A bear howled beside a dumpster throughout a long New Mexico night.
The next morning some creative humans came to help.
WATCH the wonderful video below…
(From Ruidoso, New Mexico)
A bear howled beside a dumpster throughout a long New Mexico night.
The next morning some creative humans came to help.
WATCH the wonderful video below…
(From Ruidoso, New Mexico)
A new breed of cowboy is changing how ranching is being done in the American West and might – just might – alter the dynamic in the “range wars” that have engulfed the region for more than a half century.
Make no mistake: These are not new arrivals carrying out green techniques for the feel-good sake of being green. They are ranchers managing the land in benevolent and environmentally sensitive ways because they think it will help them survive – and make money.
A seeing-eye dog in Alabama has been hailed as a hero for saving her owner’s life during a gas leak.
“The house could have blew up. She saved my life,” Nancy Jones, the dog’s owner said.
The poodle would not stop bothering Jones until she finally left the house.
The previously untold story of how an unprecedented network of high-achieving women from the world’s largest companies, innovative startups, philanthropic organizations, government, and the arts combined forces to change the lives of girls and women everywhere.
Eight years ago Maria Eitel, CEO of the Nike Foundation, began connecting a group of executives, philanthropists, entrepreneurs, artists, government officials, and academics to formulate groundbreaking initiatives investing in girls and women and creating economic benefits for all.
(READ the story from Fast Company)
A guerrilla kindness event held simultaneously in five cities provided a scavenger hunt of sweetness for volunteers on a mission to put a smile on a stranger’s face.
Some picked flowers and gave them to strangers, some passed out popsicles to sweltering pedestrians, some wrote happy notes and slid them under unknown doors.
Entitled, “Kindness Captured: A Day of Bravery and Kindness,” the events on June 30 were held in Syracuse, New York City, Denver, Seattle and Richmond, Virginia.
“We want to share the idea you can really brighten someone’s day,” said a co-founder of American Bear Films who partnered with Guerrilla Goodness to coordinate the event.
(WATCH the video below and see the kindness effect)
A guerrilla kindness event held simultaneously in six cities provided a scavenger hunt of sweetness for volunteers on a mission to put a smile on a stranger’s face.
Some picked flowers and gave them to strangers, some passed out popsicles to sweltering pedestrians, some wrote happy notes and slid them under unknown doors.
The Opening Ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics included a visual narrative, highlighting the many accomplishments of the British people over many centuries. The story included a segment celebrating the National Health Service (NHS).
The British, along with almost every other industrialized country in the world, have a universal health care system, in which care is provided for all, regardless of income.
South Korean archer Im Dong-hyun sees only blurred colors and lines when he peers toward the target about 76 yards away. It doesn’t stop the legally blind Olympian from hitting the grapefruit-sized yellow center – again and again and again.
He has 20/200 vision in his left eye and 20/100 vision in his right eye, meaning he is legally blind in his left eye and needs to be 10 times closer to see objects clearly compared to someone with perfect vision.
Haiti is planning the rollout of more than 7,000 new solar street lamps for the country, according to Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe.
It’s part of an infrastructure push Lamothe’s office said included an emphasis on the construction of new schools.
The Solar Electric Light Fund has been installing solar electric systems at healthcare facilities across Haiti, a project that could bring power to 170,000 Haitians.
The US Olympic uniforms may have been made in China, but the stadium lighting was made in America. A company called Musco, in Muscatine, Iowa has lit every Olympic game since 1984 — as well as center court at Wimbledon, the World Trade Center site and probably your kid’s sporting field. (Musco.com)
An Indonesian mountaineer who faced death threats while battling illegal loggers and a Bangladeshi lawyer who fought to keep old rusty ships from being dumped in her homeland are among this year’s winners of the Ramon Magsaysay Awards.
The six winners, announced Thursday, battled great odds to improve the plight of the poor in forest communities, Asian farmlands and exploitative industries. Working selflessly to create sustainable solutions to poverty, they are showing how committed leaders can truly transform millions of individual lives and galvanize progressive community action.
A survey of 6,500 children aged between 11 and 15 showed the numbers taking drugs, smoking and drinking alcohol had all fallen over the past decade.
29% had tried drugs at least once in 2001, compared with just 17% last year. Among 15-year-olds, the number fell from 39% in 2001 to 23% in 2011.
When five teenagers sat down and posed for a picture at Copco Lake in 1982, they didn’t plan on making it a tradition. But that’s what it became.
Every five years for the past three decades, John Wardlaw, John Dickson, Mark Rumer, Dallas Burney and John Molony have been meeting at the California lake and taking the same photo.
New Jersey Olympic swimmer Cullen Jones has a reason to swim.
He nearly died in the water. At age five, he didn’t know how to swim. Days after watching her son almost drown, she enrolled him in swimming lessons.
19 years later, after becoming an Olympian gold medalist in Beijing, Cullen is using his status to help battle the shocking statistic of Africa-Americans, especially children, who die every year in the water.
New Jersey Olympic swimmer Cullen Jones has a reason to swim.
He nearly died in the water. At age five, he didn’t know how to swim. Days after watching her son almost drown, she enrolled him in swimming lessons.
19 years later, after becoming an Olympian gold medalist in Beijing, Cullen is using his status to help battle the shocking statistic of Africa-Americans, especially children, who die every year in the water.
Three of the hospitals taking care of people wounded in the Colorado theater shooting said Wednesday they will limit or completely wipe out medical bills for the 22 victims.
Some of the wounded, many of them young, are uninsured and face mounting hospital bills.
Among the uninsured victims of the movie-theater attack is 23-year-old, Caleb Medley. His family and friends set a goal of raising $500,000 to cover his hospital bills and were nearly halfway there on Wednesday.
(READ the AP story from MSNBC)
Job openings grew again in July, as more than 190,000 positions opened up since June. The total number of job openings rose to 4,301,384, the highest so far this year, according to the Simply Hired trend tracker.
A rise in openings could mean hiring will pick up in the coming months. “It typically takes one to three months to fill a job,” reports the Associated Press.
Two cubs from one of the world’s most endangered species are being hand-reared at a Mexican zoo. The albino cubs were born in Loro animal park on Friday.
The Mexican-born cubs were born to white tigers especially imported into the Latin American country. ‘Loro’ zoo has been instrumental in helping preserve the endangered species with a specialist breeding programme to save the endangered big cats.
Two cubs from one of the world’s most endangered species are being hand-reared at a Mexican zoo. The albino cubs were born in Loro animal park on Friday.
The Mexican-born cubs were born to white tigers especially imported into the Latin American country. ‘Loro’ zoo has been instrumental in helping preserve the endangered species with a specialist breeding program to save the endangered big cats.
The first child in history to receive a trachea fashioned by his own stem cells has shown remarkable progress since the initial transplant two years ago, marking a new record for the novel procedure.
Ciaran Finn-Lynch, the now 13-year-old boy from the UK, is breathing normally and no longer needs anti-rejection medication, researchers reported in a paper published Wednesday in the journal Lancet.