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The American Red Cross also has targeted women for bigger gifts throughout its history, but added a donor group just for women in 2005. Nearly 600 women across the country give at least $10,000 a year through the Washington, D.C.-based organization's Tiffany Circle, said its volunteer co-chair, Elaine Lyerly of Charlotte, N.C. The Red Cross, which does most of its fundraising around disasters, decided it needed a stable base of donations and formed the Tiffany Circle. Lyerly said the organization has no special donor groups for men and does not plan to add one. "Women have been incredibly generous, and they want to make a difference," Lyerly said, referring both to her organization and philanthropy in general. "Women are the conduit for change on the planet." Lyerly, however, was curious about one finding of the Indiana University study that didn't make sense to her: Never married and divorced women were more likely to give, and to give more money than males of the same marital status, but widowers gave more money to charity than widows. "That really surprised me," she said. "I wonder if it's because the women influenced the men before they died." ___ Online: Women's Philanthropy Institute World Vision: http://www.worldvision.org/ American Heart Association: American Red Cross: http://www.redcross.org/
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