PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Hall of Fame Coach Mike Ditka to Host Charity Fundraising Event During Super Bowl Week in New Orleans

All proceeds to benefit Gridiron Greats Assistance Fund and The Kevin Turner Foundation.

2013-01-24
CHICAGO, IL, January 24, 2013 (Press-News.org) Hall of Fame coach Mike Ditka will be hosting a charity fundraising event to benefit Gridiron Greats Assistance Fund and The Kevin Turner Foundation on February 1, 2013 from 7pm to 10pm at The Foundry (333 Saint Joseph Street) in New Orleans, LA, as part of the Super Bowl week festivities. The event entitled, An Exclusive Evening With Ditka and Friends, will allow attendees to spend time with Coach Ditka and some of his NFL friends, hear their stories, and contribute to a worthy cause. The evening will also feature a special live music performance from The Kyle Turley Band, featuring former New Orleans Saint Pro-Bowler, Kyle Turley.

Mike Ditka will be joined by Lawrence Taylor, Dan Reeves, Ron "Jaws" Jaworski, Merril Hoge, Jack Youngblood, Rich Gannon, Paul Hornung, Ron Rivera, Kyle Turley, Kevin Turner, Vince Papale, Adam Schefter, Lem Barney, Joe DeLamielleure, Mel Renfro, Ricky Watters, Ted Johnson, Matt Birk, Mike Lucci, Dennis McKinnon, Tom Nowatzke and other NFL greats. To maintain the exclusive and intimate nature of the event only 250 tickets will be sold. Included in the $500 price of the ticket will be an open bar, contemporary cuisine and live entertainment.

"I'm looking forward to spending the evening with some of my close NFL friends, sharing stories and meeting the people who come out to support Gridiron Greats and The Kevin Turner Foundation," says Coach Ditka. "These two charities are doing important work for former NFL players and raising awareness for some of the critical issues facing everyone involved in football at any level. Please join me in supporting these two worthy causes.

We would like to extend a very special thank you to our partners and sponsors: Amway, Hourglass Wealth Management, Americas Pastime, Stub Hub, Terlato Wines, Camacho Cigars, Farber & Co., Coastal Orthopaedics, Rudolph Foods as well as individuals who have purchased tickets to this special event. This event was made possible because of their generosity.

All proceeds from the event will go to Gridiron Greats and The Kevin Turner Foundation. A charity auction of autographed NFL player memorabilia will also part of the evening's activities.

To purchase tickets, or for more information on "An Exclusive Evening with Ditka and Friends," please visit: www.gridirongreats.org or www.kevinturnerfoundation.org. To ask questions or purchase tickets by phone please call: Shannon Jordan, Gridiron Greats: (773) 867-8161 or Tamara Alan, The Kevin Turner Foundation: (615) 400-4332.

About Gridiron Greats
The GGAF's mission is to assist dire need retired NFL players who were pioneers of the game and who have greatly contributed to the NFL's status as the most popular sport in America. GGAF provides hands-on assistance to help retired players and their families deal with hardships they face after football. The services include medical assistance, transportation costs for medical evaluations and surgeries, dental assistance, housing assistance, financial assistance for utilities, medication, and coordination of services for food, automotive payments and childcare.

About The Kevin Turner Foundation
The Kevin Turner Foundation has been created to bring attention to ALS and the need for a cure; to raise awareness about the seriousness of brain trauma in athletes at every level of competition and its connection to motor neuron diseases like ALS; and to financially support efforts to study, treat, prevent and ultimately cure this disease.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Prediction of Asian summer monsoon rainfall and tropical storm activity close at hand

Prediction of Asian summer monsoon rainfall and tropical storm activity close at hand
2013-01-23
The amount of rainfall and number of tropical storms during the summer monsoon season greatly impact the agriculture, economy, and people in Asia. Though meteorologists and climate scientists have worked for years to develop helpful prediction systems, seasonal predictions of these two types of weather phenomena are still poor. Scientists working at the International Pacific Research Center, University of Hawaii at Manoa, have now made a promising breakthrough for predicting in spring both the summer monsoon rainfall over East Asia and the number of tropical storms affecting ...

Residents near Chinese e-waste site face greater cancer risk

2013-01-23
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Residents living near an e-waste recycling site in China face elevated risks of lung cancer, according to a recent study co-authored by Oregon State University researchers. Electronic trash, such as cell phones, computers and TVs, is often collected in dumps in developing countries and crudely incinerated to recover precious metals, including silver, gold, palladium and copper. The process is often primitive, releasing fumes with a range of toxic substances, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs, a group of more than 100 chemicals. PAHs, ...

Plants adapt to drought but limits are looming, study finds

Plants adapt to drought but limits are looming, study finds
2013-01-23
Scientists with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, or USDA, and their partners have determined that water demand by many plant communities can fluctuate in response to water availability, indicating a capacity for resilience even when changing climate patterns produce periodic droughts or floods. But their research also suggests that a limit to this resilience ultimately could threaten the survival of these plant communities. Sensitive environments such as the arid grasslands in the Southwestern U.S. already are approaching this limit. Results from this study were published ...

Immune cell death defects linked to autoimmune diseases

Immune cell death defects linked to autoimmune diseases
2013-01-23
Melbourne researchers have discovered that the death of immune system cells is an important safeguard against the development of diseases such as type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, which occur when the immune system attacks the body's own tissues. The finding suggests that these so-called autoimmune diseases could be treated with existing medications that force long-lived immune system cells to die. In the development of the immune system, some cells are produced that have the potential to attack the body's own tissues, causing autoimmune disease. The death ...

CSIRO telescope takes temperature of Universe

CSIRO telescope takes temperature of Universe
2013-01-23
Astronomers using a CSIRO radio telescope have taken the Universe's temperature, and have found that it has cooled down just the way the Big Bang theory predicts. Using the CSIRO Australia Telescope Compact Array near Narrabri, NSW, an international team from Sweden, France, Germany and Australia has measured how warm the Universe was when it was half its current age. "This is the most precise measurement ever made of how the Universe has cooled down during its 13.77 billion year history," said Dr Robert Braun, Chief Scientist at CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science. Because ...

Studies provide insights into inherited causes of autism

2013-01-23
The most consistent finding of autism research lies in the revelation that the disorders are incredibly complex. Two new studies in the January 23 issue of the Cell Press journal Neuron that add to the growing appreciation of this complexity focus on identifying inherited genetic mutations linked with autism spectrum disorders. The mutations—which are distinct from the spontaneous mutations that have been the focus of previous studies—may provide valuable insights into the causes of autism. "It's long been known that autism is a heritable condition and that some cases ...

New brain circuit sheds light on development of voluntary movements

New brain circuit sheds light on development of voluntary movements
2013-01-23
DURHAM, N.C. – All parents know the infant milestones: turning over, learning to crawl, standing, and taking that first unassisted step. Achieving each accomplishment presumably requires the formation of new connections among subsets of the billions of nerve cells in the infant's brain. But how, when and where those connections form has been a mystery. Now researchers at Duke Medicine have begun to find answers. In a study reported Jan. 23, 2013, in the scientific journal Neuron, the research team describes the entire network of brain cells that are connected to specific ...

Whole-exome sequencing identifies inherited mutations in autism

2013-01-23
Boston, Mass. - While autism clearly runs in some families, few inherited genetic causes have been found. A major reason is that these causes are so varied that it's hard to find enough people with a given mutation to establish a clear pattern. Researchers at Boston Children's Hospital have pinpointed several inherited mutations—among the first to be identified—through an unusual approach: using whole-exome sequencing to study large Middle Eastern families with autism. The study, published in the January 23 issue of the journal Neuron, also found evidence for some of ...

Setting the dark on fire

Setting the dark on fire
2013-01-23
In space, dense clouds of cosmic gas and dust are the birthplaces of new stars. In visible light, this dust is dark and obscuring, hiding the stars behind it. So much so that, when astronomer William Herschel observed one such cloud in the constellation of Scorpius in 1774, he thought it was a region empty of stars and is said to have exclaimed, "Truly there is a hole in the sky here!" [1] In order to better understand star formation, astronomers need telescopes that can observe at longer wavelengths, such as the submillimetre range, in which the dark dust grains shine ...

Researchers design a new imaging technique for identifying the age and sex of a corpse

2013-01-23
Researchers at the University of Granada, Spain, have designed a new computing system that determines the age and sex of a corpse with a reliability of 95%. This system is based on free software called Image and a free DICOM displayer called K-Pacs. This state-of-the-art system is very different from the traditional macroscopy systems used to evaluate the osteoarticular features of a corpse, and it is much faster and user-friendly. The author of this study is Manuel López Alcaraz, a researcher at the Forensic Anthropology Laboratory of the University of Granada, in collaboration ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Eindhoven University of Technology and JMIR Publications announce unlimited open access publishing agreement

Orphan nuclear receptors in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease development

A technological breakthrough for ultra-fast and greener AI

Pusan National University researchers identify key barriers hindering data-driven smart manufacturing adoption

Inking heterometallic nanosheets: A scalable breakthrough for coating, electronics, and electrocatalyst applications

Adults with autism show similar brain mapping of body parts as typically developing adults

Uncovering behavioral clues to childhood maltreatment

Premenstrual symptoms linked to increased risk of cardiovascular disease

Newly discovered remains of ancient river landscapes control ice flow in East Antarctica

Newly discovered interstellar object 'may be oldest comet ever seen'

Animal-inspired AI robot learns to navigate unfamiliar terrain

Underserved youth less likely to visit emergency department for concussion in Ontario, study finds

‘Molecular shield’ placed in the nose may soon treat common hay fever trigger

Beetles under climate stress lay larger male eggs: Wolbachia infection drives adaptive reproduction strategy in response to rising temperature and CO₂

Groundbreaking quantum study puts wave-particle duality to work

Weekly injection could be life changing for Parkinson’s patients

Toxic metals linked to impaired growth in infants in Guatemala

Being consistently physically active in adulthood linked to 30–40% lower risk of death

Nerve pain drug gabapentin linked to increased dementia, cognitive impairment risks

Children’s social care involvement common to nearly third of UK mums who died during perinatal period

‘Support, not judgement’: Study explores links between children’s social care involvement and maternal deaths

Ethnic minority and poorer children more likely to die in intensive care

Major progress in fertility preservation after treatment for cancer of the lymphatic system

Fewer complications after additional ultrasound in pregnant women who feel less fetal movement

Environmental impact of common pesticides seriously underestimated

The Milky Way could be teeming with more satellite galaxies than previously thought

New study reveals surprising reproductive secrets of a cricket-hunting parasitoid fly

Media Tip Sheet: Symposia at ESA2025

NSF CAREER Award will power UVA engineer’s research to improve drug purification

Tiny parasitoid flies show how early-life competition shapes adult success

[Press-News.org] Hall of Fame Coach Mike Ditka to Host Charity Fundraising Event During Super Bowl Week in New Orleans
All proceeds to benefit Gridiron Greats Assistance Fund and The Kevin Turner Foundation.