Image provided by: Upper Left Edge; Cannon Beach, OR
About The upper left edge. (Cannon Beach, Or.) 1992-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1995)
I njPPERLEFTEDG VOLUM E. 3 N U M B E R . F t& fU H V K Y I Ï Ï 5 X? J U OFFER IXÏT COAST PRODUCTIONS’P.O 60X1XU ChMION BtKCH OR *17(10- 503-WrZVS Art Saves Lives A bumpersticker with this motto is available at Annie's Kayaks in Wheeler, for $2. Call <503) 368-6055. Annie says,"I've been saying this for years." Sounds true. HAT DO TH E A R T IS T S C A N N O N BEACH H »N tuen » 'A -U $ * * , « «'• a» T ID 1 CORRECTED FOR PACIFIC BEACH TIDES F ebruary DATE - Low Tides AM PM ft 1 time ft lim e 7 19 1 Wed 806 2 Thu 8 52 3 Fr, 9 38 4 Sat 10:27 5 Sun ,1:21 6 Mon 7 lue C 7 ' 8 Wea 055 9 Thu 204 10 Fn 307 11 Sat 403 12 Sun 4 52 13 Mon 536 14 Tue 6.19 15 Weo © 659 ,6 Thu 7 40 17 Fn 822 18 Sat 9:07 19 Sun 95 6 20 Mon 1058 21 Tue 22 Wee 3 22 ' 23 Thu 1 08 24 Fn 227 25 Sa’ 3 37 26 Sun 27 Mar 4 37 5 30 28 Tue jî V *t» 3aUy Vi°<«ste<'lVlir''lYiCook-^n &r,"t' PavliFk,|l'fs. Stî«tyM,6a<b»r»Tê»"ple of soldered wire toys made by Joe Police; This photo, circa 1978, was a publicity shot drinking milk out of glasses fashioned in the taken for a gallery opening in Sheridan, OR Worcesters' oven; light filtering through a Jim featuring Cannon Beach artists, During that Hannen stained glass window and clam digging winter, it is assumed they were, as a body, on the beach by Haystack Rock. Most of all preparing for this show. Twelve years have there are memories of life in the Sketch Pad, passed. Today, only four of the eleven pictured Frank and Daisy Lackaff's gallery/home. And live and work in Cannon Beach. Marilyn Cook the parties involving many of the people in the still practices calligraphy. David Phillips claims photograph above, seen usually from a small to be working solely at the Cannon Beach Book person's vantage point under a table, sometimes Co. selling books but we imagine that, as well as being allowed tiny sips of home-brewed wine the current best sellers, there are a wealth of and beer. , his uniquely witty line drawings lurking in his Ever since Cannon Beach evolved from a head. Steve McLeod is a constant gatherer of tiny logging/fishing/vacation hamlet into a natural materials; currently kelp holds his destination of some renown, it has become attention and imagination. Some of his kelp known unofficially as an "Artists' Colony ". works are pictured throughout this issue; he During the late '60s, '70s, and early 80's, when also continues to paint. And Jim Hannen still the town was populated primarily by runs a lucrative stained glass business. year-round residents and the featured artists During the month of January the Cannon ■J C ontinued on P a & c 2. Beach Arts Association Gallery featured a showing of early, privately owned works by these and other Cannon Beach Artists of the time up until 1986 (when the Gallery was founded), titled "Cannon Beach Collects Cannon Beach". The author being a daughter of one of the first established artists of C.B., this show is a weave of childish memories; of living next Shopp« door to Ken Grant and Barbara and their boys; 1.7 1.5 1.5 1.5 17 18 3.5 3.6 3.5 3.2 29 2.5 2 1 1.7 1 3 1.0 J8 0 7 08 3 1 30 26 20 1.5 7:49 8 25 9:00 9:36 10:13 10:57 12 23 11 50 1:3, 236 3 33 4:21 5:02 5:40 6:14 6:47 7:20 7:52 8.27 9:05 948 10:41 12:10 11 48 1:28 2:41 344 4:37 5:23 60 5 -0.5 0.0 06 1.2 1.9 2.6 1.8 3.2 1.7 1.4 1.0 0.6 0.2 0.0 -0 1 -0 1 0.0 0.2 0.6 1.1 1.7 2.3 0.8 29 0 7 0.3 -0 1 -0 4 •0.5 -OS CORRECTED FOR PACIFIC BEACH TIDES F ebruary DATE - High Tides ' 1 lim A M fl "' j tim P e M ft e I 27 1 Wea 2:06 2 Thu 2:43 3 Fn 3 18 4 Sot 3:54 5 Sun 4:32 6 Mon 5 16 7 Tue C 6 07 8 Wed 7 06 9 Thu 8:07 10 Fh 9 03 11 Sat 9:54 12 Sun 10:40 13 Mon 11:24 14 lue 15 Wed © 0:30 1 03 16 Thu 134 17 Fn 2:06 18 Sat 2:40 19 Sun 3 17 20 Mon 4 02 21 Tue 4 55 22 Wed > 6 02 23 Thu 7 17 24 Fn 8 30 25 Sat 9:35 26 Sun 10 33 27 Meh I I 25 28 Tue 1:09 8 8 1:55 9.0 2:41 90 3 28 89 4:20 8.7 5 21 8 4 6:32 82 7:46 8 O 8 54 7.9 9:50 8 O 8 2 10:38 8.4 11:19 8.7 11:56 8.8 8 1 12:07 8 4 12 49 1:33 8.7 2:18 90 3:08 9.1 4:05 9 2 5 14 9 1 634 8 9 7:54 8 6 9:04 8 5 8 6 10:03 8 8 10:53 9 0 11 37 9 0 9 3 8 8 8.3 7.6 7.0 6 4 6.1 60 6 2 6 6 7.0 7.4 7.8 69 8 8 8.7 8.3 7.8 7.2 6.6 6.3 6.4 6.8 7 4 7.9 8.3 BASEBALL Baseball teaches us, or has taught most of us, how to deal with failure. We learn at a very young age that failure is the norm in baseball and, precisely because we have failed, we hold in high regard those who fail less often — those who hit safely in one out of three chances and become star players. I also find it fascinating that baseball, alone in sport, considers errors to be part of the game, part of its rigorous truth. Francis T. Vincent, Jr., Commissioner of Baseball Gcppctlo’s 'TARLt or C ontents VS; 2 E o it o r i M - 3 LtTTtRS life, Smithsonian Books & Tapes 5 JÒNE/S ORDE.N, U u DL'FE. (o Roß HtULlRoH, C oast 436-2467 ‘ Where quality and tradition make kidsjiappy^_ M unicipal W e m 7 200 N. Hemlock Cannon Beach, OR 30% Off Titles Include: A ssoc . N lws • Scamp's New Home e Black Bear Cub • Skunk At Hemlock Circle ^ 7 popvlArioM I nsert IO01 Music IZ T hsrapy 13 U h c )H P rofessor L'N ösey , BLKiN&wfcTi^ies 15 MüWkiHux in N ewport D r .K arkeus YO( • Orca Song 9 Dolphin's First Day 9 Seal Pup Grows Up f a that s ftd d litdt Asnaw piatisti UPPER LEFT EDGE FEPOTi W5 1