Wish Upon A Star
Mindy Le, of the Dreams Come True Campaign, freestyles for GenV.net
Staples Youth Social Entrepreneur Competition!
Staples: The Staples Youth Social Entrepreneur Competition is open to youth ages 12 to 24 in the US and around the globe. Two teams from the U.S. and two teams from France will get to fly to Boston, Massachusetts to attend a special awards ceremony on November 20, 2008. One of the Staples Prize finalists will be awarded a suite of Staples products worth US$5,000 to run their Venture. Additionally, there is a Global Grand Prize of a paid trip to attend and present at the next Youth Venture Summit in 2009. Lastly, up to 25 entries for new ventures will be awarded Youth Venture grants of up to US$1,000 to launch or advance their ideas. The application deadline is October 15, 2008. You can apply by visiting www.genv.net/staplesyv
Best Buy @15 Challenge!
The Best Buy @15™ Challenge will award $10,000 grants to FIFTEEN different Venture Teams that display the greatest creativity and community impact in their Venture and the clearest vision of how to create sustainable change. Out of 30 finalists who will be featured on GenV.net, 15 winners will be determined by an online vote by the public. Winners will join Best Buy for the competition announcement and a celebration. Applicants for the Best Buy @15™ Challenge must be age 12-18 and residents of the United States or Puerto Rico. The @15 application can be found at www.genv.net/bestbuy. The deadline is October 27, 2008.
HINT: Nearly 80 percent of the questions on the Staples Competition application are the same as the @15 Challenge application. I would strongly encourage you to apply to both and please feel free to cut and paste your answers from one form into the other.
Need help starting your Venture? Contact me!!!
Hi new Venturers!
Are you stuck figuring out how to go about starting your project in your hometown or school? I would like to help you. I can get you on the track you need to be. Contact me and I will help you get your project going. I will find you an organization to help and get you started with your program at your school. I can also help you with informative information about getting grants and media exposure. I also have a little funding avaialbale for those who qualify. Not as much as Youth Venture, but as you know every little bit helps. Contact me and I will help you and your friends get started.
Kyle Freas
Youth Together
National Future Business Award
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2007 TX YEF Winners
NFIB Young Entrepreneur Awards2007 Texas Young Entrepreneur Award Recipients
The NFIB Young Entrepreneur Foundation is excited to announce the winners of the 2007 NFIB Young Entrepreneur Awards, a scholarship program to set future small-business owners on the path to entrepreneurship. The recipients will attend the university, college, community college or vocational/technical institute of their choice with $1,000 in tuition assistance from the NFIB Young Entrepreneur Foundation. This year, 422 scholarships will be awarded thanks to financial support from numerous small-business leaders and corporate and foundation supporters. The major corporate sponsors are Visa USA, the Wells Fargo Foundation and Salesgenie.com.
Texas winners are listed below.
Texas
NFIB Young Entrepreneur Award
Kyle Freas Plano Plano West Sr High School
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Dallas Morning News
Life-changing moment led teen to change others' lives
Plano: He is honored for work to help abused children, animals
03:36 PM CDT on Wednesday, April 25, 2007
By CHRIS COATS / Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning News
Plano West senior Kyle Freas had a life-changing moment in elementary school while living in Austin: His teacher, frustrated with Kyle, picked him up and threw him hard against a chair. While he suffered injuries to his neck that eventually healed, the emotional trauma lingered.
Plano West High senior Kyle Freas was honored as Texas' top high school volunteer with a Prudential Spirit of Community Award. He receives a $1,000 award and a trip to Washington, D.C., where a national winner will be announced. "It caused a lot of depression in my life," he said. "I just wanted it solved by getting away from that teacher. But it just kept going on – everyone gave me special attention that I didn't want as being an abused kid.
"They treated me like I was different. I wanted everything to be normal again."
But things are better than normal for the National Honor Society member, who's been selected from thousands of high school students as the state's honoree in the 2007 Prudential Spirit of Community Awards.
Kyle's charity, "Youth Together," works with more than 100 schools to help children and animals in need. Since founding the organization six years ago, he's raised more than $70,000. Drawing on his experience, he sought to bring a sense of normalcy to the lives of abused, critically ill and homeless children.
"I want to be able to help kids see that they can get through anything and that there is help out there for them," he said. "I also want kids to see the importance of giving back."
Along with receiving a $1,000 award, Kyle and honorees from other states won an all-expenses-paid trip to Washington, D.C. A national winner will be selected at next month's awards ceremony.
To get to this point in his life, Kyle's parents, Tom and Muffie, had him go through counseling. The couple eventually moved Kyle and older brother Cody to Plano. Because of their strong belief in giving back to the community, his parents got the boys involved in charity work.
"We'd do things like taking presents to families in need," said Mrs. Freas. "I wanted the kids to see that we're lucky to have what we have and the importance of helping others."
In 2000, Cody started "Operation Paws" and worked with Operation Kindness, an animal shelter in Carrollton where students sponsor animals. Kyle took over the program when his brother left for college.
With a strong desire to help other kids, Kyle developed other programs like providing backpacks filled with school supplies for abused kids or working with critically ill children through the Make-A-Wish Foundation. He has recruited hundreds of students to aid his cause through school clubs.
"The kids look forward to the programs and want to help," said Brinker Elementary School counselor Kathy Barrett. "In Operation Paws they get a picture of the animal they are sponsoring, and there is a party where they can go to the shelter and meet it. In the Make-a-Wish program they get a bio and picture of the child whose wish they helped grant. The kids get to see the results of their contribution."
The cost to sponsor an animal is only $12, but it adds up for the shelter.
"He donates $10,000 a year, which is huge," said Tomi Tucker, volunteer coordinator for Operation Kindness. "That money is spent on emergency care and other needs. He gets the kids and parents excited – who also end up volunteering, adopting or donating."
At the Samaritan Inn in McKinney, his program provides niceties during the holidays to benefit the homeless children at the shelter.
"He's recruiting students to provide things like Easter baskets that these kids normally go without," said Cheryl Spofford, coordinator of volunteers. "The kids love knowing that the help comes from other kids."
Kyle said he would like to further expand his programs by "getting a grant program started with a board." He has recruited Plano Mayor Pat Evans to serve.
"I see the quality in what Kyle's doing, and I've challenged him on where this is going," she said. "He's building a legacy. I'd like to help him build on it."
With plans to attend the University of Oklahoma in the fall, Kyle would like to develop a program there and recruit students in Plano to continue what he's built here.
"I'll still be involved in every way – that will never change," he said.
High school pal Brad Henkel, 18, will also be attending OU.
"I've helped Kyle, and I'd like to help start it up at college," he said. "You can see what changes your efforts can make. It really does inspire you to keep helping others."
Chris Coats is a freelance writer in Plano
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Servenet Award
EVERYDAY YOUNG HERO
By Daniel Hatcher
A recent Prudential Spirit of Community honoree, Kyle Freas, 18, of Plano Texas, a senior at Plano West Senior High School, founded a nonprofit organization called “Youth Together” that encourages students at elementary and middle schools to participate in a variety of projects to help homeless, abused, and critically ill children. Since launching Youth Together six years ago, he has developed eight community service projects and offered students in more than 100 schools the opportunity to take part in them. In addition to teaching students about community service, Kyle’s program has provided backpacks and school supplies to abused children, movies, and games to pediatric patients, and holiday costumes and gifts to homeless kids. He also has projects that support homeless and zoo animals. To accomplish all of this, Kyle has recruited hundreds of high school volunteers over the years, and raised more than $70,000 to support the projects. “There is no better feeling than sharing with others,” said Kyle. “We need to realize that we are helping ourselves and our communities when we help others.”
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Plano IISD
Student Awards
Kyle Freas, a senior at Plano West Senior High School, captured, for the second consecutive year, the Prudential Spirit of Volunteerism Top High School Volunteer of the Year Award. He was named among America’s 102 most outstanding youth volunteers – two from each state and the District of Columbia – through the annual awards program honoring young people for exemplary acts of volunteerism. Kyle founded a nonprofit organization called “Youth Together” that encourages students at elementary and middle schools to participate in a variety of projects to help homeless, abused and critically ill children.
A record 115 senior students achieved Semifinalist standing in the National Merit Scholarship Program, based on their performance on the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test. These academically gifted students are among 16,000 of their peers nationwide who represent less than one percent of high school seniors.
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Changemakers "That Was Easy" Winner
This is a video showing the Staples Shopping Spree that Youth Together won.



