ClayManiacs

GOT CLAY? => Other Good Deeds => Topic started by: Moonshot on May 17, 2007, 06:49:31 AM



Title: LemonAID Stands to Aid Bubel/Aiken Foundation *UPDATE 5/21*
Post by: Moonshot on May 17, 2007, 06:49:31 AM
Quote
LemonAID sales go to special kids
RALEIGH - A North Raleigh boy is challenging children across the country to raise money through lemonade stands for the Bubel/Aiken Foundation, a North Raleigh group that helps children with special needs.
Jonathan Bunzey, 12, will have a lemonade stand at Taylor's Fine Wine & Grocery at 10005 Six Forks Road in North Raleigh from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday.

Read more here:

NEWS & OBSERVER (http://www.newsobserver.com/news/story/574912.html)


Title: Re: LemonAID Stands to Aid Bubel/Aiken Foundation *UPDATE 5/21*
Post by: Moonshot on May 21, 2007, 04:03:18 AM

Quote
Drink stand raises $1,000
Boy, 12, launches charity challenge


 Kinea White Epps, Staff Writer
Saturday is usually a day of play for kids, but Jonathan Bunzey, 12, was hard at work.

The energetic, freckle-faced boy spent most of Saturday at his lemonade and coffee stand outside Taylor's Fine Wine & Grocery off Six Forks Road in Raleigh, raising money for children with special needs.

At the end of his six-hour shift, Jonathan had more than $1,000 for a cause near and dear to him.

As a toddler, Jonathan battled encephalitis, a swelling of the brain that left him unable to speak. He now communicates through a translator.

That hasn't stopped Jonathan from putting out a call to children across the country to set up stands as part of the LemonAid Stand Off Challenge. Proceeds go to the Bubel/Aiken Foundation, which was co-founded by "American Idol" star and Raleigh favorite Clay Aiken, to help children with special needs. The foundation provides an interpreter for Jonathan so he can attend summer camps.

"The community gave us a lot when Jonathan was sick, and this is a way for him to give back," said his mother, Heather Bunzey, who helped out at the stand, along with Jonathan's sister and friends.

Jonathan set a goal of raising $400, so the final tally was a pleasant surprise. "Wow," Jonathan said through sign language as his mother interpreted.

To read the rest of the story click here: NEWS & OBSERVER (http://www.newsobserver.com/news/story/576275.html)

Interested in organizing a LemonAid stand? Visit http://www.bubelaiken.org (http://www.bubelaiken.org) Click on "What's New."