A strong gathering for a great cause
OUR LAGUNA
It was ALL about him.
The music, the food, the donated raffle and auction items, the
bidders and the volunteers who made the Benefit for Joey happen, all
had one goal -- to make life better for Joe Masella and his family.
The 10-year-old El Morro Elementary School student has
epidermolysis bulluso, for which there is no cure as yet and darn
little research toward that end. The benefit raised $25,000, with
another $2,300 still to come in from the silent auction, to help Joe
get the most advanced treatment possible for the disease, which
causes blistering inside and outside of his body, all exacerbated by
friction and heat and subject to infection.
Joe was the center of attention all night at [seven-degrees],
where the benefit was held last week. It is not his favorite spot,
but he came out from behind a phalanx of friends to pick the first
raffle ticket. He wore dark glasses most of the night, due to an eye
injury.
More than 250 people attended, ranging from students to police
officers, friends to family members and well-wishers.
El Morro schoolmates Elizabeth Shabazian and “Wex” Wexall hung
with Joe all night, much of it spent in the VIP room upstairs from
the main action. All three are going into the fifth grade when school
starts in September. Talented young musician Evren Ozan, a story in
himself, joined the group after his stint at the entrance to
[seven-degrees], performing on his flutes.
Evren, who is home-schooled, brought 10 flutes from his extensive
collection and a drum.
“I use different flutes for different songs,” he said.
Evren is going into the fourth grade. His mother, Faith, said she
was going into the fifth.
Police Chief James Spriene also spent a bunch of time with Joe.
Last year, Jim presented Joe with a badge when the boy was named a
special officer of the Laguna Beach Police Department.
Sgt. Darin Lenyi and Officer Joe Torres volunteered to patrol the
benefit. Captain Danell Adams also attended and got into a bidding
war with Imax film producer Greg McGillivray for a painting.
“I still don’t know if I got the painting, but the bidding wasn’t
about art, it was about Joey,” said Adams.
“His role in our community and in the school district is huge.
Given the budget constraints and the personnel constraints, the
district does a phenomenal job of providing kids like Joey with a
normal school environment and it’s a valuable lesson for his fellow
students.”
Adams’ family has known Joe’s mom, Laurie, since she was a girl.
“My mother, who came to Laguna in 1964, remembers Joey’s
grandmother, who just recently died,” Adams said. “Laurie and her
sister were in and out of my mother’s house a lot..”
Other bidders included author Barbara Seranella, Barbara
MacGillivray, Wendy Crump, Tammy Stanaland, Ray Tang and Keiko
Beatie.
Kathy Hyland, Shona Spazinky, Ashley Pigden, Jeannette Lee, Susan
Sandler, Jimmy O’Kane, Patti Bradley and Lisa Genesta, all friends of
Joe’s parents, Laurie and Claudio, collected and displayed the
hundreds of auction items.
Larry Du Bord made three bids on a Bruce Friend art glass vase.
Dora Wexall bid on a gorgeous quilted bag donated by Katherine Kiss,
with whom Wexall shares a Sawdust Booth.
“The Sawdust was very generous,” Wexall said.
Musician Lee Rocker, whose daughter attends school with Joe,
rocked the audience. Tony Corke, executive chef of the White House,
donated the food for the event and oversaw the preparation.
“The White House and Seven Degrees really helped our numbers,”
said Sande St. John, who organized the benefit with Sandy Thornton.
“They have completely written off everything. Mark Orgill (owner of
[seven-degrees]) and the Sawdust Festival have just been marvelous.”
Only The Sandies could have pulled off such a quality event on
such short notice.
Among those who attended: Katrina and City Councilman Steven
Dicterow, who welcomed guests.
“We take care of our own,” Dicterow said.
Also: Theresa Daem, Laguna Beach Unified School District
superintendent; Joanne Culverhouse, principal of El Morro; Nick
Hernandez, who recently organized a successful benefit for musician
Eric Henderson at [seven-degrees]; and Alyssa Summey and Marissa
Viszolay, daughters of artists who grew up together at the Sawdust
where their parents exhibited.
And: Planning Commissioners Norm Grossman and Anne Johnson and her
husband, Marv, who teaches a sculpting class at the Laguna College of
Art and Graphics with former Laguna Beach County Water District
General Manager Joe Sovella; City Council candidate Melissa O’Neal
and her husband, Mike; Laurie Masella’s sister -- Joey’s aunt, Joanne
Harabedian and Buzz Dioro.
The event concluded [seven-degrees’] summer musical series, but
the music lingers on. Contributions still can be made to Joey Masella
Fund, Fidelity Federal Bank, 310 Glenneyre St.
For more information, call 499-9117.
LAGUNA TREASURES
Eight treasured Lagunans will be honored Sept. 9, when the Laguna
Canyon Conservancy resumes dinner meetings at Tivoli Terrace.
Jeannie Bernstein, Ben and Gigi Blount, Arnold and Bonnie Hano,
Lida Lenney, Phyllis Sweeeney and Betty Swenson will be honored as
Laguna Treasures.
“Various environmental groups nominated them and we offered to
have the event, since we have dinner meetings anyway,” said
conservancy President Carolyn Wood. “These long-time Lagunans have
made a significant contribution in the effort to maintain our town’s
village character and in the preservation of our greenbelt.”
Friends of the honorees are encouraged to attend. The meeting is
open to the public.
This will be the second Laguna Treasures event. Last year, Charlie
Boyd, Joyce Dusenberry, Hortense Miller, Evelyn Munro, Don Rose, Pat
Sturgis, Estelle Warner, Lila Zali and the late Tanya Barton and
Alice Graves were honored.
Dinner is $10 for members and $15 for non-members. Membership is
$10 a year, January to December, and can be paid for at the meetings.
Tickets may be purchased at the door, but reservations are a must.
Saturday, Sept. 7 is the deadline to make reservations by calling Ed
or Kit Drollenger at 494-6465 and leaving a message with your name,
telephone number and number of reservations desired.
EXPLORING EXCELLENCE
Seven Laguna Beach Police Explorers recently graduated from the
Explorers Academy, four with honors.
“The academy is very intense,” Police Chief James Spreine said.
“One hundred and twenty explorers attended. I inspected them all and
pinned our kids.”
Explorers Marcus Claar, Stephane Arvalo, Ana Moz, Tom Cahill,
Andrew Garlock, Jordan Billwok and Camran Aldapavari attended the
camp. Moz, Cahill and Arvalo were recognized for physical training.
Arvalo also collected kudos as most improved. Andrew was recognized
for report writing.
Explorer coordinator Sgt. George Ramos, Lt. Mike Hall, who started
his career in law enforcement as a Laguna Beach explorer; and
officers Ted Falencki and Pat Etemadi were on hand to see the post’s
explorers graduate. Ted is explorer advisor of the Laguna Beach post,
Etemadi is the associate advisor.
“We now have 16 explorers, an all-time high,” Ramos said. “We meet
at 7 p.m. on Thursdays. Anyone interested in joining can call me,
Etemadi or Falencki at 497-0701.
* Our Laguna is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call 494-4321 or fax 494-8979.
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