Anonymous Donor
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From left, second-graders Zariah Thomas and Rory Englund work in class at Presentation of Mary Catholic School in Maplewood Jan. 21. DAVE HRBACEK | THE CATHOLIC SPIRIT
MICHIGAN CITY — Hats off to an anonymous donor who stepped in to pay the rent of Chef Bizzaro Millinery in downtown Michigan City through April, allowing it to survive longer to see if it can.
Donors who are located through a matching program or a cryobank often are referred to as “anonymous” donors. A better term is “unidentified donor.” The likelihood that a donor will remain anonymous in this day of direct-to-consumer genetic testing is unrealistic. Single Anonymous Donor Gives $40 Million To Fund 50 Civil Rights Lawyers CBS News The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund launched a $40 million scholarship program on Monday to support a new. Create an alter-ego email address. This may sound strange, but most online sites only. An anonymous donor has provided $600,000 to Encompass for their capital campaign to help them build a new pediatric therapy and early learning center in Snoqualmie. The donation comes as Encompass is nearing their goal of raising $8.3 million for the project. The nonprofit has raised $8.214 million.Sue Lovegreen, principal at Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary School in Maplewood, said she could tell by the sound of Brian Ragatz’s voice that something was up. “You could hear the smile in his voice,” she said about that call late last year from the president of the Catholic Schools Center of Excellence.
“It was like a little kid with a surprise he just couldn’t wait to share,” Lovegreen said. She guessed it was financial help. And she was right — except for the dollar amount. Lovegreen thought it might be word on a grant for which she applied — and could be for $10,000, $20,000, maybe even $25,000.
To Lovegreen’s surprise, Ragatz relayed that an anonymous donor had gifted Presentation school with $500,000.
Less than three miles away, Inna Collier Paske, principal at St. Pascal Regional Catholic School in St. Paul, received a similar call from Ragatz — that the same donor had given her school a $500,000 gift.
“It was amazing,” Collier Paske said. “It definitely felt like a Christmas miracle for us.”
Inna Collier Paske
Flabbergasted by the amount, Lovegreen said, “We don’t get these gifts very often, and how beautiful that (the donor) wants to stay anonymous. I really want to honor that person (by) being a good steward of this gift because they want to touch the minds and hearts and the souls of our students and leave a legacy.”
Occasional asl. Both schools are determining specifics on how the money will be used as they take a deliberative approach and plan for the future.
Presentation plans to set aside half of the gift amount in an endowment to secure the school’s financial longevity, Lovegreen said.
“We’re hoping to encourage other constituents and donors to add to that so that our endowment grows and that, again, gives us sustainability,” she said, with the goal to revitalize and strengthen their school.
Other uses for the funds will be identified from information collected in surveys from Presentation’s staff and school families, and from a comprehensive assessment, Lovegreen said. Some ideas include bringing arts back to the school and improving the science curriculum for middle school students.
“We will use feedback … to help guide our focused areas, and then we’ll be using our guiding principles to make decisions going forward,” she said.
Kindergarten teacher Shea Bruce works on phonetics with Bilen Fekadu during class at St. Pascal Regional Catholic School Jan. 21. DAVE HRBACEK | THE CATHOLIC SPIRIT
St. Pascal formed a team with input from teachers, parents and the school board to maximize the benefit for its entire school community, Collier Paske said.Anonymous Donations To Individuals
“It definitely will be a plan that will contribute to the longevity of the school and help our school thrive for the future,” she said.
While categories are not yet defined, Collier Paske said that improving programs for students would be key “because students are the center of everything.”
“We are very grateful for this anonymous donor,” Collier Paske said. “I think that the best gift, the best thank-you to this donor is when we continue to give back … to keep paying it forward … to the families — an excellence that we can provide at the school and keep striving (for) at our school.”
“We couldn’t be more thrilled to support these two wonderful schools with such amazing traditions,” said Ragatz, who took the leadership position at CSCOE last summer after serving as principal of St. Odilia Catholic School in Shoreview. “Although there is still a need for additional financial support, this is a game-changing investment, and I know the schools will use it in game-changing ways to support the students now while building a future for generations to come.”
Category: Featured, Local News
An anonymous donor gifted the NAACP $40 million to fund 50 civil rights lawyers for the organization.
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund said Monday the money would put 50 students through law school and in return the new layers would commit to eight years of racial justice work in the South, starting with a two-year fellowship with a civil rights organization of their choosing.
“The donor came to us,” Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the Legal Defense and Educational Fund, told the Associated Press. “The donor very much wanted to support the development of civil rights lawyers in the South. And we have a little bit of experience with that.”
“While without question we are in a perilous moment in this country, we are also in a moment of tremendous possibility, particularly in the South,” Ifill said. “The elements for change are very much present in the South, and what needs to be strengthened is the capacity of lawyering.”
Gallery: 2020 brought a wave of discrimination and harassment allegations against major companies like Amazon, McDonald’s, and Pinterest. These are some of the year’s high-profile legal battles. (Business Insider)
The program is officially called the Marshall-Motley Scholars Program, after former Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, who started the organization in 1940, and Constance Baker Motley, a NAACP lawyer who wrote the complaint that led to the court’s Brown v. Board of Education ruling which outlawed racial segregation in public schools. She later became the first Black woman federal judge in the U.S.© Charles Tasnadi, left, and Henry Griffin This combo of file photos from Washington show Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall on Oct. 24, 1967; and Constance Baker Motley, nominated to be judge of the southern district of New York, at her confirmation hearing, on April 4, 1966.
This combo of file photos from Washington show Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall on Oct. 24, 1967; and Constance Baker Motley, nominated to be judge of the southern district of New York, at her confirmation hearing, on April 4, 1966. (Charles Tasnadi, left, and Henry Griffin/)
“Our country continues to be plagued with racial injustice, and we need Nonviolent Warriors who are prepared and equipped on all fronts to deal with it - especially on the legal front,” the Rev. Bernice King said in a statement supporting the program. “It will allow the LDF to make greater strides on behalf of the Black community for generations to come in the area of racial justice, just as they did during the movement led by my parents.”
The NAACP also said Monday it was opening a Legal Defense and Education Fund office in Atlanta, joining offices in New York and Washington, D.C. Slots vegas no deposit codes bonus.Anonymous Donor Image
With News Wire Services
Register here: http://gg.gg/velt3
https://diarynote.indered.space
*Anonymous Donations To Individuals
*Anonymous Donor Image
From left, second-graders Zariah Thomas and Rory Englund work in class at Presentation of Mary Catholic School in Maplewood Jan. 21. DAVE HRBACEK | THE CATHOLIC SPIRIT
MICHIGAN CITY — Hats off to an anonymous donor who stepped in to pay the rent of Chef Bizzaro Millinery in downtown Michigan City through April, allowing it to survive longer to see if it can.
Donors who are located through a matching program or a cryobank often are referred to as “anonymous” donors. A better term is “unidentified donor.” The likelihood that a donor will remain anonymous in this day of direct-to-consumer genetic testing is unrealistic. Single Anonymous Donor Gives $40 Million To Fund 50 Civil Rights Lawyers CBS News The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund launched a $40 million scholarship program on Monday to support a new. Create an alter-ego email address. This may sound strange, but most online sites only. An anonymous donor has provided $600,000 to Encompass for their capital campaign to help them build a new pediatric therapy and early learning center in Snoqualmie. The donation comes as Encompass is nearing their goal of raising $8.3 million for the project. The nonprofit has raised $8.214 million.Sue Lovegreen, principal at Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary School in Maplewood, said she could tell by the sound of Brian Ragatz’s voice that something was up. “You could hear the smile in his voice,” she said about that call late last year from the president of the Catholic Schools Center of Excellence.
“It was like a little kid with a surprise he just couldn’t wait to share,” Lovegreen said. She guessed it was financial help. And she was right — except for the dollar amount. Lovegreen thought it might be word on a grant for which she applied — and could be for $10,000, $20,000, maybe even $25,000.
To Lovegreen’s surprise, Ragatz relayed that an anonymous donor had gifted Presentation school with $500,000.
Less than three miles away, Inna Collier Paske, principal at St. Pascal Regional Catholic School in St. Paul, received a similar call from Ragatz — that the same donor had given her school a $500,000 gift.
“It was amazing,” Collier Paske said. “It definitely felt like a Christmas miracle for us.”
Inna Collier Paske
Flabbergasted by the amount, Lovegreen said, “We don’t get these gifts very often, and how beautiful that (the donor) wants to stay anonymous. I really want to honor that person (by) being a good steward of this gift because they want to touch the minds and hearts and the souls of our students and leave a legacy.”
Occasional asl. Both schools are determining specifics on how the money will be used as they take a deliberative approach and plan for the future.
Presentation plans to set aside half of the gift amount in an endowment to secure the school’s financial longevity, Lovegreen said.
“We’re hoping to encourage other constituents and donors to add to that so that our endowment grows and that, again, gives us sustainability,” she said, with the goal to revitalize and strengthen their school.
Other uses for the funds will be identified from information collected in surveys from Presentation’s staff and school families, and from a comprehensive assessment, Lovegreen said. Some ideas include bringing arts back to the school and improving the science curriculum for middle school students.
“We will use feedback … to help guide our focused areas, and then we’ll be using our guiding principles to make decisions going forward,” she said.
Kindergarten teacher Shea Bruce works on phonetics with Bilen Fekadu during class at St. Pascal Regional Catholic School Jan. 21. DAVE HRBACEK | THE CATHOLIC SPIRIT
St. Pascal formed a team with input from teachers, parents and the school board to maximize the benefit for its entire school community, Collier Paske said.Anonymous Donations To Individuals
“It definitely will be a plan that will contribute to the longevity of the school and help our school thrive for the future,” she said.
While categories are not yet defined, Collier Paske said that improving programs for students would be key “because students are the center of everything.”
“We are very grateful for this anonymous donor,” Collier Paske said. “I think that the best gift, the best thank-you to this donor is when we continue to give back … to keep paying it forward … to the families — an excellence that we can provide at the school and keep striving (for) at our school.”
“We couldn’t be more thrilled to support these two wonderful schools with such amazing traditions,” said Ragatz, who took the leadership position at CSCOE last summer after serving as principal of St. Odilia Catholic School in Shoreview. “Although there is still a need for additional financial support, this is a game-changing investment, and I know the schools will use it in game-changing ways to support the students now while building a future for generations to come.”
Category: Featured, Local News
An anonymous donor gifted the NAACP $40 million to fund 50 civil rights lawyers for the organization.
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund said Monday the money would put 50 students through law school and in return the new layers would commit to eight years of racial justice work in the South, starting with a two-year fellowship with a civil rights organization of their choosing.
“The donor came to us,” Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the Legal Defense and Educational Fund, told the Associated Press. “The donor very much wanted to support the development of civil rights lawyers in the South. And we have a little bit of experience with that.”
“While without question we are in a perilous moment in this country, we are also in a moment of tremendous possibility, particularly in the South,” Ifill said. “The elements for change are very much present in the South, and what needs to be strengthened is the capacity of lawyering.”
Gallery: 2020 brought a wave of discrimination and harassment allegations against major companies like Amazon, McDonald’s, and Pinterest. These are some of the year’s high-profile legal battles. (Business Insider)
The program is officially called the Marshall-Motley Scholars Program, after former Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, who started the organization in 1940, and Constance Baker Motley, a NAACP lawyer who wrote the complaint that led to the court’s Brown v. Board of Education ruling which outlawed racial segregation in public schools. She later became the first Black woman federal judge in the U.S.© Charles Tasnadi, left, and Henry Griffin This combo of file photos from Washington show Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall on Oct. 24, 1967; and Constance Baker Motley, nominated to be judge of the southern district of New York, at her confirmation hearing, on April 4, 1966.
This combo of file photos from Washington show Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall on Oct. 24, 1967; and Constance Baker Motley, nominated to be judge of the southern district of New York, at her confirmation hearing, on April 4, 1966. (Charles Tasnadi, left, and Henry Griffin/)
“Our country continues to be plagued with racial injustice, and we need Nonviolent Warriors who are prepared and equipped on all fronts to deal with it - especially on the legal front,” the Rev. Bernice King said in a statement supporting the program. “It will allow the LDF to make greater strides on behalf of the Black community for generations to come in the area of racial justice, just as they did during the movement led by my parents.”
The NAACP also said Monday it was opening a Legal Defense and Education Fund office in Atlanta, joining offices in New York and Washington, D.C. Slots vegas no deposit codes bonus.Anonymous Donor Image
With News Wire Services
Register here: http://gg.gg/velt3
https://diarynote.indered.space
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