Hoping to inspire the youth of Canada to vote in the upcoming May 2 federal election, groups of university students in various parts of the country are injecting a little excitement into the process with their impromptu “vote mobs”.
In the last federal vote, only 37 percent of eligible voters between 18-24 came out to vote.
Jeff Parness, like many New Yorkers, was changed by the terrorist attacks of 9/11. He lost a good friend when the Twin Towers fell, but was also deeply moved by the support the city received from across the country following the attack.
In 2004, he established New York Says Thank You, a nonprofit organization that sends volunteers from New York City, particularly the city’s beloved firefighters, to help rebuild other disaster-stricken communities each September.
“I want to show the world that New Yorkers will never forget what people did for us following 9/11,” says Parness.
And, volunteers from those towns often join Jeff in continuing to ‘pay it forward’ on subsequent projects which, to date, have involved more than 7,000 people nationwide.
A new documentary on Jeff & his organization, “New York Says Thank You”, premieres next week at the Tribeca Film Festival.
Watch the film’s trailer, and CNN’s Hero of the Week video below… (READCNN story here)
Jeff Parness, like many New Yorkers, was changed by the terrorist attacks of 9/11. He lost a good friend when the Twin Towers fell, but was also deeply moved by the support the city received from across the country following the attack.
In 2004, he established New York Says Thank You, a nonprofit organization that sends volunteers from New York City, particularly the city’s beloved firefighters, to help rebuild other disaster-stricken communities each September.
Planting begins this month for a group of students at the University of Massachusetts Amherst who are pioneering a sustainable solution for campuses across the country.
The UMass Permaculture Committee is transforming a 12,000 square foot conventional grass lawn into a sustainable permaculture garden for supplying fresh food to its campus community.
In September the all-volunteer team moved 250,000 pounds of organic matter, intentionally using lawn carts to avoid any fossil fuel consumption, laying the foundations of a huge fertile garden to be planted that month.
Planting begins this month for a group of students at the University of Massachusetts Amherst who are pioneering a sustainable solution for campuses across the country.
The UMass Permaculture Committee is transforming a 12,000 square foot conventional grass lawn into a sustainable permaculture garden for supplying fresh food to its campus community.
In September the all-volunteer team moved 250,000 pounds of organic matter, intentionally using lawn carts to avoid any fossil fuel consumption, laying the foundations of a huge fertile garden to be planted that month.
A Jack Russell terrier named Chowder would not cease his persistent clawing on his sleeping owners in the middle of the night until they realized there was a fire next door, giving them just enough time to save an elderly neighbor.
“He kept jumping on me, digging in with his claws and wouldn’t stop,” Richard Carlino told The Cape Cod Times. “He wouldn’t rest until he knew everyone was awake, and we’d gone out the door to help our neighbor.”
Hundreds of people whose lives were upended by last weekend’s tornadoes, are receiving help from the kind people who have stepped up before being asked.
Distributing hot dinners, lunches, and water twice a day to 400 people, they also match the needy with those who can provide it.
The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma is one of the many groups that leapt to the aid of communities across six states where homes were destroyed by tornadoes, providing free meals and water, assistance with clearing drives and roadways, and support for other vital needs of families.
Here is a summary of good neighbors at work in Oklahoma, Alabama, Arkansas, Virginia and Mississippi and North Carolina.
Continuing their comeback in the Chesapeake Bay, blue crabs hit their second-highest total this winter since 1997, officials said Tuesday, nearly double the record low in 2007.
“The bold … management plan implemented by Maryland and Virginia to stabilize the population continues to work,” said one scientist with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.
Harry Potter fan Shona Macleod, 15, decided to contact JK Rowling in her effort to raise £950 for a park bench where she could “talk” to her pal Kieran Goulding since his death in a car crash.
The Daily Mirror reports the teen was “absolutely amazed” to receive a full set of signed Harry Potter books along with a handwritten letter.
80 percent of the workers hired at the Tennessee factory, which makes artificial grass, are disabled — but, owner David Morris doesn’t see them that way. Every worker and manager with cerebral palsy, downs syndrome, or schizophrenia is considered “able”.
Nothing special is done to help them. They simply work alongside others — and they do a good job.
Construction and operation plans have been approved for America’s first offshore wind farm, which could create up to 1000 jobs at the Cape Wind project off the Massachusetts coast beginning in a few months.
Interior Secretary Kenneth Salazar today announced the approval by the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement for the 130-turbine project in Nantucket Sound.
One example of the US government championing the rights of citizens over corporations debuted today with a new a federal rule allowing airline passengers to collect $1,300 when they are forced to give up their seat on an overbooked flight, a 63 percent increase over the current penalty.
The regulation announced by U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood will also require airlines to reimburse passengers for bag fees if their bags are lost, expand the current ban on lengthy tarmac delays, and disclose hidden fees.
One example of the US government championing the rights of citizens over corporations debuted today with a new a federal rule allowing airline passengers to collect $1,300 when they are forced to give up their seat on an overbooked flight, a 63 percent increase over the current penalty.
The regulation announced by U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood will also require airlines to reimburse passengers for bag fees if their bags are lost, expand the current ban on lengthy tarmac delays, and disclose hidden fees.
Two long-lost friends are emotionally reunited after 24 years in the wake of an important postcard getting lost in the mail, placing their relationship on hold.
Both women say that despite the postal glitch, their relationship is “timeless.”
Google’s investments in clean power are now rivaling that of stand alone clean energy investors. Monday morning, the search engine giant said it has invested $100 million in the world’s largest wind farm, the 845 MW Shepherds Flat project under construction in Oregon.
With this investment, Google has put more than $350 million (a jaw-dropping amount for an Internet company) into clean power.
Have you ever thought about starting your own company? Do you have a great idea for a product or service? Perhaps it’s time you turned your dreams into reality.
More and more, young women are not only starting their own businesses, but they are also achieving enormous success doing so. Take recent start-ups like Her Campus, Rent the Runway, and LearnVest: all three lucrative businesses were founded by women in their early twenties.