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President Barack Obama
makes remarks in the Rose Garden of the White House in
Washington, Friday, Oct. 9, 2009, about being awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) |
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Obama
gives
away
$1.4M
Nobel
prize
President
Barack
Obama
plans to
donate
the $1.4
million
from his
Nobel
Peace
Prize to
helping
students,
veterans'
families
and
survivors
of
Haiti's
earthquake,
among
others,
drawing
attention
to
organizations
he said
"do
extraordinary
work."
Obama is
giving a
total of
$750,000
to six
groups
that
help
kids go
to
college.
Fisher's
House,
which
provides
housing
for
families
with
loved
ones at
Veterans
Administration
hospitals,
will
receive
$250,000,
the
White
House
said
Thursday.
And the
Clinton-Bush
Haiti
Fund,
for
which
two
former
presidents
are
raising
money to
rebuild
earthquake-ravaged
Haiti,
will
receive
$200,000.
"These
organizations
do
extraordinary
work in
the
United
States
and
abroad
helping
students,
veterans
and
countless
others
in
need,"
Obama
said in
a
statement.
"I'm
proud to
support
their
work."
Obama
was
chosen
for the
Nobel
award
more for
his
aspirations
and
approach
than his
accomplishments
thus
far. The
Nobel
committee
honored
him for
changing
the
tenor of
international
politics
and for
pursuing
goals
Obama
says
will
require
worldwide
effort,
such as
nuclear
disarmament
and
reversing
global
warming.
Obama
himself
was
surprised
by the
award,
and
aides
said at
the time
he would
donate
the cash
prize to
charity.
The
Fisher's
House
donation
would
help pay
for
three
new
homes at
Bethesda
Naval
Hospital
and
Dover
Air
Force
Base,
where
the
bodies
of
Americans
killed
overseas
are
flown.
"It's
work
that
needs to
be done
for
these
men and
women
who have
served
this
nation
so
gallantly,"
Fisher's
House
Foundation
Chairman
and CEO
Kenneth
Fisher
said in
an
interview
with The
Associated
Press.
"It's a
privilege
to serve
these
men and
women
and
these
families
because
they
give so
much to
this
nation."
The
funds
for
Haiti
would go
to the
rebuilding
effort
led by
former
Presidents
Bill
Clinton
and
George
W. Bush.
A Jan.
12
earthquake
wrecked
Haiti
and
killed
an
estimated
200,000
people,
and the
U.S. is
playing
an
active
role in
rebuilding
the
country.
In
addition,
Obama
plans to
give
$125,000
apiece
to
groups
that
help
students
go to
college:
College
Summit,
a
national
nonprofit
that
works
with
elementary
and
middle
school
students
to boost
college
enrollment
rates;
the
Posse
Foundation,
which
gives
full
college
scholarships
to
public
school
students
who
might be
overlooked
by
traditional
scholarship
programs;
United
Negro
College
Fund;
the
Hispanic
Scholarship
Fund;
the
Appalachian
Leadership
and
Education
Foundation;
and the
American
Indian
College
Fund.
And
Obama is
donating
$100,000
to
AfriCare,
which
funds
HIV/AIDS
programs,
public
health
programs,
water
resource
development
and
agriculture
in 25
countries
in
sub-Saharan
Africa.
He will
give
$100,000
to the
Central
Asia
Institute,
which
promotes
education
for
girls in
Pakistan
and
Afghanistan.
Obama
accepted
his
peace
prize
just
days
after
announcing
he was
ramping
up U.S.
involvement
in the
war in
Afghanistan.
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