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Volvo Names Champion for Native American Housing as America's Greatest Hometown Hero at Historic New York Ceremony

    NEW YORK--April 16, 2003--

Seattle's Robert Young Named Top Hero at First-Ever Volvo for Life Awards ceremony in Times Square; Other Heroes Honored Awards presented by:

    -- Hank Aaron

-- Bill Bradley
-- Dr. Jane Goodall
-- Maya Lin
-- Dr. Sally Ride
-- Eunice Kennedy Shriver


    -- Young receives a Volvo car for life

    Robert Young, a Seattle-based champion for Native Americans experiencing a housing crisis, was named America's greatest hometown hero tonight at the first-ever Volvo for Life Awards ceremony.
    Held in Times Square, the Volvo for Life Awards ceremony caps off the largest-ever national search for and celebration of everyday heroes, providing more than $1 million in awards and financial contributions. Launched in December, the program called for people nationwide to nominate a hometown hero they know at www.volvoforlifeawards.com. More than 2,000 nominations were submitted. A panel of eight celebrity judges -- Hank Aaron, Bill Bradley, Dr. Jane Goodall, Caroline Kennedy, Maya Lin, Paul Newman, Eunice Kennedy Shriver and Dr. Sally Ride -- helped select the top winners.
    Young, 41, is the executive director of Red Feather Development Group, which is dedicated to helping hundreds of thousands of Native Americans experiencing a housing crisis. Of the two million Native Americans living on reservations, more than 300,000 are homeless. Many more live together -- in groups of up to 20 people in some cases -- in dilapidated shacks and uninsulated trailers. And, every winter, native elders freeze to death in their homes. Young and his volunteers teach reservation residents how to build homes out of a sustainable, abundant resource: straw bales.
    Young has partnered with the University of Washington and Penn State University to design a model that is three times more energy efficient than a typical home. With Young's help, some families save enough in monthly heating costs alone to pay the majority of a home mortgage. More importantly, they are finding a lasting solution to a problem that has plagued their communities for decades.
    To recognize Young's efforts, Volvo presented him with a new Volvo car every three years for the rest of his life; $10,000 in cash; and $50,000 to be donated to the charity of his choice.
    "We are very lucky to have met so many incredible individuals -- 2,036 nominees, to be exact -- who embody the values of conscience, care and character this program was intended to celebrate," said Vic Doolan, president and chief executive officer for Volvo Cars of North America. "Robert's efforts toward bringing hope and housing to the Native Americans is truly extraordinary. We appreciate the judges' mighty task of selecting our top winner, and we congratulate all of our nominees."
    Hosted by Jim Belushi, the Volvo for Life Awards was attended by more than 400 media, entertainment and other executives at Times Square Studios, Ltd. in New York. Six of the Volvo for Life Awards judges -- Aaron, Bradley, Goodall, Lin, Ride and Shriver -- recognized Young and other top hometown heroes, including:

-- Pamela Stack of Miami and Bao Xiong of Wausau, Wis. Along with
    Young, Stack and Xiong were among the Volvo for Life Awards' top
    three winners. Stack, 48, is a domestic abuse survivor who is
    Miami's leading advocate against family violence. Xiong, 37, is a
    mother of six who volunteers her time to provide job placement and
    skills assistance to Hmong refugee women in Wausau. Stack and
    Xiong each received $10,000 in cash and $50,000 to be donated to
    the charities of their choice. (Detailed bios of Stack and Xiong
    at the conclusion of the release.)

    The 2003 Volvo for Life Awards also featured music performances by the Wallflowers, Los Lobos and Heather Headley. For information about the event or to see the stories of more than 100 of the heroes nominated for this year's awards, visit www.volvoforlifeawards.com.

    Additional Hero Biographies

-- Pamela Stack, 48, Miami, Fla. A domestic-abuse survivor, Stack was
    stabbed multiple times, beaten and strangled by her estranged
    husband on Christmas Day 1990. Over the past 13 years, Stack has
    become Miami's leading advocate against family violence,
    volunteering to help hundreds of women and children leave abusive
    relationships or deal with the aftermath of abuse by taking them
    into her own home or helping them relocate to different states or
    countries. She co-founded the "Save-A-Life Campaign," which
    includes a cell-phone donation program that arms people in abusive
    relationships, the elderly and disabled people with phones that
    automatically dial 911, and a student-education program on teen
    violence and date rape. Stack is the author and presenter of 10
    training programs including, "Don't Die For Love," "From Victim to
    Victory" and "Domestic Violence in the Workplace."

-- Bao Xiong, 37, Wausau, Wis. Years ago, as a refugee from Laos with
    no formal education, Xiong discovered that many Hmong women in
    Wausau's 4,000-member Hmong community wanted to help support their
    families by working outside their homes. However, their limited
    English-speaking skills and the unspoken rules of patriarchal
    Hmong relationships kept them from working. Xiong quickly learned
    English so she could be an interpreter for Hmong women seeking
    jobs and obtained a childcare license so she could care for
    children of Hmong women who were working or taking English
    classes. Today, Xiong, a mother of six, is the unofficial social
    worker for Hmong women in Wausau, helping more than 30 Hmong women
    obtain and retain jobs, mentoring Hmong women starting daycare
    businesses, caring for Hmong children, and bridging the cultural
    gap between Hmong and American residents in countless other ways.