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In: web resources
8 Dec 2009
Social media’s power to spread the word is well known, as is its ability to help fuel charitable causes. The examples are many, including TweetsGiving, #BlameDrewsCancer, the Social Media Smackdown, Twestival, and the Mashable Summer of Social Good. Need we go on?
Now social media’s help is being enlisted to once again take up the fight for clean water. Next month, a group of people (including Jessicia Biel, Lupe Fiasco, and Kenna) will climb Mt. Kilimanjaro in an attempt to bring over 2.5 million liters of water to those in need. But they are looking to Facebook, online video, and the social media masses for help.
Here’s the basic gist: on January 7th, a group of celebrities, well-known figures, and social entrepreneurs will attempt to climb to the summit of the 19,340 foot African peak. At every step of the way, they will upload pictures and videos, as well as tweet about their progress.
The goal here is awareness about the 1 billion people that don’t have full access to clean water, but it’s also a fundraiser. For every person that joins the Summit on the Summit Facebook Cause Page or watches a web video from the climbers, HP will donate $1 (100 liters of water). In addition, for every $1 someone donates, HP will match it, up to $25,000. Intel, PUR, the United Nations Foundation, and Eddie Bauer are also partners in the effort.

The money raised will go to several charities working towards bringing clean water to others, specifically Children’s Safe Drinking Water, UNHCR and PlayPumps International.
The entire effort looks to be one giant social media blitz. Facebook Causes, Twitter, online video, and blogs are in full effect for their campaign. Combine with some all-star personalities, a tough challenge, and a worthy cause, we think Summit on the Summit could really make a lot of noise.
If you’re interested in learning more about the initiative, you can check out the Summit on the Summit website and the project’s Facebook Causes page.
Tags: facebook, HP, intel, social good, social media, Summit on the Summit, twitter
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1 Response to Kenna, Jessica Biel, and Social Media to Climb Kilimanjaro for Charity
Knowledge is Power.
January 23rd, 2010 at 1:24 pm
Here are some webpages that are really helpful: (***You will need to remove all spaces from the following links or they won't work***)
About the short stories: WileyCDA/LitNote/ Hemingway-s-Short-Stories. id-10,pageNum-3.html
Excerpts:
In the beginning, Hemingway wrote about himself, and he would continue to write himself into all, or most, of his characters until his death.
Hemingway’s genius as an American original was evident long before he produced his novels that are today considered masterpieces of American literature. Both critics and readers have hailed his short stories as proof that a pure, true American literature was finally possible.
Hemingway's writing style in the Short Stories: WileyCDA/LitNote/ Hemingway-s-Short-Stories. id-10,pageNum-70.html
Excerpts:
From the beginning of his writing career in the 1920s, Hemingway’s writing style occasioned a great deal of comment and controversy. Basically, a typical Hemingway novel or short story is written in simple, direct, unadorned prose. Possibly, the style developed because of his early journalistic training. The reality, however, is this: Before Hemingway began publishing his short stories and sketches, American writers affected British mannerisms.
Hemingway took great pains with his work; he revised tirelessly. “A writer’s style,” he said, “should be direct and personal, his imagery rich and earthy, and his words simple and vigorous.” Hemingway more than fulfilled his own requirements for good writing. His words are simple and vigorous, burnished and uniquely brilliant.
Themes of the Short Stories: WileyCDA/LitNote/ Hemingway-s-Short-Stories. id-10,pageNum-57.html
In his novels and especially in his short stories, Hemingway often uses mountains to symbolize goodness, the purity, and cleanness, and he uses the plains as a symbol of evil and confusion. This contrast has often been commented on by Hemingway scholars.
Not surprisingly, because death is at the core of this story, one of the central themes that occurs again and again in Hemingway’s stories and novels is man’s direct encounter with death or with approaching death. Whether a man is in war and on the battlefield (as Nick Adams is in several stories; as are Hemingway heroes in his novels A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and parts of The Sun Also Rises) or facing death (as Nick Adams is when he is severely wounded in “A Way You’ll Never Be” and “In Another Country”), or on big game hunts, facing charging animals (as Francis Macomber is in “A Short Happy Life”), the theme of man’s direct encounter with death is always pivotal to the story. Death is always present as Hemingway examines how man reacts and behaves in the face of death.
Hope this helps! Best wishes to you!