Arizona Daily Star Sportsmen's Fund (Send a Kid to Camp)

Arizona Daily Star Sportsmen's Fund  (Send a Kid to Camp) Sending deserving kids from Southern Arizona to over night summer camp since 1947 Sportsmen's Fund History

by Abraham S. When I shed my G.I. The year was 1946.

(Abe) Chanin

Looking back over the half-century history of The Arizona Daily Star Sportsmen’s Fund, I am reminded how it all began: Eyes—that was how it all started, for I could not erase my memory of those wide-eyed children in Europe during World War II. uniform and returned to my desk at the Star, I remembered a Christmas party my fellow soldiers and I had put on for French youngsters in the V

osges Mountain village of Hunaweir. Why not, I thought, put on a Christmas party for youngsters in Tucson? The idea became reality after the visit to my sports department of a newcomer to Tucson, Clermont D. Loper, who had just been named executive director of the YMCA. I mentioned my idea to my visitor, “Why not put on a Christmas party for poor kids?”

“That’s a great idea,” Loper said, “but let’s not call them poor. Let’s call the ‘less-chance’ and let us give them a chance.”

We talked about how we would go about it along with Ricki Rarick, the classified ad manager for Tucson Newspapers. He was excited about working for youngsters because as an outstanding golfer, he already had been working with young caddies at El Rio Country Club. The three-way discussion resulted in naming The Arizona Daily Star Sportsmen’s Fund. The first venture would be a Christmas party. I took the idea to the Star’s publisher, William R. Mathews, who approved and started off the project with a $50 donation. The Christmas party was held in the Rendezvous Room of the old Santa Rita Hotel. Nick Hall, the flamboyant manager of the hotel, donated use of the room. Fred Stofft of Howard and Stofft helped us get started by donating odd items of sporting goods. Other firms donated candies and drinks and many celebrities from the local coaching world came to hand the gifts to the ‘less-chance’ youngsters. As youngsters were getting their gifts, we heard noises of a scuffle in the alley behind the Rendezvous Room. Lope—that is how he was popularly called—and I went into the alley where we found a number of youngsters. They said they had been invited to the party but were arguing about coming in to the party because they were so poorly dressed. We took them into the party. Now the key part of the new program was to begin. The Christmas party moved to the Fox Tucson theatre with movies, gifts and refreshments. Lope said he wanted to start a YMCA camping program and suggested the Sportsmen’s Fund might want to become a sponsor of less-chance kids. The plan was for the Y to select the campers, and Ricki and I would raise necessary funds. On the pages of the Star sports section I began a direct appeal to Tucsonans for cash gifts; it was a copy of The New York Times annual “fresh air fund”. Ricki came up with the idea of raising funds by sponsoring special golf matches. Over the years the Sportsmen’s Fund brought in celebrities including Bing Crosby, Phil Harris, Randolph Scott, and Jim Garner. Local golf pros including Dell Urich and Jimmy Hines donated their services, and the celebrities came without fees. In addition many sports event were sponsored by the Star Sportsmen’s Fund including annual sell-out appearance of the Harlem Globetrotters, a benefit baseball game between the Trotters and the bearded House of David, and spring training exhibitions matching the Cleveland Indians and Frank Sancet’s University of Arizona nine. Some of the state’s most spectacular sports events were sponsored including the first American appearance of the Chinese gymnastics team that brought Secret Service agents to Tucson to protect the visitors; the performance of the great Olga Korbut with the Russion gymnastics squad and Nadia Comenici’s stunning gymnastics skills with the Romanians. Tucsonans supported the Sportsmen’s Fund programs with enthusiasm, and the first summer camp was held in the Chiricahua Mountains with Ev Palmer as the Y camp director. When Lope brought Clarence S. (Chick) Hawkins to Tucson, the camp was moved to a site in the Catalina Mountains. The camp site was on the ranch of Elizabeth Wood; Lope had convinced her to donate the beautiful ranch to the Y for camping. Clermont Loper, now retired and living with his wife Ardis in Scottsdale, recalls “Chick and his wife LaVerne worked as a team, a wonderful team. While Chick handled the many details of running a camp, LaVerne became a mother to the boys and girls who came to camp—many getting their first vacation off the hot summer streets of Tucson.”

A winter camp was added to summer camping and now the project began to spread throughout southern Arizona. The Sportsmen’s fund brought youngsters to the Triangle-Y Ranch Camp from Benson, Nogales, Willcox, Casa Grande, Eloy and the Safford area. In addition, Christmas parties were taken to outlying areas—to the Indian reservation to the southwest of Tucson, into Sonora, Mexico towns. When a strike hit the Ray-Sonora area one winter, a car-load of gifts were taken there for a Christmas party. I recall that Mike De La Fuente helped us sponsor a Christmas party across the line in Nogales. He was the promoter of bull fights, and so the party was held in the ring. I can remember covering up parts of the animals killed in the ring before we brought in basketballs and footballs for the kids. I have a vivid memory of taking gifts to a small village in Sonora. When we got to the school on a cold December day the teachers had lined up the children from the doorway all the way out on the dirty street. We were invited to walk down the row of children, and I still remember looking down and seeing how many of them were barefoot. I remember, too, how it was that the Harlem Globetrotters first came to Tucson. One day I got a call from Bill Veeck, the dynamic promoter of the Cleveland Indians. He asked me to drive out to the Lazy Vee—his ranch 22 miles east of Tucson at the foot of the Rincon Mountains. When I got there, Veeck introduced me to a short, pudgy man. “Abe Chanin.” Veeck said with a wide grin, “meet Abe Saperstein!” Then Veeck proceded to tell the boss of the Globetrotters that he had to bring the great show to Tucson for the Sportsmen’s Fund and to give us a special arrangement. Saperstein agreed and that started a long and wonderful love match between Tucsonans and Meadowlark Lemon and his talented, comic teammates. When I left the newspaper and began teaching at the University of Arizona, Tom Foust took over promotion of the Sportsmen’s Fund and he has directed the program to even greater achievements. This year the Arizona Daily Star Sportsmen’s Fund turns 50 and the remarkable relationship between a newspaper, the YMCA and Tucsonans continues as a beacon of community pride in caring for ‘less-chance’ boys and girls.

Sending Southern Arizona Girl Scouts to Camp, with your support.
02/03/2023

Sending Southern Arizona Girl Scouts to Camp, with your support.

Thank you Tom. We are going to miss you.
05/29/2019

Thank you Tom. We are going to miss you.

Foust spent 44 years as a full-time employee and six as on-call reporter.

02/23/2018

The 2018 Summer Camp donation campaign is underway! Please support the children of Southern Arizona.

Thank you!!
11/12/2017

Thank you!!

Annual fundraiser helps send local boys and girls to overnight summer camp through the Arizona Daily Star’s Sportsmen’s Fund Send a Kid to Camp program.

Thank you!!
07/09/2017

Thank you!!

The title of this letter says it all.

Thank you!
05/15/2016

Thank you!

Donations accepted year-round to help send kids to camp.

Thank you!  First group of donations are in from the envelope in the Star last Thursday.  $20,000!  We are well on our w...
03/10/2016

Thank you! First group of donations are in from the envelope in the Star last Thursday. $20,000! We are well on our way to sending every needy kid to summer camp.

Today, we celebrate Los Fiesta de los Vaqueros and the kick off to the 2016 summer camp season by asking you to help sup...
02/25/2016

Today, we celebrate Los Fiesta de los Vaqueros and the kick off to the 2016 summer camp season by asking you to help support us in our efforts to send Southern Arizona's needy children to camp.

Look for envelope in the Star to send in donations.

Thank you Mrs. Hawkins for your support over the years.
01/28/2016

Thank you Mrs. Hawkins for your support over the years.

Read the Obituary and view the Guest Book, leave condolences or send flowers. | LaVerne Hawkins 90, of Tucson, went to be with her Lord and Savior on January 6, 2016. She was preceded in death by her parents, Herman and Caroline Oberfeld, her beloved husband, Clarence "Chick"

Thank you!
08/02/2015

Thank you!

We still need to raise $40,000 to pay for camp.

Our condolences go out to the Wing family.  The children of Southern Arizona are better off because of you and your fami...
07/14/2015

Our condolences go out to the Wing family. The children of Southern Arizona are better off because of you and your family. Thank you.

Read the Obituary and view the Guest Book, leave condolences or send flowers. | Bess Wing 6/23/1935 - 6/9/2015 Heaven is now a better place with her passing. Born in Tucson, one of ten children born to Ray and Hortense Acton, she grew up in Tucson and attended SS Peter and

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PO Box 16141
Tucson, AZ
85732

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