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MSN_071819
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28 | July 18, 2019 | Malibu surfside news sports<br />
malibusurfsidenews.com<br />
The water’s fine<br />
Children’s Lifesaving Foundation gets children in the water at<br />
annual Surf Camp 4 All event<br />
Children’s Lifesaving Foundation surf camp attendees (left to right) Learsi Auregui,<br />
Jayda Reyna and Kierea Jones run through the water at Zuma Beach on Friday, July 12.<br />
For the fourth year in a row, Rothschild & Co provided volunteers and sponsored the<br />
event. Photos by Stephanie Chaisson/Surfside News<br />
Chase Rojas attempts to surf during the<br />
CLF surf camp at Zuma Beach. Children,<br />
young adults and families from Covenant<br />
House, Girls Inc and My Friends Place<br />
participated in arts and crafts, boogie<br />
boarding, and surfing.<br />
Kelsey Vinson (left) persuades Savannah<br />
Petit to go into the water during the CLF<br />
surf camp at Zuma Beach.<br />
(Left to right) Jay Allen, Coty Holsey, Nathan House, Brittney Jimenez and Chase Rojas<br />
practice popping up at Zuma Beach during the camp.<br />
Mia Campos (left) jumps over water with Camila Campos at the CLF surf camp.<br />
fire impact<br />
From Page 27<br />
posing coaches graciously<br />
didn’t accept them.<br />
Neither basketball team<br />
went on to make a postseason<br />
run, but the teams<br />
fought every chance they<br />
got. They were fighting<br />
plenty, but the sport allowed<br />
them an outlet in<br />
which to exert that energy.<br />
The dubious fight to find<br />
normal became something<br />
definite: a fight for a loose<br />
ball or a fight for a victory.<br />
Davis again sat back in<br />
his chair and turned his eyes<br />
toward the window, where<br />
he could see construction<br />
workers rebuilding in the<br />
distance.<br />
He smiled.<br />
“It’s very encouraging,”<br />
Davis said. “If they can<br />
rebuild and stay and say,<br />
‘This isn’t going to get the<br />
best of me,’ what I have to<br />
go through is very miniscule.<br />
Just to know that the<br />
community is still here and<br />
[staying mad is] not worth<br />
it. … To know that they are<br />
rebuilding says a lot of what<br />
type of people are here.”