The Woohoo! Report

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Archive for November, 2009

‘Best Dressed’ man helps homeless land jobs

Posted by stephcolin on Nov-17-2009

Frank-KellyMiami motivational speaker says his project worthy of reality TV show

Associated Press

MIAMI – The three homeless men stand before well-groomed Frank Kelly, “America’s Best Dressed Real Man” of 2007, according to Esquire Magazine. He’s there to help them get work.

“Don’t just tell me your strengths. Tell me a situation where you were able to implement that strength,” Kelly tells them.

Two months later, each has a job.

The group is part of Project Vacant Streets, Kelly’s initiative to get the homeless back on their feet one job at a time. Each participant undergoes a series of transformations — emotional, professional and physical. The idea is that in less than a month, they gain the confidence to land a job through the skills learned. Kelly says he has helped nine people find jobs in the nearly two years since he started.

Kelly, a 32-year-old product director at Johnson & Johnson, describes the program’s candidates as everyday Americans. He said most are not mentally ill or drug addicts, they have just suffered from chronic homelessness.

“They have an incredibly difficult time getting back into the work force,” Kelly said.

Kelly was born in Nicaragua, and his family moved to the Miami area when he was 2. His grandmother spent her life volunteering with churches and the homeless.

“People around me introduced me to the world of volunteering and philanthropy, but it wasn’t until Project Vacant Streets that I had my own thing,” he said.

Misconceptions about homelessness

As a second career, Kelly was already a motivational speaker, giving lectures at college campuses and work settings about leaving lasting impressions while achieving your goals. A friend suggested that Kelly speak at the Community Partnership for the Homeless in Miami, which each night houses about 700 of Miami-Dade County’s estimated 4,300 homeless.

“My first reaction was what could I possibly convey to the homeless? I was almost afraid of walking into the shelter,” he said. Once Kelly stepped inside the shelter, though, he said the room’s energy convinced him that he needed to change Americans’ misconceptions about homelessness.

In less than six months, Kelly put his idea into practice with help from his wife, who handles logistics and phone calls, and from friends and family who volunteer. Now he’s thinking about trying to turn the project into a reality TV show.

The program starts with an open house at the homeless shelter. Kelly narrows a group of candidates, selecting three he sees have the potential to complete the program.

One of the candidates Kelly recently picked was Fred Rice, 53, a waiter in Los Angeles, San Diego and Atlanta for nearly 30 years before the money ran out and he became homeless. For 16 years, Rice bounced from city to city, shelter to shelter.

“I’m putting all but two of my marbles into Frank Kelly, him teaching me basically the science of how to get a job,” Rice said.

Having picked the hopefuls, Kelly goes to work on getting them to work.

“Give some type of pitch for an interview. That gives you the confidence to walk in there with a positive attitude,” Kelly tells the latest group during one of several mock interviews.

He critiques and refines their resumes — over and over. They get a makeover at a Target, with Kelly on hand to give advice about what’s appropriate for work.

The final challenge is what Kelly calls the emotional change, with the candidates sharing their homeless experience during a speech to supporters and students at the University of Miami.

“America’s biggest fear is speaking in public. So if these people can overcome that, then who is to say they can’t overcome any interview?” Kelly said.

Success stories

Some employers aren’t willing to give Kelly’s pupils a chance.

“A large majority shut their doors on our project. They just don’t get it. They have these preconceived notions of America’s homeless,” said Kelly, who spends his lunch break calling contacts and sending out e-mails to help the candidates land an interview.

Several companies, however, have offered their services. Perry Ellis, the menswear line, has donated professional attire for candidates.

Kelly said he’s spent about 1,500 hours and $8,000 to $10,000 of his own money on the project.

His payoff has been success stories like Rice, who was hired as a food server at the Eden Roc Hotel on Miami Beach. The program, Rice said, “brought me back to the living world.”

[source]

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96-year-old grad student’s secret? All-nighters

Posted by stephcolin on Nov-13-2009

Chao Mu-he, 96, will receive his Masters degree in philosophy in Nanhua, southern Taiwan, this weekend.

Chao Mu-he, 96, will receive his Masters degree in philosophy in Nanhua, southern Taiwan, this weekend.

Taiwan man says method is only way to keep up with younger classmates

Associated Press

TAIPEI, Taiwan – A 96-year-old Taiwanese man who will receive his master’s degree in philosophy this weekend [June 2009] said he was able to compete with younger students by pulling all-nighters before exams.

Chao Mu-he, better known to his classmates at Nanhua University in southern Taiwan as “Grandpa Chao,” said he began graduate school after being told he was too old to continue as a volunteer at a local hospital.

“I was bored after I left the hospital,” Chao said Thursday. “I don’t play mahjong or have other hobbies. I felt I had to do something with my life.”

In London, a spokeswoman for Guinness World Records said she could not say if Chao is the oldest recipient of a graduate degree because the company does not keep records in this category.

Memory lapses

Chao said the most difficult part of his studies was coping with a poor memory.

“I can’t remember things as well as my fellow students,” he said. “So before a test I would wake up at midnight and study all night. That way, the material was still fresh in my mind when the test began.”

He specialized in the works of Chuangtze, a 4th century B.C. Taoist master.

Twenty-five-year-old classmate Liang Yu-chen described Chao as a polite and modest man who got on well with fellow students and paid great respect to younger teachers — making a deep bow before addressing them.

“Grandpa Chao is a living example of Chuangtze’s teachings,” Liang said. “He is always at ease, not fighting anyone.”

Just wants ‘to stay healthy’

A spokeswoman at Nanhua’s graduate school, where Chao will get his degree Saturday, confirmed that he was born on July 4, 1912.

Chao, who lives alone, said he was uncertain about his future plans.

“I just want to stay healthy,” he said.

[source]

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