Archive for April, 2007

Africa Aid T-Shirt Campaign

Africa Aid

Steven Selzer, of Africa Aid, dropped us an email telling us about his worthy t-shirt based appeal:

Africa Aid, an international nonprofit founded by a group of post-grads from the University of California, San Diego, is announcing a nationwide call-to-action: buy a t-shirt and feed an African refugee child for one school year. Leveraging the momentum from their successful School Lunch Program, which currently provides healthy, nutritious lunches for more than 200 children in the Buduburam Refugee Settlement in Ghana, Africa Aid hopes to sell enough shirts between now and June 30 to fund the program for the remainder of this academic year, and its entire second year.

“Our model is different than most nonprofits in that we are innovative, lean, and diligently focused on the impact of dollars raised,” says Eric Woods, Africa Aid Founder and Executive Director. “By collaborating with American university students and faculty for program planning, and then working directly with our partners on the ground in Ghana, we eliminate middlemen and keep our overhead costs low, enabling us to feed an African refugee child for a full school year through the sale of only one Africa Aid t-shirt.” Africa Aid is able to keep administrative and marketing costs related to t-shirt promotions low by relying on man-on-the-street guerrilla efforts at local universities, online social networking sites such as MySpace (http://www.myspace.com/africaaid), and word-of-mouth buzz.

Entering into only their third year of operation, Africa Aid is fuelled by the passion of its young but dedicated staff. In the Fall of 2005, Woods and Steven Selzer, the organization’s marketing director, travelled to Ghana to establish the organization’s flagship program, Project Aya. This unique program, the first of what Africa Aid hopes to be many more to come, is a community partnering initiative that links underdeveloped communities in Africa—in this case, the Buduburam Liberian Refugee Settlement in Ghana—to American sponsor cities such as San Diego, who provide support through local universities. The Africa Aid model was constructed to address four distinct, but interconnected issues—education, public health, water and sanitation, and economic empowerment—acknowledging that the road out of poverty requires a combined approach to all four.

The School Lunch Program (SLP) is an example of Africa Aid tackling all four interconnected poverty issues within one exciting program. By providing clean water and a nutritious daily lunch to more than 200 underprivileged refugee students, the SLP currently supplies the necessary incentive for students to participate in school, while increasing their ability to learn by improving their nutritional well-being. Working with African Refugee NGO partner, Self-Help Initiative for Sustainable Development (SHIFSD), Africa Aid has constructed a kitchen and hired several mothers of recipient children as cooks in the name of improving the economic status of women in the Buduburam community. To solidify a true local connection, Africa Aid has worked closely with their student organization at the University of California, San Diego to create a health and nutrition curriculum that supplements each school lunch in Africa. The SLP will serve as a jumping point for the development of Africa Aid’s micro-lending program, which will create economic opportunities for collectives of African women refugees who are notably also the mothers of children in the SLP.

“We are thrilled with the success that we have seen at our school in Buduburam,” says Selzer. “Following the completion of our kitchen and the hiring of local staff, we have been fully operational since January and, through the proceeds from our t-shirt sales, are almost entirely funded through the end of this school year. Our focus for the next three months is to sell enough shirts to sustain the program into its second year, and hopefully, grow our capacity to reach even more children.”

Currently, t-shirt sales account for more than 80% of the funding required for the School Lunch Program. With a strong presence on San Diego college campuses and a growing reputation globally among socially-minded young adult consumers due to their online marketing efforts, demand is increasing. T-shirts are available for purchase on the organization’s Web site at www.africaaid.org.

2XU

2XU

Whilst in New Zealand last week, I came across this uber-cool range of performance sports apparel called 2XU, a Kiwi-designed collection of cycling, running, triathlon and swimming gear with great looks and pioneering fabrics. Definitely worth a closer look.

Green Tea

Green Tea

Sorry for the lack of posts over the past two weeks, but I have been scuttling from one long-haul flight to the next over the past two weeks. I am finally back in London but I must share with you a funny article I read in a complimentary copy of the Financial Times (online at FT.com) about green tea, something that calms me whilst biding my time in transit areas of international airports. I quote:

“To US commercial culture, green tea is yoga in a bottle – or in a can, candy bar, candle, lotion, soap, perfume or pill. Described as calming and gentle, it exists paradoxically at the red-hot intersection of New Age philosophy, health mania and industrial chemistry” Green tea, the elixir of false virtue, Jacob Weisberg, April 4th 2007

The article got me thinking again about current desire for all things ‘green’, whether it be organic cotton, designer bags or tea.

City of London Race for Life

Eleni, and her sister, Tys, are running the City of London Race for Life on 03/06/2007 to raise money for Cancer Research UK and would really welcome your support.

Please take a moment to sponsor them. It’s really easy - you can donate online by credit or debit card at the following link:

Try something new!

So I’m in the office for one day only as I’m here on a Workshadow program from Loughborough University. I’ve had the pleasure of shadowing Jo as she goes about her daily work routine, which has been great so far…… but now she’s asked me to write a blog, so I’m hoping it goes ok.

Coming from Loughborough Uni ‘stash’ means everything! Whether it’s which sports team have the coolest kit, which halls of residence have the best fresher’s or leaving t-shirts, or who can come up with the most original 21st Birthday designs; what you wear shows who you are. But saying all this, I’ve noticed that the type of clothing chosen tend to be the same basic t-shirts, hoodies or polo-shirts, probably down to students being a little lazy and choosing what other have before them.

So why not try something new! Stand out from the crowd, be original, and go for a different look. Indigo have some great t-shirt options such as the distressed and vintage look, there’s even a men’s Inside-out design. Move away from the hooded sweatshirt and try Indigo’s urban jacket or jacket with stripes, and for those who want to really stand out why not try embroidering or screen printing some half mesh truckers caps. Indigo are also proud to stock products from Hanes endorsed by the likes or Michael Jordan and Jennifer Love-Hewitt; and American Apparel, so take the time to look, choose something you will be able to wear more than just a few times. Look the part, try something new!

Post by Adam Beaumont, Loughborough University, Sports Science with Management, Year 2.

Unpluggit

As well as buying organic t-shirts (excuse shameless plug (and pun!)), if you are keen to be more eco-friendly these days (and aren’t we all, otherwise how can you sit around at a Wandsworth dinner party and not trump Marjorie’s claim that she recycled 50 plastic ice-cream tubs last week?), then pop over to the Unpluggit.co.uk website run by climate campaigner Rob Bell, a Londoner who beat hundreds of applicants to become an Ambassador for this year’s Ben & Jerry’s Climate Change College.

The campaign is attracting media attention and charity WWF report that:

Rock superstars the Kaiser Chiefs were the first to sign an online petition putting pressure on the mobile phone industry to abolish energy wasting phone chargers - which fritter away enough electricity to power 65,000 homes every year in the UK alone.

If you are not fussed over the green aspect of the campaign then just think of the money you’ll save on the electric bill. I think the campaign slogan would be more effective it was something like, “Unplug your phone charger - get a free pint!” Catchy?

Italian T-shirts

T-Shirts Bambino

I have just got back from a few days in Italy with my brother and family, and these cool kids little tees I stumbled across in the hilltop village of Montalcino were worth a snap.

Not available online, you actually need to go there to have a chance of getting one. The great food, views and location also make the trip worthwhile!