Shriver supports kids
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Deirdre Newman
California First Lady Maria Shriver brought her celebrity power to
the Balboa Bay Club Wednesday as the guest speaker at a fundraiser
for the Orangewood Children’s Foundation -- helping it net more than
$125,000 for a scholarship endowment.
The foundation is a private, nonprofit organization that provides
services to prepare the county’s foster youth to become
self-sufficient. It raised money for and created the Orangewood
Children’s Home, an emergency shelter for the county’s abused,
neglected and abandoned children.
The event was hosted by the foundation’s auxiliary, 44 Women for
Children, which has grown beyond the initial 44 women who started the
group. The auxiliary was found in 1999 by Susan Samueli and supports
the foundation, especially programs that help teens to early
20-somethings succeed in their transition out of the foster care
system.
Shriver used the opportunity to exhort the auxiliary members to
give back, from donating blood to helping Habitat for Humanity build
a house.
“We’re 35 [million] to 36 million people strong in the state,”
Shriver said. “Seven million people are engaged in service. That
number should be doubled, even tripled because now more than ever, we
need help. There is nothing you can’t do to help this state.”
The endowed scholarship honors Linda Howard, who died of cancer in
October and was married to Orangewood’s Chief Executive Gene Howard.
Linda Howard had worked with abused and neglected children through
various programs.
The first recipient of the scholarship, Morgan Kashinsky, 21, came
to the Orangewood Children’s Home when she was 15 because her parents
were abusing drugs and neglected her and her brother. She received a
$6,000 scholarship that she said she would put toward USC, where she
is planning to get a master’s degree in social work.
Kashinsky said she was grateful for the foundation’s support.
“They’ve really ensured my success in school and helped me
financially and emotionally,” Kashinsky said. “They’re like my second
family. It’s been a blessing.”
Shriver expressed her admiration for the former Orangewood foster
youths who were at the luncheon.
“You deserve our respect, and you have it,” Shriver said. “I am in
awe of what you did. You weren’t born into a famous family or married
to someone who gave you this job. You had the cards stacked against
you and held your head high. You give us hope ... that our work
matters and we can really change people’s lives one at a time.”
Shana Coleman, one of the auxiliary members from Laguna Hills,
said she was inspired by Shriver’s speech.
“It was actually really great and it gave me some incentive to do
some things in the community,” Coleman said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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