Monday, August 31, 2009

NOLA Musicans' Clinic Works to Save the Music



The New Orleans Musicians' Clinic (NOMC)is on a mission to preserve the music of New Orleans by providing free or low-cost health care to the musicians who keep the city alive. Dedicated in May 1998, NOMC became the first health initiative in the U.S. addressing the health care needs of musicians and their families.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Getting the Homeless the Confidence and Skills to Land a Job and A New Life


Project Vacant Streets is Frank Kelly's initiative to get the homeless back on their feet one job at a time. Each participant undergoes a series of transformations — emotional, professional and physical. The idea is that in less than a month, they gain the confidence to land a job through the skills learned. Kelly says he has helped nine people find jobs in the nearly two years since he started.

Kelly, a 32-year-old product director at Johnson & Johnson, describes the program's candidates as everyday Americans. He said most are not mentally ill or drug addicts, they have just suffered from chronic homelessness.

"They have an incredibly difficult time getting back into the work force," Kelly said.

As a second career, Kelly was already a motivational speaker, giving lectures at college campuses and work settings about leaving lasting impressions while achieving your goals. A friend suggested that Kelly speak at the Community Partnership for the Homeless in Miami, which each night houses about 700 of Miami-Dade County's estimated 4,300 homeless.

"My first reaction was what could I possibly convey to the homeless? I was almost afraid of walking into the shelter," he said. Once Kelly stepped inside the shelter, though, he said the room's energy convinced him that he needed to change Americans' misconceptions about homelessness.

Full Story @ MSNBC: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32494577/ns/us_news-wonderful_world/

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Helping Out The People of the Galápagos Islands Who Are Sometimes Overshadowed by the Wildlife


We came across a great story today in the Christian Science Monitor about Emily Pozo, is an American living in the Galápagos who focuses on education through her nonprofit group Galápagos ICE (for Immerse, Connect, and Evolve). Living in the Galápagos, famous for exotic wildlife, as an educator Emily turns her attention to the needs of its people.

She first visited the archipelago, some 600 miles west of Ecuador, on a trip while working for a study abroad organization. Like most of her colleagues, she fell in love with the varied and unusual wildlife here that may draw 170,000 tourists this year. But unlike many visitors, she saw something beyond the natural wonders: thousands of people struggling to make ends meet every day.

"I was enamored of this place," Ms. Pozo says, "but I also saw how much there is to do here."

Galápagos ICE collects supplies, builds furniture, and fixes safety hazards in elementary schools. At least 50 volunteers have headed to classrooms to support and improve English teaching. The non-profit draws on a network of volunteers, including visiting college students, missionaries, English teachers, and artists. So far, some 150 of them have passed through, paying their own way and contributing in various ways.

Full Story @ link: http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0803/p07s01-lign.html

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

From Ex-Dealers to Street Healers













From The Washington Post:

D.C.'s Ex-Dealers Back On Streets -- Saving Lives
Group Takes HIV Prevention to Old Haunts

By Darryl Fears
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, August 26, 2009

At a busy corner in the heart of Ward 7, Jamal Hawkins, a former drug dealer, embarked on a new career: getting residents hooked on HIV/AIDS prevention. His boss, Terrence Young, also a former dealer, said the path to success is simple.

"The same rapport you had with people you were selling drugs to, that's the same skill set you use to sell HIV and AIDS prevention," Young said recently. "The people skills you developed from that apply here."

Young demonstrated his technique in the parking lot of a 24-hour convenience store, beckoning to a woman who was passing by. "Hey," he called out. "I got something for you. I got some condoms here if you need them." She walked away with a fistful.

In wards 7 and 8 -- where the HIV infection rates are among the highest in the District, where many of the city's ex-convicts live and where many of its arrests occur -- former drug dealers are being recruited as HIV counselors.

"We don't say in our job description that only drug dealers need apply, but the reality is that men and women who soldiered illegally on the streets have the skills for what we do," said A. Toni Young, executive director of the nonprofit Community Education Group. Young runs the 11-month-old program and helped conceive it.

With his smooth boyish face, Hawkins looks the part of the choirboy he once was, growing up in suburban Maryland. But he was drawn to the streets.

"It was just the lifestyle. I always wanted to live life in the fast lane," he said, standing beside one of the program's vans, dressed in an oversized T-shirt and droopy jeans that bunched over snow-white sneakers. "I was always affiliated with people who did dirt in D.C."

The District has the highest HIV infection rate of any major city in the country. Ward 8 has the city's highest infection rate, 2.8 percent, and Ward 7 is not far behind at 2.4 percent. The two wards have what HIV/AIDS workers call hard-to-reach populations, the people least likely to be tested for and informed about HIV/AIDS and most likely to spread it. They are the kind of people drug dealers come face to face with every day.

Young said she knows what critics will say: A former drug dealer is bound to slide back into criminal behavior. "I think that's the problem," she said. "We have to provide an opportunity for them to do something different from what we've known them to do. . . . We're not just trying to give people a job. We're trying to change them, and change a community's dynamic."

In the past year, at least two workers have stumbled, contributing to doubts about whether the program can succeed. Last month, a counselor was arrested for narcotics possession; earlier this year, a second worker failed a D.C. Corrections drug test, Young said.

"I had some hard choices to make," she said. "Do I say, 'You're fired'? Or do I let the justice system run its course? I'm trying to change people, but if you're being charged with a crime, that's a problem."

About 20 men and women, most of whom have criminal records, have completed the program's training courses since it began in October, Young said. "If I've managed to hold onto 18 out of those 20, I'll live with that. You have to consider that these workers have distributed more than 100,000 condoms east of the Anacostia River, they have tested more than 2,000 residents of wards 7 and 8, and they have referred more than 100 people to substance abuse care and treatment, and this area needs that."

The idea for the program started with a family member's fall from grace. Young's nephew Terrence was jailed for a drug conviction.

When he returned home in 2003, he was tired of a criminal life where rival dealers and police were gunning for him. With a new fianceé and a baby on the way, the 37-year-old broke down: "I don't know what I'm going to do."

Several years later, his aunt was planning to start a condom distribution campaign east of the Anacostia River and had an idea. "I saw something in him that he didn't see," she said. "I said I need someone who knows the streets."

As it turned out, Terrence Young was a sharp student, completing courses on HIV transmission and prevention and on how to help people change behaviors that lead to infection. He also learned how to give a rapid HIV test. Now he returns to his old haunts -- jails, halfway houses and probation offices -- to talk about HIV. He leaves fliers that offer jobs in HIV prevention for ex-convicts.

He tells them that he can't promise them the same money they made on the streets, but he can give them respect, decency and a positive role in their community.

Kehinde Hall was more than interested. After serving a prison sentence for armed robbery, Hall, 30, wanted a new life.

A return to drug dealing was out of the question, he said. "I got tired of looking over my shoulder, wondering who was comin' up behind me," he said. "I wanted to do right. I wanted to give back to the community, give my family a reason to look up to me, so that when I give my child a dollar for ice cream, it's a clean dollar."

For the first time, thug life had an advantage. "It's hard to get a Harvard student to come out here and do what we do because he couldn't relate," Hall said from the backseat of a Chevy Mark III van as it bounded down Minnesota Avenue, past blighted corners with check-cashing centers and dollar stores.

Last month, the old life caught up with Hall. He was arrested for narcotics possession after police officers searched him near his house. He is charged with two counts of possession of a controlled substance.

Hall said police searched him -- without cause -- and found nothing. But one of the officers said he saw Hall toss something near a trash bin. A search turned up drugs.

A. Toni Young said that's not the full story. Police came to Hall's house in response to a noise complaint. He and some friends were grilling in the back yard and blasting music. When the officers ordered him to turn the music down, Hall yelled at them. Had Hall been polite to the neighbor or the police, there would have been no incident, she said.

"That's what we're trying to teach here," Young said. "I blame Kehinde. The police were just doing their job."

Hall and Hawkins entered the program together and underwent three months of training for certification in HIV prevention. The entry-level outreach position, handing out condoms and referring people to support services such as job placement, pays about $28,000 a year.

Hawkins, 25, a fast learner, now earns about $34,000 a year.

Hawkins recalled a woman he met at a public housing complex in May, his first month of giving HIV tests. She paced nervously outside the van, he said, and when she stepped inside, "she was panicking." Hawkins went through the routine, checking off her behaviors as part of a risk assessment. "She was shootin' dope," he said. "Sharing needles. Having sex without condoms while high. She was saying yes to everything."

Hawkins looked the woman in the eye, the way he had been trained. "I told her I was worried," he said. "I said, 'I can't tell you to stop what you're doing, but I can tell you that if you're going to do it, at least be careful.' "

He swabbed her mouth. The result was negative. "She said, 'I'm going to take a rack of condoms and nobody is going to have sex with me without a condom anymore.' "

Five years ago, Hawkins was arrested after selling crack cocaine to an undercover officer in Virginia. He served three years, mostly at a federal prison in West Virginia, watching men engage in sex, worrying about AIDS, about being attacked. He said he decided to change his life.

"It was the guidance I got in prison," Hawkins said. "Guys who had longer stints told me, 'This isn't where you want to be.' "

As an outreach worker, Hawkins offers similar advice, and it's not always welcome. During one outing in Southeast, he said, he crossed paths with young drug dealers he knew. "They were like, 'Damn, what's this?' " He described his new life as an HIV counselor, a job with a paycheck. "Some of them tried to recruit me back."

One day late last month, the program vans rolled to a stop along a curb outside the Benning Terrace public housing complex. Hawkins stepped out with Kamau Hall, 33, Kehinde Hall's older brother. There wasn't a soul in the courtyard.

Kamau Hall, who was convicted of destruction of public property in connection with a 2001 drug arrest, wasn't worried. He knows how things go down at Benning Terrace.

"This is a word-of-mouth spot," he said. "Somebody will call somebody. Once that call goes out, they'll be coming from everywhere, all different directions."

A Unique Farm Field Trip!


A field trip to a farm is a fun day for nearly any kid. But this trip is extra-special for a particular group of children -- they're homeless and have never visited one before. The kids visiting today live in Salvation Army homeless shelters.

Katchie Farm was started in Kinderhook, New York, by Liz Neumark to support her high-end catering business, Great Performances. She decided to open the farm to children in memory of her daughter Sylvia. So far 1,000 of them have visited The Sylvia Center this summer.

Those who work at the farm hope to nourish both their bodies and their spirits.
Although the trip may not produce any budding farmers, the trip may inspire some new eating habits.

Video & Story courtesy of WABC @ link: http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=news/local&id=6982312





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For more information, visit GreatPerformances.com and click on the farm tab.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

NYC Youth Meet Their Peers From Around the World











The grounds of the United Nations were abuzz earlier this month when the kids of New York City joined with their peers from around the world at the 10th annual International Youth Day. The event was organized by Directions for Our Youth , a non-profit organization that provides opportunities for kids & teens in impoverished communities to interact with cultures from around the world. Young people from the South Bronx were invited to participate in this year's Intl. Youth Day where they shared their talents & exchanged cultural lessons with the youth of South Africa, South America, and South Asia. A live, interactive element was also part of this year's program. Kids were able to communicate, live, via satellite with their peers in Ghana. This year's event centered on climate change and the growing number of unemployed youth.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Website: MAKES ME THINK




An Imprint friend recently shared this site with us: www.makesmethink.org. MakesMeThink is an online community where readers can post their life stories on a daily basis. The posts are thought-provoking and the mission is to create positive change through the stories of others. The founders of MakesMeThink, Marc & Angel, believe everyday encounters "force us to stop and rethink the truths and perceptions we have ingrained in our minds. These encounters are educationally priceless." Through sharing our own stories & reading about the life experiences of others, there is a moment of self-reflection, and an eagerness to grow, learn and make a positive imprint on others. Be sure to check out the site & share the link with others.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Clean Water for All!



A photo of a poor woman holding a glass of dirty water might not make you stop and stare. But what about a photo of an upper-class woman holding the same dirty water?

The photos are just one way 33-year-old Scott Harrison is trying to get you to start paying attention - to water.

For many of us, drinking water is taken for granted, but for many people around the world, drinking water is inaccessible.


Watch CBS Videos Online

Charity:water the non-profit Harrison started uses graphics that catch your eye and steal your heart - or an ad that imagines New Yorkers collecting drinking water from Central Park.

Charity:water has raised more than $10 million nationwide in just three years.

A well goes for about $5,000 and donors can see exactly where their money went.

The charity is spearheading almost 1,400 projects and counting.

To find out more and to contribute visit: www.charitywater.org

Full story @ http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/08/18/eveningnews/main5250639.shtml

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

From Homeless to Health Care Provider














VIDEO: Homeless Man-Turned Health Care Provider


Stan Brock has provided free health care for 25 years. Through his Remote Area Medical Foundation, Brock has staged 346 clinics in 12 states, mostly in rural counties. His most recent clinic though is not in a typical location for RAMF - Brock has set up shop in Los Angeles for 8 days. He's treating thousands of LA workers who are either underinsured or uninsured and can't afford basic medical treatment. His foundation hopes to treat 8,000 patients while in LA - that's the equivalent of $200,000 in medical care. All of his clinics are run by volunteers - from the receptionists to the nurses & doctors. Brock is all too familiar with the the lack of funds for health care - at one point in his life he was homeless & unable to take care of his medical needs. Next up for the Remote Area Medical team - Roane County, Tennessee. They're heading there in September.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Tampa Bay Rays Radio Announcer Sees Baseball in a Different Way


This is the incredible story of sports anchor Enrique "The Volcano" Oliu, who was born blind. Enrique is Spanish voice of Tampa Bay Rays baseball and has an incredible gift for explaining a game he has never seen.


Watch CBS Videos Online

Link to text: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/08/17/eveningnews/main5247735.shtml?tag=cbsnewsTwoColUpperPromoArea

Monday, August 17, 2009

4 the Love of the Game



4 the Love of the Game is a non-profit organization that helps young Native Americans get a higher education. Through this sports & academic mentorship program, young people have an incentive to excel academically rather than falling under the influence of alcohol and drug abuse. 4 the Love of the Game was also established to boost pride in the Native American heritage & promote a healthy lifestyle for kids. To learn more, check out their website: http://www.4loveofthegame.org

Friday, August 14, 2009

Blind Dog Has His Own Seeing Eye Dog


Bonnie and Clyde are a bonded pair of Border Collies—but, in a one-of-a-kind twist, Bonnie serves as a seeing eye dog for Clyde, who is completely blind.

The original Bonnie and Clyde were together until the bitter end—and, though they’re not robbing any banks, the same goes for another couple named for the reckless gangsters: a pair of Border Collies.

Bonnie and Clyde were rescued after being abandoned on a street in the middle of a storm.

While at The Meadow Green Dog staff soon realized that these were no ordinary dogs: although they both seemed fully functional when they were together, Clyde was lost without Bonnie—literally. As it turned out, the five-year-old dog was completely blind, and relied upon two-year-old Bonnie to be his own seeing eye dog.

Sue Cootes, 59, who runs the rescue centre with her daughter Cherie, said it was incredible to see how Bonnie took care of Clyde.

"Without Bonnie Clyde would be lost. They can't be separated, we need someone to take them both on."

But Cootes’ worries were unfounded: after the article’s publication, more than 500 people called the Meadow Green Dog center, offering to take in Bonnie and Clyde. The two dogs have now been adopted by an animal lover who has a large home in the country, providing ample space for the pair of Collies to run around and play together.

Vicky Bell, a spokeswoman for Guide Dogs for the Blind Association, said she had never heard of a dog voluntarily acting as a guide dog for another dog.

She said: "This is a very unusual case – it's such a lovely story.


Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/5897234/Blind-border-collie-gets-his-own-guide-dog.html

Source:http://gimundo.com/news/article/blind-dog-has-his-own-seeing-eye-dog/

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Artist Paints the World With Google Street View



Bill Guffey has never walked the streets of London, New York or Barcelona. He has never visited the coast of Maine or watched the sun set in Italy over a Florentine villa.

But if you looked around his rural Kentucky studio, you would never know it.

Tableaus from European cities and every U.S. state (except for Hawaii) cover the walls of his home, illustrating the adventures of a presumably well-traveled artist. Yet the self-taught oil painter said he has never physically been to 99 percent of the places he has captured on canvas.

In 30 seconds on his computer, he can fly around the world with Google Street View and paint any place his cursor lands. The mapping tool give Guffey and other users a street-level window to many places in the world, navigating 360-degree horizontal and 290-degree vertical unbroken panoramas.

See full story @ link: http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/Story?id=8295043&page=1

"Imprint Moment" With Taylor Jones



This week's "Imprint Moment" is brought to you by Taylor Jones, an actress at Tada Youth Theater. Taylor is a positive force when she hits the stage, engaging her audiences with her effervescent personality. See how Taylor is leaving her imprint on NYC.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Dancing against all odds



Dancer Portland Kiera Brinkley, 16, who is a quadruple amputee has achieved her unlikely dream to dance.

She dreamt of not only becoming a dancer, but long ago made up her mind she would perform at the Julliard School. Brinkley went to New York City and made her dream come true.

When Brinkley was 2 years old, she contracted a bacterial infection. Doctors had to remove her arms and legs, but they could not take away her love of dance.

“Never stop, never think that the life you have now is all that you can have,” said Brinkley. “Just go out and do what you love to do.”

Source: KATU in Portland, Oregon
http://www.katu.com/news/52476372.html

Documentary Gives Voice to Kids of 'Missile City'












From NBC News:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32316733/ns/us_news-giving/

It has been a “quiet” spell in Sderot, weeks since the last alarm was sounded warning the residents of the southern Israeli border town of an impending missile strike. It is a sound they are all too familiar with.

In eight years, the city has been the target of about 10,000 missiles fired by Palestinian militants based in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip. The warning sirens and the strikes have taken its most serious toll on children. From newborns to teenagers, the children of Sderot sleep in fear with their parents, often wet their beds, and can experience much more severe physical and psychological problems.

Liane Thompson, an American producer and director based in nearby Tel Aviv, is working with Noam Bedein and Meital Ohayon from the Sderot Media Center to create a feature-length documentary, "Children of Missile City," on the plight of the youngsters. Studies suggest that nearly 90 percent of the children in Sderot suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. The Resilience Center in Sderot is the only facility available to treat children for psychological issues. It is in jeopardy of closing come December if it does not receive more funding. The center provides psychological counseling to the children, as well as programs for parents to help cope with the constant threat. It is also a safe haven.

Thompson, a two-time Emmy-nominated producer, says, “I hope to create awareness about Sderot and the situation. More than Sderot, awareness about post-traumatic stress disorder.” The documentary will follow the journey of several children in Sderot and give a voice to controversy in Israel. Thompson hopes funding is generated for the documentary so that the producers can create awareness for the center and ultimately generate funds to keep it open.

Red Alert
When residents in Sderot hear the Red Alert, they have 15 seconds to find shelter. That is just a little longer than the time it took to read the first two sentences of this paragraph. For local mother Batya Edry, “It's very scary … it's not very much time.”

That kind of pressure has taken its toll on the children. Yehudit Bar Hai must deal with the effects first-hand. As a local resident and trauma expert for NATAL [The Israel Center for Victims of Terror and War], she has treated children of all ages. She once visited the home of a 3-year-old boy who had broken his legs at age 1 during a missile attack. The boy was “afraid from going out of the room at home that is built as a shelter. He’s afraid of going out to the bedroom, to the kitchen, to the living room, and he spent over three weeks inside this room.”

The children are so paranoid of the noise that even a loud microphone in the mall can startle them. Bar Hai has even been called on to comfort the parents of a newborn baby. Their anxiety about the safety of their child was so severe that they transmitted their stress to the infant boy, she says. She spent hours on the phone with the baby’s parents explaining to them why their baby was not sleeping or eating well and how to make the situation better.

A place called home
Why do the residents in Sderot choose to stay? Most have no choice. The Edry family has made Sderot their home for more than 17 years. As a mother, Batya Edry says, “I have no other place to go. My husband has his work here. My kids have their friends. I mean, right now we don’t even know where to go because it’s getting all over Israel.” Her daughter, Shoshana Edry, despite having her school hit by a rocket, says, “I’m not afraid from the missiles, because I’m getting used to it.”

Thompson, who spent many years in America as a journalist, says without the Resilience Center, the children of Sderot are likely to keep suffering. "I don’t think there’s a single town in the United States that suffers from the threat of a daily attack," she says. "There’s no comparison, there’s only contrast.”

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

R.I.P. Eunice Kennedy Shriver founder of the Special Olympics


Eunice Kennedy Shriver died early today at the age of 88 surrounded by relatives at a Hyannis hospital. She carried on the family's public service tradition by founding Special Olympics and championed the rights of the mentally disabled. As celebrity, social worker and activist, Shriver was credited with transforming America's view of the mentally disabled from institutionalized patients to friends, neighbors and athletes.Her efforts were inspired in part by the struggles of her mentally disabled sister, Rosemary.

Read more about this incredible woman @ http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090811/ap_on_re_us/us_obit_eunice_kennedy_shriver;_ylt=Akxs4hLboUCrSnNhOe57lgas0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTNjbHB1NWpyBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMDkwODExL3VzX29iaXRfZXVuaWNlX2tlbm5lZHlfc2hyaXZlcgRjcG9zAzEEcG9zAzIEcHQDaG9tZV9jb2tlBHNlYwN5bl90b3Bfc3RvcnkEc2xrA2pma3NzaXN0ZXJldQ--

Priest's Mission: Save Parishioners From Foreclosure













A Los Angeles priest is on a new mission. In addition to preaching the gospel & saving souls, the Reverend John Lasseigne is now on a mission to save his parishioners from foreclosure. The 44-year-old priest at Mary Immaculate Church says many of his church members have been hit hard by the foreclosure crisis & he has decided to take action. Praying for his flock, lobbying politicians and negotiating with lenders, are daily tasks on Lasseigne's agenda. After uniting with nonprofit groups and 3 neighboring churches, Lasseigne started financial workshops for homeowners. Hundreds of families signed up & numerous success stories are told daily, but that doesn't stop the priest to continue lobbying congressmen, councilmen and corporate executives for laws, funds & loan reductions.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Millions of Dollars Left By Unlikely Sources


These stories made headlines over the weekend - a homeless man from Phoenix left behind a $4 million estate. He requested much of the money go to National Public Radio. In a separate story, a holocaust survivor, homeless and living on the streets of New York City, left $100,000 to Hebrew University - she had no known connection to the school. Both benefactors passed away a couple years ago, but their stories are just now getting media attention. Two unsung heroes who lived simple lives in an effort to make a positive change in the lives of others.

Friday, August 7, 2009

An Angel In Queens, New York: School Bus Driver Responsible For 70,000 Hot Meals And Counting...(Video)



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5KTN0xXiHgI&feature=player_embedded

Jorge Munoz has spent the last few years tirelessly cooking, packing and giving free, hot meals to hungry people every day under a subway stop--some 70,000 in total. The 46 year-old Munoz says he found his passion and path in service after choosing to stop turning his cheek to a growing problem, so prevalent in his neighborhood, and so many other communities across America.

Munoz says he spends more than half of his salary, of roughly $700 per week, buying food from local grocery stores. Every night, for the past four years, Munoz comes home from work, takes a quick coffee break, then heads out to diligently collect food donations from the community and then shops for more groceries. He heads home to meet a team, consisting of his mother, sister, 5-year-old nephew and a friend. Together, they are a well-oiled machine, as they multiply whatever they're having for dinner into, by 120 to 140 home cooked meals, carefully packed with love and care

His stove, isn't fully operating anymore because it's been overused to cook food in bulk. Because the stove is broken, he carries huge restaurant sized vats of food up to his sister's apartment to cook-- just so he can make his daily deadline. "They depend on me," says Munoz. Even with an injured back, he never once complains about the love and labor he puts into his daily routine of service.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Meet the Nation's 'Outstanding Oldest Worker'


Yesterday afternoon, on his 101st birthday, Borden, a practicing lawyer, was honored as the nation's "Outstanding Oldest Worker for 2009" by Experience Works, a nonprofit group dedicated to highlighting the workforce contributions of seniors.

To qualify for the honor, workers have to be at least 100 years old, said Cynthia Metzler, the organization's president. The other criteria are vague. But Borden was an obvious choice.

"He's got energy, he's got enthusiasm, he's got passion," Metzler said. "He's really the model we're looking for."

In an office lined with plaques and awards for community service, Borden said he is most proud of his reputation as an attorney.

He specializes in probate and real estate, still taking depositions and representing clients at the courthouse, though he leaves contested cases to a younger partner.

"It's not unusual for him to come in and do five cases at a time – bang, bang, bang, bang, bang" said Linda Hagman, the county probate auditor and – as it happens – Larry Hagman's sister in law.

"There are younger attorneys who stumble or forget things, but Jack doesn't do that."

Full Story @ link: http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/080509dnmetoldestworker.4bffaa0.html

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

"Imprint Moment" With Shawn Best



This week's "Imprint Moment" is brought to you by Shawn Best, Director of Admissions at King's College. Shawn serves as a mentor to students in New York City, encouraging young people to leave a legacy and make a positive change.

A Joyous Homecoming!


Some truly good news!

Freed U.S. journalists Euna Lee and Laura Ling are back in the U.S. are being detained in North Korea since March 17 for entering the country illegally.before being sentenced in June to 12 years hard labor. Truly good news for the Lee and Ling families!

Former President Bill Clinton following rare talks with reclusive leader Kim Jong Il, who pardoned the women.


Watch CBS Videos Online

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Billboards of Hope












Article from The New Zealand Herald:

RHODE ISLAND: Some Americans put out of work by the latest recession are driving past billboards with messages like: "Interesting fact about recessions ... they end."

Another reads: "Self worth is greater than net worth." A third says: "This will end long before those who caused it are paroled."

Drivers across America are seeing those and similar messages as part of a billboard campaign dubbed "Recession 101" funded by an anonymous East Coast donor who was depressed about how the country was reacting to the economy's tailspin.

The campaign began last month and is now appearing on more than 1000 billboards, including a spot in New York's Times Square.

Designer Charles Robb said his client wanted people to realise America had suffered recessions before and made it through.

"One of the lines is, 'Stop obsessing about economy, you're scaring the children.' That's the overriding concept of the thing," said Robb, founder of Charchin Creative in Florida.

Members of the Outdoor Advertising Agency of America had donated the space, printing materials and labour needed for the campaign, said agency spokesman Jeff Golimowski.

Some in hard-hit Rhode Island say it is hard to put a lighthearted spin on the downturn when people are worried about losing their jobs and homes, while others share the billboards' sentiments.

"History has proven that we get into recessions and we get out of them," said 41-year-old Paul Sullivan. "Whether it's perception or reality, we have to think this too shall pass."

Leonard Lardaro, an economist with the University of Rhode Island, said people should not lose hope in a crisis and should instead look for opportunity, preparing themselves for other jobs or the economy's eventual turnaround.

"For people who are very capable and talented who lost their jobs, it wears away at you. It takes away your sense of worth, which it shouldn't do," Lardaro said.

"Don't think in a recession that nothing good can or does happen."

Lardaro said he liked the posters but they were not enough to fix people's spirits by themselves.

"This person might need to have those signs posted in Rhode Island a lot longer than other states," he said.

The state's 12.1 per cent unemployment rate in May tied with South Carolina for third-highest in the country behind only Michigan and Oregon - all of which are also getting the billboards.

Gail Robnett, 53, from Exeter, said she did not know anyone unaffected by the recession and wondered about the campaign's effectiveness.

"You're not paying attention to stuff like that when you're trying to put groceries on the table."

Robb - who also designed the "God Speaks" billboards from 1999 that featured such insights as "Keep using my name in vain and I'll make rush hour longer" - said he understood that perspective.

"If you just lost your job and your house, this campaign is not going to do a thing for you. That's a whole different set of parameters," he said.

"If you're like most of America, you've still got a job and you're making your mortgage payment.

"You may not be spending what you normally spend because you're afraid of what's going on."

Mostly, Robb said, the messages were to remind people of the country's resiliency and optimism. For example, the billboard that 24-year-old Ryan Korsak saw said, "Bill Gates started Microsoft in a recession."

"I appreciate the sentiment," said Korsak, who works for a Providence software company. "But I'm kind of not Bill Gates."

Monday, August 3, 2009

High school teammates carry on

















You'll definitely want to take the time to check out this story from ESPN. Two high school wrestlers, one blind and one with no legs, discover the meaning of true friendship:
High school teammates carry on