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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: longnshort who wrote (329618)3/20/2007 4:39:57 PM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578027
 
'An amazing story' of giving that could change our world By DeWayne Wickham
Tue Mar 20, 8:23 AM ET


ORLANDO - Harris Rosen is not the kind of guy whose name usually makes it into the space I inhabit on the pages of this newspaper.

He is neither a presidential wannabe nor a political thug. Rosen is not a bigot or a high-profile fool. And as best I can tell, he isn't a heartless robber baron. What he is, however, is a very wealthy man who likes his charitable giving to be up close and personal.

Rosen, who owns seven Orlando-area hotels, has put to good use Booker T. Washington's admonition to "cast down your buckets where you are." Since 1993, Rosen has used his wealth to help revitalize Tangelo Park, a once drug-infested, trouble-plagued unincorporated community near his International Drive hotel properties.

"This kind of program, if replicated, will change our society so we don't even recognize it," Rosen says of the Tangelo Park Program he funds. The twin cornerstones of this effort is Rosen's pledge to provide free preschool education for all 2-, 3- and 4-year-old children, and a college education for all high school graduates in Tangelo Park.

Rosen's largess has helped turn things around in this community, which has a little more than 2,400 people and is nearly 90% black.

Notable progress

"This is an amazing story," says Charles Dziuban, a University of Central Florida professor and member of the Tangelo Park Program's advisory board. From the program's inception, crime in Tangelo Park dropped by 67%, and the area's high school dropout rate fell from 25% to 6%, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported in 2004.

Rosen, who is white and grew up in the Hell's Kitchen section of New York City, thinks this success can be replicated in other cities. He wants other wealthy people to follow his lead. "If they'd come to Tangelo Park, if they spoke to the kids, they would go home and find a neighborhood in their community and do what I'm doing here." The wealthiest Americans are wealthier than ever before. This year, everyone on the Forbes.com list of the nation's 400 richest people is a billionaire. And giving in this country rose to an all-time high last year with 21 Americans forking out gifts of at least $100 million to charities.

More help needed

But Rosen, who says he has given more than $7 million to the Tangelo Park Program since its creation, wants his wealthy brethren to do more to help problem-plagued, impoverished neighborhoods.

"Government is just too dense, too stupid, too inept to do this," he says. "If Oprah came down here and saw what we're doing, she would do it somewhere. If I could get (NBA Commissioner David) Stern to come here, I think he would get every NBA team involved in a project like ours" in their cities.

It might take just that to get a lot of this nation's wealthy to follow Rosen's lead.

Most of last year's record-breaking gift-giving by the rich went to colleges and universities, foundations, arts groups, hospitals and museums, The Chronicle of Philanthropy reported. Though these are all good causes, they will be of questionable value if we don't salvage the neighborhoods where crime and ignorance fester.

Rosen says charitable giving is much more rewarding when the donor gets personally involved. Two years ago, the U.S. Dream Academy - a Washington, D.C.-area group that helps at-risk children realize their dreams - seemed to agree. It gave Rosen its President's Award for his work in Tangelo Park.

But what Rosen wants more than recognition is for others to emulate him. He wants more of this nation's rich to use their money to tackle the stubborn problems that cause poor children to begin school with an educational deficit, underachieve in the classroom and drop out before graduation.

He understands these problems give rise to the kind of pathological behavior that threatens to reduce our society to an archaeological dig. He thinks the rich of this country ought to do something about it.

And I think he's right.

DeWayne Wickham writes on Tuesdays for USA TODAY.



To: longnshort who wrote (329618)3/22/2007 2:51:38 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578027
 
Key Democrat Pressured to Cut War Funding

Aaron Glantz

SAN FRANCISCO, Mar 21 (IPS) - Peace activists entered their 10th day camped outside House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's San Francisco home Wednesday, the latest in an almost daily barrage of demonstrations, vigils and local government votes designed to convince Pelosi to refuse President George W. Bush's 100-billion-dollar war funding request.

The speaker says she will support the request with conditions.

Pelosi originally voted against the war four years ago and says she wants it to end. But that rhetoric is not enough for liberal San Franciscans, including elected officials like City Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi, who spoke at a rally in front of her office Monday.

"I did not and will not accept the excuses of even the most pragmatic, prudent, or progressive sounding representative in Congress in explaining to us that this war abroad is such a quagmire that there is no reason no we can pull out," Mirkarimi told a crowd of hundreds.

"They should be unelected," he said. "They should be taken out of office."

As Mirkarimi spoke, 11 activists -- including a San Francisco mother whose son served 3 tours in Iraq -- were arrested as they staged a sit-in in Pelosi's office. Across the city, 57 protesters were arrested, many blocking traffic while pretending to die on Market Street, the city's main drag.

Demonstrators said Pelosi, who represents the city in the House of Representatives, is out of line with a majority of her constituents. Last November, city voters approved by 58 percent a measure calling for the impeachment of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.

"Nancy Pelosi some time ago made a conscious decision that she was going to stop representing San Francisco and start trying to be a national figure," said Tim Redmond, the editor of the city's progressive Bay Guardian news weekly.

The speaker of the House disagrees and released a statement to demonstrators outside her office "thanking" them for their "opposition to the war in Iraq."

"I agree that the war must end and am working within Congress to achieve that goal," she said.

Still, Redmond believes it will be difficult for locals to change the speaker's mind on the question of war funding.

"When she began moving towards becoming speaker of the House, she left behind San Francisco values and went with a more mainstream approach that will help her court Democrats in swing districts," he added.

While a liberal by national standards, Pelosi has staked out a more centrist position on Iraq than other Congresspersons from the San Francisco Bay area. Congresswoman Barbara Lee, who represents Oakland, and Lynn Woolsey, who represents the suburbs north of San Francisco, have introduced legislation requiring all U.S. troops to leave Iraq within six months.

The bill, HR 508, has 49 co-sponsors, including most members of the Bay Area's Congressional delegation. As speaker, Pelosi has buried the bill in the House Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, and Border Security.

Redmond is heartened, however, by a vote by the local Democratic Party Central Committee urging Congress to revoke President Bush's authority to wage war in Iraq and cut off all funding for the war -- except as "necessary to provide for the safe and orderly withdrawal" of the troops.

Howard Wallace, the vice president of the San Francisco Labour Council, part of the national union confederation AFL-CIO, says Pelosi fought the measure, but couldn't stop it from passing.

"We turned out a crowd," he said, "and everyone was on our side. We had some very good people on the committee and we could see things shifting before our eyes, and then we found out that they had a substitute motion -- and that was to water down the whole bill. They put in some glittering generalities that said really nothing and it was aimed at just getting us out of the way," he said.

"It didn't say anything," Wallace said. "It was insider talk, which is always full of stuff like that, and we can't take that kind of crap anymore."

In the end, almost all of San Francisco's city supervisors and state legislators voted for the antiwar measure. A few abstained. Pelosi's representative was the only central committee member to vote no.

"All this adds up and puts pressure on her and in a sense embarrasses her," said Bay Guardian editor Tim Redomond. "It says 'look, you're not making your constituents happy'. It also in a way gives her political cover because when she's in Washington she can say: 'Look at my constituents. My voters are way to the left of me.' It lets her push that edge a little more if she wants to."

If Pelosi doesn't respond to community pressure, Redmond says, a primary challenge or third party candidacy is possible. Such a challenger would likely lose, he says, put would serve to further increase pressure on the House speaker. (END/2007)

ipsnews.net