Anthony Munoz Foundation Is Looking For Straight ‘A’ Students
Do you know a Greater Cincinnati Straight ‘A’ high school student? I’m not talking about a student who necessarily gets 100% on every test. The ‘A’s that the Anthony Munoz Foundation are looking for include Academic excellence and Athletic Achievement, Actively serving in the community while possessing a strong Ambition, a winning Attitude and the Ability to overcome Adversity.
Nominate him or her for the Anthony Munoz Foundation Straight A Scholarship. While freshmen, sophomores, and junior are eligible for recognition from Anthony Munoz himself, Senior high school students are eligible for the monetary scholarship. The top 18 Senior finalists will be invited to a luncheon (9boys/9girls) and the two winners will be chosen (1boy/1girl) The winners receive $5,000 and the remaining finalists will recevie $2,000.
All high school students with a minimum of a 3.0 grade point average and in the Foundation’s Impact Region are eligible. All students nominated will receive a letter of recognition signed by Anthony Muñoz along with name recognition on the Straight “A” Scholarship webpage. Nominations are due by February 25th. Click here to nominate today!
Sue Ellen Stuebing Has A Gratitude List
Sue Ellen Stuebing is chief development officer for Public Media Connect, the organization that houses the Cincinnati and Dayton PBS stations – CET and ThinkTV. When I think about people who have a natural way of bringing a smile to my face, Sue Ellen is right up there on my list. I have known her for years through my PR work with area nonprofits. Always when I call her I am greeted by a warm voice on the other end.
I learned something new about Sue Ellen the last time we spoke. She keeps a Gratitude List to keep track of those who have impacted her life in a positive way. I couldn’t help but ask her about it. This is what she shared.
If it isn’t too personal, what are some of the things on your list?
People who make a difference in my personal and professional life or things that sometimes I take for granted, good health, a comfortable home, a career that I enjoy.
How do you create your list?
I just have a journal that I note the date and write a few things that I consider as a gratitude list before I go to sleep. I started writing a gratitude list about 20 years ago when a friend gave me a journal for a birthday present. There are times in my life that when I have written daily lists and times when I have not written in a month or more. I actually have more of a sense of peace when I think about the things I am grateful for and reflect on those things on a daily basis.
How often do you look at it?
I have only read over my past gratitude lists a few times. I really try to concentrate on each day.
How has keeping the list impacted you?
I am optimistic the majority of the time and I think that the daily reflection of gratitude helps me continue to be positive.
Random Act Of Kindness At Tim Hortons Spreads
You know what they say about how random acts of kindness spread? Well, at 10 am on Dec 21, a Tim Hortons customer paid the order of the next vehicle in line. It was the start of a chain of kindness that last THREE HOURS and 228 ORDERS!
And when customers inside the restaurant heard what was going on, they also started paying it forward.
Michelle Robichaud, spokeswoman for the company told the Winnepeg Free Press that Tim Hortons restaurant didn’t know who initiated the chain.
“We don’t know who started it, but that’s the beauty of this act of generosity,” she said. “It was the start of something wonderful.”
In Mentoring Month, An Example How Why Mentors Matter
Guest Post from Nathan Knipper
I met my Big Brother Mike Hardig when I was 10 years old. My mom was a single parent and I was an only child, so she thought having a “Big Brother” would be a great thing for me. She was right, and Mike was a great Big Brother—I only wish I’d known that at the time.
Now that I’m an adult and can look back, Mike was the important male figure I needed in my life. At first, he was just the guy who would pick me up on weekend afternoons and take me to sporting events—most of them I had never experienced before. It was always a new adventure (honestly, I don’t know how he came up with the things he did!). Then, there started to be structure in my world–a world that had very little of it, even if that structure was only on the Saturday or Sunday we were together.
January is National Mentoring Month, and I’m sharing my experience of having a mentor as an example of why we all need to help kids in our community.
I am convinced today that without Mike’s guidance—and that structure—I would’ve made some poor choices in my teens. I didn’t always make the best choices, but they most certainly would have been worse. Mike was a successful salesman at the time and that allowed me to see I could make something of myself if I put my mind to it. He led by example. Other than Mike, the people giving me guidance were friends whose guidance could be problematic, because they didn’t know any better themselves.
Mike and I stopped getting together when I was about 14. I remember feeling I was too old to have a Big Brother, but know now I just didn’t appreciate what I had. I hope he’d be proud to know that I’ve been fortunate enough to continue down a career path similar to his, that I’ve been working at Total Quality Logistics for 14 years , and am now the Vice President of Sales,
Adults in the community must step up to help kids. When kids have a Big Brother or Big Sister, they gain a friend, a confidant, a partner to help guide them through some of the toughest times in those important early years.
If we can set them up for success, show them how do be successful, then they see they can achieve it. We all need help in life and mentoring a child pays dividends beyond measure.
I know my Big Brother still lives in Cincinnati, but I’ve been hesitant to contact him because I worry he believes I didn’t appreciate the time he spent with me, the lessons he taught me. So I’ll say this: Mike Hardig, I sincerely appreciate all the sacrifices you made to be my Big Brother. I only wish I’d been a better Little Brother, but believe it or not, you had a huge hand in my success in life after we went our separate ways. For that, I thank you. Your sacrifices made a lifelong impression.
For more about Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Cincinnati, please visit their site: http://www.bigsforkids.org.
Cincinnati Earth Day Celebration Seeking Logo Designs
Calling all young Greater Cincinnati artists.
The Greater Cincinnati Earth Coalition is inviting seventh through 12th-grade students to compete in the Cincinnati Earth Day Celebration logo design contest, which will be used for the 43nd Earth Day Celebration at Sawyer Point on April 20.
The Cincinnati Earth Day Celebration inspires awareness and appreciation for the Earth’s natural environment, while showcasing individuals and organizations that protect and promote the natural beauty of our region.
Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky seventh through 12th-grade students may submit their Earth Day inspired logo designs, for a chance to win over $100 in prizes and publicity. The winning design will appear on the event website, t-shirts, social media, posters and other promotional materials.
There are no color or design limitations, however, each entry must be an original piece of art work and be submitted by Friday, February 1. Entries should be submitted in two forms, a hard copy on 8 ½ x 11 paper mailed to the Greater Cincinnati Earth Coalition, 4015 Executive Park Drive, Suite 300, Cincinnati, Ohio 45241 and a electronic copy submitted as a .jpeg emailed to contest@cincinnatiearthday.org.
Please contact Sarah Fortin at 513-733-0004 with questions or visit www.cincinnatiearthday.com.
About the Greater Cincinnati Earth Coalition
The Greater Cincinnati Earth Coalition is a community of nonprofit organizations, businesses, government agencies and individuals from the Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana tri-state region who work cooperatively and actively to promote the beauty and environmental quality of the tri-state area. Visit www.cincinnatiearthday.com for more information on the event.