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The 112 Year-Old Artist Frank Calloway spends his days turning visions from his youth into lively murals -- and at 112 years old, the images of his childhood are a window to another time. Drawn on sheets of butcher paper and sometimes stretching to more than 30 feet long, his scenes give a glimpse into the early 20th century. Calloway, diagnosed with schizophrenia, lived about half his life in state mental health centers... posted on Jul 29 2008, 2,644 reads
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Randy Pausch's Farewell In his final months, while millions of people world-wide were watching his inspirational last lecture, Randy Pausch was cocooned at home in Virginia with his wife and three young children. "Every time I'm with the kids now, there's this total sense of urgency that I try not to let them pick up on," he told me. "I can't say things and reinforce them in four years. My time is now." The computer-scie... posted on Jul 26 2008, 5,135 reads
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Mildred Norman's Simple Message In the summer of 1952 Mildred Norman, traveling alone, hiked the entire length of the 2050 mile-long Appalachian Trail. She was the first woman to accomplish this feat. It turned out to be a practice run. From 1953 until 1981, she walked more than 25,000 miles across the United States , bearing the simplest of messages: this is the way of peace --overcome evil with good, and falsehood with truth, ... posted on Jul 19 2008, 3,268 reads
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A Story of Five Million Steps In 1996, Terry Hitchcock ran from Minneapolis to Atlanta in 75 consecutive days, covering the equivalent of a marathon or more each day. He ran because he wanted to bring attention to all everyday heroes, because he wanted to make towns and cities and even the whole country aware that 35 million people struggle everyday with the extraordinary challenges of being part of a single-parent family. He ... posted on Jul 16 2008, 2,696 reads
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A Remarkable Woman's Record-Breaking Journey Hilary Lister launched a solo sail around the British Isle, expecting that it will take three to four months to sail the 1,600 miles. No easy task for anyone in general, but even more so considering that she is a quadriplegic. 36-year-old Lister has a progressive and painful neurological disease called reflex sympathetic dystrophy and is able to move only her head, eyes and mouth. To sail the boat... posted on Jul 13 2008, 2,647 reads
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Easing Childrens' Hospital Fears It seems logical and reasonable, now, that in a children's hospital, it should be someone's job to make kids with serious illnesses less fearful and more comfortable as a boon to their treatment and recovery. But 44 years ago, when Myra Fox started working at Boston Children's Hospital, it was something new. "It was a whole different way of looking at the whole child, and not just the medical prob... posted on Jul 11 2008, 2,275 reads
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A Son's Promise to his Mother David Fajgenbaum will not be able to give his mother flowers or a card this Mother's Day, but he is honoring her in a more profound way. Fajgenbaum's mother, Anne Marie, died of a brain tumor in 2004. A few days before her death, he promised her he would help students who also suffered with a sick loved one. The Ravenscroft High School grad has done that and more. Fajgenbaum, now a junior at Georg... posted on Jul 04 2008, 2,510 reads
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Hanni's Toy Workshops in Mexico Before muscular dystrophy took over her body, Hanni Sager was known as Toronto's Toy Lady as she amassed a first-class collection of toys from around the world, showed them in exhibitions, and gave lectures about them. But with her legs permanently fitted into braces, she had lost all hope in life. Then, one day she received what she thought was an airline advertisement and started to throw it aw... posted on Jul 02 2008, 3,287 reads
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Letters To A Young Teacher For more than forty years, Jonathan Kozol has taught in, worked with, and written about America's inner city public schools. His straight talk in best-selling books such as Savage Inequalities and Amazing Grace has made him a hero of many teachers, and he fiercely opposes policies he believes perpetuate educational inequities. In Letters to a Young Teacher, Kozol writes a series of personal letter... posted on Jul 01 2008, 4,234 reads
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First Woman To Walk Lost Arrow Last July, nursing school graduate Libby Sauter became the first woman to successfully cross the Lost Arrow Spire Highline, located 2,890 feet high above the Yosemite Valley floor in Yosemite National Park. Considered by many who practice the art of balance sports to be a kind of Mecca, Lost Arrow Spire's height is equal to two Empire State buildings stacked on top of the other, plus 390 feet. It ... posted on Jun 28 2008, 3,595 reads
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