A lasting legacy

sam olympic torch 2For  many people, the name Sam White conjures up one image in particular – summer 2012 and the Olympic torch borne aloft through the streets of Newark by someone wearing the biggest smile you’ve ever seen…

Diagnosed with a grade 4 cancerous brain tumour in March 2009, when he was just 12 years old, Sam was an amazing young man who touched the hearts and lives of everyone he met with that fabulous smile.

On Saturday, the Girls Around Town will be talking to Sam’s mother Pam White, who will share the story of how he overcame the devastating effects of a massive bleed on his brain when the tumour imploded.

How, during his long journey to recovery, he took on another challenge, to raise awareness of brain tumours in children and young people.

sam-white-legacy (1)And how, after he sadly died peacefully as a result of an infection in September 2013, Sam’s legacy lives on…

Join June and Sue (Tina‘s taking a break this weekend) on 107.8FM or listen online from 10am to 1pm…

Annie gets set to splash for cash

annie turnerIf you listen to Radio Newark between 7pm and 9pm on Mondays, you’ll be familiar with the voice – and the musical tastes – of Annie Turner.

Presenter of The Outer Limits, she’s a little bit wacky. Which probably explains at least in part why she’s getting ready to splash for cash later this year…

On Saturday 3 October she’ll be down in Tooting Bec, swimming back and forth in an outdoor pool – and she won’t be stopping till she’s reached her target of 2 kilometres!

annie's just givingAnnie’s favourite film is Jaws but luckily there won’t be any sharks spurring her on. The only reason she’ll be going to such great lengths to get there will be to raise as much money as possible for Macmillan Cancer Care.

“I’m doing this for everyone who gets cancer,” she says. “But mostly it’s for two very special people, my father-in-law Roger and my friend and former boss Ben.”

Roger was diagnosed with myeloma two years ago and went from being a very active retired fellow to not being able to even drive his own car.

“After enduring cycles of chemo, stem cell treatments and a lot of very nasty drugs, he’s now on top of it. He’s getting well again, gardening and driving, and he’s even been working a bit too.

“Macmillan played a part in his recovery so I wanted to find a way to give back to them.

“And I also wanted to do it in honour of Ben, a larger than life character who touched not only my life but the lives of so many others. He lost his own to cancer just before last Christmas and I’m determined to raise as much as I can because I know he wouldn’t expect anything less!”

The Girls Around Town and everyone else at Radio Newark will be rooting for Annie in Tooting. If you want to add your own support, head over to her JustGiving page to read her full story and make a donation.

Every penny – or pound! – pledged will give her yet another reason to push herself to her own outer limits…

Georgie gets set for marathon challenge

georgieWhether it’s running a busy joinery depot in Newark or running her first ever marathon on the streets of London, there can be no doubt that 25 year-old Georgie Sparham is always ready for a challenge.

One of the youngest depot managers across Howden Joinery’s 600-plus sites, she will be waiting alongside thousands of others at the starting line of the London Marathon on Sunday 26 April. And like many of her fellow runners, Georgie has two distinct targets in mind as she prepares for the event.

“I’d really love to cross the finishing line in under five hours,” she says. “But I’ve never done any serious running before and only found out I’d been accepted for the Marathon about a month ago, so it’s going to be a push!

georgie 2“That’s my first goal; my second is to raise at least £2,000 for my chosen charity, Leonard Cheshire Disability. It’s a good cause my company already supports, so this is my chance to go that bit further to help. They provide care and assistance for people with all kinds of disabilities including those resulting from work place injuries which I feel particularly strongly about, as any one of us could be affected by them.”

With £300 already donated by work colleagues and the first pledges beginning to appear on her Just Giving page, Georgie is off to a flying start on her fundraising. And, with only seven weeks to go till the starting pistol is fired, she is putting just as much effort into training for the challenge ahead.

“If I cross the finishing line – and I’m determined that I will – much of the credit will go to Irvine Taylor at NMA Fitness Centre, who’s putting me through a gruelling programme in the gym. I’ve trained at NMA since I was 15, mainly boxing, but now all the emphasis in the three or four sessions every week is on running and altitude training.

“And I’m out running on the road two or three times a week as well. At the moment my maximum is 20 kilometres, so I’m getting there!”

Although this is her first marathon, Georgie is no stranger to stepping out of her comfort zone. When she was 19, she decided to do what she herself describes as ‘something a bit crazy’ and set off alone to spend three years backpacking around the world.

Fifty countries later, she returned to the UK after a tour which included Australia, New Zealand, the Cook Islands, most of South East Asia, 11 countries in Africa and all of South and Central America apart from Brazil. Along the way, she also climbed Mt Kinabalu in Borneo and followed the Inca Trail in Peru.

“Georgie is determination personified and if anyone can complete the London Marathon at the first attempt, she can,” said NMA coach Irvine Taylor. “If she puts as much into the run itself as she does into her training, I’ve no doubt she’ll be bringing a medal back to Newark at the end of April.”

Achieving that goal is in Georgie’s hands (or feet!) of course. To help her reach her second target of raising £2,000 for Leonard Cheshire Disability, visit www.justgiving.com/Georgie1 to make a donation.