On the fate of El Toro, J. Edgar Hoover and the Pinks
- Share via
JOSEPH N. BELL
Writing obituaries for a commercial airport at El Toro has been a
cottage industry in these parts ever since Larry Agran turned his
first spadeful of mythic dirt for a mythic lake and -- while Costa
Mesa snoozed -- the Newport Beach City Council decided that
discretion was the better part of valor and turned its attention to
pursuing caps rather than pushing the edges of legal restrictions on
an all-out effort for El Toro.
The latest obit, offered on our Forum page the other day by Martin
Brower, summarily dismissed the El Toro airport as an issue that
should never have come up, which might surprise the people who twice
voted it in.
Apparently, no one has pointed out to Brower that as long as the
pressures on John Wayne continue to grow and the runways at El Toro
haven’t been destroyed, there remains a spark of life that makes
burial premature. The plug hasn’t been pulled on life support. Not
quite yet.
Hopefully this tiny flicker remains an irritant to our
representative in Congress, Rep. Chris Cox, who -- in the pantheon of
El Toro villains -- ranks very high. His years of blindsiding the El
Toro airport in Washington while he talked publicly about turning it
over to private interests here should be seriously eroding his local
support in an election year. But I can’t think of any issue -- or
degree of perfidy -- that would convince enough local Republicans
ever to jump ship. Or even to be bemused by the delicious irony of
Cox lobbying to add to the current noise at John Wayne by providing
gates to a new carrier that will offer him direct flights to
Washington, D.C.
Meanwhile, back at the
ranch ...
The current legal maneuverings in the trial of the three young men
who physically abused a 16-year-old unconscious girl in a Corona del
Mar home, then had the arrogance to videotape this outrage for the
enjoyment of their friends defy both logic and justice.
Never has a prosecutor been offered a more buttoned-up case. The
crime is pictured graphically on the tape. Therefore, the only
possible defense tactic is to stop the tape from being offered in
evidence. So, a week of the court’s time has been spent listening to
experts debate technical glitches in the tape -- but to what end? No
one has denied the actions depicted on the tape, so why could
minuscule -- or even flagrant -- irregularities disqualify the tape
as evidence? The three defendants clearly wanted others to see their
fun. It would be criminal not to grant them their wish in court.
*
My keen ability to sniff out a story was bruised a bit two Sundays
ago when the Pilot devoted much of its front page to a visit by an
internationally famous lawn bowler to a local lawn bowling club in
Corona del Mar. Spokesman for the locals was my friend and
neighborhood godfather, Jim Altobelli. For several years, our poker
group has been meeting monthly in his home and scarfing down the fare
served up by his wife, Pat, and daughter, Gina.
I have listened to Jim’s lawn bowling stories for so long that I
lost perspective on their newsworthiness -- if not their charm. He
says he sensed that and took the story to the Pilot’s newsroom
instead of tipping me off. So, I missed a scoop. But order was
restored last Sunday when we put out the chairs in his frontyard for
the first time since last September and officially celebrated the
arrival of spring with a gathering of regulars and a splendid
assortment of food and drink.
*
The front-page story in the Los Angeles Times last week detailing
the voluminous file the FBI kept on Sen. John Kerry, mostly because
of his antiwar activities after he returned home from Vietnam,
reminded me of my own brush with the FBI for different reasons during
the same period.
I was sent to Washington by a national newspaper’s Sunday
supplement to do a profile on the FBI that the agency had cleared. I
spent a week being squired around by my own personal FBI agent, who,
at our last lunch before I headed home, told me that “the director”
was anxious that the story be accurate. I told him I only wrote
accurate stories, and he said in that case I wouldn’t object if they
saw the story before publication. I said if that was a condition of
their cooperation, I wouldn’t have come to Washington, and since it
wasn’t, I had no intention of running the story by them.
The following Monday, I went to work in Chicago from my suburban
home and phoned my wife at noon. She told me two men had been sitting
in a black sedan in front of our house much of the morning. I was
furious and went to the Chicago FBI office where a man I had flown
with in World War II was an agent. He calmed me down, checked it out
and returned to tell me these were, indeed, FBI agents and they had
staked out my home in order to recover some unauthorized pictures
they said I had taken. I told him the pictures had been given to me
without strings, were not classified and had already been sent to the
magazine. And that I didn’t want to find the black sedan sitting
there when I got home.
It was gone and never returned, but the story that appeared was
softened considerably from the one I wrote. I found out later that
the FBI had checked it for “facts.” The final irony was the letter I
received from J. Edgar Hoover telling me what a fine job I did on my
article.
*
Finally, we have the Pink Revolution, which is what I like to call
a dog-in-the-well story, the sort of emotional-grabber that provides
a welcome diversion at a time when real news is the pits.
The Pinks, of course, are the Ensign Intermediate School students
who challenged authority by deliberately violating a school rule --
which kids have been doing ever since I can remember. The principal
enforced the rule -- which principals are supposed to do. And the
media ran with a nonstory and got a lot of people fired up -- which
media people do whenever and however possible.
If the rule the kids violated is bad, it should be changed. If it
is right, it should be enforced -- and properly was. And if there is
an epitaph for this affair, it is that this, too, shall pass.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.