shergold From: phil@adam.adelaide.edu.au (Phil Kernick) Date: 6 Jan 92 01:24:24 GMT Newsgroups: alt.folklore.urban Subject: Re: Craig Shergold et al FYI re Craig Shergold. Millions of dollars (note the card totals below) have been spent on this project, money which might have gone to research or treatment. The EASIEST refutation is to cite READERS DIGEST OCT 1991 PAGE 71 US EDITION READERS DIGEST DEC 1991 PAGE 35 AUS EDITION Sorry I don't know about other editions. If THAT does not help convince people, read on.... ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 Million Americans Respond to Plight of a Sick Boy New York Times (NATIONAL), Sunday, July 29, 1990, page 24. Craig Shergold, a 10-year-old English boy ill with a brain tumor, remarked last fall that he would like to break the world record for receiving get-well cards. Nine million Americans have responded, answering messages sent through a loose network of facsimile machines, office memorandums, neighborhood conversations and community newspaper advertisements. The boy's mother says she cannot handle any more cards, so a third of them are languishing at an Atlanta charity, which had initiated its own fax campaign for the boy. And the charity, the Children's Wish Foundation, is trying to figure out what to do with the cards. Last November, a handful of English companies trumpeted Craig's wish to break the record of Mario Morby, a 12 year-old English boy suffering from leukemia who collected 1,000,265 get-well cards earlier in 1989. Story Changes as It Spreads Craig's message soon reached this country and spread rapidly. His wish was distributed on leaflets at a Boston street fair, plastered on a billboard in Gadsden, Ala, advertised in a newspaper in New Jersey, announced to the residents of Surry, N.H. at a town meeting and disseminated by the Printing Industries of America to its member businesses. As the message spread across the country, the facts of Craig's story became twisted. In Boston, a leaflet said he was 7 years old, lived in Keene, N.H. and spelled his last name "Shirgold." A Chicago physician said erroneously that he had treated Craig for six years. Other accounts had the boy's disease as leukemia and said he was from Florida. In addition to the American get well cards, which came from every state, seven million cards reached Craig from other countries, said his mother, Marion Shergold, in a recent telephone interview. New Record in Guinness Book Mrs. Shergold informed the Guinness Book of World Records of the count as it stood on May 25: 16,252,692. Craig's accomplishment, which includes the 3 million cards in Atlanta, will be in the 1991 edition of the book, to be published this October, said Cathy Brooks, a Guinness Book spokeswoman. Mrs. Shergold said she "can't say a big enough thank you" to her son's correspondents, but she added, "We don't want any more cards." Officials in the office of the Georgia Secretary of State, asked by Children's Wish Foundation for advice on what to do with the cards it had collected, recommended that the charity follow the wishes of Mrs. Shergold. She has said the foundation should open the cards, share them with American children who have cancer and eventually recycle the paper. THe proceeds from the recycling, as well as any gifts received on Craig's behalf, should also be used to help sick American children, Mrs. Shergold said. +---------------------------------------------------------------+ | | | | | | | | | Photograph of a bald but smiling Craig holding a plaque goes | | here. The caption of the photograph reads "Craig Shergold | | was given a certificate by the Guinness Book of World Records | | after he received more than 16 million get-well cards. The | | 10-year-old from Surrey, England, is ill with a brain tumor. | | | +---------------------------------------------------------------+ In response to inquiries from news organizations about Children's Wish and it's handling of the cards, the Governor's Office of Consumer Affairs is "actively looking into" the matter, said Bill Cloud, a spokesman. The office is particularly interested in whether the foundation solicited any financial contributions during its campaign for Craig, Mr. Cloud said. Linda Dozoretz, executive director of the foundation, who has met with Craig in England, said the foundation never asked for money on his behalf and has not opened any cards addressed to him, but it had received direct contributions totalling about $120 on his behalf. The money has been deposited in an Atlanta bank account that the foundation opened in Craig's name, Ms. Dozoretz said. The foundation, which, like the better-known Make-A-Wish Foundation of America, fulfills the wishes of terminally ill children, came to the attention of the Georgia authorities last year, when the Secretary of State, Max Cleland, fined Ms. Dozoretz and Arthur Stein, the foundation president, $2,500 each. Mr. Cleland said a foundation radio promotion for ill children had used bogus names for the children without informing the public of that. He also said the foundation had used money left over from the granting of one wish to pay for others, as well as salaries and operating expenses, in violation of Georgia law. Mr. Stein and Ms Dozoretz, who are married, waived their right to a hearing on the charges and paid the penalty without declaring guilt or innocence said Randy Willard, an investigator in Mr. Cleland's office. Mr. Stein said in an interview that he knew he had broken Georgia law by changing the children's names, but said he would do it again to preserve privacy. He said the foundation did not take money earmarked for one wish and apply it to others, but rather deposited all donations in a general fund from which it pays for numerous wishes. He said he and his wife, "on the advice of an attorney," did not request a hearing with an administrative judge on the charges, but paid the penalty to "get the thing over with." Began by Chance Remark These activities are of little concern to Craig, who lives in the town of Surrey, in southeast England, with his mother and father, a truck driver. Craig's campaign began last September, when a surgeon who was treating him for tumors of the brain and spine at the Great Ormond Street Hospital in London joked that Craig had received so many cards from friends and relatives that he could set a record. That set Craig and his parents to thinking, and with hospital officials' assistance, they asked local companies to spread the message of his wish. "And from that grew an enormous chain letter that went round from company to company and then country to country,: said Pam Rumfitt, an appeal director at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London, where Craig, now 11, is now treated as an outpatient. Mrs. Shergold said she was grateful to her neighbors for meeting each Thursday to sift through the mountain of cards. The stamps are sold to a collector in London, with the proceeds donated to help children with leukemia, while money from recycled envelopes is given to schools for the handicapped, Mrs. Shergold said. Though Craig continues to battle the brain tumor and sometimes uses a wheel chair, his mother says he has responded well to treatment and the tumor on his spine has disappeared. Ms. Rumfitt said: "The whole family has been sort of bowled over by the show of good will. THe cards have been the best medicine in the world for him." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- From Houston Post Nov. 22, 1989, page A-13 ******* NOTE THE DATE ******** "Ailing boy has greeting card record" AP (London) A 10-year-old boy suffering from a rare brain tumor has captured the official world record for receiving the most get-well cards, officials said Tuesday. Craig Shergold's mountain of 1,256,266 get-well cards tops the previous record of 1,000,2656 cards held by another English boy, 12-year-old Mario Morby. A spokesman at Guinness Publishing Ltd. said Craig received an official certificate and his record will be included in the next edition of the book, "The Guiness Book of World Records 1991." Shergold said from his home in Carshalton, south London, that he was confident he would make it into the record books when his attempt began Sept. 24. Marion Shergold said the attempt to break the world record began as a way to cheer up her son after he was too sick to meet Princess Diana. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- From the Houston Post, June 20, 1990, page A-3: Get Well Cards Keep Coming (Associated Press) London - Despite appeals for it to stop, 10-year-old Craig Shergold receives hundreds of get-well cards daily from strangers trying to help him win a place in the "Guiness Book of World Records." Craig, who suffers from a rare form of brain cancer, broke the record months ago, but the cards keep coming. More than 16 million have arrived. "We don't want any more cards because it looks as though we're taking cards for no reason," Craig's mother, Marion, said from the family home in Carshalton, south London. "Every card says 'we hope you make it in the record books,'" she said. The get-well cards category was discontinued by Guiness once - after Mario Morby held the record with 1,000,265 cards. McFarlan [presumably a spokesman for Guiness] said the 13-year-old English boy is recovering from leukemia but the family still receives cards three years later. McFarlan revived the category after intense pressure, and Craig now holds the record. "I thought I had decided over a year ago that (Mario Morby) would be the last one, but it is very difficult to hold out against an emotive press. I couldn't do my job - well-intentioned, very sentimental people called me at work, and I received quite a lot of hate mail, including one that said, 'if you have children I hope they die of cancer.'" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ask for Cards, and Ye Shall Receive and Receive and Receive by Douglas Burns WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- A 7-year-old English boy with cancer is finding that once a story hits the modern-day grapevine of fax machines and computer bulletin boards, it is impossible to stop. Critically ill with a rare brain tumor, Craig Shergold told his parents and nurses at a British hospital in September of his wish to be in the Guinness Book of World Records for owning the world's largest collection of post cards. The same wish was fulfilled only a year earlier for another English boy with cancer. Once the news was out, it flowed through every conceivable medium to even the most unimaginable places on the globe. Budget Rent A Car in Miami got news about Craig from a Budget office in Gibraltar and sent one of their employees out to alert South Florida businesses. ``We also passed it around to all our offices in the nation,'' said Maria Borchers, director of travel marketing. Children's Wish International, a non-profit organization based in Atlanta, is also working to get cards for Craig. One of its appeals made its way to a computer bulletin board run by Bechtel, a Maryland-based company with an office in Palm Beach Gardens. ``We are getting 10,000 to 15,000 cards for Craig per day,'' said Arthur Stein, director of Children's Wish International. But Craig doesn't want any more cards. In November, he received a certificate from Guinness after his mountain-sized collection of 1.5 million cards broke the record set in 1988 by Mario Morby, a 13-year-old cancer victim. Since then, Craig's dream has become a logistical nightmare for his parents, phone operators and the Royal Marsden Hospital in Surrey, England. Monday, the unofficial count for Craig's collection reached 4 million, said Mark Young, a Guinness Publishing Ltd. spokesmen. The hospital has set up a separate answering service to implore callers to refrain from sending more postcards. Despite pleas of mercy and reports in the media, hundreds of post cards continue to pour into the hospital every day. ``Thank you for being so kind,'' said Maria Dest, a nurse at Royal Marsden. ``But he really does not need any more post cards.'' Dest said that whenever a corporation gets wind of Craig's plight, the bundles of mail increase. ``As soon as it starts to slow down, it goes around again,'' she said. Dest would not discuss the specifics of his condition. ``His condition is deteriorating, but he is still able to talk and function,'' she said. Young, with Guinness, said he gets several calls every day from people who question if Craig Shergold even exists. ``This is definitely legitimate and Craig will be in the 1990 Guinness Book,'' said Young. But because of the problems the two appeals have caused, Young said Guinness plans to discontinue the category. The public outpouring for Mario and now Craig surprised virtually everyone involved, he said. ``These two boys really captured the public imagination,'' Young said. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- [Ann Landers column, undated but from mid 1991] ONE GUINNESS RECORD ENOUGH FOR BOY === ======== ====== ====== === === Dear Readers: Last year I began receiving tons of letters telling me about a 10-year-old English boy who had a malignant brain tumor. His wish was to be in the Guinness Book of World Records for receiving the greatest number of get-well cards. The boy's name is Craig Shergold. Several months ago I read a piece in the press saying Craig's dream had become a reality. He surpassed another English lad, a leukemia victim, who had received 1,000,265 cards, which put him in the Guinness Book of World Records. Marion Shergold, Craig's mother, announced that he had received more than 33 million get-well cards from all over the world, including cards from former President Reagan, President Bush, Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev. She said her family is very grateful for the overwhelming generosity but now she hopes people will stop sending cards. "Unfortunately," Mrs. Shergold said, "we are still receiving thousands every day and have no place to store them." Meanwhile, I continue to be swamped with requests from readers asking me to print a plea in my column for *more* cards. I decided to follow up on Craig's story, so I contacted the Make-A- Wish Foundation, which had worked with the Shergolds. The people there told me that John Kluge, a Virginia billionaire, arranged for a brain surgeon in Charlottesville, Va., to operate on Craig. Kluge brought the entire Shergold family to the United States so they could be present for the surgery. Then I called Marion Shergold in London. She told me the surgery was a great success and the Craig is doing beautifully and is expected to live a full life. She also said, "This is like a fairy tale. Things like this don't happen in real life. Mr. Kluge is a saint." In her marvelous British accent, Mrs. Shergold said excitedly, "Tonight we are having a God Bless America party. About 150 people are coming to celebrate Craig's great good fortune." Now, dear readers, this lovely story now turns a little sour. I just received a request from a well-known Chicago man, asking me to publicize the fact that the same lad who broke the world's record for get-well cards would now like to break another world's record - this time for collecting the most business cards. This man is one of dozens of affluent, high-profile Americans who are faxing and chain-lettering [it's a noun! it's a verb! it's a desert topping! --jjw] their friends on behalf of Craig's "new project." In the chain letter, Craig's name is misspelled, his age is given as 7, when actually he is 11, and the address is incorrect. These errors set off the alarm signals in my head. [so THAT's what it takes! --jjw] Chain letters themselves are an abomination. I never read them, nor would I foist them on anyone, much less ask my readers to keep the chain going. What's more, Marion Shergold wants everyone to know that the Shergolds did not ask for business cards and they do not know what to do with the 10,000 that are arriving daily. While they greatly appreciate the kindness of the American people, they asked that I please help put a stop to this well-meaning effort that is turning into a nightmare. Soooooo, to all the good-hearted people who may be inclined to send a business card, please don't. I would also like to point out that your business card, which most likely lists your phone number and address, could fall into the wrong hands and become part of the mother of all mailing lists. Sharp-eyed scam perpetrators, always on the alert for suckers, may figure if you'd fall for this, you'd fall for anything. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- In the Romford Yellow Advertiser, I saw the following article the other day: Craig, 8, has cards record The parents of cancer sufferer Craig Shergold, 8, have requested that no more get well cards be sent to their home. Last year Craig, who lives in Surrey and was diagnosed as having just a short time left to live, launched an attempt to gain an entry in the Guinness Book of Records as the person receiving the most cards. Recently letters have been circulating amongst businesses in South East Essex encouraging firms to send more cards. But a spokeswoman at the Guinness Book of Records told the `Yellow Advertiser': "Craig has made the record and will be entered in the next edition of the book. His parents have requested that no more cards be sent as they have been inundated." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Now for the "proof" part: IS he actually *IN* The 1991 Guinness Book of World Records??? Yes, he is. On page 487: "Craig Shergold of Carshalton, Surrey, United Kingdom, had collected a record 16,250,692 get-well cards by May, 1990." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- One thing that does not come over from this is the HUGE PROBLEM thisd has been for the london hospital at the receiving end. Do the arithemetic. Craig has been sent about 33,000,000 cards. This has been going on for 4 years (or so), so that is 1,000 working days. Thus each day the hospital has to sift through 33,000 cards looking for money in them (not unusual), or more realistically the hospital's normal post! (OK, I know that a lot of the cards are stored in the US somewhere, but I wanted to make a point). Also, think about the stupendous waste of money this has been. 33,000,000 cards at (about) 50 UK pence, plus 33,000,000 postages at about an average of 20 UK pence is 70 times 33,000,000 giving about 23,100,000 UK pounds. The money would have been better spent on a whole raft of things - dare I say it, even Cancer Research! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Finally for those of you who want to see what Craig really looks like, the following is an encoded GIF, that I scanned directly from the Readers-Digest mentioned at the top. begin 600 craig.gif M1TE&.#=A@ +@ 9 /___RP @ +@ 0 "^X2/J$&I2%:IN?EQUJ>0> =:<HJ:JKK*VNKZ"MM**!C6 MYUF+$J"K:[-K\\L;O)N[DVO<&UQ89BMY!Y@7JB>-PTR[[-P\[58-W84MIPT> M/9Y-+EZ^K1S'_=U]%8NH/#LOKPY_CY^OO\_?[W]:2MHH,0/]&3R(,*'"A:S, MM? 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