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The Tustin News from Tustin, California • Page 11

Publication:
The Tustin Newsi
Location:
Tustin, California
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Timi70 SECTION THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1990 VOLUME 68, NO. 17 1 JLJUG 'Zl. GOOD TASTE -'T I -SCOUT i fi r-v r' I 1- v. I 4 i m. i 1 1..

t. i i Tami Thurner and Carolyn Fineman, back row. In the center are Laura Rush and Sara Erickson, and in front are Jennifer McTyre, Elizabeth Bendig, Amy Ayers and Kim Rivera. NEWS Photo COOKIE TIME Tustin area Girl Scouts will soon deliver pre-ordered cookies. However, for those who missed ordering, local troops will begin booth sales at selected shopping centers March 2.

Preparing for their sidewalk sales are Nicole Gielow, Carol Underwood, Lorin Fineman, Girl Scout Coolde Booth Sales to Begin bara Kiefer, left, shown here with committee members Joan Reigottie and Carol Oliver. Thousands of hours are donated by ALT members each year to operate the thrift shop. The monies raised help ALT support their many and varied philanthropies including Disability Awareness Program, Operation School Bell, Telecare, Senior Service Center, SAT Review sessions, and Safety on Stage. NEWS Photo THRIFTY Assistance League of Tustin (ALT), a chapter of National Assistance League, has moved its thrift shop to the new chapter house at 445 El Camino Real. The opening at the new location will be tomorrow, when the shop will be filled with many wonderful buys.

The thrift shop is open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. The shop is closed the first Thursday each month. The chairman of the thrift shop is Bar The 1990 Girl Scout Cookie sale response to the pre-sale orders taken throughout February. Those pre-orders will be delivered over the next few weeks.

The cookie managers for the Tustin area this year are Patty Rivera, Service Unit 1, and Nancy McTyre, Service Unit 2. These are women who have volunteered their time and homes to handle all of the thousands of boxes of cookies for all of the Tustin troops and coordinate deliveries to the troop leaders. cookies. All varieties sell for $2.50 per box, a portion of which helps Tustin Girl Scouts finance various troop activities. Part of the funds also goes toward improvements and maintenance of Orange County Council's Girl Scout Camp, Camp Joe Scherman, which provides year-round camping opportunities for thousands of girls.

The Tustin Girl Scouts wish to express appreciation to the people of Tustin and surrounding unincorporated areas for their great is in full swing, and starting this weekend, Girl Scout troops will be setting up booths at various supermarkets, banks, and other places of business to offer the public the opportunity to buy the seven yummy varieties of cookies. Favorites such as Thin Mints, Samoas, Tag-alongs and Trefoils will be available, as well as the popular Do Si Dos, honey-glazed chocolate chip, and a new variety this year, Cabana Cremes, an assortment of vanilla and lemon sandwich Margaret Pottenger Is AAUW's 90-91 Woman of Distinction Margaret Potteneer will be honor Santa Ana Assistance League Blarney Auction Set March 18 Members of the Modieska Aux and six years on the Santa Ana YWCA board of directors. The AAUW Woman of Distinction Award is presented by the past presidents of the Tustin Branch to a local woman who has made a lasting difference in her community. Past recipients include former Tustin Mayor Ursula Kennedy and the co-founder of Parents Who Care in Tustin, Ethel Reynolds. Proceeds from the tea benefit the Tustin AAUW Local Scholarship Fund, which distributes grants to Tustin area teachers for summer enrichment classes, workshops and seminars.

The tea is open to the public, but advance reservations are required. Cost is $15. For further information, call 731-5824. Ms. Pottenger was the first female director of the Tustin Chamber of Commerce (1961) and was the first Tustin Woman of the Year.

She has served on the Tustin Tiller Days Committee, the 1968 Tustin Centennial Committee and as volunteer coordinator of the Miss Tustin Pageant for eight years. She also is a member of the Tustin Historical Society. She has spent one day each week for the past 30 years volunteering for the American Red Cross Association. Other community involvement includes a term as president of the Lung Association, in which she has been active for the past 25 years; two terms as president of Soropto-mist of Santa AnaTustin; six years on the Red Cross board of directors; ed as the 1990 Woman of Distinction by the Tustin Branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW) at a tea Saturday, March 10, 3-5 p.m., at the home of Kathy Greenwood. Ms.

Pottenger has been active in the Tustin community as a businesswoman and a volunteer for over 30 years. A third-generation Califor-nian, she is a native of Monrovia, where here father and grandfather were pioneers in the treatment of tuberculosis. She was graduated from Stanford University with a degree in political science and moved to Tustin in the late 1950s when she established Jabberwocky Teenage Apparel in one of Tustin's oldest historical buildings. Treasures of Life Children's Hospice Open Cindee J. and Joseph J.

Dorchak both marriage, family and child counselor interns, have given "birth" to a new non-profit corporation entitled "Treasures of Life Children's Homes." The Treasure House, as the new six-bed group home located in Tustin is called, is designed to treat and house children that have been abused or neglected and removed trom their families by court order. The Dorchaks have hired child care workers with a minimum of 60 units of college to provide the around- and the office for the Homemaker Service, a service designed to send professionally trained women to the homes of families during an emergency or temporary time of need. The Irvine Building houses the league's gift shop, thrift shop, Operation Schoolbell and Family Assistance. Operation Schoolbell supplies clothes to needy Santa Ana school children, and Family Assistance provides services to Santa Ana families in time of temporary need. The Dental Center Building houses a dental care facility for needy Santa Ana school children.

This service is supported and manned by the Junior Auxiliary and the Katherine Irvine Auxiliary in addition to two qualified dentists. The Child Day Care Center is fully staffed with a director, teachers and aides. It can provide for 70 children between the ages of two and a half and five. These children may be enrolled five days a week from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The newest philanthropic project is "Operation PROP" (Pupil Recognition Opportunity Program), which offers scholarships to serious students at the Central County Regional Occupational Program (ROP) who are overlooked by other programs. iliary of Assistance League of Santa Ana, chapter of National Assistance League, are "putting on the blarney" for their annual fund-raising Blarney Auction on Sunday, March 18, at the League Chapter House, 1037 West First Street, Santa Ana, beginning at 4 p.m. Items offered in the silent auction will include a Stairmaster, tickets to sporting events, dinners in local restaurants and a variety of other tempting "biddables." Proceeds will be used to provide food, clothing and emergency relief for Santa Ana residents in need of assistance. Tickets are $5 each and are available through Modjeska Auxiliary members and will also be sold at the door. Assistance League of Santa Ana was founded in 1937 as a non-profit, non-political, non-sectarian philanthropic organization of volunteer women.

The league is an affiliate of National Assistance League which was founded in Los Angeles in 1935. The complex consists of five buildings which house the philanthropic projects of the league, the fund-raising endeavors and the business areas. The Modjeska building encompasses the meeting and the board rooms as well as the business office Orange Hill Restaurant presents the-clock coverage needed to provide a safe environment for the children. The children will receive the psycho therapeutic help needed to address 1 the issues that have resulted in their removal from their homes. Their medical and dental needs will be provided by licensed medical Drofession- vice als that accept Medi-Cal as payment tor their services.

I Treasures of Life Children's Homes is funded bv AFDC funds Saturday, March 3, 1990 Aide for Dependent Children and by private donations. As a tax- exempt corporation all donations I are tax deductible to people who I 1 open their hearts to causes like this. For more information, call 832-2601. Enjoy the picturesque hillside view and meet our wedding specialists The Formal Affair Bridal Gowns Hasson's Flower Shop Have Music Will Travel Reinbold Gallery Abbey Rents Club Limousines Diamond Gallery Creative Plants After Five Tux Shop Rivera Bakery T.B.S. Invitation Glorious Moments Wedding Favors I II I Ik I flf SWJ 1 Complete Skincare and Make-up for all your beauty needs.

MAKE-UP Application and lessons by the top make-up artist for Orange County. Facials and Body Treatments. Doors Open Bridal Fas lions 11:30 1:30 15.00 Fee Door Prizes Mors d'oeuvres created by Manny Orange Hill Restaurant 6410 E. Chapman Orange, CA 92669 For reservations (714) 997-2910 an ni. or, arte hy czxr uramf rtny 'i mai intimate tKofeuicna iineaxe iaon.

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About The Tustin News Archive

Pages Available:
44,955
Years Available:
1922-2000