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July 13, 2010 | Seen and Overheard
 

Home > Blogs > Seen and Overheard > Archives > 2010 > July > 13

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Five area charities in running for $20,000 makeover

From Hannah C. Bealer, Staff Writer

Hannah’s Treasure Chest, Community Action Partnership of Darke County, Daybreak, Humane Society of Greater Dayton and Unified Health Solutions are among 15 finalists in the Modern Office Methods “Jump Start Your Nonprofit” contest.

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Angela Addington is founder and director of Hannah’s Treasure Chest in Centerville. Staff photo by Chris Stewart

The winner of the contest from Dayton, Cincinnati or Columbus will receive an office technology makeover worth $20,000. The first and second runner up will receive $10,000 and $5,000.

Vote for your favorite charity at www.momnet.com. You can vote once each day until 5 p.m. Sunday, July 25.

What do you think?


Seen & Overheard runs daily in the Dayton Daily News. Twitter with me at DDNSmartmouth. Have an item for Seen and Overheard? Click here.

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Government workers glamorous in movies, UD research says

Talking about being hot for teacher, and police officer, and astronaut, and librarians …

While the stereotype is that government and civil servants are lazy, incompetent and dangerous, the camera sure does love them.

Research by University of Dayton professor Michelle Pautz and Laura Roselle from Elon University shows that government workers are most often described as good-looking, knowledgeable, well-trained and efficient in films.

“Are they ready for their close-up? Civil servants and their portrayal in contemporary American cinema” is published in the current issue of Public Voices.

The political scientists and their students examined the top ten grossing films of the year from 1992 to 2006, including Harry Potter, Star Wars, Austin Powers and Finding Nemo.

“The overall views of government were negative, but the individual actors were all good — there’s a disconnect there, and I think that’s fascinating,” Pautz said in a press release. “It would seem to parallel the experience of most Americans, who on the surface think government is bad but actually find their day-to-day interactions with government to be positive.”

It of course all depended on what sort of government worker the actor played and if he or she was a bureaucrat.

Sixty eight percent of CIA officials appeared in films that depict government negatively while 67 percent of teachers and 100 percent of astronauts were in films with a positively depicting government, the press release said.

What do you think? Are government workers generally hot tamales?


Seen & Overheard runs daily in the Dayton Daily News. Twitter with me at DDNSmartmouth. Have an item for Seen and Overheard? Click here.

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