A good customer is spearheading a charity auction for Fanconi Anemia
Research Fund which is working to cure the rare disease. Children with
Fanconi anemia are usually born with myriad birth defects. The genetic
condition can cause bone-marrow failure; the life expectancy for a child
with the disease is four years.    

The items are admittedly mainstream but you might be interested.

http://auctions.yahoo.com/user/charityauctions

For-Giving Technology

By Shannon Henry
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 11, 1999; Page E1                                                   
                                         
A Washington technology executive is using everything he's learned about
computers and networks in a personal project that couldn't be more
important: saving his son's life.    

 Allen Goldberg of VarsityBooks.com launched an online charity auction
yesterday to raise money that will go toward researching Fanconi anemia, a
rare disease that his 3-year-old son,  Henry, has had since birth.    

Hosted on Yahoo and running through Feb. 24, the auction is a philanthropic
version of the now ubiquitous commercial online auctions. Yahoo entered the
auctioneering business in September and has so far held 20 online charity
events. It holds the auctions for free for those with a nonprofit status,
says  Karen Opp, Yahoo Auctions Producer.    

Those who log on to Yahoo.com and click on its auctions section can bid on
100 or so items that Goldberg now has in his basement, including a jacket
formerly owned by singer Mary Chapin Carpenter and a tennis racket signed
by Gabriela Sabatini. 

   Goldberg hopes the auction will raise $7,000 to $10,000, all of it to go
to the Fanconi Anemia Research Fund in Eugene, Ore. "It lets us reach as
many people as possible," says Goldberg.    

When Henry was born and diagnosed with the disease, Goldberg, then
Webmaster at the National Association of Broadcasters, used the Internet to
research what is still a little-known condition. Only 1,000 or so people,
mostly children, have the disease. Soon after Henry's birth, Goldberg and
his wife,  Laurie Strongin, created a Web page, www.hsg.org, to keep
friends and family updated on his health and encourage donations to the
Oregon group. About $150,000 has so far been raised through the site.    

Children with Fanconi anemia are usually born with myriad birth defects.
The genetic condition can cause bone-marrow failure; the life expectancy
for a child with Henry's type of the disease is four years.    
"The clock is ticking," says Goldberg.  

Jeff

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