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School Fundraising Rallies Support for Needy Children
 December 11, 2009 at 2:46 pm

With the winter season well upon us, many schools are witnessing some of the kids showing up with insufficient clothing to protect them from the harsh elements. The teachers at Lincoln Elementary have been helping these children for 25 years now.

The teachers used to just provide for around 12 students a year, but with the recession, this year was around 35 children. To help gather the extra funds the school held rummage fundraisers, which consisted of everything from school supplies to lollipops. Spirit days where another way where the school could raise money allowing kids to wear pajamas or nerdy clothes if they paid $1.

Lincoln Elementary raised $3,300 this year to help the needy school children of their community. A great accomplishment and something everyone, who participated in fundraising, can be proud of!

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Two High School Students Fundraising for School Supplies
 November 16, 2009 at 11:05 am

Two Crystal Lake Central High School students are making a difference in their community by fundraising to provide Eberhart Elementary with much needed gym supplies. The two 15-year old students were motivated to fundraise when they heard of an account of a student from Eberhart Elementary kicking around a tattered ball. So as a school project that would benefit the community, the two students decided to raise the money to buy sets of basketballs, volleyballs, footballs, soccer balls, hula hoops, playground balls, jump ropes, and other equipment. They have collect $1,100 of their $2,000 goal so far and will deliver all the equipment when it is all said and done. Congratulations girls and keep going to achieve your worthy cause!

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Fundraising Success after a School Fire
 November 13, 2009 at 9:57 am

On Nov. 5, Whatcom Middle School caught fire around 1 a.m. The building, which has served Whatcom County kids for more than 100 years, received excessive fire and water damage. The student spirit, however, was not damaged.

Whatcom sixth-grade twins took it upon themselves to try to help the school recover some of what it lost. With the help of their mother, the twins were able to successfully fundraise $3,500 by standing outside the Barkley Village Haggen and asking people to help if possible. The twins even put in $92 from their own piggy banks.

Those were not the only donations however; many community organizations pulled together and donated what they could. The donations include Bellingham Cold Storage donating $1,000 for calculators, Whatcom Educational Credit Union and Bellingham Education Association donating a combined total of $300 to each teacher. There were also many other organization donations as well as entertainment provided for the kids.

It is great to see a community pull together after such a tragic event. Stay strong Whatcom!

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Fundraising Hero - Heather Maietta, Jewelry Artist and Marathon Walker Helps Fight Breast Cancer
 August 4, 2006 at 1:00 pm

From Tewksbury, Massachusetts, one woman makes jewelry to sponsor herself in marathon walks to raise money in the fight against breast cancer. She also works full time, is writing a dissertation for her doctorate, and still trains for her walks (and I’m sure somewhere in all this has time for family and friends).

The art of fundraising
By Linda Kush/ Staff Writer
Thursday, August 3, 2006 - Updated: 08:29 AM EST

One afternoon last summer, Heather Maietta trudged along on aching, tired feet. Cranky and exhausted, she wondered what she could have been thinking when she decided to do this. It was the first day of the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer 3-Day walk, and the 22-mile leg was almost done.

“I was so tired I didn’t even eat dinner, and I said to myself, ’I’m never doing this again,’” she said. “Then three days later after the closing ceremonies, I walked right over to the tent and signed up for next year.”

Although that first day was tough, the 60-mile walk over three days got easier. Every two miles, children and cancer survivors shouted support from the roadside. At night, she and hundreds of other walkers slept in a tent compound. The 34-year-old Tewksbury resident reveled in the sense of community and was proud that she had raised the required $2,100 to do the walk. The funds would help find a cure for breast cancer.

“It’s one of the most positive experiences I’ve ever had,” she said.

In fact, it was so positive that she’s doing it again this weekend, Aug. 4, 5 and 6.

But this time, raising the money seemed more daunting. It didn’t feel right to go back to the same friends and relatives for contributions.

Then she had the idea to let her jewelry raise the money for her.

Maietta designs jewelry and sells it at craft fairs, on her Web site and in places like Touch of Elegance salon in Tewksbury. Clusters of beads in subtle colors decorate her bracelets, necklaces, earrings and watches.

“I started out making jewelry for my sisters and for myself, and people would buy it off my body,” she said, extending a tanned arm to display a bracelet of aqua, green and clear glass beads. Someone would compliment her on a bracelet, and when she said she made it, they would ask her to make one for them. “But I could never make the exact same thing, so I would just take it off my wrist and sell it to them right there,” she said.

Her hobby grew into a business, heather M design.

She created a special line of jewelry to raise money for this year’s Breast Cancer 3-Day. Proceeds go toward the $2,200 she needs for the walk, and each piece with its pink ribbon motif raises more than just money.

“If someone is wearing jewelry with a pink ribbon, it raises awareness,” she said. “Raising the money is the hardest part, but doing it in conjunction with my business makes it a no-brainer.”

It’s a wonder she could find any time to do all that’s on her plate. In addition to making jewelry and selling it at craft shows on weekends, she works full time for the Arlington Department of Recreation while writing a dissertation for her doctorate in Education Administration and Community Leadership.

“The busier I am, the better I am, the more organized I am with my time,” she said.

Maietta was moved to do something for breast cancer research after her grandmother had a mastectomy that left her with limited use of her arm due to nerve damage.

“I have two sisters and a niece. I did it for them, my grandmother, my mother and myself.”

Maietta walks with a team, Wild Women Originals, 200 members who do fundraising walks and other activities to promote breast cancer research. Since 2002, they have raised over $1.9 million. Last year Maietta organized a craft fair with her team to help others raise money for the walk.

Lynn Ostberg, a WWO team captain, said, “With all the craft shows she does, Heather always has information about our team. More people find us through her.”

Maietta began preparing for this weekend’s walk last fall. She trains about 35 miles a week, not only for general fitness, but to toughen her feet so she can walk 60 miles over three days without blisters.

“Getting ready for this walk is like when I was planning my wedding,” she said, married to a Watertown firefighter.

“All the preparation, raising the money was difficult and the training is difficult. But it’s exciting now that it’s really happening. I look forward to doing it at last.”

Read the full article here.

Heather M Design website can be found here.

Team Wild Women Originals website can be found here.


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Fundraising Hero - Harry Briggs, “The Paddlin’ Professor”
 July 17, 2006 at 2:37 pm

From Louisiana, eighty-five-year-old Harry Briggs swims 2 miles - in a river, not a heated pool - for fundraising. That makes the prospect of volunteering for your fundraising effort or committing to sell a few items look a lot easier, doesn’t it? ;-)

Eighty-five-year-old Harry Briggs will slip into the Red River on Thursday with two things on his mind — his wife and finishing his two-mile swim.

He created the Lydia Briggs Tennis Scholarship for the Northwestern State women’s tennis program six years ago in the memory of his wife, who was an avid tennis player.

His two-mile swim is an annual fundraising effort for the endowment bearing his wife’s name and draws attention for the program. It’s the first time he’ll perform the swim in Shreveport.

“It’s quite a challenge at age 85,” said Briggs, who is adjunct professor of political science at Northwestern’s Leesville-Fort Polk campus.

“I do have demons that enter my mind and tell me that I can’t do it. You just have to drive them out. It’s really in the mind.”

A two-mile swim is difficult even for triathletes, but for Briggs, it’s nothing compared to some of the swims from his younger days.

In 1947, he was the first person to swim across Lake Erie, completing the trip in 35 hours, 55 minutes.

Legendary writer Gay Talese wrote a profile on him for the New York Times in the early 1950s, dubbing him, “The Paddlin’ Professor.”

On his 77th birthday, he swam Tampa Bay needing 14 hours to traverse the current from Tampa to St. Petersburg.

In 1997, he was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame for his 43 marathon swims.

[…]

When it’s over, hopefully the Demons’ women’s tennis program has a few more bucks for its players and he has accomplished another goal.

“As we grow older, we lose our goals,” Briggs said. “This is a tremendous goal for me. I really want to do it.

“It’s a great feeling when you walk out of the water and know you can still do it. And, what’s two miles?”

Read the full article here.

More about the “Paddlin’ Professor” here.


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Fundraising Heroes - The Kurtz Family
 June 21, 2006 at 12:01 pm

The only way the Kurtz family of Waukee can help children like their daughter, McKayla, who has cystic fibrosis, is by raising money for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.

The Kurtz family are currently the organization’s leading fundraisers in Iowa. Last month, they came close to raising $20,000 for the annual Great Strides Walk in Des Moines.

“Other than taking care of McKayla, there isn’t much else we can do to further the progress of research other than raise money,” said Chaney Kurtz, McKayla’s mom.

“It takes a long time for the money we raise to actually affect our kids - it might not affect McKayla, but maybe the next generation. But we didn’t feel like we could stand by and do nothing.”

Three years ago, the Kurtz family decided to try and raise $5,000 for the organization. They were bowled over when they generated about $8,000. The second year, they raised an estimated $14,000. This year’s total was $18,537.

Read the entire article here.


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