|
Athlete
Altruism
The
next time you hear someone talk about self-centered,
overpaid professional athletes who don't
care about anything but their next paycheck,
think of Pat Tillman. While the attack on
the World Trade Center deeply touched many
people in a variety of ways, Tillman's response
was extraordinary. Foregoing a $1 million
annual salary as starting safety with the
NFL Arizona Cardinals, he joined the US
Army where he will earn $17,316. In a move
that shocked many fans, he enlisted along
with his brother with the intention of joining
the elite Army Rangers. Because of his public
visibility Tillman's decision was widely
publicized, but according to USA Today (June
3, 2002), he is not the only American who
appears moved by the events of September
11, 2001. Since then, Peace Corps applications
have risen 18%, interest in teaching in
inner-city schools has tripled, the Navy
and Air Force are finding it easier to keep
pilots who often leave for high-paying private
sector jobs, and former military pilots
are even asking to return.
...................................
Advice
for the Ages
On
June 23,2002, Ann Landers an American
institution passed away after a lengthy
illness. Using her nationally syndicated
advice column which started in 1955, she
offered guidance to countless readers over
the years. In one of her columns, first
published on October 5, 1969, she suggested
some interesting-and-still-timely insights
on the ways a person can differentiate between
right and wrong. Quoting Dr. Harry Emerson
Fosdick (Florida Times-Union, August 25,
1990), she recommended we carefully consider
six questions:
(1)
Does the course of action you are planning
to follow seem logical and reasonable. Never
mind what anyone else has to say. Does it
make sense to you? If it does, it is probably
right.
(2)
Does it pass the test of sportsmanship?
In other words, if everyone followed this
same course of action, would be results
be
beneficial for all?
(3)
Where will your plan of action lead? How
will it affect others? What will it do to
you?
(4)
Will you think well of yourself when you
look back at what you have done?
(5)
Try to separate yourself from the problem.
Pretend, for one moment, it is the problem
of the person you most admire. Ask yourself
how that person would handle it.
(6) Hold up the final decision to the glaring
light of publicity. Would you want your
family and friends to know what you have
done? The decisions we make in the hope
that no one will find out are usually wrong.
...................................
A
Labor of Love
Sometimes
we overlook the extra lengths to which police
officers frequently go in the pursuit of
doing good for another person. One example
of such an officer is Richard Conte, a member
of the 13th Precinct in the New York Police
Department, who was assigned to the digging
and recovery unit that sifted through items
found in the rubble of the World Trade Center.
According to an article in The Vancouver
Sun (November 13, 2001), when he located
a key ring with a wedding band on it, he
sent it to the city property clerk as required.
But then, Conte said, "... it began
to bother me knowing it would just be sitting
on a shelf." After obtaining permission
from his supervisor, he began on
his own time to track down the owner
and return it. Noticing a little bar-coded
supermarket tag on the key ring, Conte determined
that it belonged to Dennis Cook, 33, an
employee of Cantor Fitzgerald who perished
when Tower One collapsed on September 11.
And when he learned that Cook's father-in-law,
Al Palladino, lived near the precinct, he
made arrangements to deliver it to him personally.
On October 28, 2001, Palladino returned
the key ring and wedding band to Cook's
widow, Dana. That date held special meaning
for the Cook family ... it was to have been
Dennis and Dana's sixth wedding anniversary.
...................................
Do
As I Say ...
In
an address to graduating seniors at New
Hampshire's St. Anselm College in May, 2002,
former Tyco CEO Dennis Kozlowski cautioned
his audience this way:
You
will be confronted with questions every
day that test your morals. Think carefully,
and for your sake, do the right thing,
not the easy thing.
According
to USA Today (June 7, 2002), less than three
weeks after making those remarks, Kozlowski
was indicted for evading more than $1 million
in sales taxes on purchases of artwork by
such masters as Monet and Renoir. Kozlowski,
who was paid $19 million in cash and about
$80 million in Tyco stock over the past
three years, was forced to resign.
"Laws
control the lesser man. Right
conduct controls the greater
one."
-Chinese Proverb |
|
|