Monday, June 7, 2010
Name A New Hybrid Daylily
So we are inviting the public to visit Cora Gardens, 230 Cora Road, Cookeville, on
June 18th - 19th & July 9th - 10th, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. - to view and hopefully purchase our new unnamed hybrid seedlings.
Cora Gardens will have 200 plus (2009 seedlings) plants available for their selection. The daylily plants (New Hybrids) will range in costs from $75.00 $250.00 – there will be discounts on multiple purchases of three or more. Another 200 “2010” seedling will be sold at $25.00 each – these seedling have not bloomed as of yet – so there will be a big surprise when they bloom in 2011. 2010 cannot be pre-registered until 2011 or until they bloom and are evaluated.
You will receive all that exist of that plant. And should you wish to register that plant, we will assist you with the paperwork. The fee to register Daylilies with the AHS* is $15.00 each. Upon AHS* approval of the name you've selected (8-10 wks), you will get the original registration papers. Not bad, considering a new intro (bearing ANY ol' name) is about $100.00 to $500.00 per fan... and you don't get "all that exists"!
We will also be happy to mail your plant for a fee of $25.00, which includes postage and handling… anywhere in the continental United States, except where prohibited.
*The American Hemerocallis Society, Inc.
100% of the net proceeds will go Habitat for Humanity International, to aid with their rebuilding and repair of existing housing efforts.
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After the January 12th Haitian Earthquake in which 230,000 lost their lives, hundreds of thousands of children were left orphans and one and a half million of the Haitian population were left with no shelter… a number of individuals from the Highlands’ of Tennessee formed Rebuild Haiti.
Why Rebuild Haiti? Our Mission is to help the Haitian people with relief and rebuilding efforts, over the long term.
Many Americans donated to the Haitian Relief Efforts – from small change to large contributions – this included the United States Government, a number of Corporations and many donations from other countries. The first donations came fast during the first few weeks after the devastating event – but sadly have dropped to a trickle in only four months since the earthquake hit. And some of the larger commitments are at best questionable.
While many Haitians are receiving some food and water – many are still without shelter and with little to no medical care. People are still sleeping under traps and bed sheets – on the ground and when the rains start in full force – no one can predict the outcome.
So we at Rebuild Haiti are partnering with Habitat for Humanity International, in hopes of helping them, house some 50 thousand families over the long term. Our goal is to raise $10,000 plus from this fundraising event. This will help build and/or repair 500 housing units.
It is a unique and wonderful way to remember loved ones, friends, and events – add beauty to your gardens – for generations to come… and help the Haitians all at the same time. This could be a once in a lifetime opportunity.
Friday, May 14, 2010
Success!
Last night was awesome – best acting I have seen in a long time – not a fault - super energy – I laughed till I cried. If you are looking for a wonderful night of pure enjoyment and laughter – don't miss your last chance to see The Dining Room on Saturday – Curtain 7:30 p.m. or Matinee at 2 p.m. May 15th. Get your tickets at the door starting 7 p.m.
Proud to be a small part of the marvelous group of professionals!
Stan Rodriguez
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Ready to laugh?
We need to sell 800 seats during the fours scheduled performances to make our goal of $10,000. That would assist Habitat to help repair and/or build 500 homes for displaced Haitians. Please buy your tickets now and bring a friend. Please spread the word to your family, friends and co-workers. Let them know how important this is and we promise you an evening of laughter and enjoyment.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Come to WOW
Bring your loose change to the WCTE booth to the benefit of the tens of thousands of Haitian children orphaned by the devastating earthquake on January 12th. Your loose change and/or dollars will make a difference in their lives.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Are you saving your loose change? Windows on the World is April 17
Samaritan's Purse is a nondenominational evangelical Christian organization providing spiritual and physical aid to hurting people around the world. Since 1970, Samaritan's Purse has helped meet needs of people who are victims of war, poverty, natural disasters, disease, and famine.
Windows on the World
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Charities we support
Doctors Without Borders is an international medical humanitarian organization created by doctors and journalists in France in 1971. In emergencies and their aftermath, DWB provides essential health care, rehabilitates and runs hospitals and clinics, performs surgery, responds to epidemics, carries out vaccination campaigns, operates feeding programs for malnourished children, and offers mental health care. When needed, DWB also constructs wells, dispenses clean drinking water and provides shelter materials like blankets and plastic sheeting.
On any given day, close to 27,000 doctors, nurses, logisticians, water-and-sanitation experts, administrators, and other qualified professionals can be found providing medical care in international teams made up of local DWB aid workers and their colleagues from around the world.
Habitat for Humanity International is an ecumenical Christian ministry that welcomes to its work all people dedicated to the cause of eliminating poverty housing. Since its founding in 1976, Habitat has built, rehabilitated, repaired or improved more than 350,000 houses worldwide, providing simple, decent and affordable shelter for more than 1.75 million people.
Habitat has set a goal of helping 50,000 earthquake-affected families in Haiti improve shelter conditions. The organization’s multi-year plan includes distributing emergency shelter kits, debris recycling and removal, house repairs, transitional shelter, new construction and on-the-job training in house construction. Through all aspects of its work, Habitat strives to cultivate partnerships with local residents and other humanitarian organizations that can multiply the effectiveness of its response in Haiti.
Heifer International is a non-profit charitable organization dedicated to relieving global hunger and poverty. It provides gifts of livestock and plans, as well as education in sustainable agriculture, to financially-disadvantaged families around the world.
Heifer has set a goal to raise $3 million to fund a multi-year recovery restoration effort in Haiti. Staff will assess project and partner needs and provide rapidly productive agricultural and livestock resources to help families meet medium- to long-term needs. Efforts will focus on helping restore land and access to clean water. Staff will begin to establish partnerships with complementary agencies for program and funding strategies. Heifer will support sustainable recovery of family farms through training, reforestation, improved small animal species (poultry, swine and ruminants) and soil conservation methods over three to five years. As residents migrate to smaller towns, Heifer will work with other agencies to identify areas with the most concentrated need and opportunity for Heifer’s assistance.
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Make noise!
No other nation in the past two hundred years has endured – and is still enduring – so much. A million plus Haitians are still without the barest necessaries of life: adequate food, drinking water and shelter. Sanitation is still primitive and completely inadequate. Some 500,000 tents or plastic tarps have been distributed, but that still leaves numberless people sleeping under thin sheets and in the mud when it rains.
Conditions will soon worsen. The rainy reason is fast approaching. Homeless Haitians must be moved to higher ground soon, or disease, misery, and death will afflict more and more of them. Immediate and dramatic action is essential. There is no time for politics and bureaucratic turf wars. If land must be appropriated to accomplish the task, some authority needs to cut through legal niceties. Landowners’ rights must stand aside; the rights of the masses who desperately need a place to go take precedence. We are talking about people’s lives after all. Now! The clock is ticking, the hands are moving.
Most newspapers and TV stations have moved on. Other concerns have superseded Haiti’s earthquake – the politics of health care, the earthquake in Chile, the storms in this country, our seemingly endless winter. . . , the list goes on. But the job in Haiti is not done. We’ve got to maintain the focus. How do we keep helping the Haitian people?
Make noise!
Write, call, FAX, or email
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(include your e-mail address)
202-456-1414
FAX: 202-456-2461
www.whitehouse.gov/contact
Write, call, FAX, or email
U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander
455 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
Phone: (202) 224-4944
Fax: (202) 228-3398
http://alexander.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Email
Write, call, FAX, or email
U.S. Senator Bob Corker
185 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
202-224-3344
FAX 202-228-0566
http://corker.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=ContactMe
Write, call, FAX, or email
U.S. Representative Bart Gordon
2306 Rayburn HOB
Washington, D.C. 20515
Phone: (202) 225-4231
Fax: (202) 225-6887
http://gordon.house.gov/contact/contact_form.shtml
If your representative is someone else, Google them for their contact information.
Write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper, or all newspapers in your region.
Please take the time, now. And ask (nag, cajole, prod, motivate) your family, friends and business associates to write. The more noise, the better the chance of action.
Monday, March 1, 2010
Children in urgent need of surgery
The Haitian earthquake has taken many lives – some estimates run as high as 300,000. While the official count stands at 212,000, the exact figure may never be known. Many other Haitians were injured and are still without the necessities needed to maintain a normal life – adequate food, water and shelter. But this is not their story – this article relates to the mountain of red tape that is keeping children apart from much needed medical care.
This is the story of one of these children – Landina – a three month old, little Haitian girl that unless she receives an operation – she will die - says Dr. David Nott – a British volunteer.
Landina has suffered greatly in her short life. “Her agonizing wails are hard to list to”, he says. “It is a desperate cry for help from a life that is only just beginning, but may soon end.”
She was pulled from the rubble of a collapsed hospital. Her mangled right arm had to be amputated. But she has lost much more than that - her mother is missing – presumed dead.
Dr. Nott said: "Because the bone in her head is dead there is significant risk of infection not only systemic infection but brain infection."The child needs urgent treatment in a neurological centre." And one of the few places that performs the complex operation she needs is the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London. But transporting her there has become a major challenge.
Dr. Nott’s request to move her out of the country has been turn down, because of the lack of paper work. The problem is how to get the child from Haiti to London at a time of great sensitivity over Haitian children, especially orphans, following the scandal over the American missionaries who are now being held on child trafficking charges.
Dr. Nott said: "With all the paper work and legal problems I don't know precisely how we will do it but we are not going to stop.”I have written to the Haitian government to see whether or not they can expedite this to ensure she gets on a flight to the London.”
Time is running out for Landina. Mr Nott believes they have a window of 10 days, possibly only a week to save her; such is the risk of brain infection.
For Landina… the clock is now ticking. If this tiny child, who has already suffered so much, does not get help and fast, she may well become another needless casualty of a disaster that has claimed so many.
The upside to this story… we have just learned, as we were finishing this article, that after weeks of trying to obtain the necessaries paper work - last Tuesday, the authorization to evacuate Landina was received, but due a series of last minute delays – she was not able to leave until last Friday. Landina is now being looked after at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London, where she will receive treatment for her injuries.
Back to an even darker downside to this story… six to twelve months after her treatment, Landina, that had her right arm amputated near the shoulder – is to be returned home to Haiti. (An agreement – that had been made with the Haitian government in order to expedite her departure.) This child will be returning to a country that cannot feed her people – where there’s little medical care, no parents… an orphaned amputee.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Why the Good Old Dollar is Best…
Take Habitat for Humanity International. This organization has worked in Haiti for many years and has helped thousands of Haitians build homes, and with that experience we believe they know what’s best.
On February 9th, Habitat announced that it expects to help 50,000 families in Haiti, who were affected by the devastating 7.0-magnitude earthquake that struck near Port-au-Prince on January 12, through a multi-year effort that includes relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction.
“This is a bold goal, but the level of destruction and the number of families affected demands a bold response,” said Jonathan Reckford, chief executive officer of Habitat for Humanity International. “In our response, we want to provide the widest range of shelter resources available, so that we can have a positive impact on the greatest number of people possible.”
Habitat’s threefold plan begins with the distribution of 10,000 emergency shelter kits that contain tools and supplies to help families make immediate house repairs and construct temporary shelters on their home sites. “We want to help families return to their homes and begin rebuilding their lives as quickly as possible,” said Reckford. “Providing these tools is an important first step in the recovery.”
Emergency shelter kits: The contents of Habitat’s kits include tarpaulins, rope, duct tape and a hammer—all used for building temporary shelters that help guard families against the elements. A chisel and a hacksaw help with salvaging materials from collapsed houses. Buckets are used for debris removal and for carrying water. Gloves and masks in the kits help provide protection during the cleanup. The kits are being assembled in the Dominican Republic and in Atlanta, and are being distributed in earthquake-affected areas in Haiti. The emergency shelter kits cost approximately $250 a piece, including cost of transport to Haiti.
In the rehabilitation phase, Habitat will help families remove debris, salvage materials that can be recycled, repair homes that received minimal damage and build transitional shelters that meet basic needs. As conditions improve over time, the material from the transitional shelters can be incorporated into permanent housing. Habitat transitional shelters are expected to range in cost from $1,000 to $2,500.
In the reconstruction phase, Habitat will build core houses, each with a separate sanitation facility. These basic housing units are permanent and resistant to earthquakes and hurricanes. They are designed to be expanded over time by the homeowner families and meet international humanitarian standards. Depending on design adjustments according to context and the cost of materials in the earthquake’s aftermath, the core houses will cost from $4,000 to $6,000 a piece.
Charitable organizations like Habitat for Humanity International know what’s needed and many have formulated plans – like the one mentioned in this article – that will best serve in Haiti’s recover.
So, if you have a mind to help, please do it through cash donations at this time. That’s what is needed. And you can do it on line by going to Habitat for Humanity International at https://www.habitat.org/ .
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Sponsors needed for June production of The Dining Room
This organization was formed in the hope that we – the Highlands community – would be able to assist where and when possible in the relief and rebuilding of Haiti following the devastating 7.0 earthquake on January 12th.
One of our efforts toward that goal is the production of a play, The Dining Room, written by A.R. Gurney and Directed by Kathy Gilpatrick.
As Executive Producer of Rebuild Haiti, it is my pleasure to invite you to participate by being one of the play’s major sponsors: Patron: $500; Star: $250; Friend of the Arts: $100.
Sponsors will be noted on all advertisements and featured on the play’s program. And, in thanks for your participation, Cora Gardens will provide a unique 2010 Hybrid Daylily for you to name, keep and enjoy.
Your check should be made out to Rebuild Haiti and sent to:
Rebuild Haiti c/o Dale Wilson, Treasurer
1231 Woodlake Trace
Cookeville, TN 38501
Please remember to earmark your donation The Dining Room.
All proceeds from this production, other than those used to secure rights, order scripts, produce advertising and printed material, will go to Habitat for Humanity International to assist in the reconstruction of Haitian homes.
We thank you in advance for your generosity and commitment to Rebuild Haiti’s goals.
Sincerely,
Stan Rodriguez
President, Rebuild Haiti
(931) 520-4253
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Bidding date extended!
Support WCTE-TV and REBUILD HAITI!
WCTE-TV will continue to accept bids on the Featured Artists Silent Auction through February 19. View artwork here or visit West Textures, 24 West Broad, Cookeville. Bids can be submitted to Michelle at West Textures (931.526.6015).
WCTE will share 25% of the proceeds with REBUILD HAITI.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
A Day of Prayer and Mourning…
Friday, February 12th marked the one month anniversary of the Haitian earthquake. On the day when most Americans were waiting for the opening of the Olympic games, Haitians stretched their arms to the sky in prayers of remembrance and thanks. People poured into the streets of their capital, climbed on the rubble of destroyed buildings, and filled the parks with hymns that reverberated throughout the city of Port-au-Prince. Haitians stopped what they were doing to give thanks for their lives, for the aid they were receiving, and in remembrance of the loss of loved ones and friends in hopes that this catastrophe would never happen again.
The official death count stands at 212,000 with some estimates at 230,000 to 270,000. The actual numbers may never be known and don’t matter. We don’t need politics and the media to divert us from the fact that hundreds of thousands died on or around January 12, 2010, and that immediate life-support needs remain.
About 2,000,000 people have received two week rations by United Nation’s count, leaving 1,000,000 plus needing food. People are still living on the streets without shelter. Only 48,000 of the 200,000 tents needed have been supplied to-date. The other 152,000 won’t be coming; in a widely criticized move, officials have decided to hand out plastic blankets instead. Does that make sense, with the rainy reason approaching? Yes, aid agencies must try to look ahead and conserve, but is holding back funds for immediate relief going to help the long term problems? Americans have donated well over $500,000,000 toward earthquake relief, but only about half has been spent because agencies are starting to worry about the decline in donations. Questions of priorities, immediate and longer-term, need to be sorted out and coordinated.
And there are still plenty of legal and infrastructure problems. Clean water supply is a continuing issue. There are only 900 latrines in and around the capital, serving some 900,000 people. Administrative problems need to be resolved so sick and injured children can be brought to the United States for treatment. Of course, there must be adequate safeguards against trafficking, but unreasonable paperwork hurdles must not stand in the way of humanitarian efforts. Bureaucratic blocks to the licensing of new business ventures also need to be streamlined. Turf wars, finger-pointing, and political quibbling over who’s responsible for what need to be recognized for what they are so help – still desperately needed – reaches the Haitian people efficiently and soon.
Friday, February 12, 2010
How can I help?
1. Send a check – to Rebuild Haiti c/o Dale Wilson, Treasurer, 1231 Woodlake Trace, Cookeville, TN 38506
2. Volunteer – We need people to help at our fundraisers scheduled throughout 2010. Email wecanrebuildhaiti@gmail.com to get your name on our volunteer list. We’ll contact you to help.
3. Support our fundraisers – Follow our website for details on upcoming fundraisers.
As if enough weren't enough
Disease brought on by the lack of clean water – sanitation conditions and crowded tent cities - will bring the death toll to an ever-increasing number of Haitians. Not to mention the dehydrating heat and lack of medical care.
There are 91 working hospitals in Haiti and they have tried to take care of hundreds of thousands of individuals with life-saving services. Long-term care is still a dream, trying to happen. And there are still hundreds on the streets that remain untreated.
The Haitian government has raised the number of deaths up to 230,000. Exact numbers are unknown, as there are people still buried in the rubble of collapsed buildings. Many others buried by families are not included in this number. Injuries are estimated at well over 350,000 – homeless and orphaned numbers are also on an increase.
Makeshift camps are a breeding ground for diseases – like measles, diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough – an epidemic in the making. And while officials are trying to vaccinate 530,000 children against these diseases – the vaccination program is still in the works.
Respiratory infections, malnutrition and diarrhea may be the biggest killers – yet to come. And a shortage of medical equipment and spotty electrical power has not helped matters any.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
A Not-So-New Way of Giving…
Give a person a fish and you will feed them for a day…
Teach a person how to fish and you can feed them for a lifetime.
Same goes by giving a person a small (well-managed) loan and that person will be able to climb out of poverty.

Micro banking has taken hold in some of the poorest locations around the world. Some loans have been made for as little as $50, and 97% of all loans have been paid back. The money collected from these re-paid loans is then loaned out to others.
Imagine a world without hunger. We can make this a reality with just a small donation…one that will help feed humanity, bring people out of poverty and enrich the human community all at the same time. This will not happen overnight, but it can happen – if we but give wisely.
Please check out FINCA International here. Learn how you can make this happen, then take the next step…
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
When will It stop?
Imagine being completely petrified of when the next earthquake will hit, when the ground will shake and buildings will crash down around or on you, a fear so disabling you can’t think rationally, a fear like some monster in a child’s closet. It keeps building until you can’t sleep or think. Imagine losing your family, a father, mother or child. The grief and despair are physically and mentally disabling for strong adults. Imagine the effects of being suddenly orphaned on a child.
You can give water to the thirsty, feed the hungry, rebuild homes, and help mend broken limbs, but if you don’t take care of broken minds all is lost.
Reports are coming out of Haiti that one in five Haitians are suffering severe psychic trauma – understandably enough. Haiti was and remains a war zone, in effect. Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome is common. You can see it in the faces of those suffering – you don’t have to be a doctor to see the fear and/or emptiness in the eyes of men, women and children. How can we expect them to adjust to post-quake everyday life – which itself is traumatic enough?
Some individuals will not be able to cope without professional help. What little medical assistance is currently available in Haiti is focused on taking care of physical wounds. The minds of the Haitians are left to heal themselves.
Haiti still needs all the help we can send. Look deep within yourself. Consider the situation and give all you can. And remember that the recently signed federal act, P.L. 111-1126, allows us to claim a charitable deduction in tax-year 2009 for donations made through March 1, 2010 for the relief of victims in areas affected by the earthquake in Haiti.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Good news!
Saturday, February 6, 2010
The urgency remains!
Donations to some relief agencies have dropped dramatically. Red Cross donations are down 50% from January and other organizations are also feeling the pinch, even though some relief efforts on the ground are just starting.
It will take more than a few days for Haiti to recover from this catastrophe. Men, women and children are still starving and without shelter. Many have lost everything they owned, and the hurricane reason is fast approaching. Much more needs to be done. We need to assist where and when we can. We need to get the word out and keep the Haitian people in our prayers. Please give generously to agencies that are assisting in Haiti!
We support the following at this time:
Church World Services: http://www.churchworldservice.org/site/PageServer
Doctors Without Borders: http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/
Habitat for Humanity International: http://www.habitat.org/
Heifer Project International: http://www.heifer.org/
Friday, February 5, 2010
WCTE Artists Reception & Silent Auction 5p Tonight!
West Textures on West Broad
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Is it enough? The things we’re doing?
It’s easy to blame the Haitian government, which has always been inefficient, usually corrupt, and often violent and oppressive. Some would blame the Haitian people themselves for being superstitious and lazy.
But that won’t do; the government and people are a product of their history and subsequent conditions, not the other way around. Overcoming the burden of history and conditions requires help, especially now, after the catastrophic 7.0 earthquake.
I’m sure we feel we have given much during the three weeks since the earthquake. But is it enough? What usually happens several months after a disaster is that world attention moves on and pre-disaster life gradually re-emerges, under even poorer conditions. When the Haitian people struggle back onto their hands and knees – if not their feet – will we leave them there to continue a life of squalor and deprivation? I hope we can do better this time.
What can we do? Besides continuing to give generously to existing charities and supporting the efforts of REBUILD HAITI locally, we need to exercise our political influence. We must tell our own leaders to support Haitian reconstruction, providing favorable trading conditions, debt relief, and perhaps a microloan program to encourage grass roots entrepreneurship. We need to maintain our personal involvement in organizations dedicated to bringing education and better medical care to more of the Haitian people.
But we must not simply take over Haiti, giving them what we think they need, or ordering them to act the way we think they should. Aid, encouragement, compassion, and prayers are necessary; imposing our control, culture, and values will not, in the long-term, cure Haiti’s problems.
Stan Rodriguez
REBUILD HAITI
Next Meeting: February 4 at UCC
We will meet at 6 p.m. at United Church of Cookeville on 502 Gould Drive (off Willow, south of I-40). Anyone who is interested in supporting Rebuild Haiti is welcome to attend.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Why Rebuild Haiti?
Everyone knows about the initial devastation: an estimated 200,000 individuals are believed dead, some 250,000 were injured, 1.5 million are homeless, untold thousands of children were orphaned. Today, 20 days after the earthquake, conditions are still dire and suffering continues.
- The United Nations estimates that 2 million Haitians will need food aid until December 2010 and beyond.
- Water distribution is still limited.
- Sanitation remains a major concern; construction of latrines in the homeless camps is going slowly.
- Medicine is still badly needed.
- Some 200,000 people need post-surgery follow-up.
- An undetermined number of others still have untreated injuries.
- The number of diarrhea, measles, and tetanus cases is increasing.
- Some two million family tents will be needed; only 2,000 have been distributed so far.

We cannot ignore our responsibility because of absurd prejudices and preconceived notions about Haitians — that they are cursed by some pact with the devil, or that they are uncivilized and corrupt.
No! They are human beings, like us. And they are suffering. That is why we organized Rebuild Haiti.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Saving Haiti's Mothers
- Rev. Melissa M. Roysdon, Providence Baptist Church
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Welcome to Rebuild Haiti
Also in attendance: Jerry DeVolder, Dale and Cynthia Wilson, Merritt Ireland, Becky Magura, Tom and Sharron Eckert, Bob and Anita Bay, Paige Pearson and Barb Myers.



