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  2. Who Gives A Crap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_Gives_A_Crap

    Who Gives A Crap (WGAC) is a brand of toilet paper, tissues, and paper towels founded in Australia in 2012. The company sells recycled and bamboo products and donates half its profits to charity. The company sells recycled and bamboo products and donates half its profits to charity.

  3. MinnPost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MinnPost

    The organization is part of a much-discussed trend away from print toward online media. Quoted by Minnesota Public Radio News, Laurie Schwab, executive director of the Online News Association, said in June 2007, 45 percent of the association's 1,100 members "started working at print publications and migrated online". [5]

  4. Dorothy Day homeless shelter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_Day_homeless_shelter

    The funding was provided by private donations as well as state, city, and county and city funds. [1] The state of Minnesota and Ramsey County and other public sources have provided $25 million in funding for the project. [3] Private funding provided $40 million of the project budget in donations from more than 480 individuals and institutions.

  5. 10 of the companies that give the most to charity in the US - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/finance/2018/09/27/10-of-the...

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  6. Owatonna People's Press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Owatonna_People's_Press

    The paper was expanded to ten pages of news and advertising in 1900 when railroad lines began intersecting Owatonna. Darby added a daily edition in 1916 named the Daily People's Press and discontinued the weekly edition in 1921. In 1938, Darby bought and consolidated the Steele County pioneer weekly Owatonna Journal-Chronicle to the Press.

  7. Street newspaper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_newspaper

    An early Hobo News front page. Although the modern street newspaper began with the 1989 publication of Street News in New York City, [1] [2] and the Street Sheet in San Francisco, 1989, newspapers sold by the poor and homeless to generate income and to bring attention to social problems date back to the late 19th century; journalism scholar Norma Fay Green has cited The War Cry, created by the ...