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SHAKE-A-LEG Newport Announces Breakthrough Advancement for Sailing
Newport, R.I., USA (November 19, 2008)
SHAKE-A-LEG Newport
– a national leader in therapeutic sailing programs
allowing children, adolescents and adults of varying abilities to
dramatically improve their lives – announced today the donation of
the 12-Metre Easterner (US
18) to the world famous disabled sailing program. Donated by
Arthur Shlossman (Jamestown, R.I.), the classic yacht best known
for its America's Cup history, will be adapted by SHAKE-A-LEG to
allow people with disabilities to compete alongside able-bodied sailors. The
yacht’s steering and sail trim features will be reengineered
to allow disabled people to compete in an arena that no one could
ever have dreamed during the era when the magnificent America's Cup boats
were originally commissioned.
“It's a breakthrough of monstrous
proportions, not only for disabled people, but for the whole sailing
world,” said Paul Callahan, SHAKE-A-LEG CEO and a member
of the 2000 U.S. Paralympic Team who has served as guest tactician
aboard the 12-Metre Valiant since
1998.
Once Easterner has
been modified, Callahan will lead a team of both disabled and able-bodied
crew members aboard her to the starting line of The
12-Metre World Championship, hosted
by the New Yacht Club in Newport, R.I., next September. More than
forty 12-Metres from around the globe are expected to
compete on the same waters that once hosted the America’s
Cup.
Callahan also stated that the 66-foot Easterner will
become an integral part of SHAKE-A-LEG's daily Adaptive Sailing
program that teaches people with disabilities the fundamentals
of teamwork, self confidence, mentorship and an added feature, “the
ability to perform optimally under pressure, with disabled and
able-bodied people working side by side.” Callahan
went on to say that this will not only show that disabled sailors
are competent in their own right, but can work alongside with,
and even successfully compete with, able-bodied professional
sailors."
Designed by the legendary C. Raymond Hunt
and built for the late Chandler Hovey, Easterner competed
in the 1958 America's Cup defense trials with Columbia and Weatherly.
A contender for the America’s Cup defense again in 1962 and
1964, Easterner was
later sold and moved to California where she spent 28 years before
returning home to Newport, R.I.
Created in 1982 to make sailing accessible
to individuals with physical, as well as intellectual disabilities,
SHAKE-A-LEG Newport’s Adaptive
Sailing Program broke ground as the
first program of its kind in the USA. Adaptive
Sailing has earned world-wide recognition
and become a model program for other waterfront communities. Operating
from its fully accessible facility in Fort Adams State Park, Adaptive
Sailing is open to all ages, and offers
lessons and recreational sailing in two-hour sessions supervised
by US SAILING certified instructors, as well as competitive sailing
opportunities.
SHAKE-A-LEG Newport is a 501(c)(3) charitable
non-profit organization established in 1982. For more information,
visit www.shakealeg.org
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