Download - UNC-DM January 2012 Newsletter
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[GrantRant]
[Mission365]a year-round effort
[HospitalInspiration]for UNC-DM Dedication
unC-dMs IMpaCt
a hero who Made hIs MIssIon possIble
VOLUME3;ISSUE6
[ZeroedIn]where are they now?
page VI
page III
page VI
page V
Mary Grace Hicks, former Community
Events chair, has used skills gained
from UNC-DM in Italy and D.C.
Visit uncdm.wordpress.com to learn how.
UNC-DMs Morale committee and Overall
committee get crafty in a social withkid co-captains.
UNC-DM provides lunch to parents
of children in the Newborn Critical
Care Center.
UNC-DM Committee Member Dana Royaldraws inspiration from the plight
of a teacher back home.
Theodore Roosevelt
26th
President of the United States
Believe you can and youre halfway there.
Monthly Social: A WinterWonderland Kids were able maketheir own snowakes, play pinthe nose on the snowman andparticipate in other wintry games.
Healthy Steps: We volunteeredin the waiting room until schoolreleased for break and we had ourrst wave of dancers to volunteer.
BEN & JERRYS GRAND
RE-OPENINGJANUARY 11Come to Ben & Jerrys on Franklinfor its grand re-opening as a Ben
& Jerrys and Auntie Annes Pretzels.Get free cones and pretzels anddonate to UNC-DM.
BEN & JERRYS FRANKLIN ST
MORALER/VOLUNTEER
RECRUITMENT WEEKJANUARY 16-20
Sign up to morale for six hours
or volunteer for three hoursat the Marathon.
PIT OR ONLINE
SMITH CENTER CHILDRENS
CHALLENGEJANUARY 26
Bring $1 to the Smith Centerto help us raise more money thanDuke when we play N.C. State.
SMITH CENTER
I lve when Facebk tell
me 30 my riend changedtheir prfle picture and verhal them are t the ame@UNCDM picture
@eglin14 LIz GosLIN
DEC 1
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UNC Dance Marathon
Benet Reception is an annualevent that aims to connectUNC-DM and the community.
The 10th annual BenetReception will be held Friday,Jan. 20.
The reception offerscommunity members a chanceto learn about, celebrate
and contribute to UNC-DMsefforts.At the reception, guests are
treated to light hors doeuvres,drinks and desserts. They alsoparticipate in both silent andlive auctions, bidding on itemsthat range from jewelry to abasketball autographed by theUNC mens basketball team to
Late Night with Jimmy Fallontickets. There will be speakersat the event including parentsof patients of N.C. ChildrensHospital.
At last years reception,John and Jessica Hill spokeabout their experience havingchildren in the hospital, givingcommunity members insight
into the impact that UNC-DMhas on families.
Dr. Julie Byerley also spoke
and emphasized the hard workthat is put into various aspectsof UNC-DM. Dr. Byerley,a huge supporter of UNC-DM,is on the Host Committee forthe 2012 reception.
UNC-DMs Community Eventscommittee has been workingto make this years receptionbetter than ever before.
According to CommunityEvents Chair Megan Warren,
the committee has been
working to bring in new andexciting items for the silentand live auctions. This yearsreception is taking place in theGreat Room at Top of the HillRestaurant for the rst time.
Members of UNC-DMsOverall Committee are lookingforward to this years receptionand sharing the mission of
UNC-DM with the community.The Benet Reception
UNC-DMs Benet Reception to link community to causeBY JORDAN SUTTON
will bring together many
community members, includingbusiness owners, doctors andfamilies connected to thehospital and university ofcials.
It is really amazing to seeso many different peoplegathered together in celebrationof what has been accomplishedand in hopes of what can andwill be achieved for the kids,
Warren said.
PHOTO UNC-DM PUBLICITY | Auctioneer Benjamin Farrell rom Custom Beneft Auctionsled the live auction at the 2011 UNC-DM Beneft Recption. Farrell will be at the 2012reception as well.
PHOTO UNC-DM PUBLICITY | Dr. Julie Byerleyspeaks to guests at the 2011 UNC-DMBeneft Reception.
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Alyssa is resilient, a ghter and
will win this battle, Royal said.UNC-DM recognizes the need toput a face to the cause that drivespeople like Royal to become moreinvolved with UNC-DM.
Each UNC-DM dancer teamis assigned a kid co-captain,an idea that Royal stronglysupports.
Knowing someone in the
hospital puts everything inperspective. It really makes itmuch more personal and drives you
to participate more, Royal said.
Royal rst decided to joina committee after dancingin the 2011 marathon andrealized she wanted to bemore connected to the cause.
After being a dancer, I wantedto see how UNC-DM actuallyworked. For example, I didntrealize that all committeesare given the chance to be
involved in the hospital.Being on a committee createsa community within the
organization, Royal said.
Royal said being on acommittee was an incredibledecision that has changed theway she thinks about UNC-DM.
You may think you know allabout UNC-DM and the For theKids fund. But there are somany other aspects to UNC-DMand its grants that youprobably do not know about,
Royal said.
operationDEDICATION:Roots at homeBY EMILY TRACYBy her junior year, Dana Royal
was already actively involvedwith N.C. Childrens Hospital.She was a Dancer in UNC DanceMarathon her sophomoreyear,a Fundraising Projectscommittee member herjunior year and a volunteerin the intensive-care unitthrough the UNC HospitalVolunteer Services program.
However, this year a specialpatient in the hospital touchedher close to home.
In late September, Royalshigh school gym teachers two-year-old daughter Alyssa wasdiagnosed with leukemia.
I am from a small high school
in a close-knit community, soAlyssa being in the hospitalreally hit close to home, saidRoyal, a Roseboro native.
Royal visited the familyshortly after her motherinformed her that Alyssa wasin the hospital during theearly stages of leukemia.Today, Alyssa is doing better
after entering remissionin November. Her weekly visitshave become much less frequent.
PHOTO COURTESY OF DANA ROYALDana Royal dances in 2011 UNCDance Marathon her sophomoreyear, which inspired her to joina UNC-DM committee.
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Though it may be unseen,there is a group of people whoare vital to the success of UNCDance Marathon.
Its members may blend
into the background and thecrowds during the marathon.Their hard work and dedicationraises more money for thekids; keeps dancers fed andmotivated; and ensures thatevery aspect of the marathonruns smoothly.
They are moralers andvolunteers.
Carolann Belk, a recentgraduate, ended her UNC-DMexperience as a moraler.
Belk joined UNC-DM asa member of the Publicitycommittee her Junior year.
What sparked me to beinvolved in UNC-DM was myroommate of four years, Cathy
McCormick, who was alwaysvery involved, and was a sub-chair our sophomore year
and a committee chair byour senior year. I had wantedto get involved in some wayafter her sub-chair experience,and the Publicity committee
sounded like a great t to myinterests.
Belk found that she didnthave the time in her senioryear to be on a committeeand decided that moraling wasmore her speed.
I had remembered howmuch fun moraling lookedwhen I danced the previousyear. It was not quite asstrenuous as dancing, but I stillfelt like I was contributing toUNC-DM and got to wear a funcostume.
Moralers have to raise $60 fortheir rst shift of six hours and$30 for every additional shift.Volunteers, who work more
closely with the Operationscommittee running themarathon, must raise $20 for
their rst three-hour shift and$10 for each additional shift.
Belk was assigned the 12a.m. to 6 a.m. shift, or to herexcitement the Harry Pottershift that she attended asDobby, the house elf.
My shift felt difcult eventhough I knew it was not nearlyas bad as what the dancers hadto do since it was the middleof the night. I tried to stayenergetic and lively though forthe dancers because I knew
they needed that at that hourespecially, Belk said.
My favorite experience
while I was moraling was thesunrise walk around KenanStadium. I had really enjoyedthat the previous year also,and it's fun to get out of thegym and see something thatmost of us college studentsrarely get to see a sunrise.
As Moraler and VolunteerRecruitment Week (MVRW)approaches, remember thereis more than one way to be apart of the marathon.
unC-dM Moraler
BY JEFFREY SULLIVAN
PHOTO JEFFREY SULLIVAN | Dressed as Dobby, or her Harry Potterthemed shit,Carolann Belk moraled rom 12 a.m. to 6 a.m. at the marathon last year. She takesa pause rom the rave to pose or the camera.
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Morale, OC get crafty with kid co-captains at the Scrap ExchangeBY EMILY EVANS
Old CDs, magazines, toilet paper tubes,
rope and even magazines gained new lifeat the kid co-captain social at the DurhamScrap Exchange Dec. 3.
Members of the UNC Dance MarathonOverall Committee (OC), and the Moralecommittee, which won the opportunityto participate in the social due to highattendance at UNC-DM events throughoutthe fall semester, worked on crafts andspent some time with the kid co-captains
and their families.The Scrap Exchange is a non-prot
organization that takes leftover materialsfrom businesses and families and resellsthem, said Entertainment Chair DianeMorris. The warehouse, convenientlyenough, also has a party space with tablesand chairs and 40 barrels of stuff (therewere old CDs...even oppy drives), yarn,bottle caps, old lm reels, Styrofoamblocks, etc, she said. It was crazy.
Attendees of the social had free reignover items to make crafts and play games,said Morale committee sub-chair HannahSacco. We were in a craft area thathad barrels of all sorts of materialsthat you could make things out of. Theyhad toilet paper rolls, felt, beads, key-board keys, CDs, rolls of lm, markers.
Adds Morale committee member RachelBrown, There was no glue or nails oranything except tape to connect them
The social was a great opportunity for
these UNC-DM committee members to getto know the kids and parents connectedwith the marathon a little better.
I really think it has been my favoritesocial yet. We got to bond with the kid co-captains, their siblings and their parents,Sacco said.
Brown agreed. My favorite part wasdenitely getting to meet the kids.
Morris said she enjoyed working with kid
co-captain Jack Shapiro, and was inspiredby his creativity. Jack, who really loveshockey, made a hockey helmet out ofBurger King crowns and also a hockeystick and puck out of other materials thatwere there.
Riddell recounted more favoritememories from the social. The twins,Rachel and Abigail Ward (kid co-captains)created a car that actually rolled for arubber duck and spy gear binoculars. AnnaVolz and Jo Saberniak made a car, too,with little people made of wine corks.
One of the cutest things was whenbaby Jake Ellis, who wants to grow upto be a Carolina football player and waswearing his t-shirt and football helmet,was playing with some of the moralerswith his football and after he made a
touchdown someone started singing thealma mater, Riddell said.He had the biggest smile on his face.
with so we really had to be creative.The Morale committee was thrilled to
win the opportunity to participate in thesocial.
All of Morale loves to get the chanceto hang out with the OC and of course we
love to get to know our kid co-captains,Brown said.
Morale committee Chair Maggie Riddellagreed. It was really exciting when Ifound out Morale had won the competitionbecause we had been neck and neckwith Campus Fundraising committee allsemesterI was really excited to be ableto share this opportunity of a social with
our kid co-captains with Morale sincetheyll be looking forward to the marathonas team leaders together.
PHOTO EMILY EVANS | Morale committee members AnnaVolz and Jo Saberniak work on a moveable car at theDurham Scrap Exchange kid co-captain social.
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AUNC-DMf
lashbackf
rom
2005cOMMU
NITYeVENTS
Chair
MarygRAC
E-HICKS
BY MEGAN TURNER
UNC-DM is hugely
impactful in its
mission thanks
to a supportive
campus.
Visit our blog www.uncdm.wordpress.com for to ndout what Mary has donesince graduation.
John was born at 27 weeks gestationOct. 19, 2011. He was immediatelytransferred to N.C. Childrens HospitalsNewborn Critical Care Center.
His family resides in Cameron, N.C., buthis mother stays at the Ronald McDonald
house in order to easily visit John in theNICU, but Johns father stays in Cameronduring the week to take care of Johnssiblings.
Next Issue Learn About
Pediatric Eating Disorders
Unit- Patient and Family
Resource Library
Learn everything you need toknow about the 2012 marathon
If you have any questions, comments,
concerns, please contact 2012 PublicityChairOlivia Barrow at
One out of every ten babies bornin the U.S. is admitted to a newbornintensive care unit (NICU) to treatbirthing complications or to foster babiesborn prematurely. The support of familymembers and hospital staff helps theseparents immensely during these times.
In September 2007, the March of Dimeschoose the N.C. Childrens Hospital
as the rst in the state to implementits NICU Family Support Program afamily-centered program that providesinformation and comfort to families whiletheir children are in the NICU.
The Family Support Programs hostsseveral weekly events, such as ParentEducation Hour and Parents Night Out,sponsored by UNC Dance Marathon.
UNC-DM is now, also, funding the
Newborn Critical Care Centers ParentSupport Lunch.
Lunch is provided every Friday, from12 p.m. to 1 p.m. in the N.C. ChildrensHospital.
Please visit our blogto read more aboutthe NCCC Parent Support Lunch and howit helps the children and families of theN.C. Childrens Hospital.
GRANT RANTNCCC PARENT LUNCHES |BY JEFFREY SULLIVAN
Johns father is active duty Army andhas returned to work. Due to the cost of
gas and parking, it had been difcult forJohns father and siblings to visit John onthe weekends.
Shortly after his son was admitted tothe NICU, Johns father called his wife intears, worried that his monthly incomewould not be sufcient enough to providegas, parking, food and other necessitiesfor his family. Have faith everything
will work out, his wife told him.Since then, UNC-DM has provided Johnsfamily with weekly gas cards, allowingJohns father and his siblings to visit.
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