Tag Archives: lindsay brown

Calling All Pretty Amazing Girls!

In September 2012, we saw a familiar face on the cover of Seventeen: Lindsay Brown, the She’s the First chapter president at the University of Notre Dame! She was selected for being a stellar student athlete for organized a tie-dye cupcake bake sale for She’s the First, which led her to visit the girls she sponsored in Nepal and then create a nonprofit to teach girls in developing countries how to play soccer and be confident on the field and in the classroom. To do all this, she had to quit the soccer team and forfeit her own academic scholarship. Pretty amazing.

It’s that time of year when Seventeen is once again on the search for its 2013 cover girl in the 3rd annual Pretty Amazing Reader Cover Contest. In this competition, Seventeen asks girls ages 15-22 who are talented, creative, and inspiring to share their story. The winner also gets a $10,000 scholarship!

Last year the spotlight was on empowering girls in the developing world. What other accomplishments can you share with Seventeen? How have you, or one of your friends, inspired others to be pretty amazing? Spread the word!

Submit your story to Seventeen in 1,000 words or less and upload two photos by April 30th, 2013. For more contest information and to enter click here. If you want us to put in a good word for you, just email our Founder/President Tammy Tibbetts, tammy@shesthefirst.org.

 

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Leaders Unite! The STF*{Campus} Summit is Here

You have no idea how excited we are that this week is finally here!

This Thursday, October 11 is the United Nations’ first-ever Day of the Girl, and you know we love firsts. The movement is designed to create enthusiasm for the advancement of girls’ lives around the world; so, of course all of us here at She’s the First are joining in on the celebration. And I mean all of us—even 35 of our campus leaders from all over the country.

We're celebrating the Day of the Girl with these amazing women!

That’s right: tomorrow evening, the She’s the First*{Campus} superstars will be flying in to New York City and finally meeting each other offline at the 2012 She’s the First*{Campus} Summit. In addition to some exciting Day of the Girl festivities, we have two jam-packed days of activities and workshops planned for the students to bond with and learn from one another.

In honor of the Day of the Girl, we will be hosting an assembly at The Young Women’s Leadership School of Brooklyn for 300 high schoolers, the majority of whom will later become first-generation college students. We are excited to feature some incredibly inspiring women at the assembly, including Christine Quinn, New York City Council Speaker; Ann Shoket, editor-in-chief of Seventeen; Lindsay Brown, Seventeen’s “Pretty Amazing” contest winner and She’s the First*{Notre Dame} President; and actresses Monique Coleman and Josie Loren. Be sure to catch a live broadcast of the assembly on Thursday morning at 8:15 am—you don’t want to miss this! Watch below or on our Facebook page.


Stream videos at Ustream
Thursday afternoon, our She’s the First*{Campus} leaders will convene to propose ideas for bettering girls’ lives. Their solutions will be presented that evening at a reception with VIP guests and later presented to the United Nations. Although it is a challenging assignment, we have no doubt that our students will come up with some remarkable ideas.

This week will surely go down in She’s the First history and we are thrilled to be involved with the Day of the Girl. Stay tuned for a full recap on our blog next week and remember to follow along with our #STFSummit hashtag all week long!

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Now Watching ‘Pretty Amazing’ Seventeen.com Videos!

Walk by the newsstand. Pick up the October issue of Seventeen. You’ll recognize a face you’ve seen all over shesthefirst.org!

Lindsay Brown is the President of She’s the First*{Notre Dame} chapter and SEVENTEEN MAGAZINE’s cover girl!

As we found out last week, Lindsay won this year’s Pretty Amazing reader model cover contest, as a result of her genius idea to sponsor girls’ educations one tie-dye cupcake at a time and her powerful girls’ empowerment soccer program in Nepal!

Seventeen is a girl’s go-to magaizne for entertainment, fashion, and beauty, and it’s so refreshing to see them be bold in the media world by making one of their readers, a girl just like you or me, a super celebrity, for reasons that truly matter–having a big heart and dreams to change the world.

Seventeen captured Lindsay’s ‘Pretty Amazing’ journey on video. Check out some of our favorite episodes:


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She’s the First*{Notre Dame} President is Seventeen Cover Girl!

CONGRATULATIONS to our Lindsay Brown, creator of the tie-dye cupcake fundraising craze and president of the She’s the First*{Notre Dame} chapter — out of 35,000 entries, she WON Seventeen‘s “Pretty Amazing” Reader Model Cover Contest!

Pick up the October issue of Seventeen ASAP to read about Lindsay and the four outstanding finalists: Chloe, Brittany, Kim, and Lindsay G., whom we admire for being “firsts” in their own incredibly impressive ways, from ballet to flying planes!

Thank you to the contest judges — Ann Shoket, Jared Eng, and Emma Roberts, and all the Seventeen readers who voted — for recognizing that Lindsay’s story can inspire millions of girls to take action for education equality worldwide.

Why is this cover so exciting?! Well,…

  1. It’s academic! Lindsay will receive a $20,000 scholarship (very well-deserved given that she’s spent so much of her own money traveling to Nepal…she also plans to go to Kenya over winter break, to implement her girls’ empowerment soccer program!).
  2. It’s bigger than one person. The girls Lindsay sponsors in Nepal — especially 13-year-old Hima — are going to flip out when they see their stories in the magazine, too! If this doesn’t prove to them that crazy dreams can come true, we don’t know what does! Lindsay also represents what it means to be a She’s the First*{Campus} leader, before a huge national audience of college-bound teens.
  3. It’s actionable. Most of all, any American girl who picks up Seventeen and says, “I want to be like Lindsay Brown!” can do just that, right now. None of us needs to wait to be the change we wish to see. Sign ups for our Tie-Dye Cupcake Bake-Off movement in November have begun!

We congratulate you, Lindsay, and celebrate the work of you and your fellow She’s the First*{Campus} presidents across the U.S. do–there’s 35 of you now!

We also would like to recognize the founder of our Nepal partner school, Maggie Doyne…because without her, there would be no “Pretty Amazing” story, there would be no Hima to inspire this “girl effect.” We are humbled that we get to write the happy ending with all of you.

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Help Us Welcome the Girls of the Magic Bus Foundation in Mumbai!

Did you follow Christen and Kate’s journey to Shanti Bhavan, our partner school in India & wish you could travel there, too?

Do you want to find a meaningful way to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of Title IX,  the law that ended gender discrimination in U.S. sports?

Here’s what we suggest: Join us on June 25, 30, or July 2nd to meet a group of girls visiting NYC from Mumbai–the city that houses the impoverished slum where Slumdog Millionaire took place, if you saw that movie–with an organization called Magic Bus. They tweeted us a very exciting, free, and inspiring invitation!

 

The Magic Bus Foundation is a non-profit built on mentorship — they empower children and communities to break the poverty cycle by promoting education, health, gender equality, and leadership. Soccer is one way in which they achieve the mission. (We already know this is a smart idea, because of very own  She’s the First*{Notre Dame} star Lindsay Brown‘s project which landed her a spot among Seventeen‘s Pretty Amazing Reader Cover contest finalists).

The U.S. General Manager, Rahul, reached out to @shesthefirst after meeting with our friends over at @10x10act. Social media continues to work magic for us!

Magic Bus is now working in Bangalore, where Shanti Bhavan is located! We can’t wait to see where this partnership will lead, but in the meantime let’s give these girls a NYC visit they will never forget.

Join us and meet the girls (Tickets are FREE!, just RSVP):

  • Monday, June 25th: Meet the girls at a reception in The Fuller Building, 595 Madison Avenue, Suite 900
  • Saturday, June 30th: Cheer the girls on at their soccer game at Pier 40
  • Monday, July 2nd: Help the girls take over the Today Show Plaza & grab Al Roker’s attention on national TV at 30 Rock!

To learn more visit www.magicbus.org and tweet us or @magicbus_usa if you plan on coming!

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She’s the First*{Notre Dame} Star Will be in Seventeen!

SOCCER STAR PUTS SHE’S THE FIRST IN NATIONAL SPOTLIGHT:
Student Lindsay Brown Named a Seventeen Cover Contest Finalist

The tie-dye cupcake bake sale fundraiser that launched a movement for girls’ education worldwide will reach millions of teen girls through the Pretty Amazing Contest, sponsored by Neutrogena

New York (June  07, 2012)–Seventeen, the leading teen magazine reaching 13 million girls, announced on Friday that Lindsay Brown, a rising senior at the University of Notre Dame and a founding member of the campus’s chapter of non-profit She’s the First, is a Top 5 finalist in its Pretty Amazing cover model contest. Her boundless energy and commitment to She’s the First’s cause—funding girls’ education in the developing world, not to mention starting her own empowering soccer program—helped her stand out among applicants. If she wins, she will receive a $20,000 scholarship from Neutrogena Wave for Change and appear on the cover of the October 2012 issue of Seventeen.

This contest means more than a personal achievement for Lindsay—it will also bring momentum to the 2nd Annual She’s the First Tie-Dye Cupcake Bake-Off fundraising campaign, which Lindsay inspired. In September and October, students nationwide will join Lindsay in changing the game for girls’ education by signing up to host bake sales on campus. From November 12-18, their classmates will purchase the eye-catching tie-dye treats. In the process, they’ll sponsor girls at the eight developing world partner schools of She’s the First, located  in countries like Nepal, Tanzania, Guatemala, and India, where four out of five girls don’t graduate from high school. Last year’s inaugural Tie-Dye Cupcake Bake-Off raised $22,800 to sponsor 48 girls in just eight days with the participation of 100 teams across the nation.

“With Seventeen’s spotlight on Lindsay and the cupcake fundraising campaign, we expect young men and women here in the U.S. to connect with the mission of She’s the First on a never-before-seen level,” said Tammy Tibbetts, founder and president of She’s the First. “Internationally, the money we raise will enable girls who were condemned to a life of poverty to be the first in their families to graduate high school. This is an inspiring message for teens in the U.S., teaching them empathy along with valuable entrepreneurial, leadership, and social media skills.”

The tie-dye cupcake craze started in Fall 2010, after Lindsay, then a soccer player, and Maddie Fox, the goalkeeper, led the NCAA-winning Notre Dame women’s soccer players in organizing a campus bake sale of special tie-dyed cupcakes. The women raised $900, enough to sponsor three girls at the Kopila Valley School in Surkhet, Nepal. Meanwhile, Lindsay shared the recipe with shesthefirst.org; it quickly went viral among supporters. That summer, Lindsay traveled to Nepal to meet the girls she sponsored, and she formed the first girls’ soccer team in the region, teaching the young athletes confidence on the field and in the classroom.

The winner of the Pretty Amazing contest is chosen through public voting and by a distinguished panel of judges, including actress Emma Roberts, Seventeen editor-in-chief Ann Shoket, and celebrity blogger Jared Eng.

To support Lindsay and She’s the First, vote at seventeen.com/prettyamazing; share her story through social media (watch her impressive finalist video at http://ow.ly/bplpW); sign up on shesthefirst.org/cupcakes to host a tie-dye cupcake fundraiser of your own; or contribute to a girl’s sponsorship at shesthefirst.org/donate.

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She’s the First Success Story Premieres on NBC!

This commercial, which aired during the Notre Dame football game on NBC yesterday, is one of the most powerful two minutes I’ve ever watched:

You’ll recognize Lindsay Brown, of course! She’s the creator of the first tie-dye cupcake bake sale for She’s the First, which sponsored the three girls in Nepal whom she visited on this trip–when she created the first girls’ soccer team at Kopila Valley School.

Lindsay’s cupcake sale exactly one year ago inspired the Tie-Dye Cupcake Bake-Off this past November 1-8, for which 100 teams signed up! The grand fundraising total is still being tallied, but I can tell you this: It’s no chump change. We’ll announce later this week!

So, what do you fight for? She’s the First is proud to fight for girls’ right to an education and their opportunity to break barriers and be a “first”…with all of you, I feel like we’ve created quite an all-star team to fight in the most creative, productive, and peace-building way possible.

Thank you, Maggie Doyne, for working so tirelessly on a school and building a community of deserving children for us to support. Thanks to Maddie Fox, the NCAA-winning womens’ soccer team at ND, and She’s the First*{Notre Dame} for helping to make this small idea so huge, and thank you, Notre Dame, for bringing millions of hearts to Surket, Nepal. You never know where it will lead…hopefully to many more sponsorships, and in turn, girls who are the first to graduate!

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How a Cupcake Changed My Life — and Hers

the original poster!

I have a bright pink poster hanging in my Notre Dame dorm room that reads “She’s the First: Tie-Dye Cupcake Sale September 15, 2010 Help us send a girl to school in the developing world!” At the time, little did I know, this “girl” would quickly turn into three, and before I knew it, I’d be on a plane to spend my summer in Nepal.

A few days before I left for my trip to Kopila Valley School, I received a little envelope in the mail. Inside was a crumpled note from one of the girls my Notre Dame soccer team and I sponsor, Hima Tamata.

This is Hima at age 7

The note read, “Dear Lindsay, you are so nice. I love you. Lindsay and Hima are best friends.” To say it made my day would be an understatement. When I made it to Kopila Valley I couldn’t wait to finally meet Hima, the girl I had been following on Maggie Doyne’s blog for months, and tell her how thankful I was for that note. But before I could get a word out, Hima walked up to me and starting singing, “let it snow, let it snow, let it snow.” At first I had no idea what she was referring to considering it was around 90 degrees in Surkhet everyday. Then Hima pulled out the Christmas card that my Notre Dame friends and I sent her back in December. She had saved it in a plastic bag in the front pocket of her backpack. When you open the card it plays a Christmas carol. Hima had memorized the song and had even memorized the note I had written inside. She named each of the girls that had signed the card and asked, “Are these all my friends in America?” Hima’s eyes got so big when I replied yes. All she could say back was “oh ma gawd.”

As I spent more and more time with Hima I began to understand how one little girl could inspire a person like Maggie to build an entire children’s home and school. When I was with Hima I would forget how much she’s been through. She’s such a happy, energetic, carefree young girl. I really don’t think there’s a word to perfectly describe her.

Lindsay and Hima at Kopila Valley School

She still has a long way to go — she’s 12 years old and in the second grade but that doesn’t seem to defeat her in any way.  She has this “silent self-confidence” about her that I believe will get her to the places she wants to go in life.

Above all, Hima has the biggest heart of anyone I know. I gave her a journal the first day we met so we could continue to write notes to each other once I went home. A few days before I left Hima pulled out the journal and gave me 8 notes, one for each of the girls that signed the Christmas card. Each said something like “Dear Maddie, I love you. My name is Hima. I read in 2 class. My mom breaks rock. You are my best friend. Hima loves Maddie.” I read through each of the following notes addressed to Courtney, Melissa, Jordan, and a couple other girls but I stopped when I got to the last one, it read, “Dear Dreams.” I couldn’t figure it out at first but then I realized the last sentence I had written in the card was “Follow your dreams!”

Hima

Hima was confused and thought that “Dreams” was one of her friends in America. I was about to break it to her that “Dreams” really isn’t a person, but then she turned to me and said, “I am so lucky to have 9 friends in America. I work hard in school so one day I come visit and I see Dreams.” After taking a second to think about it, I decided maybe Hima is on to something after all. Right now her friend “Dreams” might not exist, but Hima’s right: If she continues to work hard in school, one day “Dreams” will be true.

Now when I look at that bright pink poster in my dorm I can’t help but smile. I’ve surrounded it with several pictures of happy Kopila girls. I always think about how crazy it is that something as simple as cupcake can make such a profound change in a girl’s life half way around the world. But what I’m starting to realize is that the same cupcake has made such a profound change in my own life. Getting to know Maggie, Hima, and all the other Kopila girls over the past year has shown me that we may be young, but together we really do have the power to make a difference in this big world. That’s what I love about She’s the First — we set out to empower girls around the world without realizing we are empowering ourselves.

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The Tie-Dye Cupcake that Started it All

Who would’ve guessed that a tiny, brightly colored cupcake would be able to make the lives of girls in Nepal a little sweeter? Along with some sugar, flour, and eggs, Lindsey Brown mixed determination, passion, and creativity to create a life-changing recipe.  Last year, Lindsey, then a sophomore at Notre Dame, wrote to She’s the First asking how she could help. Inspired by the New York Times Magazine piece on Maggie Doyne, founder of the Kopila Valley Children’s Home & School, Lindsey was driven to action. Her fundraising efforts came in the form of the now iconic She’s the First tie-dyed cupcakes. After her NCAA champion soccer teammates joined her efforts, their cupcake sales raised nearly $1,000!

The cupcake that started it all

Lindsey’s cupcake-filled journey with She’s the First began small – selling the small treats out of her dorm room.  Now, she’s busy baking the cupcakes with the students at Kopila Valley in Nepal!  A few weeks ago, Lindsey traveled to Nepal to visit the school that she has dedicated the past two years to supporting.  During her trip, Lindsey whipped up a batch of her famous cupcakes to celebrate two of the young girls’ birthdays.  As Lindsey wrote on her Tumblr, “My friend Maddie Fox and I always joke that we’re saving the world one cupcake at a time.  But, after coming here and meeting the three girls that my team sponsors, I’m starting to think it might not be a joke after all.”

Because of her team’s creative fundraising efforts, Lindsey launched a cupcake coalition that’s taking over the nation. From New York City to Rome, She’s the First*{Campus} chapters will be hosting cupcake sales in support of girls’ education.  Lindsey certainly created a recipe for sweet success! Like the young students they’ve sponsored, She’s the First*{Notre Dame}’s cupcakes have proven that big change can come in small packages.

Do you want to join our first national bake sale? Let us know by signing up at shesthefirst.org/cupcakes!

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She’s the First*{Notre Dame} Goes Global!

Chapter Members Monica Townsend (2012), Lindsay Brown (2013), Maddie Fox (2013), Casey Kraft (2012)

Between Casey Kraft’s recent departure to volunteer in Peru and Monica Townsend’s return from Shanti Bhavan in India, our She’s the First*{Notre Dame} chapter has gone globe-trotting this summer!  Now, one more of their members joins our world traveling roster.  This week, Lindsay Brown, a sophomore at Notre Dame, arrived in Nepal to visit our partner school, the Kopila Valley Children’s Home.

As a member of the She’s the First*{Notre Dame}, Lindsay represented She’s the First at the Clinton Global Initiative University.  She is also one of the creators of the now iconic She’s the First tie-dyed cupcakes. As a national soccer champ, Lindsey and her Notre Dame teammates also sponsor three girls at Kopila Valley.  Lindsay is a star both on and off the field!

Make sure to check the Kopila Valley blog to see how Lindsay’s soccer team, “The Sagarmatha,” (Mt. Everest in Nepalese) does during her stay!

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Notre Dame Students Rep STF at Clinton Global Initiative U

Lindsay Brown and Madeleine Fox, proudly representing She's the First at Clinton Global Initiative U this weekend!

This past weekend, college students representing 50 fifty states and more than 90 countries convened at the University of California, San Diego for the 4th annual meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative University (CGIU). Madeleine Fox and I were fortunate enough to attend for our commitment to empowering girls in the developing world through education.

My name is Lindsay Brown and I am a She’s the First volunteer at the University of Notre Dame. During the fall, my soccer team and I sold enough tie-dyed cupcakes to sponsor three students at Kopila Valley School in Surkhet, Nepal! Inspired by the huge outpouring of support we received, Madeleine and I decided to attend CGIU in the hopes of learning from other college students’ experiences how we could expand our She’s the First efforts not only at Notre Dame but also in the broader community.

Prior to CGIU, student groups dedicated to positive change make a “Commitment to Action” in one of five focus areas: Education, Environment & Climate Change, Poverty Alleviation, and Public Health. CGIU offers these commitment groups a place to come together, share ideas, network, and collaborate to move our commitments one step closer to concrete realities.

On Friday, Former President Bill Clinton stated, “CGIU is more than an event. It’s a community of individuals who work throughout the year to inspire and support.” By the time CGIU convened a mere two days later on Sunday afternoon, I had already began to understand what Former President Clinton was hinting at. I consider myself beyond lucky to be a part of this unique and powerful community. I am honored that I was able to represent She’s the First and its commitment to empowering girls in the developing world. I wish every She’s the First supporter had the opportunity to experience CGIU. It provided me with the sense that between all the chaos of school, family, soccer, and whatever else can possibly fit into 24 hours. I am one of many working toward a united vision of a better world.

I’m having a difficult time finding words to accurately describe the colossal amount of positive energy I encountered.

For two hours straight, every which way I turned I encountered another person overflowing with eagerness to explain their unique vision of a better world and how they planned to go about it. One might find it overwhelming or perhaps even exhaustive, yet for me personally, this energy was reassuring and to some an extent, calming.

For the first time in my life, I was surrounded by nearly 1,100 other college students who seemed to share my own restlessness, my own inability to sit still and be satisfied with the way the world is. It was calming to find that I am not the only one amongst my peers plagued by an unidentifiable force, this unknown gravity, compelling me to act. At this point, I can only be certain of one thing, this force is creating a momentum amongst young people that cannot be constrained by boundaries or stopped with the simple telling of a no. Our energy cannot be contained within the box therefore our ideas are guaranteed to be found outside of it. Kennedy Odede told us “the ideas you have can change the world.” The world better be ready for change because our generation’s vision of a better tomorrow is already becoming a reality.

Hellen Keller once said, “the only thing worse than being blind is having sight but no vision.” Whether it may be educating girls, eradicating malaria, ending global hunger, or fighting climate change, our generation’s solutions to today’s pressing challenges will lead us to a better tomorrow. However, I would like to ask what good is this vision if it never becomes a reality? We have the energy, we have the drive, now it is up to us to make it happen.

Here are some powerful quotes from various CGIU panel members that I think strike a chord with every She’s the First supporter!

  • “Women are the engine of development in any society.” Kennedy Odede
  • “If you just do what you can- you can make a difference.” Former President Clinton
  • “Education is a right, not a privilege.” Mehnaz Akber Aziz
  • “When you change a girl’s life you begin to change the world.” 10×10 The Documentary Group
  • “Empowerment should be fun and sustainable.” Jessica Matthews
  • “Community members must understand that education is an imperative that we must work for together.” Eduardo Padron
  • “What we have in common is more important than our differences.” Former President Clinton
  • “Having a cross-cultural dialogue is really the only way to solve these global problems.” Anu Shradharan
  • “Don’t patronize people, SEE them.” Former President Clinton

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Happy New Year from She’s the First!

We made a She's the First Yearbook of our first year memories on Shutterfly.com!

She’s the First made a yearbook from our first year! On Shutterfly.com, we created a hardcover book, and each year, we’ll make it a tradition. We’ll keep these in our office someday, but for now, they’re in the hands of a few She’s the First leaders, and we scanned the pages for you to see below!

Thanks to all who made 2010 an incredible year for our organization and, most importantly, for the girls we support worldwide! By our count, in our first full year, we sponsored at least 36 girls and raised at least $13,430 for girls’ tuition from our marquee events and your independent, grassroots fundraisers!

(If we left anyone out, please forgive and email tammy@shesthefirst.org so we can update. To see the partners in our directory which manage the sponsored girls’ schooling, visit shesthefirst.org/directory).

Special thanks to our FRIENDS OF FIRSTS who made life-changing, world-shaking change with us this year!

* The guests, performers, and supporters of GIRLS WHO ROCK: $6,000 – sponsored Elizabeth, Grace, Happiness in Tanzania)

* The guests of the She’s the First Soiree: $1,550 – sponsored a girl we’ll meet in 2011 at Shanti Bhavan Children’s Project in India!

* Lauren Horn & Sarah Matthews & Friends: $700 – sponsored 7 girls in Haiti!

* Lew Blaustein: 2 girls in Haiti, 1 in Tanzania at Village Schools International

* Evelyn Lisoski, Tara Rummell Berson, and Melissa Walker: 3 girls in Malawai in Goods4Good’s program

* Annemarie Dooling & Friends on Twitter: 1 girl in Haiti

* Sammy Davis: 1 girl in  Haiti

* Kaitlin Davis: 1 girl in Haiti and 1 girl in Kenya at Kiberia School for Girls

* Lindsay Brown, Maggie Fox & their Women’s Soccer Team & Friends at Notre Dame: 3 girls in Nepal at Maggie Doyne’s Kopila Valley Children’s Home & School

* Justis: 1 girl in Haiti

* Mackenzie Olson: 1 girl in Nepal

* Nancy Roberts: 1 girl in Liberia

* Kate Lord: 1 girl in Haiti

* IWantHerJob.com, by Brianne Burrowes: 2 girls in Guatemala in Starfish One by One’s program

* Julie Wamser and her dorm at Notre Dame: 2 girls in Tanzania at Village Schools International

* Urban Girl Squad: 2 girls in Tanzania at Village Schools International

* She’s the First*{Manhattan}: $300 – beneficiary to be decided in Jan 2011!

* Proceeds from the Asha Patel Designs She’s the First Bracelets: $298 and growing! for Shanti Bhavan and Kenya Education Fund girls

* Proceeds from the Prime Produce Prom: at least $625 – beneficiary program TBD in Jan 2011!


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