Celebrate family in the New Year
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JIM DE BOOM
“Celebrate Family” is the theme of the 2005 Tournament of Roses
Parade being held this morning in Pasadena and televised around the
world to more than 300 million viewers. My viewing preference is KTLA
Channel 5 coverage which begins at 8 am and is repeated throughout
the day.
While you are watching the parade be sure to look for the entries
from Kiwanis International, Lions International and Rotary
International.
Many local service club members and high school students will have
spent hours over the past week decorating floats.
MATTERS OF THE HEART
Mark your calendar for annual “Matters of the Heart” fundraiser
luncheon sponsored by the Soroptimist International of Newport
Harbor.
This year it will be Thursday, Feb. 10 at the Turnip Rose in Costa
Mesa for a lovely Valentine-themed luncheon with both silent auction
and standard raffles.
Sandra Robbie of KCET and “Harbor Boulevard of Cars” will both be
honored for their continued contributions to the local community.
More information will be coming in the Community & Clubs column.
NEWPORT’S CENTENNIAL PREVIEW
The Speak Up Newport program is, on Jan. 12, planning for the
city’s upcoming 100th birthday party.
Mayor Steve Bromberg, Mayor pro tem Don Webb and Councilwoman
Leslie Daigle and other members of the Centennial Committee will
bring us up to date on the plans. The meeting will be at the Newport
Beach Yacht Club, 1099 Bayside Drive, starting at 5:00 PM with
appetizers and a cash bar followed by the program at 6:00 PM.
Just a reminder that Speak Up Newport’s 24th-annual Mayors Dinner
will be Thursday evening, Feb. 3 at the Sutton Place Hotel.
Information on both meetings is available at (949) 224-2266.
WORTH REPEATING...
From the Thought for Today, provided by Greg Kelley of the Newport
Mesa Irvine Interfaith Council ... “Spread love everywhere you go:
first of all in your own house. Give love to your children, to your
wife or husband, to a next-door neighbor .... Let no one come to you
without leaving better or happier. Be the living expression of God’s
kindness; kindness in your face, kindness in your eyes, kindness in
your smile and kindness in your warm greeting.” -- Mother Teresa
NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS
As you make your New Year’s Resolutions, add one to visit a
service club, and check them out for possible membership.
Membership in a service club is an extra 30 minutes a week on a
breakfast, lunch or dinner hour for a club meeting filled with
information, fun, friends and service.
For some, it’s a way to start a day inspired with a sunrise club.
For others, it’s a way to stay informed about your community. For
still others, service club membership is way to end a day, with
friends at a dinner meeting.
We should be thankful for all our blessings, for we could have
been born in the Sudan or Afghanistan. We are indeed blessed people.
Service club membership is one way to share our time, talent and
treasurer with our neighbors, here and abroad.
Many people want to make a difference in the world, and those of
us in service clubs find that we can have a greater impact as a
group, than as an individual.
Take for example, Rotary’s $480-million effort to eradicate polio
from around the world and providing the polio vaccine to some two
billion children under the age of 5 in the past 12 years. More than
one million Rotarians, including 200 in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach,
are making a difference with their support of the Los Angeles Times’
Reading by Nine program.
Exchange Club members make a difference with their major thrust of
prevention of child abuse.
They promote Americanism with the Freedom Shrines, copies of
historical documents important in American history, found in our
schools, libraries and at John Wayne Airport.
Soroptimist International, including our local Newport Harbor
chapter, make a difference with their emphasis on local women’s
opportunities and the development of women peace ambassadors around
the world.
Lions Club’s major emphasis is on blindness and preserving sight
with eye exams for our local school children and major treatment
campaigns in third-world countries.
You can recycle your old eyeglasses thanks to the efforts of local
Lions Clubs. Kiwanis Clubs around the world have a major campaign
underway to eliminate iodine deficiency illness in third world
countries and dozens of local projects benefiting youth.
Who are members of service clubs? Men and women, leaders,
educators, clergy, retirees, recent college graduates, housewives,
and your neighbors are members.
Help your community and the world through a service club. For
many, service club membership is an extension of our religious
beliefs and congregation affiliation.
You are invited to attend a service club meeting this coming week
to learn more about opportunity for service.
Most clubs will buy your first meal for you as you get acquainted
with them.
SERVICE CLUB MEETINGS THIS WEEK
MONDAY
6:30 p.m.: Harbor Mesa Lions will meet at the Costa Mesa Country
Club at 6:30 p.m. to hear Past District Governor, Chuck Overbey
discuss the “Lions Project for Scleroderma Cure.”
TUESDAY
7:30 a.m.: The 48-member Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary Club meets
at Five Crowns Restaurant for a program by Gary Irons of the Wellness
Community of Orange County
(https://www.newportbeachsunriserotary.org).
WEDNESDAY
7:30 a.m.: The Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club will meet at the
University Athletic Club.
Noon: The Exchange Club of the Orange Coast meets at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
6:00 p.m.: The 50-member Rotary Club of Newport-Balboa meets at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club for an update on Project Deaf India
by Dr. Raj Desai. (https://www.newportbalboa.org)
THURSDAY
7 a.m.: The 20-plus-member Costa Mesa-Orange Costa Breakfast Lions
Club will meet at Mimi’s Cafe to hear Edward Kjaer Edward on the role
electricity plans plays transportation now and in the future.
(https://www.cmoclions.org)
Noon: The 50-member Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club will meet at the
Holiday Inn for a program titled “A doctor talks about Diabetes”.
(https://www.kiwanis.org/club/costamesa); the 100-member Rotary Club
of Newport Irvine meets at the Radisson Hotel for a Christmas
program. (https://www.nirotary.org)
* COMMUNITY & CLUBS is published Saturdays in the Daily Pilot.
Send your service club’s meeting information by fax to (714) 921-8655
or by e-mail to jdeboom@ aol.com.
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