Syndicate ‘The Judge’
I read that Judge Bob Gardner is bowing out of the column-writing
business. His farewell column in Tuesday’s Daily Pilot (“Judge rules
column is adjourned”) brought back memories. I was with the
then-Orange Coast Daily Pilot when he began writing for the
newspaper.
It was in the 1970s, I believe, and Judge Gardner, already retired
from the state Court of Appeal, had returned from the South Pacific,
where he had served at the behest of the federal government as chief
justice of the High Court of American Samoa.
One day, after the paper had been put to bed, three of us were
discussing the day’s events in the office of the late Tom Keevil,
then-editor of the Daily Pilot. Present besides Keevil were the late
Tom Murphine, managing editor at the time, and myself, then-assistant
managing editor.
Keevil mentioned that Judge Gardner was back in town and I,
knowing something about the judge’s literary credentials as a widely
read writer of crystal clear and often humorous appellate court
decisions, suggested we ask him to write a column for the paper.
Keevil was skeptical, doubting such an esteemed jurist would do so.
“Why don’t we ask him,” I said. “Nobody will die if he says no.”
That conversation spawned a luncheon at the legendary El Pescador
Restaurant on 17th Street in Costa Mesa.
The fateful question was posed, and the judge said “yes.” A
financial arrangement was struck and a date agreed upon for submittal
of the first weekly column. The deal was sealed over handshakes.
That first column was about a young man with a “sissy name”
(Marion Morrison), who was brought to Newport Beach by some gentlemen
interested in pugilism (and gambling) to fight the town tough. The
young man, who was to become known as John Wayne, won the one-punch
fight.
Years later, Gardner wrote, he was involved in a card game with
Wayne, by then a longtime Newport Beach resident, and related this
story for the amusement of others at the table.
Wayne never looked up from his cards, Gardner recalled, and all he
said was, “So you were the skinny kid who held the money.”
Some years passed, things changed at the Daily Pilot, and a new
editorial regime dropped the Gardner column. This mistake was
rectified later by more enlightened editorial bosses at the paper and
Judge Gardner’s column reappeared.
Now, sadly, it is gone again. Time marches on for all of us.
Perhaps the Daily Pilot could work out a way to reprint some of
Judge Gardner’s columns. That way, the newspaper’s readers could
continue to experience the joy of reading the works of one of our
community’s great treasures.
In any event, thank you, Bob Gardner, for all the joy you’ve given
me.
CHARLES H. “CHUCK” LOOS
Newport Beach
May blessings be heaped upon the head of Judge Robert Gardner for
all the joyous moments he has shared with us.
I think there should be an entire page devoted to the letters you
will receive from his readers. It will be a great memory for his
children, and those family members beyond them, to know how the
community appreciated the wise and humorous words of “our” Judge
Gardner.
LILA CRESPIN
Corona del Mar
It was with sadness that I read the banner headline in the Daily
Pilot Tuesday that announced the final column by Judge Robert
Gardner. Over these past several years, I’ve looked forward to his
contributions each week as he presented vignettes of his life to
entertain us. With just one glance at his photo, it was easy to
visualize him as a scamp growing up on Balboa, sharing adventures
with his cronies. We learned from him that judges are not all pomp
and pontification. Thank you, Judge Gardner, for the years of wisdom
and fun. Thanks to the Daily Pilot for providing his column for us
all.
GEOFF WEST
Costa Mesa
Tuesday’s announcement that Judge Gardner is no longer going to
write his weekly column in the Daily Pilot prompts me to make a
suggestion that has been on my mind for many months. Would the Pilot
consider publishing in book form (soft cover would be fine) all of
his past articles? Over time, I’ve mentioned the idea to a number of
old-timer friends, and they have all backed the idea. Even the Costa
Mesa Historical Society thought it would be a worthwhile project.
Judge Gardner’s “The Verdict” is the first thing I read each
Tuesday. Where else can we learn of our area’s past told with such
humor -- and from first-hand experience?
Let me know if there’s anything I can do to encourage the project.
MARIAN PERRIN
Newport Beach
We were married by Judge Robert Gardner in 1979. Though we have
remained close friends and see him often, we were glad and sad to
realize the time has come for his total retirement. Again, thank you,
Bob, for all your wonderful memories.
JOE AND MARILYNN COLLINS
Corona del Mar
I’m very sad to hear that Judge Robert Gardner is no longer going
to have his column. The last time I felt this sorry is when Charles
Schulz passed away, and we heard that Charlie Brown would no longer
be in the comics.
I’m just wondering if there’s any chance, since we now have reruns
on Charlie Brown, why can’t we have reruns on Judge Gardner? His
knowledge about our towns is fantastic. He knew many of my old
friends, and it was always a delight to read stories that I had never
heard before. And I can read them again and again. I’ve bought all
his books, and I really think it’d be a great idea if you could get
permission from Judge Gardner to rerun some of his old news articles.
I think it would be a blessing for everybody who missed him in the
old days, and I would love to reread them. So, just a little idea. I
still read Charlie Brown every day, and I would read Judge Gardner
every Tuesday.
BILL VONKLEINSMID
Corona del Mar
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