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Fond memories of a trusty sidekick

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Bill Carpenter was my best friend in high school and college, and we remained friends the rest of our lives.

He died the other day at 69. I didn’t see it coming.

Funny, the night before he died I had a dream about him. My wife, Hedy, and I were in North Carolina visiting our daughter and four grandchildren. I told Hedy about the dream the next morning.

“I’ve got to give Bill a call as soon as we get home,” I lamented.

He died the night we arrived.

We grew up together in Costa Mesa/Santa Ana Heights. I graduated from Costa Mesa High in 1962, he in ’63. We both went to Orange Coast College.

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For hundreds of hours during high school and beyond we scuffled in one-on-one basketball games on my driveway. Like most houses in our neighborhood, we had a basketball hoop above the garage door. How many times did we slam each other into that door while preventing a lay-up?

Bill was 6-foot 3; I was 5-foot 9. He’d systematically back me into the low post, then turn and power the ball over me. I knew exactly what he was going to do, and I couldn’t stop it.

All the while, he’d call out the play-by-play: “He shoots, he scores!”

We’d purposely see to it that a window was left ajar in our high school gym on Friday nights. We’d return to play on Saturdays and Sundays. We’d also play in the old gym at OCC.

Carpenter and I played our version of wiffle ball in his backyard. Wiffle balls, as far as we knew, didn’t exist at that time. So we used small plastic lemon juice containers. Hence, our game was “Lemon Ball.” You could plug the spout with a finger and make the “ball” dance to the plate.

We used a broom handle for a bat.

We played over-the-line with a real baseball and bat at Mesa High and also in OCC’s LeBard Stadium.

We body-surfed at 17th Street.

We double-dated to the prom.

I transferred to OCC in 1962. Bill, then a Mesa senior, would occasionally sneak over to visit me on OCC’s campus. But he tried to stay out of trouble. He started for Mesa’s football team.

I introduced him to my group of new friends in OCC’s Drama Department. He came to our rehearsals and hung out with us. The next year, I played Launce in OCC’s production of Shakespeare’s “Two Gentlemen of Verona.” He was my sidekick, Speed. Perfect.

Bill bought a nifty 1961 Chevy Corvair, and he and I raced all over town. We went to Harbor Shopping Center, the beach, football and basketball games, dances, rehearsals, midnight meals at Bob’s Big Boy, and parties on the Peninsula.

Those were great days.

I joined the Army in 1964. I saw Carpenter every time I came home on leave. When I returned from overseas duty in 1967, he’d married.

Following my discharge, I enrolled at OCC. Bill got me a part-time job at a Santa Ana paint store where he worked. I was there for two years before completing my A.A. degree and transferring to Cal State Fullerton.

On the job, Bill and I would sneak into a storeroom and play “basketball,” shooting wadded wallpaper balls into a trashcan. He still dunked over me.

Bill and I continued to be friends long after I finished college. We played on the same basketball team one night a week at a Boys Club. He came to visit me at OCC where I held down an administrative post.

In 2006, I told him I had Parkinson’s. He was distraught.

Parkinson’s affects 1% of the population. What was the possibility of him getting it too? Infinitesimal.

Several years later Bill described to me symptoms he’d been experiencing. I told him to see a neurologist.

His suspicions were confirmed. Parkinson’s.

I attended Bill’s funeral Saturday. He’s now beyond the tremors, the shuffling gait and the cognitive deficits. He’s with the Lord and backing some sap into the low post.

I miss the Big Guy.

JIM CARNETT, who lives in Costa Mesa, worked for Orange Coast College for 37 years.

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