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WAITT FAMILY FOUNDATION UNDERWRITES FOUNDING
FATHERS CAMPAIGN TO MOBILIZE MEN TO TAKE STAND
AGAINST VIOLENCE
NEW YORK -- June 1, 2004 -- Gateway Computers
founder Ted Waitt joined New York Yankees manager
Joe Torre, hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons, Liz
Claiborne CEO Paul Charron, and business leaders
at an event in New York to encourage men across
the country to become “Founding Fathers” and
to pledge their efforts to stop domestic violence.
The event was part of a nationwide campaign to
mobilize men to take a stand against violence.
The 2004 Founding Fathers Campaign
Co-Chairmen, (left to right) Joe Torre, Russell
Simmons, Ted Waitt, and Paul Charron show their
combined support.
The effort, organized through The Family Violence
Prevention Fund, will aim to engage men to teach
young males that violence against women is wrong. “ I
am so proud the Chair the 2004 Founding Fathers
Campaign,“ said Waitt, “because when
we stop violence in a home, we help give a young
girl or boy the safe, peaceful childhood they
deserve. When we teach a teenager that violence
is wrong, we prevent him from becoming a bully
and batterer who goes through life harming others.
And when we empower a young man to speak out
against violence, we help him become an example
for others and start a chain of positive action
that can extend indefinitely.”
Torre, who has previously discussed growing up in an abusive household,
said his father, a police officer in New York, "was violent with
my mom." " He never hit me, but the scars that a child takes
with him into adulthood, they don't go away," Torre said Tuesday.
Torre, who has led the Yankees to four World Series titles, added that
coaches and managers need to do more to foster healthy attitudes toward
women among athletes. " You tell them to be aggressive, go out
there and beat somebody up, go out there and win a ballgame, and unfortunately
when they go out on a date that night they don't take `No' for an answer," he
said.
The Waitt Family Foundation underwrites the “Founding Fathers” campaign
along with support from Liz Claiborne, Inc, HomeGoods, and The Wireless
Foundation.

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Men line up to sign the
campaign pledge. Ted Waitt, (left) Chairman
of the 2004 campaign is one of the first
to sign. |
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