Soup kitchen warms their hearts, too I...
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Soup kitchen warms their hearts, too
I would like to comment on Lolita Harper’s column about the
Someone Cares Soup Kitchen (“One foot in the Thanksgiving soup line,”
Dec. 1). I have been a once-a-week volunteer for more than four
years, and while this wonderful place helps those in need, it also
provides a place for people who want to help themselves by helping
others less fortunate.
We have the regular volunteers, who have been coming for years,
but we get many high school and college kids who are doing their
service credits, and I think they get a great, eye-opening experience
that we hope they will use to their benefit.
We also have those that need to do community service hours because
of some trouble they have gotten into. They also get a great
experience, and many of them come back even after their hours are
completed. We are very thankful for the many organizations and people
that support the soup kitchen financially, but it’s the volunteers
who really work the hardest to help give our guests more than just
something to eat.
We give a friendly hello, we know their names, and we give them
something that food can’t give them -- we give them respect.
I have taken both my young nieces to the soup kitchen with me so
that they can see not every child has a beautiful, warm house to
sleep in at night. The soup kitchen is starting its toy drive for
Christmas, and this year has been especially hard, so when you are
out shopping for your children, please buy one more gift and bring
it, unwrapped, to the Someone Cares Soup Kitchen on West 19th Street
in Costa Mesa.
All of us who volunteer out of love, thank you.
LINDA DEPAUL
Costa Mesa
Noisy planes? Do what Newport did
Laguna Beach has a real problem with noisy transport airplanes
climbing out over the city from John Wayne Airport starting at 7 a.m.
nearly every day of the week, (“Noise from low flights raising
hackles,” Coastline Pilot, Nov. 21.)
The simple solution, of course, is to open an El Toro
international airport, because then the overflights will be gone, as
they were when the Marines were flying. But there are other options
for controlling the noise. Laguna Beach can ask the airlines to turn
their engines down while passing over the city, as they do while
passing over Newport Beach.
When the pilots learned they do not need all that power to take
off and climb, the complaints from Newport Beach citizens decreased
dramatically, as they will at Laguna Beach. Power cutback is the
solution to noise until El Toro opens and the overflights stop.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
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