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- From: kudzu@netcom.com (Michael Sierchio)
- Subject: Re: Craig Shergold information
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.173210.13664@netcom.com>
- Summary: DO NOT SEND ANY {GET WELL, POST, BUSINESS} CARDS TO CRAIG SHERGOLD!
- Organization: True Love, and Home-Grown Tomatoes
- References: <sTF5VB1w165w@xocolatl.com>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 17:32:10 GMT
- Lines: 91
-
- From: Gene Spafford <spaf@cs.purdue.edu>
-
- DO NOT SEND ANY {GET WELL, POST, BUSINESS} CARDS TO CRAIG SHERGOLD!
-
- If you contact the ``Children's Make a Wish'' foundation, you will
- find that they are not soliciting any form of card for Craig Shergold
- or anyone else. Better yet, if you call the publisher of the Guinness
- Book of World Records (US publisher is "Facts on File" @ 212-683--2244
- ext. 336), you can get this same story confirmed. You will also find
- that they will no longer endorse or support any effort to break this
- record.
-
- Many years ago, Craig Shergold developed a brain tumor, believed
- inoperable. He sought to set the Guinness record for get-well cards.
- The effort was well-publicized around the world, and he did, indeed
- set the record (consult a recent edition of the book [p. 207 of the
- 1992 US edition, for instance] --- he has received in excess of 33
- million cards to date; he officially set the record as of 17 Nov
- 1989).
-
- As part of this whole story, his plight caught the attention of John
- Kluge, the US billionaire, who paid for Craig to come to the US and
- receive specialized treatment. As a result, Craig has recovered
- completely from his non-malignant tumor. He is also no longer seven,
- but twelve (as of January 1992).
-
- The problem is that the mimeographed sheets and letters seeking cards
- for Craig have continued to be circulated. As a result, get-well
- cards continue to pour in to the post office for Royal Marsden
- Hospital in England. Worse, the appeal has mutated into various other
- versions, such as an appeal for business cards, one for postcards, and
- another version that appeals for holiday cards.
-
- The Shergold family has publicly appealed many times for people to
- cease to mail cards and letters, and that no more appeals be made on
- their behalf. One easily accessible way to verify this is with the
- article on page 24 of the 19 July 1990 NY Times. People Magazine
- wrote an article about it on June 1, 1991, page 63. Many other
- publications have also carried stories on this; even Ann Landers wrote
- about it on 6/23/91, but people still keep sending cards. Both
- Guinness and Royal Marsden have repeatedly issued press releases
- asking people to stop circulating requests for cards, as they are
- creating an undue burden on both the hospital and the postal service.
-
- The Guinness people have discontinued the category to prevent this
- kind of thing from ever happening again, and are doing their utmost to
- kill any further mailings. The Royal Marsden Hospital is at a loss
- what to do with the cards that continue to arrive --- most are being
- sold to stamp collectors and paper recyclers, and none go on to Craig.
-
- This appeal for Craig, as well as many urban legends, regularly appear
- on electronic bulletin boards around the world, and in many
- organizational newsletters and bulletins. It is both heartening and
- unfortunate that there are so many well-meaning people who continue to
- propagate these stories. It is too bad that so many of these people
- are unwilling to verify their information before passing such things
- along, especially when a simple phone call will suffice to do so. In
- this case, opening a recent copy of a book carried by nearly every
- library and bookstore would illuminate the situation.
-
- If you would still like to do something for a dying child, consider
- making a donation to a charity such as UNICEF or to the International
- Red Cross (Red Crescent, Red Magen David). Many thousands of children
- are dying daily around the world from disease and starvation, and
- countless millions more are suffering from the ravages of war, famine,
- disease, and natural disaster. Think how many of them might be helped
- by the millions of dollars in postage spent on cards to Craig
- Shergold.... Addresses (in US) are:
-
- UNICEF American National Red Cross
- 1 UN Plaza 17th & D Streets
- New York, NY 10017 Washington, DC 20006
- Attn: international children's aid
-
- Also, I encourage you to save this announcement, in either electronic
- or hard copy form, and to post it anywhere you've seen the original
- plea. If you see it in the future, as you probably will, you can
- attach a copy of this announcement.
-
- --
- Professor Gene Spafford
- Dept. of Computer Sciences
- Purdue University
- W. Lafayette IN 47907-1398
- spaf@cs.purdue.edu
-
- --
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