Some hopes for a new beginning
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BARBARA DIAMOND
Happy New Year.
Sorry to report, I’ve already broken my No. 1 resolution to cut
back on desserts. No way, could I resist that last slice of pecan pie
that houseguest Caroline Birich baked.
But that doesn’t mean I can’t start over -- and that goes for any
other backsliders, including those who want to start good new habits
or kick unhealthy ones.
Linda Dietrich vowed to quit smoking and I am here to tell, it’s
tough. So, hang in there, sweetie. We are all rooting for you.
“I am going to walk more,” police department Volunteer of the Year
Terry Smith said. “I need the physical exercise.”
Marion O’Dare wants to loose 10 pounds -- don’t we all?
Carol, without an e, Reynolds vowed to eat less, play more --
hopefully that would include piano and French horn.
“Loose weight -- lots of it -- and get healthy,” are the goals of
Planning Commissioner Anne Johnson.
Laguna Canyon Conservancy President Carolyn Wood resolved to live
another year. If she keeps that resolution long enough, she might see
some of Laguna’s traffic problems solved.
“Spend more time with my children,” was City Treasurer Laura
Parisi’s resolution.
Realtor Gayle Waite resolved to take more time off -- but no one
wants to see her cut back on community activities.
Marion Jacobs WILL finish her book and Nikki Ford will take better
care of her mother, Laguna Beach Woman’s Club President Peggy Ford.
Here’s to us cockeyed optimists who look at the New Year as a new
beginning and count our blessings.
Let’s all make a resolution to share.
Hearts of Montage, a volunteer group of Montage Resort and Spa, is
offering an opportunity. Business Center Manager and long-time Laguna
Beach resident Chris Loidolt announced Tuesday that the Hearts would
host a four-day, community fundraiser at Aliso Creek Inn and Golf
Club, Jan. 30 to Feb. 2, to benefit victims of the tsunami that
devastated Southeast Asia.
“We will kick-off the fundraiser with a family picnic,” Loidolt
said. “The picnic will include boxed lunches, family activities and
live music. The cost will be $50 per family, all of which will be
donated to the relief effort.”
The picnic will be held on the first fairway. Reservations may be
made by calling (949) 715-6420.
Golf fees of $25-per-person for the remaining holes who play
rounds on that Sunday or the full nine holes on the following Monday,
Tuesday or Wednesday will be donated to the fund. For reservations,
call (949) 499-1919.
“Laguna Beach is a commun- ity known for its compassion and Hearts
of Montage is asking for support to once again aid those in need,”
Loidolt said.
“As President Bush said in his news conference, ‘The greatest
source of America’s generosity is not our government -- it’s the
heart of the American people.’ That sentiment is particularly true in
Laguna Beach.”
Loidolt is the community liaison for the Hearts of Montage
volunteer program. The group’s mission is to serve the commu- nity
through participation in programs of global impact.
“In our first year, through Hearts of Montage, associates
[employees] have volunteered in various organizations and community
events, including Coastal Cleanup Day, the Ocean Institutes’
Adopt-a-Class program benefiting El Morro students, and volunteering
at the Boys and Girls Club.”
Not to mention the $20,000 donated to the Bluebird Rocket Ship
Fund.
Opportunities to support worthy causes abound in Laguna. Here’s a
new one.
Laguna Beach Seniors announced at their annual Holiday Luncheon
that a founder’s wall -- similar to the one at South Coast Medical
Center, would be part of the proposed Senior Center. The wall will
include the names of the first 150 people who contribute $1,000.
Donations that day raised $16,000.
“We have more than 100 nonprofit groups that feel passionately
about their causes,” Mayor Elizabeth Pearson Schneider said Tuesday,
rebutting a newspaper article that claimed that Laguna’s grass roots
had shriveled.
“We have the Arts Alliance with thousands of members, green
environmentalists that are perceived as the conscience of the county
and blue environmentalists that have led the charge to clean our
ocean of pollution.”
Representatives of many of these groups -- and lots more in other
fields, such as health care, will attend the 18th annual Chamber of
Commerce Leadership Luncheon to be held Jan. 18 at the Hotel Laguna.
“The luncheon sets the pace for 2005,” luncheon founder Bobbi Cox
said.
Participants will be asked to introduce themselves and their
affiliation and share their most significant accomplishment in 2004
and their most important goal for 2005.
The luncheon is a smorgasbord of opportunities for anyone
interested in becoming more involved in the community. If there is a
cause, there is a group and newcomers are always welcomed.
“If we don’t reach out to everyone, shame on us,” Pearson
Schneider said.
Pre-paid reservations are required. Jan. 14 is the deadline to
send checks to the chamber, 357 Glenneyre St., Laguna Beach, 92651.
Specify if a vegetarian luncheon is desired, otherwise
participants will be served a stir fry of rock shrimp, oyster
mushrooms, roasted cabbage and glass noodles with a ginger garlic
glaze; roulade of sole, julienned squash, boiled new potatoes and
caramelized onion butter. Dessert -- for those who haven’t made a New
Year’s Resolution or can’t keep the one they made, is warm chocolate
tartlet hazelnut gelato. Oh, help!
A reception will begin at 11:30 a.m. Cox will make open the
proceedings at noon. Grant McCombs will lead the Pledge of
Allegiance. The Rev. Jerry Tankersley will offer the invocation.
Pearson Schneider will be the keynote speaker, followed by chamber
President Dennis Junka’s closing remarks.
The luncheon is presented with special consideration by hotelier
Claes Anderson and is underwritten by chamber board members Junka,
Chris Lange, Dave Sanford, Ken Delino, Kathy Conway, Veronica Nice,
Michelle Clark, Bob Dietrich, Timothy Dillon, Gerry Foster, Ron
Hyrchuk, Chris Lutz, Dennis Myers, Tom Simpson, Shaun Tabor,
Catherine Wilkinson and Len Weinstein.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652; hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite, 22;
call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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