An idea stemming from one State College apartment has blossomed into over 727 meals donated to those facing food insecurity, but a cease and desist letter threatens to halt the meal distribution.
Nick Cradler, Penn State student and founder of the startup food business One for One, is leading an effort to curb hunger around the world.
Cradler (senior-economics) said when he was younger, his grandfather would take him into Wilmington, Delaware, to work at food banks, and he said this humbled him.
âSo you wake up once every two weeks at like 6 a.m., and thereâs a bunch of random people [who] come together and you see the poorest of poor people⦠come in and choose whatever they want,â Cradler said. âItâs definitely an eye opening experience. It makes you grateful for what you have.â
WFP steps up food aid to Myanmar
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Interfaith charity works for Myanmar s needy
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Updated / Friday, 23 Apr 2021
11:43
Mick Ryan was one of 157 people who died when the Boeing 737 Max crashed on 10 March 2019
The widow of an Irish man who died in an Ethiopian Airlines crash two years ago has said she and other families just want justice for their loved ones.
Mick Ryan, from Lahinch in Co Clare, was one of 157 people who died when the Boeing 737 Max crashed minutes after take off en route from Addis Ababa in Ethiopia to Nairobi in Kenya on 10 March 2019.
The father-of-two was part of an engineering unit with the United Nations World Food Programme.
His widow, Naoise Connolly Ryan, is pursuing a civil case against Boeing in the United States.