B.W. COOK -- The Crowd
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The 22nd annual Walter Knott Service Awards will be presented Feb. 23
by event sponsor Goodwill Industries of Orange County. The luncheon
tribute will unfold at The Hyatt Regency in Irvine to honor four
individuals who have made “significant contributions to improving the
quality of life for people withdisabilities,” said Joann Waldron, a
member of Goodwill’s board of directors.
“The luncheon is also a way to raise critically needed funds for
education, training and employment at Goodwill,” she said.
Walter Knott, founder of Knott’s Berry Farm, was the first recipient
of the Goodwill Service Award in 1978, and it was subsequently renamed in
his memory to continue the legacy of philanthropy and volunteerism
embraced by Knott during his lifetime.
Members of the Knott family are prominent Newport Beach residents.
Daughters Virginia Knott Bender, Marion Knott Montapert and Toni Knott
Oliphant will be joined by family members and friends such as Russell and
Mildred Knott, and Roger and Barbara Severson, along with corporate
support from Glenn Woody Financial, Insignia/ESG, DMK Inc. and Freedom
Newspapers in sponsoring the upcoming ceremony.
The 2001 honorees are Elizabeth Phillips, Katherine Sherwood, Gail
Williamson and Norma Yorde.
Phillips is being honored for her work as an international advocate
against child abuse. She lost her sight at the age of 6 months, when a
nanny shook her so violently that she was severely injured.
Sherwood, paralyzed from a massive stroke that affected the right side
of her body, is an artist who managed to teach herself to paint with her
left hand when she lost the use of her right one. Her work is nationally
known.
Williamson uses her formidable resources and talent in the
entertainment industry to influence producers and studios to hire people
with disabilities. She crusades with casting directors, studio executives
and anyone she can rally through her advertising campaigns and monthly
newsletter trumpeting the cause of fair and equal employment for people
with disabilities.
Yorde, a centenarian, and her husband, Paul, founded the Good Shepherd
Lutheran Home of the West to help people such as her son, Donnie, who was
born with Down syndrome, stay out of institutions. Eventually, their
dream and purpose turned into a network of 100 homes for people with
disabilities -- a network that serves some 5,00 people living in
residential homes providing dignity and care.
Goodwill Industries is dedicated to the values embodied in the work
and commitment of the honorees. For more than 75 years, Goodwill has
worked closely with this community to help those in need find a level of
self-sufficiency and personal independence through achievement.
Today, the program assists thousands of people, helping with language
skills, cultural adjustment and professional goals. Funding for the
social service programs in Orange County comes from revenue from donated
goods sold in 13 Goodwill stores around the county and from special gifts
and programs such as service awards presentation.
For more information, call Denise Higuchi at (714) 547-6308.
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