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Year in Review: Arts

Year in Review: Arts

Pictured: The Marvelous Wonderettes/

Mammoth’s arts community continues to prosper. Although we’re not sure that tequila qualifies as art, but … we didn’t know where else to mention the inaugural Mammoth Margarita Festival.

JANUARY:

Students from four Mono County high schools competed in the 2nd Annual Mono County Finals in the national Poetry Out Loud competition. Ashley Garrison represented Mono County in the state finals.

FEBRUARY:

During a winter when Mammoth needed a laugh the most, director Shira Dubrovner came through, staging Mammoth Lakes Repertory Theatre’s production of the opera-skewering comedy “Lend Me A Tenor.”

MARCH:

Tahoe Adventure Film Festival promoter Todd Offenbacher brought the festival back to Mammoth Lakes’ Edison Theatre for its second year.

In Bishop, Playhouse 395’s spring musical declared, “Hello, Dolly!” The expansive production featured 23 performers on wireless mics, and a 22-piece orchestra.

JUNE:

Mammoth Lakes Music Festival’s 12th consecutive season, presented by Chamber Music Unbound, brought in 16 international guest artists for a summer-time revelry in great chamber music.

JULY: 

Mammoth Food & Wine Experience, the second annual fundraising event benefiting the Mammoth Lakes Foundation and Mammoth Schools NOW Foundation, sold out both days of the two-day event’s festivities.

Lesley Bruns directed this summer’s Shakespeare in the Woods presentation of Sierra Classic Theatre’s “The Tempest” This version was given a Caribbean-Calypso treatment.

Mono Council for the Arts staged the 25th Annual Kids Fishing Festival, in collaboration with the Eastern Sierra Fishing Guides Association, at the Snowcreek Ponds.

The Hayden Cabin/Mammoth Museum celebrated a historic century of tourism in the Lakes Basin.

AUGUST:

The Eastern Sierra Symphony orchestra formally changed its name to the Sierra Summer Festival Orchestra, and its long-time conductor, Bogidar Avramov, stepped down. Veteran musician and music teacher Aimee Kreston took over the reigns as SSFO’s Director.

Joe Louis Walker was one of the acts that helped Mammoth Brewing Company’s Bluesapalooza notch another hit. And the Festival of Beers drew a record number of participating brewers.

Mammoth’s new summer festival offerings included new entries, one of which was the Mammoth Margarita Festival, headed up by Gomez’s owners and operators Michael Ledesma and Russ Squier, and Mammoth Rocks co-founder Mark Deeds.

SEPTEMBER:

Mammoth Hospital doctors and their “celebrity” partners were shaking their booties at the “Dancing with the Docs” gala event. The fundraiser, a dance competition between physicians, took the place of Mammoth Hospital’s Festival of Trees annual event. Team Jive — Radiologist Dr. Yuri Parisky and Kathy Copeland, Disabled Sports Eastern Sierra Executive Director —won the overall competition.

The Southwest Council, Federation of Fly Fishers’ Fly Fishing Faire came to Mammoth Lakes. Part of the Faire included a film festival, which featured screenings of “The Manzanar Fishing Club” and “The Mono Lake Story.”

After nearly 70 years since the Mono Inn last celebrated the author of “Huck Finn,” current owners Jim O’Meally and Mario Aguilar revived “Mark Twain Days.”

Mammoth Bluegrass Festival founder Dan Lehman turned his love of the musical genre into a two-day festival, another new entry on the summer scene, which made its debut in the Village at Mammoth.

OCTOBER:

Mammoth Lakes Repertory Theatre kept theatergoers’ toes tapping with “The Marvelous Wonderettes,” a funny, touching musical a trip back to 1958 and the Springfield High School prom with Betty Jean, Cindy Lou, Missy and Suzy. The show was “American Bandstand” meets “American Graffiti” meets “Happy Days,” with razor sharp wit embedded everywhere.

NOVEMBER:

MMSA focuses on providing a better level of entertainment and booking bigger acts, including its opening weekend “Carnivale” with headliner RZA.

Playhouse 395’s Children’s Theatre brought Dr. Seuss to life in its version of the popular “Seussical: The Musical!”

Winterfest presented by Vestal and Oakley featured bands Blondfire and LA Riots at Eagle Lodge, which was transformed into the set of “Hot Tub Time Machine” with an 80’s theme!

Playhouse 395 opened “The Subject Was Roses,” an award-winning family drama set in the 1940s, at Bishop’s Inyo Council for the Arts Theater.

Sierra Classic Theatre’s annual Murder Mystery Fundraiser debuted “Murder at the Market,” written and directed by Mike Dostrow.

“Barefoot in the Sanctuary,” a play by Eva Poole-Gilson, was performed at Bishop’s Inyo Council for the Arts Theater. The show was based on poems and songs Gilson found inspirational.

As a warmup for the Christmas season, for the first time since 2005, the Theatre of Note from Los Angeles brought the satirical musical “A Mulholland Christmas Carol” to Bishop Union High School. The adaptation tells the story of the birth of Los Angeles by casting water baron William Mulholland as Scrooge. “A Christmas Carol” presented a musical rendition of the Los Angeles water wars with Owens Valley mixing harmonies, history and humor in an acoustical, bluegrass take.

DECEMBER:

A tie boosted the number of finalists from three to four during the Mammoth edition of the national Poetry Out Loud event at Mammoth High School. Competing in the Mono County finals on Jan. 5, 2013 are Kate Wilson, Tatum Sandvigen, Taylor Sanders and Meritzel Herrera.

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Little old Mammoth has a resident podiatrist in Dr. Marianne Cuttic

Little old Mammoth has a resident podiatrist in Dr. Marianne Cuttic

Pictured: Dr. Cuttic/

When you get a minute, stop and consider those things at the end of your legs. No, not your shoes … what’s inside them. They’re called feet and ankles, and those body parts are some of the most overlooked, according to Dr. Marianne Cuttic, whose Mammoth Foot & Ankle podiatry practice is for anything below the knee.

Sheet: People don’t think about their feet that much.

Cuttic: “That is a classic statement. People really don’t think about them that much, until they’re hurt. Unlike most body parts, we tend to rely on having them both all of the time.”

Originally from rural, upstate Pennsylvania, Cuttic, a graduate of the Temple University School of Podiatric Medicine, considers her Mammoth practice as sort of getting back to her roots, and said she’s always known her life’s work would be as a doctor. “I was born with that “ah hah” moment,” Cuttic quipped. “My mom said I had always wanted to be a doctor.” She danced ballet from age 5 until age 22, at which point she was a semi-professional in the art while living in Philadelphia.

“As the oldest of four, I was always trying to keep up with my next younger brother, and play whatever sport he played,” she recalled, playing football. Cuttic ran cross-country and track in high school. All those and one non-sports related experience helped arc her career path toward podiatry.

“My grandmother got me into sewing when I was 8, and I found that I really loved fine, detailed work,” Cuttic remembered. “I looked into general orthopedics and knew I wanted a sports-oriented practice, but I found my niche when I paid a visit to Dr. Neil Kramer, a podiatrist in Bethlehem, Penn. He’s the one who told me there are 27 bones in the human foot. I was like, ‘Wow!’ He became my mentor, and helped me through medical school. He was even on hand to present me with my diploma personally.”

Cuttic said the emergency room almost pulled her away from podiatry. “But I wanted to be a mom, and [the ER] wasn’t conducive to the lifestyle I wanted.”

After moving to California 17 years ago, she opened her own practice in the South Bay, Redondo Beach 10 years ago. “Other than skiing with my kids, I said to my husband that I’d love to practice here in Mammoth,” Cuttic said. Her husband, by the way, is none other than legendary professional mixed martial artist, UFC Hall of Famer and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu instructor Royce Gracie, who is well versed in the need for healthy feet and ankles. Gracie teaches classes at Snowcreek Athletic Club when in town.

Sheet: How many years have you and Royce been married and how did you two meet?

Cuttic: “We’ve been married 18 years this July. We met when I was doing my residency. My best friend and her husband owned a gym in Philadelphia, and I was doing personal training on the side. Her husband taught jiu-jitsu, and brought Royce into the gym. He walked right through one of my aerobics classes and I gave him the evil eye. He was flirting with the ladies and I didn’t know who he was then, but that’s the kind of socially flirtatious Brazilian man he is. My friend and her husband wanted to go out to dinner and show Royce around, and asked me to come along, which I reluctantly did. We talked for hours and have been inseparable since.”

Sheet: Seems as though a doctor being married to a traveling athlete is challenging. What’s your secret to managing family life?

Cuttic: “My secret is I’m a great multitasker! My family always had a great work ethic with lots of chores to do. I’m an independent personality, and I can function fine whether he’s here or not. My friends say I must have 26 hours in my day! Even today his schedule is as hectic as it ever was. It’s a juggling act and sometimes. I wonder when his next event is. I tell him, ‘Go, you’re messing up my routine!’”

She and Royce are the parents of 3 boys and a girl, who’s the youngest.

A major impetus to hanging her shingle here was on a flight to Los Angeles. “I was talking to a girl sitting next to me who was on her way to L.A. for surgery because there was no podiatrist here,” Cuttic related.

“I met [local pediatrician] Dr. Maria King about a year ago, and she asked me if I wanted to become office mates. We did, and it’s been a great relationship,” Cuttic added.

In addition to her husband, Cuttic is used to a mostly athletic clientele, but loves the diversity of patients she sees here. “I get kids, athletes, seniors, hikers, bikers,” she noted. “With all the running, and winter and summer sports, it’s no wonder the orthopedics department at Mammoth Hospital is getting slammed. I thought it was going to be dead during summer, but it was really busy.  I felt like I had something unique to contribute to the community and everyone has been receptive.”

She also spends part of her time in surgery, when needed, and has hospital privileges.

One thing she stresses for prevention is proper footwear. “In this environment, there are a lot of jobs and activities that keep people on their feet constantly, and patients who are prone to certain problems can find those exacerbated,” she notes. Of course, Cuttic points out that genetics is a significant factor in roughly 40% of cases involving bunions, hammer toes, flat feet and other feet-related problems.

“It’s important to get your feet looked at, especially children. Half of all kids with flat feet outgrow it, but kids don’t have all the bones in their feet until age 5. It might be symptomatic, it might not, but if it’s going to be an issue, then I have a better chance of correcting it at a younger age, as opposed to when they’re teenagers and their growth plates are closed.”

With older people, checkups are a good thing, Cuttic thinks, since by the time most have severe pain, the damage has potentially been done.

A runner as well, Cuttic also said she plans to tap into her love of dance, mulling a revival of holiday performances of “The Nutcracker,” among other artistic pursuits. She might also be a contender in next year’s Mammoth Hospital “Dancing With The Docs” fundraiser.

Still splitting her time between Redondo Beach and Mammoth, Cuttic said she can see spending more and more time here, and eventually either selling her SoCal practice or making it secondary to this one. “I grew up near the Poconos, and love pine trees and mountains … I think of Mammoth as a ‘get back to my roots’ environment.”

Dr. Marianne Cuttic’s practice is located in Mammoth at 437 Old Mammoth Rd., just a few doors down from Giovanni’s. Office hours are 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Call 760.934.1111. In Redondo Beach, her office hours are 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday-Friday, closed Thursday. Call 310.316.7020.

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Rhiannon’s Kids gets rolling

Rhiannon’s Kids gets rolling

(Photo: Susan Morning)

New children’s fund benefits from Dancing with the Docs

In life, it is not our experiences that make us unique but the way in which we come out the other side that makes us special. For Amanda Taylor, the birth and subsequent death of her daughter left her and her husband, Gabe at a crossroads: would they deal with the experience by following a path of despair or one of creation?

While some people in a similar situation may choose to wallow in grief, Amanda chose the latter path and turned her experience into something productive by creating Rhiannon’s Kids, a new children’s fund in Mammoth.

“Rhiannon [the Taylor’s daughter] thrived during her short life,” Amanda said. “It was due to a combination of her stubbornness and the love she received.” Support and love came not only from her parents, but from the local community and her doctors as well.

Rhiannon Lynn Taylor was born in October of 2009. Amanda had enjoyed a healthy, happy pregnancy, so it came as a huge surprise when Rhiannon was diagnosed with Trisomy 18, a terminal genetic disorder, at birth. Rhiannon was born with two severe holes in her heart as part of the disorder, and 138 days later she died of congestive heart failure.

“TR-18 is an extremely rare genetic disorder,” Amanda explained. “Most infants with this diagnosis don’t survive the first week. They are often described as being incompatible with life.”

Shortly after her arrival into this world, Rhiannon was flown from Mammoth to Reno, Nev. in order to receive the specialized infant care she required.

“There’s a misconception out there that your health insurance will help cover your travel expenses in situations like these,” Amanda said. The Taylors quickly realized this wasn’t true as they followed their daughter to Reno by car and spent several nights in a hotel room, footing the bill for gas, food and lodging while stressing over their daughter’s well-being.

Rhiannon spent the majority of her 138 days at home, comfortable and loved. The Taylors knew her time was limited and chose to make the best of it, treating her like a normal newborn and allowing themselves to develop a strong attachment to their baby girl — a decision that made it both more painful and less when Rhiannon was no longer with them, according to Amanda.

“Since high school I’ve always wanted to make a difference in kids’ lives,” Amanda, who is currently working on her teaching credential, said. “Rhiannon added more depth to that purpose. It made me want to do more. And the support of the community made me want to be supportive back.”

So, earlier this year Amanda sat down with Gary Myers, former Mammoth Hospital CEO and current Chairman of the Board for the Healthcare Trust of Mammoth Lakes, Mammoth Hospital’s Foundation.

“I told him that I wanted to start a children’s foundation to help families with travel expenses when their kids have to go out of town for specialized care,” Amanda said.

Myers was supportive and suggested that Rhiannon’s Kids be created under the umbrella of the Healthcare Trust. Amanda next spoke with local pediatrician Dr. Amy Conrad about such a foundation, and was told that the need for that type of support was huge. The only thing left was to go before the Healthcare Trust’s Board and make the pitch.

Amanda made her presentation to the Board in March, the same month in which Rhiannon had passed away two years prior. She received a call almost immediately after leaving the boardroom saying that her request to start the foundation had been unanimously approved, and the non-profit quickly began to spread its wings.

Since March, Rhiannon’s Kids has put together a Board of its own made up of Amanda as Chairwoman, her mother-in-law Kathleen Taylor as Vice Chair, and Dr. Conrad and Dr. Kim Escudero (both of whom were Rhiannon’s pediatricians in Mammoth) as medical specialists. The Board is currently looking for a fifth member to serve as its Business Manager. Rhiannon’s Kids has also started receiving donations, and found several families in need of support.

While Gabe does not sit on the Board, his networking skills and connections throughout the snowboarding industry will serve as key elements in helping the organization as it grows.

Last weekend’s Dancing with the Docs marked another milestone for the organization as its first fundraiser.

Each doctor that danced in the event was competing for the charity of his or her choice. Dr. Escudero chose to dance on behalf of Rhiannon’s Kids and ended up raising between $2,000 and $3,000 (the numbers were still being tallied at press time).

“We were so happy to be a part of Dancing with the Docs,” Amanda said. “The event offered great        creativity and originality and really has potential to grow.”

As for growth with Rhiannon’s Kids, Amanda would one day like to see it serve the entire Eastern Sierra.

“We’re so remote here,” she said. “I want to be able to help families, to be able to make a small difference and give back to my community.”

Currently, Rhiannon’s Kids serves newborns to 21-year olds who have acute and chronic medical conditions and are established pediatric patients regularly served by Southern Mono Healthcare District. Doctors such as Conrad and Escudero refer children and their families to the foundation for assistance.

The support provided is designed to cover expenses for lodging, travel and meals in acute or emergency situations, or for scheduled medical services.

Rhiannon’s Kids is just ramping up and will have a website available soon to provide more information. For now, contact rhiannonskids@yahoo.com to learn more.

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Who will win the Mammoth Mirror Ball?

Who will win the Mammoth Mirror Ball?

Dancing with the Stars, passe. Try Dancing with the Docs!

This summer, five Mammoth Hospital doctors and their “celebrity” partners will be shaking their booties for a chance to be crowned the winning team at the “Dancing with the Docs” gala event, to be held Sept. 22.The fundraiser, a dance competition between physicians, takes the place of Mammoth Hospital’s Festival of Trees annual event. The hospital’s Fund Development Coordinator Bubby Greene pitched the idea to Community Relations Director Lori Ciccarelli after seeing a Dancing with the Stars spin off titled, “Dancing with the Priests.”

Ciccarelli loved the idea and easily got the board of the hospital’s foundation, the Healthcare Trust of Mammoth Lakes, to buy in as well.

“It’s going to be something fun for the town,” said Ciccarelli, who will emcee the Sept. 22 event with Chair of the Healthcare Trust and former hospital CEO, Gary Myers.

Slated to perform:

Kris Wilson, MD, Pediatrician and Tommy Czeschin, Olympic silver medalist and Amazing Race television star, with Leah Dutcher choreographing.

Kim Escudero, MD, Pediatrician and X-Games gold medalist Johnny Teller, with choreographer Pamela Stayden.

Yuri Parisky, MD, Radiologist and Disabled Sports Eastern Sierra Executive Director Kathy Copeland, choreography by Gigi Van der Riet.

Kurt Smith, MD, Anesthesiologist (choreographing) and Jamie Halverson of the Mammoth Lakes Foundation.

Jennie Walker, MD, Emergency Medicine and Town of Mammoth Lakes Recreation Manager Stu Brown with choreography by Allison Page.

 

Many of the teams met for the first time this week to kick off rehearsals. As an additional bonus to the event, the teams will be filmed throughout the three-month process. Beginning July 27, local television station Sierra Wave will turn the footage into a nine-week miniseries leading up to the gala. New episodes will play every Friday evening (time TBA), and will then repeat throughout the week. The gala event will also be taped and play the week after it occurs.

The Sheet touched base with all of the teams this week to get a look at how the competition was stacking up.

Yuri Parisky and Kathy CopelandJumpin’ and Jivin’

Kathy Copeland, known for her fun-loving and energetic personality seems like she might be tough to keep up with on the dance floor, but at their first meeting on Wednesday night, Yuri Parisky proved a good match.

“Yuri will do his homework and Kathy will wing it,” said their choreographer Gigi Van der Riet to the camera after spending an hour and a half with her team.

The couple will be performing the Jive.

“The Jive is not as technical but it takes a huge amount of energy,” Van der Riet, a native of South Africa with a background in ballet, contemporary and jazz dance, said.

With zero dance background, Yuri did his best to pick up the moves quickly in the two-hour rehearsa.

“I’m doing this because I believe in the hospital,” Parisky said. “Patients I take care of benefit from the Healthcare Trust. Plus, it’s a great way to get back in shape, lose some weight and prove that talentless people can be taught to dance!”

“Going out and making fools of ourselves is a fun way to give back,” Kathy joked. She says her sole claim to dancing fame was at Whiskey Creek during her drinking days.

“It’s like the Romans feeding someone to the lions,” Yuri added.

Expect high energy and even some lifts to be part of Yuri and Kathy’s routine. The pair’s method of practice will be slightly unique since Kathy will be hiking the John Muir Trail for the entire month of August.

“We’ll be shadow dancing with Gigi when the other isn’t around,” Yuri said. “So when we come together the sparks will fly!”

 

Kris Wilson and Tommy CzeschinCha-Cha-Cha-ing

Kris and Tommy were scheduled to meet for the first time this Friday night, June 29, according to Czeschin.

“I have no dance background, whatsoever,” Czeschin admitted. “I am really doing it to support the hospital.” He thought the team would be learning the moves to the Cha-Cha.

Czeschin, fresh off of the reality television show, The Amazing Race, didn’t see Dancing with the Docs as following a similar reality TV track. Perhaps no one had clued him into the miniseries portion, yet.

The team’s choreographer, Leah Dutcher was excited to get the process rolling. “I can say that I am quite anxious to get started,” she wrote via email. “Having been a Ballroom dance instructor for 10 years in Los Angeles, and again for 8 years here in Bishop, I know how much hard work it takes to get people to the ‘performance’ level. I hope my team is ready for a fun, but difficult, journey!

I do hope the event is a huge success!”

 

Kurt Smith and Jamie HalversonDisco 

Disco actually has some of its roots in various forms of ballroom, and can be very elegant when done well. Mammoth Hospital Anesthesiologist Dr. Kurt Smith and the Mammoth Lakes Foundation’s Jamie Halverson plan to put Studio 54 sheen on a disco routine for their dance.

“I picked out ‘Last Dance’ by Donna Summer, who died recently. Disco was sort of aerobics before there was aerobics in gyms,” Smith noted, emphasizing its natural athleticism, which he thinks is a bit overlooked in the dance world.

Their routine is based on one that was created by Smith for an intra-fraternity competition during his college days. Smith won, always a good reason to dig up the old moves and dig out the old Saturday Night Fever suit and dancing shoes!

Halverson said she’s also done a few turns on the disco dance floor back in the day. “I’m came out of the disco era,” she acknowledged. “I remember bell-bottom jeans, hip huggers, white and red checkered tops, collars that were super big with the sleeves flared out.” Look for their routine to be as much about the costumes as the dancing. “When I think of disco, I think of fashion,” Halverson quipped.

As mentioned, this team will be choreography its own moves.

“The toughest part of putting this together has been finding choreographers,” Ciccarelli said. “I couldn’t talk anyone into taking on two teams.”

 

Jennie Walker and Stu BrownCrazy like a Foxtrot

If it’s true that you can’t beat the classics, then Mammoth Hospital Emergency Medicine Doctor Jennie Walker and Town of Mammoth Lakes Recreation and Communication Director Stu Brown plan to highlight why the Foxtrot isn’t just formal, it’s also a lot of fun.

I was also a dancer for many years,” said Walker. “I studied mostly ballet and jazz, with some tap and a little ballroom experience. I made a short-lived attempt at a professional career, but realized that was not likely to be successful, so I went to medical school instead! I am really excited to have an opportunity to perform again!”

“My best friend was a ballroom dancer and I danced with my daughter at cotillion, which is the extent of my ballroom dancing experience,” Brown acknowledged. “But I would describe myself as a casual observer of ‘Dancing with the Stars.’” The duo hasn’t yet settled on music, but has started working out the steps.

Choreographing the pair is actress and theatre director Allison McDonell Page, who as it happens has a fair amount of dancing on her impressive resume. “I have little ballroom dance experience, though I hope to live vicariously through my great aunt who taught ballroom dancing for 40 years in Chapel Hill, North Carolina,” she said. “However, I was a dancer most of my life. I studied jazz and modern mostly. I choreographed through high school and college and was the Director of a Dance company at Harvard.

Page said she contemplated a career in musicals as a chorus girl, but wasn’t too sure of her singing voice and decided to change paths and become an actress. “I worked as an actress for 15 years in New York City, Los Angeles and theaters around the country. Though it’s been a while since I took a dance class, I did choreograph a number for last year’s high school production of “The Wizard of Oz” (she did “The Jitterbug” number). I think we will have a blast and will be the team to beat!”

 

Dancing with the Docs

Choreographer Pamela Stayden and Dr. Kim Escudero

Kim Escudero and Johnny TellerSalsa 

Dr. Kim Escudero loves to dance, but has never done so in a formal setting.

Now she’ll get her chance … if her partner John Teller shows up.

Johnny was late for practice on Wednesday because he’s busy competing in the Mammoth Motocross.

Mike Fiebiger, who employs Teller at Alpine Garage, is dubious of Teller’s talents.

“He can’t dance. He makes me look like Fred Astaire. You know white guys can’t dance. All we can do is slow dance.”

Fortunately Escudero, who’s half Puerto Rican, says dancing’s in her blood.

“She’s got great hips,” adds choreographer Pamela Stayden.

“And I’ve been pleasantly surprised [by Johnny],” Stayden added. “He’s been giving input. And they’ve got their song picked out.”

Teller and Escudero are dancing for Rhiannon’s kids, a fund set up for local children to help pay for families’ transportation costs if a child with serious medical issues needs to be transferred to a bigger hospital.

 

Ciccarelli said that there is a possibility of a sixth team if she can find another doctor to commit.

“There were zero takers when we first put the idea out there, but slowly the doctors have come around,” she said.

The competition will take place on Sept. 22 and money raised will go the hospital. Each team’s dance will last between 2-2.5 minutes. There will be two forms of judging at the gala. A panel of judges as well as a People’s Choice Award.

“The event is already bringing in people from all walks of life,” Ciccarelli said. Athletes, the medical community, DSES volunteers and more have already begun to approach her. Placing the doctors outside of their elements is a real draw.

Tickets for the Sept. 22 gala are $100. For sponsorship opportunities or to learn more, contact Greene at 760.924.4128 or Ciccarelli at 760.924.4015.

 

 

 

 

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