Born October 31, 1936, Dale Brown’s fight for justice began the day his father walked out, just two days before he was born. Man in the Glass: The Dale Brown Story is the compelling story of how an overachiever from tiny Minot, North Dakota relentlessly fought, scratched and clawed his way to the top. Raised by a single mother on welfare, Dale learned early on that nothing would come easy. At 10 years old, listening to a welfare worker harass his mother, Dale vowed that he would fight intimidation and injustice. His early life was a series of struggles that culminated in an unwavering loyalty to those he loved, an unbendable moral compass and a life-long devotion to fighting for the underdog.

At Minot State University, where Dale met his future wife, Vonnie, he became the only athlete in school history to earn a letter in three sports each of his four years. It was obvious early in his life that he was destined for achievements that meant taking a different route from many in his home town. He would not join his peers at the local factory; his mind was set on becoming a teacher and basketball coach.

After brief stops as an assistant coach at Utah St. University and Washington State University, Brown became the Head Basketball Coach at Louisiana State University in 1972. Dale and Vonnie would bring their daughter, Robyn, and a sense of North Dakota pride, to Baton Rouge. Through persistence and gut-wrenching energy as a natural born promoter, Brown built LSU into one of the most feared programs in the nation. He traveled the state of Louisiana handing out purple and gold basketball goal nets and dropped thousands of stuffed Tigers (the school mascot) from the ceiling of the Maravich Assembly Center on to fans during a game. He was a tireless recruiter and consistently found his teams most successful when they were the underdog. Brown was a fighter and knew how to motivate his players when their backs were against the wall.

His 1981 and 1986 teams reached the National Collegiate Athletic Association ("NCAA") Final Four. When Brown came to LSU they had never beaten the University of Kentucky. An intense rivalry began during Brown’s tenure and LSU would defeat the University of Kentucky nineteen times during Brown’s twenty-five years at LSU. Though Brown was considered by many Kentucky fans as "the villain of Baton Rouge", he would ultimately receive a standing ovation at Kentucky’s home basketball court, Rupp Arena, the year after his retirement.

Although battling the NCAA can have detrimental effects on a school and its athletic programs, Brown was, and is still, relentless in his accusations that the NCAA cheats the very student-athlete that makes the NCAA what it is. In Brown’s opinion, the NCAA has become so powerful and out-of-touch, that it does not use common sense in its treatment of student-athletes. Brown’s fight with the NCAA began in 1981 when the NCAA refused a request to provide transportation for LSU players for a teammate’s funeral. As Joe Dean, Sr., the retired LSU Athletic Director, says, "[t]hey told Dale he would be breaking the rule if he were to fly his team to the funeral, and Dale told them, ‘that’s why I’m calling…I’m going to break the rule… I’m telling you up front." Brown’s battle with the NCAA would span the remainder of his career and continues today.

Realizing early in his life that much of his success, on and off the basketball court, would hinge on those who influenced and consulted him, Brown sought advice from the greatest of minds. Coach John Wooden of UCLA is chief among those confidants. From the late 1960s through today, Brown and Coach Wooden spent countless hours discussing the finer points of basketball, though their conversations often turn to the contemplation of life and its deeper meanings. En route to building a 40-year relationship, Brown described Coach Wooden as "a brother, father-figure, coaching mentor, and friend all rolled into one person". Other associates contributing to Brown’s highly eclectic circle include Project cast members and stories such as:

Silky, the ex-drug dealer who now meets Brown at an inner-city school to help troubled youth.

His relationship with Matthew McConaughey began when Brown consulted McConaughey during the production of the award-winning film We Are Marshall. Throughout their friendship, they challenge one another to make a positive impact on those around them and maintain their love for travel.

He is a card-carrying member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People ("NAACP") and deeply admires his friend, Dick Gregory.

Dale’s visit with Mother Teresa was extraordinary and his searches for Big Foot and Noah’s Ark are legendary.

Determined to bring the world’s most dominant big man to LSU, Brown traveled to the Soviet Union attempting to bring Lithuanian Basketball star Arvidas Sabonis to the United States to play at LSU. The KGB had other ideas and hid Sabonis outside of Moscow. Working through Armand Hammer, a double-agent, and even Mikhail Gorbachev, Brown used every route available to get Sabonis out of the USSR. Unfortunately, the covert operation proved fruitless and Brown returned to Baton Rouge empty-handed.

Brown lends his name, his hand and his funds to Native American causes. He has set up a matching-funds scholarship at the "United Tribes Technical College" in Bismarck, North Dakota and has traveled with the Native Americans to Washington, D.C. to address the need for increased funding. He has watched the quality of life for Native Americans improve minimally and speaks truthfully to Native Americans about the importance of education and the necessity of personal responsibility, stating "[i]f you want a helping hand look at the end of your damn arm."

By the end of his career at LSU, Brown had the second most all-times wins in Southeastern Conference Basketball history, behind only Adolph Rupp of Kentucky. However, his illustrious twenty-five year career was only the beginning; a stepping-stone in his efforts to affect real change. Brown realized that he "could use basketball to speak up against injustices" which he has done in a multitude of ways. Through his foundation he has helped underprivileged kids and former players get their college degree. He speaks to and on behalf of a variety of minorities and other "cheated, mistreated" groups; and he seeks to make a difference in the lives of those he comes in contact with daily. As his long-time friend and former producer of Inside LSU Basketball, Jim Talbott said "[h]e’s the most generous man I’ve ever met. He gives money to everybody. I’m surprised he’s got any left."

It is exactly these relationships and the immense loyalty he has with close associates, family and needy strangers that most closely define who Brown is. Whether it’s traveling the world with his friends Darrell Williams, M.D., Jim Talbott, or Tom Moran, meeting his daughter in Las Vegas, traveling to Calcutta to meet Mother Teresa or going to Washington, D.C. on behalf of the Native Americans, Brown’s driving motivation has always been the human touch. He realizes that his most profound impact is not shaking up the political establishment, postulating grand theories or simply winning awards (though he does all of these with great vigor); it is the impact that he can have on the individual that drives Brown’s every step.

The Project does not tell the story of a basketball coach; it tells the story of an amazing man who is living an amazing life, who just happened to be a basketball coach.

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Getwell is the story of the Church Health Center, the nation's largest faith-based health clinic and its inspirational leader G. Scott Morris, M.D., M.Div. as they face the increasingly difficult task of providing health care for the working poor in Memphis, TN.

The story begins on August 1, 2005 when Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen announces that 320,000 Tennesseans will lose their state-provided healthcare. Twenty-seven days later Hurricane Katrina adds 10,000 new potential patients to their rolls, compounding the effects of the national healthcare crisis.

Rallying the Churches, Hospitals, Doctors, Nurses, Corporations, Donors and Volunteers, Dr. Morris works to continue uniting the city around the Biblical Mandate to care for the poor who are sick.

With a broad-based focus on primary care, prevention, body and spirit and political activism, the Church Health Center has become the model for the rest of the nation, affecting real change for the increasing numbers of uninsured Americans across the country - and miraculously doing it one person at a time.

The cast includes Brad Martin, CEO & Chmn. of the Board for Saks Fifth Avenue, Debbie Fields-Rose, founder of Mrs. Fields' Cookies, Mike Leavitt, Secretary of Health & Human Services and Janelle Goetchus, the "Mother Teresa of D.C.".

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