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Muhammad Ali changed the sport of boxing with his deft moves, unconventional strategies, jackhammer punches and mouth that always seemed to be in gear. His passion was bigger than the ring, and his character never wavered, not in the face of being drafted into the controversial Vietnam War, not when he wanted to “whup” the thief that stole his bicycle when he was 12 years old.
Wanting to right that earliest injustice set Ali on a path that would take him to two national Golden Gloves titles and a gold medal in the 1960 Rome Olympic Games at age 18. At 22, he defeated the heavily favored brawler Sonny Liston for the world heavyweight title.
The brash kid from Kentucky quickly made a name for himself. He was articulate, spouted rhyming couplets and mugged for the camera in a day when decorum was the rule. He mussed the hair of buttoned-down commentator Howard Cosell and kept up with the bellicose sports personality line for line in interviews.
But it was Ali’s unyielding conviction that earned him the most attention. He refused to fight in a war he saw as senseless and political when there was so much injustice at home. He converted to Islam, committing to a strict religious regimen and a lifelong pursuit of using his platform to help others.
“That’s who he was,” remembers Greg Fischer, 12-year mayor of Louisville and now advisor on the Muhammad Ali Index. “He saw the news of a man threatening to jump from a building and ran over to talk him off the ledge. He often stopped his entourage to help somebody. He delivered groceries to widows, visited hospitals and schools. He even flew to Iran to help negotiate the release of American hostages. Famous or not, that was his true character.”
As entertaining as he was, as controversial as he was at the time, as surgical as he was in the ring, he was, in essence, a hurricane of good. His religious convictions got him arrested and stripped of his heavyweight title. But it didn’t slow down his opinions or dampen his determination and compassion.
“Only 40% of the Muhammad Ali Center is focused on his athletic prowess,” says Fischer. “The bulk is devoted to his leadership principles, his humanitarian efforts, his work in civil rights. There are three values that guided my administration in Louisville: Lifelong learning. Health. And compassion. There is no greater manifestation of these values than the champ. Not only here locally, but all over the world. Ali was a voice of compassion in a fractious time. It is that foundation the Muhammad Ali Index is built on. Compassion is a human value we are all born with. It is a muscle we need to continually develop.”
More than just providing goods and services to underserved communities, the Muhammad Ali Index’s mission is to help people change their behavior to affect lasting and sustainable change in communities.
“The Muhammad Ali Index reports on the state of compassion in America. We started with 12 pilot cities and have grown to 20 areas that include urban and rural regions to see where America is, right now,” explains Fischer. “We are also moving internationally, talking to countries that are looking for lasting solutions.”
One of the purposes of the Index is to teach compassion, so members of communities become interdependent. When one is in need, the community supports them. That person becomes self-sufficient and rises to the point of giving back. The community — and the commitment — becomes self-perpetuating.
“Neuroscience shows that the more compassionate you are, the happier you are. There’s a direct link between brain health and compassion. It’s a gift that keeps on giving,” Fischer continues.
Teaching compassion, including self-compassion, connecting networks of resources and using an average kid from Louisville who grew up to be the greatest boxer of all time for inspiration is the vision of the Muhammad Ali Index.
Relationships. Resources. Accountability. Measured progress.
“Service to others is the rent you pay for your room here on earth,” Muhammad Ali once said. It all starts with compassion and continues with a plan of action.
Be a Champion… PassItOn.com®
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For the Love of the Game.
Simon Keith was just 21 years old when he stood at the edge of life and death: He needed a heart transplant. Soon, though, the avid soccer player from Lewes, England, was determined to put his new heart to the test. Three years after the transplant, Keith became the first heart transplant recipient to play professional sports.
Bear with Me!
The story of Wojtek the bear, who joined the Polish Army in WWll.
Everybody Can Be a Hero.
How window cleaners brightened the day at a children’s hospital.
Benny’s Bees.
How a former Marine with PTSD finds solace in service and beekeeping.
Running to Win isn’t Always Running to Come in First.
Jacqueline Nyetipei Kiplimo demonstrates what really matters in life and in sports.
The Woman Who Talks to Trees.
Understanding the power of relationships in the natural world will help us heal the people we share our communities with.
Understanding Our Universe.
In a suburban neighborhood, the angst of the world still reaches a group of elementary kids. Bob stares at the stars with them and explains the universe and how there is order to everything.
Unlikely Friends with Common Roots.
From the StoryCorps archives, a story of two friends from the same side of the tracks, with very different backgrounds.
How Far Can Mind and Body Take You?
101 triathlons in as many days. That’s what the Iron Cowboy found out. How far can you go?
Crafting Relationships.
10-year-old Alfie works in the woodworking shop with his grandfather, crafting high-end chopping boards. Selling items out of the garage, the duo are building their relationship — and a brighter future.
Love Rules.
How Rick Moranis shrunk his role as an actor to be with his kids.
Turning Tough News Into Hope.
How 11-year-old Jordan Phillips raised $120,000 to help fund cancer treatment.
Bee Productive.
17-year-old Gloria Barron Prize winner Anna Devolld is helping small things make a difference: Pollinators.
How to Honor Your Mother.
Warrick Dunn played in the NFL for 12 seasons. His most impressive stat: He’s built 200 homes for single mothers. And he’s not done.
More Than Just Dancing
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Wanderers Turned Wonderers.
Tobie Spears and her husband wanted to see the world. But traveling together made them realize how big a difference the little things are. Like providing a sewing machine to a village, or teaching a new way to raise vegetables. So, she founded Be Humanitarian, and the impact has outgrown even their own expectations.
To Stay or Run?
The courageous story of a collegiate wrestler who fought a grizzly bear to save a friend. With thanks to the Cowboy State Daily.
The Friendship Heard Round the World.
Luz Long and Jesse Owens struck up a friendship at the 1936 Olympics that transcended sport, race and history.
Never, Ever Give Up.
The incredible story of the 12-year-old cancer patient who brings joy to half a million children fighting cancer.
Courage in a New World.
The story of Stagecoach Mary, the first Black woman to deliver mail in the Wild West.
The Mistakes We Learn From and Build On.
Every year, a handful of students in prisons across America take stock of their lives and make changes. Many earn their diplomas, ensuring better options and choices when they get out.
Let the Kids Give it a Try
How 17-year-old Dasia Taylor developed sutures that detect infection.
From the NFL to the Opera
When Life Changes, Change your Dreams.
Going the Distance.
Why top collegiate and professional athlete Dillon Shije will never stop running for his people.
Our Local Heroes in Scrubs.
How health care workers saved the day.
Lift Your Voice, Use Your Mind, Lift Others.
How a spark plug of a teacher ignites possibilities within her students in classroom 161.
A Whale of a Story.
How Moko the dolphin led a disoriented mother whale and her calf through a treacherous channel and back out to sea.
From Humble Dishwasher to Mega-star.
Without the help of an elderly waiter, Sidney Poitier might never have become the actor that he is.
Cross Safely.
How one man made sure his retirement years were spent helping kids move safely through life.
The Little Things that Make the Biggest Difference.
How one man created a forest the size of Central Park by planting one tree a day.
Living on a Prayer.
Catch up with mega-star musician Jon Bon Jovi as he continues to inspire fans, serving up soup and doing dishes at JBJ Soul Kitchen in New Jersey.
Something Healthy for All of Us
How 17-year-old Gloria Barron Prize Winners Annie and Shirley Zhu provide fresh food for 1,400 people a year.
Bringing the Moon to your Living Room.
How 14-year-old Philo Farnsworth tinkered his way to the technology that broadcast the moon landing.
Listening to the Music Inside.
The long journey of Maria Tallchief from the Osage Nation in Oklahoma to prima ballerina in New York City.
For Soccer Superstar Cristiano Ronaldo, Every Day is Mother’s Day.
Fortune and fame have allowed the soccer great to take care of his mother after all she has done for him.
Not Out of the Way, Along the Way.
Taking the long way to school makes for a long friendship.
The Language of Love and Inclusion.
Barron Prize Winner Mia Lee founded LingoX, a nonprofit that provides free language classes for refugees, when she was 18 years old. LingoX now serves 136 countries.
What we Learn About Ourselves from the Boys in the Boat.
Joe Rantz overcame childhood scarlet fever, abandonment and depression to become the oak-strong oarsman of the winning boat that shocked the world in the 1936 Berlin Olympics.
To All who are Lost: You will be Found Again.
The amazing story of the missing marathon runner who turned up 54 years later.
A Good Father Goes a Long Way.
Ron Howard’s father made a few suggestions to Andy Griffith. The result is an endearing father-and-son relationship that millions still watch today.
The Enduring Smile of the Mona Lisa Still Calms Us Today.
The mystery and the maternal security of the world’s most famous painting.
Overcoming Fear Sometimes Requires a Patient Friend.
How a flight attendant took the time to comfort a passenger who was having panic attacks.
Are You Smarter Than a Seventh-Grade Business Owner?
How Kidpreneur Alejandro Buxton is making money for college and helping others.
From Russia, With Love.
The incredible story of Russian sculptor Andrey and his mission to bring unity to Ukraine and Russia through art.
Sometimes the Wrong Direction is the Right Way.
How a wrong number, a wrong text and a mix-up led to long-lasting friendships.
The Baseball Player you’ve Never Heard of is the Player we Should All Aspire to be.
David Ross played for three MLB teams, winning two World Series, hitting a home run to cinch the championship for the improbable Cubs, and solidifying his place in sports history as a great teammate.
Using the Write Words
How an African American Woman Wrote her Way to Freedom.
The Dream Builder.
Mark Ostrom and the Joy Collaborative customize spaces for children with physical and emotional needs.
The Future Belongs to Kids.
So far, things look pretty bright.
The Long Shot.
Hunter Woodhall won state in the 400 meters with a blistering time of 47.64 seconds — without legs.
Education is for Everyone.
Reading and writing are the basics of an education. See why a 90-year-old Kenyan great-grandmother went back to primary school.
Photographs that Changed the World.
How the searing photographs of Walker Evans’ America during the Depression created a national change in attitude toward the poor.
Climb Higher, Leave Behind what Ails you.
Dr. Rick Nielsen, entrepreneur and founder of Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions and the Noorda College of Osteopathic Medicine in Utah, has climbed Kilimanjaro 10 times. His wife, Jodi, has summited the mountain twice. They have returned to that mountain so others can feel the pain, and the exhilaration of freedom.
Recognizing the Need.
How a neighbor took a disaffected young man under his wing and taught him how to be a man
The Brotherhood in Sports Goes Beyond the Field.
How a men’s rugby team supported one of their own.
The Long Walk.
In rural Sierra Leone, where distance often stands between children and their dreams, Mustapha's journey from shoeless schoolboy to education pioneer began with a two-mile walk to school. Decades later, he's still moving forward.
Reach for the Stars…
No Matter How Long it Takes.
Don’t Let a Bad Day Trick You Into Believing You Have a Bad Life.
Allie Newman not only survived cancer but also helps hospitals better meet the needs of teenage cancer patients.
How Far Would you go for a Friend?
The story of Dindim, the penguin who travels 5,000 miles every year to visit with its rescuer.
When the World Says You Can’t, Listen to the Inner Voice that Says You Can.
The legacy of Susan La Flesche, the first Native American to earn a medical degree.
A Voice for Our Time.
The improbable dream journey of singer-songwriter Kodi Lee.
Being a Mother…
The roundabout journey to a dream fulfilled.
Walking and Learning and Appreciating what we Have.
Neil King’s walk from Washington, D.C., to New York City uncovered the gems of slowing down.
53 Olympic Gold Medals.
How one athlete overcame a genetic disorder and a tragic accident to become a treasure worth more than gold.
Judging by Appearances Misses the Most Beautiful Part of Life: Friendship.
When Oliver Bromley was asked to leave a restaurant because of his facial disfigurement, he didn’t seek revenge. He only asks that we all seek understanding.
Out of the Village and On to Break Records.
The incredible story of Makazole Mapimpi, the first South African to score in a Rugby World Cup Final. Against almost impossible personal odds, Makazole succeeded, a triumph of the human spirit.
Caitlin Clark and the Importance of the Supporting Cast.
The all-time NCAA scoring leader is more than a great shooter.
Taking the Fear Out of Surgery.
How one doctor helps children face their hospital fears by dressing them up as superheroes.
The Last Person you Think of Should Probably be the First.
How a group of high school boys practiced the art of inclusion.
Overcoming Our Own Worst Mistakes.
Kaelin Clay made an unpardonable error in football. And he owned it.
Let the Music Move You.
Bob Geldof has spent a lifetime seeking harmony in the world.
Billy Mills
The story behind America’s first and only 10,000-meter Olympic champion.
Steph Curry Keeps Hitting the Shots that Matter.
In his new book for children, the NBA superstar encourages kids to take courage and believe in themselves — something the once-underrated hoop star understands.
Bigger than Life.
How Premier League superstar Sadio Mané is changing the world beyond soccer.
The Feel of Language.
Louis Braille invented a language you can touch. When the son of a saddlemaker created a tactile way for blind people to read, he opened up a whole new world for millions of people, turning the page on the Dark Ages.
The Curse of Texting and Driving.
How one father turned personal tragedy into triumph for thousands of teenagers by creating the Honor Connor Scholarship Fund.
If a Man Asks for Bread, Will You Give Him a Stone?
Treating people, even prisoners, with respect is what food service giant Bill Mouskondis is all about.
Never Give Up.
Lessons learned from Preston Tucker, creator of one of the most innovative cars in American history.
Teach Your Children.
How Graham Nash is still leading children into a better future.
A Lesson We Should Never Forget.
The incredible story of American POWs smuggling rations to Russian prisoners at Stalag-B.
Arthur Brooks, the Professor of Happiness.
Being happy in this life doesn’t come easy for any of us. Harvard Professor Arthur Brooks has discovered timeless ways to find fulfillment and happiness, no matter our situation.
Laughter is the Best Teacher.
How humor and history go together in this classroom.
Listening from the Heart.
Ludwig Van Beethoven wrote some of his greatest works when he couldn’t hear a note.
Doubling Back for a Friend.
Two teammates paused their 5K race to help a fellow competitor.
A Hand Up.
Maak Impact Chairman Mike Linton and founder Skyler Meine had a chance meeting with a humanitarian while on safari. The result is an organization dedicated to creating business owners in one of the longest-running refugee camps in the world.
From the Beach to the Desert.
How a group of ambitious kids from Laguna Beach High School in California are digging wells in Kenya.
No Strings Attached.
How a 7-year-old girl brings joy to neighbors with her violin.
If You Love Dogs, You’ll Love this Story.
A German shepherd slept at his owner’s gravesite.
Everybody Gets on Base.
Measuring the victories of life, one single at a time.
It’s Okay to Admit When You are Wrong.
A cancer survivor and his best friend live through an avalanche and preserve their friendship. A StoryCorps story.
Go Fast, Go Long.
Carroll Shelby left his name on racetracks and cars all over the world. But it was at Le Mans, teamed up with family carmaker Ford, that Shelby ran the race he’ll be remembered for.
Capturing Determination and Strength.
John Singer Sargent is noted for his ability to capture the essence of a person’s character. In his portrait of Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler, we discover the strength of a woman who has suffered tragedy, borne heavy responsibility and developed great character.
Friendship Dispels the Darkest Nights in Alaska.
How two men find hope in friendship to prevent suicide.
On the Wings of Angels.
Angel Flight has picked up 7-year-old Itzy in her home in a small Kansas town and flown her to Colorado to see cancer specialists over 60 times — at no cost to Itzy and her family.
Disagree Better. Have More Friends. Be Happier.
Marianne Viray worked for nonprofits for years. She saw what worked and what didn’t, but at heart, something was missing. What she discovered in her research is that opportunities for people to improve their lives naturally follow when they have the skills to understand another’s perspective and work together.
Curing Cancer, One Bar of Soap at a Time.
14-year-old Heman Bekele awarded the 3M Young Scientist Award for developing a soap that activates skin cells to fight cancer.
Tolstoy and the Power of Kindness.
“The more intelligent a person is, the more he discovers kindness in others,” Tolstoy once wrote. In all his great works that explore the indignity and misery brought upon the human race, this one truth stands out brightest in his writing.
Going the Distance from the Farm to the Record Books.
Cliff Young showed up to the most grueling footrace in Australia — 875 kilometers — in overalls and gumboots. He went on to win in record time.
No Matter Who You Are, You Can Always Help.
The day Muhammad Ali rushed to save a stranger who was about to take his own life.
How to Land an Airplane Without Landing Gear.
17-year-old Maggie Taraska landed her airplane without landing gear on her way to flying solo cross-country.
The Calm in the Storm.
Being that one voice of encouragement in a community makes all the difference.
The Importance of a Good Dinner.
Cowboy chuckwagons were manned by veteran cowboys who cooked, sewed, repaired equipment and acted as mediators when tempers flared.
Taking Care.
How one woman turned a life of neglect into a lifetime of taking care of people.
Taking Care of the Most Vulnerable.
Pam Tully dedicates 6 months a year to rescuing baby flying foxes alongside the volunteers who help her.
Stay Curious.
The remarkable underwater life of Jacques Cousteau.
Getting 100 on her Final Exam.
Nola Ochs went back to college at 95 years old. At age 100, she had earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees and was still taking classes.
Laughter is the Best Medicine.
While filming ‘Schindler’s List,’ weekly calls from Robin Williams helped Steven Spielberg ease the weight of directing such a heavy film.
Beyond the Game.
Willis Ward was benched on the Michigan Football squad for being Black. His teammate, Gerald Ford, stuck up for him and became his lifelong friend.
Teamwork that Saves Lives.
How a high school baseball team lifted a car off one of their classmates pinned underneath.
Respecting Your Customers.
As the Great Depression impoverished the country, many families stretched their budgets by making clothes out of flour and seed sacks. What companies did next may surprise you.
The Agony, the Ecstasy, and the Redemption that Olympic Competition Brings.
Derek Redmond, the 400-meter record holder from Great Britain, delivered one of the most inspiring moments in athletic history at the Barcelona games in 2012.
A Custom of Respect.
How the Japanese soccer team brings sportsmanship to the game.
You’re Never Too Old to Make a Difference.
British WWll veteran Captain Tom Moore raised over $45 million for charity at age 100.
The Cellist of Sarajevo.
In the grips of war, the people of Sarajevo waited anxiously for some kind of resolution. Much of the city had been reduced to rubble. Life hung by a thread. The notes of hope cut through the air for 22 days straight as cellist Vedran Smailović risked death to fill the air with music.
From Homeless to Johns Hopkins.
Life is never fair. But if you work hard enough, and help someone along the way, you give yourself a better chance to make it.
Beatrice Shilling
The motorcycle daredevil who became a mechanical engineer and saved the lives of countless pilots in WWll.
Superheroes Do Fly … Sometimes!
Olympic kitesurfer Bruno Lobo swoops in to save a drowning woman.
In the Aftermath of Disaster, Rebuild.
Julie and Ron Lynam lost their dream home in a forest fire, so they got to work dreaming and building again—a StoryCorps story.
The Taming of the West Featuring Diamond Kitty.
It’s time to give cowgirls their due. Kitty Canutt was a bronc rider in the early 1900s who wore a diamond in her tooth that she occasionally removed and pawned when she needed contest entry money.
The Frozen Race to Save Lives.
The 1925 dog sled run to deliver serum across Alaska covered 674 miles with 20 mushers and 150 dogs.
We Are All Amateurs.
George Plimpton made a name for himself by slipping into high-profile careers and writing about his madcap adventures — as an amateur.
The Key to Life.
Father-and-son locksmiths Phil and Philip Mortillaro share the simple wisdom of being happy. From the StoryCorps collection.
Milton Wright, Father of Famous Fliers.
The stern man who believed humans were never meant to fly was overcome with emotion when Wilbur took him on his first flight.
Winning at the Game of Life.
College football player gives up his scholarship to make more possible for a teammate.
Everyone Needs a Good Teacher. Even Einstein.
Ernst Mach, the forgotten professor who influenced Einstein and developed a method for measuring aircraft velocity.
A Diamond in the Making.
How an everyday superhero saved the day by taking time to go through the garbage to find a stranger’s wedding ring.
He Ain’t Heavy, He’s my Brother.
The tender relationship between two brothers is a beacon for us all. A StoryCorps moment that will make your day.
From First Response to 11 Years of Friendship.
How EMTs saved a life and then enjoyed living it together.
The Birth of Superman.
How two awkward teenage boys dreamed up the world’s most popular superhero.
Taking Responsibility.
How one high school student supported her family during the pandemic.
‘The Velveteen Rabbit’ – How we Discover what Makes us Real … is Love.
Just as Margery Williams’ classic children’s book helps us all through the transition of childhood into adulthood, it helped the author through difficult times.
If You Don’t Know Anything About Orangutans, You Don’t Know Jack.
Meet Jack Dalton, Gloria Barron Prize Winner and the nature conservationist who started by saving the orangutans at age 8.
For the Cost of a Box of Cereal.
How just noticing makes all the difference in the world.
Fix it Yourself.
How one couple moved hundreds of miles from home to run a center for pregnant teenage girls.
A Most Unlikely Friendship.
How the war in Ukraine brought two families together from opposite sides.
How To Be Free.
Eliza Zenger teaches dance, music and arts to adults with disabilities. Their performance is the most beautiful you will ever see.
The Science of Happiness.
How a high school senior made sure an entire elementary school got Halloween.
It’s a Jungle Out There.
Rudyard Kipling, author of the timeless story about Mowgli and his animal friends, was more than a great storyteller and Nobel Prize laureate. He was a great humanitarian, caring for soldiers, mentoring young writers and donating his resources to alleviating poverty.
The Bison are Back!
With the reintroduction of the iconic beast by Native American tribes, something else returned: the environment, creatures and culture.
Road Trip Across America.
A discovery of what unites us.
Hope. Dream. Become.
Expressing emotions in a healthy way helps us see the world for what it is and, more importantly, how we choose to engage with it. Check out these young poetry winners from the WPSU poetry contest in Pennsylvania.
Pull Up for a Stranger in Need.
How the trucker community pulled off an impromptu maneuver that saved a man’s life.
The Hero to our Four-legged Friends.
When the floodwaters poured in, Captain Dusty Mascaro waded in and saved more than 100 pets in Hillsborough County, Florida.
Shakespeare and Love.
The bard speaks of love over 2,500 times in his collected works. He knows a thing or two about the transformative power of our deepest emotion.
Never Too Small to Make a Big Difference.
Georgia “Tiny” Broadwick was the first woman to jump from an airplane using a parachute.
Find the Good in Everybody.
Dolly Parton has made us feel loved and appreciated for decades. The singer/songwriter is a part of each of us who desires to be our best.
The Art of Doing Good.
How 18-year-old Gloria Barron Prize winner Austin Picinich is saving the salmon of Seattle by painting community murals.
Give Peace a Chance.
How a Mexican-American Marine negotiated peace speaking Japanese during WWll.
Going Deep to Deliver Kindness.
Free-dive record holder Enzo Maiorca rescues a trapped dolphin, then watches as it gives birth.
Harmony in Hardship.
Glenn Miller dropped out of college to become the swingingest band leader in the world.
The History of Us.
How a football coach develops young men by teaching them their own history.
Changing Course in the Middle of Life’s Journey.
Peter Pretorius was stranded in Mozambique during the country’s worst famine. Rather than find a way out, he designed a way to give back.
An Impossible Journey.
How John Wesley Powell navigated the Colorado River and Grand Canyon in wooden boats.
Playtime is for Everybody.
A dad sells off his business and builds a theme park for disabled kids.
The Janitor who Changed the World of Science.
What would you do with your free time if you were a janitor at a university? How about becoming the inspiration for the movie “Good Will Hunting”?
Slopes and Wheels.
From the cold wilderness of Alaska to the inner workings of the heart, Preston Pollard is helping kids rethink the way they approach life.
Challenge, Change and Complexity: The Big 3 Cs.
The three Cs seem to make us miserable, but they ultimately lead to greater life fulfillment and happiness. Dr. Taryn Marie, a leading expert in resiliency, teaches us that the hard things in life are not to be avoided, but to be embraced for what they teach us.
Wheels of Good Fortune.
One hundred sixty years ago, a man with a bold mustache and a bicycle with a huge wheel dreamed of pedaling around the world. Meet Thomas Stevens, the first human to circumnavigate the globe on a bike.
Simone Biles Springs Her Way Into History.
The sprite athlete with the eternal smile is vaulting her way back into the Olympics after overcoming a bad case of the “twisties.”
Engineering a Better Community.
Barron Prize winner and high schooler Adeline Smith co-founded Growing the STEM, a nonprofit that creates math and science programs for students in 14 underserved Idaho schools.
Finding a New Family at the Mountain Man Rendezvous.
How a Vietnam vet pulled himself out of drug addiction by going back in the past.
Finding Our Way.
Using the natural elements around her, Kala Baybayan Tanaka navigates the ocean in a canoe for up to three weeks using nothing but observations of the natural elements around her.
Wax On, Wax Off: The Pat Morita Story.
Known primarily for his role as Mr. Miyagi, Pat Morita is a mentor and a big-hearted friend who endured a difficult childhood to become a voice against racism.
Anatomy of a Bestseller.
How “Gray’s Anatomy,” a book of drawings featuring blood vessels, muscles, the nervous system and other squeamish things, came to be one of the world’s most widely read books.
Rescuing a Vessel — and a Family’s Memories.
A boat at the bottom of the lake for 30 years and a renewed appreciation for life when it is restored.
Good Food. Good Friends. Good for the Future.
Barron Prize winner Abby Yoon gets her hands dirty in the garden so at-risk kids can get fresh produce for lunch.
The World Awaits You.
The story of the first woman to circumnavigate the world.
Trusting Those Who Guide Us Through Life.
The amazing brotherhood of aviation navigators.
Including Everybody Means Everybody.
How Inclusion Films is making movies using crew with developmental disabilities.
Living Alone doesn’t Mean you Have to be Lonely.
How a community in Maine supports those who want to be left alone.
Reforesting the Amazon, 100 Million Trees at a Time.
How skydiving legend Luigi Cani’s daring stunt is aimed at breathing new life into our world.
Dream Big.
How a young artist from a remote mountainous tribe came to illustrate one of the most popular books of our time: ‘The Archer,’ by Paulo Coelho
Matter In Motion.
How a physics professor is igniting the scientific passions of her female students.
Beyond the Moon with an Eye on Mars.
The story of a young woman who dreamed of pushing the boundaries and now designs launch systems for NASA.
The Last American Explorer.
Norman Vaughan trekked Antarctica with Admiral Byrd, completed the Iditarod 13 times and climbed the 10,000-foot, icy mountain named after him at age 89.
A Hero for Accessibility.
How an 8-year-old girl captured the attention of the nation and motivated Congress.
A Legend On and Off the Court.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar sold his four championship rings and three MVP trophies for $2.8 million. Then he donated all of the money to support youth education programs
Miracle or Magician?
Whoever created the Loretto stairs in Santa Fe was a master craftsman. To do it in 1878 with nothing but hand tools is awe-inspiring.
The Electric Influence of a Good Mother.
Nikola Tesla was, in many ways, the stereotype of a mad scientist. His mother was kind, curious and loving. She encouraged him to look beyond his humble beginnings to the world stage.
Family of 7 Adopts a Grandpa.
Friends come in all shapes, sizes, and ages. But love is universal.
The Legacy of Dorothy Vaughan.
The Hidden Figure who Helped Put a man on the Moon.
The Least Likely to Help.
How a bedridden attorney still fights for the rights of others.
Born to Make a Difference.
Kids who are changing their world.
The Secret Ingredient to a Good Meal: Family and Friends.
Bernetta McKindra pays tribute to her grandfather, the Barbecue King of Kansas City. A StoryCorps story.
Everybody’s Grandma.
Connie might have said there was nothing special about her. Her grandchildren and their friends will tell you a different story.
The Art of Pitching.
A little confidence at the right time goes a long way.
Ramping Up to Help those in Need.
How a community came together in a time of tragedy.
To the Coaches of Pint-sized Athletes.
All year round, you’ll find brave dads and moms standing in the rink, on the field and in the gymnasium — surrounded by eager eyes and short attention spans. Here’s to the volunteers in our communities who teach our kids life lessons and never forget the orange slices.
It’s Not Your Lifespan, it’s Your Wingspan.
How one girl’s 16 years of life impacts thousands.
The Most Recognizable Voice in the World.
James Earl Jones put away the villainous Darth Vader to enjoy a character more like his real self: the kind Mr. Mertle in Sandlot.
The Weight We Carry and the Burdens We Share.
The life of best-selling author Isabelle Allende is a mission to bring relief to the suffering and a call to join the effort.