Sunday, February 24, 2013

Word photo games on facebook ? 15 ebooks ? free download

Word photo games on facebook ? 15 ebooks ? free download

Word photo games on facebook download on GetBookee.org free books and manuals search ? Creating a Facebook Page v2.
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Boy George 'Fuming' Over Facebook Phonies

?There's loads of George O'Dowds, there's loads of Boy Georges I've got my own kind of official Boy George fan page, but I actually don't own my Facebook page which I mean, really? I'm fuming.? Photo Credits: PR Photos. Latest Boy George headlines: ?
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I lost my facebook fan page likes!

I accidentally unsynced my facebook fan page and lost my likes on my reverbnation page. i just synced back up. Will i get my likes back?
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How can I get more facebook fan on my fan page ? ? Yahoo! Answers

How can I get more facebook fan on my fan page ?
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Facebook adds free calling to iPhone, iPad apps

SAN FRANCISCO: Facebook on Friday allowed users to make free calls to friends using the social network's application tailored for iPhones or iPads. An updated Facebook app for the popular Apple mobile devices shows when friends are online and then ?
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How Facebook increases brain power for the elderly

Researcher Janelle Wohltmann, arranged Facebook training for 14 elderly people who had never used the site or had used it less than once a month. They were instructed to become Facebook friends only with those in their training group and were asked to ?
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Facebook updates iOS app with free calls in the US, Canada

From a Facebook message, users can tap the ?i? icon in the top right corner and select ?free call.? This will only work if both users are in the U.S. or Canada and have the latest version of Facebook or Facebook Messenger installed on their iOS device.
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Bugs affect Facebook insights for pages

Facebook has discovered that its ?pages? feature, which allows businesses and websites to share their information with millions of Facebook users, has a slight issue. There were some bugs that were discovered after Facebook launched a ?comprehensive ?
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Microsoft joins Apple, Facebook, and Twitter; comes out as hack victim | Ars ?

Facebook, Twitter, Apple, and now Microsoft. Redmond has announced that it too has found compromised computers on its network. A brief statement on its Security Response Center blog states that a small number of computers?with machines in the Mac ?
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Will Sheryl Sandberg Leave Facebook This Year?

I think if Sandberg were to leave Facebook now, there would be a sense of unfinished business. The company's stock is still about 30% below the level at which the IPO priced last spring, and my guess is that Sandberg would like to stay at the company ?
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Study: Nearly Half Of Parents Monitor Their Children's Lives On Facebook

A new study finds that 92 percent of parents on Facebook are friends with their children ? and 1-in-2 of them joined to monitor their kids in the first place. (Photo illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) ?
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Facebook 'confessions' pages causing problems for Wisconsin schools

Coulee Region students are posting Facebook ?confessions? that would make even a seasoned priest blush. But there's little districts can do to stop them. Pages popped up across the region this week that allow users to make anonymous posts about life as ?
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Yellowstone County Republican chairwoman criticized for racist Facebook post

A screen-captured image from the Facebook page was posted to a local right-leaning blog Feb. 15 and quickly went viral. It has been re-posted on the Daily Kos, a liberal website with 2.5 million unique monthly visitors. Commentors on several blogs are ?
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If Twitter and Facebook users picked Oscar winners ? (infographic)

According to digital ad firm RadiumOne, Twitter and Facebook users would select Hugh Jackman as best actor for Les Mis ? shockingly, not Wolverine ? and Jennifer Lawrence as Best Actress for Silver Linings Playbook. Twitter users would pick teen vamp ?
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82% children on Facebook get vulgar messages

?The most disturbing finding is that many children are accepting Facebook friend requests from strangers. This is dangerous as children are vulnerable to being bullied or abused,? said Debasis Nayak, director of Asian School of Cyber Laws, which ?
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Microsoft hacked by same cyberattack as Apple and Facebook

The software giant said it experienced a ?security intrusion? similar to those suffered by social media site Facebook and technology company Apple earlier this month. In a blog posted on its website, Microsoft insisted that there was no evidence of ?
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Tennis star quits, and Twitter and Facebook get some of the blame

And that depression was only fueled by hateful comments on her Twitter and Facebook accounts, including ?burn in hell? and diatribes that her losses had cost bettors money. She took her story public, she says, to drive home the point that ?depression ?
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'Brooklyn Heights Parents' Facebook Page Launches

A new Facebook destination, ?Brooklyn Heights Parents,? launched this month to serve as an interactive forum for Brooklyn Heights' families. facebook.com/BrooklynHeightsParents will ?provide updates about the neighborhood, our children's life and ?
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Company tasked with running customer service emails for Pinterest, Twitter and ?

It said in a blog post on February 15: 'Facebook was not alone in this attack. It is clear that others were attacked and infiltrated recently as well. As one of the first companies to discover this malware, we immediately took steps to start sharing ?
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Facebook updates iOS app with improved buttons and free calling ?

Facebook has released a new version of their iPhone app today that features an all-new button design, as well as free calling to anyone in the U.S. or Canada integrated right into the main app.The Social Media Hat
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Source: http://occupythemedia.org/word-photo-games-on-facebook-15-ebooks-free-download/

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Pope Benedict XVI shutting down @Pontifex Twitter account

The current Pope, 85-year-old Pope Benedict XVI, dropped a bombshell when he announced on February 10 that he was stepping down from his papal position ? the last time a Pope stepped down was back in 1415 and in most cases a Pope assumes his position until death. Despite his conservative religious stance, the Pope was the first to embrace the digital age by opening up a Twitter account. What?s to come of @Pontifex now that he?s no longer the Pope? Vatican Radio announced that his Twitter account would be shut down.

The 1.5 million users that are following the Pope will be following one less person by 8 PM Vatican Time (CET) time on February 28, which coincides with the official exit from his position. Vatican Radio says that he?ll send out a final tweet before then.

The Pope is following eight other accounts ? the Pope?s Twitter account in different languages including Italian, French, Arabic, and six others (including English of course). These accounts, which have a combined total of 1.3 million followers, will be also shut down.

?It seems unimaginable that one could continue to use a communication tool so popular and powerful during the ?sede vacante? period,? Vatican Radio said.

The Pope opened his Twitter account, which means ?Pope? and ?bridge builder,? in December. The lifespan of the account is coming to an end after just two months and at the time of this writing has just 36 tweets. Since the account was maintained by his papal aids over at the Vatican, and signed off by him, there may be no one to maintain the account anyway unless Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger (Benedict XVI?s birth name) decides to take up the @Pontifex Twitter account on his own.

The reason for the Pope?s resignation is left up for debate, and there are plenty of speculating in the media, the next Pope who is to succeed Benedict XVI, hasn?t been appointed yet. The Vatican Cardinals will be voting for the next Pope starting between 15 and 20 days once he resigns from his post on the 28th. We have to wonder if the next Pope would be interested in opening up a Twitter account for himself. And since the current account isn?t personalized, but rather ?refers to the person of the pope,? there?s no reason why it couldn?t be assumed by whoever assumes the position.

According to Italian news agency ANSA, The Vatican says that every moment from of Benedict XVI?s last day will be recorded. Currently, there?s no indication that moments from his last day will be tweeted.

?

Source: http://www.digitaltrends.com/social-media/pope-benedict-xvi-shutting-down-pontifex-twitter-account/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Caves point to thawing of Siberia

Friday, February 22, 2013

Evidence from Siberian caves suggests that a global temperature rise of 1.5 degrees Celsius could see permanently frozen ground thaw over a large area of Siberia, threatening release of carbon from soils, and damage to natural and human environments.

A thaw in Siberia's permafrost (ground frozen throughout the year) could release over 1000 giga-tonnes of the greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere, potentially enhancing global warming.

The data comes from an international team led by Oxford University scientists studying stalactites and stalagmites from caves located along the 'permafrost frontier', where ground begins to be permanently frozen in a layer tens to hundreds of metres thick. Because stalactites and stalagmites only grow when liquid rainwater and snow melt drips into the caves, these formations record 500,000 years of changing permafrost conditions, including warmer periods similar to the climate of today.

Records from a particularly warm period (Marine Isotopic Stage 11) that occurred around 400,000 years ago suggest that global warming of 1.5?C compared to the present is enough to cause substantial thawing of permafrost far north from its present-day southern limit.

A report of the research is published in this week's Science Express. The team included scientists from Britain, Russia, Mongolia and Switzerland.

'The stalactites and stalagmites from these caves are a way of looking back in time to see how warm periods similar to our modern climate affect how far permafrost extends across Siberia,' said Dr Anton Vaks of Oxford University's Department of Earth Sciences, who led the work. 'As permafrost covers 24% of the land surface of the Northern hemisphere significant thawing could affect vast areas and release giga-tonnes of carbon.

'This has huge implications for ecosystems in the region, and for aspects of the human environment. For instance, natural gas facilities in the region, as well as power lines, roads, railways and buildings are all built on permafrost and are vulnerable to thawing. Such a thaw could damage this infrastructure with obvious economic implications.'

The team used radiometric dating techniques to date the growth of cave formations (stalactites and stalagmites). Data from the Ledyanaya Lenskaya Cave ? near the town of Lensk latitude 60?N ? in the coldest region showed that the only period when stalactite growth took place occurred about 400,000 years ago, during a period with a global temperature 1.5?C higher than today. Periods when the world was 0.5-1?C warmer than today did not see any stalactite growth in this northernmost cave, suggesting that around 1.5?C is the 'tipping point' at which the coldest permafrost regions begin to thaw.

Dr Vaks said: 'Although it wasn't the main focus of our research our work also suggests that in a world 1.5?C warmer than today, warm enough to melt the coldest permafrost, adjoining regions would see significant changes with Mongolia's Gobi Desert becoming much wetter than it is today and, potentially, this extremely arid area coming to resemble the present-day Asian steppes.'

###

University of Oxford: http://www.ox.ac.uk/

Thanks to University of Oxford for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126980/Caves_point_to_thawing_of_Siberia

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SACS President Belle Wheelan Addresses Livingstone Founder?s Day

By Laurie D. Willis
Livingstone College News Service

An educator whose illustrious career has spanned more than three decades and whose name will go down in history told Livingstone College students on February 7 there are no dumb questions, they should be as respectful of janitors as they are board chairmen and they should take care of themselves spiritually, mentally and physically.

Dr. Belle Wheelan, president of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, gave a spirited speech during Livingstone College?s 134th Founder?s Day ceremony. Instead of trying to impress people with her vast knowledge, Wheelan imparted practical, yet sage advice to the college?s students, faculty, staff and special guests.

She spoke before a packed audience inside Varick Auditorium, which included Salisbury Mayor Paul Woodson, Salisbury City Councilman Pete Kennedy, Catawba College President Dr. Brien Lewis, Rowan Cabarrus Community College President Dr. Carol S. Spalding, retired AME Zion Bishop George W.C. Walker, Sr. and other dignitaries.

Wheelan was introduced by Livingstone College President Dr. Jimmy R. Jenkins Sr., who read a list of African-American firsts before bringing her to the podium. He began by citing Carol Mosley Braun, the first African-American woman elected to the U.S. Senate, and ended by mentioning President Barack Obama. Then he rolled off a list of accomplishments by Wheelan, the first woman and first African-American to serve as president of SACSCOC, the organization that serves as the regional body for the accreditation of degree-granting higher education institutions in the Southern states.

Wheelan set the tone for her speech within seconds by asking the students to sit on the edge of their seats before asking them to stand, raise their arms in the air and shout hallelujah. After the students sat back down Wheelan quipped, ?You probably won?t remember a word I said today, but at least you can say I had you on the edge of your seats and shouting hallelujah.?

Wheelan told the students she wanted to share 10 important lessons with them and did so in a way that was simultaneously serious and vivacious.

She began by encouraging them to have goals and work hard to achieve them. Then she spoke to the importance of giving back ? whether by purchasing a box of Girl Scouts cookies or by one day funding a scholarship at Livingstone. Wheelan followed those points by assuring the students there are no dumb questions. Education should be continuous throughout life, she said. ?If you are lacking in knowledge you have no one to blame but yourself.?

Wheelan told the students they should always stand for something before stressing the importance of taking care of their bodies, souls and minds. For the sixth lesson she borrowed from ?Life?s Little Instruction Book? and told the students to be kind to everyone, despite their positions. To bring home the point, she said college presidents are no more important than students ? or other employees ? at colleges or universities.

Wheelan spoke of having good manners for her seventh point, saying it doesn?t hurt to say hello to people, to speak to others in passing or to say excuse me when you have to step in front of someone.

She concluded her lessons by telling students to be proud of their heritage, including Livingstone College, to learn to laugh and not take life so seriously and to remember the word American ends in the letters i-c-a-n.

She spoke of the civil rights struggles of the 1960s, the emergence of women?s rights in the ?70s, the country?s focus on individuals with special needs in the ?80s, the way people of diverse sexual orientation began making their voices heard in the ?90s, and the concentration of issues relating to immigration in the 2000s.

?We are all Americans,? Wheelan said.

After her speech, Wheelan was given a standing ovation by the audience and a presidential award by Jenkins.

As Thursday?s program got underway, the audience rose to its fee to sing ?The Star Spangled Banner? and the Negro National Anthem, ?Lift Ev?ry Voice and Sing.?

Bishop W. Darin Moore, a member of the Livingstone College Board of Trustees, gave the invocation. He said there are voices in the atmosphere, including voices of violence, racism, sexism and classism. The good news, however, Moore said, is there is still the voice of God, which rings louder than all other voices combined.

Bishop Dennis V. Proctor, also on the Board of Trustees and president of the Board of Bishops, read from Proverbs, including 3:5-6 which says, ?Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge Him and He shall direct thy paths.?

Greetings were given by Bishop George E. Battle, Jr., senior bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and Chairman of the Livingstone College Board of Trustees, Dr. Carolyn W. Duncan, president of the college?s Faculty Senate for 2012-2013, Dorian R. Edwards, president of the Student Government Association, and Rev. William E. Simmons, president of the Livingstone College National Alumni Association.

Battle, a member of the Livingstone College class of 1969, spoke with loving pride of his alma mater. He also discussed growing up on a tobacco farm but achieving success despite the odds. Also during the ceremony, Roslyn Burrough, a Broadway singer who has performed for Obama and former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, gave a powerful rendition of ?To God Be the Glory.?

Founder?s Day commemorates the life and accomplishments of Livingstone Founder Dr. Joseph Charles Price, the college?s first president. Born on Feb. 10, 1854, in Elizabeth City, N.C., Price graduated valedictorian in the class of 1879 from Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, completing a three-year theological course in two years.

Price was known as a brilliant scholar, great gospel preacher, world famous orator and advocate for the common man. He served as Livingstone?s first president for 10 years until his death in 1893.

Price?s grandson, Dr. Richard W. Sherrill of Virginia Beach, Va., his wife, Phyllis Lett Sherrill, and their son, Philip C. Sherrill, director of corporate/foundation relations at Norfolk State University, attended the Founder?s Day celebration. Another grandson, Charles P. Sherrill of Salisbury, passed away last month. A resolution honoring him was read during the event.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HBCUDigest/~3/QrC9WhRkW_E/

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Governors: Looming cuts threaten economic gains

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Washington's protracted budget stalemate could seriously undermine the economy and stall gains made since the recession, exasperated governors said Saturday as they try to gauge the fallout from impending federal spending cuts.

At the annual National Governors Association meeting, both Democrat and Republican chief executives expressed pessimism that both sides could find a way to avoid the massive, automatic spending cuts set to begin March 1, pointing to the impasse as another crisis between the White House and Congress that spooks local businesses from hiring and hampers their ability to construct state spending plans.

Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie, a former congressman, noted that the cuts ? known in Washington-speak as "the sequester" ? could lead to 19,000 workers laid off at Pearl Harbor, site of the surprise attack in 1941 that launched the United States into World War II.

"That will undermine our capacity for readiness at Pearl Harbor. If that doesn't symbolize for the nation ... what happens when we fail to meet our responsibilities congressionally, I don't know what does," he said.

The budget fight came as many states say they are on the cusp of an economic comeback from the financial upheaval in 2008 and 2009. States expect their general fund revenues this year to surpass the amounts collected before the Great Recession kicked in. An estimated $693 billion in revenues is expected for the 2013 budget year, nearly a 4 percent over the previous year.

At their weekend meetings, governors were focusing on ways to boost job development and grow their state economies, measures to restrict gun violence and implement the new health care law approved during Obama's first term.

Some Republican governors have blocked the use of Medicaid to expand health insurance coverage for millions of uninsured while others have joined Democrats in a wholesale expansion as the law allows. The Medicaid expansion aims to cover about half of the 30 million uninsured people expected to eventually gain coverage under the health care overhaul.

Yet for many governors, the budget-cut fight remains front-and-center and fuels a pervasive sense of frustration with Washington.

"My feeling is I can't help what's going on in Washington," Gov. Terry Branstad, R-Iowa, said in an interview Saturday. "I can't help the fact that there's no leadership here, and it's all politics as usual and gridlock. But I can do something about the way we do things in the state of Iowa."

Indeed, right now no issue carries the same level of urgency as the budget impasse.

Congressional leaders have indicated a willingness to let the cuts take effect and stay in place for weeks, if not much longer.

The cuts would trim $85 billion in domestic and defense spending, leading to furloughs for hundreds of thousands of workers at the Transportation Department, Defense Department and elsewhere.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said the cuts would harm the readiness of U.S. fighting forces.

The looming cuts were never supposed to happen. They were intended to be a draconian fallback intended to ensure a special deficit reduction committee would come up with $1 trillion or more in savings from benefit programs. It didn't.

"We should go back and remember that sequestration was originally designed by both the administration and Congress as something so odious, so repellent, that it would force both sides to a compromise. There can't be any question, this is something that nobody wants," said Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, a Democrat.

Obama has stepped up efforts to tell the public about the cuts' negative impact and pressure Republicans who oppose his approach of reducing deficits through a combination of targeted savings and tax increases. House Republicans have said reduced spending needs to be the focus and have rejected the president's fresh demand to include higher taxes as part of a compromise.

Governors said they are asking the Obama administration for more flexibility to deal with some of the potential cuts.

"We know that the cuts are coming, but we also don't want to suffer disproportionately," said Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, a Democrat and chairman of the National Governors Association.

"We're just saying that as you identify federal cuts and savings, allow the states to be able to realize those savings, too," said Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, a Republican and the association's vice chairwoman. "Give us the flexibility to be able to make the cuts where we think it will be the less harm to our citizens."

___

Follow Steve Peoples at: http://twitter.com/sppeoples and Ken Thomas at: http://twitter.com/AP_Ken_Thomas

___

Online:

National Governors Association: http://www.nga.org

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/governors-looming-cuts-threaten-economic-gains-133434444--politics.html

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Vietnam vet, teen bring Scouting to Afghanistan

Keith Blackey, a veteran of the Vietnam War, has a lifelong involvement with scouting. He has brought his passion for scouting to Afghanistan as a way to say thank you and make a difference. NBC's Mandy Clark reports.

By Mandy Clark, Correspondent, NBC News

KABUL, Afghanistan - A 68-year-old Vietnam veteran and an idealistic 13-year-old boy might seem unlikely partners. But these two Boy Scouts -- 55 years and 7,000 miles apart -- joined forces to help some of the poorest people in Afghanistan.

Maryland teenager John Ferry needed a project to become an Eagle Scout, the highest rank attainable in the Scouts. He learned that Army Maj. Kenton Barber who was serving in Afghanistan needed donations of shoes to give to Kabul street kids.

Ferry emailed Barber to see how he could help. The boy did not want to stop at shoes, and so contacted schools, local businesses, churches and senior centers for help collecting more than a ton of winter clothes. He says he could not believe there were kids his age that still froze to death every winter in Afghanistan.

Keith Blackey?s path to Afghanistan began 60 years ago as a fighter pilot in Vietnam. In Sept. 1968, he was shot down during an intelligence gathering mission over North Vietnam.

?My wingman was with me and he could have escaped because we were under terribly heavy fire from surface to air missiles but instead he risked his life, followed me in and saw where our parachutes landed,? he said.

A3 Warrior pilot Blackey was taken captive by the North Vietnamese. A Marine unit launched a rescue operation within three days, and Blackey?s wingman, Lt. Cmdr. Chip Beck, rescued him. Over the years the two stayed in infrequent touch.

Courtesy Barbara Ferry

John Ferry, a 13-year-old Boy Scout from Kensington, Md., helped get about a ton of winter clothes to some of the poorest people in Afghanistan.

Forty years later, Beck asked a favor.

?What do you say to someone who has saved your life and he asks you to do something? There is no answer except yes,? Blackey said.

Beck asked Blackey to help build up the Iraqi scouting program. Six years later, Blackey had built a network of 150,000 Scouts.

Today Blackey is in Afghanistan hoping for the same success. ?After three months in Kabul, 2,000 Scouts have been signed-up -- so far, all orphans.

Blackey calls the program ?a game with a purpose.?

It is about having fun but also about learning guiding moral principles, manners, teamwork and leadership ? skills orphans badly need, he says.

Back in Kensington, Md., John Ferry had a ton of clothes but could not find a way to get it to Afghanistan.

?I was never discouraged, there was times it was slow going but I was not discouraged,? Ferry said.

He finally got in touch with a U.S. military program that agreed to ship them for free.

Enter Blackey. Once all the clothes arrived in Kabul, Blackey and his Scouts took over. ?They loaded the shipment onto a truck bound for the Northern province of Bamiyan.

?The Scouts that helped both in Kabul and in Bamiyan, they are all orphans, many of them are living in poverty, and their scout uniform is the nicest thing they have,? Blackey said.

Despite their own poverty, the Scouts in Bamiyan wanted to help those in the most need, so Blackey handed out the clothes to some of the poorest people ? those who live in caves in cliffs where the famed Bamiyan Buddhas once stood.

?It is a really depressing lifestyle. It is cold, they have no heat,? he said. ??They share a room with their animals.?

Courtesy Barbara Ferry

John Ferry stands alongside the truck loaded with clothes bound for Afghanistan in Andrews Air Force Base in Prince George's County, Md.

The Scouts spent hours stuffing garbage bags with jackets, sweaters, shoes, hats and mitts for each family member living in the caves. The help reached over 100 families, or around 600 people.

What touched Blackey was, ?how gracious they were and their gratitude for these gifts.?

In Maryland, Ferry waited eagerly for news. The best part for him was seeing the photographs.

?I recognized some of the clothes,? he said.

Asked why he took on such a big project, Ferry said, ?If you do a good deed for a stranger, maybe they will do another deed for another stranger. ?But this was the right thing to do. It is just natural to help out those in need.?

Blackey?s motivation runs deeper.

?For two wars I have proven to myself that bombing adults does not solve the problem. For my last two wars instead of wearing a military uniform, I?m wearing the Scout uniform,? he said.

?I really believe we are going to do more for the future than I was ever able to do for my first two wars.?

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/22/17055879-game-with-a-purpose-vietnam-vet-teen-bring-scouting-and-help-to-afghanistan?lite

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Paula Broadwell Military Promotion Revoked (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/286357441?client_source=feed&format=rss

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