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1/26/2010
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Dillard's Celebrates Long Standing
Partnership with Ronald McDonald House
Charities®
More than $1.4 million donated to local RMHC
organizations through the sale of Southern
Living Christmas Cookbooks
Little Rock, Arkansas, January
14, 2010 -- Dillard’s, Inc. (DDS: NYSE)
(“Dillard’s”) announced today that it will make a
significant contribution of more than $1.4 million
to local organizations of Ronald McDonald House
Charities (RMHC). This donation was made possible
through the sale of Dillard’s exclusive Southern
Living Christmas Cookbook. Ronald McDonald House
Charities of Tallahassee will receive a check for
$24,412 on Tuesday, January 26, 2010 at 11:00 a.m.
at 712 East 7th Avenue.
In 2009 Dillard’s offered a
beautiful Southern Living Christmas Cookbook.
This exclusive, 288 page hardbound cookbook
is a go-to guide for the season with over 400
delicious recipes, plus menus and hundreds of
inspiring photos.
Profits from the sales will benefit local
Ronald McDonald Houses operated by Ronald McDonald
House Charities® in Dillard’s markets.
With this year’s contribution,
Dillard’s has now donated over $5.9 million to
Ronald McDonald Houses over the years.
Denise Mahaffy, Vice President, said,
“Partnering with Ronald McDonald House Charities
gives all of us at Dillard’s an enormous sense of
pride.
We are honored to support the Ronald McDonald Houses
in our communities.”
Marty Coyne, President and CEO
of Ronald McDonald House Charities, said, “We are so
thankful to Dillard’s for their continued support of
Ronald McDonald House Charities over the years. Our
Ronald McDonald House® program helps children access
the highest quality health care and ensures families
can face the weight of an illness together.
RMHC wouldn’t be opening its 300th
House this year if it weren’t for the generous
support of corporate donors like Dillard’s.”
About Ronald
McDonald House Charities
Ronald McDonald House
Charities, a non-profit, 501 ©(3) corporation,
creates, finds and supports programs that directly
improve the health and well being of children.
Families and children being cared for at
seventy-three percent of the most prestigious
children’s hospitals in the world benefit from one
or more of the RMHC core programs. Its programs are
grassroots-driven to enable the Charity to offer
help where children need it most – right in their
own communities. RMHC makes an immediate, positive
impact on children’s lives through its global
network of local Chapters in 52 countries and its
three core programs: the Ronald McDonald House®,
Ronald McDonald Family Room® and Ronald McDonald
Care Mobile®. RMHC and its global network of local
Chapters have awarded more than $460 million in
grants and program services to children’s programs
around the world. These programs and grants provide
a bridge to quality health care and allows families
more time together helping in the healing process.
For more information, visit
www.rmhc.org.
About
Dillard’s
Dillard's, Inc. ranks among the
nation's largest fashion apparel and home
furnishings retailers with annual revenues exceeding
$6.9 billion. The Company focuses on delivering
maximum fashion and value to its shoppers by
offering compelling apparel and home selections
complemented by exceptional customer care. Dillard's
stores offer a broad selection of merchandise and
feature products from both national and exclusive
brand sources. The Company operates 313 Dillard's
locations spanning 29 states, all with one nameplate
- Dillard's. For more information, visit
www.dillards.com or call 1-800-345-5273.
02/15/2010
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Food Check-Out Week
celebrated at Tallahassee Ronald McDonald
House
(Tallahassee, Fla.)—As the economic squeeze continues,
many Americans remain concerned that the cost of a healthy diet
is out of reach. However, according to an Agriculture Department
study, the cost of eating healthy hasn’t changed as much as
some less-healthy alternatives.On Feb. 18, area county Farm
Bureaus will host their annual luncheon at the
Ronald McDonald House in Tallahassee.
This event is an opportunity to showcase Florida
agriculture for lawmakers and their aides.
Farm Bureau’s Food Check-Out Week, Feb. 21-27,
focuses on helping Americans learn how to how to
stretch their grocery dollars with healthy,
nutritious food. America’s farmers and ranchers are
committed to producing safe, healthy and abundant
food. And they share a common concern with consumers
when it comes to putting nutritious meals on the
table while sticking to a budget.
The
good news: a recent USDA report favorably supports
the economics of healthier eating. Recent food price
data show that prices for unprepared, readily
available fresh fruits and vegetables have remained
stable relative to dessert and snack foods, such as
chips, ice cream and cola. Therefore, as defined by
foods in the study, the price of a “healthier” diet
has not changed compared to an “unhealthy” diet.
Eating
healthier is even more convenient for Florida
residents. With the state ranking second in the
United States for sales of snap beans, fresh market
tomatoes, cucumbers for fresh market, cucumbers for
pickles, bell peppers, squash and watermelons.
Florida also ranked first in the United
States in the value of production of oranges,
grapefruit, tangerines, and second for sugarcane for
sugar and seed. Florida ranked second in the United
States in sales of greenhouse and nursery products,
sweet corn and strawberries.
Farm
Bureau has developed Food Check-Out Week educational
materials dedicated to helping consumers make
healthier food purchases. Information on several
topics including “Tips for Better Nutrition on a
Tight Budget,” “How Much Should I Eat?,”
“Understanding Food Labels” and “Understanding What
MyPyramid Means” is available.
Additionally, the county Farm Bureaus in Leon,
Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison, Lafayette, Suwannee,
Taylor and Wakulla donated food and funds to the
Ronald McDonald House in Tallahassee, recognizing
the need everyone has to find solutions to feeding
families healthful foods on a tight budget. The
Ronald McDonald House provides a
“home-away-from-home” for families of seriously ill
children receiving medical treatment in the (CITY)
area. The food will be used to help feed families
staying at the house.
These
county Farm Bureaus have been supporting the Ronald
McDonald House for over 10 years as part of the Food
Check-Out Week event.
Now in
its twelfth year, Food Check-Out Week also
highlights America’s safe, abundant and affordable
food supply, made possible largely by America’s
productive farmers and ranchers. According to the
most recent (2008) information from the USDA’s
Economic Research Service, American families and
individuals spend, on average, less than 10 percent
of their disposable personal income for food.
02/24/2010
Iraq Soldier makes
huge donation to Tallahassee charity from
Iraq with love. An early Christmas to Ronald
McDonald House.
Charities thrive on donations. Without them, they
can't survive. But it's not everyday you get a
donation in the five-figure range from one person.
But that's what happened to the Ronald
McDonald House of Tallahassee, and the person
writing the check is overseas, fighting for our
country.
Kathy Anderson has been the
Executive Director for the Ronald McDonald House of
Tallahassee for 16 years. And she'll never forget
her trip to the mailbox last week...a trip that
changed the house forever.
"It was a typical Monday
morning, you are going through the mail and I see
this pink envelope. I realize it's a military
address and I'm thinking it's one of our families
has gone and they are sending us back a picture,"
said Anderson, "And I open this sweet note and I
open the flap and I expect a photo to fall out and a
check falls out."
The check was for 10, 271
dollars. Sent in by Officer Malinda Kate Palmer
Holt, (Senior Automotive Maintenance Officer/
Senior Ordnance Logistics Officer) stationed
overseas in Iraq. Her story dates back 15 years when
her granddaughter was born, one pound, 12 ounces,
and 13 inches long.
Malinda and her daughter stayed
at the Ronald McDonald House in Tallahassee for 14
weeks. An extraordinary amount of time, but the time
and hospitality wasn't lost on the family. Because
15 years later, from Iraq. A check with love.
"The fact that they were there
for my daughter, they fed her, they housed her,"
said Holt, "When a parent is going through that,
they need that more than anything else. "
Nishaunte Johnson is all smiles
these days. She's a healthy 14 year old girl living
in Newberry, Florida. But 15 years ago, that wasn't
the case.
"I remember seeing her foot. It
was the size of the first joint and thumb. A tiny
little thing, but someone was always with her."
In her letter, Malinda says my
enclosed donation of 10,271 dollars will never repay
the benefits reaped by my daughter during the 14
weeks Nishaunte was hospitalized, fighting for her
life. I truly appreciate all you do, for families in
distress.
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