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BurberryAiken's CDD | Home & News

Latest News From CDD

Showing posts with label able to serve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label able to serve. Show all posts

Monday, March 26, 2007

Tidbits 3/26

Need something to spruce up your desktop? Here's a cool wallpaper from the CB'ers' PAHers. Get yours at the Clayboard.

  • LBFCA - time to hit the ticket box offices, Claymates!
  • Clay Aiken The Ideal Idol and berkleylovesclay on what might be in store for Clay ...
    What will Clay sing on the summer tour? Doesn't matter much to me, because he will be there, singing to me.

    Each and every tour has been different --- and I have enjoyed my experiences with every concert I've been able to attend. I don't know if it's "grass is greener" syndrome or not, but I wish I could have seen the JBT and the JNaT in person. Those seem like his very best shows as singer and as entertainer. With all of the wonderful memories I've had of Clay on stage, in person or via clack, I will never miss a concert tour if I can find a way to be there.
  • PNN News - article on the 2007 TBAF Clay Aiken Able To Serve awards which were announced last week...
    The Bubel/Aiken Foundation and Youth Service America are pleased to announce the grantees of the Clay Aiken Able-to-Serve grants for National & Global Youth Service Day, April 20-22, 2007. These awards of up to $1,000 support youth-led service projects in which youth with and without disabilities serve their communities together. A selection of the service themes include: emergency preparedness, building wheelchair accessible gardens, disability awareness, and building intergenerational relationships.
  • Herald Net - In an article entitled, "Fair aims to aid disabled as they enter adult life", by Eric Stevick, there is a mention of a young woman with disabilities who got to meet Clay, "And she's a big fan of "American Idol" winner Clay Aiken and held his hand and personally thanked him for his work in behalf of the disabled when he performed in Seattle."
  • The Trades - In "Grease: You're The One That I Want - Episode 11- Finale" by Sheila Franklin:
    All four finalists are impressive, and its admirable how all the previously eliminated Greasabees are getting into it. A bit of a flashback to fill space at the beginning, then David comments that he thinks that it is “Tom Cruise versus Ben Stiller.” That’s an odd comparison. I am thinking it is more like Clay Aiken versus a short Travolta personalitywise.
  • National Ledger - Sanjaya Malakar "ruining" American Idol ...
    Continuing: Comparing themselves to Clay Aiken fans, the Claymaniacs, or whatever they prefer to be called; Fanjayas are flooding the phone to vote for Sanjaya each week. Ugh - now I'm not sure that I can eat. Will these fans, Howard Stern and Vote for the Worst.com be able to push him though for another terrible week?
  • Washington Post - article mentions Clay's manager, Simon Renshaw.
  • Foxes on Idol - this week in Idol history, AI5 -
    It wasn’t all bad, however. This was the night Taylor introduced Ray LaMontagne to Idol, singing “Trouble,” and Katharine sang Christina Aguilera’s “The Voice Within.” Paula and Randy loved Taylor, but while Simon couldn’t find fault with the performance, he criticized Taylor’s outfit, calling it “very Clay Aiken.” Paula and Randy weren’t as enthused over Kat’s performance, but Simon loved it and said, “This was the best so far and was almost as good as Christina’s.
  • Buddy TV users on why AI6 underdog Sanjaya Malakar is so popular... "AI has become a vehicle to launch careers and celebrities, good, bad and questionable. Don't forget Clay Aiken, William Hung, etc. etc. etc. Underdogs seem to garner a lot of sympathy."

  • Nothing here today.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

2007 BAF Clay Aiken "Able-To-Serve" Grants Announced


We've heard of a variety ways that Clay's Able-To-Serve grants have made real impact on the lives of people across America, so it's wonderful news that the Bubel Aiken Foundation is announcing receipients of 2007 Clay Aiken Able-To-Serve grants via this press release from Youth Service America:

THE CLAY AIKEN ABLE-TO-SERVE GRANTEES NAMED FOR NATIONAL & GLOBAL YOUTH SERVICE DAY
APRIL 20-22, 2007

WASHINGTON -- (March 16, 2007) -- The Bubel/Aiken Foundation and Youth Service America are pleased to announce the grantees of the Clay Aiken Able-to-Serve grants for National & Global Youth Service Day, April 20-22, 2007. These awards of up to $1,000 support youth-led service projects in which youth with and without disabilities serve their communities together. A selection of the service themes include: emergency preparedness, building wheelchair accessible gardens, disability awareness, and building intergenerational relationships.

The Clay Aiken Able-to-Serve projects for National & Global Youth Service Day 2007:

* Forty-five youth from Hutchinson, Kansas will plant trees along a popular walking trail and dedicate a plaque to commemorate their efforts reminding future visitors on the trail that youth of all abilities can make valuable contributions to their communities.

* After learning that scent-trailing dogs have difficulty tailing people with Down’s syndrome, Hillary, age 19, from Brewer, Maine was awarded a grant to launch a public service campaign about this topic alongside 25 youth with and without disabilities. They will reach out to police who will share the information with the National Down’s Syndrome Society, bloodhound training organizations, and search and rescue organizations.

* Tiffany, age 18, from Lynn, Massachusetts was awarded a grant to tackle the overcrowding and violence she has witnessed in her community public parks. She will lead 20 youth from the Part of the Solution Youth Council to mobilize their community and launch five simultaneous park clean-ups. The youth will petition the city to replace basketball hoops.

* Ashley, age 18 from Sparta, Michigan was awarded the grant to implement a project in which special education students who run the high school ice-cream shop train students from the National Honor Society in ice cream preparation. Following the training, both groups of students will plan an ice-cream social together for elders in the community.

* Fifty members of the Paraquad Youth from St. Louis, Missouri will assist The Foster and Adoptive Care Coalition’s resale clothing store and the Circle of Concern food pantry. Extended interactions among low-income youth, youth in foster care, and youth with disabilities will work to challenge assumptions and stereotypes.

* In Cranford, New Jersey, 300 students and community members will prepare garden beds for spring planting at two schools and one senior housing complex. Students will design, budget, and plant the community gardens.

* Youth in Durham, North Carolina, will convene two community forums to highlight best practices for public safety, human service professionals, and people with disabilities. One panel will focus on the interaction of the police department with the disability community and the second panel will focus on the interaction between EMS, the fire department, and the disability community.

* In Salem, Ohio, 40 students with learning and cognitive disabilities, in partnership with vocational education students, and with the assistance of a high school horticulture class, will design and landscape the Salem Storybook Museum. The Museum provides reading programs for 2,860 youth who are not proficient readers.

* Matt, age 20, from Carbondale, Pennsylvania won the grant to mobilize 30 youth to create an interactive information and snack station in conjunction with Healthy Kids Day. The group will educate the community about health and well-being from good nutrition and exercise. The Youth Board of the Carbondale YMCA will recruit youth from other youth-serving organizations.

* More than 150 younger youth between the ages of five and 14 from Abingdon, Virginia, will create wheelchair accessible gardens for children with severe disabilities to use as areas for physical and mental therapy. The group will collaborate with local high school students studying horticulture to develop a plan and will collaborate with students in the 4H Future Farmers Forum for construction and summer maintenance. Students with disabilities will water and monitor the growth of the plants, assisted by non-disabled 4th and 5th graders.

Full profiles of the grantees are at: www.ysa.org/awards/clayAikenGrantees.cfm.

National & Global Youth Service Day (April 20-22, 2007), the largest service event in the world, mobilizes youth to identify and address the needs of their communities through service-learning and community service. The event is organized by Youth Service America (YSA) with the support of State Farm Companies Foundation as the Presenting Sponsor. More than 115 National Partners and 51 Lead Agencies throughout the United States organize projects. Overseas, National Lead Agencies in 118 countries around the world manage international events. Planning Tool Kits, Service-Learning Curriculum Guides, classroom posters, grants, and more are available for youth, parents, teachers, and organizations. For the U.S. Map of Service Projects for National & Global Youth Service Day 2007: www.YSA.org/map.

Youth Service America is a national nonprofit resource center that partners with thousands of organizations committed to increasing the quality and quantity of volunteer opportunities for young people ages 5-25, to serve locally, nationally, and globally. Founded in 1986, Youth Service America’s mission is to expand the impact of the youth service movement with communities, schools, corporations, and governments. In addition to National & Global Youth Service Day, which take place concurrently each April, YSA also hosts SERVEnet (www.SERVEnet.org), providing the largest database of volunteer opportunities in America. For more information: www.YSA.org.

The Bubel/Aiken Foundation provides services and financial assistance to promote the full integration of children with disabilities into the life environment of those without. The Foundation strives to create awareness about the diversity of individuals with disabilities and the possibilities that inclusion can bring. To learn more about The Bubel/Aiken Foundation or ways to get involved visit their Web site at www.bubelaiken.org.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

The BAF - Another Example Of How It Is Making A Difference


We have yet another example of the excellent work being done by Clay's Bubel Aiken Foundation. A YMCA in Pennsylvania is earmarked for a BAF Able To Serve grant this year, and this article from the Times Tribune tells us how they plan on spending it:

On Thursday, the Greater Carbondale YMCA was informed it had been selected one of 10 organizations in the nation — and the only one in Pennsylvania — to receive a Clay Aiken Able-to-Serve Grant from the Bubel Aiken Foundation and Youth Service America.

The grant money has been slated for an interactive information and snack station at the 13th annual Fred Ciotti 5K Run/Walk event, hosted by the YMCA on April 21.

Event organizers would like to invite a nutritionist or dietician to make children more aware of healthy eating and their own eating habits, YMCA Executive Director Steve Durkin said.

“A few years ago we added the fun run to the Fred Ciotti race so the kids have fun,” Mr. Durkin said. “Now we’re expanding it to include Special Olympics.”

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

2004 BAF Project Highlighted

The CB's ClaysMyMidlifeCrisis has found a nice article McMains Children's Developmental Center's website about a project the Bubel Aiken Foundation helped fund in 2004. Although this isn't really new, it's another example of how Clay and the Bubel Aiken Foundations are changing lives each and every day.

Clay Aiken Grant Brings Wheelchair Swing to Center | 5/1/2004

Her vision become reality when 12-year-old Brooke Arnold and her physical therapist, Ashley Knecht, wrote a grant to the Bubel/Aiken Foundation for a wheelchair accessible swing for the Center. They were one of 25 recipients across the country of the Clay Aiken ABLE to SERVE grants offered to encourage children with disabilities to play and carry out projects for the National and Global Youth Service Day on April 16-18.

The $1,000 grant helped pay for the new swing which has ramps that allow people who use wheelchairs to swing without having to be taken out of their chairs. Brooke got the idea from a summer camp she attended where there was a similar swing, but she could not find any like it in Baton Rouge.

Ashley Knecht is thrilled with the new swing, and says that “it promotes the independence of children who use wheelchairs.”

Bubel/Aiken Foundation founders Clay Aiken, 25-year-old recording artist and 2003 American Idol runner-up, and Diane Bubel, mother of an autistic child, hope the foundation will create awareness about the diversity of individuals with disabilities and the possibilities inclusion can bring.

According to Boundless Playgrounds, a national, non-profit organization that specializes in accessible playgrounds, five million children in the United States are unable to enjoy playgrounds because of a disability.

Together, Ashley and Brooke have helped to foster inclusion, independence, and fun for others who use wheelchairs.


CDD supports:

Bubel Aiken Foundation GoodSearch for TBAF UNICEF