Philanthropy and tennis for 5-plus decades
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B.W. COOK
They come in hats and gloves.
It was as it was more than 50 years ago, when a group of Newport
women, all tennis players, came off the court and into the ballroom
to launch the southern Orange County chapter of the Adoption Guild of
Southern California.
The year was 1961. The location of the inaugural fundraiser was
the Balboa Bay Club. This week the ladies returned, albeit in
different hats and gloves, to the fashionable new ballroom at the
Balboa Bay Club and Resort.
Times have indeed changed, yet the familiar tea sandwiches
arranged on the plate at the club harkened to a simpler, perhaps more
genteel time when charity work was a matter of purpose in Newport and
elsewhere.
Today, many of the ladies in support of the guild balance busy
careers and families. Many of them remain tennis enthusiasts. After
all, the adoption guild still sponsors the prestigious Roy Emerson
Tennis Classic, an annual Newport event that ranks as one of the most
important tennis doubles tournaments in California.
What has not changed in half a century is the acute need for
adoption services and foster care. The adoption guild, an auxiliary
of Holy Family Services Adoption and Foster Care Agency, was founded
in 1949 by Dolores Hope (the wife of the late Bob Hope) and George
Piness, a prominent L.A. physician credited as the founding father of
modern allergy medicine. Fifty-five years later, Debra Richardson, an
executive with the agency headquartered in the Los Angeles area,
addressed the Newport-Mesa crowd to share experiences relating to the
placement of children today.
“Permit me to tell you about a call I received recently from a man
in Utah,” said Richardson, continuing, “It was a father calling to
inquire about adoption placement for a child soon to be delivered by
his unwed teenage daughter. It turns out that the man himself had
been an adopted child, placed by Holy Family Services. He shared that
he had been raised in a loving home and he wanted the same for his
grandchild.”
Richardson went on to report that the agency has placed 6,000
children over its 55-year existence.
Chaired by Sue Kreuter, and co-chaired by Lin Auer, the
luncheon/high tea was also a fashion show, and an inspirational
speaker’s event. All bases were covered. Adoption Guild president
Lorie Moran welcomed the crowd, including support from Jackie Glass,
Pam Young, Carol Hartman, Nancy Lusk, Anna Noel Williams, Claudia
Auer, and Joan Sammis. Also enjoying the afternoon and sampling the
freshly baked scones with Devonshire cream and raspberry preserves,
were Alison Auer, Diane Kleppinger, Terry Callahan, Peggy Guziak, Kim
Wilson, Janey Merkle, and Arlene Stevens.
The fashion show, presented by “Shades of Red”, a Newport boutique
run by Colleen Hopkins, offered a parade of models showing off spring
and summer fashions as Ron Levy played piano and Carl Freedman played
violin. As the show ended, a serious presentation was offered to
guests by two luncheon speakers offering inspirational messages. Pat
Allen, a local psychiatrist, is a sought-after expert in the area of
“teaching people to get what they want in life, and saying no to what
they don’t want.” Allen was joined by local Toni Bruner, originally
from England, who shared her life experience during World War II.
Bruner was separated from her family at the age of 4 and was not
reunited until she was 14.
The sentimental gathering was also supported by Sally Peck, Mary
Ramella, Ann Clark, Gaye Roche, Michelle Miller, Marily Wilson, and
Jeanette Chase. All of the net proceeds benefit the work of Holy
Family Services.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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