N e w s a b o u t S e n i o r s i n t h e C e n t ra l C i t y Senior Independence Newsletter No. 3 | Fall 2014 333 Turk Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 | curryseniorcenter.org | 415-292-1040 There’s No Room for Him at the Inn: Seniors Must Wait 2 Years or More! Can you share a corner of your universe with this acclaimed artist? By Tod Thorpe If you met Ira Watkins, aged 73, you would never believe he could be homeless. Now he gives an entirely new meaning to the phrase “starving artist”. He has been living in his van for 3 years and needs a home but the wait-list for low-income senior housing is no less than 2 years even with Curry case management! Ira is a gentlemanly sort with a warm smile and the air of distinguished gentility from an age long gone and has a silky voice with a nice southern lilt. Born in Waco, Texas to a family of 7 brothers and 5 sisters he recalls a childhood filled with struggles and poverty but also parents who were loving and kind with a solid framework of faith. However, with so many siblings, if he wanted toys growing up, his father told him he’d have to build them on his own. This gave birth to his fervently industrious nature and he hit the streets with a shoeshine box to earn what he could. It also gave momentum and inspiration to his natural artistic talent to depict lively images of his human experience with scenes of rural gatherings, farmer’s markets and cityscapes. Ira says, “I can’t even remember a time when I didn’t draw and it’s something that just comes out of me without trying. But no one seemed to take much interest until I was 50 years old”. Ira’s art has been the focus of many shows since then and he has sold innumerable works. His most recent show was at the John Natsoulas Center for the Arts in Davis, CA from September 24-November 1, 2014. However, he is the most humble artist and has never learned how to manage or promote his art properly and perhaps with an opportunity for higher education or other fortunate life circumstance, things would be very different for him now. His Curry Case Manager, Jeffrey Faircloth, Acclaimed artist and homeless Curry senior, Ira Watkins, poses with one of his San Francisco cityscapes. Ira is still looking for a place to live and hopes you might help. Ira Watkins’ art depicts and celebrates his community and every day life experiences has heard all the details of his on-going struggles and says, “Ira could be bitter for the many times when he was not treated with dignity and respect but he has the most positive social conscience. He knows the difference in good and bad people no matter what.” Ira now turns to you. Ira wants to paint his way out of poverty and into a permanent home. He is fastidious, a great cook and could afford to contribute $350 per month from his social security. He says, “I love creating art and like for it to move people, so whoever can help me with a place to live, can pick what they want from my work.” Surely you or someone you know has a spare room so Ira can finally come home for the holidays! Please contact Tod Thorpe at 415-292-1040 or via email at tthorpe@curryseniorcenter.org. From the Executive Director, David Knego Let’s Infuse Innovation and Disrupt Our Perceptions This holiday season we can apply new values and bring cheer to isolated seniors. “Disruptive innovations” are seen every day with the hi-tech industry changing the way we go about our lives. A partial definition is that “innovation creates a new market by applying a different set of values, which ultimately overtakes an existing market”. Airbnb, Uber, Lyft and many other on-demand services are the easy examples of innovations that take established industries off-guard. So where is the disruption and innovation with social issues? How can we make the golden years truly golden — for those seniors living in San Francisco’s Civic Center neighborhoods? A “traditional” view of the golden years — rocking on the porch, golfing, taking vacations and tending to grandchildren is starkly different from what many Baby-Boomers are and will be experiencing. It is certainly different than what the seniors served by Curry are experiencing– where they live, what they look like, the lack of income and the resources that they don’t have. So let’s disrupt some of our old and tired stereotypes of old-age and old people. Just ‘cause they are slower, Curry Senior Center Board of Directors Jeffrey Alan Beane, MD, President Jonrie Dávila, Vice-President Zachary Schiller, Treasurer Dennis Kneeppel, BA, MPA, RN, Secretary J. David Bickham Beverly Brumfield Cynthia K. Ceres Walter DeVaughn Dave Knego, back right poses next to Jim Illig of outstanding corporate partner, Kaiser and (front left to right), megavolunteer Marilyn Chan, beloved District 6 Supervisor Jane Kim and health instructor Jazmine Soubra. and grayer and hard of hearing does not diminish their benefit to all of us. They know about longevity, have learned much in their lives and much to teach us. And they very much appreciate your time and efforts. So let’s innovate — socially — by applying a different set of values… to an existing market. You can do something different this holiday season for the seniors in your life and the seniors at Curry Senior Center. Happy Holidays! There’s No Place Like Home The Importance Of Home Visits Though both simple and small the single-room-occupancy hotel rooms where many seniors live are familiar surroundings, include cherished possessions and are called home. However, many seniors with chronic illnesses and mobility issues, are physically unable to get out — and need help with basic necessities. Even with an escort travelling to Curry for an appointment can be daunting. Diane Dwyer Phil Marechal Shirley Quitugua Robert Razzo Richard Sax Lara Sallee, MPH Richard Sullivan Amy Whalen Alice Zhang Leadership Staff David Knego, Executive Director Richard Zercher, MD, Medical Director Rachel Ainza, Principal Clerk Dawn Stevens, Nurse Manager Arlo Bushnell, Associate Director of Development Home visits have been a hallmark of Curry Senior Center’s services since our founding in 1972 — a cornerstone of being client-centered. Home visits are a strategy to engage, assess functioning, and provide treatment. Home visits are also useful to build trust and help seniors become motivated to participate in services. Toby Shorts, Community Programs Supervisor This past year staff completed 957 home visits to the frail elderly including: 344 inhome visits by physicians and nurse practitioners; 200 in-home visits/counseling sessions by the behavioral health team; and 413 visits by the case management team. Claudia Pinto-Mora, Medical Records As one Nurse Practitioner said “…it is a great honor and privilege for people to allow me into their home…home visits also show the value of the individual-and let them know how important they are”. Stay-tuned for the next issue of our newsletter, Senior Independence, where we will highlight the work of our i-Pad in-the-home pilot, Project Senior Vitality. Staff and volunteers work with “graduates” of our computer learning center, with donated i-Pads so they can “stay-connected” at home! 2 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2014 Michael McGinley, Case Management Supervisor Margot Ragosta, Behavioral Health Clinician Susmita Shah, Behavioral Health Services Director Tod Thorpe, Director of Development 415-292-1040 Donor & Volunteer Curry Heroes at Twitter This Tech Giant is a Very Tweet Neighbor And Curry’s New Video is Debuted — Check It Out On Our Home Page Have you ever wondered what it would be like to tweet from inside Twitter?! If you missed your chance on October 9th at Curry’s Annual Donor and Volunteer Heroes Celebration, make sure to put it at the top of your must-attend list next year. generous hosting and presenting of the entire event for nearly 200 Curry fans — an event that would have cost at least $10,000 for Curry to host on equivalent scale. Twitter has proven itself to be a very generous neighbor indeed. The celebration was atop Twitter headquarters in the “Aviary” providing beautiful views around the city and overlooking our City Hall bathed in Giants’ orange light. The food was fantastic and plenty of libations complimented the upbeat atmosphere. Long-time friends Caroline Barlerin, Head of Twitter Corporate Outreach and Philanthropy and Jim Illig, Kaiser Community Benefit Manager, both award recipients, celebrate at the Heroes event. Regardless, thank you for all you do at Curry because this event was definitely about the change you make happen in Curry seniors’ lives. And thank you Twitter for your very Curry Board Vice-President and Senior Associate Director of Planned Giving at Stanford, Jonrie Dávila, opens the Donor & Volunteer Heroes Celebration with warm words and applause. Perhaps the greatest highlight was the crowd’s response to the debut of Curry’s new video, “A Day in the Life of a Curry Senior: Rick Siesky”, created with more generosity by our beloved partner, Kaiser Permanente and their Northern California Multimedia team. The video can now be viewed on the Curry Senior Center home page at curryseniorcenter.org. On 10-17-14 the Curry Board hosted an all-staff appreciation event at the must-not-miss Chambers Restaurant, by the pool at the Phoenix Hotel. Here E.D. Dave Knego (right) celebrates with Medical Director, Richard Zercher, M.D., who was recognized for his 25 years to the day (also the anniversary of the Loma Prieta earthquake). Zercher’s first evening and days were spent doing home visits to check up on seniors shaken by the quake. Thank you to each and every one of you who touch Curry Senior Center in some way throughout the year. The honorees that night, listed below, stood to represent all of you for your love and compassion. Beverly Brumfield John & Shirley Quitugua Family Marilyn Chan Hasi Raeyed Gail Finne Katie and Bob Sharp Maggie Pickavance curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 3 Curry Discovers the Secret to Advancing Your Career and Changing the World Simultaneously Now You Too Can Join this Magic Carpet Ride By Tod Thorpe Are you a professional that understands the value of networking with other professionals to volunteer and help your community? Balancing just those two priorities without even including all the other pressing matters in your life is daunting in the least! We’ve been promoting this new group for Curry for the last several months and we are confident that it will provide leadership development and resume-building opportunities as well as a chance to build new friendships. We have now identified the leadership for the group who is a powerhouse all on her own, who is deeply connected and who has committed her time to do the heavylifting to launch the effort forward. Welcome Aisha Ahmad, the new Founding President of Curry’s Professionals and Executives Leadership Circle! Having been raised in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and having attended the American School there while being a Pakistani national, Aisha is no stranger to developing and maintaining relationships with people of different backgrounds and nationalities- perfect for this effort and our little United Nations of Curry. Upon graduation, she started working in medical research and simultaneously enrolled in a Former Wall Street investment banker, now entrepreneur and proud new Curry Professionals group leader Carrie Snyder (left) is posing with Curry Professionals Founding President Aisha Ahmad at the Twitter-hosted Donor & Volunteer Heroes Celebration. Master of Public Health program, with a focus in epidemiology and healthcare administration. Aisha was then selected for a highly coveted hospital administration fellowship at Stanford Children’s Health. After her fellowship, Aisha stayed on at the Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital in positions related to performance improvement, business development, strategy planning and fundraising. Stanford then sponsored Aisha for US citizenship and she became a US citizen in March, 2014! In 2012, Aisha started her own healthcare management consulting practice that specializes in lean leadership and performance improvement at large hospitals and insurance companies. She also serves as lean operations advisor to small healthcare startups. Stay tuned for additional information via Curry e-news for upcoming meetings and save the date for Saturday, December 13th for Santa“Curry”Con (details to follow)! On this day, thousands of Santas, elves and reindeer in costume flash mob in the city spreading joy for an event called Santacon. We will soon announce the locale for our own gathering of Curry Santas on this day with the goal of collecting as many $10 Walgreens cards as we can for Curry seniors’ holiday gift bags this season- usually the only gift most of them will receive. A Personal Message to You from Founding President, Aisha Ahmad The Curry professionals group is an amazing way to meet people both from within your professional industry and that of others. Our members are from healthcare, finance, technology, hospitality, legal, and general entrepreneurialism, just to name a few. Our goal is to get to know one another, expand our professional and personal networks, and simultaneously contribute in a meaningful way to improving the lives of the 15,000 homeless seniors that live right here in the heart of our city. Through fundraisers that involve happy hours, SantaCon, a ski trip and a wine country party bus, we want to raise money that feeds the hungry seniors and compensates for their medical care. We would love for people to come volunteer with us, or just join us for an event and make a new friend or two! 4 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2014 Program Assistant Humberto Piñón (right), says that the appreciation seniors share with him because of the help you enable at Curry is contagious. Here he is teaching ESL class with program participants. Your Support is Ensuring Some of the Most Marginalized Are Welcomed The Latino and LGBT Seniors Add Spicy Color to the Curry Community By Samantha Wilcox Here at Curry Senior Center, we strive to help our program participants live an independent life while also helping them to maintain their dignity and self-esteem. The Community Programs department is aiming to do just that by creating new programs to help further involve our Latino and LGBT clients, helping them to stay healthy, mentally active, and get the full Curry Senior Center experience. Until recently, Curry was lacking a Spanish translator to help clients feel understood and comfortable. However, Program Assistant Humberto Piñón recently joined Community Programs and is not missing a beat when it comes to helping Spanish speaking clients to feel welcome and part of the Curry community. “Being unable to adequately understand your surroundings leads to anxiety, but having someone who can help you navigate the process brings our clients a sigh of relief,” Piñón said. Piñón has not only strengthened the Latino community at Curry by offering translation services, he also brought both his cultural pride and his Mexican cooking skills to the table for Curry’s First Annual Hispanic Heritage Festival on October 14th. “We want all of our clients to enjoy the full Curry experience,” Community Programs manager Toby Shorts said. “Instead of clients only using services such as our health clinic, we want to help provide them with social activities as well. By catering activities to Spanish-speaking clients, we hope to help strengthen a sense of community, help them get social, and ultimately set them on the track for a more fulfilling quality of life.” Community Programs is also strengthening our programming for our LGBT clients, with programs like Creative Writing, ‘Decades of Drag’, and Rainbow Brain Games coming to the center in upcoming weeks. “Clients who self-identify as part of the LGBT community face a different set of problems than our other clients,” Shorts said. “Many have lost family support, and tend to isolate themselves. However, we want to break those habits by offering our clients a safe place where they can be themselves without shame.” Thanks to the generosity of Curry Senior Center donors, clients are able to find a safe place where they are accepted for who they are, and find a community of like-minded people. “Donors are truly helping seniors create a better quality of life for themselves,” Piñón said. “They are extremely thankful for the opportunities you offer them at the center, and the sense of appreciation is contagious. Seeing them come alive is the best feeling in the world.” curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 5 The Loss of My 92-Year-Old Father in August Leaves Me Proud, Thoughtful and Even More Committed To contemplate the heart-rending visual of someone like my own father being alone and without resources on the streets like many of Curry’s seniors, makes me feel profoundly grateful to you for responding to the need for health, hope and dignity for others. By Diane Dwyer It feels very strange and more than just lonely to now have lost my father, the last of my natural parents; to know that I can’t just pick up the phone and call, drop by for a visit and a hug or know that he will be there when my children graduate or get married- it’s downright disorienting. And yet I am so grateful and at peace knowing that he had a very full life, abundant resources and was surrounded by my 6 siblings and me the night before he passed in celebration of his life. It does not mean that adjusting to his aging was easy for him or any of us, but in a general sense, that was a very blessed and peaceful departure. I’m very proud of my dad, Richard T. “Dick” Dwyer, who was born in San Francisco on December 27, 1921. If you had asked him what he was most proud of, he likely would have said that his greatest legacy was his seven Diane’s daughter, Blake, poses recently with her grandfather. 6 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2014 Diane interviews her father during the 75th anniversary of the Golden Gate Bridge. He walked across it the first day it opened on May 27, 1937. children and their families. But there was so much more. In World War II, he served as a medic on a Liberty Ship, only two of which exist today and the only one which is historically accurate and unaltered is the SS Jeremiah O’Brien moored here in San Francisco at Pier 49 (I even had the opportunity to take him on a cruise on the SS Jeremiah O’Brien for a WWII anniversary and saw the medic’s quarters that were identical to the one he slept in so many years before) . Not long after his return from the war he met and married the love of his life, my fabulously funny and wonderful mother, Dorothy Blake Dwyer, who passed in 2000 just shy of their 51st anniversary. Mom helped support Dad while he finished college and he then founded and worked in his own accounting firm for 50 years, and it still bears his name: Richard T. Dwyer & Company. That business provided them with the financial resources to provide fulltime care when it became necessary, and I was fortunate enough to have six brothers and sisters to help. He was adored, respected and loved by not only his family but also their friends and his colleagues for his guidance, his fundamental fairness, his enormous generosity and his deep and abiding faith. He and Mom helped start Our Lady of Mercy Parish in Daly City, helping to build a community that remained close to Growing up, Diane Dwyer recalls the huge Magnolia tree in her parent’s yard watching over the family gatherings. Curry staff, volunteers and seniors gifted to her a memorial magnolia honoring her father to again watch over her family. his heart his entire life. To his final day, family grace ended with the prayer: “Our Lady of Mercy, pray for us.” part of all that Curry Senior Center provides to seniors in the Tenderloin. Curry fills the gap for thousands of seniors in San Francisco every year, from finding housing and meals to health care. More than medicine or a dining room, Curry is a refuge and a welcoming community. It’s a place where isolated seniors can find family and home. Dad remained physically active, diving for tennis balls on the courts and playing golf well into his 80s. It was also incredibly fortunate that he remained very sharp mentally as he aged. He was the traditional male head of the family, making all the decisions, not relying on anyone else but himself, so it was heartbreaking to watch as his body began to give out and he struggled to realize the emotional and physical support he would need. What we learned, though, is that it’s incredibly challenging trying to navigate the health care system as well as long-term care needs. I think about how many people don’t have the financial resources, not to mention family support as they age, and that is why I’m so proud to be a Diane Dwyer celebrates with her father on his 70th birthday. It was a gift for my siblings and me to be able to provide the emotional support my dad needed in his last days. And I feel honored that in my humble way, as a board member, I can continue to help Curry seniors. I feel honored to be in the company of people like you whose gift in honor of their own parents and grandparents, is to change that indignity experienced by so many of our elders. Thank you for making a difference and for making it possible for so many seniors to age with dignity and respect. curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 7 Be the Difference: How You Can Help Now Unselfish and noble actions are the most radiant pages in the biography of souls. — David Thomas SPECIAL HOLIDAY VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES AT CURRY Winter Holiday Parties Get in touch with the true spirit and make your season bright! Volunteers will serve food, decorate, give out gifts and hear stories of holidays gone by from around the world. We have heard from many volunteers that this was the one thing that stood out the most for them the entire season. There are two different parties and dates to fit your schedule. Thursday, December 18, 2014 11:30AM - 12:30PM (a group of 5 needed) Monday, December 22, 2014 10AM – 1PM (a group of 10 needed) Curry’s Own Adopt-a-Senior for the Holidays Program Approximately one hundred fifty of the very neediest program participants at Curry are chosen by the case managers to fill out a special, personal gift request with an approximate $50 value each. Many of these seniors are homeless or have almost nothing. This is the perfect opportunity for individuals or a business group to rally their colleagues to fulfill the requests and deliver them to Curry. Most items can even be bought online! Hasi Raeyed (right) celebrates every holiday at Curry Senior Center and volunteers daily as a Curry Ambassador in the dining room. Senior Care and Walgreens, many San Francisco Walgreens stores will participate in promoting “trees” filled with wish-list holiday gift requests for Curry seniors, many of which are homeless. You can help by working with our Queen Elf, Michelle Noble to put up the displays at the Walgreens and by picking up gifts once a week and delivering them to Curry Senior Center. This program will begin in December and last until December 23, 2014. This program begins just before Thanksgiving and ends just before Christmas Day. Contact Arlo Bushnell at 415-292-1064 or email abushnell@curryseniorcenter.org Contact Michelle Noble at 415-292-1095 or email mnoble@curryseniorcenter.org Be a Santa to a Senior (BASTAS) — Walgreens Elves This is one of the most highly sought and definitely greatest needs! Thanks to a generous partnership with Home Instead 8 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2014 Walgreens employee, Andrea, poses with Home Instead Senior Care’s BASTAS (be a Santa to a senior) program display at the Castro Street Walgreens. Please shop at SF Walgreens in late November and December and thank them for hosting this wonderful effort! For questions about these additional on-going ways to participate: Call Arlo Bushnell at 415-292-1064 or email to abushnell@curryseniorcenter.org Dining Room and Bingo Serve lunch and visit with the greatest characters you’ve ever met- Curry seniors! We always hear this is guaranteed to bring you more happiness. On Wednesdays and weekends, become the most popular person in the City and host Weekly Bingo too! Individuals or groups up to 15 for outstanding team building Daily 10:15AM to 1PM Cultural Celebrations Bring joy and festivity to Curry Seniors during various cultural parties throughout the year. Help decorate, serve and socialize. The events include but are not limited to: the Hispanic Heritage Festival, Halloween, Veteran’s Day, Autumn Lantern Festival, Moon Festival, Russian Festival, and Holiday Celebrations. Individuals are welcome but this is a favorite for groups of up to 10. Various week days throughout the year, 9:30AM-12:30PM Project Senior Vitality — One on one technology mentoring with iPads Unlock a window onto the world for a senior by tutoring individually how to use email, apps & tracking devices that monitor physical activity, body weight, heart rate, and sleep or search for YouTube videos and explore social media. Individuals are matched with seniors for at least a 6-month commitment. Highly flexible schedule: meet with your senior for at least 4 hours per month and additional hours via Skype as you like. Social Media Development Sub-Committee Volunteer in any capacity, attend Curry events and share, like and tweet everything about Curry. This is an extension of the Development Committee and participants work directly with our social media specialist, Maggie Pickavance. Very flexible schedule and a bi-monthly meeting. Community Thrift Store (623 Valencia St., San Francisco) Accepts donations on behalf of Curry Senior Center. Bring your old clothes, jewelry, books, sports equipment, furniture, CD’s, electronics and luggage and tell them you want the proceeds to go to Curry Senior Center. Photographers please! A picture is worth 1,000 words and it’s so much better when not just taken from a smartphone! Our designer will love you and you’ll get credit for your work too- as well as attend fun events for free. We also have occasional portrait sessions with our seniors. Shop at Cole Hardware and mention Curry Senior Center at checkout! A portion of your purchase will go to supporting seniors’ programs. Various dates based on event calendar. Curry Senior Center’s Legacy Circle Development Team Support and Special Events Join Curry’s Development Team supporting data management, mailings, event preparation and support, expository writing for publications, grant writing, research and more. We’re a very entertaining team and this is a great beginning for the person considering crossing over from corporate work to nonprofit. We are also building a core team of highly experienced volunteers for our annual gala and other special events. Ensuring that aging with health, hope and dignity continues long into the future Curry Senior Center’s Legacy Society is composed of people who include Curry Senior Center in their will or another type of planned gift. These donors gain the satisfaction of knowing Curry’s important services – health care, nutrition, socialization, and celebrations – will continue for years to come. Very flexible timing based on project calendar. Join the Curry Professionals and Executives Leadership Circle! This group provides a team approach to developing leadership and professional networking opportunities while having heightened impact on Curry’s services. They help plan Curry events, hold collections and happy hour fundraisers, rally teams of volunteers and interface with board leadership to devise new ways to respond to the crisis and indignity suffered by so many of the elderly. We ask you to consider joining this group of generous donors, either by indicating your interest with a note on the enclosed return envelope or by contacting Curry Board of Directors VicePresident, Jonrie Dávila at jonried@yahoo.com or by calling her at 650-823-3280. You may also contact Development Director, Tod Thorpe at tthorpe@curryseniorcenter.org or by calling 415-292-1040. Does your company match donations? If so, make a donation through your company’s workplace campaign and double the impact of your donation. Ask your HR representative at work how. Donate cereal, peanut butter, new clothes or hygiene items! You’ll guarantee that our seniors will have breakfast, warm clothes and the basics we take for granted. Want to stay up-to-date with what’s happening at Curry Senior Center? Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter! CurrySrCenter @CurrySrCenter curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 9 Because of You, Bocce Breaks Another Record for Breakfast! Have you ever been to an event that you loved? Not so much? Katie and Bob Sharp (also award recipients at Curry’s Donor & Volunteer Heroes Celebration for being the most loyal and generous donors over the years) are pictured here with friend, Mary, at the Bocce Competition and Social Event. They also happen to be board member Diane Dwyer’s beloved in-laws. By Tod Thorpe I’ve been to hundreds of events and most of the time I can appreciate the effort but rarely do they rival at least a dozen other things that I’d rather be doing, even if it were with the same group of people! Curry’s annual September “Bocce — A Friendly Competition and Social,” is one you should never miss again. In fact, it is what drew my wife, Mary Dunbar (also a 10 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2014 development professional) and me into Curry as donors and then charmed me into volunteering on the Curry Board Development Committee. And then that lead to the happiest I’ve ever been professionally, now that I’m on staff! You should know that you really have created an oasis of inspiration and change in the heart of the City and you should experience it when you have the chance. Other than volunteering, this is a wonderful way to do it! The Marin Bocce Federation is a fast trip across the Golden Gate Bridge and beautiful with voluptuous rose gardens surrounding all the courts. The mood is relaxed, casual and friendly and most of the terrific people attending have never even played before. Three-time Bocce champions from Team Vasco pose and celebrate. The breakfast OJ and bagels changed soon after to Ada Knego’s best-ever BBQ and mimosas. Curry Professionals Founding President Aisha Ahmad in sunny yellow invited her dear friends for their first foray into Curry Bocce and they loved it! - left to right, Colm O’Riain, Justin Bandy and Emi Suzuki. Left to right, Edwin Carmona-Cruz, John McKinnon, Rory Volk, Community Programs Supervisor Toby Shorts, and David Bradshaw show off their bocce pride. This team is also joining the Curry Professionals and Executives Leadership Circle. Other stand-out qualities are the donated Noah’s bagels and Peet’s coffee in the morning, quickly transitioning to plenty of delicious mimosas under the gazebo and the best BBQ you ever had, followed by great raffle prizes and awards. And thanks to many of you; although on Tuesday before the Saturday event we had only raised $6,000 towards our $25,000 goal to support breakfast for Curry seniors, we cleared $20,000 that morning. Ultimately, thanks to a very generous “topping off” donation from Michelle Rogers of Home Instead Senior Care in Mountain View and some straggling donations following, we surpassed the goal and raised over $27,000! Save the date now! The next Curry Bocce is already scheduled for: Saturday, September 12, 2015. curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 11 SF-DPH Community Health Network 333 Turk Street San Francisco, CA 94102 VERY IMPORTANT DATES! Zendesk makes a special announcement benefiting Curry Wednesday, November 19, 2014 Helping Hands Healing Hearts Gala Thursday, May 7, 2015 Bocce Ball Competition & Social Saturday, September 12, 2015 Our Mission is to provide services to seniors that promote independent living while maintaining their dignity and self-esteem. STAY TUNED FOR A BIG SURPRISE NEXT WEEK FROM CORPORATE PARTNER We really want to know what you think! Please respond to the short survey on the envelope within. While shopping for the holidays on Amazon.com, please sign up for Amazon Smile and choose Tiffany Apczynski, Zendesk Director of Public Affairs, receives the corporate award for most volunteer hours at the Twitter-hosted Donor & Volunteer Heroes Celebration on Oct. 9th. Curry as your benefiting charity of choice.
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