Tag Archives: research

Sen. Patty Murray Presents 2013 Golden Tennis Shoe Awards

At this year’s Golden Tennis Shoe Awards luncheon, held Monday, April 29, at the downtown Seattle Westin, Senator Patty Murray put the spotlight on the Special Olympics, ovarian cancer, and violence against women, through awards to Tyler May, Swedish Cancer Institute medical oncologist Saul E. Rivkin, and the Tulalip Tribes’ Deborah Parker, respectively. Though Murray, in her rise to budgetary power in the Senate, has gained a reputation for earmarks, as these awards indicate, her concerns are difficult to militate against.

Murray had met May and Parker separately, when they traveled to D.C. on citizen lobbying efforts. May, who years ago found that golf sat at the intersection of his athleticism and autism, was at the Capitol to help the push for reauthorization of the Special Olympics Sport and Empowerment Act of 2004, while Parker was speaking out for an expansion of coverage in reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act, so that non-Indians responsible for abuse that occurs on tribal lands will be prosecuted. It was, as Murray was to learn, a very personal crusade.

May dedicated his award to all Special Olympians. “I’m trying to put myself out of business,” Dr. Rivkin — who founded the Marsha Rivkin Center for Ovarian Cancer Research in 1996, in memory of his wife — said drily, accepting his award. Parker, for her part, invited her family and tribal members who were in the audience to stand and share in the award.

Murray had invited Dr. Jill Biden, whose husband works for the government, to speak as well. Biden’s address took a global view of women’s empowerment, hitting on the themes of access to education, freedom from violence, and cultivation of leadership potential. Referencing Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In, Biden insisted, “Now is not the time to lower our voices.”

On Tuesday, Murray toured the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, sitting in on a roundtable discussion on sequestration impacts on research funding with scientists from heard from the Hutch, Seattle Children’s Research Institute, UW Medicine, and the Pacific Northwest Diabetes Research Institute. FHCRC’s Randy Main, its vice president and chief financial officer, estimated that cuts in federal funding could subtract $41 million from the Center’s revenues alone. Murray has shepherded a budget with no NIH cuts through the Senate, but House of Representatives Republicans have not been in a compromising mood.

It’s For the Kids! Children’s Seattle Gets $65 Million in Gifts

The news broke on Halloween (no, not the costume-tantrums post) that Seattle Children’s Hospital had pulled off one of the largest trick-or-treats ever. The hospital announced that it had received two gifts totaling $65 million. One, from an anonymous donor, was for $50 million from an estate, to support pediatric research at Seattle Children’s Research Institute.

Another $15 million came from  Mrs. Jean Reid of Bellevue, causing us to take back all the unkind things we’ve ever said about the Eastside. Reid’s gift is directed toward the Children’s Bellevue Urgent Care Clinic, advanced nurse training, and the “greatest needs” of Children’s Bellevue Clinic and Surgery Center. ($1 million is an outright gift, and the remaining $14 million comes from the Reid estate.)

Notes Children’s: “Robert and Jean Reid have been very committed to nursing education throughout the years, having supported scholarships for undergraduate and graduate students at the University of Washington School of Nursing. They also donated to the University of Washington School of Nursing to establish the school’s first endowed deanship: the Robert G. and Jean A. Reid Endowed Deanship in Nursing.”

They also would like you to know that “Children’s serves as the pediatric and adolescent academic medical referral center for the largest landmass of any children’s hospital in the country (Washington, Alaska, Montana and Idaho).” And you probably shouldn’t let your two-year-old play with your iPad that much. Even if the video may go viral on YouTube.