A San Diego woman first formed a bond with a Chinese goose at Miramar Lake 20 years ago. After a 10-year break, she went back to the lake to see if he was still there.
She named him Blanco. As soon as she pulled up in the car she recognized him. She got out and said, “Blanco?”
“His telescoping neck shot up in the air and it was like I never stopped seeing him.”
When most people think about protein, they think of meat, eggs, cheese and Greek yogurt. But every whole food contains protein, says vegan writer Alisa Rutherford-Fortunati.
From your morning banana to your evening salad, finding plants packed with protein is easy to do.
Plant-based foods are also cholesterol-free, mostly high in fiber, and alkalizing to the body rather than acidic. This helps increase oxygen and protect calcium.
Baxter Holmes, a Boston Globe sports reporter, tweeted a photo after last night’s Celtics game that will tug at your heart strings (and perhaps encourage a little more gratitude for your own heart).
After Jeff Green scored the winning basket with a fraction of a second left in the game, he went over to hug the doctor who performed heart surgery on him just one year earlier.
Green said of his perfectly executed play, “That was for him.”
After she declined to play and all her coworkers won a million dollars in the Powerball Jackpot, the administrative assistant of a real estate company, who was hired just three weeks ago, found out why the group calls itself a “family”.
None of them hesitated to share a portion of their $83,000 net winnings with ‘the new girl’.
Having not yet reached her first payday the coworker felt she had to opt-out of the pool. That’s when the lottery coordinator of the office in Plantation, Florida said, “You know, if you don’t play we are going to win.”
It had been a normal Sunday night for Dawn Ward, a waitress at the Olive Garden restaurant in Lubbock, Texas.
Then, a married couple were seated and Ward thought they deserved ultra-generous care.
“They said they had a special event happening and they wanted to spend it here at Olive Garden,” Ward said. “And so I inquired what it was and they said that he was going to be deployed the next morning.”
Our son, who moved to LA last month, was on the Redondo Beach pier and saw a guy wearing our GOOD HAPPENS shirt!
Andy walked up, introduced himself and they shared a wonderful moment of connection!
He told David that I lived in Virginia, and he only just moved to the area. He’s still looking for a job, and a room to rent, if you know of anything 🙂
In her final days of fighting cancer, Katelyn Norman, 14, of Campbell County, Tenn., created a bucket list.
She wanted to slow-dance at her prom and learn to drive, so her high school organized ‘Light the Night for Kate,’ preparing an elegant evening with all her favorite things and lining the road with candles for her to drive home.
The prom’s theme last night was “Katie in the Sky with Diamonds” and thousands of people lined Highway 63 to hold candles in honor of the courageous girl.
You’re broke, you struggle with bills, then out of nowhere you find $30,000 in cash which only you will ever know about because the money belongs to someone who is dead. What do you do?
Carol Sutor of Bristol, Pa., was in that situation on Thursday and decided to return the money to the family of the woman who had spent years saving it.
“I had to give it back,” she said. “I believe in karma, whatever I do will come back to me, good or bad.”
While messing around and building things on his deck one day, Todd Bol took a dollhouse-size structure and turned it into a free community library that would have global impact.
He started a movement called Little Free Library, a nonprofit that seeks to place small book exchange boxes in neighborhoods around the world.
The idea has taken off, growing from 100 libraries in 2011 to 6,000 libraries in 2013.
It’s an unlikely pair of protégé and mentor that led Matthew Pakkala to go from street-savvy school dropout to focused high-achiever.
It’s a tale of a boy’s childhood overshadowed by addiction and mental illness at home and of a school principal who – as much a guardian angel as educator – helped him survive it.
Imagine driving along and seeing someone standing in the road frantically waving their arms. Would you stop?
It’s a good thing Ryan Cornelissen did stop. He was the calm presence needed in a crisis to revive a newborn who was not breathing after a man’s wife had given birth in the car.
The Macomb County Sheriff’s Office Emergency Operations Center responded to Ryan’s 911 call on March 16, 2013.
Dispatcher Steven Kukuk guided Ryan so he could save the newborn’s life.
You can still see more than 10,000 coin-operated phones around New York City today. What seems a relic of the past in this age of mobile technology, became a vital link in an emergency for those who had no power to charge their devices during Hurricane Sandy.
Still, many of the phone booths scattered across the city are rotting in disrepair, so Mayor Michael Bloomberg launched a design contest in December to “re-own the phone”. He invited designers to submit ideas that might include solar panels, wi-fi, charging station, and information kiosks — anything to give the booths a make-over and bring their communications potential into the 21st century.
You can still see more than 10,000 coin-operated phones around New York City today. What seems a relic of the past in this age of mobile technology, became a vital link in an emergency for those who had no power to charge their devices during Hurricane Sandy.
Still, many of the phone booths scattered across the city are rotting in disrepair, so Mayor Michael Bloomberg launched a design contest in December to “re-own the phone”. He invited designers to submit ideas that might include solar panels, wi-fi, charging station, and information kiosks — anything to give the booths a make-over and bring their communications potential into the 21st century.
Billy Ray Harris, the Missouri homeless man who returned the engagement ring dropped in his donation cup by mistake, now has a part-time job, new friends, and tens of thousands of dollars that were donated by admirers. But, he says the best part is reconnecting with his beloved sisters in Texas.
A family reunion was planned for later this year, but the TODAY Show planned a surprise during an interview on Sunday, bringing him into the arms of his family for the first time in 16 years.
Billy Ray Harris, the Missouri homeless man who returned the engagement ring dropped in his donation cup by mistake, now has a part-time job, new friends, and tens of thousands of dollars that were donated by admirers. But, he says the best part is reconnecting with his beloved sisters in Texas.
A family reunion was planned for later this year, but the TODAY Show planned a surprise during an interview on Sunday, bringing him into the arms of his family for the first time in 16 years.
Harvard pulled off a huge upset to begin the college basketball “March Madness” last week, but all eyes have turned southward to a little school with a load of confidence: No. 15-seed Florida Gulf Coast is in the midst of what could be the greatest Cinderella story in NCAA tournament history.
The FGC University men’s basketball program was formed just 11 years ago in 2002. Their record last year was 15-17, before getting a new coach, Andy Einfield, in April.
And now, in just their second year of postseason eligibility, the FGCU Eagles are headed to the Sweet Sixteen, having defeated No. 2-seed Georgetown and No. 7-seed San Diego State, winning by an average of 10 points per game.
Angelight Films is a non-profit production company that gives children with brain and spinal cord tumors the opportunity to express themselves by creating and even starring in their own short film.
Inspired by her sister who died of a brain tumor at age 5, Stephanie Angel founded Angelight Films as a creative outlet that helps children heal and recognize their inner light.
Angelight Films is a non-profit production company that gives children with brain and spinal cord tumors the opportunity to express themselves by creating and even starring in their own short film.
Inspired by her sister who died of a brain tumor at age 5, Stephanie Angel founded Angelight Films as a creative outlet that helps children heal and recognize their inner light.