TwitChange 2.0: Helping Soldiers
Celebrities are for sale. At least their tweets are. The TwitChange auction is back with a long list of celebrities auctioning off a follow, mention or retweet to support U.S. military veterans and their families.
Celebrities are for sale. At least their tweets are. The TwitChange auction is back with a long list of celebrities auctioning off a follow, mention or retweet to support U.S. military veterans and their families.
More and more celebrities are making good with their birthdays each year. Here’s a round-up of five recent examples.
Destined to advance public awareness and social change not only at home but throughout the world, these days are designated to make a significant contribution to making our planet a safer, more enjoyable place to live and dwell.
Several universities around the United States have been honored for their eco-friendly innovations on campus. Here’s a look at a few.
The Associated Press reports their survey of Salvation Army food programs across the country and says there is an increased demand for help, yet donations are declining.
tennis stars Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi of Pakistan and Rohan Bopanna of India – dubbed the “IndoPak Express” – have combined forces for their charitable enterprise, “Stop War, Start Tennis.”
Here’s a list of companies that channeled dollars back into the local community, and in some cases, helped with relief efforts globally.
From Twilight heartthrob Robert Pattinson donning a new red ‘do to Britain’s funnyman Ricky Gervais eliciting laughs and gaffs for his brutally honest stabs at Hollwood’s hottest stars to the blush frock of Black Swan star Natalie Portman, the Golden Globes was wrought with various shades of red.
Shockingly, the aides-Andrew Young, Jesse Jackson, James Bevel, and Samuel “Billy” Kyles-say that despite witnessing everything that unfolded that evening, “no authority from the Memphis Police, the Tennessee State Police or the FBI have ever asked them a single question.”
“Everybody can be great, because everybody can serve.” Martin Luther King Jr.