Six-decade Rotarian
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Andrew Edwards
After six decades of volunteer work, Newport Beach’s Earl Fusselman
still takes time to help out.
Fusselman, 87, is a longtime member of the Rotary Club -- he
joined the organization in 1944 after his discharge from the Army --
and is also a volunteer with the Newport Beach Police Department.
“What can you say about a guy like that?” Rotarian Frank F. Mead
III said. “He just keeps going forever.”
Fusselman served in the Army for four years and rose to the rank
of captain. During World War II, he was stationed stateside and
worked in the quartermasters corps, training units that would be sent
overseas.
He left the service after he contracted a grave illness from a rat
bite at a base near Phoenix, Fusselman said.
He recalled that he was so sick that Army officials told his
family members that there would not be enough time for them to visit
him at the hospital.
The grim prognosis was off the mark, however, and Fusselman
bounced back. After discharge, he started his own dry-cleaning
operation in Bell, where a neighboring businessman introduced him to
the Rotary Club.
“I just got out of the Army, and I was in the dry-cleaning
business, and a man from the hardware store down the block invited me
to join the Rotary Club,” Fusselman said.
As a Rotarian, Fusselman’s community- service projects have aided
the Meals on Wheels and hospice care programs, Mead said. Fusselman
has also traveled abroad to help start Rotary Clubs.
“It took me around the world,” Fusselman said. “I’ve visited 15 to
20 clubs outside the United States, and I’ve gotten to meet some
wonderful people.”
In the late 1940s, Fusselman journeyed to Cuba to encounter
Rotarians in Havana. At the meeting, Fusselman was impressed by the
lengths they went to in order to make sure everyone could understand
each other.
“I’ll never forget that,” he said. “They had a microphone and an
interpreter for every language that was there.”
Fusselman came to Newport Beach in 1965 and joined the
Newport-Balboa Rotary Club, where he was a member for 15 years before
switching to the Newport Irvine branch. In 1999, he was part of the
first class to graduate from the Newport Beach Police Department
Citizens’ Police Academy.
He now helps police by checking on vacationers’ homes, ticketing
drivers who park in handicapped parking spaces and helping out any
way he can, Sgt. Steve Shulman said.
“Anything that he does, he does with great enthusiasm,” Shulman
said.
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