IN Cranberry Winter 2016 | Page 10

WHAT’S NEWS IN CRANBERRY LOCAL GIRL SCOUTS MAKE WARM BLANKETS FOR CANCER PATIENTS Cranberry Area Girl Scouts of all ages used a day off of school to work together creating nearly 125 blankets for cancer patients in honor of their founder, Juliette Gordon Low. Juliette Gordon Low died in 1927 of breast cancer, a time in our history when cancer wasn’t openly discussed. This project was selected as the Cranberry Neighborhood Service Unit Project of the Year for 2016 and follows several other scouting year projects designed to help the local community while encouraging scouts of all ages to work together for a common goal. Today, girls are painfully aware that cancer is a struggle for many and they do not want to sit on the sidelines but instead want to do something to encourage others. In fact, many Girl Scout families in Cranberry have been affected by cancer in some way and several local girls wanted a way to help. Scouts from Troops 20519 and 20074, Samantha Mill, Andi Mikula, Sabra Richart and Alena Richart, all had grandmothers who were diagnosed with cancer over the past year and they put their diverse skills together to help coordinate the blanket making program. Samantha was made aware of a need for blankets at a local cancer center while her grandmother was undergoing treatment recently for uterine cancer. She learned that these centers routinely run out of blankets. Andi, Sabra and Alena learned that there was a great deal of misinformation still in the community about cancer prevention and treatment. The girls each worked with their leaders and the Cranberry Girl Scout Service Unit to plan the day by making SWAPs and posters, researching cancer, collecting supplies and organizing the activities. Other troop leaders joined the efforts and recruited moms, who were cancer survivors, to set up drop off locations for supplies and help to publicize the event. 8 724.942.0940 TO ADVERTISE | Cranberry More than 70 scouts from 16 different troops, ranging in age from 5 – 17, and leaders, worked together tirelessly on Friday, Nov. 11, 2016 and at home, preparing fleece and tying knots making no sew blankets which will be donated to local cancer patients undergoing treatments at a variety of locations in the Pittsburgh Area. Locations include Children’s Hospital, St. Margaret’s Hospital Cancer Unit where Samantha’s grandmother received treatment and the Cancer Center at AGH Wellness Pavilion in Wexford where Andi’s grandmother received treatment. Patients, along with Samantha’s grandmother, have already received the blankets with much appreciation. Photo courtesy of Tatiana Bower and Tabatha Mill ST. MARGARET FOUNDATION FALL FACE-OFF HOCKEY TOURNAMENT WINNER St. Margaret Foundation proudly announced that Seneca Valley won the championship round of the two-week St. Margaret Foundation Fall Face-Off Hockey Tournament by beating Butler 3-2 at Alpha Ice Complex in Harmarville on Sept. 20. The teams competing were Bethel Park, Butler, Canon-McMillan, Central Catholic, Franklin Regional, Greater Latrobe, Hampton, Mars, Montour, PineRichland, Quaker Valley, Seneca Valley, Shaler, South Park and Upper St. Clair. For more information, contact Mary Lee Gannon at [email protected] or 412.784.4277. CARDINAL WUERL NORTH CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL ANNOUNCES INITIATIVE TO HONOR ROONEYS Cardinal Wuerl North Catholic High School is proud to announce an initiative honoring Ambassador Dan Rooney (Class of 1950) and Patricia Rooney in recognition of their hard work and generosity. The upgraded athletic practice area will be named the Ambassador Dan Rooney Athletic Complex and the school library will be named the Patricia Rooney Library. Phase One of the initiative will enhance library services by expanding technology, and will also enable the student government to participate in leadership development programs. It will also upgrade the athletic practice fields, including regrading, adding irrigation, drainage and new sod, which will provide improved surfaces for sports teams and the marching band. “Mr. and Mrs. Rooney have touched and influenced so many lives in the areas of education, civic leadership and athletics that it is only appropriate we try to honor them with these recognitions,” says Kevin Colbert (Board Member and Class of 1975). Construction began Nov. 1 with a dedication soon thereafter. LOCAL RESIDENTS REACH ACROSS BORDERS TO CHANGE LIVES Rosita Valenzuela and her younger brother, Luis, grew up in San Luis, Mexico. At the ages of five and four, police removed both children from their home. For the rest of their young lives, they lived at Bethel Orphanage in San Luis. Had it not been for the intervention of residents in Cranberry Township, the children might have remained in the cycle of drug addiction and poverty that marked their childhood. Through the years, local individuals from Pittsburgh’s Caring Hearts Ministries funded operations at the orphanage and visited there often. The Cranberry Township Sunrise Rotary raised several thousand dollars to help fund the mission work. Because of the efforts of these local residents, Rosita and Luis learned English. Both distinguished themselves by excelling in school. When Rosita graduated from high school, she was invited to spend her college years with a Cranberry Township physician and his family. The family assisted with her education expenses, as did a family in Confluence, where Rosita resided when school was not in session. In May, she graduated Cum Laude from California University of Pennsylvania with a bachelor’s degree in Spanish, and Luis received his associate degree in facilities management from the Community College of Allegheny County. Local resident Walter Scott has played a significant role in the lives of Rosita and Luis. Scott