Snowboarding Info, News, Pictures, Forum, Shop, Travel and Community
 
Snowboarding News
 

Snowboarding News - May 2010

 


Our Snowboarding News Desk stays up-to-date with all the snowboard events and news items from around the globe. This is the news archive of May 2010. Get your daily snowboarding news updates right here. You can use the Display Mode changer below to view our news in different formats:
 

Feed

Display Mode:

 

<
1 2 3 4 5 >

 
 Monday, 31 May 2010


Benjamin Sater, 18, of Plano, Texas, was named one of America’s top ten youth volunteers for 2010 in a ceremony today at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, winning a national Prudential Spirit of Community Award for his outstanding volunteer service. Selected from a field of more than 21,000 applicants across the country, he received a personal award of $5,000, an engraved gold medallion, a crystal tr ophy for his school, and a $5,000 grant from The Prudential Foundation for the nonprofit charitable organization of his choice.

Also honored in Washington was Emily Lites, 11, of Roanoke. She and Benjamin were named Texas’ top youth volunteers in February, and were officially recognized last night at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, along with the top two youth volunteers of every other state and the District of Columbia. At that event, all of the Prudential Spirit of Community State Honorees for 2010 were presented with $1,000 awards, and congratulated by former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Olympic snowboarding champion Seth Wescott. The honorees also received engraved silver medallions and an all-expense-paid trip with their parents to Washington, D.C., for this week’s recognition events.

“The Prudential Spirit of Community honorees give us great hope for the future,” said Dr. Rice. “Their compassion and commitment are already making a real difference in so many lives, and I have no doubt that their leadership will continue to positively impact the world for many years to come.”

Benjamin, a senior at Plano West Senior High School, has raised more than $800,000 for Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children over the past seven years by hosting an annual children’s golf tournament called “KidSwing.” Benjamin visited the hospital frequently as a child for free treatment of a condition affecting the tendons in his fingers. “Scottish Rite became a very special place to me,” he said. When he discovered that the hospital exists solely on donations, “I knew right away that I wanted to give back to them since they had done so much for me.”

So Benjamin, only 11 at the time, created “KidSwing.” He worked with a local golf pro to set up the course, recruited kids from his school and neighborhood to play in the tournament, and sent letters seeking corporate sponsors. There are no entry fees, but players are encouraged to raise at least $100 each for the hospital by asking friends and family members to sponsor them. Participation has grown every year, and today, it is one of Scottish Rite’s biggest fund-raising events, benefiting a different hospital program each year. One year it funded a learn-to-golf program for children with physical disabilities, many of whom actually participate in the charity event thanks to special prostheses the hospital created for them. “I am extremely proud of what the event has become,” said Benjamin. “There is no better feeling than giving back and making a difference.”

Emily, a fifth-grader at Roanoke Elementary School, has filled more than 700 brightly colored boxes with toys, games, and goodies and delivered them to local hospitals to cheer up young patients and their siblings. Emily’s baby brother had a stroke before he was born, and Emily has accompanied him many times to the hospital. “I learned firsthand how sad and boring hospitals are,” said Emily, “so I decided to spread some smiles with Emily’s Smile Boxes.”

With her mother’s help, Emily created a website (www.emilyssmileboxes.com) to solicit donations, and so far has raised more than $5,500 to buy items for her boxes. She invites friends to help her put the boxes together, and then personally delivers them to hospitals. “My goal is to make sure that every hospital in the nation has smile boxes to cheer up the patients and their siblings,” said Emily. “I truly believe that one child can make a difference in the world, and I want to be that kid!”

Source: www.businesswire.com

 

 
 Friday, 28 May 2010


Two Oklahoma students, Kenna Baker, 18, of Yukon and Alana Ralson, 11, of Warr Acres, were honored in the nation’s capital last night for their outstanding volunteer work during the presentation of The 2010 Prudential Spirit of Community Awards. The two young people – along with 100 other top youth volunteers from across the country – received $1,000 awards as well as personal congratulations fro m former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Olympic snowboarding champion Seth Wescott at the 15th annual award ceremony and gala dinner reception, held at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.

Kenna and Alana were named the top high school and middle level youth volunteers in Oklahoma last February. In addition to their cash awards, they received engraved silver medallions and an all-expense-paid trip with their parents to Washington, D.C., for this week’s recognition events.

“The Prudential Spirit of Community honorees give us great hope for the future,” said Dr. Rice. “Their compassion and commitment are already making a real difference in so many lives, and I have no doubt that their leadership will continue to positively impact the world for many years to come.”

Kenna, a member of the Canadian County 4-H in El Reno and a senior at Yukon High School, has made more than 6,000 “cooling ties” over the past five years to keep American soldiers cool in the desert heat of Iraq and Afghanistan, and has conducted more than 300 workshops to teach others how to make the ties. During a student trip to Washington, D.C., Kenna visited the war memorials and “felt a tugging at my heart to do something for the soldiers serving our country,” she said.

Soon after, she read about a woman who wanted to make cooling ties for troops overseas, and since Kenna had used them before, she contacted the woman and taught her how to make them. Together, they began seeking volunteers and donations to help make the ties, which contain water-absorbing crystals that become cool to the touch when moistened, and are called “hugs” because they fit snugly around the neck. In addition to making more than 6,000 hugs herself, Kenna has taught more than 4,000 other people to make them at fairs, conferences, schools, libraries, 4-H and scout gatherings, and organization meetings. And she invented a “turning tool” with her father that makes the process faster. Kenna also sews quilts for injured soldiers, the elderly, hospice patients, and neonatal infants, and makes stocking hats for newborn babies. “I feel strongly that everyone should work toward the betterment of their community, country, and world,” said Kenna. “One way to do this is through volunteer work.”

Alana, a sixth-grader at Western Heights Middle School in Oklahoma City, volunteers for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF), working to promote public awareness and education, raise funds for diabetes research and patient care, and lobby Congress to provide more funding for diabetes research. “Eight years ago I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes and my life drastically changed,” Alana said. After her family started a team to participate in an annual walkathon, Alana began participating in as many activities and fund-raisers as she could to support JDRF, the Children’s Miracle Network, and Diabetes Solutions of Oklahoma.

She has helped with fund-raising auctions, presented at awards dinners, sold raffle tickets, assisted at a “poker run” to raise money for a diabetes camp, and volunteered at a benefit rodeo. She also organized a walkathon at her school for JDRF and persuaded a family fun center to donate 10 percent of its profits on a busy Saturday to the foundation. In addition, she has told her story in television and radio interviews, and recruited other volunteers to help find a cure. Last year, Alana was selected to represent Oklahoma as a delegate to JDRF’s Children’s Congress in Washington, D.C, where she met with President Obama and delivered scrapbooks on her life with diabetes to three congressmen. “I will keep telling my story until I can tell the final chapter: The Cure for Diabetes is Here!” she said.

“Kenna and Alana are wonderful examples of young Americans who care about the world around them and have taken the initiative to improve that world,” said John R. Strangfeld, chairman and CEO of Prudential Financial, Inc. “We salute their effort, their achievements, and their spirit of community.”

Source: www.businesswire.com

 

 
 Thursday, 27 May 2010


Two South Dakota students, Presley Door, 18, of Brookings and Kallen Rittberger, 13, of Hermosa, were honored in the nation’s capital last night for their outstanding volunteer work during the presentation of The 2010 Prudential Spirit of Community Awards. The two young people – along with 100 other top youth volunteers from across the country – received $1,000 awards as well as personal congratu lations from former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Olympic snowboarding champion Seth Wescott at the 15th annual award ceremony and gala dinner reception, held at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.

Presley and Kallen were named the top high school and middle level youth volunteers in South Dakota last February. In addition to their cash awards, they received engraved silver medallions and an all-expense-paid trip with their parents to Washington, D.C., for this week’s recognition events.

“The Prudential Spirit of Community honorees give us great hope for the future,” said Dr. Rice. “Their compassion and commitment are already making a real difference in so many lives, and I have no doubt that their leadership will continue to positively impact the world for many years to come.”

Presley, a senior at Brookings High School, has played a key role in the operation of the Brookings Regional Humane Society since she was a freshman in high school, spending 8 to 10 hours a week cleaning, caring for animals, and performing basic medical procedures. Presley learned about the society’s need for volunteers while looking for a dog to adopt, and because she had always wanted to be a veterinarian, she signed up. “I had no idea that the shelter would instill in me a passion so strong that it would consume most of my time,” she said.

Presley started out performing routine tasks such as cleaning kennels, sweeping and dusting, grooming and socializing animals, and checking food and water. As she gained more experience, she learned to give vaccinations and medications to animals, draw blood for medical tests, and assist with simple surgeries. She also helps with fund-raising events, and sometimes travels to Indian reservations to rescue dogs and help at a spay/neuter clinic. Presley was so effective at the shelter that she was offered a part-time paid position as an animal care technician after a year, but she continues to volunteer about 10 hours a week outside of her job. “Volunteering has given me the experience and the confidence to know that I can handle a career in veterinary medicine,” said Presley.

Kallen, a member of the Kids Inc. 4-H Club and a seventh-grader at Custer Middle School in Custer, has taken part in a broad range of service projects benefiting senior citizens in his area through his 4-H club, church, and school. Several older people have taken an active interest in helping Kallen over the years, so “I was motivated to give back to people who had been kind and caring to me,” he said. “Then I realized that others needed help as well.”

Kallen has collected and delivered holiday meals for the elderly, raked their yards, made sweet breads to take to a nursing home, and played games with patients at a senior care facility. He also helped prepare and serve a spaghetti dinner to honor grandparents, cooked food for funerals, scraped and painted a senior citizen’s house, and made bandage-rollers for the Red Cross. In addition, he recruits other students to join his volunteer efforts, and helps his own grandparents whenever he can. “It would be really easy to make an excuse to not do things for other people,” said Kallen. “But if everyone could help each other, our whole country would be better for it.”

“Presley and Kallen are wonderful examples of young Americans who care about the world around them and have taken the initiative to improve that world,” said John R. Strangfeld, chairman and CEO of Prudential Financial, Inc. “We salute their effort, their achievements, and their spirit of community.”

More than 21,000 young people submitted applications for the 2010 awards program last fall through schools, Girl Scout councils, county 4-H organizations, American Red Cross chapters, YMCAs and affiliates of the Points of Light Institute’s HandsOn Network. The top middle level and high school applicants in each state were selected in February and flown to Washington this week with their parents for four days of special recognition events.

Source: www.businesswire.com

 

 
 Wednesday, 26 May 2010


Two Nebraska students, Jordan Somer, 16, of Papillion and Jaden Moore, 13, of Norfolk, were honored in the nation’s capital last night for their outstanding volunteer work during the presentation of The 2010 Prudential Spirit of Community Awards. The two young people – along with 100 other top youth volunteers from across the country – received $1,000 awards as well as personal congratulations fr om former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Olympic snowboarding champion Seth Wescott at the 15th annual award ceremony and gala dinner reception, held at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.

Jordan and Jaden were named the top high school and middle level youth volunteers in Nebraska last February. In addition to their cash awards, they received engraved silver medallions and an all-expense-paid trip with their parents to Washington, D.C., for this week’s recognition events.

“The Prudential Spirit of Community honorees give us great hope for the future,” said Dr. Rice. “Their compassion and commitment are already making a real difference in so many lives, and I have no doubt that their leadership will continue to positively impact the world for many years to come.”

Jordan, a junior at Central High School in Omaha, founded an annual “Miss Amazing Pageant” for disabled girls and women, and has donated more than $15,000 from ticket and auction sales to charities over the past three years. “There are no pageants for girls and women with disabilities,” explained Jordan, who was Nebraska’s Junior Teen Queen in the National American Miss pageant in 2007, and has been an active volunteer with Special Olympics. “They aspire to be queens just like any other girl.”

Jordan secured a venue, contacted organizations that work with the disabled to find contestants, and obtained donated trophies and medals for prizes. She created a program, wrote a script for the show, coordinated a silent auction, planned a reception and luncheon, and supervised details such as flowers, tickets, and crowns. Jordan recruited classmates and other teens in her community to assist at the event. The revenue raised has gone to Ronald McDonald House, The Salvation Army, and local charities. In addition, more than 500 pounds of canned food – collected as pageant entry fees – have been donated to feed the hungry. “I continue to be touched by the participants each year,” said Jordan. “I am so proud of what they accomplish.”

Jaden, a 4-H member with the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension and a seventh-grader at Norfolk Middle School, has made hundreds of colorful pillowcases over the past two years for sick and abused children. Jaden was introduced to the pillowcase idea when the local extension office asked 4-H families to make kid-friendly pillowcases. She helped deliver them to the hospital and was touched by the children’s response. “It made me feel wonderful to see how happy they were when they picked one out,” she said.

Realizing that the supply of pillowcases would eventually run out, Jaden decided she wanted to continue the project. She appealed for fabric and monetary donations in a newspaper and on the radio, through 4-H and hospital newsletters, and with a poster at the county fair. Then with the help of some fellow 4-H members, she spent countless hours cutting fabric to size, pinning, sewing, and folding new pillowcases, which she delivered to the hospital’s pediatric ward and to the child advocacy center of Faith Regional Health Services for distribution to children in dire need of some cheer. “When they receive their pillowcases, they know that people care about them and want them to feel better soon,” said Jaden. “Even the smallest things can make a huge difference.”

“Jordan and Jaden are wonderful examples of young Americans who care about the world around them and have taken the initiative to improve that world,” said John R. Strangfeld, chairman and CEO of Prudential Financial, Inc. “We salute their effort, their achievements, and their spirit of community.”

More than 21,000 young people submitted applications for the 2010 awards program last fall through schools, Girl Scout councils, county 4-H organizations, American Red Cross chapters, YMCAs and affiliates of the Points of Light Institute’s HandsOn Network. The top middle level and high school applicants in each state were selected in February and flown to Washington this week with their parents for four days of special recognition events.

Conducted in partnership with the National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP), The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards were created 15 years ago by Prudential Financial to encourage youth volunteerism and to identify and reward young role models. Since then, the program has honored nearly 100,000 young volunteers at the local, state and national level.

Source: www.businesswire.com

 

 
 Tuesday, 25 May 2010


Two Kansas students, Lindsey Curtis, 17, of Manhattan and Alex Stonebarger, 13, of Leawood, were honored in the nation’s capital last night for their outstanding volunteer work during the presentation of The 2010 Prudential Spirit of Community Awards. The two young people – along with 100 other top youth volunteers from across the country – received $1,000 awards as well as personal congratulatio ns from former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Olympic snowboarding champion Seth Wescott at the 15th annual award ceremony and gala dinner reception, held at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.

Lindsey and Alex were named the top high school and middle level youth volunteers in Kansas last February. In addition to their cash awards, they received engraved silver medallions and an all-expense-paid trip with their parents to Washington, D.C., for this week’s recognition events.

“The Prudential Spirit of Community honorees give us great hope for the future,” said Dr. Rice. “Their compassion and commitment are already making a real difference in so many lives, and I have no doubt that their leadership will continue to positively impact the world for many years to come.”

Lindsey, a senior at Manhattan High School, spent nearly a month last June helping to care for 55 abandoned children at an orphanage in Uganda. “I’ve always wanted to serve others somewhere in a third-world country,” said Lindsey. So, together with a friend who shared her passion, Lindsey earned and saved money for 10 months to pay for a trip to Jinja, Uganda, and landed at the Amani Baby Cottage.

From 8:00 a.m. until bedtime, Lindsey was directly responsible for 11 babies from 8 to 16 months old. She got them up in the morning; bathed, fed, and dressed them; changed their diapers; played with them; took them on outings; and got them ready for bed at night. She also helped care for the older kids at the orphanage. After three-and-a-half weeks of playing mother to the children, Lindsey returned home to begin collecting clothes, books, and shoes to send back to the orphanage. She vows to return to Uganda as soon as she can so that she can continue to support those who have so little. “I got the opportunity to serve and love those who needed it most, and in return, I learned the true meaning of unconditional love,” she said.

Alex, an eighth-grader at Mission Valley Middle School in Prairie Village, founded a youth volunteer organization that has raised $3,500 for animal charities by making and selling pet toys and leashes from recycled materials. “I have always loved animals and I feel strongly about helping the environment, so I combined the two ideas and created pet toys made from recycled building materials, used clothing, and other discarded fabric,” said Alex.

She started her project, called “Fetching Dreams,” after discovering that she was too young to volunteer at an animal shelter. So instead, Alex designed pet-safe toys based on her experience with her own dog, and recruited and trained school groups, Girl Scouts, youth groups, and community volunteers to help her make the toys and leashes, which were then sold at festivals, art fairs, animal shows, and other local events. The proceeds, as well as donations solicited through her website (www.fetchingdreams.webs.com), go to the Humane Society of Kansas City, a no-kill shelter, and the Rolling Dog Ranch in Montana, a sanctuary for disabled animals. “I never realized that the world is willing to support a middle-school student and help me achieve my goals,” said Alex.

“Lindsey and Alex are wonderful examples of young Americans who care about the world around them and have taken the initiative to improve that world,” said John R. Strangfeld, chairman and CEO of Prudential Financial, Inc. “We salute their effort, their achievements, and their spirit of community.”

More than 21,000 young people submitted applications for the 2010 awards program last fall through schools, Girl Scout councils, county 4-H organizations, American Red Cross chapters, YMCAs and affiliates of the Points of Light Institute’s HandsOn Network. The top middle level and high school applicants in each state were selected in February and flown to Washington this week with their parents for four days of special recognition events.

Conducted in partnership with the National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP), The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards were created 15 years ago by Prudential Financial to encourage youth volunteerism and to identify and reward young role models. Since then, the program has honored nearly 100,000 young volunteers at the local, state and national level.

“The young women and men in America’s schools are nothing short of amazing, and nowhere is this more evident than amongst this year’s award recipients,” said NASSP President Steven Pophal. “They possess a keen intellect, servant hearts, capable leadership skills, and are filled with energy and ambition. NASSP and Prudential are honored to recognize them.”

Source: www.businesswire.com

 


<
1 2 3 4 5 >

 
advertisementadvertising info



advertisementadvertising info

For a complete list of all discount coupons with our merchants, subscribe to our Discount RSS Feed:

Snowboarding Everywhere