Thursday, December 19, 2013

Homeless to Harvard: The Liz Murray Story

Liz Murray

Author, Breaking Night: A Memoir of Forgiveness, Survival, and My Journey from Homeless to Harvard
Exclusively WSB
From homeless to Harvard . . . it is an unlikely turn of events. Liz Murray’s life is a triumph over adversity and a stunning example of the importance of dreaming big. Murray’s life as the child of cocaine-addicted parents in the Bronx was bitterly grim. There was never food in the house, everything was filthy, drugs were everywhere and the welfare checks were spent before they arrived. By age 15, Murray’s mom had died and she was homeless—living on the streets, riding the subway all night and eating from dumpsters. Amidst this pain, Murray always imagined her life could be much better than it was. “I started to grasp the value of the lessons learned while living on the streets. I knew, after overcoming those daily obstacles that next to nothing could hold me down.” Determined to take charge of her life, Murray finished high school in just two years while camping out in New York City parks and subway stations. Murray’s story is exhilarating and her delivery innocently honest, as she takes audiences on a very personal journey where she achieves the improbable. Her story sounds like a Hollywood movie—and it practically is. Lifetime Television produced a movie about Murray’s life story entitled From Homeless to Harvard, which premiered in April 2003. Murray is the recipient of Oprah Winfrey’s first ever Chutzpah Award. Her memoir, Breaking Night, was released in September 2010 and within a week landed on The New York Times best-seller list.Murray received her B.S. in Psychology from Harvard University in June 2009.


http://www.washingtonspeakers.com/speakers/speaker.cfm?SpeakerID=3821 Follow this link to learn more about Liz Murray and listen to some of her speeches.


www.facebook.com/lizmurraybreakingnight?filter=3 Follow her on Facebook

http://www.fspa.org/news/archives/lizmurray.html More information on Liz Murray



Monday, December 2, 2013

November 25, 2013 The Knoxville Journal:  The Lincoln's Christmas Turkey by Michael Williams



Although Thanksgiving had been observed sporadically throughout the nation since the administration of George Washington, the day was never observed as a national holiday until President Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation making it a legal holiday.
The nation was set to observe the first national day of giving thanks in November of 1863. Ironically, the day would not go off without a hitch. Thanks to the compassionate spirit of a precocious, yet mischievous child, the holiday took an unusual twist and a new tradition was born that is carried on to this day.
Late in 1863, a live turkey was brought to the White House. The turkey was intended to be dinner for the Lincoln family as they celebrated their first official Thanksgiving.
Tad Lincoln, the president’s youngest child, noticed the bird ambling around in a pen on the lawn. The 10-year-old loved animals and began taking up time with the bird unaware of the turkey’s impending doom. He named his new found friend, Jack.
Early on Thanksgiving morning Tad arose and went outside to find his feathered friend missing. He searched the grounds of the White House and failed to find the bird. He later found Jack in a cage in the White House kitchen. The diminutive child asked the cook why Jack was caged. The cook responded that Jack was to be killed and served for dinner.
Tad was horrified. He implored the cook not to kill Jack until he had a chance to speak to his father. The youth rushed upstairs to the President’s conference room where he was having a staff meeting. Tad burst into the room with tears in his eyes and begged his father to spare Jack’s life. He explained that he had asked the “executioner” to delay killing Jack until he spoke on his behalf.
President Lincoln explained to the child that Jack had been brought there specifically to be eaten by the family.
Tad pleaded “He’s a good turkey, and I don’t want him killed. He must not be killed. It is wicked.”
Historians have long debated President Lincoln’s motivation. But, his actions inspired an unusual holiday tradition.
As a child, young Abraham Lincoln went out to hunt for food. He was about Tad’s age when he shot what would be the only turkey he ever killed. He was later overcome with remorse after he saw the lifeless eyes of the bird. His guilt traumatized the youth and he never hunted for game again.
Whether he saw an opportunity to appease his child and play a good-natured joke on the White House chef or if he remembered his own earlier hunting experiences as a child that left him traumatized, no one will ever know.
After a moment of thought Lincoln wrote a note to the chef that Jack the Turkey was to be spared and released to Tad Lincoln.
The grateful child thanked his father and rushed downstairs hoping it was not too late. He approached the chef and handed him the presidential order sparing Jack’s life. The chef read the note, rolled his eyes and released the bird to Tad’s custody. Jack lived out his remaining years as Tad’s pet on the grounds of the White House.
Remembering the story of Tad, President Harry S. Truman started the tradition of pardoning a Presidential Thanksgiving Turkey in 1947. In a ceremony held at the White House, Truman read Tad’s story to an audience then ceremoniously issued a pardon to the fortunate turkey.
Every year since, the National Turkey Federation has raised a turkey to participate in the annual event. Following his pardon, the turkey is released to Frying Pan Park’s Kidwell Farm where they live out the remaining years of their lives. The farm is a petting farm where kids get to meet the turkeys that dodged the butcher’s cleaver.

 
EXTRA CREDIT: WHAT WERE THE NAMES OF THE TWO TURKEYS THAT PRESIDENT OBAMA PARDONED ON NOVEMBER 27, 2013?
 
EMAIL YOUR FIRST AND LAST NAME WITH YOUR ANSWERS TO: wrichards@camden.k12.nc.us
 
 
This is due no later than Wednesday, December 4 at 7:40 A.M. Any answers received after that date and time will not be accepted.