Monday, March 22, 2010

4th Grader Raises Thousands for WWII Vets


Justin Peterson is a 9-year-old with an apparent knack for fundraising.

The Chewelah boy has raised more than $3,689 since late last year to help the region’s Honor Flight program with its mission: sending World War II veterans to Washington, D.C., to see their war memorial.

“I’m just really surprised because I didn’t think we’d get this much,” Peterson said. “At first my goal was only $600, but we well cleared that. Now I like $4,000.”

He has persuaded people to donate through public speaking engagements, a letter campaign, a loose-change drive and a taco feed.

Recently, his efforts got a mention on a local radio station, said Tony Lamanna, a Spokane police officer and regional Honor Flight director. That prompted a $1,200 pledge from an anonymous donor.

“It’s been a lot of fun,” said the boy’s mom, Elizabeth Peterson. “We’ve been receiving a couple checks per day from area VFW posts.”

Justin Peterson’s inspiration came after he started interviewing World War II vets for a school project at Gess Elementary School. The fourth-grader has talked to seven or eight vets now, he said.

“One of them, he was a mine sweeper. He blew up mines so his fellow ships could come in,” he said. “That’s one of my favorite stories. I have so many.”

Peterson has raised more by himself than all of Greenacres Middle School in Spokane Valley ($1,400) or all of Willard Elementary School in Spokane ($2,200), Lamanna said.

“We are going to be taking five or six trips this year,” Lamanna said. In all, about 200 veterans will be able to see their memorial.

Justin’s fundraising effort will support six veterans, Lamanna said. “It’s phenomenal.”

-Jody Lawrence-Turner [The Spokesman-Review]

Story Link: http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2010/mar/19/9-year-old-a-fundraising-phenomenon/?print-friendly

Woman Donates Tax Return, Wins Lottery!

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy



Renee Green of Bellevue, Washington, recently donated her tax return to the Haiti relief efforts. What happened to her in return for her good deed? She won the lottery - $50,000 to be exact! Check out the video to learn more!

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Historic Choice - Woman Named H.S. Football Coach



CNN Story Link: http://www.cnn.com/2010/LIVING/03/11/woman.football.coach/index.html

(CNN) -- A high school in Washington, D.C., on Friday named a former women's professional football player as its head varsity football coach, a move that a national women's sports advocacy group calls historic.

Natalie Randolph, 29, a science teacher at Calvin Coolidge Senior High School, was introduced as the school's head football coach Friday in a press conference.

"We needed to find the best leader, role model, coordinator and instructor for our young men," Coolidge principal Thelma Jarrett said. "Natalie passed our first test -- she's proven herself as a great organizer, a leader who is knowledgeable about the sport as a player and a coach."

Students and faculty, along with Randolph's loved ones and former D.C. Diva teammates were on hand for the announcement as Mayor Adrian Fenty decreed March 12, 2010, "Natalie Randolph Day" in Washington.

Randolph was a wide receiver for the D.C. Divas women's pro football team and a standout sprinter and hurdler at the University of Virginia. She has experience coaching boys, having been an assistant football coach for Washington's H.D. Woodson High School in 2006 and 2007.

But now she's stepping into the head coaching role, extremely rare for women in high school football, though It's not clear how many women have been head coaches for boys' high school football teams.

Randolph said gender would not make a difference in her new role.

"While I am proud to be part of what this all means, being female has nothing to do with it. I love football, I love football. I love teaching. I love these kids," she said Friday.

"My role as head coach is to do all that I can to help these young men, these students, reach their goals. I want to make their families, the school, the city proud of us as a team, not me."

Randolph said she had already sought out some members of her coaching staff.

In a Thursday story about Randolph's hiring, The Washington Post reported that another Washington teacher, Wanda Oates, was named head football coach at a different Washington high school in 1985. But she was removed a day later after coaches who didn't want to coach against her pressured the school district, the Post reported.

Clell Wade Coaches Directory Inc., a company that keeps a database of interscholastic coaches, doesn't keep track of gender, owner Karen Wade-Hutton said.

But Wade-Hutton, whose family has been keeping track of interscholastic sports through the company for 50 years, said that although she's heard of women who were assistant football coaches at high schools, she's "never heard of a female head coach at a high school football team."

The New York-based Women's Sports Foundation "congratulates Natalie Randolph on her historic mark," the group's CEO, Karen Durkin, said in an e-mailed statement Thursday.

"Girls and women -- along with their fathers, sons and brothers -- now have clear evidence that the gridiron ceiling can be broken. Natalie's hiring will serve as a much-needed catalyst for women in leadership positions across all sports," Durkin said.

Rich Daniel, the Divas' general manager, said Randolph will win over anyone skeptical about her ability to coach in an almost exclusively male sport. He referenced her assistant position at Woodson, where she worked with wide receivers.

"I know their passing game was one of the best in the league," Daniel said. "She went through some of the same things she'll go through now: Do you know how to coach? Can you play? But you can ask that of males, too. That's not unique to her being a female.

"People will have that initial reaction, but they'll realize she ... really knows what she's talking about."

Randolph's attorney, Lawrence Wilson, said, "I think everybody is pretty excited about it, not just because she's making history, frankly, but I think they're just excited about having Natalie Randolph."

Wilson, who knew Randolph at Virginia, where he also was a track and field athlete, said she is a "soft-spoken teacher -- and I'm sure a coach -- with a swift sword."

"She has a quiet demeanor about her but has no problem getting respect from people," he said.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Giving the Gift of Time - 5 Inspiring Stories



From Real Simple Magazine:http://www.realsimple.com/work-life/life-strategies/gifts-of-time-00000000030604/index.html

Empowering Girls
Jocelyn Allen
Age: 40
Hometown: Farmington Hills, Michigan
Single mother of one son

Whether she’s attending a Detroit Pistons game, strolling through a museum, or playing golf, Jocelyn is hard to miss, what with the 30 tween and teen girls she has in tow. Jocelyn, the vice president of public affairs for OnStar, heads up Divas4Life, an organization for girls between the ages of 8 and 18 that encourages them to become, in her words, “determined, inspired, victorious, and adventurous.”

The idea came to Jocelyn in 2002, while she was volunteering as youth director at St. John Evangelist Temple of Truth, in Detroit’s beleaguered Northend community. A longtime member of the congregation, Jocelyn had witnessed parents struggling to provide the basics for their families. “Detroit’s youth are the ones hardest hit by the problems that plague this city,” she notes. “I have been tremendously blessed, and I felt I could be a good role model for young girls.”

In 2003 Jocelyn started Divas4Life to provide her students with “access to mentors who look like them, have overcome the odds, and are giving back to their communities,” she says. Word spread through the neighborhood, and soon Jocelyn had dozens of girls eager to join.

From that point on, Jocelyn, with the help of her all-volunteer board, has arranged weekly field trips for her girls. One week they might go horseback riding; the next, they might attend a performance of La Bohème. Occasional etiquette lessons and money-management and college-prep courses are offered, as are lunches with successful African-American women. (The costs of Divas events are funded by board members or by donations from local companies.) “With everything we do, I want the girls to learn a lesson,” Jocelyn says. “I don’t want them to sense any limits.”

Since Divas began, more than 75 girls have participated in the program (pictured here, six current members). Many become high achievers; this year’s group boasts honor students, violinists, and sports stars. Shyniece Hardwick, who joined Divas when she was 12, is one such success story. “After my mother left, I had no female to guide me,” says Shyniece, now 21, who was raised by her father. “Divas taught me what’s right, what’s wrong―and it’s why I’m in college today.” Shyniece considers Divas a lifeline, so much so that she now works for Jocelyn as the group’s first intern while completing her senior year at Eastern Michigan University.

No matter how busy Jocelyn is at work or with her son, Michael Davis Jr., 17, she says she never tires of running the organization. “It’s rewarding to be there when the girls need someone to listen to them, to tell them they are worthy,” Jocelyn says. “I may not be able to save the whole world, but I can make an impact on these young women’s lives.”

Copy & paste this link to read about 4 other inspiring stories: http://www.realsimple.com/work-life/life-strategies/gifts-of-time-00000000030604/index.html

Monday, March 8, 2010

Man & Dog Reunited & It Feels So Good



Story from The Oregonian: http://www.oregonlive.com/news/index.ssf/2010/03/after_two_years_apart_portland.html

The story of the man, his dog and the lost and found began on a spring day two years ago near an open field in Chicago.

Roger Mallette was playing with his black lab, Ike, when his cell phone buzzed. Mallette turned around, took the call and Ike took off.

"It was extremely painful," Mallette said Sunday at his office in Southeast Portland. "I never got over it."

For the longest time, it seemed to Mallette the story would end right there and he'd never see Ike again. It seemed like all he could do was nurse his broken heart and tell friends about the dog that got away. But then, late last year, Mallette got a phone call and the whole story changed.

Mallette, who is 45, found Ike on Craigslist in 2004 when he lived in Seattle. He went to pick him up and found his new friend in a muddy backyard, bounding around, full of energy. This did not bode well.

Ike is a runner. If he's not on a leash, he'll sniff around and take off. Mallette estimates that in their first few months together, Ike ran away five or six times.

But Mallette always managed to find his dog. He gave Ike a rabies tag and had a microchip implanted between Ike's shoulder blades, both of which identified Mallette as his owner.

Together, in early 2007, Ike and Mallette moved to Chicago. It was there, in spring 2008, when Mallette took that fateful cell phone call.

He'd taken Ike off the leash to play ball with him in a grassy lot. One minute, Ike was running around, chasing the ball. The next minute: gone.

Mallette put up fliers and placed an ad on Craigslist. No luck. He eventually gave up, too distraught to get another dog.

In late 2008, Mallette moved to Portland. He owns and operates a company that makes cycling jerseys and he wanted to be in the sport's epicenter.

This is where he met his fiance, Elizabeth Everman. He told her all about Ike.

"I'd heard all these stories about him," said Everman. "Roger, whenever we saw a lab, would almost tear up."

That's where the story stood in early December, 2009.

Then early one morning, when Mallette was asleep, he got a phone call. It was a woman from a dog shelter southwest of Chicago. She had Ike, she said on the voice mail. Call us back.

"I about fell out of bed," Mallette said. "I was in utter disbelief. I was so caught-off-guard I was hoarse. I could barely talk."

Apparently, Ike had run away again and someone in Romeoville, Ill., southwest of Chicago, called the animal control department. An officer came and picked Ike up.

After the microchip and the rabies tag confirmed that Mallette was the owner, Mary Helton gave him a call from the shelter.

"He started crying," Helton recalled.

With help from a friend, Mallette had Ike flown to Portland several days later.

Now when he tells the story about his dog, it has a happy ending.

"I have to say man, it's the coolest thing," Mallette said. "The greatest gift the universe has ever given me."

-- Stephen Beaven

Friday, March 5, 2010

Grace Groner, A University Angel

Lake Forest College received a more than generous gift from a woman whom some are calling “Amazing Grace.” When this 100 year old Lake Forest graduate died in January, she donated her entire estate to the college, totaling $7 million! In the past, Groner donated $180,000 to the school towards a scholarship program which allows at least 1,000 students to get internships and study abroad. In 1935, she bought $60 shares of Abbot Laboratories where she worked as a secretary for 43 years. Over the next 70 years made when the shares split, Grace made investments which allowed her original stock purchase to turn into a huge fortune. Her modest home is donated to the school and will be named “Grace’s Cottage” and used as a place to live for woman who received scholarships. See her amazing tale at http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/26184891/vp/35722825#35722825.

Scientists Make a Giant Leap in Discovery


In Australia, the Yellow-spotted Bell frog has been rediscovered after scientists thought it was extinct for 30 years. Luke Pearce, a fisheries conservation officer saw the frog when he was walking down a stream doing research in 2008. He returned to the same spot in 2009 and other experts confirmed a colony of 100 Yellow-spotted Bell frogs. In order to protect the frogs from environmental dangers such as poaching, the discovery was kept a secret, until now. According Mike Tyler, to a frog expert, around a dozen species of Australian frogs are critically endangered. David Hunter, a threatened species officer says, “it gives us hope that a lot of other species that we thought were extinct aren’t actually extinct-we just haven’t found them.” Original article at http://www.aolnews.com/science/article/yellow-spotted-bell-frog-species-rediscovered-in-australia/19383321

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Treat First, Charge Later - Chicago Doctor's Slogan


Watch CBS News Videos Online

From CBSNews.com:
(CBS) His work takes him to Chicago's meanest streets. But at seven feet tall, cruising in his 500-horsepower Dodge and wearing black leather -- he knows no fear.

He may spend some nights playing the blues with his band, but by day, Dan Ivankovich is all business: a bone doctor with a heart as big as his frame.

The tall guy with the hard-to-pronounce name gave drummer Jimmi Mayes a new hip when he didn't have insurance. And he did the surgery that gave Patricia Wilson her groove back.

"You really feel like this person is really going to do something for you," Wilson said.

It was during his residency at Cook County Hospital (the place that inspired the TV show "ER") that the orthopedic surgeon first saw the need and realized his calling.

"Patients were on waiting lists for five years for basic stuff, colonoscopies, mammograms," Ivankovich said. "And I thought, this is America?"

He decided to treat first and charge later. In a city where hundreds of thousands live in poverty, he's therefore always on call.

"On any given day, it might be three, four, five different hospitals, multiple surgeries," Ivankovic said.

Ivankovich does as many as 800 surgeries a year, twice the number for most orthopedic surgeons. And he makes roughly half as much because at least one-third of his patients are uninsured.

"I've never let something like resources, poverty, money, get in the way," he said. "When you see something that's just blaring at you, how do you keep going and say it's OK? It's not."

"You see a child that's crippled. You see a 50-year-old in a wheelchair, and I can fix it. Why wouldn't I?" Ivankovich asks.

As outgoing as he is about his work, he's deeply private when it comes to his family - other than to admit they pay a price.

"What are you gonna do? I mean this is what I do, this is who I am," Ivankovich said. "It's very, very tough, You give up a lot.

But he refuses to give up the mission that gives his life meaning.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Up with Chile



Chile’s president-elect Sebastion Pinera brings hope and encouragement in efforts to rebuild the nation after the devastating 8.8 magnitude quake that hit this past weekend. He calls this reconstruction project, Up With Chile, and is meeting with current president Michelle Bachelet to discuss the response effort. Pinera will be the first conservative leader in Chile in 19 years since Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship, but says, “These are times when we have to act with a sense of national unity. It is not the time for conflict between government and opposition.” President Bachelet has done many positive reforms within the country’s economy and social efforts. However, under Chile’s constitutional term limits she is unable to run for a second consecutive term. Sebastion Pinera will be sworn in on March 11th. Article from http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/02/28/chile.pinera/index.html

Google Helps to Find Missing Loved Ones in Chile


Google isn’t only used to search the web and find books. This Internet mega house may be the missing link between you and misplaced family members and/or friends who are victims of the massive Chilean earthquake on Saturday. North Carolina residents, particularly those in Charlotte, are using Google Person Finder, a free service, to search for loved ones in Chile and other disaster areas. You can also post any information about other missing persons. Currently Google is tracking more than 56,900 records. To use Person Finder specifically for Chile, visit http://chilepersonfinder.appspot.com. Original article from
http://www.examiner.com/x-28830-Charlotte-Healthy-Living-Examiner~y2010m3d1-Google-Person-Finder-may-help--locate-those-missing-in-Chile.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Video Game Hopes to Empower Africa


Story from CNN.com: http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/03/01/evoke.game.africa.poverty/index.html

(CNN) -- Some people think of online gamers and see gaunt loners huddled in dark rooms, the sad blue glow of the computer screen on their faces as their lives pass them by.

Game designer Jane McGonigal sees "superheroes" with untapped potential that can be used to fix vexing real-world problems.

"Gamers are willing to work hard all the time if they're given the right work," she said. She calls them "super-empowered, hopeful individuals," and includes herself among the bunch.

McGonigal's latest online game, called "Urgent Evoke," launches on Wednesday. With it, she hopes to channel the obsessive focus online games create into something more productive than conquering monsters and earning virtual weapons.

She wants to push people in Africa -- a long-troubled continent where people might feel less empowered than elsewhere -- to solve problems like environmental degradation, lack of food, water scarcity, poverty and violence.

To do this, the Urgent Evoke game -- classified in the emerging "alternate reality" genre -- straddles the online and physical worlds. Players, a few hundred of whom are in Africa, earn points and power-ups by completing real-world tasks like volunteering, making business contacts or researching an issue, then submitting evidence of their work online.

At the end of the game, McGonigal expects some players to have business plans about how they will improve the world.

Play a game, get a job

Depending on how well the game goes, Urgent Evoke could influence the future of alternate reality gaming and spur innovation in Africa.

Bob Hawkins, senior education specialist with the World Bank Institute, said one big reason people in African countries aren't as entrepreneurial and innovative as those in the West is that they don't feel as empowered to create change. That's largely why his international development group is funding McGonigal's project to the tune of $500,000.

"There have been studies, for instance, in South Africa that the public investment in universities isn't producing the types of new ideas and innovation that industry wants," he said. "What happens is that industry is importing ideas from outside the continent and outside of South Africa."

He hopes Urgent Evoke will empower people in Africa to change their own futures. This game will act as a kind of hyper-engaged online social network, he said, setting people in the developing world up with contacts in Europe, the United States and elsewhere who may offer insight or even cash.

An unannounced number of game "winners" will be given mentorships, internships, start-up money and scholarships for playing the game.

Responding to an 'Evoke'

At first, none of that may sound especially game-like.

But McGonigal, the game designer, said the power of Urgent Evoke is that it doesn't feel like work when you're immersed in the story and working with other gamers around the world to chase bite-sized goals.

Video: Watch McGonigal explain her gameVideo

Urgent Evoke gamers follow a story that's presented each week like a comic book online. The central figure of the Evoke narrative is a mysterious character who spots the world's big problems and sends out "Urgent Evoke" messages to a team of game playerson Wednesdays, asking for help.

A new challenge, such as a famine or water shortage, is presented to players at midnight for 10 weeks. Players earn points by accepting the challenges and then responding with evidence that they've used their real-life "superhero" powers to help. A person might, for example, contact a community organization that specializes in environmental issues, or try to provide meals for someone in their neighborhood.

Players catalogue their activities and submit the evidence in the form of a blog post, a video or a photo, which players post on the Urgent Evoke Web site.

Other people in the game network read these posts and, if they feel the player has done a good job, can award them further power-ups in a number of categories like creativity, collaboration, sustainability and courage.

Players with the most points at the end of the game win, but McGonigal and Hawkins said the experience of playing is what's most valuable.

The game will "open their eyes to the range of challenges that they could roll up their sleeves and take on," Hawkins said.

Potential for addiction

McGonigal makes the controversial argument that if people played more online games like Urgent Evoke or World of Warcraft, our society would be better equipped to battle big problems.

That's because gamers are trained to believe they can win, and because they're matched with tasks that are fit to their skill levels, based on what level they've achieved in the game, she said.

McGonigal wants to see people exhibit the same level of enthusiasm and optimism they display in games in their real lives.

People spend a collective 3 billion hours per week playing online games today, she said. That number must be 21 billion -- seven times the current amount -- for our society to realize its innovative and creative potential, she said.

Not everyone thinks that's a good thing.

Kimberly Young, a PhD psychologist and founder of the Center for Internet Addiction Recovery, argued that online games, educational or not, are an addictive force in our society.

People can learn and develop skills in online worlds, she said, but "they do that to the exclusion of developing those skills in the real world."

Internet access

Even those who support the Urgent Evoke game admit it faces a number of challenges.

Chief among them is that the online game is designed particularly for people in Africa, a continent where people have less Internet access than anywhere.

About 400 of the 3,500 people who have signed up for the game so far come from Africa, said Hawkins. He said the World Bank is launching an ad campaign in South Africa to encourage people to play.

Many university students have access to computer labs with the Internet, he said, and the game is designed so it can also be played over SMS text messaging or on mobile phones that use the Opera Mini operating system, which is popular on the continent.

"Even if you never get to a computer, you could do everything that you would need to do in the game on your cell phone," McGonigal said. "Pretty much everyone that we would be trying to reach through this game has cell phone access."

People outside Africa are also encouraged to play, and the game has a "mentorship" program so people all over the world can give guidance.

Lasting impact

The other nagging question is to what extent the online game actually can inspire lasting change in the real world.

McGonigal's previous work shows some degree of lasting change may be possible.

In 2007, she created an online game called "World Without Oil," which challenged people to re-imagine their lives without their dependence on fossil fuels. McGonigal did not conduct scientific focus groups with the game's 1,700 players, but she said she has gotten feedback from many of the players. They reported their energy consumption habits changed during the game and that they've kept those changes up in the years that have followed, she said.

For Urgent Evoke, McGonigal said she plans to conduct surveys of participants to see if the game actually led to real-world change.

She said she will measure success by how involved people are in the game, whether they stick with the story until the end and if they've joined organizations or taken real steps to create change in their communities.

If all goes well, the World Bank may sponsor an Arabic version of the game next year. There are also tentative plans to hold sequels in Africa.