Sunday, 05 September 2010
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D1 Hoops Player Lizarraga Featured in ESPN
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Deaf player's teammates see inspiration

Cal State Northridge's Michael Lizarraga is the only D-I player who can't hear

By Arash Markazi

ESPNLosAngeles.com

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Northridge's Special Player

There is a distinctive sound when you walk into the "Matadome," the quirky nickname of the flat-roofed basketball gym nestled inside the kinesiology building at Cal State Northridge. There's the booming voice of head coach Bobby Braswell yelling at his team to set a pick correctly. The squeaking of sneakers rubbing against the hardwood floor as players run up and down the court. The echoed chants of fans and the blown whistles of referees in the mostly empty gym. And the sound of the ball pounding on the cracked court as cheerleaders shout from the baseline.

For Michael Lizarraga, the only deaf athlete competing in NCAA Division I men's basketball, these sounds have zero meaning.

He can't hear the fans cheering for him after a strong rebound and must look at an interpreter to understand that Braswell is imploring him to extend his arms when he's on defense. Yet when Lizarraga, is on the court his 6-foot-7, 270-pound frame blends in seamlessly with the action.

"It just comes from instincts," Lizarraga said through his interpreter, Erin Matthews, a 28-year-old CSUN graduate. "I grew up playing basketball with hearing people and it's something natural that I do. I don't know how to explain it. I've always played basketball."

As Lizarraga, a junior forward, takes a seat on the bench, he signs with his teammate and best friend Willie Galick, a senior forward. When the two first met before a team barbeque three years ago, Galick didn't know sign language. In fact, he had never met a deaf person in his life. Gallick, 22, tried introducing himself to Lizarraga, 21, when he got in a teammate's car and Lizarraga just pointed to his ears, and Galick had to be told that Lizarraga was deaf.

"I was shocked," Galick said. "A deaf basketball player? I'd never heard of that. I'd seen a one-armed basketball player or a basketball player with a prosthetic leg, but I'd never seen a basketball player who couldn't hear. I thought this guy must be pretty special."

Galick got to know how special Lizarraga was over the next year as they bonded on and off the court. Lizarraga, who is from Northern California, and Galick, who is from British Columbia and transferred to CSUN from Pepperdine, were on the sidelines together most of their first season while Lizarraga learned the system as a freshman and Gallick sat out after his transfer. To pass the time, Galick would often ask Matthews how to sign random words and would then sign them to Lizarraga during practice to make him laugh.

Michael Lizarraga is 6-7 and one of Northridge's strongest players.

"I would call him a dirty rat or a turnip; one of our favorites is 'butter duck,'" Galick said. "I don't know where that came from but I was like, 'What's "butter"? What's "duck"?' And then I'd put it together, and it makes us laugh every time. We became close that first year. He's like my little brother now."

What started out as a way to goof off on the sidelines while they couldn't play quickly turned into a second language for Galick, who even began dating a deaf girl he met through Lizarraga. Galick has become so good at sign language that he can fill in for Mathews, who is unable to attend as many games and practices as she has in the past because of budget cuts.

"When he was first learning, he would sign very sloppy or sign slow, but he picks it up faster and faster. He's been signing pretty well now," Lizarraga said. "It's been tough not always having an interpreter, but Willie is happy to interpret for me, too. Sometimes when she's not here I want to know what coach said, but he talks for a really long time, and I want to know everything he's saying, but I have to be patient and just get the summary version from Willie."

Galick is constantly reminded of all the sounds around him when he's walking around campus with Lizarraga and signing to him or pointing him toward someone trying to get his attention.

"You don't really notice it, and you don't realize what you have until you lose it," Gallick said. "It's like walking around the world with noise-canceling headphones on all the time. You don't hear your own footsteps; you don't hear your own breath; you don't hear people walking around you, cars, birds; you don't realize how many sounds are out there until it's taken from you."

It was actually the sight of headphones and the thought of music flowing through them that gave Galick his most heartbreaking moment with Lizarraga last year.

"We were sitting on the team bus and everyone has their headphones on before the game and they were getting focused and bobbing their heads to the music, and Mike just gets my attention and signs, 'I wish I could do that,'" Galick said. "I'm like, 'Wish you could do what?' And he's like, 'I wish I could listen to music,' and I just paused my music and stopped what I was doing. All I could say was, 'I wish you could, too.'"

Lizarraga, who has started eight games this season and is averaging 2.3 points and 2.2 rebounds, grew up in Woodland, a small suburb 15 miles northwest of Sacramento. Although he and his sister, Natalie Ann, 15, are both deaf, his parents, Cari and Tavo Lizarraga, can hear and speak. It was actually the sight of Lizarraga's father signing to Michael during an AAU tournament in Las Vegas that caught the eye of Braswell while he was scouting another player. Lizarraga, who played basketball, football and baseball at the California School for the Deaf in Fremont, was encouraged to go to Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., the nation's only liberal arts university for the deaf and hard of hearing. Lizarraga, however, wanted to play Division I basketball.

"You have to give a lot of credit to Michael: He had a dream and a goal to play Division I basketball, and he's worked hard at it," Braswell said. "He is a pivotal part of what we do now. He's playing significant minutes. We depend on him, and he's one of our stronger guys. There's a great level of respect his teammates have for him as a basketball player, and they don't see him any other way."

CSUN was the only Division I school Lizarraga considered because of its nationally renowned program for deaf students. In fact, there are two other deaf athletes at CSUN in addition to Lizarraga (Ashley Griffith, who is on the women's track and field team, and Danielle Berman, who is on the women's water polo team). The large number of deaf students at CSUN has actually given Lizarraga his own cheering section at games, where they root for him in their own unique way.

"I remember the first time he played here at home, I looked across the stands and I saw a group of people shaking their hands up in the air," Braswell said. "There were about 20 people doing that, and it didn't dawn on me until one of my assistant coaches told me those were deaf students and that's how they clap. When Mike scored his first basket, to see them all doing that is a moment I'll always remember."

As practice wraps up before the Matadors' final home game, he tries to teach a couple of teammates some phrases in sign language. He then motions for his teammates to call him later. "Wait, text me, don't call me," he signs. "Text me." They all bust up laughing as they leave the gym.

"Mike is a very funny guy," Galick said. "He notices things no one else notices because he sees how people act and picks up on their facial expressions and body language. He mimics them sometimes, and he does the best impressions of people. The other day he was making fun of how someone we know talks on the phone and he puts the phone up to his ear and then puts it up to his face and switches hands, and everyone is laughing because we all know what he's talking about. Mike gets people out of going in their little bubble with their headphones because Mike can't go into his own little bubble. He can't shut things off because everything has always been shut off. He's always looking around and wants to get involved. He's always starting conversations even thought he can't talk."

Galick shakes his head and looks down at the ground when he's reminded that he and Lizarraga are playing their final games together. After this year Galick will graduate and move back to Canada, while Lizarraga will have to move on without his best friend and on-court interpreter.

"I try not thinking about it, but it's slowly creeping up on us," Galick said. "I'm sort of leaving him behind without anyone to take my place. It's a sad situation but something that had to happen eventually. I'm trying to get other teammates involved, but they're not picking it up as well as I'd like them to. Hopefully a couple guys will step up and learn a few new words every day."

Galick just wishes there were some way he could help Lizarraga hear the same way Lizarraga has helped him sign.

"I wish I could give him my ability to hear even just for one day so he could hear his mom's voice and his dad's voice," Gallick said. "Just to hear how much they care about him. I just wish he could hear and talk to his parents even for a day in a quiet setting where he could hear nature and all these subtle things we take for granted. I wish I could give that to him for everything he's given me."

Arash Markazi is a reporter and columnist for ESPNLosAngeles.com.

 

Reprinted from ESPN.com

 

 
Deaf Tulane Swimmer Keeps Winning
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Tulane swimmer Kristin Ates hasn't let being deaf keep her from winning

By Tammy Nunez, The Times-Picayune

February 24, 2010

 

The sun was not yet up Tuesday in New Orleans, and Kristin Ates, a slim 18-year-old with long, shiny brown hair, was decked out in Tulane swimming gear, sitting on the deck of the Reily Center natatorium waiting to begin her final practice before heading to Houston this week for the Conference USA Swimming and Diving Championships.

 

Kristin Ates hasn't let being deaf prevent her from being very good as a swimmer.

Nerves clearly were setting in for the freshman, a walk-on who was just 24 hours from getting her first taste of college championship swimming. A few times during idle pre-practice chatter, she was startled by a few loud noises.

You'd never know she was deaf.

"I was born with bilateral sensory neural hearing loss," Ates e-mailed the night before. "I have severe hearing loss in one ear and profound in the other. I have a cochlear implant, though, that helps me hear very well -- but without the implant I can't hear anything.

"This does come in handy sometimes, though. For example, I can sleep at night in pure silence!"

The implant doesn't help Ates at practice or meets. She can't wear the device, which directly stimulates a nerve in her ear that conducts hearing, in the water. So Ates does what she has done throughout her life -- she reads lips.

She can pick up on conversations across the room, and has no trouble understanding instructions from Tulane Coach Lena Guarriello without wearing her implant. Ates speaks very softly, with just a hint of difficulty with annunciation. Her voice is so low that listeners have to lean forward to catch her words, but most people simply write that off as a trait of shyness. She has a quick smile, an eager nod and a tight bond with her teammates.

--- Words left unspoken ---

Ates is so assimilated into everyday life that she arrived at Tulane without telling anyone she was deaf, including her coach. Guarriello found out about Ates' disability from the Greenbackers booster club.

"They asked me how I planned on coaching a hearing-impaired athlete, and I was just clueless," Guarriello said. "All of Kristin's communications with me up until that point had been via e-mail, and I'd never anticipated anything like that. I guess she had been Googled (by the boosters) and it was kind of a shock. I felt a little embarrassed that I didn't know."

It's not that Ates is ashamed of her hearing loss. She embraces her disability. She represented the United States in the World Deaf Championships in Taiwan and willingly answers questions about her handicap.

"After going to Australia for the 2005 Deaflympic Games, I was able to compare the Australian culture to the Taiwanese culture," Ates said. "I loved competing against athletes from all over the world, and I remain in touch with friends from Germany, Australia, Sweden, Russia, Taiwan, South Africa and several other countries today. After traveling abroad for those international competitions, I've developed a passion for seeing the world and experiencing new cultures.

"It was also pretty cool to stand on the medal stand and watch the American flag go up with our national anthem playing. I won two gold, one silver and two bronze medals in individual events competing in Taiwan."

Ates' ability to adapt in everyday life was learned at an early age.

"I was born in a hearing family with no history of deafness. My younger brother and I are the only members of the family with any hearing loss," Ates said. "So my family was entirely oral. My mom taught me sign (language) when I was an infant, and then I did speech therapy for years to work on my speech and oral communication. Even though I hated it at the time, all the work definitely paid off."

In high school, Ates had a sign language interpreter attend class with her. But at Tulane, Ates relies on the implant and lip reading.

"It's worked out great so far," Ates said. "I do prefer to sit in front of the classrooms, but my cochlear implant helps me so much that I don't rely on lip reading professors so much. Lip reading still serves as a good backup for me to make sure I'm understanding everything clearly."

According to Allie Evans, her training partner and classmate, Ates does more than just keep up. The two are in a chemistry class together and Ates figures out most of the assignments before everyone else, Evans said.

"A lot of swimmers are in (the chemistry class)," Evans said. "She's probably the smartest out of all of us. She's very dedicated, so on the weekends when we have outings, she's studying."

--- Driving force ---

Swimming is only part of the reason Ates chose Tulane. Being on the team and participating in grueling work as a distance swimmer is the easy part of what the Charlotte, N.C., native plans on achieving in New Orleans.

Ates wants to be a doctor.

"I knew Tulane was a great medical school, and it was the perfect match for my major (cell and molecular biology)," Ates said. "When looking at colleges, academics was my main priority, but the opportunity to swim Division I sealed the deal."

Though she isn't the top point scorer on the team, Ates is a part of the distance depth and contributes immensely to the team each day at practice, according to Evans.

"Kristin . . . is the best person to train with just because she is so dedicated and she always puts her heart into everything," Evans said.

Ates is one of several freshmen who comprise nearly all of Tulane's roster. The program was a victim of budget cuts after Hurricane Katrina struck in 2005 and was brought back to competition this past fall. Today is the beginning of a championship season in which the Green Wave gets a chance to crack the upper echelon of Conference USA, namely Southern Methodist and Houston.

"I think this team has a lot of potential going into conference because we're new and everyone sees us as underdogs," Evans said. "But we have a lot of fast swimmers, and I think that we're going to surprise a lot of people."

Guarriello said everyone is going to have to swim fast to get third place behind SMU and Houston at the C-USA meet, which begins today and runs through Saturday. But just being able to participate in the conference meet for the first time in four years is an important step for the program.

"This group of women is exactly what I wanted," Guarriello said. "I couldn't ask for a better group of freshmen and our junior transfer to start our program. They are ideal student-athletes. They are outstanding in the classroom. They are phenomenal athletes and they're well-rounded people. . . . I wouldn't want it any other way. That makes this upcoming week very exciting. I'm very nervous for them. I'm nervous for our program. But it's a good nervous."

Ates is feeling the nerves, too.

"We've all come a long way this year, being a brand-new team and all, and I can't wait to see the hard work pay off for our team," she said.

 

Reprinted from www.nola.com

 
4A Football Star Weighs CU or Gallaudet
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Destination a snap decision

Dakota Ridge's Barber won't let deafness keep him out of college ball

By Brian Forbes

Special to The Denver Post

 

Steven Barber may attend Division III Gallaudet University, a school in Washington, D.C., for the deaf and hard of hearing, or try to be a walk-on at CU. Barber starred at 4A Dakota Ridge. (Craig F. Walker, The Denver Post )

 

LITTLETON — Like any talented high school football player, Steven Barber dreams of experiencing all the pomp and pageantry of playing at the next level. That crowd, which he hopes will be screaming for him, is something he will never hear.

Born with profound hearing loss, the 6-foot-2, 215-pound Barber is a home-schooled senior who starred last season for Class 4A Dakota Ridge as a defensive end, fullback and quarterback in the "wildcat" formation and was The Denver Post's All-Colorado long snapper. He has the kind of skills to be a shoo-in college player at some level.

Barber, who was a national semi-finalist for the prestigious Rudy Award, named for Notre Dame's iconic alum Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger, has one standing offer — from Division III Gallaudet University, a school in Washington, D.C., for the deaf and hard of hearing.

"I just want to play as long as I can," Barber wrote in an e-mail.

So goes the elusive dream for thousands of prep athletes who are weighing their options or looking for more after the balloons sag and the sheet cakes that come with national signing day are gone.

At Gallaudet, coaches assured Barber's mother, Leslie McCutcheon, that her oldest child will have ample opportunity to play as a freshman, especially as a long snapper, a duty the Broncos paid Lonie Paxton $1 million to perform in the 2009 season.

"It would be a good fit for Steven because he hasn't had that all-deaf contact," McCutcheon said. "But it is really far from home."

While the Bison's offer is special, Barber wouldn't mind being a Buffalo.

To be closer to his family, Barber is mulling the idea of enrolling at the University of Colorado and trying to be a walk-on with the Buffs. It's not far-fetched when you consider that a former Buffs coach told Dakota Ridge coach Ron Woitalewicz during a summer camp that Barber was downright amazing as a long snapper.

Barber, a fun-loving kid with distinct eyes and an easy smile, shrugs at that praise. Sort of like he did after being named the Dakota Ridge homecoming king last October. He's kind of a natural, whether it be making friends or playing football.

"One day my little league coach, Jeff Long, was trying new people in different positions on the punt team," Barber wrote. "He asked me to snap, so I did."

From there, Barber began watching closely what the snappers on TV did, and he practiced in the backyard by snapping the ball through a tire hanging from a tree.

On Barber's phone is video of him snapping a 16-pound bowling ball down the lane for a strike. Barber reckons he can knock down all the pins about 60 percent of the time.

"He even has the curve on it like a bowler," McCutcheon said. "It's crazy. And he does get strikes."

While the Jeffco school district provided Barber with a translator for every practice and game, not all colleges have that kind of help for athletics. She knows Barber's deafness might be intimidating to the uninitiated, but she hopes he will get the opportunity to show off his unique skill.

And that could get people talking. Even if Barber won't hear it.

 

Read more: http://www.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_14329182#ixzz0exl1JYb3

 

Reprint from the Denver Post

 
Gallaudet Coach Deals with Loss, Disease
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Coach deals with loss, disease on hardwood

BY VINCE GUERRIERI

 

WASHINGTON -- Kevin Cook can't imagine a day when he isn't coaching basketball.

Cook, a 1979 Fremont Ross High School graduate, is in his third season at the helm of the women's basketball team at Gallaudet University, a university designed to accommodate the deaf and hearing-impaired. He has led the Bison to a 10-8 record this season.

After many years as a coach on the college and professional levels, Cook is learning to communicate efficiently with a team that can't hear him screaming on the sidelines. But in the list of challenges he has to face, that's relatively minor.

A little more than a year ago, he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. His only sibling, Kelly Preston, did research on the disease and put him on a diet and a regimen of herbal supplements. She died in a house fire in Helena last month, while helping her daughter and grandson escape injury.

Cook has had trying moments, particularly since Preston's death. But he keeps moving forward. His coaching career steadies him. He continues not because he has to, but because he wants to.

"I try to win the next minute," he said. "I try to win the next day. I really haven't thought of myself not coaching. It's what I love to do. It brings me joy."

Cook graduated from Urbana University. He has been an assistant at the University of Kansas and for the WNBA's Houston Comets. After 11 years in Houston, he found himself looking for a job when Hilton Koch bought the Comets. The team faltered and has since suspended operations.

Another Comet employee was a Gallaudet graduate, and knew the alma mater was looking for a coach. Cook, who has coached international teams from three continents, believes basketball is basketball. But there was a learning curve in communicating with students who ranged from slightly hearing-impaired to completely deaf. Cook said there's only one player on his team who hears well enough to make a phone call.

"There's a lot of communication on the defensive end," he said. "When you're on a pick-and-roll, you can't just yell 'Switch!'"

The Bison won three games in Cook's first year at the helm. It was a far cry from his days with the Comets, who won the first four WNBA titles.

"I learned patience," he said. "With the Comets, we weren't used to losing any games."

The following year, the Bison doubled their win total to six.

Cook said one of the things he had to do was teach his team how to win. And it seemed like the team was making strides, winning four of their first seven games.

But the day after the Bison beat York, Preston died while saving her 16-year-old daughter and her daughter's infant son from a house fire. Cook described his sister as his best friend.

"If we didn't talk every day, we talked every other day," he said.

Jeff Eicher, the assistant basketball coach and athletic coordinator at Strongsville High School, has known Cook since they were in seventh grade. He knows how much Cook loved his sister.

"Kelly was his soul mate and confidant in life," Eicher said. "My heart aches for Kevin, his mom Ruth and Kelly's daughters. No one should have to go through what they have. Somehow their faith will help them carry on with their life."

Cook is impressed and grateful for the support the community has had for him -- both in Washington and in Sandusky County. Members of the Bison men's basketball team -- and people from the Capital Athletic Conference in general -- contributed clothing and supplies to the family relief effort. People in Sandusky County have held benefit dinners and clothing drives.

Preston was helping Cook as he fought his way through Parkinson's Disease. He honestly believes there will be a cure in his lifetime.

"This is just a minor hurdle," he said.

Eicher said Cook has the toughness to handle it. He saw it at Ross.

"It was common for basketball coaches to ask their players to run long distances during the summer and fall to stay in shape for the winter basketball season," Eicher said. "If Kevin was asked to run two miles, he would run four miles and add ankle weights to enhance his endurance. If he was asked to shoot 200 shots a day, he would shoot 400 shots. There was no one during that time at Fremont Ross High School who was as passionate about the game of basketball as he was."

Now, Cook's mission is twofold. He's still a coach. He'd like to see the Bison win three more league games. That would be enough to put them into the playoffs.

And next year, Gallaudet will leave the Capital Athletic Conference for the Northeast Athletic Conference.

"We'd like to go into the league with the chance to win it," he said.

In the meantime, he's watching players develop.

"I'm in the basketball business, but I'm also in the people business," he said. "I see the team changing, and them changing as individuals. It's rewarding."

But he also has to keep putting one foot in front of the other. For him, that's the easy part.

"I've only had a handful of tough days," he said. "Things could be so much worse.

"I'm still able to do what I love."

 

Reprinted from: TheNews-Messenger.com

 
Gallaudet Basketball Benefits Cancer Cause
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GALLAUDET BASKETBALL TEAMS SET TO HOST TWO BENEFIT GAMES TO FIGHT CANCER

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. - For the third consecutive year the Gallaudet University men's and women's basketball programs are teaming up to hold benefit games over the next three weeks to help raise awareness and donations to fight cancer.

GU will start things off this Saturday, January 30, with Coaches vs. Cancer Suits and Sneakers weekend, which is a collaborative initiative of the American Cancer Society and the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC). Participating NABC member coaches will wear sneakers instead of dress shoes with their suits during weekend games to demonstrate their support for the American Cancer Society and its vision of a world with less cancer and more birthdays. Basketball fans are also encouraged to wear sneakers to games that weekend to show their support. The Bison will host the University of Mary Washington with the women's game tipping off at 2 p.m. followed by the men's game at 4 p.m.

"This is an important cause for us to support because we all have known someone that has had cancer. It effects us all. I hope the campus community can come out and support Coaches vs. Cancer," said Gallaudet men's basketball coach Jeb Barber.

On Wednesday, February 17, the Bison will participate in the Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) "Pink Zone" initiative, formerly known as "Think Pink", that helps to assist in raising breast cancer awareness on the court, across campuses, in communities and beyond. Gallaudet will welcome St. Mary's (Md.) College to town for a men's and women's doubleheader that begins at 6 p.m. with the women's game followed by the men's game at 8 p.m. GU is encouraging all fans in attendance to wear something pink to show their support for this special cause. The Gallaudet University athletics department will be selling special Bison pink sweatshirts in the lobby for $25 with a portion of the proceeds going towards the WBCA Pink Zone.

"We are honored to participate in the WBCA Pink Zone initiative for a third year," said Gallaudet University women's basketball coach Kevin Cook. "We hope we can paint the Field House pink on February 17!"

 

More information about Coaches vs. Cancer, Pink Zone, the Kay Yow/WBCA Fund, The V Foundation is available from the following resources:

 

About the American Cancer Society/Coaches vs. Cancer

Thanks to the dedicated efforts of college and high school coaches and fans across the country, Coaches vs. Cancer participants have raised more than $55 million since 1993 to help the Society fund groundbreaking cancer research, provide up-to-date cancer information and education, advocate for public health policies that benefit communities, and deliver services that improve the quality of life for patients and their families. Additional information is available at www.coachesvscancer.org.

 

About WBCA Pink Zone

The WBCA began the WBCA Pink Zone, formerly known as "Think Pink", in 2007 as an initiative to raise breast cancer awareness in women's basketball, on campuses and in communities. The 2010 Pink Zone dates are February 12-21. Kay Yow, former North Carolina State University head women's basketball coach, served as the catalyst for the initiative after her third reoccurrence of breast cancer in 2006. In 2007, more than 120 schools unified for this effort and helped make the inaugural year a success. In 2008, over 1,200 teams and organizations participated, reaching over 830,000 fans and raising over $930,000 for breast cancer awareness and research. The 2009 campaign raised over $1.3 million, reached over 912,000 fans, unified more than 1,600 participating teams and organizations, and saw 56+ schools break attendance records at their event. The WBCA's charity of choice is the Kay Yow/WBCA Cancer Fund, in partnership with The V Foundation. The WBCA strongly encourages all donations from Pink Zone games to be given to this Fund. Additional information can be viewed on its Web site at www.wbca.org/pinkzone.asp.

 

About the Kay Yow/WBCA Cancer Fund

The Kay Yow/WBCA Cancer Fund was announced on December 3, 2007, during the Jimmy V Classic. The Kay Yow/WBCA Cancer Fund, in partnership with The V Foundation for Cancer Research, will raise money in the fight against women's cancers. It was appropriate to announce this Fund during the Jimmy V Classic because of the connection between the late Jim Valvano, former North Carolina State head men's basketball coach, and the late Kay Yow, former North Carolina State head women's basketball coach. The Fund was the first women's initiative that the WBCA has chosen in its 28-year history, and is also the newest women's initiative for The V Foundation. For additional information about the Kay Yow/WBCA Fund, please visit www.wbca.org/kayyowwbcacancerfund.asp.

 

About The V Foundation

The V Foundation is a charitable organization dedicated to saving lives by helping to find a cure for cancer. The foundation seeks to make a difference by generating broad-based support for cancer research and by creating an urgent awareness among all Americans of the importance of the war against cancer. The V Foundation performs these dual roles through advocacy, education, fundraising and philanthropy. For additional information about The V Foundation, please visit www.jimmyv.org.

 

Reprinted from the Gallaudet University Athletics Website

 
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