Las Vegas Review-Journal

All here: Girls, boys, toys, joys

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▶ reviewjour­nal. com/sewell christmas

“I just wish, with all the money in this town, that more people would do this,” Bob Ellis said as students trickled into the school cafeteria, each wearing courtesy “junior officer” stickers handed out by Henderson police officers. “This is a joy. This is my Christmas.”

His Christmas includes hordes of screaming chil

GIFTS

dren, fighting their instinct to disobey orders to stay seated and run to Santa Claus as he strode into the room. As loud as his entry was, it was nothing compared with the moment when Santa gave the signal and a red curtain was pulled back to reveal a pile of toys.

Gifts for all

And what toys! The Ellises, who spent upward of $200,000 on gifts this year, worked with a new company, Caracao, to provide age-approriate toys for boys and girls at each grade level. The toys change each year, but Sandy, who helps shop, knows there are some everlastin­g trends.

Around third grade, girls tend to be into crafts. So they purchased three-in-one bead sets for all of them. Hot Wheels never go out of style, and that’s the gift first-grade boys took home.

The Ellises may have outdone themselves with the gifts for the fifth-graders. Girls received 7-inch tablet computers and boys were gifted small, Sky Phantom drones.

“It’s real exciting. We just love to watch the kids. They get crazy,” Sandy Ellis said.

Volunteers who have joined the Ellises’ expanding giveaway over the years distribute­d the gifts quickly and efficientl­y.

The gifts didn’t stop with the students.

UNLV’S new athletic director, Desiree Reed-francois, joined the festivitie­s and gave teachers tickets to the men’s basketball game against Boise State on Dec. 30, which is not a school night.

“It’s the teachers, the staff, the volunteers who see these kids everyday, they’re the heroes,” said Bob Ellis as he watched the presentati­on.

A history of giving back

For their efforts to spread holiday cheer, the Ellises will have their own school named after them on Beltrada Avenue and Via Italia in 2018-19, a decision made in October by the School Board.

Bob Ellis is the former president and CEO of Snap Towing, and he owned B&E Auto Auction before selling it a decade ago. He now owns R&S Investment Properties and R&S Leasing.

They have lived in the valley since the 1950s. Bob graduated from Rancho High School in Las Vegas, Sandy from Basic High School in Henderson. Bob’s alma mater has been the beneficiar­y of the couple’s generosity, too, which included a $50,000 donation to help homeless students.

Christmas gifts for schoolchil­dren aren’t the only way they give back. The Ellises have donated to the Henderson Libraries Foundation, UNLV and Nevada State College, focusing on educationa­l programs.

For their efforts, they were named Distinguis­hed Nevadans in 2015 by the Nevada System of Higher Education, two of 11 people honored that year for contributi­ons “to the cultural, scientific or social advancemen­t of Nevada.”

Contact Meghin Delaney at 702-383-0281 or mdelaney@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter,

 ?? Joel Angel Juarez ?? Sandy Ellis watches students gather for gifts Friday at C.T. Sewell Elementary School in Henderson. This is the 13th year that Ellis and her husband, Bob, have donated gifts to underserve­d children in Nevada.
Las Vegas Review-journal @jajuarezph­oto...
Joel Angel Juarez Sandy Ellis watches students gather for gifts Friday at C.T. Sewell Elementary School in Henderson. This is the 13th year that Ellis and her husband, Bob, have donated gifts to underserve­d children in Nevada. Las Vegas Review-journal @jajuarezph­oto...

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