Today LRI stands at the forefront of innovation in lupus research. The national
nonprofit organization has raised millions in private sector funds—part of its Campaign for a Cure to back 42 novel research studies and grants that support talented investigators
pursuing lupus research. Already, 73% of LRI's initial 3-year grants have produced significant results, leading to expanded
funding from the NIH and other government offices.
The Institute backs bold, high-impact basic and clinical research studies
grounded in sound deductive logic. Scientific and medical specialties represented among grant recipients range from rheumatology
to cardiology, nephrology, neurology, and dermatology. LRI also invests in the future by recruiting, motivating, and supporting
talented new investigators.
With your help, we were able to donate $30.00 in 2006!
With your help, we were able to donate $20.00 in 2007!
With your help, we were able to donate $0 in 2008!
The National Breast Cancer Foundation operates with a Board of Directors
approved budget and by good business management practices. The Foundation is incorporated as a 501(c)(3) corporation in order
to provide tax incentives to its contributors. Better Business Bureau standards require charities to spend at least 50 percent
of all contributions on their stated causes. More than 80 percent of all donations to the National Breast Cancer Foundation
benefit free mammograms to needy women, educational programs and cancer research projects.
With your help, we were able to donate $220.00 in 2006!
In early 2007, we learned that in order to use the name of the Breast Cancer
Foundation that we were donating to was going to cost us a $5000.00 fee - as their name is copyrighted. For this reason,
starting in 2007, we are hoping to change our charity to the Y-Me Breast Cancer Foundation.
The 24-hour Y-ME National Breast Cancer Hotline (1-800-221-2141) is made
available to anyone touched by or concerned about breast cancer or breast health. The Hotline is staffed entirely by trained
peer counselors who are breast cancer survivors. In Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 2004, over 83% of their revenue went
to Program Services.
With your help, we were able to donate $0.00 in 2007!
With your help, we were able to donate $0 in 2008!
This foundation was established in 2004 and received 501(c) (3) status on
January 19, 2005. Mission Statement: We will work to eliminate colon cancer as a life threatening disease through the
development and dissemination of educational programs focused on prevention, early screening and detection, and aggressive
therapeutic intervention.
The Foundation has established a niche and has branded itself with two extraordinary
programs: "Save Our Parents Program" and "The Sharing, Caring and Surviving Colon Cancer Symposium".
With your help, we were able to donate $30.00 in 2006!
With your help, we were able to donate $0.00 in 2007!
With your help, we were able to donate $0 in 2008!
The National MS Society is a collective of passionate individuals who want to do something about MS now—to
move together toward a world free of multiple sclerosis. MS stops people from moving. They exist to make sure it doesn't.
The National MS Society help each person address the challenges of living with MS through our 50-state network of chapters.
The Society helps people affected by MS by funding cutting-edge research, driving change through advocacy, facilitating professional
education, and providing programs and services that help people with MS and their families move their lives forward.
With your help, we were able to donate $0 in 2008!
“The Best Hope for a Cure”
The Diabetes Research Institute (DRI) is a recognized world leader
in cure-focused research. Since its inception in the early 1970s, the DRI has made significant contributions to the
field of diabetes research, pioneering many of the techniques used in islet cell transplantation. From innovations
in islet isolation and transplant procedures to advances in cell biology and immunology, the Diabetes Research Institute is
now harnessing the power of emerging technologies to develop new cell-based therapies to restore insulin production.
With your help, we were able to donate $0.00 in 2007!
With your help, we were able to donate $0 in 2008!
Acker Family Fund
In December 2008, I tried to make a donation to the Acker Family only to find out that their accout
at FirstBank of South Jeffco had been closed earlier that year. As much as I would love to continue to help the Acker
Family, I am unable to find a way to get donations to them. For this reason, in 2009, I will have to discontinue our
support for them.
Heidi Acker never
had enough money to pay the bills for the past five years. But the Littleton day-care teacher and mother of four always had
something to give. She slept on an old sunken couch in the living room so her
kids could have the bedrooms. She was the loudest fan at her children's soccer,
cross country and gymnastics events. She volunteered at almost every school or
extracurricular activity fundraiser. She advised and comforted struggling parents
and friends. Since Heidi's death on Saturday, October 20, 2007 in a freak car
accident, friends and strangers are stepping up to give back. The goal is to keep the children, ages 14 to 22, in their home
until the youngest graduates from high school. The student council at Dakota
Ridge High School, where the two youngest children attend, raised $1,000 in a one-day class-to-class fundraiser. The family's church, Belleview Community Church, is picking up the tab for the funeral and burial. And local restaurants, Red Robin and Chick-fil-A, and Boy Scout troops also are raising
money. The response is a testament to Heidi's character, said friend Jerice Stowe. Tall and willowy with high, apple-shaped cheekbones and straight raven hair, the 50-year-old
German-born immigrant was selfless to a fault. She preached compassion. And she dreamed of seeing her children graduate from
college. "She just was an angel, as a friend, as a mom and to the community,"
Stowe said. "She has been living and dealing with unbelievable odds. She didn't
allow the circumstances . . . to dampen her spirit." Trish Loupee, another longtime
friend, is coordinating fundraising. Loupee said she never saw Heidi buy anything, "not even a stick of gum," for herself. "She took clothes from me," Loupee said. "If you asked her to go out, she wouldn't
do it. It would be her last $2 and she would need it for the children." The financial
troubles began when Heidi's husband moved out and the couple later divorced. Her
income from Belleview Acres Day Care Center in Littleton barely covered the mortgage.
"We were dirt poor," said son David, 19. "She was so worried about it. I don't know how we got by." Heidi drove the kids to their activities in a beat-up 1993 Dodge Caravan donated by her church. The church cook sent home leftovers. Heidi never knew the source, but the church also has been paying the
Xcel bill for the past two years. The eldest child, Sonja, 22, buys groceries
with her income from her cashier job at Pet-Smart. She's about to graduate from Metropolitan State College of Denver where
she is on full scholarship. Despite the financial hardships, Heidi often refused
help. On Saturday, she went on a date to a Buddhist shrine at Red Feather
Lakes. She was on her way home, riding in the passenger seat of the car, when it began to snow. A tire slipped off the remote mountain road in Larimer County and the car flipped, her children said. Heidi
was wearing a seatbelt, but she died instantly from the force of the crash. When
she died, Heidi was wearing the small, silver heart pendant her son Christopher, 16, had given her and a jean jacket handed
down from a friend's mother. She will be buried in that same jean jacket, Levi
jeans, a black T-shirt and black loafers. At the service, the children will play songs by the Rolling Stones, her favorite
band. (This article was taken from the Rocky Mountain New online edition 10/27/07. It was written by Myung Oak
Kim.)
With your help, we were able to donate $0.00 in 2007 and 2008!