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10 national
awards receive $10,000 from Paul Newman to continue their good work.
What drives an 8-year-old
to give his own toys to other children? How can a homeless man ever
pay back a kindness? Take a glimpse into the hearts of Make A Difference
Day.
9th
Annual Honorees:
A
convoy of toys, W.Va.
No
job is too small, Pa.
"I need so much help...", N.C.
No more dirt floors, Texas
Miracle
on silver wings, Ala.
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Making
luck for lupus, Nev.
River
of fear becomes river of hope, N.C.
Standing
with other youth, Job Corps
You can overcome any circumstances,
Okla.
Big gift from sick boy, Mich.
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Encore
Awards to people who keep on doing good.
Regional
Awards for outstanding local volunteers in each state.
A
convoy of toys
Beckley, W.Va. -- Boy turns eighth birthday into a flood
of toys for 1,000 disaster victims -- $10,000 award from Paul Newman
benefits United Methodist Flood Relief Center, Tarboro, N.C.
After Hurricane Floyd caused the largest evacuation in U.S. history,
Drew Humphrey, 7, saw hundreds of homeless kids on TV. "What will
those kids play with now?" he worriedly asked his mom. Nothing,
she replied -- the North Carolina children lost everything in floodwaters.
That's when the West Virginia boy said he'd give them his toys,
including his favorite "big Batmobile planes" and whatever he got
for his upcoming eighth birthday. Enter the media: The Thomson newspaper
group -- which owns two West Virginia papers, The (Beckley) Register-Herald
and the Bluefield Daily Telegraph -- began writing about Drew. A
$3,200 deluge of toys and money came from West Virginia, Virginia,
North Carolina and Kentucky. Four Wal-Marts set up collection sites.
On Oct. 23, a police escort led two UPS trucks and a 12-vehicle
convoy to where 300 kids waited for a share of 1,000 new toys. "It
was like Christmas for those kids," says newspaper editor Frank
Sayles, who helped hand out the toys. "And so many people greased
the wheels, including the state police, who helped us breeze through
the tollbooths." That day, Drew's family also toured flood-ravaged
areas. "Some people were crying," Drew says. "I prayed a little
bit." His family adopted nine flood families and still continue
delivering beds, socks, underwear and, yes, more toys. "We're just
following up on Drew's idea," says dad Ken. "It's made us think
a lot. My wife and myself, we're both teachers, but sometimes the
kids, they teach us."
"You
can overcome any circumstances"
Tulsa -- Homeless man pays back a kindness
with a $1,000 concert -- $10,000 award from Paul Newman benefits
Glory House Shelter
"I wanted to show people you can overcome any circumstances,"
says Ed Dixon, 50. "Just because you're down and out, doesn't mean
you can't do something to make a difference." Down and out is an
understatement. In 1997, Dixon was separated from his second wife,
out of work, broke and unable to buy food for son Paul, 15, who
was living with him -- first in a small studio apartment, then a
warehouse and eventually an old van. He came to Glory House Shelter
to get free groceries but wouldn't leave before telling the shelter's
operator, Katy Jones, "If I ever get the opportunity, I will repay
your kindness somehow." Last fall, Jones got a phone call: "I'm
ready to repay you for your generosity to me." Without an address
or phone and despite his appearance ("He looked like a homeless
man," says Jones), Dixon persuaded the local Wal-Mart to give him
space for an Oct. 23 benefit concert. A local copier donated fliers,
and Dixon played guitar on the street to raise money for a sound
system. But there were obstacles. He had to pawn his keyboard to
pay for a new transmission in his van. In the end, a friend loaned
him speakers and a mike, and the concert reaped $1,000. Dixon's
luck also has turned. He's now in a government-funded computer-training
course and living at a local ministry. Already planning next year's
Make A Difference Day, he says, "You ain't seen nothing yet."
"I
need so much help ..."
Henderson, N.C. -- Family stumbles across
a need -- $10,000 award from Paul Newman benefits Saint Paul AME
Zion Church and Oxford Church of God Teen Youth Group
So many volunteers came out on Make A Difference Day that Susan
Abbott and her kids weren't needed at the project they had chosen.
Driving away, passing a rundown church, Abbott spied an elderly
man hard at work. Something moved her to stop. "Do you need help?"
she asked. Stunned silence. Then the man broke into a smile. "I
need so much help, where do I start?" gently asked the Rev. Winston
Blackwell, 74. His church, Saint Paul AME Zion Methodist, is old,
small and poor. That day, Blackwell was using a handsaw to gnaw
at several 75-foot trees that threatened to fall on the uninsured
church and blocked a donated steeple from being erected. "When I
told him I would be right back," Abbot said, "I'm sure he thought
he'd never see me again." ("I didn't," he says.) But Abbott soon
returned with another daughter, husband Randy and his new chainsaw.
By nightfall, the Abbotts had sawed five trees into firewood. Since
then, Blackwell has made the Abbotts honorary members of his church,
and they've donated clothes to the church's children. Blackwell
still needs money to erect the steeple, but he has the Abbotts'
promise of manpower -- and friendship.
River
of fear becomes river of hope
Raleigh, N.C. -- Congregation pours money, love and
labor into flooded towns -- $10,000 award from Paul Newman benefits
Edenton Street United Methodist Church Hurricane Floyd Relief Fund
Look carefully at the face of Frances Abrams, (she's on left in
the photos in the Photo Essay), standing knee-deep in the Tar River
-- a river that turned into a flood-swollen destroyer last September
and took away her home. Today, and years from now, Abrams still
will find strength in the arms of Jeanie Aycock and other guardian
angels who came to the aid of flood victims. For Make A Difference
Day, the 2,800 members of Edenton Street United Methodist Church
in Raleigh passed the plate to collect $50,000 and promised to help
flood victims until they are back home, a commitment that could
last three years. On Make A Difference Day, church members cleaned
out nine houses in Princeville, where a damaged impanelled dike
left thousands homeless. Volunteer Louis Wilkerson vividly recalls
the backbreaking work of lifting waterlogged furniture, the sadness
of seeing a family's possessions stacked in huge piles on curbs.
He recalls a 92-year-old man who'd lived for 75 years in the same
house -- now filled with eight feet of water -- watching Wilkerson's
crew throw all his possessions into a heap on the street. The man
stayed because the process promised his return.
No
more dirt floors
El Paso -- One
woman drives two projects in two countries -- $10,000 from Paul
Newman benefits Casas por Cristo
For Make A Difference Day, Maida Apodaca pledged to sponsor a
tidy new house for a poor family living in Anapra, Mexico, within
sight of America's riches. Working through the charity Casas por
Cristo, she vowed to raise $2,500 for materials plus $225 for the
use of a van, and recruit 16 workers to build the house in three
days. At first, things didn't come together. "I couldn't seem to
raise the money, so I decided to forget building the house and selected
another project" -- collecting 2,000 toiletries and socks for a
homeless shelter. She doesn't drive, so "I went door to door asking
people if they had an extra bar of soap. If they didn't, I asked
them for 50 cents." Amazingly, money and volunteers trickled in
for the house project, too. Says John King, who drove 300 miles
from Santa Fe to help build: "This really opened my eyes. These
people live in squalor, and they can look across and see us, how
we live. They were in tears when the house was finished." Said new
homeowner Paula Luna Garcia, a single mother of two with a $33-a-week
income who had been living in a cardboard-wall shack but now has
a snug concrete-and-wood home: "All good gifts come from the Lord,
and you were the means that I have received one."
Miracle
on silver wings
Montgomery, Ala. -- 11% of Maxwell Air Force Base personnel create
a foster home -- $10,000 award from Paul Newman benefits The Shepherd's
Staff
Linnie and Debra Dickson have four children -- and, over the years,
43 foster children. The couple dreamed of helping more children,
as well as training new foster parents -- if only they could turn
an abandoned 20-room estate into a foster center. On Oct. 23, their
dream took wing as families from Maxwell Air Force Base arrived
to hang drywall, sand ceilings, repair structural damage and repaint.
Total labor and supplies: $38,430. Legal and medical officers in
training donated $1,400. The base's volunteer manager says they
were motivated by tragedy: A former base enlistee is in prison for
the murder of one of her children, but her surviving 5-year-old
daughter is now in the Dicksons' foster care. Now, thanks to the
base, other kids in trouble have a safe new home. "You just don't
find that kind of help in life," says a dazzled Linnie Dickson.
"It made me want to join the Air Force!"
Making
luck for lupus
Sparks, Nev. -- Three kids paint rocks to raise $1,000 for research
on lupus, a disease afflicting one of their moms -- $10,000 from
Paul Newman benefits the Lupus Foundation of America
Last fall, Bobbie Vaden, 41, was hospitalized with complications
from lupus, an energy-sapping arthritic illness that forced her
to quit her job. Nearly 2 million Americans have lupus; that's more
than AIDS, cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, sickle-cell anemia
and cystic fibrosis combined. "I was kinda scared, 'cause I didn't
know what was gonna happen," says daughter Diana, 10, who stayed
with her best friend, Kristal DeRuise, 10, while her mom was hospitalized.
But then Kristal suggested they raise money for lupus research.
Says a choked-up Bobbie: "When I was in the hospital, we were all
scared, and to have Kristal, a child, come forth ..." Kristal, brother
Trevor, 8, and Diana took action: Collecting round rocks from a
nearby lake, they worked at a kitchen table to paint them like ladybugs
to be sold for $2 each. For Make A Difference Day, they set a goal:
sell 500 ladybug rocks ($1,000) for the Lupus Foundation. "Lucky
Ladybugs for Lupus" opened for business Oct. 23 outside Wal-Mart.
Not only did the children meet the goal, but continued ladybug production
has earned $300 more. "Hopefully," Kristal says, "we'll give the
Lupus Foundation enough money so they'll find a cure."
No
job is too small
Schuylkill
County, Pa. -- 9,700 volunteers tackle 146 projects -- $10,000 award
from Paul Newman benefits Schuylkill County Department of Human
Services
Ann McGee, shown at right with two of her third-grade students,
told her class she was shocked to see a homeless man in St. Clair,
one of 67 small towns that dot rural Schuylkill County (pop: 152,000)
in eastern Pennsylvania. The kids rallied the school to collect
$800 (80,000 pennies) for the homeless for Make A Difference Day.
Within days of their gift, they learned three people had been helped.
That's the tip of the iceberg: 9,700 volunteers in this economically
struggling area pitched in on 145 other projects, touching the lives
of more than 5,000 needy neighbors. Among the recipients: six nursing
homes; eight food pantries; 23 non-profits; 22 individuals, families
and groups; two animal shelters; three libraries; and six parks.
Together, the accomplishments proved awesome and provided invaluable
lessons. Take Robert Hughes and daughter Hayley Marie, 4, who picked
up all the trash in a park: "I wanted her to understand she can
make her own back yard a better place to live, no matter how small
the task."
Standing
with other youth
97 Job Corps centers in 44 states -- 7,000 at-risk youth give back
-- $10,000 award from Paul Newman benefits Donald A. Buchannon Scholarship
Fund, Seattle "It made me proud; those walls were sturdy," says
Sam Chasing His Horse, 20, who helped build an indoor maze for the
Flat Head Reservation Boys and Girls Club in Ronan, Mont. The Native
American group was among 7,000 Job Corps volunteers from 97 centers
in 44 states who turned out for Make A Difference Day, an increase
of 40% from 1998. The main thrust of the academic, vocational and
social-skills training organization is to give something back while
preparing young people who may not have many advantages to lead
better lives. Give they did. In the Blue Ridge mountains of Virginia,
145 students and staffers in Smyth County made meals for the homebound,
did house- and yardwork for two elderly sisters, and stocked the
food pantry with food to last months.
Big
gift from sick boy
Alpena, Mich. -- 10-year-old cancer patient's garage
sale for other patients -- $10,000 from Paul Newman is split between
the Cancer Center Development Fund at Alpena General Hospital and
Ronald McDonald House in Buffalo, N.Y.
Andrew Libka was so excited the night before Make A Difference
Day, he couldn't sleep. The 10-year-old's project: sell his toys
to help other cancer patients. Andrew refers to his cancer as "It."
Diagnosed with skin cancer last year, he had to travel 500 miles
to the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, N.Y., for his therapy,
a difficult thing for a little boy who doesn't want people to know
he has "It." While there, he and and his parents stayed at a Ronald
McDonald House. For Make A Difference Day, Andrew decided to help
the Ronald McDonald House and a drive to create a cancer treatment
center in his own town at Alpena General Hospital. He planned to
sell toys -- some of his own, some donated -- at a Make A Difference
Day garage sale. He called on neighbors, his church, even the hospital
to give. Total collected: $615.46. He hand-delivered the hospital
$307.73 -- a drop in the bucket toward funding a $6 million cancer
center, but when raised by a young cancer patient, inspired.
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