Sidney Zacharias, fourth-grader, laughs as
she gets her hair shaved for the St. Baldrick's Foundation.
Karina Williams/The Placer Herald
Sixth-grader Chase Hale shaves his head in
honor of his cousin Maxwell Herlehy, 5, who is currently being
treated for leukemia. Herlehy, in the white shirt, watches in
the background. Karina Williams/The Placer
Herald
It is hard enough to get a child to eat
vegetables let alone volunteer to shave their head.
But
for 30 students, both boys and girls, from Ruhkala Elementary
School, the decision to shave off their locks to raise money
and awareness for childhood cancer was easy.
The
students took part in a special event Wednesday to raise money
for the St. Baldrick's Foundation, a national nonprofit
organization dedicated to raising awareness and funds to help
fight cancer in children.
The special event was the
brainchild of Adam Salinger, a 12-year veteran of the Rocklin
Unified School District and teacher at Ruhkala
Elementary.
So far, the students have raised more than
$16,000 for the cause, and donations are still coming in.
"You can see the difference when we have kid
power behind us," said principal Gary Yee.
Last year,
Salinger raised $2,000 for the foundation with only himself
and Yee shaving their heads.
Salinger held a special
elective class every Friday specifically designated to set up
the St. Baldrick's event.
Consisting of 20 students
third through sixth grades, the class recruited shavees, set
up the logistics with barbers and obtained all the nessecary
materials through St. Baldrick's in New York.
"It feels
really, really light and really weird," said fourth grader
Sidney Zacharias, one of three girls who participated in the
shaving.
Zacharias said what she looks forward to the
most is not having to wash her hair.
The original goal
of the group was to raise $5,000, Salinger said.
After
the group quickly matched that goal, they set the bar a little
higher at $7,500.
"They wanted to make sure that the
goal was manageable and reasonable," Salinger said. "Once they
hit that goal, they kept changing it. They just keep setting
the bar higher and keep making it."
Salinger has been
involved with the St. Baldrick's Foundation for about six
years. He got involved through the Keaton Raphael Memorial, a
non-profit organization set up by Robin Raphael, who lost her
son to childhood cancer.
"Last year I transitioned to
where I did kind of my own event where I was the only shavee,"
Salinger said. "It was a natural progression to get the kids
involved."
St. Baldrick's Foundation began as a casual
conversation between friends and has since become the world's
biggest volunteer-driven fundraising program for childhood
cancer. Events have taken place all over the world and
throughout the United States, raising more than $20 million
and shaving more than 26,000 heads.
Funds are directed
to childhood cancer research, to save lives and to improve the
long-term quality of life for children who
survive.