Friday, October 16, 2009

Newest "Hole in the Wall" Announced


Newman visits site of new camp for ill kids

Hole in the Wall comes to state

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CARNATION -- Actor Paul Newman, who says his film achievements can't compare with the work his Hole in the Wall Gang camps are doing for seriously ill children, on Thursday visited a historic Snoqualmie Valley farm that will be the site of another such camp.

"If I'm going leave a legacy, it's not going to be my films or anything I did politically -- it's going to be these camps," the Oscar-winning actor said.

Newman was on hand as Seattle businessmen Tim Rose and Jim Hebert announced that their non-profit organization, Camp Korey, is buying the 818-acre Carnation Farm from Nestle to host a camp for sick children.

Camp Korey became a Hole in the Wall camp in May, which means it receives logistical support from the Association of Hole in the Wall Camps and a nominal amount of money.

Hole in the Wall camps have welcomed 100,000 seriously ill children since Newman started the original camp in 1988 in Connecticut with profits from his Newman's Own food products. This year 16,000 campers are expected to attend the 10 active camps all around the world.

Camp Korey is named for Rose's son Korey, who died at 18 of bone cancer. Expected to open next summer, the camp will offer free weeklong sessions for children 6 to 16 years old during the summer as well as programming throughout the year for families and caregivers of sick children.

Rose, a senior vice president for Costco Wholesale Corp., said the camp will try to accommodate children of all conditions and offer supervised medical care.

Hebert would not discuss the farm's purchase price but said camp operation costs would exceed $3 million a year.

2007-06-29 21:22:58 GMT

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