About 5,000 disabled veterans live on the streets in New Mexico. So Shane D’Onofrio, a disabled vet who served in the U.S. Navy, created a non-profit organization called “What Would U Give“.
D’Onofrio opens his home to veterans to help get them off the streets. He uses his own disability checks to run the job-training and resource programs — about $1,700 a month. He also gets local and national businesses to donate services and items to the veterans in need.
On January 16, crowds gathered in the small community of El Mozote to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Peace Accords that ended El Salvador´s 12-year-long civil war. Rural El Mozote is the site of a 1981 massacre of more than 1,000 civilians and children, carried out by the Salvadoran Armed Forces.
At the solemn event, El Salvador’s first leftist president, Mauricio Funes, named the military officers implicated in the horrific massacre, stating, we must “remove the veil that has blinded us for three decades.”
Funes asked for forgiveness from the victims and the Salvadoran people on behalf of the State and then announced a series of reparations for the victims and their families.
On January 16, crowds gathered in the small community of El Mozote to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Peace Accords that ended El Salvador´s 12-year-long civil war. Rural El Mozote is the site of a 1981 massacre of more than 1,000 civilians and children, carried out by the Salvadoran Armed Forces.
At the solemn event, El Salvador’s first leftist president, Mauricio Funes, named the military officers implicated in the horrific massacre, stating, we must “remove the veil that has blinded us for three decades.”
Funes asked for forgiveness from the victims and the Salvadoran people on behalf of the State and then announced a series of reparations for the victims and their families.
For many it is just a game, but for two couples who live half a world away from each other, Words with Friends was more that that, it was a life saver.
While Georgie Fletcher was playing the online scrabble game with Beth Legler, she happened to mention in passing that her husband was not feeling very well.
Mrs Legler told her to explain her symptoms as her husband Larry is a doctor.
When she relayed the symptoms to him, he immediately diagnosed the Australian native with a heart problem, and told him to immediately see a doctor.
A lucky move.
The situation had indeed reached a critical point and there were perhaps just hours before the man would die.
Through her program Shelter Music Boston, professional violinist Julie Leven brings live music to residents that feeds their souls and makes them feel ‘elegant.’
At their first performance, Leven says, all the women looked tired. But she was bowled over by the interest the women took in the music – and their attentiveness.
The Virginia Republican party voted overwhelmingly to reverse its December decision to place on their ballot a “loyalty oath” that would have required March primary voters to support the eventual GOP nominee for president.
Scrambling to meet a Friday deadline for finalizing primary ballots, Virginia Republican chairman Pat Mullins polled the state party’s governing central committee by phone and e-mail.
The way Clay Taber looks at it, he’s got three moms now, after a transplant nurse, practically a stranger, donated one of her healthy kidneys so that he might start married life untethered to a dialysis machine.
Allison Batson first heard about Taber, now 23, when a nurse at Atlanta’s Emory University Hospital told her “it looks like we’ve got a 22-year-old in renal failure,” Batson recalled. “It just tore me up.”
Tests revealed he had Goodpasture syndrome, a rare autoimmune disease that attacks the kidneys or the lungs.
Hollywood’s biggest stars marked the two-year anniversary of the massive Haiti earthquake last week, gathering on Saturday to raise five million dollars for Sean Penn’s J/P Haitian Relief Organization, which was set up to support thousands of displaced people living in a settlement camp there.
At the event, which featured an auction of celebrity items, Penn was also named “ambassador at large to Haiti” by Haiti’s foreign affairs minister.
Kim Kardashian was a surprise guest, having just visited Haiti in December on a humanitarian trip.
“I can’t wait to go back,” the reality TV star said.
(READthe story at E Online and WATCH videos about the extraordinary work of Penn’s group)
Hollywood’s biggest stars marked the two-year anniversary of the massive Haiti earthquake last week, gathering on Saturday to raise five million dollars for Sean Penn’s J/P Haitian Relief Organization, which was set up to support thousands of displaced people living in a settlement camp there.
At the event, which featured an auction of celebrity items, Penn was also named “ambassador at large to Haiti” by Haiti’s foreign affairs minister.
Kim Kardashian was a surprise guest, having just visited Haiti in December on a humanitarian trip.
After a four-year run during which states had to close budget gaps of historic proportions, the term “surplus” is finally making a modest comeback in capitals.
According to the Rockefeller Institute of Government, at least 45 states saw their revenues increase over the past year.
Enough economic vital signs are headed in the right direction that the mood in most states is encouraging, and some legislatures will start reversing the most painful of their recent cuts as soon as this year.
In its most recent survey of legislative fiscal directors, the National Conference of State Legislatures reported that more states were “cautiously optimistic” or “positive” about the fiscal outlook for the rest of 2012. The number of fiscal directors who said they were “pessimistic” was zero.
If you’re measuring the kindness at the Corner Perk in Bluffton, South Carolina, it’s safe to say their cup runneth over. It’s a cycle of generosity that started two years ago when an anonymous customer gave the barista $100 to pay the bills for the next customers in line.
The owner says the lady who started the pay-it-forward tradition kept it going for a few months now and then — but in the past few weeks, the phenomenon has really taken off, with other strangers hearing about the kindness and following suit.
The nation’s newest Miss America is a 23-year-old Wisconsin brunette who had long conversations with her family mulling whether or not to make her father’s jail time for mail fraud the heart of her campaign in the beauty pageant.
Laura Kaeppeler said she wants children of incarcerated adults to feel less alone, to have mentoring and as much of a relationship with their parents as possible.
The brainy contestant estimates there are more than two million children with parents in jail.
A teenager from the West Midlands today told how he led a dramatic rescue of terrified passengers as chaos gripped the stricken Costa Concordia cruise liner.
Dancer James Thomas acted as a human climbing frame to help 16 passengers into lifeboats after the luxury liner ran aground off the Italian coast, before toppling on to its side in shallow waters.
The 19-year-old hero also led dozens to the lifeboat decks, only abandoning ship when a passenger forced him to leave with them.
A dedicated marine biology student at a Long Island High School learned she was named one of 61 finalists for the $100,000 Intel Science prize just days after her family was forced to move into a homeless shelter.
Now, thanks to news reports on TV and print, the 17-year-old student and her family have been flooded with offers of help, including a 3 bedroom home available soon from Suffolk County Social Services and money from a kind stranger to retrieve the beloved family pets from an animal shelter.
Samantha Garvey’s intensive 6-years of research on mussel ecosystems led to her invitation to the prestigious national science competition and the worldwide attention on the fact that she and her family of five moved into a homeless shelter after their eviction on New Year’s Eve.
She said she never thought her biggest worries would be eliminated in a day. The family pets, including a dog, cat and turtles were also invited to move into the Long Island rental home, once repairs are completed in ten days..
Her mother told her: “Sammy, this is all because of you.”
A dedicated marine biology student at a Long Island High School learned she was named one of 61 finalists for the $100,000 Intel Science prize just days after her family was forced to move into a homeless shelter.
Now, thanks to news reports on TV and print, the 17-year-old student and her family have been flooded with offers of help, including a 3 bedroom home available soon from Suffolk County Social Services and money from a kind stranger to retrieve the beloved family pets from an animal shelter.
Samantha Garvey’s intensive 6-years of research on mussel ecosystems led to her invitation to the prestigious national science competition and the worldwide attention on the fact that she and her family of five moved into a homeless shelter after their eviction on New Year’s Eve.
A Russian fuel tanker has finally reached Nome harbor after a Coast Guard icebreaker cleared a path for it through hundreds of miles of ice in a last-ditch effort to provide heating fuel and gasoline to the Alaska town.
A storm prevented Nome’s 3,500 residents from getting a fuel delivery by barge in November. Without the tanker delivery, supplies of diesel fuel, gasoline and home heating fuel were expected to run out in March…
President Barack Obama and the First Lady invited Star Wars Director George Lucas and a few of the cast members from his new film, Red Tails, to the White House Friday for a movie night. But the guests of honor were a few of the original Tuskegee Airmen, the black WW II aviators whose story — brought to the big screen thanks to Lucas’s own money — is opening in theaters on January 20.
Trent Dudley, the president of the Washington, D.C., Tuskegee Airmen chapter and a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, called the White House screening “a tremendous recognition of all the contributions the airmen made not only in World War II but the fight against racism.”
President Barack Obama and the First Lady invited Star Wars Director George Lucas and a few of the cast members from his new film, Red Tails, to the White House Friday for a movie night. But the guests of honor were a few of the original Tuskegee Airmen, the black WW II aviators whose story — brought to the big screen thanks to Lucas’s own money — is opening in theaters on January 20.
Trent Dudley, the president of the Washington, D.C., Tuskegee Airmen chapter and a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, called the White House screening “a tremendous recognition of all the contributions the airmen made not only in World War II but the fight against racism.”