Worth Sharing

WS

At Home

Showing 161 - 180 of 560 Posts

India Withdraws Some Kashmir Troops in Peace Gesture

India is withdrawing about 15,000 soldiers from Jammu and Kashmir, a military official said on Thursday, in a move aimed at boosting prospects of peace talks with the disputed region's separatist groups. Ashok Mehta, a retired army general and New Delhi-based strategic analyst, said the removal of troops was a goodwill gesture aimed at Kashmiri groups.

Recent Posts
75-Year-old to Run Three Day Race Through Death Valley Heat

Into the furnace of sand and peril that is Death Valley, a 75-year-old grandfather from England will run next week in an effort to raise money for Cerebral Palsy Care in Kent. He already holds the record as the oldest man to complete in the world's toughest foot race, securing it as a sprightly 70-year-old back in 2005.

Teacher's Encouraging Notes Make Difference in Test Scores

A Texas middle school teacher tried an experiment that paid off handsomely this spring. He wrote personal letters to 40 of his seventh-grade students in Fort Worth praising them for the progress that they were making in his class. The results are in and virtually every student scored higher than his/her previous test scores would have predicted.

Memphis Ballet School Gets a Hand Training Inner City Kids

Al Roker of the Today Show went on a nationwide tour to Lend A Hand to five charities in need. He helped raise $3 million, but the highlight for me was the New Ballet School in Memphis which offers low-income and troubled students the inspiration to dance -- hip hop style, flamenco, or ballet -- regardless of their ability to pay.

Last Lakota WWII Code Talker Dies at 86: Tribute

On Wednesday, the last of the Lakota code talkers, Clarence Wolf Guts, died at 86 and was buried with honors in the Black Hills National Cemetery. Lakota soldiers from Sioux-speaking tribes joined a special unit that used native language to keep the enemy from intercepting vital communications.

Priest Reforms Gangs With Boundless Compassion, Now Homeboy Program Needs Help

For the past 20 years, the Rev. Gregory Boyle, a Jesuit priest who started Homeboy Industries, has mentored and counseled the more than 12,000 gang members who pass through Homeboy each year to learn job skills, get their gang tattoos removed and attend therapy sessions on everything from alcohol abuse to anger management. Now the group is in financial trouble.

Volunteer Army Aids Nashville Flood Victims

Thousands of volunteers have been working in Nashville since floods devastated the city three weeks ago. College and high school students especially have given up leisurely weekends to become Good Samaritans simply trying to ease a stranger's pain.

Redirecting Nature's Bounty to Feed the Hungry

With 40 pounds of excess fresh produce that he didn't want to waste, one home gardener brought it to the local food pantry and homeless shelter. Realizing how valuable it was to the pantry he set up a website to help divert more fresh food for those who needed it.

Room to Read Builds Its 10,000th Library

April 30 marked a momentous day in the history of Room To Read, a charity that builds children's libraries around the developing world. On that day in Nepal 1,000 villagers lined up to celebrate the opening of the group's 10,000th library.

Nepali Butler Inherits New York Fortune

Until a few months ago, he was a butler in one of the more expensive residential buildings in Manhattan. But now, Nepal-born Indra Tamang is the owner of two multi-million dollar apartments in the historic Dakota Building.

Woman Motivates People With Chalkboard Messages Along Commuter Route

Searching for a mode of creative expression after losing her camera, Penny Proudfoot began writing messages of inspiration and humor for commuters along the busy 2-lane road outside her home. Did you make a difference today? They didn't go unnoticed. Drivers who were reading the board started writing back.

Oregon Inmates Help Save Deputy's Life

Two jail inmates on a work crew in Oregon helped to save the life of a deputy who collapsed. Instead of making a run for it, inmates Robert Parker and Michael Smith used the cell phone of the stranded motorist's cell phone to call 911.

Hair to the Rescue! Salons Send Hair to Absorb Oil Spill in the Gulf

Thousands of salons, groomers and wool farmers are sweeping up their floors to mail their hair, fur and wool clippings to help contain the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The fibers are being stuffed into nylon stockings and covered in mesh to make highly effective "hair booms" to protect beaches and coastal waters threatened by floating oil, all thanks to a non-profit organization called Matter Of Trust.

Anne Frank's Tree, Now Dying, Still Inspires Hope and New Life

Three times in Anne Frank's widely read diary, the young Holocaust victim wrote about a tree. She could see it from the attic window of the secret annex where her family hid for two years. Though the tree is dying, its chestnuts have been used to make new saplings that will be shipped around the world to like-minded groups and museums.

Kids of Oklahoma Bombing Victims Build New Lives Thanks to Scholarship Fund

15 Years after the attack on a federal building, children are benefiting from the outpouring of donations from people who wanted to help the victims' families. More than 200 children had parents killed or disabled in the truck bombing and two-thirds have since gone on to college or other education programs, thanks to the Oklahoma City Community Foundation fund.