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Category Archives: Coronado Culture
CASABIANCA
The poem ‘Casabianca’ was written by Mrs. Felicia Dorothea Hemans. It starts out with the well known line, “the boy stood on the burning deck”. The story relates to an extraordinary incident of devotion and heroism witnessed during the Battle of the Nile.
It was on the evening of July 28 of 1798 that the English naval squadron under Lord Nelson sailed in. They had caught the French fleet at anchor and unprepared. The French flagship was the L’Orient and it soon found itself flanked by English ships attacking from both sides. A fierce battle was soon raging and the flashes of 2000 guns lit up the ships in the gathering darkness. L’Orient was caught by the English broadsides and was set ablaze.
It was then that the English sailors saw an amazing sight. There on that burning deck they saw a boy standing alone. He was Cassabianca, the 12 year old son of one of the ship’s officers. There he stood, alone at his post. He was surrounded by flames and facing the astonished English foe. Soon afterwards the fire reached the powder magazine deep down in the hold. The boy perished when the whole ship erupted in a massive explosion.
The sound of L’Orient blowing up was heard at Rosetta 20 miles away. And the glow of the fireball was seen in Alexandria. It was an enormous explosion of a magnitude rarely seen back in those times. The English sailors stood in awe at what they had just witnessed. For some twenty minutes the guns were silent. The English officers and men were absolutely horrified at the carnage that had taken place. They sent a ship to rescue the survivors from the water. About 70 French sailors were saved.
The account of that boy who stood on that burning deck was told and retold. Eventually it passed on into legend. The story remains a classic example of devotion and faithful service. And the poem continues to serve as a source of inspiration and wonder for many throughout Christendom. That boy who stayed at his post on that burning deck has not been forgotten. And the story of his heroic stand is remembered right up to the present day.
The boy stood on the burning deck
Whence all but he had fled;
The flame that lit the battle’s wreck
Shone round him o’er the dead.Yet beautiful and bright he stood,
As born to rule the storm;
A creature of heroic blood,
A proud, though child-like form.The flames rolled on–he would not go
Without his Father’s word;
That father, faint in death below,
His voice no longer heard.He called aloud–’say, Father, say
If yet my task is done?’
He knew not that the chieftain lay
Unconscious of his son.‘Speak, father!’ once again he cried,
’If I may yet be gone!’
And but the booming shots replied,
And fast the flames rolled on.Upon his brow he felt their breath,
And in his waving hair,
And looked from that lone post of death
In still yet brave despair.And shouted but once more aloud,
’My father! must I stay?’
While o’er him fast, through sail and shroud,
The wreathing fires made way.They wrapt the ship in splendour wild,
They caught the flag on high,
And streamed above the gallant child,
Like banners in the sky.There came a burst of thunder sound–
The boy–oh! where was he?
Ask of the winds that far around
With fragments strewed the sea!With mast, and helm, and pennon fair,
That well had borne their part–
But the noblest thing which perished there
Was that young faithful heart.
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I’m Dreaming of a Field Christmas
PLEASE MAKE GENEROUS DONATION TO THIS WORTHY ORGANIZATION
I’m Dreaming of a Field Christmas
A handmade Christmas tree welcomes Marines with 1st Marine Division to the Division (Forward) headquarters field mess aboard Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms during Exercise Steel Knight 14 Dec. 14, 2013.
The field mess served two hot meals each day during Steel Knight, which enabled 1st Marine Division to test and refine its command and control capabilities by acting as the headquarters element for a forward-deployed Marine Expeditonary Force.
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CHARITY PIMPS An Editorial By A.R. Graham
Our mission at the Coronado Clarion is to identify reputable and bona-fide organizations who assist those in real need and who make zero profit, which means every single penny taken in goes directly to the cause and not to highly paid directors with handsome salaries and fat expense accounts.
One of the lowest form, charity pimps, the “veteran charity pimp”. He/she is the one who may or may not have served our great nation but who ingratiate themselves with real veterans for one purpose and that is to raise money for near fictional causes such as, “My dog got hit by a car, and I need $10.000 for surgery bills.” Many of our readers have fallen victim to these bottom feeders, and out of sheer kindness and compassion they give willingly. Unfortunately, the money goes directly to Jack Daniels, Jim Beam, Johnnie Walker, and those three despicable formaldehyde ghosts guzzle it down as they sit with the charity pimp planning their next incursion.
Whenever I see a sign that announces “Homeless, Hungry, Need Help”, I am tempted to place signs around town saying “Do Not Feed the Charity Pimps”.
STARK CONTRAST
By stark contrast, there are many honest organizations who do marvelous work every day.
Luke works at the Clarion as a webmaster and he is also truly “severely disabled”. At the age of 18, he was the top player on the Coronado High School water polo team until he was diagnosed with a rare wasting disease which left him in a wheelchair and with a very short life expectancy. He was to be placed in a nursing care facility, but he refused and instead set out to defy death. He is now 36 years old. He swims and exercises every day, and although he has a tough time getting in and out of his wheelchair, he is as vital as any man I know. He could crush your larynx with his upper body strength, and he is just as good and in some cases better than most tekkies I know.
VETERANS VILLAGE OF SAN DIEGO
If I find a homeless veteran in need, I drive he/she to a wonderful place called Veterans Village Of San Diego.. There they will meet a man I admire greatly by the name of Captain Phil Landis, President and Chief Executive Officer. Mr. Landis enlisted in the United States Army in 1965. After attending various military schools, he served in Vietnam from 1967-1968 as a platoon leader and headquarters company commander with the First Battalion Thirty-Fifth Infantry. He was honorably discharged from active duty in 1969 with the rank of captain. He is a native Californian and was formerly employed as a real estate agent. Mr. Landis became a board member of Veterans Village of San Diego in 1996, vice-chairman in 1997, chairman in 2001, and chief executive officer in 2007. He currently serves on the national, 12-member Department of Veterans Affairs Advisory Committee on Homeless Veterans.
VVSD assists homeless veterans who have substance abuse and/or mental health issues including men and women who have recently returned from Iraq and Afghanistan. At the heart of VVSD’s treatment plan are five pillars of success: prevention, intervention, treatment, aftercare, and employment services.
Those who chose to go through the program at VVSD come out the other side washed, clean, and sober, and I mean “clean and sober”.
The process is awesome and utterly effective because it is run by professional people who know all the tricks that toxic people play, and they leave no room for cheaters. Everyone is monitored as a rigorous regimen of hard work and intensive counseling takes place. The result is a solid foundation of sobriety and renewed self-confidence and most of all the return of that most precious survival component “the work ethic”.
LOCKS OF LOVE (LOT’S OF LIES)
Right up there with all of the other predators is “Locks of Love and Charity” is run out of a small storefront in a strip mall in Florida and you will read below in the (nothing but bullshit) “non profit” outreach. The first glaring tell/red flag is “we provide” which means “we sell” and at a revoltingly high profit in this editor’s opinion.
“Locks of Love is a public non-profit organization that provides hairpieces to financially disadvantaged children in the United States and Canada under age 21 suffering from long-term medical hair loss from any diagnosis. We meet a unique need for children by using donated hair to create the highest quality hair prosthetics. Most of the children helped by Locks of Love have lost their hair due to a medical condition called alopecia areata, which has no known cause or cure. The prostheses we provide help to restore their self-esteem and their confidence, enabling them to face the world and their peers”
Mission Statement Bullshit
Our mission is to return a sense of self, confidence and normalcy to children suffering from hair loss by utilizing donated ponytails to provide the highest quality hair prosthetics to financially disadvantaged children. The children receive hair prostheses free of charge or on a sliding scale, based on financial need.
An oily mission statement, but its outreach is deceiving because they fail to inform the doner that the hair (which is worth thousands of dollars) is sold at a huge profit. Further, the company that makes the wigs is “top secret”, and they refuse to divulge any information whatsoever. This means to me, that they are hiring some offshore, third world nation (usually children) to do the work.
I contacted them after one of our readers was suspicious because of their secrecy, but they sent me an equally oily e-mail:
Hi Lilly,
It was very nice to talk to you about your organization.
I am doing a story about people who donate their hair for good causes.
Please visit our website to view the causes we support. (see link below)
Please tell what your annual budget is and what percentage of the profits go to charity, and the name of the company that manufacturer of the wigs.
Thank you,
Al Graham.
(Editor Coronado Clarion)
https://www.coronado-clarion.com/category/special-military-issue/
Hi Al!
It was a pleasure speaking with you yesterday! Unfortunately, I cannot give out our manufacturer’s name. He likes to remain anonymous. Please let me know if there is anything else you need from us.
Best,
Lilly Robbins
Communications Director
Locks of Love
This response has triggered a full-scale investigation by our investigative team at: WWW.WorldWideCrimeWatch.Com and the results will be broadcasted in all social media.
EVEN MY VET DOCTOR IS A PET SCAMMER
I took my cat to the vet doctor and he wants to charge $750.00 for a blood test and to remove a small benign tumor on his neck. The Vet Doctor is not alone, most Vet visits are nothing short a of an involuntary shagging and the pet owner becomes a victim.
The old woman who loves her doggie more than any human she knows is most vulnerable because the Vet Pimp always tells her she needs three kinds of daily meds, five kinds of booster shots and a very special, very expensive brand of cat food if she wants Fluffy to live longer than her and she is about 97 years old.
We advise that you review your animal’s medical bills exactly the same way as you review your own bills. For instance, if you paid for Fido’s office visit with a licensed Veterinarian, was Fido actually seen by Dr. Gooddoggy … or by his assistant, Mark Bark? Were Dr. Gooddoggy’s fees in line with industry standard? Did you (or, more specifically, Fido) receive the medications you were billed for?In one 2006 case of published Veterinary Fraud, a costly purebred animal was taken to a vet to be put to sleep. The owner paid the fee and left the animal. (The dog, even though it was relatively young, suffered daily seizures.) The vet, instead of doing what he was paid to do, medicated the dog and sold it to a new owner without telling the original owner.Some might argue that this is not fraud at all and the vet is a hero. The fraud in this case was more in the deception of the “deal” than the morality. The details, plenty more than we have listed here, came out and charges were filed. Last we heard, the case had been set for trial.Now and again we encounter the cases where Fido needs, ahem, unusual care. While we’re sure that these “doctors” would argue with us as to the validity and value of what they are doing for the animal world, we’re going to say this anyway.
“We do not believe that a Doggy Psychologist will be able to lay Fido down on a black leather couch and get results by talking to him about the inappropriateness of peeing on the living room carpet or biting the mailman.”
- Fact: No part of chiropractic education deals with animals, and no part of veterinary education deals with manipulative forms of physiotherapy.
- Fact: The practice of chiropractic, by definition and in most states, is restricted to humans (a definition supported by a 1998 decision of the appeals court of the state of Michigan). There are chiropractors and veterinarians, albeit just a few, who would beg to argue with that finding.
- Fact: Practicing on animals is legally restricted to veterinarians in all states. From a technical perspective, a licensed chiropractors may work on animals if a licensed vet orders such treatment and directly supervises it, but that work is as an unlicensed veterinary assistant and should/would be billed accordingly.
- Fact: Any chiropractor working alone (unless s/he is also licensed as a veterinarian or is directly supervised by a veterinarian) who is manipulating animals is likely breaking current laws.
- Fact: No scientific studies show that chiropractic adjustment does anything useful in any animal. Additionally, no published study has ever shown how a chiropractic-related problem can be diagnosed in animals or how treatment success can be determined.
To be continued in the next Coronado Clarion issue….
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YKYGUICWhen…
YKYGUICWHEN…
YOU KNOW YOU GREW UP IN CORONADO WHEN…
Is a Facebook Group devoted to members sharing their fond Coronado memories of growing up here. Different members begin threads and watch out, Coronadoans from many generations living both here in Coronado still or having relocated join together to exchange remembrances of days gone by. The following are two favorite subjects of all of ours: Food & Stars!
YKYGUICWhen…
Denise Adams Shirley began this thread: OK I’ve got one…What was your favorite place to eat on the island when we were growing up and old enough to go out and choose for ourselves?
Left to Right: Denise Adams Shirley ’69, Pamela Murphy Moreno ’72, Elizabeth Betsy Johnson Richie ’71, Nikki Delaurentis ’71, & Wendy Berry Pullin ’71
AND THE TOP 10 RESTAURANTS IN OUR MEMORIES WERE:
MEXICAN VILLAGE
MARCO’S
NIGHT & DAY CAFÉ
CHARBURGER
CHU DYNASTY
ANDERSON’S BAKERY
KRISHNA MULVANEY’S
BOB’S DRIVE-IN
THE BRIGANTINE
CORONADO PHARMACY
HONORABLE MENTIONS GO TO:
MANHATTAN ROOM
NORTHWOODS INN
PAPA TOM’S
JALISCO’S
S&M SUBS
DINO’S
CLAYTON’S
ORANGE JULIUS
LOS PANCHOS
CAPTAIN JACK’S
STRETCH’S
CHOWDER HOUSE
CHEZ LOMA
GOODIE’S (CORONADO WINE & CHEESE)
CIRCUS DRIVE-IN
WENDY’S
MIGUEL’S
YUMMY SAMIS
BASKIN ROBBINS 31 FLAVORS
LYDIA’S
MI CASITA
BULA’S
AMPHIBIOUS BASE
STARDUST DONUTS
DANNY’S
PIZZA GALORE
THE BISTRO
VIVA’S
PIZZA GARDEN
And our comments were: You Know You Grew Up in Coronado When…
Wendy Sanger McGuire — Unreal! I got this in the mail from someone in Lakeside yesterday. I told him how we all felt about the Mexican Village and that if he sent it, I would donate it to the library archives, and he sent it so we all could enjoy!
Lynne Harpst Koen –With family – Mex Pac & Marco’s. On our own: Bob’s Drive In, Papa Tom’s, CharBurger, Orange Julius, Greasy’s!
Denise Adams Shirley – HMMMM…Maybe Mexican Village was the BEST!
Michael Kelly – Stretch’s & such a nice guy! Karaoke King when Mex-Pac started doing it in the 80s!
Donna Huchthausen Davis – Old Mexican Village & Stretch’s…
Nancy Trepagnier – The Old Mexican Village
Kimberley Graham – The Village Burrito was to die for, shredded beef or chicken with gobs of melted cheese & their yummy signature sauce. Start with a crisp quesadilla adorned with green chiles & the best dressing on the Mexican Village romaine salad ever. And not to be completely stuffed, you had to end with the homemade classic dessert, Mexican flan. I truly miss the Mexican Village!
Nancy Cox Castro – Mexican Village…the way it used to be – always a fave!
Andy Niemyer – As a kid, it was a “big deal” to go out: La Avenida, Mexican Village, and Dino’s were all places in town my parents took us. I remember taking dates to Marco’s, the Brigantine, and the Chart House. After I moved back to Coronado with the Navy in ’73, I was a regular at Papa Tom’s – Biggest burgers ever! Of all the natural changes that have happened in my home town over the years, the Mexican Village is the one I will miss the most.
Scott Young – Marco’s, to this day, I still crave their pizza!
Mike Jarvis – Marco’s had the best after surfing scarf food in the world!
Katie M. Farnsworth – Favorite place was Marco’s! Yum!!
Suzi Lewis — My family’s favorite dining establishments were: Marco’s, the Manhattan Room, and the Mexican Village. During my short visits to see my dad and mom or step-mom, I’ve been taken to Miguel’s, Costa Azul, Bistro D’ Asia, and the Island Café. Al and Kimmie took us to Il Fornaio.
Kimberley A. Graham – Almost every Friday night whilst growing up, we ordered two large pizzas from Marco’s (one extra cheese & one with everything – no anchovies)! So delicious! It was our special treat. They had the best homemade sausage. When I moved back to Coronado to raise my kids, we also made Marco’s a ritual. We would walk in & the Palumbo sisters would just start cooking for us. I miss Marco’s so much & so do my kids!
Martha Torkington – Marco’s!!!
Kimberley Graham — Does anybody remember the little hamburger shack next to the car wash by Perkin’s Bookworm? It wasn’t Circus Drive-In, who had the best greasiest fries. Or does anyone remember the pizza at the Manhattan Room? And then there was Trout Almondine at Dino’s. That would be with your parents. And I will forever miss Marco’s & Chu Dynasty. One of the Palumbo sisters has opened an Italian restaurant in IB called Café di Roma. I am excited to try it.
Wendy Sandy McGuire — Frances Palumbo advertises her catering in the Eagle and the new restaurant in IB is Cafe di Roma. Ganosh Gourmet carries their sauces, foccacia bread, and turkey sausage for those too tired to go down the Strand, but we also eat there every chance we get! All the sisters are working there, and it is awesome.
Denise Adams Shirley – OOOOOOHHH Marco’s…AND Jalisco’s! Yummers!!!
Tim Hinsvark — Chart House all-u-can eat ribs night, Brig, Mulvaney’s salad bar, Capt Jack’s was ok, Marco’s, Mexican Village, that deli where Leroy’s is now, Jalisco’s Cafe in IB.
Lynne Harpst Koen – Remember the little submarine sandwich place?? YUMMY Samis! Kathy Williams Campbell and I used to pig out on them in the median right there on Orange. Then we’d go to Baskin Robbins 31 Flavors for dessert. Ah! Those were the days, my friends!!
Kimberley Graham — How about the garlic bread spread at Northwoods Inn?
Michael Kelly — Coronado Pharmacy Fountain Patty Melts…the best!
Kimberley Graham – On my own, for me, it was always Clayton’s for the roast beef sandwich with cheesecake for dessert & Coronado Pharmacy lunch counter for the pimento cheeseburger.
Helen Nichols Murphy — Coronado Pharmacy fountain! Of course, my Mom was the Manager & the Best Cook in town! No one could make a Hamburger like my mom “Mallie”!
Aleene Queene — You’re so right, Helen! Best hamburgers, cheeseburgers, and many soups!! Mallie was the best!
Barbara Gatzert –Mulvaney’s…So much fun with friends. I’ve got good memories of the drug store counter and their malts.
Bill Meyer — Sorry girls, but I beg to differ. The Coronado Pharmacy fountain had nothing on the Night and Day Cafe. And my mom was the best cook the Night and Day Cafe ever saw. The fresh hash browns were to die for.
Denise Adams Shirley — Gotta go with Bill on this one…I’m sure your Mom was an awesome cook, Helen…it’s just the Hash Browns that got ME!! lol
Kim Harris — I liked Papa Tom’s burgers and Clearman’s Little Northwoods Inn had a great, huge chili burger, free if you could eat two, and peanut shells on the floor.
Charles Crehore – Remember CharBurger French fries? Yum!!
Denise Adams Shirley – I know Charlie, they were the only burgers that tasted char-broiled…NOT like Burger King, huh?
Brenda Jo Robyn – CharBurger drive-thru on my bike!
Maggie McDonough — Anybody remember ‘Mi Casita’? In the block that doesn’t exist anymore…I remember a munchies buzz there…laughing hysterically with an unforgettable best friend, Alice Stocker,and almost getting kicked out…I’m smiling now from that memory…
Charles Crehore — We used to make food sculptures and turn water glasses upside down at Clayton’s and they would just laugh.
Mark Washabaugh — Mulvaney’s for prime rib. Marco’s for pizza. Cruising to IB to eat at Oscar’s, and of course, McDonald’s.
Old color photo postcard from c.1950, shows interior view of La Avenida Cafe with the 1938 El Dia del Mercado mural by Ramos Martinez
Lory Frank Farrior – How inviting! What is there now?
Michael Kelly — Some three-story monstrosity with multiple restaurants and shops. The murals were purchased by a Japanese company in the early 90s and stored for years until the new Coronado Library got a hold of them and displayed them. They did a GREAT job! How many “Jack Salads” did I toss there? All of us that worked there lived off Jack Salad! nom nom ~ Still know the recipe….neener neener neener! I loved working there so much!!!
Teddi Setterlund – La Avenida!
Helen Nichols Murphy – My mom worked there for years and loved it! The Jack Salads were the best!
Denise Adams Shirley — La Avenida was the BEST!
And now for the famous recipe for Jack’s Salad! Thanks, Michael
Michael Kelly – 1 egg first, then juice from one lemon, beat thoroughly in bowl, 2 caps of Worcestershire sauce. The secret is to add garlic to your oil days in advance to infuse the oil. I think it was a 1 cup ladle we used. Then we sent the Romano cheese through an old meat grinder, so it came out round, thick, and coarse (NOT PARMESAN) about a cup. The croutons were homemade along with the garlic oil. Salt and fresh COARSE ground pepper to taste. The Romaine must be thoroughly washed and dried or the oil will not stick. No anchovy paste was ever added. They served it with chicken or cold jumbo shrimp too. I do it by “eye”, so I will make a batch and “measure”.
Elizabeth Betsy Johnson Richie — La Avenida for many things…primarily Jack’s salad, and Mexican Village for Mexican Pizza (and their salad ROCKED too). Before I was old enough to go out on my own…La Avenida for hot chocolate and fresh cinnamon rolls after mass on Sunday with my Dad.
Barbara Gatzert – Oh, the best hot chocolate…Memories of my Dad taking me, I believe the name of the restaurant was La Avenida…Oh I had to get up so early at 6 LOL…I love you Dad…
Kimberley Graham — I remember going as young girls to Anderson’s Bakery & eating donuts hot out of the fryer in the darkness of the night. It was the yummiest of the yummiest. I also remember putting down a half dozen glazed donuts on Saturday mornings as a ritual. At that time, no one thought it was bad for you. It was just yummy.
Suzi Lewis – I still think they were the best doughnuts in the world. Remember the holes?
Maureen Rutherford Nieland — I have always said that it was Anderson’s Bakery that kept me from getting my stomach pumped. There were a few kids that had to go to the hospital to get their stomachs pumped after eating lunch at a drive through (or drive up) that used to be next door to the “Night and Day” Cafe. I was the only one that went to Anderson’s for my usual Lime sherbet cone dipped in chocolate sprinkles…I think the lime sherbet did it…That was my favorite there…
Michael Kelly — I was the one up at 5:00 in the morning “injecting” the Jelly- Filled Donuts (as a kid I ALWAYS wondered how they did that), dipping them in chocolate and nuts, putting them in those gold trays, and displaying them before the door’s opened. I was the “Donut Dresser”. Lol! I think my FAV donut was Bud’s Buttermilk Bars! Nothing compares to this day!
Aleene Queene — Yes, Michael, Bud’s Buttermilk Bars!! None anywhere compare!!
Michael Kelly — They were dark and crispy on the outside but super soft on the inside and must of weighed a pound a piece…They were amazing!
Denise Adams Shirley – I can just smell it…mmmmm!
Helen Nichols Murphy — I miss Anderson’s Bakery! Wish it was still here along with Marco’s & Coromart, LOL!
Chuck McIntyre — Helen…I too missed it on a trip back home. I walked in and looked through all the cases and nothing seemed to be very appealing. The “Anderson’s charm” was gone for good for me. Anderson’s pastries were so yummy. To this day, their Bear Claws are still the benchmark by which I judge all others by. I almost forgot I had a job there for a few years. Bud and Clare were great to work for.
Katy Tahja — Their Christmas goodies were awesome…Kathy Alban
Michael Kelly — Wow….this hit me hard. Bud was the nicest, kindest man I have ever met. He was in the bakery almost daily and was renowned for his Pfeffernüsse cookies at Christmas and Buttermilk Bar recipe. I have NEVER tasted anything in comparison to date. There is a picture of Cheryle in my album here. Darn it…here come the waterworks…
Andy Niemyer — I never had “mass-produced” bread until I moved away from Coronado for college. We always got sliced bread from Anderson’s. Gosh I miss that stuff. Ever so often, as a “treat” we’d get some of the pastries, too.
Michael Kelly — That bread slicing machine at Andersons first scared the crap outta me. “Would you like your bread sliced thin or regular?”
Lala Chappell — ”And would you like it with or without fingers?”
Michael Kelly — Lala….You had to step on a gas pedal thingy and feed the bread from behind the blades, then push it as close as you could with your hands. CRAZEE! I think that machine had to have been acquired by Bud! It was old…
Paul Fournier — I’ll always remember the coffee cups on the pegs on the wall and the smell of everything baking right when you walked in. I walk into bakeries and think,”not as good as Anderson’s.”
Michael Kelly — Paul…That was the “Coronado Coffee Club”! You either brought in your favorite coffee cup from home and placed it on a peg OR Anderson’s would sell you a plain white coffee cup and paint your name on it. There was a little sink in the corner toward the cake display. After your morning coffee, you would rinse out your cup, and place it back on your peg. Great memory!
Mike Atencio — Absolutely. They always smelled good too. I would stop and enjoy the smells on Saturday mornings just waiting for them to open the place up. I didn’t mind waiting outside before they opened or in line inside. It was worth it.
Tina Shoys — That was the BEST bakery! I’d forgotten about it.
YKYGUICWHEN…
Lynne Harpst Koen began this thread: How about – “WHAT FAMOUS PEOPLE DID YOU SEE/MEET?” Growing up here in Coronado?
Lory Frank Farrior — Susan Dey from the Partridge Family. Literally bumped into her at the Del. Saw George C. Scott at a private showing for the Greek Tycoon. Cathy Coleman was with me. First night I got tipsy.
Janet Brooks Greene — I ran into Dick Van Dyke…literally…running in the front door of Coro-Mart! All I remember is saying “sorry” then looking WAY up into his face…It was a WOW moment for this kid!!
Brenda Beth Allison — When I worked at the Hotel del, I heard stories about Orville, and they were not very flattering. They called him a “prude”.
Ted Nulty — He would rub two quarters in my face if I got there after 4:30 and say “If you would have gotten here sooner this could have been yours!” I got out of X-country practice and started my shift at 4:00. Had to dash to the Shores to try and make it on time during rush hour. I had ladies tip me $2-$5 dollars for a delivery and they would say “Thank you”. Orville never did. Won’t buy his Pop-corn to this day.
Joe Hewitt — Yeah I meet Orville outside of La Perla one day on the side lawn area. I guess he was doing a commercial or something, and he lost the tiny foam piece that goes over a lapel microphone he was wearing. It fell in the grass!! He asked me to help them look for it, and after about an hour of searching for it, we couldn’t find it…I asked him didn’t he have extras and he said yes! But he didn’t want to waste 15 cents!! Hahaha! That was when I realized the man was pretty tight with the cash! LOL
Carrie Woodruff — Got to interview Orville for journalism class and met John Travolta in Pizza Galore and got to walk with him up Orange Avenue! Such a nice guy.
Ted Nulty — Orville was an ASS!!! Hated that man with a passion. He was so rude to me and the other kids that worked at Coronado Pharmacy as delivery drivers!!
Laurie Hunt Puglia — I guess I got him on one of his good days. He was very nice to me and gave me a jar of his popcorn. I love his popcorn especially the Homestyle…I am going to go pop some now.
Carrie Woodruff — Just goes to show you, treat people as you want to be remembered when you’re gone.
Robin Summitt Hunt — He was rude. He came to my teller window at BofA…glad it was a quick transaction.
Marnie Constance — He came into KFC often when I worked there, and we all hated him. He was so rude!
Michael Kelly — Orville lived in La Perla with his female “partner” Pat. I had met both he and Pat when he was still alive and have been in their home. Pat gave me a KPBS tape on “The Mansion” on Ocean Blvd that I still have.
Paul Berry — My dad held me on his shoulders to see Marilyn Monroe when she was filming “Some Like It Hot” at the Hotel Del.
Rob Squires — Peter O’Toole, David Janssen, and Orville Redenbacher.
Jeffrey Donn Hansen Sr. — I interviewed Eric Estrada at the Del for Mrs. Wright’s Journalism class. He was there to crown the queen of the ball.
Mark Washabaugh — I stood next to Steve Martin at the Del’s tennis shop and didn’t even know it.
Maureen Rutherford Nieland — Watched “Some Like it Hot” being made and got Jack Lemmon’s autograph — lost it years ago. Loved watching them all. Of course, Marilyn Monroe & Jerry Lewis got a rap for being pretty rude on their visits to Coronado. Johnny Downs, of course. I met many more working in Vegas for 38 years. Oh yes, almost forgot one of my favorites in Coronado, was seeing Roy Rogers and Dale Evans and Trigger in the 4th of July Parade long before the bridge came in. They had to come all the way around the strand or by the ferry. I can’t remember which way they came, but guarantee it wasn’t easy. Trigger had all the heavy silver they put on him too.
Wendy Pullin – Not a one.
Wendy Sanger McGuire — Remember when Fred MacMurray was here to film “The Chadwick Family” and the Islander Marching band made a bundle of money from appearing in the final scene?
Mary Lou Staight — This is what I remember about the movie, The Chadwicks:
1) Fred MacMurray and the rest of the cast were all familiar ’60s – 70s TV faces, not to mention Disney (nod to the Village Theater). I went through each actor’s list of work, and most of them were in family-oriented sitcoms at this point. In other words, we knew who they were because they came into our living rooms regularly.
2) If the TV Movie got good ratings, it might have been turned into a regular series. Obviously, it wasn’t. I am giggling because in my opinion – it stunk.
There are four reviews on the site (I am a regular on Imdb). The reviewers were all about twelve years old when they saw the show, and they all LOVED it…and cried. The bar for twelve-year-old movie critics isn’t very high. It was an uninteresting, boring drama. Hollywood had not yet entered the world of “Dallas” and “Dynasty”, so they hadn’t particularly got it right.
3)Filming in Coronado! And, the day WE got to be in a movie! The band and drill team were in their marching uniforms. The drill team stood for hours in front of my house. I lived in that white house next to the Sacred Heart playground. 7th and C was a very important corner for standing and waiting for your queue. I guess Fred MacMurray was nice and signed autographs. He had to play bagpipes and walk in front (or back???) of a small plane. The town was throwing him some kind of parade in his honor??? This all had to do with someone dying in his family, and he was somehow a hero. I can’t find or remember the actual story. I do remember a scene of the inside of a hospital and everyone was crying. It started out as this happy family and then the whole movie was about all of the terrible things that were happening to them. It was just depressing. The two things I remember most: The entire band/drill team scene was during the ending credits – WHAT! The town people were the “parade watchers” — something Coronado people were BORN to play!!! And, they were barely shown. Now, here’s the sin of ALL sins. Before the parade scene, Fred MacMurray’s cab is driving across the bridge away from Coronado. He decides right there and then, he CAN’T leave his beloved Coronado! Right in the middle of the bridge (the very top) he tells the driver to “TURN AROUND”…ON THE BRIDGE!!! YOU CAN’T DO THAT!!! Now, if you don’t understand how this could happen — you are officially “New”! Of course all of us who know better – it was when those little plastic separator posts were in use. I can’t even imagine that now.
Scott Young — Met and got her autograph – Pamela Anderson about 8 years ago on the U.S. Ronald Reagan while it was ported at North Island. I’ll never forget, she gave me some words of wisdom to live by, she said, “my eyes are up here.”
Kimberley Graham — Partied with Robin Williams once. He was crazy & frantic like he is on talk shows. Followed me into the girls’ restroom. I had to tell him to skedaddle.
Suzi Lewis — He was best buds with one of my former housemates here. They went to high school together, and their families played tennis together. She said he was like that even before the coke. Drove people crazy.
Teddi Setterlund — Beau & Jeff Bridges, Mohammed Ali. I worked in the sales office at the Del, and my dad was Del security, & I was lucky enough to meet and see many. A couple of the men were so handsome I was struck dumb. HAHAHAHA. Not to brag but I worked the hat check stand the night President Nixon met with the President of Mexico. There were a lot of hot shots there. John Wayne turned me down for an autograph & I tried on Nancy Reagan’s chinchilla coat. Great fun that nite.
Denise Adams Shirley — I am SO dissappointed in John Wayne…I bet Nancy Reagan was really a nice person!
Suzi Lewis — No one, but my grandmom got me Lloyd Bridges’ autograph, and at the time, I wanted to be on Sea Hunt.
Kimberley Graham — Met Lloyd Bridges as well. He was a very nice man. I wanted to be a sea huntress too. Especially, playing with the dolphins!
Mary Pruter — I waited on Bonnie Franklin from One Day at a Time at Mulvaney’s. Also one of the main actors from Knots Landing!
Marci Rose — My grandmother played bridge with Jim Morrison’s parents! I saw Steven Tyler at Viva Nova. And of course Scout Wieland from Stone Temple Pilots lived in Coronado for years.
Kimberley Graham – When I worked at Le Meridien here in Coronado, we had many, many stars stay there. Just to name a few that I waited on & got to know included Ed Harris, Amy Madigan, Valerie Bertinelli, Dan Akroyd, Wolf Blitzer & the CNN crew, Martin Sheen, Billy Joel, Larry King, etc. But by far, my favorite evening was when I was working in La Provence, the cocktail lounge. It was midnight & the only people in the lounge were Peter, the bartender, & I. The next thing we know is Steven Tyler & the entire band, Aerosmith, descended upon us with a few groupies after their concert. We entertained them & them us until 4 in the morning. I heard many an interesting story that evening. A definite never-forget time.
Robin Summitt Hunt — Orville Redenbacher, Dick Van Dyke, Robby Benson, George Gobel, darn-my mind just went blank–had lunch with the gentleman that played Marcus Welby M.D. — also quite a few more…made life interesting.
Denise Adams Shirley – Robert Young.
Robin Summitt Hunt — Thank you…that was driving me nuts. Thanks Denise.
Sarah Daw — Dick Van Dyke and The Who, Jimmy Carter.
Mark Washabaugh — Orville Redenbacher, Dick Van Dyke, Diane Carroll (she played a nurse named Julia), Steve Linde…
Steven Linde – Mark, thanks for the shout out! Lol…
Suzi Lewis — Someone mentioned Robin Williams. He owns property up here in Sonoma, and I used to run into him at Fiesta Market. We have other celebs who own property up here, but either I never see them or am so blind I wouldn’t recognize them from the meter man/woman.
Armand DeCesare Jr. – I worked the front desk and later as a doorman at the Meridien. I personally checked in Robin Williams, George Thorogood, the B52s, General Colin Powell (although he never came to the lobby), Lou Reed, Van Halen, Paul Weller, Lars Ulrich, and countless others. I worked there from 1991-1998. Oh, VADM Stockdale came in for lunch about once a month. Very nice man.
Kerry Prochaska — I was working at Central Drug Store at the time, and I remember Peter O’Toole coming in to buy something or pick up a prescription.
Kimberley Graham — Jay Ruedi’s mother married an actor named Jim Hess who was in the Stuntman.
Mike Gaffrey — My sister was an extra in The Stuntman and had a couple close ups. We watched them film at the Del as well as the Children’s Pool in La Jolla.
Kimberley Graham – The Hotel Del Coronado used to host celebrity tennis tournaments. As kids, we used to run around and meet all kinds of stars. I don’t remember who I was with: But we met Lloyd Bridges, Kurt Douglas, Kim Novak, Jerry Lewis, etc. at the Del. My parents used to play tennis with Charlton Heston & the father from The Addam’s Family, John Gomez. When I lived in Leucadia, I had my grand prize of partying with George Harrison, but also met people at celebrity tennis tournaments at La Costa down the street from my house like Lucille Ball, Johnny Carson, Michael Landon (“I Love Milk”), Clint Eastwood, all of the Monkees, Shaft (John Shaft), etc. Life has been big & fun thanks to my roots in Coronado!
Robin Summitt Hunt — There was a film with Robby Benson (a lot of the girls at the front desk were fighting over who would get to check him in…also one with Susan Sarandon….us pbx operators sometimes answered ‘delmonico lodge’…That’s what they named the Del for their movie…also Ghost Story with Sebastian Cabot. I’ll have to check with Nancy, she was at the del longer than I was.
Gerald Washabaugh — Steve Martin, Sean Penn, Madonna, who were registered as Annodam at the Del, yelled at me for asking for an autograph for my niece, who was four at the time. Penn was cool and gave one. I interviewed the stars of Hart to Hart and Simon and Simon for school newspaper. Too many to name since I worked at the Del, most were cool some were plain asses. I was so happy when the Del kicked Madonna out and said she could never stay there again. Got in trouble trying to meet President Carter. The list could go on. I just remember one thing about stars that keeps me from getting star struck. They really are the same as us. Oh, was supposed to interview the Who, but when I showed up, I cannot remember her name, came walking out of Roger Daltry’s room half dressed and hair messed up. He said sorry and sent me on my way. He was too tired to do the interview.
Joey Harris – Elvira! I saw her arriving to pick up her child at Camp Marsten when I was about ten! I had a serious “schwing” moment!
Posted in Coronado Culture, Current Issue, Spring 2012 Issue
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CAN YOU EAR ME NOW?
About that hissing sound in your ear? In the early 19th century a startling discovery was made that proved Darwin’s theory of evolution before he ever dreamed of joining the voyage of the Beagle. This discovery was made by a German biologist, Karl Reichert, who to his great astonishment found that two of the ear bones in mammals are the same thing as parts of the jaw bones in reptiles. In short, two of the ear bones in mammals -including homo sapiens– came from the gill arch that formed the jaw of a reptile.
In his brilliant bestseller, Your Inner Fish: A Journey into the 3.5 Billion Year History of the Human Body, paleontologist, Neil Shibun, by examining fossils and DNA shows how our hands evolved from fish fins, our heads are organized like long-extinct jawless fish, and how major segments of our human genome look and function like those or worms and bacteria.
But perhaps none are as fascinating as the evolutionary history of our human middle ear, which like all mammals has three bones. Reptiles and amphibians have only one bone; fish none.
Building on Rechert’s amazing discovery around 1912 another German anatomist, Ernst Gaupp found that the single bone in the reptilian middle ear is the same as the stapes of mammals and that the the two other bones of the middle ear -the malleus and incus- evolved from bones set in the back of the reptilian jaw.
Neil Shibun asks: Why do mammals need a three-boned middle ear? His answer: “This little linkage forms a lever system that allows mammals to hear higher-frequency sounds than animals with a single middle-ear bone. Bones originally used by reptiles to chew evolved in mammals to assist in hearing.”
Who says science isn’t awesome!
Posted in Clarion Causes, Our Town, Winter Edition 2013
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