Paying a 32-mile tribute across the sea
- Share via
Paul Clinton
By paddling the 32 grueling sea miles from Catalina Island to the
Manhattan Beach Pier on Sunday, Mark Schulein hopes to offer an apt
tribute to an old friend.
At least that’s the spirit behind the Newport Beach resident’s
challenge to honor Suzanne Leider, who died earlier this month after
a decade-long battle with an uncommon and deadly cancerous tumor.
“It’s a testament to Suzie,” Schulein said. “It was amazing to
know what this woman was going through. You would never see it on
her.”
Schulein, who knew Leider back when the two attended the same
Newport Beach synagogue in the mid-1980s, watched his friend cope
with her illness before finally succumbing to it.
Leider died Aug. 8 of complications from synovial cell sarcoma at
the age of 35. She had been living in Napa Valley for the last year
of her life.
On Sunday, the 33-year-old Schulein and three other Newport Beach
men will take the rigorous journey as a part of the Catalina Classic,
a paddleboard race that has been held annually for more than 20
years.
Schulein will be joined by Keith Munemitsu, 35, Jack Hamilton, 26,
and Scott Lincoln, 43.
Munemitsu, who graduated with Leider from Newport Harbor High
School in 1985, said he also watched his friend keep an upbeat
attitude during the illness.
More than 300 cars joined in the funeral procession Aug. 12 for a
woman who found time to crack jokes from her hospital bed and
continued to cheer up friends and family despite her own dire
straits.
After graduating from Newport Harbor with a 4.0 grade-point
average, Leider collected a psychology degree from UCLA and went to
work as a nurse so she could “take part in the healing process,”
Munemitsu said.
On her road into the health-care profession, Leider felt soreness
in her right thigh after one of her regular jogs. Once a lump began
to appear at the location, Leider saw a doctor, who told her she had
a malignant tumor.
That was October 1992.
During her long battle with cancer, which included a handful of
painful surgeries and a string of debilitating radiation chemotherapy
doses, Leider founded the Sarcoma Alliance, a nonprofit group.
At the same time, Munemitsu founded Ocean of Hope, the alliance’s
main fund-raising group.
Participating in the paddling event will simulate Leider’s
situation in at least a psychological way, he said.
“When you’re paddling, you’re finding ways to go on,” Munemitsu
said. “We’re paralleling that to a cancer victim. That’s what they go
through every day.”
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.