Snowdays Foundation is an all-volunteer organization dedicated to youth empowerment through snowboarding. We run a program that teaches snowboarding to young people in the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area.
Our students come from middle and high schools in some of Portland's most challenging neighborhoods, with the lowest academic achievement, the highest poverty rates, and the highest percentage of single-parent households.
We are proud to be partnered with Self-Enhancement Inc., one of Portland's most well-respected youth mentoring organizations.
Mission
The mission is to provide life skills through snowboarding for middle and high school students.
By working through challenges on the mountain, students gain self confidence, strengthen friendships, and also have an opportunity to become more aware of their natural surroundings. The organizers of Snowdays have all reaped vast benefits from snow sports, learning to respect and care for the mountain environment, understanding the benefits of healthy lifestyle choices, and appreciating the joy that snow sports can bring. It is our hope to pass on this knowledge, excitement, and passion to the students.
Snowdays is 100% volunteer run by those involved in the snowboard industry or passionate about the benefits of snowboarding.
History
Snowdays was started in 2004 by Travis Parker and Patrick Edwards. Patrick teaches science at Jefferson High School in Portland, Oregon, and Travis is a world-class professional snowboarder.
Our students come from middle and high schools in some of Portland's most challenging neighborhoods, with the lowest academic achievement, the highest poverty rates, and the highest percentage of single-parent households.
We are proud to be partnered with Self-Enhancement Inc., one of Portland's most well-respected youth mentoring organizations.
Mission
The mission is to provide life skills through snowboarding for middle and high school students.
By working through challenges on the mountain, students gain self confidence, strengthen friendships, and also have an opportunity to become more aware of their natural surroundings. The organizers of Snowdays have all reaped vast benefits from snow sports, learning to respect and care for the mountain environment, understanding the benefits of healthy lifestyle choices, and appreciating the joy that snow sports can bring. It is our hope to pass on this knowledge, excitement, and passion to the students.
Snowdays is 100% volunteer run by those involved in the snowboard industry or passionate about the benefits of snowboarding.
History
Snowdays was started in 2004 by Travis Parker and Patrick Edwards. Patrick teaches science at Jefferson High School in Portland, Oregon, and Travis is a world-class professional snowboarder.
The Fat Bloke Sevens rugby tournament.
This tournament provides an opportunity for overweight, unfit, poorly skilled and generally wobbly rugby players to take part in a Sevens competition with like-minded, and bodied, individuals and teams. It was the first tournament of its kind and has spawned many falttering offspring. So much so that the RFU have shown great interest in this type of tournament and encouraged the growth of such events both within the UK and internationally.
tfairy.org.uk/images/fb2006/img602.jpg
The original tournament, organised by supporters of London Irish rugby team, has spawned many similar events over the World and has generated huge interest within the world of rugby as a format for including supporters and previous players in events which bring community and club together.
Originally set at Henley RFC, the tournament has been held in Reading at Abbey RFC for the last few years. Recently a womens rugby tournament has taken place at the same time as the mens and has included teams from London Irish Ladies, Leeds Ladies, Worcester, Marlow and Bristol.
For the mens tournament, teams come from all over the country and abroad, including Ireland, Holland, and Italy. Most of the Guinness Premiership teams provide a supporters team to take part and over a thousand rugby fans converge for a weekend of rugby, drinking and singing in a traditional rugby style in the middle of July each year.
The idea is to keep 'coarse' or 'grass roots' rugby alive in local clubs and at the same time raise funds for charities.
----
Sources and articles:
Flatulent Fairies (Organisers): http://www.fartfairy.org.uk/fatblokes.html
CHP Consulting (Sponsors): http://www.chp.co.uk/news/press.php?press=74&author=0&publication=0
Jasons Leopards (Harlequins Team): http://www.rugbynetwork.net/main/s98/st77894.htm
Leeds Lardies (Leeds Tykes Team): http://www.photofitz.com/lardies/2003.html
Charity:
Wooden Spoon Society
--Eek the weeble 19:59, 12 October 2007 (UTC)
This tournament provides an opportunity for overweight, unfit, poorly skilled and generally wobbly rugby players to take part in a Sevens competition with like-minded, and bodied, individuals and teams. It was the first tournament of its kind and has spawned many falttering offspring. So much so that the RFU have shown great interest in this type of tournament and encouraged the growth of such events both within the UK and internationally.
tfairy.org.uk/images/fb2006/img602.jpg
The original tournament, organised by supporters of London Irish rugby team, has spawned many similar events over the World and has generated huge interest within the world of rugby as a format for including supporters and previous players in events which bring community and club together.
Originally set at Henley RFC, the tournament has been held in Reading at Abbey RFC for the last few years. Recently a womens rugby tournament has taken place at the same time as the mens and has included teams from London Irish Ladies, Leeds Ladies, Worcester, Marlow and Bristol.
For the mens tournament, teams come from all over the country and abroad, including Ireland, Holland, and Italy. Most of the Guinness Premiership teams provide a supporters team to take part and over a thousand rugby fans converge for a weekend of rugby, drinking and singing in a traditional rugby style in the middle of July each year.
The idea is to keep 'coarse' or 'grass roots' rugby alive in local clubs and at the same time raise funds for charities.
----
Sources and articles:
Flatulent Fairies (Organisers): http://www.fartfairy.org.uk/fatblokes.html
CHP Consulting (Sponsors): http://www.chp.co.uk/news/press.php?press=74&author=0&publication=0
Jasons Leopards (Harlequins Team): http://www.rugbynetwork.net/main/s98/st77894.htm
Leeds Lardies (Leeds Tykes Team): http://www.photofitz.com/lardies/2003.html
Charity:
Wooden Spoon Society
--Eek the weeble 19:59, 12 October 2007 (UTC)
* Erik Satie (1917)
::Sonatine Bureaucratique
* Sergei Prokofiev
::Symphony N° 1 (1917)
* Igor Stravinsky
::' (1920)
::Octet (1922/1923)
::Oedipus Rex (1927)
::Apollon Musagete (1928)
::Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra (1929)
::Symphony of Psalms (1930)
::Violin Concerto (1931)
::Symphony in C (1940)
::Orpheus (1947)
::The Rake's Progress (1951)
*Paul Hindemith
::kammermusik No 7 for organ and chamber orch op 46. no 2
*Bohuslav Martinů
::Fantasia for Theremin, Oboe, Piano and String Quartet (1944)
*Vangelis Papathanasiou
::Mythodea
::Foros Timis Ston Greco
*Francis Poulenc
::Les Biches
::Suite Francaise for Piano
More references to neoclassicist pieces can be found in the article .
Neoclassicistic
Pieces
::Sonatine Bureaucratique
* Sergei Prokofiev
::Symphony N° 1 (1917)
* Igor Stravinsky
::' (1920)
::Octet (1922/1923)
::Oedipus Rex (1927)
::Apollon Musagete (1928)
::Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra (1929)
::Symphony of Psalms (1930)
::Violin Concerto (1931)
::Symphony in C (1940)
::Orpheus (1947)
::The Rake's Progress (1951)
*Paul Hindemith
::kammermusik No 7 for organ and chamber orch op 46. no 2
*Bohuslav Martinů
::Fantasia for Theremin, Oboe, Piano and String Quartet (1944)
*Vangelis Papathanasiou
::Mythodea
::Foros Timis Ston Greco
*Francis Poulenc
::Les Biches
::Suite Francaise for Piano
More references to neoclassicist pieces can be found in the article .
Neoclassicistic
Pieces
The Dream for Africa is a vision of the unification of the present 54 African states. It was one of the main mission objectives which necesitated the founding of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) - now renamed African Union (AU) - an organisation that seeks to establish a centralised government and bank for all African states.
In practical terms, the current trend toward the creation of 'development regions' such as the SADC and Ecowas will benefit the greater goal of attaining Pan-African unification and a continent-wide governing body.
The emergence of strengthening trade ties with the Caribbean and South America, as well as with Asia and the Pacific rim economies stands to benefit Africa throughout the new century.
Many Africans view the continent's rich store of culture and diversity as a resource for internal growth. Proponents of African spiritual traditions such as Ifá and Vodun; practitioners of Africa's cultural expressions such as Capoeira (via Angola); and her multitude of body, musical and auritorical performers together nurture the belief that these life-giving forces will benefit the continent's socio-political development in the modern era.
The dream of Africans is linked to the health of Africa's people, her resources and self-esteem - yet, the African continent's wellbeing is intrinsically linked to the wellbeing of all the peoples of the world. Much shedding of the baggage imposed on Africa during the past 400 years is necessary and is, in fact, happening. The future of the African continent is full of hope and involves the metamorphosis from underdevelopment to sustainable growth energised by the revitalising ingredients already present within the continent herself.
In practical terms, the current trend toward the creation of 'development regions' such as the SADC and Ecowas will benefit the greater goal of attaining Pan-African unification and a continent-wide governing body.
The emergence of strengthening trade ties with the Caribbean and South America, as well as with Asia and the Pacific rim economies stands to benefit Africa throughout the new century.
Many Africans view the continent's rich store of culture and diversity as a resource for internal growth. Proponents of African spiritual traditions such as Ifá and Vodun; practitioners of Africa's cultural expressions such as Capoeira (via Angola); and her multitude of body, musical and auritorical performers together nurture the belief that these life-giving forces will benefit the continent's socio-political development in the modern era.
The dream of Africans is linked to the health of Africa's people, her resources and self-esteem - yet, the African continent's wellbeing is intrinsically linked to the wellbeing of all the peoples of the world. Much shedding of the baggage imposed on Africa during the past 400 years is necessary and is, in fact, happening. The future of the African continent is full of hope and involves the metamorphosis from underdevelopment to sustainable growth energised by the revitalising ingredients already present within the continent herself.