
Evergreen Park student recycling paper into warmth for homeless people
He's started making more of the bricks and distributing them as part of a larger effort to provide warmth to people experiencing homelessness on cold nights, and even as a fuel for cooking.
The effort is something Duffner is doing on his own, not part of a service project at EPCHS, where he is a senior. But the school is plenty proud of him.
'Everyone throws out paper,' he said. 'This way you can actually see what it can become,' said Duffner.
Duffner dubbed the effort the Heat4Homeless project, and he does much of the work in his grandfather's workshop in Chicago's Mt. Greenwood neighborhood. Retired accountant Bill Duffner, his grandfather, takes time out of his furniture restoring hobby to help out.
'This is just my mancave,' said Bill Duffner of the workshop space. 'I come here to make things.'
The brick-making process, which the younger Duffner learned from online videos, starts with recycled newspapers, which are shredded and then watered down in a big barrel. Billy then places them in a mold with three PVC tubes in each and then the paper slurry is pressed down with a bottle jack. The PVC pipes help hold the bricks together, aids in airflow and saves paper, he said.
'When on fire, the air goes through the holes so they burn better,' Billy said.
The bricks are then placed on racks, built by Billy's grandfather, and left to dry for four or five days. The elder Duffner is also making an oven for quicker drying.
When finished, Billy includes firestarters with each pack of bricks, as well as a detailed description of how to start the fire logs. Each fire log burns for about 45 minutes and fire starters burn for 15-20 minutes.
He said he gained experience helping his dad, a former carpenter, who is now an engineer, when he would build decks for people. He also said he likes taking an idea and building it up into a real business.
'We can really push them out now,' said Billy. 'Every week distributors bring them out to people who need them.'
Those distributors are nonprofit organizations such as Oak Lawn-based Almost Home Chicago, and he is looking for more who can use the bricks. One distributor who took bricks found them so helpful to homeless people that he came back and asked for 10 more, Billy said.
It's become a family affair, too, with grandmother Mikki Carping getting the word out to the media and grandmother Marianne Duffner reaching out to homeless agencies. Friends and neighbors are helping supply the recycled paper.
Bill Duffner, said helping others has direct benefits for his grandson as well.
'I think it's great business experience,' he said. 'And I think it's good he's thinking about people other than himself.'
Billy feels such passion for the project that he's gathering paperwork to apply for non-profit status.
He's also working on making sure his Heat4Homeless organization stays alive, possibly in high school service groups or non-profits with space for the brick-making equipment.
'I think the idea of this nonprofit is here to stay,' Billy said. 'This summer I'm going to work really hard on this to build up a stockpile.'
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NBC News
20 hours ago
- NBC News
Chaos amid starvation: Videos from Gaza show Palestinians struggling to get food at distribution sites
Click or tap to continue reading ⇨ by Marin Scott, Bryan Gallion and Tavleen Tarrant A new food distribution system debuted in the Gaza Strip on May 27 after an 11-week aid blockade Israel said was aimed to further pressure Hamas into releasing hostages — the longest blockade of humanitarian resources since the war started in October 2023. Distribution began while doctors warned that hunger was approaching starvation for many Palestinians. The operation is run by Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a Delaware-based nonprofit backed by the United States and Israel. Both countries said this arrangement would prevent Hamas from stealing aid after they made unsubstantiated claims of systematic theft by the militant group. For people in Gaza, the process of obtaining food at GHF sites has been chaotic, dangerous and sometimes deadly. Between May 27 and July 31, 'at least 1,373 Palestinians have been killed while seeking food,' according to a report from the United Nations Human Rights Office. Of the total, 859 people were killed "in the vicinity" of GHF sites and 514 others along the routes of food convoys, it said, adding that most of these killings were committed by the Israeli military. The Israeli government and GHF blame Hamas for the chaos and deaths. Videos shared on social media in the last two months, collected and verified by NBC News, depict the dangers that hungry Palestinians face when seeking desperately needed aid. This browser does not support the video element. This video, filmed on the opening day of distribution at the GHF site in Rafah, captures the chaos after Israeli soldiers fired live rounds into the air to disperse the massive crowds. Credit: Social Media GHF created four food distribution sites to control the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza, replacing an old system run by the United Nations that was organized across hundreds of sites. Of the four GHF sites, three are still operating. Israel continues to control almost every part of the aid distribution process, with its military inspecting all aid arriving at border employs contractors who provide security at each site. The organization says any fatal attacks on Palestinians have happened outside its distribution sites. 'To date, none of our aid workers have engaged in any lethal engagement,' a GHF spokesperson said. This browser does not support the video element. A June 20 video from the Khan Younis distribution site shows GHF-contracted security personnel in tactical gear pointing guns at Palestinians looking for aid.A GHF spokesperson said the video shows that a flash-bang grenade was used to 'get people to move.' Credit: Basem Mallouh, Instagram This browser does not support the video element. A second video at the same site shows security contractors in tactical gear deploying pepper spray at a crowd, as GHF employees wearing blue vests stand nearby.A GHF spokesperson said pepper spray, described as 'nonlethal,' has been used by the organization to 'disperse crowds, break up a fight or prevent a trampling incident.' Credit: TikTok This browser does not support the video element. Another video from June shows a man in tactical gear firing a canister into a crowd of asked about the video, a GHF spokesperson said the organization uses 'white smoke to disperse, not gas/tear gas,' and described it as 'totally harmless.' Credit: Social Media In interviews with NBC News' crew in Gaza, several Palestinians said they were scared for their lives as they attempted to obtain food for their families. Israel Defense Forces (IDF) 'opened fire on us randomly,' Mohammed Abu Deqqa said of his experience trying to collect food from GHF's site in Al-Shakoush, Rafah. 'There are so many dead and wounded, we were only trying to get food ... It was hell.' This browser does not support the video element. In a video from July 12, shots from Israeli forces are seen hitting the ground near a large group of Palestinians as they pack together about half a mile away from the GHF aid site in said the incident was "not at our site." The IDF said this incident is "under review." Credit: Social Media In a video from July 12, shots from Israeli forces are seen hitting the ground near a large group of Palestinians as they pack together about half a mile away from the GHF aid site in said the incident was "not at our site." The IDF said this incident is "under review." Credit: Social Media The Israeli military has acknowledged that its soldiers have fired warning shots or have fired at individuals who they claim appear to pose a threat or are in unauthorized areas. In a statement to NBC News, an IDF spokesperson said that as part of its operations along main routes to GHF distribution centers, the military conducts reviews aimed at 'improving the operational response in the area and minimizing possible friction' between Palestinians and IDF forces. This browser does not support the video element. On July 24, GHF advertised a 'women-only' distribution day on its social media channels. Credit: NBC News Crew On July 24, GHF advertised a 'women-only' distribution day on its social media channels. Credit: NBC News Crew This browser does not support the video element. In a video captured by NBC News, Najah Shaheen, a mother of six, said she walked more than 2 miles to a distribution point. The 58-year-old said that she has diabetes and that she hadn't eaten in days. Credit: NBC News Crew In a video captured by NBC News, Najah Shaheen, a mother of six, said she walked more than 2 miles to a distribution point. The 58-year-old said that she has diabetes and that she hadn't eaten in days. Credit: NBC News Crew Three women who had been seeking aid told NBC News that the crowd faced live bullets, tear gas and pepper spray as people tried to get food at the Khan Younis GHF site that Saqr, director of nursing at Nasser Hospital, said two women were killed while on their way to the distribution site. A GHF spokesperson said that the women-only day was 'very successful' and that there were 'no incidents' at the site itself. Israel announced Sunday it was implementing limited pauses in fighting to allow supplies to enter Gaza after international outrage over its aid restrictions. Experts and advocates told NBC News the hunger crisis in Gaza has reached a 'tipping point.' President Donald Trump's Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, and the U.S. ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, assessed a GHF distribution site during a rare visit to Gaza on Friday. Many Palestinians continue to risk their lives to avoid starvation while mourning loved ones they have lost in their desperate search for food.'I told him not to go. I said we would endure the hunger,' a grieving father, Khamis Abu Mustafa, said of his 23-year-old son, Ali, who died in June while trying to collect food from the Khan Younis GHF site for his family. 'But he couldn't bear to see his siblings starving. He went — and came back a martyr.' More from NBC News
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
How the gender education gap is impacting dating
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. More and more women are "marrying down" when it comes to education, said The Atlantic. Marriages had been moving in a "more egalitarian direction" since the mid-20th century, when more women began attending university and entering the job market. But now the trend of women "partnering up with their educational equals" seems to be reversing, with a growing number practicing "hypogamy" – wedding someone of a lower social class or education level. Too picky? Women now outnumber men in higher education in almost all developed countries. In the UK, more women were accepted into university than men for the first time in 1996, and that gap has only grown; in 2024, female students outnumbered male students by 28%, according to government figures. While women's educational advancement is a "cause for celebration", it's also causing "issues" when it comes to heterosexual relationships, said The Independent. There has been an increase in "assortative mating", where people want their potential partners to have the same education level as them, as well as having similar attitudes in areas like politics, personal habits and finances. A 2023 study from the US-based Institute for Family Studies found 45% of single women with a degree said their relationship status was due to an "inability to find someone who met their expectations", said the paper. In her book "Motherhood on Ice: the Mating Gap and Why Women Freeze their Eggs", Yale professor Marcia Inhorn said the women she spoke to were having trouble finding partners who fulfilled the "three 'E's: eligible, educated, equal". And it appears they're not just being "too picky". As part of the study, polling expert Daniel A. Cox surveyed more than 5,000 people, and found his interviews with the male participants "dispiriting"; many were "limited in their ability and willingness to be fully emotionally present and available". 'Romantic pessimism' Women's academic success, coupled with the "male breadwinner norm" that remains a lingering "cultural anchor", gives the "shrinking pool of more successful men tremendous power", said Sarah Bernstein in The New York Times. Social media is "rife with male fantasies", including "beautiful, submissive tradwives" embracing traditional gender roles. But while a small group of rich, successful men are "reaping the benefits", others find themselves struggling to compete in the dating market. "Enter the manosphere", a space filled with "romantic pessimism" and the idea that "modern women are not to be trusted". And women themselves are feeling "similarly despondent" about dating. In fact, according to a study by the Survey Center on American Life, 41% of single people in 2023 had "no interest in dating at all". It's "too soon" to know whether this "gulf in attitudes" among young people today will negatively impact the already "tumbling birth rates", said The Economist. But "early signs are discouraging". Policymakers must tackle the "underlying problems that are driving young men and women apart", starting with figuring out how to make education work for underperforming boys at school. It's not all bad, though. There is some evidence that beliefs are "evolving", said The Atlantic. Christine Schwartz, a sociology professor at the University of Wisconsin, analysed data from the World Values Survey and found that in the countries where hypogamy is more prevalent, people were less likely to agree with the statement "if a woman earns more money than her husband, it's almost certain to cause problems". And while hypogamous marriages used to be more likely than others to end in divorce, recent analyses of marriages in Europe and the US suggests this is "no longer the case". These trends don't necessarily prove a major shift is under way. "But they might offer a reason to be cautiously optimistic about society's ability to adjust to new realities." Solve the daily Crossword


Miami Herald
a day ago
- Miami Herald
China State Media Reveals New Nuclear-Armed Submarine
A Chinese sailor deployed aboard a nuclear-armed submarine vowed that his unit would fire missiles "without hesitation" upon receiving an order, according to a report by state media. The report by China Central Television also claimed this was the "first disclosure" of a new Chinese submarine conducting a long-distance mission in an undisclosed maritime location. Newsweek reached out to the Chinese Defense Ministry for comment via email. China possesses more than 370 naval vessels, making it the world's largest combat fleet by hull count, including six Type 094 nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines, each armed with 12 nuclear ballistic missiles, according to the Federation of American Scientists. All Type 094 submarines are homeported at Longpo Naval Base on Hainan Island in southern China, which borders the South China Sea, and represent China's "first credible sea-based nuclear deterrent," the Pentagon assessed in its report on Chinese military power. Ballistic missile submarines are the most survivable leg of China's nuclear triad, alongside land-based ballistic missiles and nuclear-capable bombers, because they are extremely difficult to detect while conducting patrols that maintain a constant at-sea deterrent presence. A Chinese submarine, unidentified in the report, was seen departing a naval base at an undisclosed location, according to footage aired by China Central Television on Thursday. Australia-based naval analyst Alex Luck told Newsweek the submarine is one of six Type 094 boats in service, suggesting the footage was likely taken at Longpo Naval Base. It remains unclear whether the submarine carried out its mission in the South China Sea. While the footage offered a rare glimpse inside the submarine and how sailors operate it, certain interior sections were blurred, likely for operational security reasons. It was not immediately clear whether the interior scenes were filmed while the submarine was at sea. "Today is a peaceful era, but tomorrow may mark the start of war. On the day real war begins, we will wait only for the order—and then launch this missile without hesitation," said Ma Xiaohui, a sailor assigned to an unidentified submarine unit. The Type 094 submarine can be armed with either JL-2 or JL-3 ballistic missiles, which have ranges of 4,488 miles and 6,214 miles, respectively. The JL-3 missile is capable of targeting portions of the U.S. mainland when launched from China's littoral waters. As part of Chinese President Xi Jinping's accelerated development of nuclear forces, China's next-generation nuclear-armed ballistic missile submarine, the Type 096, is expected to enter service in the late 2020s or early 2030s, according to the Pentagon's assessment report. In comparison, the United States currently operates a fleet of 14 Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines, each armed with up to 20 Trident II D5LE nuclear missiles. According to the Federation of American Scientists, this missile has an estimated range of 7,456 miles. The Pentagon, in its report on Chinese military power: "The [People's Republic of China]'s next-generation Type 096 [nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines] will reportedly be armed with follow-on longer range [submarine-launched ballistic missiles]." The Federation of American Scientists, in its report on Chinese nuclear weapons: "Whenever they are in the South China Sea, China's [nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines] typically appear to be accompanied by a protection detail, including surface warships and aircraft (and possibly attack submarines) capable of tracking adversarial submarines." It remains to be seen whether the Chinese military will disclose details of other nuclear forces in the coming days as it celebrates the 98th anniversary of its founding on Friday. Related Articles New Chinese Warship Debuts in Contested WatersMap Shows What Trump Tariff Rates Are For Each CountryAmerica Needs a Digital Dollar | OpinionIran Reacts to New US 'Assault' 2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.