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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    7:58am, EDT

    Ex-Marine Angela Madsen on her journey from homelessness to the Paralympics

    Retired U.S. Marine Angela Madsen once lived out of a locker at Disneyland. But the 52-year-old paraplegic turned her life around and has since rowed across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. She's now competing for Team USA at the Paralympic Games in London.

    By Jamieson Lesko, NBC News

    LONDON -- Angela Madsen's journey to the London 2012 Paralympics is nothing short of extraordinary.

    Complications following a back injury she sustained while serving in Marine Corps at the age of 20 led to her becoming a paraplegic when she was in her 30s.

    Bound to a wheelchair, she fell into a deep depression. She lost her job. Her marriage dissolved.


    "I lost my house ... I ended up homeless, kept my things in a locker at Disneyland. Happiest place on earth, right?" she told NBC News at the USA track-and-field training camp at RAF Lakenheath, near Cambridge, England, last week.

    But the native Californian missed surfing, so she set out to find a way back to the water, determined to turn her life around.

    Some of the hottest tickets at the London Paralympics are for wheelchair rugby. The sport is so violent and fierce, that it has been dubbed "Murderball."

    "I started taking responsibility … and started making the changes and decisions to move positively forward in my life,” she said.

    Now, her definition of a disabled person is "somebody who doesn't believe they can and doesn't try.”

    'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage

    She competed in the 2006 world surfing championships and then fell in love with rowing.

    She turned this hobby into history by rowing across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.

    Ahead of the London Paralympics, L.A. Galaxy midfielder David Beckham spent a day learning blind soccer from Team Great Britain.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "I didn't row across my first ocean until I was 47,” she said with a laugh.

    "I have six Guinness World Records for rowing oceans. I've circumnavigated Great Britain ... I've been places on this planet that no human being has ever been before. A thousand miles from land in any direction ... it's been a pretty amazing life."

    Read Angela Madsen's profile at the Paralympic Games' website

    Next year, she plans to row solo across the Pacific Ocean.

    Madsen rowed for Team USA in the Beijing Paralympic Games, narrowly missing the podium. "I missed the medal rounds by 7-hundredths of a second.”

    Centra "Ce-Ce" Mazyck, who was paralyzed during a parachute jump with the 82nd Airborne in November 2003, will compete in the javelin at the London Paralympics.

    In the London 2012 Paralympic Games, the 52-year-old is trying her hand at track and field events, competing in the women's shot put and javelin.

    "I don’t have any regrets about anything. If I could go back and change anything I wouldn't, except for the amount of pain I have with the rods in my back,” Madsen said. “That could definitely go. But I can’t foresee change in anything. I'm very, very satisfied with the life that I have now."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'Superhuman' athletes burst onto world stage
    • Red Cross halts most Pakistan aid in wake of beheading
    • Unexploded WWII bomb disrupts Amsterdam airport
    • Pakistani Christians live in fear after girl's blasphemy arrest
    • 'A less polar pole': Arctic sea ice at record low
    • Botched restoration turns Spanish church into tourist attraction

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    56 comments

    Not "Ex-Marine," it's "former or retired." Once a marine, always a marine. Just saying...ooorah.

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    Explore related topics: games, usa, military, featured, paralympics, rower, angela-madsen
  • 20
    May
    2012
    11:34am, EDT

    America's best high schools: 1,000 that make the grade

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    Seth Tooley has no problem talking up his alma mater -- The Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Bowling Green, Ky.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    “It’s not your average high school,” said Tooley, 22, a 2008 graduate of the academy, a public high school for juniors and seniors based at Western Kentucky University.

    Tooley now studies science at Western Kentucky but also helps the Gatton Academy by answering telephone calls to the front office. “The students here are learning on a higher level, a ground-breaking level, and that makes all the difference," he told msnbc.com. "When they say students are working on the latest research with leading experts in the field, it's true.”

    Editors at Newsweek & The Daily Beast agree, naming The Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science as the best public high school in America.


    The annual rankings by Newsweek & The Daily Beast highlight the 1,000 public high schools nationwide that have proven to be the most effective in turning out college-ready graduates.

    The Top 15 are:
    1. The Gatton Academy of Mathematics and Science in Kentucky, Bowling Green, Ky. 
    2. The School for the Talented and Gifted Magnet, Dallas
    3. Basis Scottsdale, Scottsdale, Ariz.
    4. School of Science and Engineering Magnet, Dallas
    5. Basis Tucson, Tucson, Ariz.
    6. Jefferson County International Baccalaureate School, Birmingham, Ala.
    7. Signature School, Evansville, Ind.
    8. Stanton College Preparatory School, Jacksonville, Fla.
    9. Suncoast Community, Riviera Beach, Fla.
    10. Thomas Jefferson for Science and Technology, Alexandria, Va.
    11. City Honors School at Fosdick-Masten Park, Buffalo, N.Y.
    12. School for Advanced Studies, Miami 
    13. Andrew Carnegie Vanguard, Houston
    14. Uplift Education North Hills Preparatory School, Irving, Texas
    15. Pine View School, Osprey, Fla.

    For the complete list of 1,000 schools, and more educational insights, click here to go to thedailybeast.com/besthighschools.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Nurses (yes, nurses) lead charge for Wall Street 'sin' tax
    • Texan to Obama: Forget turkey, pardon writer O. Henry!
    • Mysterious object nearly downed plane over Denver
    • Highway murders: Suspect held in 'fake cop' case
    • Video: Scientist bitten by alligator: 'A little out of my size range'

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    274 comments

    I'd love to know what percentage of committed families there are amongst these schools.I suspect a very high percentage

    Show more
    Explore related topics: best, america, schools, usa, academy, education, high, gatton

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