Heart attack killed bodysurfer
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The 53-year-old man who died last week while bodysurfing off Main
Beach suffered a massive heart attack before lifeguards spotted him
floating face-up in the ocean, Deputy Cullen Ellingsburgh of the
Orange County coroner’s office said Tuesday.
Jerry Greene, a regular volunteer at the Canyon Club for the last
eight years, was a Vietnam veteran decorated with a silver star and
two purple hearts, Canyon Club manager Everett Smethurst said. He was
pronounced dead at South Coast Medical Center on July 16.
“Jerry was just a guy who cared a great deal about people,”
Smethurst said. “He worked countless hours as a volunteer, probably
about 80% of the time I’m here, and I’m here all the time. This place
misses him terribly already.”
Members of the club are trying to organize a memorial service for
Greene in the next two weeks. Greene lived with his younger sister in
Aliso Viejo, taking care of her when he wasn’t at the Canyon Club, a
12-step recovery center, Smethurst said.
“His sister here isn’t all that well. He has another sister in
Dallas we’re trying to track down and a brother that’s in jail, as
far as we know,” Smethurst said. “We’re functioning as Jerry’s family
to try to take care of him like he deserves.”
Barry Baker, also a volunteer at the Canyon Club, said Greene was
always willing to help people and was a great member of the
community. He said he was shocked by the news of Greene’s death.
“He went bodysurfing all the time,” Baker said. “He watched his
diet real close and exercised -- he seemed healthy. I don’t know what
else to say.”
Greene went to Vietnam when he was 17, Smethurst said. He was
discharged and spent more than two years in the hospital after an
exploding mortar shell lodged shrapnel in his legs. He couldn’t walk
for years after the injury, Smethurst said.
Smethurst said he expected to announce a date for Greene’s
memorial service soon, adding that it would definitely be at the
Canyon Club, 20456 Laguna Canyon Road.
“Like everything else, we’re taking Jerry’s passing one day at a
time,” Smethurst said.
-- Mike Swanson
Festival shows off wild side Saturday
Mutual of Omaha’s “Wild Kingdom,” which premiered on Jan. 6, 1963,
took viewers on an excursion to the far corners of the globe,
studying wild animals in their natural habitat. The Festival of Arts
is going one step farther this Saturday by bringing live exotic
animals up close and in person with their “Walk on the Wild Side”
event.
Chris Hoy, a Festival exhibitor for 20 years and renowned wildlife
artist, said he is looking forward to this third year for the event,
which will be from noon to 4 p.m. It’s something he enjoys doing for
Laguna residents and visitors.
This year, they will have a Bengal tiger, a serval cat from
Africa, a baby wallaby or “Joey,” a red fox, a kinkajou, a bear cat,
a 250-pound yellow boa constrictor, which will be returning from last
year, an alligator and others.
“The reason I wanted to do the event is that in 1979, I went to
Bandon, Ore. and held my first tiger at my aunt and uncle’s zoo, the
West Game Park,” Hoy said. “Ever since, I’ve been going all over the
world and have been able to get into the cage with all these rare and
exotic animals.”
He wants to bring that same experience to Laguna Beach. All the
animals featured have been hand-raised, Hoy said. Some have been used
in movies and television.
He said he was nervous doing this event at first because he
thought it would upset or disrupt the other festival artists, but
discovered that they enjoy it as much as the public does.
The sounds of a Caribbean steel drum band will be heard playing
live, a fitting soundtrack for the atmosphere, Hoy said.
Hoy said that the animals are just as curious about the people
looking at them as they are.
The Festival of Arts is at 650 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach
residents are always admitted free. The event is covered by Festival
admission. Tickets are $5 for adults and $3 for students and seniors.
For information, call 494-1145 or go to www.foapom.com.
-- Suzie Harrison
Parking permits set to expire
Residential parking permits -- the purple stickers -- will expire
Thursday, but the police department won’t enforce expired stickers
until Sept. 1.
Applications for new permits, valid from Aug. 1, 2003, to July 31,
2004, were mailed to current permit holders this month. Residents who
haven’t received a renewal application can call (949) 497-0733 with
their name, Laguna Beach address and a daytime phone number to have
applications mailed to them.
The cost of one-year residential parking permits rose to $200, and
six-month permits will no longer be issued. The 400 block of Third
Street has been eliminated from the program.
Applications will be processed by mail or at the cashier counter
at City Hall, 505 Forest Ave. Proof of residence is required, and all
mail payments must be made by check.
For more information, call (949) 497-0733.
-- Mike Swanson
Event a collaborative one at Festival
Three local artistic talents will take part in a collaborative
event at 5:30 p.m. on the Festival of Arts grounds Monday. The
Hartfel Ballet will perform afterward.
The event, sponsored by the California Choreographers Dance
Festival and the Festival of Arts, combines the musical talents of
10-year-old flute prodigy Evren Ozan and local drum teacher and
musician Greg White with the dance interpretations of Kimberly Bixler
Leeds.
Entrance to the Festival of Arts is free to all Laguna Beach
residents.
-- Mike Swanson
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