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'SON OF RED CAR' MAKES LONG-AWAITED RETURN TO VALLEY.


Byline: DENNIS McCARTHY Dennis McCarthy may refer to:
  • Dennis McCarthy (composer), (born 1945), an American composer
  • Dennis McCarthy (congressman), (19th century) Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1885
  • Dennis McCarthy MBE (radio presenter), British radio presenter
 

If you enjoy sequels, check out the one that just opened Saturday in the San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley

Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills.
.

It's called ``Son of Red Car - the Orange Line.''

Trust me. You'll laugh till you cry.

It's a transportation docudrama about the future, which - get this - turns out to resemble the past. They just changed the colors.

If you remember Ike, the Helms Man, and Webers bread bologna sandwiches for lunch five days a week, you're probably shaking your head and laughing today.

Stick around long enough, and everything old becomes new.

And now a clone of the Pacific Electric Red Car trolleys that crisscrossed criss·cross  
v. criss·crossed, criss·cross·ing, criss·cross·es

v.tr.
1. To mark with crossing lines.

2.
 the Valley until the early 1950s has returned.

They're called Metroliners these days - bigger, faster and sleeker. They don't have the overhead electric wiring and bell clanging clang  
n.
1. A loud, resonant, metallic sound.

2. The strident call of a crane or goose.

intr. & tr.v. clanged, clang·ing, clangs
To make or cause to make a clang.
, but they're traveling down the streets in special lanes, just like the old days.

Hey, if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks likes a duck, it's a duck.

``It's amazing - we're recycling ourselves,'' says Ralph Herman Sr. who used to ride the old Red Car with his dad from their home in Reseda to the store his pop ran at Hollywood and Vine.

He's right. It does feel like we've seen this movie before, doesn't it? We did. We lived it.

I caught the tail end of the Red Car era. In 1954, my cousin, Joe, and I used to walk up to Glenoaks Boulevard from his parents' home on Rosedale Avenue on the Glendale/Burbank border to ride the trolley to school at St. Robert Bellermine's.

Joe was in sixth grade. I was failing fifth. I wound up passing with a D-minus special, which I believe is still the school record for the lowest passing grade any student has ever received.

My teacher - Sister Mary Norbatina, a nun out of the old school - loved two things in life more than anything. God and red ant (Zool.) A very small ant (Myrmica molesta) which often infests houses
A larger reddish ant (Formica sanguinea), native of Europe and America. It is one of the slave-making species.

See also: Red Red
 colonies.

She could sit or kneel for hours mesmerized by both. I couldn't help her out with God, but I could kiss up to her by finding red ant colonies in the dirt on the school grounds during lunchtime.

So that's what I did to pass. Scouted red ant colonies for a nun. Sister Mary thanked me with a D-minus special.

Anyway, the Red Car worked like a charm in L.A. until the last line in Burbank and Glendale was shut down in 1955. It fell victim to changing times and low ridership.

We all fell in love with our cars, and the auto manufacturers and tire companies Manufacturer Country Est. Brands and Subsidiaries
Aeolus Tyre China
Alliance Tire Company Ltd. Israel 1950 Amtel-Povolzhye, Kirov; Amtel-Chernozemye, Voronezh
Apollo Tyres Ltd.
 were only too happy to help us put the last nail in the Red Car's coffin.

Now, more than 50 years later, we still love our cars. Trouble is we love them sitting in a parking lot called a freeway, blowing $3-a-gallon gas out the tailpipe tail·pipe  
n.
The pipe through which exhaust gases from an engine are discharged. Also called exhaust pipe.


tailpipe
Noun

a pipe from which exhaust gases are discharged, esp.
.

The people we pay to figure out our transportation needs and get us out of gridlock Gridlock

A government, business or institution's inability to function at a normal level due either to complex or conflicting procedures within the administrative framework or to impending change in the business.
 finally came up with a great idea. Light rail and subways were just too expensive and disruptive to build.

So, hey, let's bring back the old Red Cars we killed on our streets half a century ago, and call it the new Orange Line. Time marches on.

I was going to take a ride on ``Son of Red Car'' Saturday to check it out, but I got to thinking what Patti Hudson said the other day.

She's the young woman I wrote about earlier in the week who barely survived the Metrolink derailment derailment /de·rail·ment/ (de-ral´ment) disordered thought or speech characteristic of schizophrenia and marked by constant jumping from one topic to another before the first is fully realized.  in Glendale in January when some wacko decided to park his SUV on the tracks to end it all.

He chickened out, jumped to safety, and lived. But he did end it all for 11 other people on that train. Patti was almost fatality fa·tal·i·ty
n.
1. A death resulting from an accident or disaster.

2. One that is killed as a result of such an occurrence.
 No. 12.

She's not riding Metrolink anymore, and I asked her if she was going to take the new Metroliner bus from her home in Northridge to her job in downtown L.A. now.

Patti said she probably would, but not for at least a couple of weeks. She wants the people still in their cars to get used to seeing the Metroliners sharing the road with them in the Valley.

She's already had one idiot in an SUV almost take her life on the train. She doesn't want to chance some other idiot zoning out on a cell phone and blowing past the big orange ``M'' warning signs posted at Metroliner intersections.

I think Patti's being too optimistic. I'd give it a month.

Dennis McCarthy, (818) 713-3749

dennis.mccarthy(at)dailynews.com

CAPTION(S):

photo

Photo:

This Pacific Electric trolley car is one of those that served most of Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  from 1901 to the 1950s and `60s. The paint jobs gave them their informal name: the Red Cars.

Courtesy of Interurban in·ter·ur·ban  
adj.
Relating to or connecting urban areas: an interurban railroad. 
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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Oct 30, 2005
Words:804
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