24-hour run aids students, quake victims
By JERRY SOIFER 
Special to The Press-Enterprise  
                Mieko Morita was trying to send a message of help halfway  around the        world from Corona to her native Japan. Ed  Ettinghausen of Wildomar was        trying to set a world record. 
        Morita, 47, of Santa Monica, and Ettinghausen, 48, were two of a  group        of men and women who recently set out to run and walk 24  hours around        the quarter-mile dirt track at Auburndale  Intermediate School in Corona        to benefit the school's 100-mile  club, which teaches life skills and        fitness to children striving  to run and walk 100 miles at school during        the year. 
        Morita, who was born in the small town of Ashiya, near Kobe, also  wanted        to help the victims of the earthquake and tsunami in  Japan.  
She covered more than 60 miles to raise more than $1,200.     
             Ettinghausen traversed four 26.2 mile marathons in 24 hours. He  then        intended to take part in the Los Angeles Marathon on Sunday.
The other 24-hour participants included Steve  Hernandez, 43, of Temple        City; Laurel Kahn, 55, of Chatsworth;  Mikey Lopez, 43, of Riverside;        Rose Meiri, 29, of Reseda; Joe  Nakamura, 32, of Upland; Erik Schnautz,        43, of Alhambra; Sol  Shapiro, 49, of Corona; Christina Sorensen, 39, of        San Francisco;  Allessandro Struppa, 25, of Irvine; Daniel Struppa, 55,        of  Irvine; Bjoern Kampmann, 38, of Brea; and Darren Van Soye, 49, of         Anaheim.
The run started Friday at 9 p.m. with  the track barely illuminated by a        pair of lights. Each  participant carried a computer chip that was        counted as it passed  the start-finish line. Participants were allowed to        stop for  naps. They also were fed through the course of the day. It         finished Saturday at 9 p.m.     
The men, women and children who participated in the 24-hour run raised        about $12,000.
 
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