News + Events

Athletes on Ice!


image taken from timesdispatch.com

From Richmond Times-Dispatch, Oct. 24, 2009:

JUAN ANTONIO LIZAMA TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER
Published: October 24, 2009

Some of the special-needs athletes participating in yesterday’s Special Olympics skating event with the performers of “Disney On Ice” couldn’t speak.

But they vocalized, smiled broadly and clapped.

“That’s from the excitement,” said Sylvia Seaborne, a John Marshall High School exceptional education teacher who came to the Richmond Coliseum with the group. “They’re making noise. That means they’re happy.”

About 40 Richmond and Chesterfield County Special Olympic skaters who attended the morning performance of “Disney On Ice” were treated to a post-program skating clinic, with a special appearance by Minnie and Mickey Mouse.

Ashley Grant, an 11-year-old fifth-grader at Greenfield Elementary School in Chesterfield, was up and dressed in her glittering pink skating outfit since 6 a.m., said her mother, Julia Grant.

“She always has to have a beautiful dress on,” she said as her daughter skated on the rink with other athletes and Disney performers. “She’s been talking about the show every day for the last month.”

Her daughter became interested in ice skating two years ago, Grant said. She took her to the Richmond Ice Zone in Midlothian.

“She thought she was going to glide on the ice and be able to do a couple of spins, but she fell on her butt,” she said. “It took her awhile to realize that if you fall, you get back up. She’s come much further than we thought.”

The sociable Ashley took some other youngsters by the hand and guided them in their skating. She often picked up her friend Christopher Worsham, who attends Salem Church Middle School.

Edward Hargrove, Christopher’s stepfather, videotaped his son’s little steps on the ice, his clapping, singing and repeated falls, which he seemed to do for fun.

“Just to see him having fun and enjoying himself is great,” he said.

For some of the skaters, the event offered a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, said Seaborne, the John Marshall High teacher.

“To be out here with Minnie and Mickey, characters they see on TV every day, it just warms my heart,” she said.

These kinds of events are important for children with special needs, Grant said.

“It’s such a self-esteem builder for these kids,” she said. “It’s something they can do, that everyone else is doing and that they’re good at.”

Link to original article: http://www2.timesdispatch.com/rtd/news/local/article/DISN24_20091023-221809/301299/

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Quest for the Gold!, a huge success!

Ravenchase’s Quest for the Gold – a race to benefit Special Olympics Area 6 – was a huge success. Beginning with the starter clue which incorporated the athlete’s oath inspired by the founder of Special Olympics, Eunice Kennedy Shriver & ending at Positive Vibe Café who is a tremendous supporter of our athletes…the racers ran through Richmond stopping to gather clues at various sports venues & deciphering puzzle pieces to determine where to go next.

A pair who are new to Ravenchase had the following comment:

“Just for the record: We LOVED this event. We had so much fun (despite our occasional bickering). The main question for us is when will the next one be, because we loved it! $50 well spent, and the fact that it benefits Special Olympics Area 6 makes it even better!”

The team who captured first place openly admitted to being addicted to the races and promise to return when supporters of Special Olympics again race through Richmond solving mysteries, learning about our great city & benefiting the athletes in Special Olympics Area 6.

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Congrats to the athletes of the 2009 Area 6 Fall Games!

Congratulations to all of the athletes of the 2009 Area 6 Fall Games! We wish you best of luck at the State Championships in November!

Area 6 would like to thank the volunteers that made our event possible. We especially thank the FC Richmond Soccer Club for running the soccer events. We hope you had a good time and made some new friends!

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Quest for the Gold!

Saturday, October 17th
1:00 p.m. - ????
Location: all over Richmond!

Calling all sports enthusiasts, history buffs, Ravenchase fans and inquiring minds! Here is a unique opportunity for you to learn more about the history of sports in our grand city of Richmond, all while supporting your local Area 6 Special Olympics program.

It’s a Scavenger Hunt with a twist. It’s National Treasure with a local flare. Treasure maps, clues, actors and gadgets are all yours to use to unlock the codes as you race through the streets of Richmond to the final destination where wonderfully tacky prizes and bragging rights await the top three teams. And where everyone will enjoy a refreshing beverage of choice and the time to share their adventures and some misadventures, too.

Get off the couch and Get into the Game!

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logologo2

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Young Athlete program added

Special Olympics Virginia is offering a Young Athlete training program for children, ages 2-7, with intellectual disabilities. The training site will be at Trinity United Methodist Church located at 903 Forest Ave. The program will start Thursday, September 24 and meet every Thursday from 3:30-4:30. There is no charge to participate. This program is designed to teach young children movements and skills that are precursors to a variety of sports. For more information contact Tina Andes at 726-3032 or tandes@specialolympicsva.org.

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Eunice Kennedy Shriver, founder of Special Olympics, passed away at 88


image taken from NYTimes.com

Words from our President:

It is with great sadness that we inform you that Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the Founder and Honorary Chairman of Special Olympics, passed away early this morning at Cape Cod Hospital (Massachusetts), surrounded by her family.

Mrs. Shriver forever altered the course of mankind by leading a human rights movement to bring dignity, respect, opportunity and hope to people with intellectual disabilities, throughout the world.

And the gift was that she invited all of us to come stand with her, on the right side of history.

In fact, Mrs. Shriver’s greatest legacy may be this: that she made it possible for each of us to feel our own power to be the difference, to be the change, to be the ambassadors for acceptance and inclusion. She once said, “Special Olympics belongs to the future not the past.” To honor her, we will work toward that future.

We encourage you to visit the tribute site that was established in her honor, www.eunicekennedyshriver.org. On the site, you can post your own tribute to Mrs. Shriver and share your condolences and sentiments regarding the impact of her life and work.

Mrs. Shriver believed that there was always more to be done. Your continued support of Special Olympics will honor her life and continue her legacy.

Thank you and we ask that you will keep Mrs. Shriver’s family in your thoughts and prayers.

- Rick Jeffrey, President, Special Olympics Virginia

From the SOVA website:

“Thanks Mrs. Shriver”
By Athlete and Global Messenger, Frank Stephens of Fairfax, VA

There is a very large hole in the world today. It is the size of one person, but it will take an awful lot of people to fill it back up again. The space that Eunice Kennedy Shriver filled in the world was just a lot bigger than most people. Her heart alone seemed to be limitless. There was always room there for one more of us.

You see, I am a man with Down Syndrome and my life is worth living because Mrs. Shriver lived hers the way she did. Forty-one years ago Mrs. Shriver started asking “why not” about the lives of people like me, and nothing has been the same since. Special Olympics, which began as an outing for a few individuals in the Shrivers’ backyard, now has participants all over the world. Because of Mrs. Shriver, people like me have a place to compete, a place to be brave, a place to win with joy, and a place to lose with grace.

But the miracle that Mrs. Shriver has made is not really what happens on the field of play, but rather what has happened in the hearts and minds of the millions of people who have coached, volunteered, and cheered at our games. Because so many people have come in close contact with us through participation in Special Olympics, we are no longer automatically excluded from society.

None of us need fear the welcome that Mrs. Shriver will receive as her spirit moves on. There are tens of thousands of special angels who have gone before her who are just waiting for the chance to cheer for her at the end of her race as she has cheered so many of ours. For us left behind, there are no words to say “Thank you” enough, so on behalf of all of us athletes, I would just like to repeat what we told her a year ago at one of those special gatherings in the Shrivers’ backyard, “Rock on, Mrs. Shriver, rock on.” I can still see her smile and hear her laugh.

Thanks, Mrs. Shriver, you took the one lifetime you were given and gave meaning to millions of lives. If there is an awards ceremony for life, you win the gold medal.

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A note on Ms. Shriver

Dear James River Region,

As some of you may have seen on the news, Special Olympics Founder, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, is currently in critical but stable condition at Cape Cod Hospital.

We all know the profound impact that Ms. Shriver has had, not only on the lives of our athletes, but on the lives of millions around the world. Ms. Shriver started Special Olympics over 40 years ago in 1968. Please keep her and her family in your thoughts and prayers.

Below are statements that have been issued by both her family and Special Olympics International. Also, feel free to click on this link (www.eunicekennedyshriver.org) to go to an amazing website about Eunice Kennedy Shriver. I will continue to keep you all updated as the situation regarding her health plays out.

Statement on the Health of Eunice Kennedy Shriver - August 7, 2009

Eunice Kennedy Shriver is in Cape Cod Hospital in intensive care in critical but stable condition. Her entire family is with her - her husband, all her children and her grandchildren. The family is grateful for the prayers of her many friends.

- Statement issued from the Shriver Family

Special Olympics Statement on the Health of Eunice Kennedy Shriver - August 7, 2009

The Special Olympics movement is saddened to hear that our Founder, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, is hospitalized. Our thoughts and prayers are with Mrs. Shriver and her family at this time. Every day, our Special Olympics family continues to work tirelessly around the world to bring her powerful vision to life to change the lives of people with intellectual disabilities, using sports as the catalyst for respect, acceptance and inclusion.

- Statement issued by Brady Lum, Special Olympics President & COO

Tina Andes
James River Region Director
Special Olympics Virginia

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Special Olympics founder, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, in critical condition

From the WRIC 8 News website:

Eunice Kennedy Shriver critical at Mass. Hospital

BARNSTABLE, Mass. (AP) - Eunice Kennedy Shriver, a sister of President John F. Kennedy and a longtime champion for the disabled, was in critical condition Friday at a Massachusetts hospital.

The 88-year-old Shriver’s husband, 1972 vice presidential candidate and former Peace Corps director R. Sargent Shriver, gathered at her side along with their children and grandchildren at Cape Cod Hospital in Barnstable, said family spokesman Stephen Rivers.

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the husband of Shriver’s daughter, Maria, was also there, said Aaron McLear, a spokesman for the governor.

Shriver has been weakened in recent years by a series of strokes. She lives in Hyannis Port, near the family compound where her brother, U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, has been staying as he undergoes treatment for brain cancer.

Sen. Kennedy left the compound Friday in a golf cart with his wife and dog, headed toward the area where the family sailboat is docked.

Shriver is the fifth of the nine Kennedy children. Edward Kennedy and Jean Kennedy Smith are her sole surviving siblings.

In a recent interview posted on eunicekennedyshriver.org, Sen. Kennedy said his sister has never backed down from the rest of the competitive clan.

“She always strived to be the best, and she in many respects has made such an extraordinary difference in the lives of so many people around the world,” he said.

Shriver is perhaps best known for her work to establish the Special Olympics, inspired in part by the struggles of her mentally disabled sister, Rosemary.

She organized the first Special Olympics in 1968 in Chicago. The two-day event drew more than 1,000 participants from 26 states and Canada. By 2003, the Special Olympics World Summer Games, held that year in Dublin, Ireland, involved more than 6,500 athletes from 150 countries.

Special Olympics Virginia - Area 6 wishes her good health.

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Summer Games Slide Show

Thank you to everyone who volunteered and cheered on our athletes at the 2009 SOVA Summer Games! Our athletes did splendidly and we all had a great time!

Here is a sideshow found on the SpecialOlympicsVA’s youtube.com channel (http://www.youtube.com/specialolympicsva). We hope you enjoy it.

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Happy Father’s Day from Area 6

Area 6 would like to thank all the fathers who give us their time and energy as volunteers, friends of athletes, and family members of athletes. Jonathan, a Chesterfield athlete, and Richard Koch, his father, are featured on the Special Olympics website! THE Special Olympics website! Check it out. Picture 2.

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