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Buy an Electric Vehicle at Best Buy, Plug it in at McDonalds

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mcds-car-recharging.jpgBest Buy will soon roll out electric vehicles they hope will zoom off the showroom floor, including the Brammo Enertia, an all-electric motorcycle that retails for just less than $12,000.

After exiting Best Buy with your green vehicle, stop by the McDonald’s in Cary, N.C. and plug in your electric vehicles at their new charging station. The fast food giant opens the new store with its EV charger, on July 14, reports the blog HybridCars.com.

(Read more on GreenBiz.com)

Taiwan, China, Exchange Historic Messages of Hope

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taipai-101.jpgThe presidents of Taiwan and China exchanged direct messages Monday for the first time since the two sides split 60 years ago – the latest sign of their warming relations.

Chinese President Hu Jintao congratulated Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou on his election Sunday. “I hope both our parties can continue to promote peaceful development in cross-strait relations, and help bolster mutual trust between the two sides in political affairs,” Hu’s telegram said. 

(Continue reading the AP Story)

Skyscraper, Taipai 101, free photo – GNU license

Bankruptcy Forsaken Adoptions Restored

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black-boy-jumping.jpgA Toronto-based mining company has donated $100,000 to keep an Ethiopian orphanage afloat, giving hope to Canadians in the process of adopting children living there. Many companies have offered donations to help would-be parents, left heartbroken when Imagine Adoption filed for bankruptcy July 13.

However, the large donation given by Yamana Gold Inc. should be enough to keep the Addis Ababa facility afloat. It currently houses 43 children already matched with potential Canadian parents.

(Continue reading in Toronto Star)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star 

 

 

Detroit Project is Giving $100 Dollars to 100 People Over 100 Days

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project-100.jpg Project 100 in Detroit is randomly distributing $100 dollars to 100 people over 100 days. Believing that even the smallest act of kindness can bring significant change, the founders of Project 100 want to make a positive impact by sparking a renewed sense of hope in the community.

There are no requirements or no strings attached except that recipients are asked to think about what they can do to make their community a better place, whether it’s volunteering for a community event, helping out a neighbor, or making a donation. Project 100 believes that one kind act will lead to another, creating a ripple effect for change.

One woman (photo, right) said she immediately wanted to give the money – or part of it – to someone else.

Watch below as the Project 100 surprises Brian, an off-duty police officer, with a 100 dollar bill. He says he wants to spend it on his friends.

At their website, you can learn more about the initiative, which is ongoing through September, and how you might become a pawn in their game of hope: www.whatisproject100.com. Project 100 is a non-profit organization as well as an educational resource on the subjects of volunteering and saving money.

Well-preserved Angel Mosaic Uncovered in Turkey (Video)

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mosaic-face-istanbul.jpg Workers doing restoration work to a former Byzantine cathedral in Istanbul uncovered a remarkably well-preserved mosaic of an angel’s face. The angelic image was likely covered in the 1400s when the cathedral was transformed into a mosque.

Watch the video below, or at Clip Syndicate… 

Bank of Canada says Recession Over, Growth Returning to Economy

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canada-button.gifThe Bank of Canada is declaring the recession essentially over, saying Canada’s economy will begin growing this summer and lead most of the industrialized world next year.

Driving growth will be sharper improvements in consumer spending and housing sales for this year, one paper reported. Other favourable economic indicators are increased consumer confidence and improved retail sales.

(Continue reading story by Canadian Press)

 

Ex-Fighters Build New Businesses Under UN Reintegration

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fisherman-ivorycoast-un.jpgFrom raising chickens and growing tomatoes to washing cars and renting out party equipment, combatants emerging from the civil war in the Ivory Coast are finding jobs in hundreds of new enterprises and projects under a pilot United Nations initiative that aims to reintegrate ex-fighters into their former communities.

The $4 million disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) program, which is being jointly run by the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Côte d’Ivoire and the UN Development Program, has helped between 3,000 and 4,000 ex-combatants since it began in August last year.

The initiative has been so successful that it should be introduced across all UN peacekeeping efforts, said the director of its West African operations. “We are recommending that $1 million be given to each peacekeeping operation… the extra money could come from the UN Peacebuilding Fund,” Y. J. Choi told the UN News agency.

Some of the former combatants in Côte d’Ivoire have never held jobs before, Mr. Choi said, but thanks to these so-called “microprojects” they now have the opportunity to operate a small business and try to expand it.

Chicken farms, a car wash, vegetable market gardens and an event rental business (tents, chairs and sound systems are hired out for public events and parties) are just some of the enterprises that have emerged under the program.

The projects are not funded indefinitely in the hope that they will eventually become self-sustaining, Mr. Choi explains, saying “you can’t be permanently dependent… This is a supplementary program. Our target is to help people build their own livelihoods that will keep going.”

Unlike traditional reintegration schemes, which give participants a small sum of money and a package of basic tools and equipment so they can resume life in their former communities, the pilot initiative focuses on giving jobs and helping ex-fighters to fund small businesses and short-term projects, deterring them from taking up arms again.

He notes that the initiative has been helped by the increasing security in Côte d’Ivoire over the past 18 months, which has allowed businesses to flourish and given ex-fighters a greater incentive to participate.

UNOCI and UNDP are currently analyzing the microprojects that have been supported so far to evaluate their success and determine whether they need further support. (UN News)
Photo credit: UN/Ky Chung

Purple Means Complaints Stop Here

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purple-bracelets-complaint-free.jpgIn the darkest hour of her life, real estate agent Arnie Renda made the soul-saving decision to stop complaining.

“My mother died, my husband died, the market was crashing,” Renda says of 2008, “and I was like Teflon. I let it roll off me.”

She’d read a little book, A Complaint Free World, written by a Missouri pastor whose sermon about the negativity of complaining became a worldwide phenomenon.

Pastor Will Bowen urged people to keep track of how much they complain by moving a little purple wristband from arm to arm each time they groused.

“Life is better without complaining in spite of everything that has happened to me,” says Renda. “I feel so good.” (Continue reading in Toronto Star)

Almost six million purple bracets have been distributed globally via the Complaint Free World website, where you can get 3 bracelets sent to you for free — more, if you represent a school, church, prison, drug rehab group or other organization that is taking the lesson of positivity to their wider audience.

(Thanks to Diana Jenner for earlier submitting this idea as a possible story)

Cats Provide the Perfect Answer to Combat Stress — by the Hour (Video)

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cat-destressing.jpg A new cafe concept is taking hold in Japan. Paying by the hour, stressed-out workers get a chance to play with friendly cats in a bid to unwind from the toils of everyday life in the big city.

Watch the AFP video below, or at Clip Syndicate… 

 

Porter Rescues Threatened Murals From JFK Airport

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mural-by-carybe.jpgAs a baggage porter at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, Darren Hoggard spent slow days over 30 years gazing at the scenes on the walls of the American Airlines terminal.

Unexpectedly he learned the paintings would be no more, slated for demolition in 2007 along with the rest of the terminal. (Above: the JFK mural, Rejoicing and Festival of the Americas, by Carybé)

The news hit Hoggard so hard, it showed on his face, and a passerby stopped to ask what was wrong. Coincidentally, the passerby, Beatrice Esteve, was familiar with the murals’ artist, who hailed from her native Brazil. She vowed to do whatever she could to help Hoggard.

(Continue reading the AP story at MSNBC)

Afghan School for Girls Succeeds Despite Lack of Walls and Books (with Video)

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afghan-girls-school.jpg This Afghanistan girls’ school successfully prepares students for University but without any roof, walls, library, or many books… until now.

Thanks to an American charity, A Little Help, this school in Badakhshan province now has an entire library from grades one through twelve, lab equipment to help teach Biology, Chemistry and Physics, and several huge tents to keep the students out of the rain and hot sun.

Badakhshan province has the highest number of girls attending Kabul University, in part due to the Naswani No 2. girls school in Feyzabad. Hundreds of girls and pre-schoolers study hard despite the lack of classrooms and teaching materials for everyone.

Watch the video below, from the YouTube- Good News Network channel (click to subscribe to the YouTube channel), or read the entire story at the bottom…

Wedding Party Boogies Down the Aisle (Video)

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dancing-wedding-aisle2.jpgIn a church in St. Paul, Minnesota this month, Kevin Heinz and Jill Peterson vowed not to have a boring wedding. Instead of a standard entrance walking down the aisle, they and their wedding party performed a choreographed dance sequence to the electro-pop song Forever, by Chris Brown.

The YouTube sensation below, has received 1.3 million views in five days and landed the couple on the Today Show. 

Congratulations to the bride and groom… 

India Court Releases $2.3 Billion for Forests

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aspen-trees-scott-catron-gnu.jpgThe Supreme court of India has released $2.3 billion of frozen funds to be used to boost forest density and wildlife habitats, the Ministry of Environment and Forests said.

The money would improve the tree cover on 14.8 million acres (60,000 sq km) of degraded forest land.

Increasing the number of trees on Earth is the best tool for reducing levels of carbon dioxide currently in the air, the main contributor to global warming.

(Continue reading in Reuters-India)

World’s First Zero-Emissions Hydrogen Power Plant Coming to New Mexico

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hydrogen-jetstreamwind.jpgEnergy technology company Jetstream Wind recently announced plans that it will develop the world’s first sustainable zero-emissions power plant. The plant will use power from renewable resources such as wind and solar power, which will then be converted into hydrogen and transferred back to the grid as available power, according to the New Mexico-based company.

(Continue reading in ODE magazine)

Autoworkers Transform Rust Belt Factory into Wind Power Assembly Line

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welding-fireworks.jpgInnovative backyard wind turbines are the result of years of Silicon Valley research, yet they are being manufactured in former auto plants by former auto workers, in the heart of the rust belt.

The old skills have been applied to new products, resuscitating a city in Michigan and establishing a model for job retraining in the 21st century.

Watch the video, or read more from ABC News and 20/20

Dow Breaks 9,000 for First Time in 6 Months After Home Sales Surge

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business-graphic-up.gifUS Stocks rose 2.1% to close at 9,069.29 today as bright reports on home sales and corporate earnings bolster beliefs that the recession is lifting.

The Dow Jones industrial average jumped above 9,000 today for the first time since early January as favorable home sales data combined with another round of encouraging earnings reports to boost optimism about the economy.

Investors were buoyed by news that sales of previously owned homes rose 3.6% in June — more than expected. (Read more in LA Times)

US Restores Texas Wetlands Out of Toxic Stew

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wetlands-portarthur.jpgMore than 2,500 acres of coastal wetlands have been restored and enhanced in Port Arthur, Texas, as a result of a cooperative agreement between Chevron, the polluter, and federal and state natural resource agencies. The clean-up efforts not only provide beneficial habitats for the fish and wildlife of the area, but also will expand outdoor recreation areas for the public.

Chevron Corporation was forced to restore the habitats after toxic releases from its refinery operations decades ago. They cooperated with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, and the Texas General Land Office to fund the 4 square miles (1000 hectares) of restoration.

Healthy coastal wetlands are particularly valuable in providing a buffer as tropical storms and hurricanes move onshore.

U.S. Solar Market has Improved Markedly in Six Weeks

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solar-array.jpgSolar panel makers have suffered this year from a falloff in demand due to a lack of available financing for projects but the U.S. market for solar power has improved dramatically in the last six weeks, says the head of solar panel maker Yingli Green Energy.

“Increasingly attractive returns on solar projects have attracted more debt financing from banks in recent weeks, while the Obama administration earlier this month unveiled guidelines that will allow companies to apply for $3 billion in government grants for renewable energy projects.”

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He also said that residential sales of solar panels have remained “rather robust” throughout the economic downturn.  (Continue reading in Reuters)

Venice’s First Female Gondolier Pushes off into History

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gondoliere.jpgAs a little girl in Venice, Giorgia Boscolo was forever bugging her father to let her ride with him in his gondola. While her sisters played with dolls, she would beg him for a turn with the oar.

Now, the 23-year-old mother of two calmly took her place in one of Venice’s storied gondolas and gently steered the sleek black boat straight into the annals of history.

(Continue reading in the L.A. Times)

(Photo: Venice gondolier, GNU free license) 

First Chinese-American Woman Enters Congress

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cong-judy-chu.jpgCalifornia Democrat Judy Chu became the first Chinese-American woman elected to the U.S. Congress, winning a largely Hispanic district with 61 percent of the vote in a special election to replace Hilda Solis who was appointed as Labor Secretary.

In an audio interview with NPR, the newly-minted Congresswoman talked about her journey from school board member to Capitol Hill and winning a district of majority Hispanic voters in the 32nd Congressional District of California. (Listen here)