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Today features the Vail Veterans and how they get wounded warriors moving — in the snow

March 25, 2013 Jan Mazotti

The Today Show recently featured a story on the Vail Veterans Program. Take a look!

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Since, 2004, the Vail Veterans Program has been transforming military injured and their families through individualized, world-class outdoor programs building confidence and life-long relationships. In January 2013, the Vail Veterans Program hosted 28 veterans, 28 guests and five staff from the three major military hospitals. In fact, 14 of the 28 veterans who attended have suffered multiple-limb loss. “That family experience is essential to getting wounded vets back on their feet,” said Tiffany Smith, a therapeutic recreation specialist at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

The Vail Veterans Program participants include United States military personnel who have been severely injured while serving our country. Most veterans who participate in the programs come directly from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland; Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas; and the Naval Medical Center in San Diego, California.

The program hosts two winter events that include downhill skiing, snowboarding and cross-country skiing for wounded warriors and their families. Staff Sergeant (SSG) Matt Keil says, “I was shot in the neck by a sniper in Iraq. I am now a quadriplegic confined to a wheelchair. I attended the Vail Veterans Program with other disabled veterans. For a brief time, we felt free from our injuries and were able to heal by sharing stories. The program showed us that no matter what happened in our lives, we could tackle anything we wanted and that our personal sacrifices will never go unnoticed and are deeply appreciated.”

“The Vail Veterans Program helped my whole family. I can’t put it in words to explain how good it felt to see my family enjoying life after I almost lost mine,” declared SSG Robert Henline.

Since its inception, the Vail Veterans Program has hosted more than 1,000 soldiers and their families in their program entirely free of charge thanks to donors, volunteers and the Vail community. “Even though I don’t participate on the mountain, working with our vets at Denver International Airport are some of the most inspiring days of my year. They remind me how very blessed I am to live in this country.” said Jan Mazotti, president and editor-in-chief of ICOSA magazine.

Corporal Mark Litynski believes, “The week in January was life changing for me and for so many others!”

To learn more about The Vail Veterans Program, visit http://vailveteransprogram.org/.

In Featured Stories Tags skiing, Today Show, vail resorts, vail veterans, vail vets, Veterans, wounded warriors
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It's Not OK to NOT Know Social Media

January 7, 2013 Sandy Grason

"Dear Today Show," writes Andrea Smith in her recent obliteration of the popular morning show's hosts, "It's not OK to know nothing about social media or the internet anymore. I couldn't agree more.  I happened to catch the offending banter live as it aired and I made the comment to my husband, "How can all 3 of the hosts of NBC's morning show be so completely clueless about social media?"

Here's the clip, if you missed it. Skip straight to 2:20 for the bewildered repartee.

Granted, Willie states "Clearly, we're not the panel to have analyzed this story" and Savannah's ending note of "What's the take-away? We don't know either." Duh. Right?

As Andrea Smith says in her article;

"Reading the news and then proclaiming you don’t understand any part of it is the epitome of failure.  Social media and digital technology is no longer news; it’s part of the way we live our lives, how we communicate, how business is conducted. Kids use technology to learn in school, to get their entertainment, to compete in the world. They don’t call it technology; they call it life. Saying "I don’t get it, so I will just skip this part of a global revolution" is like saying "I don’t know how to drive a car so I'll keep riding my horse and buggy to work." Technology is not something we can choose to ignore."

Bravo!

You can read Andrea Smith's entire Mashable.com article here.

 

 

In Science & Technology Tags Andrea Smith, Facebook, irony, Mark Zuckerberg, Mashable, photos on Facebook, privacy issues, Randi Zuckerberg, Savannah Guthrie, social media, Today Show, Twitter, Willie Geist
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