Two teens give out party favors
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Dane Grace
Two classmates celebrated a birthday party together at the Coastal
Canyon Clubhouse in Newport Beach on Friday with a DJ and Italian
food, but this party was about giving, not receiving.
Samantha Mangione, who will be 14 on Dec. 23, and Rebecca Beyer,
who turned 14 on Oct. 14, asked partygoers to hold the gifts and make
donations instead. Samantha attends Our Lady Queen of Angels School
in Newport Beach. Rebecca attends Harbor Day School in Corona del
Mar.
“At first, I was going to get presents, and then I was like, ‘I
don’t really need presents,’” Samantha said. “I have everything I
really need.”
Samantha chose Ronald McDonald House of Orange County to receive
donations in her name. The Mangione family has been involved with the
Orange County Ronald McDonald House in Orange since it opened 15
years ago and have been longtime donors of time and money. Her family
has owned McDonald’s restaurants for about 35 years and owns nine in
cities across Orange County.
Executive Director Deborah Levy said Samantha is a familiar face
at the house, and earlier this month, Samantha and 10 friends helped
raise $6,000 by selling raffle tickets. But Levy never expected the
teen to give up her birthday gifts.
“It’s highly unusual that a child will want to give up her
birthday presents for charity,” Levy said.
Samantha said she would feel the sacrifice but added that it’s
worth forgoing the gifts.
“I’m usually excited to get presents, so I think about the
families and the children,” Samantha said. “So, I try to think about
it that way.”
The house provides lodging for families who have to travel to
receive treatment for their ill children, who are being treated at
nearby hospitals. The house charges $5 a day, but won’t turn away
families who can’t pay.
Virginia Mangione, Samantha’s mother, said her daughter’s
volunteer experience with the ill and their families influenced her
decision for the birthday celebration.
“She’s been involved with the house and she’s seen what the
families and children go through,” Mangione said.
Rebecca chose the Cystinosis Research Foundation because of a
friend who has the disease, a genetic disorder that causes a build-up
the amino acid -- the building blocks of proteins -- cystine. The
accumulation does damage to the eyes, brain and liver. The disease
often strikes children and can cause muscle wasting. Rebecca has gone
to school with the girl since kindergarten and has known other kids
at the school who’ve made donations. Rebecca just wanted to do her
part.
“I wanted to do it to help my friend,” Rebecca said.
Her mother, Lesley Beyer, said that her daughter’s attitude has
been nothing but positive.
“Rebecca said, ‘The best gift I can have is to make the cure to
Cystinosis a little closer,” Beyer said.
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