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by
Jennifer Kowalewski
Once again, faculty, staff and students are
asked to open their hearts and wallets to the Kenyan Children’s
Fund to help children in need. A dinner scheduled Thursday,
April 20, will benefit orphaned children in the Africa nation
ravaged by the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
In western Kenya, 30 to 40 percent of adults
are affected by the HIV virus. The littlest sufferers are the
children left behind.
“The money raised will provide school
uniforms for these children,” says Gillian Ice, Ph.D.,
M.P.H., assistant professor of social medicine and a
principal organizer of the benefit. “This year, we have a list
of 600 children who have lost both parents. In Kenya, children’s
schooling is free, but the child has to buy the uniform.
Sometimes, that is out of reach. For many children, this may be
the only piece of clothing they have. I would like to provide
uniforms for all 600 children.”
At a cost of $5 per uniform, the benefit,
hopefully, will raise at least $3,000. The event will take place
at 6 p.m. on the Irvine Hall Bricks. The public is invited.
Dinner is $5 for students and $10 for
non-students. Raffle tickets are $5 each; with the chance to win
prizes such as weekend getaways, gift certificate to area
restaurants and Ping Center memberships.
Dinner will include pasta with a dill sauce,
roasted vegetables, salad and dessert.
OU-COM students will have the Kenyan
Children’s Fund cookbook for sale as well, which has many
wonderful recipes donated by faculty and staff.
Event organizers have planned a presentation
to coincide with dinner.
The Kenyan Children’s Fund began four years
ago, after Ice traveled to the nation to conduct research on
grandparents as caregivers of AIDS orphans. While there, she saw
the need and wanted to give back to the community that was basis
of her research. One of the most fundamental ways she could help
these children, and Kenya, was to see that they were properly
clothed, sheltered and educated. Thus the fund began.
Since its inception, the benefit dinner has
raised money used to build a dormitory at the Jaber Orphanage
and School and purchased text books and school bags. This will
be the second time purchasing uniforms.
Ice has returned to Kenya each year since the
fund began to continue her research. She also brings with her
several OU-COM medical students, not only to research but to
help educate Kenyans in their critical fight against HIV/AIDS.
- 30 -
News for
the week of
April
17
– April 22
Anderson Minority Health Month
lecture cancelled
Social Work Chairman Greenlee
continues Minority Health Month presentations with ‘Appalachian
Cultural Competence’ Tuesday at noon
H. Paul Kim, D.O. (’94), is the
final speaker for Career Medical Specialties Week
D.O.C. Awards held Wednesday evening
in Irvine 194
News for
the week of
April
10
– April 15
News for
the week of
April 3
– April 8
News for
the week of
March 27
– April 1
News Archives
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