A Minnesota girl, Jaydn Moriarty, decided to make her 10th birthday party less about herself, and more about others.
Forgoing presents, she instead requested that her friends bring personal care items to donate to people who are down on their luck.
A Minnesota girl, Jaydn Moriarty, decided to make her 10th birthday party less about herself, and more about others.
Forgoing presents, she instead requested that her friends bring personal care items to donate to people who are down on their luck.
Driving home from her job as an executive at a health-care company, Lisa Fitzpatrick found her street blocked by police tape. Someone her daughter knew had been killed — the unintended victim of a drive-by shooting. For Fitzpatrick, that was the turning point.
“It was just too much,” she said. “Too many young men were lying face down in their own blood. I didn’t want it to be normal anymore. I didn’t want the children to think that this was normal. I had to do something.”
Fitzpatrick quit her job, downsized her life and created the APEX Youth Center (Always Pursuing Excellence). Since 2010, more than 460 children and youth have come for the free pizza and fun, and in the process learned conflict resolution skills.
(WATCH the video and READ the story at CNN)
Students at the University of Eindhoven in the Netherlands say they have created the world’s first solar-paneled family sedan.
The futuristic looking car seats four and can drive 370 miles before needing to recharge (600km).
They’ve calculated that even in a cloudy country like Russia, the car would generate enough power to drive every day.
(WATCH the video from the Tech Crunch)
Cucumbers are very easy to grow and make for a delicious treat. But did you know they can prevent hangovers, or clean the kitchen sink?
Below is a list of tips and tricks that you can use with cucumbers to enhance health, beauty, and home.
A pit bull named Smoke is currently on a more than 2,500-mile journey home to California after disappearing three years ago and being found in Florida.
It has taken a nationwide, metaphorical “village” and a Seattle-based “pet detective” to bring Smoke closer and closer to his family.
When Theron Humphrey adopted Maddie, a coonhound with an extraordinary sense of balance, she took his life in a whole new direction.
The photographer knew he wasn’t happy, so he decided to set off on a 365-day road trip to all 50 states. But first he adopted a shelter dog for a companion without knowing how brilliant a fit she would be in his life.
Since 1989, the number of Americans who volunteer has grown by more than 25 million and service is up across all age groups. –White House, 2013
President Obama welcomed the man who launched the modern service movement, President George H. W. Bush, now in a wheelchair and 89 years old, back to the White House Monday for a ceremony honoring the 5,000th recipients of his Point of Light award. The two presidents lauded Kathy Hamilton and Floyd Hammer of Union, Iowa for stepping up to fight hunger and improve the lives of children worldwide.
Nearly 10 years ago, Hamilton and Hammer participated in a volunteer mission to Tanzania to help renovate an HIV/AIDS hospital there. Startled by the starvation they saw, the couple started Outreach, Inc., which has engaged thousands of volunteers in packaging and distributing 230 million free meals to children in more than 15 countries, including the United States.
The elder President Bush helped launch a nonprofit – Points of Light – that has become the largest organization in the world dedicated to volunteer service and he instituted a daily presidential recognition with his Points of Light Award.
“While he didn’t originate the notion of helping our fellow man,” according to the White House Blog, “he reasserted it as a national priority and insisted that ‘there can be no definition of a successful life that does not include service to others.'”
Nominate someone you know for a Daily Point of Light Award at pointsoflight.org.
(WATCH the video below, or LEARN more (and watch full ceremony) at the White House Blog)
SHARE the Memory in a Tribute to a Former President…
As an energy source, algae may be growing up.
A new apartment complex in Hamburg, Germany, intends to generate heat — and shade — as well as revenue, from growing the micro-organism.
The five-story building, expected to become fully operational this week, has a high-tech facade that is actually a vertical algae farm.
A young fan of a London football team that was in Vietnam for an international match showed such spunk by running after the tour bus that the team wanted to meet him.
Vu Xuan Tien, 20, wore an Arsenal team jersey and smiled and waved as he dodged traffic and obstacles along a 5-mile stretch in Hanoi. The club is one of the most successful in English football history.
Arsenal teammates chanted, “Sign him up,” as they watched him trying to keep up with the moving coach.
A gesture by a customer at Heav’nly Donuts in Amesbury, Massachusetts triggered a chain reaction on Saturday that led to a lot of smiles.
The staff began counting at around the seventh car as the driver paid for the order of the customer behind them, after getting theirs free.
“It was the best twelve dollars I ever spent,” said the unemployed woman who took the free drinks but then started the chain as the second in line.
It only ended when there were no more people in line whose orders could be paid for.
The phenomenon of paying for the person behind you in line at a drive-thru window goes back at least five years. In 2008, KUSA in Colorado reported on it in this video for CNN.
And, it isn’t happening only in the U.S. One pay-It-forward chain lasted for three hours at a Canadian coffee shop in Winnipeg over the winter holiday last year.
(READ the story at WBZ-Boston)
Today’s 90-year-olds are surviving into very old age with better mental performance than ever before, Danish research suggests.
People born in 1915 scored higher in cognitive tests in their 90s compared with those born a decade earlier, according to a study in The Lancet.
Better living standards and intellectual stimulation may be key factors, experts say.
(READ the story from the BBC)
After the attacks of Sept. 11, Kerri Martin decided to change her life, leaving the corporate world to open a bike shop.
Now, through her store Second Life Bikes, she’s giving neighborhood kids the opportunity to learn the value of hard work by helping them to fix and earn their own bikes.
Most kids stay on at the shop even after getting their own. They like the team spirit and sense of accomplishment.
(WATCH the video from TODAY)
A pair of fans on their way to see the Dave Matthews Band in concert in Hershey, Pennsylvania Saturday night were late — but right on time.
Instead of rushing past a stranded cyclist whose tire had blown, they stopped to help. Guess who the rider turned out to be? Dave Matthews himself, taking a pre-concert ride in the country without a cell phone, needed a ride back to the show.
A young teenage girl was admiring the acoustic guitars in a New York City music store when John Mayer wandered into the shop with Katy Perry.
A salesman at Rudy’s Music Shop mentioned to Mayer that there were a few big fans in the next room, so he decided to go talk to them.
Julie Fermin and her two friends took photos with the rock/pop stars and chatted about playing guitars.
After hearing Julie admiring the Epiphone six-string while remarking that she couldn’t afford it, the singer-songwriter secretly paid for it before he left and said to reveal the fact only after he’d gone.
(SEE more photos and details in the UK Sun)
A Lancaster, Pennsylvania teen got a bunch of his friends together to join the search for a missing five-year-old girl.
Temar Boggs didn’t know the girl or her family but suddenly had a gut feeling that he would find the child.
He saw a van driving around the neighborhood and got a glimpse inside of a girl in the back seat.
A young man in Tennessee doesn’t let autism or mental challenges stop him from living a full life — and helping others less fortunate to do the same.
After visiting the animal control office to look for a new pet, 15 year-old Bubba asked his mother why the dogs and cats didn’t have any toys, beds or blankets. They looked cold and lonely in their cages. He asked if the family could buy the beds and toys. His mom had to explain that they couldn’t afford the cost.
“All that day I could see that he had a lot on his mind,” said his mother. “Later that evening he came to me and told me he would raise money to help the animals.”
What if underground parking garages were lit by lamps running off the CO2 exhaust from the passing cars?
French Bio-chemist Pierre Calleja invented an algae lamp that needs no electricity for illumination and also gobbles up carbon emissions that cause global warming.
The French start-up he works for, FermentAlg, installed one of the algae-filled tanks in a parking garage in Bordeau. It feeds on the CO2 in the air at the rate of 1 ton per year, the amount that a tree absorbs over its entire lifetime, according to the French project Shamengo.
The mayor of Vilnius plans to install a huge screen on the town hall to broadcast a real-time “happiness barometer” that will monitor the mood of the Lithuanian capital.
The giant display will monitor the level of happiness based on tabulated votes sent in by city residents from their mobile phones and computers.
(READ the story from Reuters)