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University of Denver Students Launch Free Bike Lending Library

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udenver-bike-path.jpgA student-led bike library opened Sept. 24 at the University of Denver offering high-tech bikes on loan for free, and a glimpse of the citywide bike sharing program that gets rolling next spring. The free DU lending library is open to all students, faculty and staff using the same bikes that will dot the city landscape in early 2010.

The bike library is part of Denver University’s (DU) sustainability efforts that incorporate conservation, recycling and innovative building design. Bikes will be available for free use with DU identification. The establishment of the bike library was led by the Undergraduate Student Government, which contributed and raised some $50,000.

“It’s really a perfect solution for a lot of students like me who don’t have a bike,” said student government senator Dillon Doyle. “I wouldn’t use a bicycle every day, but if I could just borrow one, I’d use one once a week to run errands or buy groceries.”

USDA to Fund Environmental Clean-up of Mississippi River

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miss-river-dam-us-int-dept.jpgAgriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced last week a new initiative to improve water quality and the overall health of the Mississippi River Basin funded by $320 million over the next four years for voluntary projects in watersheds locations in 12 key states.

“The Obama Administration is committed to cleaning up the entire Mississippi River Basin, a critical natural resource that provides drinking water for tens of millions of Americans,” said Vilsack.

The Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watersheds Initiative (MRBI) will help agricultural producers implement conservation and management practices that avoid or control fertilizer runoff that chokes marine life with its algae blooms and dearth of oxygen.

Lost Dog Gathers Clues to Find its Family (Video)

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rottweiler.jpg Over the last 20 years, the Love Me Tender animal rescue in central Tennessee has rounded up more than 1,000 abandoned dogs. And although most are timid and untrusting, one Rottweiler named Ella was notably different.

“I could just tell right away she was somebody’s baby. She just didn’t act like a stray dog to me,” said Kathy Wilkes-Myers, who found the dog a few months ago.

The dog’s demeanor convinced her there was more to the story. So she did some detective work, and what she found is a heart-wrenching tale of a car accident and unending loyalty. 

Watch the video below, or read it at CBS News

 

 

Salute to Operation Bigs: Mentoring Kids of Deployed Parents

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Photo by LaShawn Dobbs

operation-bigs-mentoring.jpg Operation Bigs pairs volunteers from Big Brothers Big Sisters with kids who have a parent deployed. The “Bigs” volunteer meets with the child after school to play games and sports and do some mentoring. In some cases it makes a big difference.

Operation Bigs runs at five elementary schools on the base at Camp Pendleton and is expanding into other parts of San Diego, thanks to funding from the Jack in the Box Foundation, T. Boone and Madeleine Pickens, and other supporters.

Video may take a moment to load…

Troops In Afghanistan Keep Nightmare At Bay

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afghan-girls-school.jpgThere is honest debate now about whether the United States should commit more troops to Afghanistan, or withdraw them. But I was part of the NPR team that covered the war in Afghanistan eight years ago. I get distressed to hear analysts and policymakers say the primary goal should be just to keep al-Qaida terrorists from using Afghanistan as a base.

I saw the kind of society the Taliban made in Afghanistan — a nightmare no people should live again. The Taliban outlawed news, art, music, theater, song, literature, dance, sport, comedy and any religion but theirs.Women could not work or attend school. They could not so much as walk outside without a male relative. We met women who said they had prepared to commit suicide, because they had no hope of change. 

(Read more, or listen, at WBUR.org)

How One Family Eliminated $106,000 of Debt

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victorian-home-cbs.jpgFrugality and hard work led to a debt-free lifestyle in five years for Russell and Kathy Hildebrandt of New Richmond, Wis., who successfully paid off $106,000 in credit card and personal debt.

Several steps were key to making the plan work. They eliminated discretionary spending. She began buying generic food and shopping at thrift stores for clothing purchases. They stopped exchanging Christmas and birthday gifts with each other and their relatives.

(Continue reading on MSNBC)

 

India’s Greenest and Cleanest Village Defies the Norm

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sweeping-sidewalk.jpgLarge crowds of visitors have been thronging to the village curious to find out why Mawlynnong has earned the reputation for being arguably the cleanest and greenest in India.

The streets are cleaned several times each day, plastic is completely banned and all waste disposal is environmentally friendly. Spurring the cleanliness is local initiative from the residents, all of whom can read and write. Unlike many parts of India, each house has a toilet.

(Continue reading w/photos at BBC)

Baby We Were Born to Run

springsteen-aarp.jpgBruce Springsteen celebrated his 60th birthday on Friday, and landed on the cover of AARP’s magazine.

“We put Bruce on the cover first and foremost because he was turning 60,” she said. “Like the rest of America, we found that to be inspiring. Looking at Bruce, he really personifies our message at AARP that attitude matters more than age.”

(Continue reading in NYTImes Health blog)

The World’s Building Sector Offers Vast and Cheap Energy Savings

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1stwisconsinbldg.jpgAcross rich and poor nations, the average cost of cutting a ton of carbon from buildings is only $25.00 US dollars, a new study says, and this energy efficiency investment pays for itself.

The worldwide building sector accounts for almost 40 percent of total greenhouse gas emissions, but it is easily the cheapest source of emissions cuts.

Turning a Bad News Diagnosis Into Good

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brandon-inge-with-cancer-boy.jpgEven though the cancer has spread throughout Noah’s body, and he is on methadone and twice-a-day steroids to lower the pain, his courage and joy and exuberance and perseverance are miracles to witness.

The boy spent as much time at the University of Michigan’s C.S. Mott’s Childrens Hospital as he did at home. On June 4th, during an autograph session at the hospital, Brandon Inge, 3rd baseman for the Detroit Tigers, signed a picture for Noah and that night, Noah saw Brandon on TV during a Tigers game, becoming an instant fan. Noah watched every Tigers game after that and one day after his fifth birthday, during a fundraising for Mott Children’s Hospital, Brandon presented him with a signed ball.

September is Pediatric Cancer Awareness Month. If you click on the C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital website, you can’t help but notice that “Cancer is the leading cause of death by disease among U.S. children between infancy and age 15.” 11,000 new cases of pediatric cancer are expected to be diagnosed each year.

Noah Scott Biorkman, a patient at Mott Children’s Hospital, was diagnosed with Stage IV Neuroblastoma in February 2007, a type of cancer that occurs in infants and young children.

He was 2 ½ years of age and after an aggressive regimen of chemotherapy, went into remission, but he relapsed last September.
Noah’s mother wrote on her www.carepages.com website that the scans showed that Noah “wasn’t going to make it.” She asked him what he would like to do. His answer was to see his favorite ballplayer again and ask him to hit a home run “just for me”, and to go to another game.

The hospital contacted Brandon’s wife, Shani, to tell her that Noah’s health was “rapidly deteriorating” and of Noah’s wish. When Brandon was told about Noah, he decided to come and visit him. In the afternoon before a Tigers home game, Brandon and Shani came to the Biorkmans’ house and stayed for over two hours.

“After Noah showed Brandon his room and his basement full of toys, they played,” Diana wrote. “Brandon signed a jersey for Noah and they exchanged friendship bracelets that Brandon is still wearing. Then, they built a pillow fort with every pillow in my house. Brandon sat in one end and Noah sat in the other. They hung out together, just the two of them” and Noah offered to share his superhero tattoos with Brandon and Shani’s two kids.

That night, Brandon hit a home run during his first at-bat. Noah’s mom wrote, “Noah jumped up and down and yelled—He did it for me! He did it for me! Then he heard his name and he gave the look of wonder and turned to my mom and said, ‘I never thought I would hear my name on TV.’”

In the moments after he homered, Brandon Inge broke down into tears in the Tigers dugout. “I lost it,” Brandon said. “I was crying. That’s never happened to me during a game before.”

The home run hit for Noah was not the first hit for an ailing child this year. On June 23, Inge visited Tommy Schomaker while he was recovering from heart-transplant surgery and that night, with “Tommy” written with a black marker on Inge’s arm, he hit a home run.

“Disney couldn’t have written a better script,” Tommy’s father admitted to an AP reporter. According to Mike Schomaker, “Kids were coming into the room with IVs, ‘Tommy, did you see your name? You’re on TV! You’re on TV!’”

Because of the time and money that the Inges donated to help fund a $750 million hospital for women and children, the University of Michigan hospital proclaimed September 2nd “Brandon and Shani Inge Day.”

Since the memorable home runs, Noah’s wishes continued to come true. He went to a few Tigers games, visited the Tigers clubhouse, gave 45 friendship bracelets to the entire Detroit baseball team, was featured with his mom and dad on ESPN, enjoyed a helicopter ride over Comerica Park before a game, and, perhaps best of all, Brandon presented to him the signed home run ball. Noah spent more time with Brandon and Shani at home, and was baptized a week before a golf outing in his honor.

Even though the cancer has spread throughout Noah’s body and he is on methadone and twice-a-day steroids to lower the pain, his courage and joy and exuberance and perseverance are miracles to witness.

Noah survived to make his Make-A-Wish golf outing on September 18th in Northville, Michigan. Although Brandon was in Minnesota with the Tigers that day, his wife, Shani, golfed with 103 others, to raise money for the Noah Scott Biorkman Foundation and Make-A-Wish.

Diana Biorkman, Noah’s mom, said at the golf outing that Noah understands his body is sick and that he will die and “become an angel.” Yet, she and her family know what a gift they’ve been given and what a miracle Noah’s life has been.

Because of heroes like the Inges, the doctors, and nurses at Mott Hospital, because of the courage of Noah’s parents and family and the support of friends, the tragedy of a little boy struck with terminal cancer has become an incredible lesson about giving and love and making wishes come true..

Arnie Goldman has been married for 24 years to wife Judy and they have three children. He is the president of a small wholesale distributor in Michigan and has written two books, Five Fathers and Outlive Me: Thirty Years of Poems and Writings. 

Fanged Frog, 162 Other New Species Found in Mekong

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rough-coated-frog-ralph-hendrix-wwf.jpgA gecko with orange eyes, a bird that would rather walk, and a fanged frog that eats birds are among 163 new species discovered last year in the Mekong River region of Southeast Asia, WWF announced this week.

In 2008 alone, scientists identified these and other rare and unique species — 100 plants, 28 fish, 18 reptiles, 14 amphibians, 2 mammals and a bird, the reluctant flyer Nonggang babbler.

“After millennia in hiding these species are now finally in the spotlight, and there are clearly more waiting to be discovered,” said Stuart Chapman, Director of the WWF Greater Mekong Program

1,000 new species from the jungles and rivers of the Mekong area have already been catalogued by WWF from 1997 to 2007.

Cybermentors: Web Mentors Hook Girls on Science

genetic-scientists-work.jpgEven though her older sisters are engineers, when it comes to questions concerning education Holliston Logan isn’t calling on her siblings – she emails her mentor.

The Canadian senior is a participant in Cybermentor www.cybermentor.ca, a web-based mentoring program that matches girls aged 11 to 18 with female scientists and engineers, and is designed to encourage young women to consider careers in those professions.

 

 

A World First: Vaccine Helps Prevent HIV Infection

vaccine-jars.jpg“For the first time, an experimental vaccine has prevented infection with the AIDS virus, a watershed event in the deadly epidemic and a surprising result.”

The good news: The vaccine cut the risk of becoming infected with HIV by more than 31 percent in the world’s largest AIDS vaccine trial of more than 16,000 volunteers in Thailand, researchers announced Thursday in Bangkok.

  (Read the AP story in MSNBC)

Good News on Carbon Emissions, But Can It Last?

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cars-driving-at-sunset.jpgGlobal greenhouse gas emissions are in sharp retreat . There’s nothing like a recession to help clear the air of toxins and drive down pump prices — but we all know it can’t last. Or can it?

A lasting shift in consumer behavior could be underway, say even the gloomier of environmental prognosticators, to form the basis of a more sustainable environment.

(Continue reading Reuters article on Canada.com)

New French Wine Barrels Save Oak Trees

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wine-barrel-making.jpgThe French wine industry is turning green. After developing organic wines, some in the business have now patented ecologically responsible wine barrels that conserve hundred year-old oaks. They require less of the noble oak tree to construct because they are double layer, with the oak only a couple millimeters thick. Also, they are more economical.

(Video may take a moment to load)

1st Co-ed University Opens in Saudi Arabia

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The first fully integrated co-ed university opened yesterday in Saudi Arabia. The school, which focuses, on sciences gives all students a full scholarship plus a stipend. So far, students from 61 countries have enrolled.

(Video may take a moment to load)

How to Clean Up a Compact Florescent Light Bulb

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cfbulb.jpgYou know the old joke … how many (fill in the blank) does it take to change a light bulb? All kidding aside, the real question is … how many people does it take to clean up a broken CFL.

Be extra diligent with the Compact Florescent Lamp (CFL) light bulbs. Yes, they use 75% less energy than the incandescent light bulb and come in all sizes and shapes now. But be cautioned, CFLs require special care in handling when inserting into the socket and then extreme careful removal when broken.

So – what to do if a CFL breaks? According to the federal agency, Energy Star, first and most important – do NOT brush it up and throw it in the trash. When a CFL breaks – it releases a small amount of mercury into the air – precautions and careful cleanup are essential for everyone’s health and well-being.

UCLA Scientists Make Paralyzed Rats Walk Again After Spinal Cord Injury

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lab-mouse-cc-flickr-be_khe.jpgUCLA researchers have discovered that a combination of drugs, electrical stimulation and regular exercise can enable paralyzed rats to walk and even run while supporting their full weight on a treadmill.
 
Published Sept. 20 in the online edition of the journal Nature Neuroscience, the findings suggest that the regeneration of severed nerve fibers is not required for paraplegic rats to learn to walk again. The research may hold implications for rehabilitation after human spinal cord injuries.
 
“Previous studies have tried to tap into this circuitry to help victims of spinal cord injury,” he added. “While other researchers have elicited similar leg movements in people with complete spinal injuries, they have not achieved full weight–bearing and sustained stepping as we have in our study.”

(Thanks to Andrew Norris for submitting the link – Read more below)

7-Year-old Autistic Girl Belts out National Anthem for Huge Crowds

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gina-sings-natl-anthem.jpg Doctors told parents of autistic child  that she may never learn to speak. But music unlocked the door, when, at age five, she heard the National Anthem.

She now opens major sporting events performing her pitch-perfect rendition of the song. Gina’s social skills and schoolwork have improved too.

Read the story at CBS News or watch the video below…