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CBS News A bus driver in Winnipeg, Canada, brought his passengers to tears when he stoppe
stanley cups d his bus to give a barefoot homeless man the shoes off his feet.Winnipeg transit bus driver Kristian Doubledee was doing his job Tuesday, just like he has done every day for the past four years. But, for the 38-year-old who was born in Boston and raised in New Brunswick, Canada, this day was going to turn out differently.Denise Campbell, a passenger on Doubledee s bus, recalled, Suddenly, the bus driver yelled, Hey buddy - and he got off the bus and went out to a man. That s when Doubledee took off his shoes and handed them to the homeless man who had been walking barefoot.Campbell said, One of the ladies sitting in front of me got up and asked him or said to him, That was the most amazing thing I have ever seen. So moved by what she had seen, Campbell wrote about it on a community news blog. From there, it went viral, and the story of the bus driver who literally gave a stranger the shoes off his feet has people everywhere talking - and speechless.The Winnipeg home
stanley cup less shelter heard about the story and has been looking for the man who received the shoes, so far, without luck. Floyd Perras, executive director of Siloam Mission in Winnipeg, said, I think the good news about this story is that there was someo
stanley cup ne in need, whether they re down on their luck or they were homeless or whatever - somebody took the opportunity to make a difference in that person s life Asked what Bean Why Are Vitamins Named Using the Alphabet
Ansel Adams is renowned fo
termo stanley r his stunning, black-and-white photographs of landscapes in the American West. But, in 1943, he documented one of the most shameful events in U.S. history. In commemoration of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, the Library of Congress LOC blog directs readers to an online set of rare pho
stanley bottles tographs that Adams donated to the Library between 1965 and 1968, placing no copyright restrictions on their use. As the LOC notes: Several months after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, more than 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry were forced from their homes on the West Coast and sent to relocation centers by the United States government, which had declared war on Japan. Documents accompanying the Adams online photo collection say the evacuation 8220 truck a personal chord with Adams after an ailing family emp
stanley quencher loyee was taken from his home to a faraway hospital. When Ralph Merritt, director of the Manzanar War Relocation Center, invited Adams to document camp life, he welcomed the opportunity. He shot more than 200 photos, mostly portraits, but also scenes from daily camp life with the majestic Sierra Nevada mountains often visible in the background. Adams told an interviewer in 1974 that from a social point of view, his Manzanar photos were the most important thing I ;ve done or can do, as far as I know. View more of the collection online at the Library of Congress.