant commands and activities, one of which, the Naval Aviation Depot, is the largest aerospace employer in San Diego.

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REMEMBERING: ADMIRAL GEORGE STEPHEN MORRISON

Admiral George Stephen Morrison

George Stephen Morrison was a Rear Admiral and naval aviator in the United States Navy.  Morrison was commander of the U. S. naval forces in the Gulf of Tonkin during the Gulf of Tonkin Incident of August 1964.  He was the father of Jim Morrison, the lead singer of the legendary rock band, The Doors.

Morrison was born in Rome, Georgia to Caroline and Paul Morrison.  He was raised in Leesburg, Florida.  Morrison entered the U.S. Naval Academy in 1938.  He graduated in 1941, was commissioned an ensign in the U.S. Navy, and was sent to Hawaii.  Assigned to the minelayer Pruitt (DM-22) at Pearl Harbor, he witnessed the Japanese attack on December 7, 1941.

In 1943, he studied flight training at NAS Pensacola, Florida, graduating in spring 1944.  Morrison flew missions in the Pacific Theater for the duration of World War II.

After the war, he was an instructor for secret nuclear-weapons projects in Albuquerque.  During the Korean War, he was assigned to the joint operations center in Seoul, earning a Bronze Star for his part in combat operations against North Korea and Chinese forces.

In 1963, Morrison took command of the Essex-class aircraft carrier Bon Homme Richard (CV-31), flagship of a 3rd Fleet Carrier Division (today’s Carrier Strike Group) in the Pacific and based at Naval Air Station, Alameda, California.  Morrison was in command of the Carrier Division during the controversial Gulf of Tonkin Incident in 1964, which resulted in a dramatic escalation of the Vietnam War.  In 1966, he was promoted to Rear Admiral; at age 46.  In 1972, he was appointed Commander of U.S. Naval Forces in the Marianas.  As such, he was in charge of relief efforts for Vietnamese refugees sent to Guam after the 1975 fall of Saigon.

Admiral Morrison was the keynote speaker at the decommissioning ceremony for Bon Homme Richard, his first ship as an admiral, on July 3, 1971 in Washington, D.C., the same day his son, Jim Morrison, died in Paris, France at age 27.

Morrison retired in 1975.

Morrison met and married Clara Clarke in Hawaii in 1942.  Their son, James Douglas, was born in 1943 in Melbourne, Florida.  A daughter, Anne Robin, was born in 1947 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and a son, Andrew Lee Morrison, was born in 1948 in Los Altos, California.

In retirement, the Morrison’s lived in Coronado and Chula Vista, California.  Clara Clarke Morrison, 89, died after a long illness in Coronado on December 29, 2005.  Rear Admiral Morrison died in Coronado on November 17, 2008.  His private memorial service was held on November 24 at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego.  His ashes were scattered at sea near the same spot off Point Loma, where his wife’s ashes had been scattered nearly three years earlier.  Admiral George Stephen Morrison left behind the legacy of an outstanding military career as well as his children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren.

Excerpts from “I Remember” by A. R. Graham

A Silver Medallion

Admiral Morrison was Commander-in-Chief of Carrier Division 9 stationed at Sasebo, Japan.  He had a fleet of carriers and was doing some serious ass-kicking during the Vietnam War.  One of the carriers used was the mighty battleship, the New Jersey, which had 16-inch guns and once unleashed a salvo which sank half of a small island.  The Admiral received a glowing citation which was written on fine parchment accompanied by a silver medallion as big as your face.  He read it to us out loud at a family gathering.  His countenance radiated deep pride and pleasure.

The Athlete

Admiral George Stephen Morrison was so small as a child that he was given shots to spur his growth to little or no success.  He stands 5’8” and his sisters and parents were also petite.  Anne is 5’7”, Andy is about 5’11”, and Jim was 5’10”.  Jim appeared taller because he wore boots that elevated his height by several inches.  Jim was not big-chested and neither was his father, who was perfectly toned, but never large nor muscular.

The Admiral used to tell us stories of his years as a cadet at the U. S. Naval Academy.  He always inserted the Morrison touch of humor into all.  This was one of his favorites:

Because of his stature, he had difficulty keeping up with his long-legged shipmates, who ran him ragged.  Running was the order of the day.  The cadets ran everywhere.

When the dinner bell rang, Steve, as part of a fire crew that consisted of a cart, ladder, and fire bell propelled by six galloping cadets, took up the rear.  By the time they reached the dinner table, the fire crew was lobster-hot in addition to the sauna-like Maryland heat.  “Wow!  My feet never touched the ground a lot of the time!”  When the Admiral told this story, he did it with so much animation that it left us in stitches with his theatrics.

The Admiral is, among other things, a superb athlete.  We played doubles table tennis regularly.  The Admiral was laser precise, NASCAR-quick, and impossible to beat.

He was also one of the rare ones that excelled on the rings.  He can be seen in action from photographs in the 1943 graduation book of the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis.  Steve has remained in perfect shape all of his life.  So much so that over fifty years later, he could easily wear the uniform he graduated in to naval academy reunions – and it fit him perfectly.

In the early 1970’s, the Admiral came to visit Anne and I.  While we were in the backyard playing with the kids on a set of regulation parallel bars, he gave us a few pointers.  He walked languidly to the bars, grabbed them, and went into a perfect kip – a stunning piece of aerial choreography.  It was like watching Nureyev as he landed like a leaf.  For a split second, he maintained perfect posture as if he was in a competition and the judges were watching.

The Admiral and the UFO

Back in the day, we were sitting around talking about UFOs, Area 51, and all the other lunatic alien legends.  We were laughing about the accounts of people claiming they had been abducted by aliens who then proceeded to fiddle or tamper with them.  The Admiral suddenly pronounced, “I chased a UFO once.”  We sat in rapt silence waiting for the punch line.  His story went like this:

Steve and his fighter squadron were patrolling the skies during the Korean conflict when they saw a silver object at three o’clock moving at a high rate of speed.  Steve radioed for permission to pursue the unidentified flying object.  He and a few other members gave chase for ten minutes.  When they finally got near enough to see more clearly, the object started shimmering in the bright morning sunlight.  It appeared to be picking up speed while simultaneously sending an urgent transmission.

The young aviators were fixing to blow this sucker out of the shy, when Lt. Commander Morrison, who had arrived on the scene first, discovered that the UFO was an escaped shiny metallic weather balloon.

The Admiral Wore Desert Boots

When Captain Morrison became Admiral Morrison, he received orders for duty at the Navy building in London, England.  Clara leased a huge apartment on Bayswater Road just a few miles from the American Embassy.  Anne was attending an extension of the University of Gainesville on an Air Force base outside of the city and Andy attended an extension of the American high school system.

The Admiral would take a brisk morning walk to work every day.  In 1966, England’s fashion scene was wild.  The mini-skirt was barely a skirt at all and most young people looked like peacocks with colors so dazzling one needed furnace goggles just to walk down the street.

The Morrison’s dressed conservatively, indeed.  Americans were so shocked and amused to see a nation of popinjays with funny accents that it was a laugh-riot to them.

One day, Andy challenged his father to be more with it and dress in some modern clothes.  That evening, when the Admiral came home from work, he told Andy that he had a surprise for him.  He left the room and returned ten minutes later wearing Andy’s buttoned down, collegiate-striped shirt, bell-bottomed Levi’s, and a pair of tan desert boots.  This was the standard dress for most American high school kids at that time.  The clothes fit the Admiral perfectly.

The Admiral always looked young for his age.  Even then, at the age of fifty, he sometimes looked like a young man.  He wore the clothes the rest of the night.  When friends came over to visit, nobody said a word, neither the Morrison’s nor the guests.  Clara almost burst her lungs trying not to laugh.

The Admiral Goes Back to School

When the Admiral retired from the Navy, he was only in his fifties.  So, he considered a second career as a university mathematics instructor.  He began taking refresher courses at San Diego State University.

There is a fine distinction in the Navy when it comes to rank.  When a commander retires from the service, he is awarded a final promotion in the form of the rank of admiral.  As you can imagine, there are a great number of admirals who are so in name only.  Admiral George Stephen Morrison was not one of those.  Instead, he rose through the ranks at lightning speed due to hard work and dedication.  He was also one of the youngest admirals in the entire history of the United States Navy.

The Admiral’s math professor was a retired naval commander himself and a strict no-nonsense teacher.  However, using the previous equation, that would in actuality, make the math professor a lieutenant commander, the lesser rank.  The professor, who applied this military manner in his dealings with all the students, was unaware that he had a retired bona fide admiral in his class.

“Class begins at 0800 hours and I require strict punctuality.”  The stern officer/teacher had issued this edict to the entire class on the very first day.  It had been made the order of the day.

Not too long after that, the Admiral forgot his reading glasses.  So, he went home to retrieve them, making him late for class.  This, in turn, caused the professor to sneer, “Well, Mr. Morrison, what did they say to you when you arrived late for work at your job?”

The Admiral responded with superb biting humor, never missing a beat, “They used to say, ‘Good morning, Admiral.’”

The silence was deafening and it prevailed for what seemed like an hour as the professor’s face underwent many contorted shapes.  The Admiral sat in his chair with all the confidence of a trial lawyer who had just dealt a smug prosecutor a lethal and unexpected legal ass whipping.

The professor/lieutenant commander was blinking faster than “I Dream of Jeannie” as he tried to snap himself back to some semblance of the control he believed he once had.  The Admiral sat in bemused silence and so did the rest of the class.

The chastened professor/officer saluted the Admiral every morning after that, especially when he was late.

Electronic Warfare

The Admiral was a specialist in electronic warfare.  One of his projects was to put the first ever Navy spy satellite into orbit around the earth.  He kept a replica of the hand-sized metal sphere which had five “My Favorite Martian” antennae protruding from its center.  “Back then, that’s all we could throw up there”, the Admiral would say, “and there are still things about the project I am not allowed to discuss.”  He was true blue when it came to the rules.  “Suffer the consequences if you violate the rules.”  He was not a lenient man nor was he harsh in his application of discipline with his children and the men under his command.

Yet there was another side to him.  While the family was driving across the country on one of their many trips connected to tours of duty, the Admiral said, “The rules were made to be broken intelligently.”  I believe there is a part of him that understood that many people cannot function in a gray society or strict environment.  In that belief system, you must challenge the boundaries, but not head on.  In other words, “You must do what you want without appearing to have broken the rules.”  In essence, “Don’t get caught.  If you do get caught, you should not receive special treatment and must be punished under the full penalty of the law.”

Celebration of the Piano

The Morrison kids grew up singing around the piano.  Over the years, Clara Morrison recorded get-togethers and kept them “in a well by the side of the road”.

Oftentimes, when we gathered at the ivories, Captain McDairmott, the Morrison’s longtime friend and the Admiral’s shipmate, would record our sessions.  Some went back to the days when the Morrison kids were quite young.  I have a recording of Jim singing, “You Get a Line and I’ll Get a Pole”, when he was ten years old.

During one of our songfests, the Captain asked the Admiral to say something into the microphone for a test.  He deferred to me.  I, in turn, asked him to repeat something he had said earlier in his lecture about nuclear energy.

“E to the high of pi (or high pi) plus one equals zero”, which he explained was the entire basis of mathematics.  In mathematical language, this means, God.

The Admiral Arrested

Admiral Morrison loved to go to Las Vegas to play cards.  Two or three times a year, he and Clara would check into one of the big resort hotels for a week of relaxation and gambling.  Clara had terrorized every slot machine in Vegas for many years and invariably won.

The Admiral had a formula that he unflinchingly adhered to.  It was a mathematical equation known only to him.  This method never failed in the big picture — for even though he lost a few hands, he always came away from the table a winner.  The only flaw in the Admiral’s near-flawless enterprise was the amount of money he wagered.  It was always the same, no matter what.  The Admiral was a measured man, who would never indulge in excess to any degree, and so it was with gambling.  His bet never exceeded two dollars, ever.

On one of the Morrison’s gambling junkets, the Admiral was having a good old time as he won every round.  Each time the dealer issued him a winning hand, all eyes focused in his direction as he placed a new bet – the very same sum of two dollars – over and over again.  To degenerate gamblers, this cautiously guarded playing style is a shameful practice and they are appalled by such a punk wager. He might just as well have been playing Monopoly or Parcheesi because to a real gambler, “This guy is a jinx.”  His normally steady and sober gaming method elsewhere would be a virtue.  However, here in this gamblers’ den of iniquity, it was decidedly unethical, or at the very least, in poor taste.

The word gamble conjures up many reckless synonyms such as action, bet, chance, punt, raffle, risk, spec, stab, toss up, uncertainty, venture, and wager.  To the Admiral, it was simply the original derivative of the word gamble which is game.  That is what he was doing – playing a game whilst everyone else around him was gambling.  His game never changed and he always walked away from the tables either winning or not losing.

One night, the Admiral was up to his usual – that is to say – most unusual display of devil-may-care attitude toward the sacred rules of gambling.  He had won nine hands in a row, but kept laying down the same paltry sum of two dollars.  The dealer was becoming irritated while the rest of the table wished silently that he would make a larger bet, but he did not.

Finally, a very muscular and very drunk, hardcore gambler at the far side of the table started to laugh out loud every time the high roller won a hand or placed a new bet.  In the end, the whole table joined in.  Even though they were merely laughing at the drunk’s laughter, which was something between a cackle and a gagging sound, it was getting to the Admiral.  Now his smile was beginning to fade.  Each time he put down his two-dollar bet, the drunk would loudly sing, Hey, Big Spender, followed by that hideous cackle.

As the dealer laid down the next winning card and before the drunk could issue his next ridiculing remark, the Admiral flew off his chair faster than a light being switched on or off and was in the drunk’s face, “Do you want to do something about it or are you all talk?”

The drunk was flabbergasted and speechless.  The Admiral returned to his chair and continued where he left off.  He bet the very same two dollars and, by God, he won again.  The table was silent and so was the drunk.

Clara related this incident to the rest of the family amid howls of laughter at the prospect of Jim Morrison’s straight-laced father in a near brawl with a drunk in Las Vegas and what a sensational headline that would have made:

“JIM MORRISON’S DAD ARRESTED FOR BEATING OF GAMBLER IN LAS VEGAS”

Andy questioned his father, “What the hell were you thinking, old man, picking a fight with a guy who could crush your head with one hand?”  The Admiral answered with pronounced confidence, “I think I could have taken him.”

In his day as a young aviator, he had flown through certain death on many occasions and wreaked serious carnage on the enemy during three separate wars. Yet in civilian life and as a family man, he was the epitome of nonviolence.  He never physically disciplined his children or uttered an angry word in their presence.  So, it was quite out of character for him to deploy this primitive aspect of his inner self in public.

“You can’t judge a book by its cover.”

Stardust Memories

It has been two weeks of visiting relatives, sons, daughter, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, grandchildren, and to top it off, Andy Morrison came by for a visit.  He told the following story:

“Dad and I were driving to San Diego to pick up some supplies.  I had just bought a new Willie Nelson CD and he was anxious to play it.  But I didn’t know if Dad would like the music.  On this album, Willie is doing the oldies from the Forties and one of the tracks is ‘Stardust’.  Well, Dad listened to it intently and when the song was over, he popped the CD out of the deck and put it in his pocket.  After a several seconds, he pulled it out of his pocket and asked, ‘Where’s the case?’  When we found it, he put the CD back in the case and returned it to his pocket.  I said, ‘Dad, what are you doing?’   He replied, “I’m gonna take it home for your mother to listen to.’”

Father and son both laughed loud and long (the Morrison Anthem) at the Admiral’s sentimentality towards Nelson’s rendition of the ballad.  Andy dropped his dad off and rode off to the beach to watch the setting sun.

“Sometimes I wonder why I spend
The lonely night
dreaming of a song
The melody haunts my reverie
And I am once again with you
When our love was new
And each kiss an inspiration
But that was long ago
And now my constellation
Is in the stardust of a song…”

–Hoagy Carmichael / Mitchell Parish

 

NOTE:  The Morrison’s retirement home located at 135 “H” Avenue will be featured in the Coronado Historical Association’s Wings of Gold salute to the naval aviators dubbed the “Home Front” Project beginning in February.  Each home of these noted naval aviators will have a sign with a number corresponding to a brochure with a map and a brief bio of each aviator placed in the front yard.  Brochures and maps are available through the Coronado Historical Association:  (619) 435-7242, www.coronadohistory.org

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HOME TO THE ADMIRALS

 

 

 

By:Nina Odel   AKA Lynne Harpst

In the middle of the 300 block of Eighth Street stands a classical Spanish villa. Typical of many of the beautiful homes built in this style in Coronado in the 1930s, the residence is a treasure of our island.  It not only captures our town’s past and present but also secures our future.

Stepping through a bold purple door – the current owner’s favorite color – the foyer affords entry into three main sections of the house: a large and inviting living room with a wood-burning fireplace, a formal dining room, and the second floor via a central sweeping staircase. Whether you choose to ascend the stairs or ride the built-in elevator, what awaits you is a master wing, complete with a spacious master bedroom suite and a large viewing deck.  An adjacent wing comprises a large bedroom, sun porch, and office.  The red tile roof, mature landscaping, with lush foliage and vibrant flowers, and tiled walkways enhance the beauty of this property.  For seventy-five years, the owners of 330 Eighth Street have entertained prominent Coronado guests in the large patio.  A generous-size cottage, complete with its own kitchen, provides accommodations for longer-term company.  It is certainly a home in which to relax and enjoy the best of Island life.

330 Eighth Street was constructed in 1936 for Admiral Jonas H. Ingram.  Born in 1888 in Jefferson Clark County, Indiana, Admiral Ingram was an officer in the United States Navy during both World War I and World War II.

A graduate of the United States Naval Academy, Ingram was the head football coach from 1914 to 1917, going on to become the Director of Athletics from 1926 to 1930.  During the Mexican Revolution, he received the Medal of Honor for his actions in the 1914 Battle of Veracruz.  Upon graduation from Annapolis, he served aboard the battleship New York, which operated with the British Grand Fleet during World War I.  During World War II, he was Commander-in-Chief of the United States Atlantic Fleet, and was personally responsible for the safety of the convoy of American troops to Europe.  In his highly illustrious naval career, he also earned the Navy Cross, three Distinguished Service Medals and the Purple Heart.

After being detached from duty as Commander-in-Chief in 1946, Admiral Ingram retired to his home at 330 Eighth Street.  Ending forty years of military service, it was now time for him to enjoy retirement, and what better place to do so than the Emerald Isle!  But the Admiral was not an idle retiree.  He immediately accepted the position of Commissioner of the All-America Football Conference.  Upon his resignation in 1949, he went on to serve as vice president for the Reynolds Metal Company as well as the superintendent of summer schools for Culver Academies.  In 1952, he suffered a series of heart attacks, passing away on September 10, 1952.

Admiral Jonas H. Ingram was interred in Section 30 of the Arlington National Cemetery.  His wife, Jean Fletcher Ingram, who passed two years later, was buried with him.

This was not the end of housing prestigious officers for 330 Eighth Street. Sometime after the passing of Admiral and Mrs. Ingram, Admiral “Jimmy” Thach purchased the residence; and with many a fine social gathering of his peers, he continued the grand home’s naval legacy.

John Smith Thach was born in Pine Bluff, Arkansas on April 19, 1905.  Like Admiral Ingram, he also graduated from the United States Naval Academy.  He spent two years serving on battleships before training as a naval aviator in 1929Earning his wings in 1930, Thach quickly built a reputation as one of the most skilled aviators in the Navy.  As a member of Fighting One – known as the “High Hats” for the tuxedo-style hat they adopted as their logo – Thach and his squadron performed stunt work for Clark Gable’s 1931 movie, “Hell Divers”. During this period, Thach also set endurance records with experimental aircraft. For the next ten years, he served as a test pilot and instructor, establishing a reputation as an expert in aerial gunnery.

In the early 1940s, Lieutenant Commander Thach took command of Fighting Squadron Three, also known as “Felix the Cat”.  It was while serving this unit that he and wingman Edward J. “Butch” O’Hare developed the “Thach Weave”, a combat flight formation that could counter enemy fighters of superior performance.

The maneuver had its first disciplined test at the Battle of the Coral Sea in 1942. Using the “Weave”, Thach’s VF-3 downed nineteen out of the twenty Japanese fighters attacking the carrier Lexington.  The widespread employment of the maneuver at the Battle of Midway, by planes flying from the Yorktown, showed similar positive results for the U.S. Navy, establishing the legend of the “Thach Weave”.

With his tactical skill deemed too valuable to risk at sea, Thach was transferred to Jacksonville, Florida to teach combat tactics and create training films that became the standard for a generation of naval aviators.  It was then that he developed the “big blue blanket” system to provide an adequate defense against Kamikaze suicide attacks.

At the close of World War II, Commander Thach returned to the Pacific as the operations officer to Vice Admiral John McCain’s carrier task force, and was present at the formal Japanese surrender on September 2, 1945.

Thach was promoted to Rear Admiral in 1955.  He was placed in command of an antisubmarine development unit, “Task Group Alpha”, with the Valley Forge serving as his flagship.  He subsequently appeared on the cover of  “Time” magazine for his contributions to anti-submarine warfare, a primary focus in the ongoing Cold War.  In recognition of his outstanding performance and achievements, the Navy created the Admiral Thach Award, given to the best antisubmarine warfare squadron.

Thach was promoted to Vice Admiral in 1960 and served as the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Air in the Pentagon, where he presided over the development of the A-7 Corsair II among other naval aviation programs.  During his stint as Commander-in-Chief of U.S. Naval Forces in Europe, he received his fourth star.  He was now a full Admiral.  Among Admiral Thach’s notable awards were the Navy Cross with Gold Star and the Navy Distinguished Service Medal with Gold Star.  Also of note is that he and his brother James were among only a handful of naval officers to serve as full admirals while on active duty.

Retiring from the Navy in May 1967, Admiral Thach settled in for some much needed and well-deserved “R ‘n’ R” at his family home.  John Smith Thach died in Coronado on April 15, 1981, a few days shy of his 76th birthday.  He was buried at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego. The guided missile frigate USS Thach was commissioned in his honor in 1984.

John and Madalynn Thach had four children.  The family lived in the Eighth Street home for over thirty years.  Heirs of Admiral Thach passed ownership of the residence to civilians in 1988.  The Elliott family resided there for 14 years.  In March of 2010, retired music producer George Koen and famed heiress Lynne Harpst Koen purchased the prestigious property.  “Funk Palace”, as the Koen’s have fondly nicknamed it, hosts Beatles banners, Rock ‘n’ Roll trivia and the memorabilia of Ms. Harpst Koen’s incomparable family – a founding family of Coronado whose benefaction to the town is immeasurable.

On February 4, 2011, the Coronado Historical Association will open an exhibit marking the 100th anniversary of U.S. naval aviation.  Entitled “Wings of Gold:  Coronado and Naval Aviation”, it will emphasize the role of Coronado in that remarkable history:  Coronado is often referred to as the birthplace of naval aviation.  The exhibit will be housed in the Coronado Museum of History and Art, with a special members’ preview on February 3.  “Wings of Gold” will include photographs, documents and objects from the museum’s archives.

There will also be a self-guided “Salute to Naval Aviators” tour beginning February 4.  The home of Admirals Ingram and Thach, located at 330 Eighth Street, will be one of the featured spots on the “Home of a Naval Aviator” tour, as well as the homes of Admiral Morrison and many other notable naval officers.

Maps and brochures are available from the Coronado Museum of History and Art located at 1100 Orange Avenue, Coronado, California.  Hours:  Mon.-Sat., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sun., 10-5 p.m.  For more information, call (619) 435-7242 or log onto www.coronadohistory.org

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RECIPES

General Mess Manual and Cookbook, U.S. Navy. [First US Navy cookbook issued in 1902.]

Traditional Navy Recipes

Do you miss some of the traditional fare from the mess decks aboard ship? Here are recipes for a number of Navy dishes from 1958. Now, invite a lot of old shipmates or get out your scratchpad and calculator — these recipes are geared toward 100 portions.

Baking Powder Biscuits
Creamed Sliced Dried Beef
Navy Bean Soup

Baking Powder Biscuits

YIELD: 300 Biscuits or 100 Portions, each portion 3 biscuits (1 ounce each)
INGREDIENTS
WEIGHTS
MEASURES
PORTIONS
METHOD
Flour, sifted
Baking powder
Salt
15 lbs.
15 oz.
3 oz.
15 qt.
2 1/2 cups
6 tbsp.
1. Sift dry ingredients into bowl of mixing machine.
Shortening 3 3/4 lb. 7 1/2 cups 2. Add shortening to flour mixture and blend until consistency of cornmeal (low speed, approximately 3 minutes).
Milk   5 or 6 qt. 3. Add milk and mix until dough is formed (low speed, approximately 1 minute).
4. Place portion of dough onto lightly floured surface, knead until dough is smooth.
5. Shape into a ball and roll to a uniform thickness of 1/2 inch.

VARIATIONS:

  1. BUTTERSCOTCH BISCUITS: Roll dough into a rectangular sheet 1/3 inch thick. Spread with melted butter and brown sugar. Roll dough as for jelly roll. Cut into slices 3/4-inch thick.
  2. CHEESE BISCUITS: Add 2 lbs. (2 qt.) of dry grated cheese to dough. Brush biscuits with milk and sprinkle with grated cheese.
  3. CINNAMON BISCUITS: Proceed as for butterscotch biscuits. Spread with melted butter, granulated sugar and cinnamon.
  4. COBBLER: Place prepared fruit in pan. Cover with biscuit dough 3/8-inch thick; dock, and brush with melted shortening.
  5. ORANGE BISCUITS: Make a small indentation and place 1/2 teaspoon orange marmalade on each biscuit.
  6. WHOLE WHEAT BISCUIT: Substitute 7 lbs. of whole wheat flour for 7 lbs. of white flour.

Creamed Sliced Dried Beef

YIELD: 6 1/4 Gallons or 100 portions, each portion: 1 cup
INGREDIENTS
WEIGHTS
MEASURES
PORTIONS
METHOD
Butter or shortening
Flour, sifted
Pepper
2 lb.
2 1/2 lb.
1 qt.
2 1/2 qt.
1 tbsp.
1. Melt shortening add flour, and blend. Add pepper. Cook 5 minutes.
Milk, hot   4 3/4 gal. 2. Add hot milk slowly, stirring to prevent lumping.
Beef, dried, sliced
Shortening
7 lbs.
1 lb.
1 3/4 gal.
1 pt.
3. Separate beef into slices. Cook in hot shortening until edges curl.
4. Add to white sauce. Blend.

NOTE:

1. If beef is too salty, omit cooking in hot shortening (step 3), soak beef in hot water 15 minutes and drain before adding to white sauce.
2. If desired, freshly sliced dried beef may be added to white sauce without cooking in hot fat.
3. Serve with toast, baked potato, steamed rice, noodles, spaghetti, or cornbread.

Navy Bean Soup

YIELD: 6 1/4 Gallons or 100 portions, each portion: 1 cup
INGREDIENTS
WEIGHTS
MEASURES
PORTIONS
METHOD
Beans, white, dry 6 lbs. 3 1/2 qt. 1. Pick over and wash beans.
Ham stock
Ham bones
  7 gal.
8 bones
2. Add ham stock and ham bones. Heat to boiling point; cover and simmer 2-3 hours or until beans are tender. If necessary, add hot water.
3. Remove ham bones.
Carrots, shredded
Onions, finely chopped
Pepper
1 lb.
2 lbs.
2 3/4 cups
4 1/2 cups
2 tsp.
4. Add carrots, onions, and pepper. Simmer for 30 minutes.
Flour, hard wheat, sifted
Water, cold
1/2 lb. 2 cups
3/4 qt.
5. Blend flour and water to a smooth paste. Stir into soup, and cook 10 minutes longer.

NOTE:

1. If beans are old, soak 3 to 4 hours prior to cooking.
2. Add salt and additional pepper if desired.

VARIATION:

Old Fashioned Navy Bean Soup: Add one No. 10 can of tomatoes in Step 4.

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NAVAL TRIVIA

The Navy Hymn

Eternal Father, Strong to save,
Whose arm hath bound the restless wave,
Who bid’st the mighty Ocean deep
Its own appointed limits keep;
O hear us when we cry to thee,
for those in peril on the sea.
O Christ! Whose voice the waters heard
And hushed their raging at Thy word,
Who walked’st on the foaming deep,
and calm amidst its rage didst sleep;
Oh hear us when we cry to Thee
For those in peril on the sea!
Most Holy spirit! Who didst brood
Upon the chaos dark and rude,
And bid its angry tumult cease,
And give, for wild confusion, peace;
Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee
For those in peril on the sea!
O Trinity of love and power!
Our brethren shield in danger’s hour;
From rock and tempest, fire and foe,
Protect them wheresoe’er they go;
Thus evermore shall rise to Thee,
Glad hymns of praise from land and sea.

Origins of the U.S. Navy Flag

The Department of the Navy Seal, created in 1957, was to serve as the main feature of the official United States Navy flag, adopted two years later. The flag did not pass through an evolutionary development as was the case with the Navy seal.

Ships of the earliest period in the Nation’s naval history wore a variety of flags, including the striped Grand Union, and those bearing a pine tree or rattlesnake. However, these various banners may be considered steps in the genesis of the national ensign, the “Stars and Stripes,” rather than forebears of a specific flag for the Navy.

Toward the end of the nineteenth century the Infantry Battalion flag (above left) was introduced for use by naval landing forces. This was a blue flag with a white diamond shaped device in the center and a blue foul anchor superimposed on the diamond. For more than sixty years, the Infantry Battalion flag served as the unofficial Navy flag in drill formations and parades and at other ceremonies. An official Navy flag, truly representative of the Navy’s operating forces at sea, was authorized by Presidential order 24 April 1959:

The flag for the United States Navy is 4 feet 4 inches hoist by 5 feet 6 inches fly, of dark blue material, with yellow fringe, 2 1/2 inches wide. In the center of the flag is a device 3 feet 1 inch overall consisting of the inner pictorial position of the seal of the Department of the Navy (with the exception that a continuation of the sea has been substituted for the land area), in its proper colors within a circular yellow rope edging, all 2 feet 6 inches in diameter above a yellow scroll inscribed “United States Navy,” in dark blue letters.

Unlike the national ensign, commission pennant, union jack, and admiral’s broad pennant which fly from gaff, mast, or staff on board naval vessels, the flag of the United States Navy is reserved for display purposes and is carried by an honor guard on ceremonial occasions.

Presidents Who Served in the U.S. Navy

John F. Kennedy (1961-63); Lyndon B. Johnson (1963-69); Richard M. Nixon (1969-74); Gerald R. Ford (1974-77); Jimmy Carter (1977-81); George Bush (1989-93)

USS Coronado (PF-38)

The USS Coronado (PF-38), a Tacoma-class frigate, was the first ship of the United States Navy named for Coronado, California.  She was launched June 17, 1943 by the Consolidated Steel Corporation under a Maritime Commission contract.  It was sponsored by Mrs. J. R. Crutchfield.  Lieutenant Commander N. W. Sprow, USCG, was in command.  Originally the PF-38 was a gunboat, but was later redesignated as a patrol frigate.

Coronado sailed from San Diego on February 8, 1944 for convoy escort duty to Australia en route to New Guinea.  After escorting troop and cargo transports to Manus and support the landings there, she returned to the western part of New Guinea taking part in the landings there.  Later that year, she sailed from Humboldt Bay to join in the Leyte operation.  In 1945, after an overhaul back in the States, she sailed for Alaska where she took on four Soviet officers and 45 men aboard for training. Coronado was decommissioned in July of that year and transferred to Russia under land lease.  Returned to the U.S. at Yokosuka in 1949, she was placed in reserve there until 1953 when she was transferred on loan to Japan under the Mutual Assistance Program. Coronado served in the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force (Sugi) until decommissioned on March 31, 1969.  At that time, she was returned to U.S. custody in 1971.  Currently, her fate is unknown.

During her commission, Coronado received four battle stars for her World War II service:  the Bismarck Archipelago operation, the Hollandia operation, the Western New Guinea operation, and the Leyte Gulf operation.

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SOLDIERS’ HOMECOMING

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AVIATOR PROVIDES GOLDEN RULE

By Kimberley Graham

This year, 2011, marks the “Centennial Anniversary of Naval Aviation” for  those who wear the golden wings of Naval, Marine, and Coast Guard aviators. We have a very special citizen living among our ranks here on the Emerald Isle who qualifies amongst those proud aviators.  His name is Captain Len Kaine.  Captain Kaine is a retired U.S. Navy fighter pilot and president of the Golden Rule Society (GRS).  After retiring from the Navy, Captain Kaine established the nonprofit corporation to support our troops, veterans and their families, with a primary focus of assisting the children of our nation as well as 15 other countries around the world.  Over its 39-year history, the GRS has accomplished its goals through a variety of fundraising programs and activities.  The philosophy of the Golden Rule Society is, “To better the lives of others is your life’s greatest reward.”  This is not only the society’s philosophy, but Captain Kaine’s as well.

Captain Len Kaine’s exuberance, innovation, and hard work have not gone unnoticed.  Locally, a proclamation was presented to Captain Kaine by Mayor Casey Tanaka, designating the first week of October 2010 as Golden Rule Society week in Coronado.  Mayor Tanaka also nominated the organization for the “2010 San Diego Veterans Allegiance Award” recognizing the nonpaid volunteers who support our troops and veterans.  In a separate nomination from Vice Admiral Edward H. Martin, Kaine was nominated as the “2010-2011 San Diego County Veteran of the Year” for his 38 years of volunteer service to those who defend our freedoms.  Captain Kaine and GRS received this award alongside eight others, which were presented to he and his organization at a local luncheon by members of Congress, Susan Davis and Bob Filner, for “outstanding and invaluable community service”.

On a nation and worldwide level, Captain Kaine was presented with the “2005 President’s Lifetime Achievement Award, Gold Medal and Citation” for his charity work.  Senator John McCain pinned on the Award at the 50th year reunion of Carrier Naval Aviators.  In 2003, the benevolent Captain Kaine was nominated for the Novel Peace Prize.  He received both a place on the National Role of Honor in Washington, D.C. and a Letter of Commendation from the Under Secretary of Defense (Director of Youth Activities) in 2002.  These are but just a few of he and the Golden Rule Society’s many accolades.

Once again in the words of Captain Kaine and the Golden Rule Society, “To better the lives of others is your life’s greatest reward.”The Golden Rule Society is led and managed by non-paid volunteers and 100% of the net funds raised by the organization go to help children and non-profit beneficiaries. More than a million lives have been touched and improved by the very generous outreach programs offered by the GRS.“We truly welcome every child, young adult and grown-up who has access to the Internet into our educational, motivational, inspirational, and character building program, with special affinity for children of Military Service Members, Firefighters, and Law Enforcement Personnel, and all who Protect and Serve.”

For more information on the Golden Rule Society and how you may volunteer or contribute to this honorable organization visit: http://www.goldenrulesociety.org


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THE EPIDEMIC OF DISCONNECTION

Recently, noted journalists Bob Woodward and Tom Brokaw alongside the First Lady, Michelle Obama, joined the Oprah Winfrey Show to acknowledge the “epidemic of disconnection” we have as citizens of our great country for the over 5,800 soldiers who have lost their lives in the Iraqi-Afghanistan wars as well as the millions of soldiers, officers, and their families who currently serve this effort on our behalf.  It is time as we honor our warrior heroes to also honor those who struggle in the present.  Many soldiers who are fortunate to survive their deployments only return to be deployed yet once again.  The soldiers miss the birth of their children and the milestones of these children we all cherish so much.  Their spouses and family miss them terribly and worry about them constantly.  Do we?

Who are the Gold Star families?  Who are the Blue Star families?  Gold Star families have lost a loved one in the wars.  Blue Star families have a loved one currently serving in the wars.  This article is an appeal to us as community citizens to reach out to these special families.  Not only to offer our gratitude, but our assistance.  What can we do for you, as a family, to show our gratitude?  Adopt a Family.  We, at the Coronado Clarion, would like to hear and share your stories.  We will serve you and provide awareness.  As a military town, this should be foremost and fundamental in our consciousness.  Coronado owes a huge debt to its military.  Here are some organizations you may participate with and find assistance for your very special families and friends:

www.woundedsoldiers.com

www.serve.gov

www.goldenrulesociety.org

www.veteranmuseum.org

www.soledadmemorial.com

www.coronado-clarion.com

fhp.osd.mil/deploymentTips.jsp#navy

www.nmfa.org

www.army.mil/features/FamilyAssistanceHotline/default.htm

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Special Edition in Honor of the U.S. Military

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WINGS OF GOLD

“Wings of Gold: Coronado and Naval Aviation Museum Exhibit Marks 100th Anniversary”

In early 1911, the United States Navy asked pioneer aviator Glenn Curtiss to train one its officers to fly. Curtiss chose a sandy, scrub-covered island in San Diego Bay as the location and Coronado became the birthplace of Naval Aviation.  On February 4, 2011, the Coronado Historical Association (CHA) will participate in a national celebration of the Centennial of Naval Aviation with the unveiling of a themed museum exhibit entitled, Wings of Gold:  Coronado and Naval Aviation.

Wings of Gold will be on display in one of the main galleries of the Coronado Museum of History and Art and will feature rare photographs and documents such as an early pilot license signed by Orville Wright. An original 1920s pilot uniform and a national insignia that flew on aircraft from 1919-1940 are examples of some of the items on view.  A multi-media component utilizing oral history interviews highlighting the history of U.S. Naval Air Station (NAS)–North Island, will be included in the exhibit.  A series of lectures, a film festival and a community-wide commemorative home signage program with map of residences lived in by over a 100 naval aviators will complement the exhibit during its six-month run.

Coronado Historical Association Naval Aviator Yard Sign Initiative:  Look for signs in front of houses where Naval Aviators past and present have lived as you drive around Coronado or come by the association for a map.

The Coronado Museum of History & Art is located at 1100 Orange Avenue, Coronado.  Suggested donation:  $4  Hours:  Mon.-Sat., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sun., 10-5 p.m.  For more info, call (619) 435-7242 or log onto: www.coronadohistory.org

 “Coronado Library Centennial Exhibit:  Jan-Dec 2011”

The Coronado Public Library will be commemorating the Centennial of Naval Aviation throughout 2011 with a special exhibition highlighting the progress of naval aviation from its beginning in 1911 to its role in the modern world.  The hundred year story of U.S. Naval Aviation will be told in six chronological bi-monthly exhibits.  The exhibits will showcase scale models of naval aircraft, historical photographs, uniforms, original paintings, flight gear, pilot log books, and other memorabilia.  Of note will be a small-scale diorama of North Island and how it changed over the decades.

For more information about the exhibition or scheduled events call 619-522-7390 or visit www.coronado.lib.ca.us.  The Coronado Library is located at 640 Orange Avenue, Coronado, Ca.  Open Monday-Thursday 10-9, Friday-Saturday 10-6 and Sunday 1-5.  All programs and events at the Coronado Library are free to the public. 

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ARLINGTON WEST

The first Sunday of November 2003, a group of local activists erected 340 wooden crosses on the beach immediately west of Stearns Wharf in the beautiful seaside community of Santa Barbara, California.  The wooden crosses marked the deaths of U.S. servicemen and servicewomen in Iraq.

Outraged that the Bush administration had barred U.S. media from photographing returning coffins containing the war dead from Iraq, founder Stephen Sherrill, along with a small group of local activists, erected the first installation of what has become widely known as the Arlington West memorial. “I didn’t feel that the American people were mindful of the terrible price we were paying – and were about to pay – for the invasion and occupation of Iraq,” says Sherrill. “The statistics in the newspapers were just tiny little numbers, too easy to breeze over.”

Since the first installation of the crosses in 2003, the number of American soldiers killed in Iraq has grown beyond 4,300. Every Sunday morning, members of Veterans for Peace and volunteers from the community, place crosses in the sand in remembrance of those whose lives have been sacrificed in Iraq.  Hundreds of observers from across the nation and around the world visit Arlington West every week.  To date, there have been approximately twenty duplications of the original Arlington West all across America, including their weekly “sister memorial” in Santa Monica, California.

In the intervening years since the memorial started, Veterans for Peace members and volunteers have effectively transformed what began as an angry anti-war protest into a genuine memorial — somber, chilling, and irresistibly moving.  The memorial has been deliberately de-politicized in an effort to make Arlington West a non-threatening experience for everyone, regardless of their political affiliation.  Gone are the placards denouncing George W. Bush that were there in the beginning.  In their place are flowers, flags, and the names of the dead attached to the crosses and posted on makeshift bulletin boards.

The immense temporary cemetery was named after Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia, a burial ground for soldiers killed in active duty.  It takes two dozen volunteers about three hours to erect the display of over 3,000 crosses. Planted in straight, tight rows covering over an acre of beach, it makes a stunning visual statement.  In the background, the sound of “Taps” can be heard playing nonstop from a nearby recorder.  At sunset, the music ends and the crosses are taken down, packed up, and stored away until the coming week.

Each cross has a name, rank, age, place of death, and how the death occurred.  It is remarkable how many ages marked are 19.  The phrase heard over and over, spoken by the viewers, “This really makes you think.”

Adjacent to one of the most heavily traveled intersections in Santa Barbara, Stearns Wharf has always been a favorite place for tourists to stroll.  But now, it has also become a place where friends and relatives of the deceased can pay their last respects.

Unfortunately, as of August 2010, the temporary cemetery has entered into a controversial change.  The cross display will no longer be erected every Sunday standing for U.S. casualties in Iraq.  Instead, the 3,000-plus crosses will be swapped out for 1,236 “new” plastic markers, each one representing the death of a U.S. military member serving in Afghanistan.  Since the start of 2010, there has been a “troubling uptick” in casualties in this war — nearly 250 since May versus 45 fatalities in Iraq.  The other major motivating factor behind the redesign is logistics.  Already a fairly involved process, this removes some of the heavy labor needed for the weekly project.  Many of the wooden crosses will still remain on the site, but not necessarily erected each week.  According to a spokesperson for the founding organization, VFP, “We will absolutely continue to put up crosses if people come specifically to visit them…We have no intention of abandoning the visitors who come to Arlington West.”

Although the memorial has always suggested debate due to its controversial origination, nonetheless, it serves our fallen well.  Arlington West is a definite “must visit” to remember our brave and honorable American military citizenry.

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I REMEMBER

By A. R. Graham

To order I Remember by Alan Graham: www.irememberjimmorrison.com

Cover art by stupendous rock photographer, David LeVine.


Proceeds from sale of the book go to: Kimberley Graham Cancer Recovery Fund

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VETERANS MUSEUM

By Al Graham

There are many war memorials in San Diego, but there are many more that have been forgotten, yet they still exist.  Up until last year, there was no war museum in the county.  So, when Captain Will Hays USN retired, heard that an old church had become available in Balboa Park – a new one was built recently at Balboa Naval Hospital; and the old one looked like it might be demolished, he went about making this abandoned church into a not-so-abandoned historical domain.  Now San Diego can proudly boast that it finally has a Veterans Museum to honor the proud history of our long enduring military and its heroes.

The Veterans Museum and Memorial Center occupies the former chapel of the Naval Hospital on Inspiration Point in San Diego’s Balboa Park.  The original hospital buildings have been familiar and nostalgic landmarks to countless naval personnel and San Diegans alike since the early 1920s; although the chapel itself was not built until the World War II period.  Today the museum houses a unique collection of artifacts, memorabilia, and papers as well as a library holding more than one thousand volumes. Dedicated to veterans of all conflicts, the museum’s exhibits feature World War I, World War II, Pearl Harbor, the Korean and Vietnam Conflicts, Desert Storm, Women in the Military, and paintings by local artists of military subjects.

Do not miss a living history tour by our docents who have been there!  See the first American flag to fall in the Philippines. Enjoy the museum’s unique collections of memorabilia and artwork dating from the Civil War to the present. This is the place to see and hear history. The Veterans Museum and Memorial Center is one of the very few places you will find that covers all branches of the service and is indeed a home for all veterans groups.

Museum Hours:  The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.  Admission Prices:  $5 for General Adult; $4 for Veterans & Seniors (65+); $2 for Students with Valid I.D.  Free Admission for:  Museum Members, Active Duty Military & their Dependents, & Children 12 & under.

Veterans Memorial Museum
2115 Park Boulevard
San Diego, Ca 92101
Phone / 619.239.2300
info@veteranmuseum.org

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STAR PARK

By A. R. Graham

At the gas station on Orange Avenue in Coronado, California hangs a lonely and badly tattered black and white flag.  It bears an image of an American soldier, head bowed with a Vietnamese prison guard tower in the background.  The mournful letters POW*MIA are chilling to the eyes even now many years after the conflict.  The flag is soaking wet from a heavy rain as a driving wind whips it into an angry frenzy.

Old Glory is hanging next to the disheveled banner.  She is also buffeted by the high winds, but she is intact and vibrant as the violent gusts of air streak across her.  The stars are dancing almost as if twinkling in nightlights.

Most young people today have no idea what the POW*MIA flag stands for.  To see it neglected and forgotten is a dismal tribute to those who will never return.  The fate of the missing is still highly disputed, and amidst this confusion, the truth may never be known.

In Coronado, there is a very special place of tribute in honor of ALL of the souls who died for our nation.  One block from the Pacific Ocean lays a serene circular park.  A massive pine canopy filled with tuneful birdcalls hangs above; and as the dawn breaks, the sun gently brushes the face of Old Glory and the rest of the flags hanging next to her:  the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Marines, the Coast Guard, and at the very end, flying briskly in a warm Santa Ana wind is the MIA flag.  Rivulets of wind ripple across its face as the soldier’s black silhouette seems to be speaking urgently, “Forget Me Not.”  “Forget Me Not.”

Or perhaps that is just this writer’s imagination.

JENKINS, HARRY TARLETON JR.

SYNOPSIS:   CDR Harry T. Jenkins, Jr. was a pilot assigned to Attack Air Wing 16 onboard the USS Oriskany.  Jenkins was a respected seventeen-year aviation veteran.  Jenkins had grown up in Washington, D.C., and graduated from high school in 1945.  In 1948, he earned his wings and reached the pinnacle of operational success, command of a carrier-based squadron, the Saints of Attack Squadron 163, on December 30, 1964.  He flew many combat missions from the Oriskany.

One such mission was flown September 9, 1965.  A major strike had been scheduled against the Thanh Hoa (“Dragon Jaw”) bridge, and the weather was so critical there was a question whether to launch.  Finally, the decision was to launch.  Halfway through, weather reconnaissance reported the weather in the target area was zero, and the CAG, Commander James B. Stockdale, had no choice but to send the aircraft on secondary targets.  Stockdale and his wingman, CDR Wynn Foster, circled the Gulf of Tonkin while CDR Harry Jenkins took his strike element to look for a SAM site at their secondary target — had anything been found, Wynn and Stockdale were to join Jenkins’ group.

After fifteen minutes or so, Jenkins’ group came up empty.  The group made the decision to hit a secondary target, a railroad facility near the city of Thanh Hoa.  It was here that CDR Stockdale’s aircraft was hit by flak.

Stockdale ejected, landing in a village and was captured.  The villagers brutally beat Stockdale as they took him captive, all within sight of the aircraft above.  Stockdale was held captive for seven and a half years, and he was to see Jenkins again before he was released.  CDR Wynn Foster would eventually assume Jenkins’ position as squadron commander of VA-163.

Jenkins carried a Bible with him on the ship, letting it fall open somewhere to read.   One night, the passage said something about, “He shall fall into his enemies.”  Jenkins wondered at the time if that was a premonition.  He also dreamed about becoming a prisoner.  He was worried about losing his men and agonized over planning, of finding the best way to a target.  He confided to another fellow officer that he was tired, not only physically, but emotionally as well.

On one particular mission Jenkins had narrowly escaped death when an anti-aircraft shell hit his aircraft, blowing off the canopy and destroying the instrument panel.  Jenkins guided the crippled aircraft safely back to the Oriskany.   When he landed on the deck of the Oriskany, he discovered that shrapnel had penetrated his G-suit, but hadn’t reached the inner lining.  These sorts of missions sapped the strength of the best of pilots.

On November 12, 1965, Jenkins launched in his A4E Skyhawk fighter aircraft on his 133rd combat mission on a reconnaissance mission over North Vietnam. He was two weeks short of leaving Vietnam for home.  Then on November 13, 1965, Jenkins and his wingman launched in their A4E aircraft on Jenkins’ 133rd combat mission.  The target area was Dong Hoi, a quiet area where nothing much happened because of reports that the river southwest of the city was passing traffic.  The two pilots went around the river but determined it was not navigable.  On their return, they decided to crater a road junction in case traffic was going through there at night.  They planned to slow down the traffic then return at night and check traffic again.

On the way to the junction, about ten miles from the coast, they passed a clump of trees where it appeared that a lot of traffic had driven, possibly a truck park.  The wingman orbited while Jenkins went down to investigate.  He flew very low, ten to twelve feet off the ground, and at fairly slow speed, looking under the trees.  Nothing was around, and the area was quiet.

Pulling off and heading toward the coast, Jenkins heard a gun start firing. He looked back and could see two streams of tracers from a 37-millimeter enemy anti-aircraft gun, a twin mount, nearly dead astern from him.  He quickly pulled back on the stick of his Skyhawk and sought the safety of cloud cover overhead.  But the aircraft had been hit dead astern, in “the hell hole” just aft and under the seat where the control junctions, electrical buses are.  The controls of the aircraft were immediately disconnected.  The stick wouldn’t function, and all electrical gear was down.

A second explosion followed.  Jenkins continued to climb and headed toward water, still some six to eight miles away.  The aircraft started rolling very rapidly and began to drop.  So Jenkins was forced to eject below 2,500 feet.

The wingman circled above.  Below, the Vietnamese were all around howling and yelling.  Jenkins landed on a rise approximately 12 miles south of Dong Hoi, North Vietnam.  The rise was covered with short brush and no place to hide.  He had no time to assemble his emergency radio and ran up the hill and slid under the brush.  His ejection and progress were intermittently monitored by his wingman as low clouds allowed.  The Vietnamese approached him, swinging a sickle on a stick, and slashing through the brush.  Another came right to his feet, poking with a stick.  Jenkins gave himself up.

In Jenkins’ words, “…if that had been one of my earlier missions, there is no way that gunner would have gotten me.  I’d just seen so much flak and had been hit several times.  I was just tired, I guess, and not thinking.”

Meanwhile, Jenkins’ wingman had been joined by nine other aircraft within five minutes of the initial bailout.  A1s circled overhead looking for Jenkins.  The Vietnamese were all armed and began shooting at the A1s, evidently for Jenkins’ benefit, as with each shot came a glance towards Jenkins.  Search and rescue aircraft reported observing over 100 troops and other personnel in Jenkins’ vicinity.  They remained on station looking for Jenkins for about two hours, but the Vietnamese successfully hid him from view.

A Radio Hanoi broadcast on November 14th indicated that an American pilot was shot down and captured on November 13th in the Dong Hoi District.

Jenkins was moved toward Hanoi, traveling at night.  During the trip, Jenkins was amazed by the large numbers of trucks that moved through the night in North Vietnam.  While he had seen only a few trucks from the air at night and never in daylight as a pilot, he was astounded to see the tremendous numbers of trucks moving under low light, guiding by reflective painted stripes or plastic strips on the road about every thirty feet.

Jenkins arrived at the Hoa Loa Prison in Hanoi in the early morning hours of November 23rd.  He was taken first to the “Meathook Room” for interrogation; then later to a cell where his ankles were manacled and locked together by a long steel bar topped by a heavy piece of lumber.  His wrists were tied behind him, upper arms laced tightly together from elbows to shoulders.

Jenkins was the fifty-fifthAmerican POW and the first senior officer to be tortured upon arrival in Hanoi.  For two years and one month, from late 1967 through most of 1969, CDR Jenkins, the third-ranking senior naval officer in a North Vietnamese prison camp, was put into leg irons at five o’clock each evening and stayed in irons until seven the next morning.  As special punishment for communicating with another prisoner on one occasion, Jenkins spend 85 consecutive days in irons.

In early 1969, Jenkins became ill and was in great pain at a camp known as Alcatraz, located some ten blocks from the Hanoi Hilton.  He was receiving no medical care, and fellow prisoners, led by Jenkins’ former wing commander, Jim Stockdale, put the pressure on.  What ensued might be called a “prison riot”.  The effort did bring a doctor to Jenkins’ cell; although the doctor did nothing to ease his pain.  The next morning, Stockdale organized a 48-hour fast to demand medical attention for Jenkins.  The next evening, each prisoner was interrogated and on the morning of January 27th, Stockdale was taken away to another prison center.

While the Vietnamese clearly had the upper hand on controlling their American captors, the POWs found many ways to “slip one over” on the Vietnamese.  One day, Jenkins discovered a loose wire in an extension cord and secretly shorted the wire, so that when guards turned the lights on that evening, three or four fuses were blown before the lights could be made to work.  Jenkins carried the fun from camp to camp.  In one camp, the lights were all in a series.  Jenkins bared the wire in his room and alternately shorted and restored the lights so that the camp was totally dark or completely lit at his whim.  He also broke some wires in a radio speaker causing all the speakers in the camp to go out.  He manipulated the wires in a radio, and, using the POW tap code, sent messages around the camp by turning the Vietnamese music on and off in code.

During the years Jenkins was a prisoner of war, he was taken across the infamous Thanh Hoa bridge.  A girder that he had hit on a strike mission prior to his capture was, to his great satisfaction, still wide open.

CDR Jenkins was held as a prisoner of war until he was released in Operation Homecoming in 1973.  He had been held for over seven years.  He was among 591 lucky American prisoners who came home at the end of the war.

Since the war ended, nearly 10,000 reports relating to Americans missing, prisoner, or unaccounted for in Southeast Asia have been received by the U.S. government.  Many authorities who have examined this largely classified information are convinced that hundreds of Americans are still held captive today.  These reports are the source of serious distress to many returned American prisoners.  They had a code that no one could honorably return unless all of the prisoners returned.  Not only that code of honor, but the honor of our country, is at stake as long as even one man remains unjustly held.  It is time we brought our men home.

Harry Tarleton Jenkins, Jr., was promoted to the rank of Captain during the years he was a prisoner of war.  He lived in Coronado, California, and worked for a defense contractor.  Captain Harry Jenkins died in the crash of a homemade aircraft 2, August, 1995.

“I was C.O. of VA-163 flying the A4E when shot down 13 November 1965 nea Dong Hoi, North Vietnam.  During my stay in North Vietnam, I spent four years in solitary confinement.  During this time I did much reflection on my life and my faith.  While I hope never to repeat the experience, I feel I gained a certain insight into things I might never have obtained otherwise.  Since I’ve returned I’ve been asked many times “was the war right, was it worthwhile?”  There is no doubt in my mind we were right in fighting.  I don’t think we had to fight to preserve America but it was necessary in order to preserve American honor.

A free people were threatened with the yoke of Communism being imposed by force, I fought to prevent that and I feel that fight was successful.  Our belief in freedom of choice for all required that we help the South Vietnamese or any other nation that needs our help.

We owe our independence to foreign help, mainly French, and our honor dictates that we stand ready to offer help to others when they need it to remain free.  Many men invested their whole lifetime to this cause. I invested only seven years.  Though I hope never to have to, I’m ready to invest more if it is required.

I wish everyone could understand the gratitude I feel for their thoughts and prayers during those long years and I’d like to ask everyone to continue their prayers until all those not yet home have been properly accounted for.”


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PRESIDENTS AND RESIDENTS

By Nina Odele

Coronado was such a magical place to grow up.  Of course, as little kids we didn’t know that back in the 60s a nd 70s.  We thought all kids everywhere had a whole Island Paradise to play in. Things were mostly on the quiet side here in our, then, sleepy little town.

Except for when one of the presidents of the United States came to visit.  Then there was stirring and buzzing on every square inch of our happy childhood playground!  Orange Avenue and 4th Street were cordoned off to normal traffic many hours before the heralded appearance of the very impressive shiny black Presidential motorcades.  I could almost feel the collective blood pressure of all my fellow residents rising in anticipation.  People would line the streets waving American flags and larger flags were proudly waving in the median strip all the way down Orange Avenue to the Hotel Del.  It was very much a parade-like atmosphere each and every time.

The Presidents I can remember rolling into our Crown City were:  Nixon, Reagan, Ford, Carter, and Bush Sr.

They all came by car as they had already been to various speaking engagements in and around San Diego.  Coronado was and is a popular relaxing retreat for our Country’s Presidents.  They spent as much time as they could unwinding here.  I remember when it wouldn’t be unusual to see Jimmy Carter jogging on the beach!  After 9/11 everything changed.  It was no longer safe for the motorcades to parade down Orange Avenue.   Even in our VERY military town. Terrorists ruined that tradition forever.

By the time Bush Jr. was in office, the safest way in was to fly straight to Naval Air Station North Island via Air Force One.  I lived right on Sunset Park.  One day I saw police cars driving onto, and lining up in the park — Not something you see every day.  Also, San Diego Police Mounted Patrol parked their horse trailers right in front of my house.  My humble corner was their official staging area.  As an ex-Mounted Officer (San Diego County Sheriff) myself, this was extremely exciting!  I grabbed my camera and went to go visit with them as they readied to form a barrier along the beach when the President flew in.

By this time, there were people gathering all along Ocean Boulevard.  Homeland Security was everywhere as well.  Everyone was finally in place.  I took to my perch on the upstairs balcony with my little 35mm camera at the ready, hoping to snap a photo of AF1 as she flew in.  I had no idea how close I’d be, but I was prepared nonetheless.

Suddenly, there she was, in all her glory! — Flying RIGHT over Sunset Park.  I began clicking away with my camera.  I couldn’t believe how close I was.  The jet itself was very impressive.  I remember thinking how quiet it was compared to the others that flew into North Island every day.  The whole thing lasted maybe 30 seconds, but I will never forget the experience!  It was pretty cool watching the motorcades in those earlier days, but nothing like almost being able to reach out and touch the belly of AF1.

Here are a few of the photos I captured from that awesome day:


HISTORY OF AIR FORCE ONE

 

 

Air Force One is the designation of any airplane that serves the President of the United States government.  The same planesare used by the vice-president but are called Air Force Two when he is aboard.  The presidential fleet consists of two customized Boeing 747-200B aircraft (military designation VC-25A) called SAM 28000 and 29000.

The name Air Force One was established after an incident in 1953, when Eastern Airlines flight 8610 crossed paths with the president’s plane, then called Air Force 8610, although the Air Force One name was not made official until 1962.

The first aircraft configured for presidential use was a C-87A (Liberator Express) called Guess Where II, but concerns about the C-87 safety record relegated it to use by senior members of the White House staff, including First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt on her goodwill tour of Latin America.

In its place, a Douglas C-54 Skymaster (VC-54C) was configured for the president and nicknamed Sacred Cow.  It has a sleeping area, radio telephone, and an elevator to raise President Franklin Roosevelt into his wheelchair (but FDR used the plane only once).  This airplane is now housed at the National Museum of the United States Air Force.

In 1947, President Truman replaced the Sacred Cow with a Douglas DC-6 Liftmaster (VC-118) named Independence after his hometown.  Its nose was painted to look like a bald eagle.  Its aft fuselage was converted into a stateroom.  And the main cabin could seat 24 passengers or could be made up into 12 sleeper berths.  This airplane is now housed at the National Museum of the United States Air Force as well.

In addition to the Independence, Eisenhower used two Lockheed C-121 Super Constellations (VC-121E) called Columbine II and Columbine III and two small Aero Commanders.

In 1958, Eisenhower added three additional aircraft into the executive branch service.  These were Boeing 707 (VC-137) aircraft designated SAM 970, 971, and 972.  These were the first presidential jet aircraft.

During the Kennedy administration, SAM 26000, a Boeing 707 (VC-137) went into presidential service.  Influential industrial designer, Raymond Loewy, designed the new livery (the exterior color scheme) and the interiors.  President Johnson took the oath of office on board SAM 26000, and the airplane continued to serve presidents up to Bill Clinton until 1998.  It was replaced as the primary executive aircraft in 1972 by SAM 27000, another VC-137, which served until 2001.  This airplane is now housed at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum.

In 1990, the two Boeing 747 (VC-25A) aircraft used today were delivered (having been ordered by Ronald Reagan).  The same livery was used, but the interiors were selected by Mrs. Reagan.

A new Air Force One is scheduled to go into service in 2017.  The likely candidates are a Boeing 747-8 and a Boeing 787.

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THE PATRIOT GUARD RIDERS

At first glance they look like a gang of renegade bikers with patches and rocker bars adorning their bikes and leather vests as they gather in a Coronado grocery store parking lot. There are no two individuals alike, each bike, vest, and the various other allegoric symbols speak of very diverse gathering of  souls with a unifying bond and with a single solemn objective.

Most of them are Vietnam vets, but their are also simply patriots both male and female. The leader calls the group to attention and they gather around him. He explains the mission to newcomers in the group, and in this case it is to escort a young Seal Team member’s coffin to Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego.

He hands out dog tags to each member. Each time they assemble, new members get their “first mission” tags, but most are getting another one of many. Instructions on how to process in unison along the highways are then given followed by precise directions.

Frenchie, a biker/pastor/patriot, is called upon to give the blessing. It is simple but powerful — the words delivered in such reverence — big men are moved almost to tears.

A single but most powerful word is the basis for such dedication. It is never spoken in casual tones by these Patriots because it is most cherished, revered, and never ever used lightly.

Every action by the Guard speaks of “RESPECT” for the memory of the fallen and their grieving loved ones.

The waves of emotion ripple through the crowds gathered along the roadside to watch this awesome, yet bittersweet convoy. The first into view are the rippling stars and stripes  affixed to the back of the bikes followed by the sound of powerful Harley Davidson motorcycles like a division of Sherman tanks as they thunder by.

Even more moving is to watch the dark green military buses carrying the fallen soldier and his family as they pass next. Even after they have passed, some men are still saluting as they disappear across the Coronado Bay Bridge.

The Patriot Guard Riders (PGR) is a motorcycle club whose members attend the funerals of U.S. Armed Forces members, firefighters, and police at the invitation of the deceased’s family. Patriot Guard Riders’ representatives state that they are not a chartered motorcycle club, but a group of patriotic individuals with an unwavering respect for those who risk their lives for America’s freedom and security.

The group was formed in 2005 to shelter and protect the deceased’s family from protesters such as the Westboro Baptist Church, who claim that the deaths of American troops in Iraq and Afghanistan are divine retribution for American tolerance of homosexuality. PGR members position themselves to physically shield the mourners from the presence of the Westboro protesters by blocking the protesters from view with their motorcade or by having members hold American flags. The group also drowns out the protesters’ chants by singing patriotic songs or by revving their motorcycle engines.

Although initially founded by motorcyclists, the organization is open to anyone regardless of political affiliation, veteran status, or whether they ride or not. The only prerequisite is “a deep respect for those who serve our country: military, firefighters, or law enforcement”. The Patriot Guard was established in Mulvane, Kansas at the American Legion Post 136 in 2005.

The group’s mission quickly expanded to include the funerals of law enforcement officers, fire department personnel, all first responders, and any active duty member or veteran of the U.S. Armed Forces from all previous wars and conflicts, and it is now largely focused on recognizing and honoring the sacrifices of fallen service members as well as their families and loved ones. As of March 2011, PGR reported over 220,000 members. In addition to their attendance at funerals, the group also greets troops returning from overseas at welcome home celebrations, deployment ceremonies, and perform volunteer work for veteran’s organizations such as Veterans Homes. The group also assists families in financial difficulties with travel and housing arrangements. They also visit military hospitals to encourage and honor wounded service members of the United States Armed Forces.

 

 

Posted in Clarion Causes, Spring 2012 Issue | 1 Comment

Flag of Freedom by George Koen

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WALTER WILLIAM HARPST, JR.

By  Lynne Harpst Koen

My dear sweet Dad, Walter William Harpst, Jr., was born on October 8, 1916 in Columbus, Ohio. Walter (Wally) discovered his talent for music when he was still a boy. Wally’s remarkable talent would take him all over the globe and he was a career musician for over 65 years. Wally played the guitar, ukulele, and stand-up bass (then known as big bass violin). He also sang like a bird. While playing with one of the “Big Bands” in New York City in the early 1940’s, Wally got a new “calling”, and into the Army he went. Wally and his Army Band entertained different branches of the Service during WWII including the Navy, Marines, and Air Force. Wally’s Band was “Special Services” intended to boost the soldiers’ morale. Wally served mostly in the Pacific (Okinawa) and had more than his fair share of close calls over seas. Wally had many “war stories” but one of the oddest ones was when the war was allegedly over. One day, Wally and the troops heard a loud, thundering noise. Suddenly, as they all watched, over 600 Japanese soldiers came pouring out of caves surrounding the base camp. They surrendered peacefully.

After the Army, Wally returned to playing music on the West Coast, mostly in the L.A. and Palm Springs areas. He met and preformed for many big stars of that era including Bob Hope, Dinah Shore, Lorn Green, Jerry Lewis, Desi and Lucy, and many more. Wally also toured for MCA and did a stint as a master of ceremonies for a radio show for a short while as well. While performing a gig at the Hotel Del Coronado in 1955, Wally met a Hollywood model named Frances Goodrich. Frances (Fran) was summering at the Del. The two fell in love and were married. I was born on November 15, 1957.

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JUMP START

Original Members: JB (nado-native): vocals, percussion; Dave Shoudy: lead guitar, vocals; Al Cosgrove: bass, vocals; Dave Maggiora: guitars, vocals; Gregg Miller: drums, vocals; Later Members: Alex Agundez: guitars, vocals; Alan Neff: drums; Steve Patrick: rhythm guitar, vocals; Becky Russell: drums;

The JumpStart Band ROCKS!!   

Jumpstart introduces “Steve Patrick” on rhythm Guitar and vocals. Steve is a very well known 5th grade teacher in Coronado and lives on Palm with his wife Libby, who was Dave Shoudy’s son’s kindergarten teacher back in the mid-90s. Steve replaced Alex Agundez, who sings lead vocals and plays lead guitar with his own group, Slight Return.

Steve Patrick at his first gig with JumpStart

Dave Shoudy comments, “It was in front of my face all the while as I’ve known Steve for ages. However, it never dawned on me until I walked down Orange Avenue on Open House Night, 2009. Across the street and upstairs from the Village Theater, I heard a band and thought ‘oh well, not my party’ and walked on. About an hour later, I ran into Steve and his gang in front of Danny’s. It was his band that was doing that gig. We went to the Brigantine and celebrated the start of the new Holiday Season after that.” A month later, Steve performed his first Jumpstart gig at the Hotel Del Coronado for the Coronado Realtor’s Association.

 

Most recent member of JumpStart: Becky Russell

 

 When Becky was nine years old, her big brother brought home a pair of drum sticks from school. She took those sticks from his room into her room and began banging on the furniture. He later said, “Keep them, they’re yours.” And that was the start of it. Soon after, Becky’s mom bought the toy snare, then the junior drum kit.For a short time, Becky was with “The Stiletto’s” entertaining crowds in San Diego’s Gas Lamp, Coronado’s Island Sports & Spirits, and McP’s. She was soon to do similar with “Big Rig Deluxe” for years. Later, joined with Coronado grad Dave Paseman’s band, “Hoosier Daddy” playing private parties and having a whole lot of fun. Often, Becky would set with “The Robin Hinkel Band” performing all over So Cal. Robin’s shows used a variety of musical talent, always changing.

After relocating to Nashville in sixth grade, she joined up with the school band. The first day at the chair challenge, she tied for first chair. All jealousy broke loose as the last chair boy began to heckle. Becky beat him up. Becky was very fond of the Junior High Band situation. Many of the kids’ parents were musicians as well. Her stepfather, Kenneth Hunt, was a songwriter in Nashville. And, today, her younger stepsister, Amanda Hunt-Taylor, is a songwriter as well.

Soon it was time to move again. This time to Dallas –Dallas, Georgia. A new town and a new school, but by this time she was diversified performing in the marching band, the concert band, and for school dances, and a jazz band.  Becky was also in the “Spirit of Atlanta Drum and Bugle Corps”. In the middle of her sophomore year, she moved to Coronado.  It was like going from the sticks to paradise. She played in the concert band in Coronado, then decided to keep her drumming at home. She switched interests and it was all about cross-country running.

In June 1980, Becky, a CHS grad, jumped back into the music scene. This time a garage band, “New Toys” and performed local casual scenes. Years later, she would join “Solstice” who performed in San Diego night clubs. Other bands followed: “Bonneville 7” — a psycho-billy band with two billy brats and Pip Hancock and Johnny Bowler from well known UK group called “Guana Batz”.

Becky is currently performing shows with fellow 1980 CHS grad, Dave Shoudy, and the group, “JumpStart”. The group “JumpStart” also consists of Coronado native JB Cosgrove (vocals), husband Al (bass), and Coronado teacher, Steve Patrick (guitar), entertaining most all of Coronado.

SPECIAL NOTE:  JumpStart will be playing live along with Luv Nutz at the After the Coronado 4th of July Parade Party from 12:00-4:00 p.m., Monday, July 4, at the VFW Post 2422, located at 557 Orange Avenue.  Stop by for some fun music, snacks & celebration!  Happy 4th!

 
 

 

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