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Victoria Swiger

ASPCA | Fight Animal Cruelty - 0 views

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    Help fight animal cruelty. Save the animals. Care for them. Don't abuse them. Animals are made for love and care not for abuse!
Rebecca Needham

Lost & Found Horse Rescue Foundation, Inc. - 0 views

  • donations
  • Since 1997
  • more than 500
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  • no longer able to
  • volunteers
  • aged and unhealthy
  • victims of abuse and neglect
  • provide appropriate care
  • For The Horse Farms Open House: Lost and Found will have blacksmith and equine dentistry demonstrations, refreshments, and visitors can meet horses available for adoption.
  • Horses that arrive at the Rescue are evaluated to determine what special care they may require and their optimal use
  • provide minor rehabilitation so horses can have a productive secondary career.
  • The facility includes a 15-stall horse bank barn, conference building, pony barn, office area and corn crib. Approximately 30 volunteers handle the weekly chores required to take care of all the L&FHRF animals
Alexandra Smith

CCAkids.org - Programs & Services - 0 views

  • CCA disseminates information to educate craniofacial patients and their families, health care providers and the general public regarding craniofacial conditions. 
  • CCA also promotes public awareness of craniofacial conditions and social acceptance of individuals with facial disfigurement
  • These surgeons head teams of specialists specifically trained in the surgical management of problems involving the face and head.
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  • Centers with craniofacial teams working together have the advantage of a greater experience to provide comprehensive, quality care, which leads to better results and fewer complications.
  • CCA disseminates information to educate craniofacial patients and their families, health care providers and the general public regarding craniofacial conditions.
  • Craniofacial patient families often call CCA to seek emotional support, discuss problems and identify resources. Through our database we are able to network families with support groups
  • One of the most important goals of CCA is to promote social acceptance of children and adults with facial disfigurement.
  • We believe that in order for the general public to accept these and any differences, they must see and understand them
Glade Sparks

Home - Paralyzed Veterans of America - 0 views

  • Our veterans are our heroes for life. After serving our country, serious injury shouldn’t stop them from living the full, rewarding lives they deserve. At Paralyzed Veterans of America, we fight for better health care and benefits, aid in the search for a truly satisfying career, and provide the path to adventure through adaptive sports. What’s more, we are committed to ongoing care by educating clinicians about spinal cord injury, and we’re deeply invested in the future—a cure for paralysis. 
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    a site for helping paralyzed veterans
Clint Walters

Is PowerPoint Making Us Stupid? | Six Pixels of Separation - Marketing and Communicatio... - 0 views

  • The 3 C's of a great presentation: Content. What am I being asked to present? What is the story here? How can I tell it in a simple way? How can I create a simple story that pulls it all together? Compelling. How well do I know my content? How well am I using my body language and words to deliver my content? What else can I do to make my presentation both memorable and actionable? How well have I practices this material be compelling in my delivery? Compassion. How can I get people to emotionally connect to me? How candid am I being with the audience? How much do I care about the audience? How much do I care about the content? How much emotion can I deliver?
Shauna Hirt

ASPCA | Top 10 Ways to Prevent Animal Cruelty - 0 views

  • Here are some other signs and symptoms that we see in many of the cases we investigate: Tick or flea infestations. Such a condition, if left untreated by a veterinarian, can lead to an animal's death. Wounds on the body. Patches of missing hair. Extremely thin, starving animals. Limping. An owner striking or otherwise physically abusing an animal. Dogs who are repeatedly left alone without food and water, often chained up in a yard. Dogs who have been hit by cars-or are showing any of the signs listed above-and have not been taken to a veterinarian. Dogs who are kept outside without shelter in extreme weather conditions. Animals who cower in fear or act aggressively when approached by their owners.
  • If you aren't sure where to report cruelty, please visit our Report Animal Cruelty section.
  • Without phone calls from concerned citizens who report cruelty in their neighborhoods, we wouldn't know about most instances of animal abuse. It all comes from the public, it all starts with YOU—that's why it's so important to keep your eyes and ears open.
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  •  If you have pets, be sure to always show them the love and good care they deserve. But it's more than just food, water, and adequate shelter. If you think your animal is sick, bring him to the veterinarian. Be responsible and have your animals spayed or neutered. And give your pets lots of hugs!
  • If a parent isn't treating the family's pets right, we tell the kids that their dog or cat would really appreciate fresh water every day or some daily playtime. If the animal has been left outside without shelter, we'll say, 'You have a nice house, and if you get cold, you can put a coat on. But your dog can't do that.' Children understand that animals are living creatures who have the ability to feel pain, joy and sadness.
  • Support your local shelter or animal rescue organization. It's a great way to make a difference. Some of our ASPCA volunteers foster animals who have been abused in their former homes, giving these dogs and cats the chance they deserve to have a good life.
  • Get to know the animals in your neighborhood and invite your friends and neighbors to do the same. Together you can keep an eye out for any suspicious behaviors—abuse and neglect of companion animals, the mistreatment of local wildlife, dogs left in hot cars and other signs of abuse.
Brooke Bortner

Why support St. Jude? - 0 views

  • The support of caring people like you helps ensure that St. Jude Children's Research Hospital will continue its lifesaving mission of finding cures and saving children.
  • Thanks to donors, St. Jude families never pay for treatment not covered by insurance, and no child is ever denied treatment because of the family's inability to pay.
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