Tag Archives: charitable
Wounded Warrior Project Receives Over $10,000 From Advanced Charitable Services, Presented By Norwell And Plymouth Based Advanced Mortgage Services
DATELINE: NORWELL AND PLYMOUTH, MA
Wounded Warriors Project, a national organization that helps wounded veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan engagements, received a financial boost via a check for $ 10,500 from Advanced Charitable Services based in Norwell, MA.
The sizable donation was raised via a golf tournament recently held at Southers Marsh Golf Club, Plymouth. More than 85 golfers participated in the fund-raiser which included a round of golf, dinner, awards and auction.
“We are delighted to help out the veterans who paid a high price for our freedom,” noted Brian Comer, President of Advanced Mortgage Services. He added, “The spirit and the success of this initial event have inspired us to make it an annual outing and fund-raiser for this great cause.”
Michele Comer, Senior Vice President of Advanced Mortgage Services based in Norwell and Plymouth, Mass., formed Advanced Charitable Services, Inc., a non-profit organization to promote and raise funds for worthy charitable causes.
Linda Perry, Area Outreach Coordinator for the Wounded Warrior Project, was on hand to accept the check and noted, “This kind of contribution and community effort help raise the spirits of our wounded Iraq and Afghanistan vets, as well as help to fund the programs and services that the Wounded Warrior Project offers to help them to rehabilitate and assimilate back into the civilian world.”
Wounded Warriors offers a range of programs, services and events designed for an individual’s needs beyond a vet’s hospital stay. Services range from combat stress recovery, peer mentoring, family caregiving, benefits counseling, advocacy, disabled sports programs, and backpacks stocked with necessary items for vets as they are discharged from a medical facility.
The mission of the Wounded Warrior Project is to honor and empower wounded warriors. Its purpose is to raise awareness and to enlist the public’s aid for the needs of severely injured service members, to help severely injured men and women aid and assist each other, and to provide unique, direct programs and services to meet their needs. WWP is a national, apolitical organization headquartered in Jacksonville, FL.
The next golf tournament/fund-raiser for Wounded Warriors is scheduled for this summer. To participate, contact Stacey Jordan, (800) 337-4660.
Find More Home Mortgage Articles
How do you feel about money?
The recession is teaching us all some hard new lessons about respecting money.
We all know that the love of money is the root of all evil. Yet we think of it as unclean:
o We call it filthy lucre,
o Too much of it means you are stinking rich
o Too little and you are dirt poor.
We dont talk about money openly and we treat it as if it is a vulgar subject. We routinely ask strangers what they do for a living, but would never dream of asking how much they earn. And that applies equally to family and close friends.
Its not always like that
Some cultures feel differently about money. When I tell people that I write about money for a living, it evokes little interest and they dont pursue the conversation. I wonder if it would be the same if I said I was a sports or travel or food writer.
Now theres a change
The recession has brought the subject of money out into the open and is making us love the stuff more than we did before. Most of us now believe that money is more important than it was prior to the recession. This thinking is also reducing how we value possessions. Money is a great tool and also a measure of value and a form of exchange. It buys food and clothes for us and our families; it keeps a roof over our heads, pays our bills and if were lucky, buys a few treats as well. So why is it so notoriously hard to earn and unbelievably easy to spend?
A lesson from the recession
Along comes a recession and changes our attitudes towards money. It teaches us to look after it and how to use it and invest it wisely. If we werent caught by the recession or by investing in one of the huge money frauds, we know how lucky or clever we were compared to others.
Charity keeps going
Surprisingly, research shows that people are maintaining their charitable donations and are helping family in these difficult times. It is a fact that charitable donations in the US doubled after the 1930s Great Depression because people witnessed the trauma of poverty.
More money lessons
One of the tough lessons of the recession is that of staying out of debt. Moreover, it is teaching us that saving money is good, and borrowing too much is dangerous.
We will always feel funny about money but until somebody develops an entirely different social structure, or we return to a barter system, we just have to learn to live with money. We should learn to love it, not because its money but for what it can do for us if we use it properly.
One of these days, man should start work on evolving a new financial system. Thats probably got about the same chance of success as developing a substitute for water!