Articles with Tag ‘relief’

Girl’s fundraising artwork for Haiti relief really rocks

Friday, February 12th, 2010

A local fifth-grader is helping Haiti rebuild, one stone at a time.

Lexi Caruthers, 10, of Olivenhain Pioneer Elementary, was so touched by the earthquake disaster in Haiti that she spent last weekend gathering about 200 small rocks. She painted them with colored wax, then sold her artwork from a stand in front of her house in Encinitas.

She was asking 25 cents to 50 cents per rock, many decorated with hearts to symbolize love for the Haitians, but some passers-by donated even more. One woman en route to a Haiti fundraiser acquired Lexi’s art to show everyone that kids are helping, too.

Lexi, knowing that every little bit helps, was hoping to raise $10. So she was ecstatic when she passed the $100 mark. At last tally, her proceeds had earned $124.81, which will be donated to UNICEF for Haiti relief. However, she plans to sell even more, rain permitting…

Another fundraising effort involved a student robotics team. Members enlisted sponsors for scores they made at a regional robot baseball tournament last weekend at Madison High School. Einstein’s Daughters, comprised of six students from four area high schools, raised $1,500 which they’re donating to a Haiti orphanage. The all-girl team won the 2009 FIRST Robotics world competition, a brainchild of inventor Dean Kamen.

White Gold

When two Encinitas high school seniors saw the Got Milk? campaign’s slapstick “Battle of Milkquarious,” rock opera video on YouTube, they noticed a contest invitation from the California Milk Processor Board to recreate one of its scenes. Cash prizes go to the winner’s high school arts program, so Alex Finden and Zach Simmons ran the idea by their San Dieguito Academy TV production teacher, Eric Neubauer, and Principal Michael Grove, who approved their project. Little did they realize it would lead to the evacuation of about 400 students on a recent Saturday while they were taking Scholastic Aptitude Tests.

The students chose the opera’s opening scene — an armed milk heist in the singing Milkquarious leader’s white pad. Finding a child’s wading pool (in December) to sub for a hot tub, spraypainting it white, then figuring out how to fill it cost effectively with milk (powdered milk did the trick), was the initial challenge, says Elizabeth Finden, Alex’s mom.

On the first day of filming at school, the students used a fog machine for a “steam” effect over their milk-filled hot tub and promptly set off a smoke alarm. Student test takers filed out, then firefighters arrived and shut down the film production. Undaunted, the young producers, with the help of several music students, completed their video, without fog, the next weekend.

Alex and Zach were elated to learn that their video is among 10 finalists, winning $2,500 for their school. Now they’re hoping a public online vote at the Web site: www.milkquarious.com will earn their school the $20,000 first prize or $10,000 second prize. Voting closes at 10 a.m. tomorrow.

Humor helps…

Flooding has been so bad on the grounds of Helen Woodward Animal Center in Rancho Santa Fe this week that employees began referring to their inundated “barking lot” as Lake Helen…

Last Saturday evening Father Steve Callahan, pastor of St. Brigid Church in Pacific Beach, was called in to celebrate a Mass for the New York Jets at the Hyatt hotel where the team was staying. Ever since the Chargers’ loss Sunday, his St. Brigid parishioners have been giving him grief about praying with the enemy.

“My response has been that I prayed for two things,” says Callahan, “that all players be kept safe and free from significant injury (heard and answered), and that all players perform to the best of their ability (heard by the Jets, ignored by the Chargers).”

via Girl’s fundraising artwork for Haiti relief really rocks – SignOnSanDiego.com.

Young hockey players score big

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Members of two local hockey teams froze their toes and noses Saturday as they collected donations for the Haitian relief effort.

Members of the Pictou County Weeks Jr. A Crushers and the Weeks Major Midgets stood in the middle of a downtown bridge manning a voluntary toll for four hours as an icy wind whipped up the East River.

Red-faced with the cold, their hockey jerseys covered with safety vests, the players cheerily shouted “thank you” to the people who rolled down vehicle windows to deposit money into large, 19-litre plastic water bottles, the kind you put on coolers.

Half an hour into the voluntary toll, motorists had stuffed several of the water jars half full with bills and coins.

“The bridge isn’t even busy yet,” said New Glasgow police Const. Rebecca Heighton, one of the warmly clad officers supervising the toll on the George Street bridge.

The hockey players were joined later in the morning by town councillors and other volunteers.

By the time the toll closed at 1 p.m., volunteers collected 133 litres of money — about seven of the large water jugs — for the Haitian Relief Fund. The fund is administered by the Canadian Red Cross.

There were so many bills, loonies, toonies and quarters, organizers figured it would take until Tuesday to count all the money.

Volunteers estimated the final tally will be in the $3,000 to $5,000 range.

As far as anyone can remember, Saturday’s event was the second time a voluntary toll was held on the bridge to help disaster victims. The first was in 2004 when one was held to raise money for the victims of the Indian Ocean tsunami.

The number of deaths due to the Haitian earthquake was earlier estimated to be about 50,000 — roughly the population of Pictou County. That figure has multiplied and is expected to reach about 200,000, but the initial estimate brought the magnitude of the disaster home to area residents, said Kim Dickson, New Glasgow’s marketing director.