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First Double Arm Transplant Recipient Regains Mobility

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double-transplant.jpgThe recipient of the world’s first complete double arm transplant scratched his head and back and beamed at his doctors Wednesday, saying he was on the path to independence a year after the pioneering operation.

Farmer Karl Merk lost his arms just below the shoulder in a 2002 combine harvester accident.

(Continue reading at Toronto Star)

Kids Banned From Pool Get Disney Trip from Tyler Perry

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disney-castle.jpgHollywood actor and producer Tyler Perry was so disturbed after hearing that 65 Pennsylvania children were refused pool privileges at a swim club that he decided to treat them all to a Disney World vacation.

“He wanted to do something nice for them and let them know that for every negative experience, there are people out there who want them to succeed regardless of the color of their skin,” said Keleigh Thomas, Perry’s publicist.

Mr. Perry is paying for a 3-day holiday in Florida for all the kids from the day care center near Philadelphia, including all transportation, hotel, admissions and food costs.

(Read more in CNN.com)

Dramatic Drop in UK Deaths from Most Common Cancers

Dr. Eliaz uses citrus pectin to help stage-4 cancer patients

dr-eliaz.jpgThe death toll from three of the UK’s most common cancers has dropped to its lowest level in almost 40 years, according to new figures released by Cancer Research UK this month.

Mortality rates for breast, bowel, and male lung cancer are at their lowest since 1971.

The latest figures from 2007 showed breast cancer deaths plummeting 36 percent since their peak in 1989.

From a high in 1992, bowel cancer deaths dropped 31 percent.

As more people have given up smoking, the number of men dying each year from lung cancer since 1979 has dropped dramatically to 19,637 deaths in 2007 – an improvement in mortality rates of 53 percent.

Samsung to Invest $4.3 Billion to Become Green Leader

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samsung_logo.jpg The world’s largest chipmaker will invest $4.3 billion in R&D and facilities development to make the South Korean company a leading eco-friendly company by 2013.

More than half the investment will be spent to develop products which cause less damage to the environment, and the remainder on energy-saving technologies and the environmental improvement of manufacturing facilities, Samsung Electronics said in a statement.

Watch the video below, or read the story from Reuters.  

Defying Slump, 13 States Insure More Children

nurse photo by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

health-care-robert-wood-johnson.jpgDespite budgets ravaged by the recession, at least 13 states have invested millions of dollars this year to cover 250,000 more children with subsidized government health insurance.

The expansions have come in the five months since Congress and President Obama used the reauthorization of the Children’s Health Insurance Program to vastly increase its funding and encourage states to increase enrollment. The federal government covers the vast majority of the cost.

(Continue reading in the New York Times

Indian Saint Tours North America Harnessing Power of Hugs

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amma-hugging-org.jpgTrue bliss is on tour.

Get a hug from spiritual leader Amma – one of more than 26 million she’s given throughout her adult life – and, according to her followers, it has the power to change your life.

Amma’s reach is unquestionable. Known as South India’s “hugging saint,” she has raised millions, having pledged $1 million to the Bush-Clinton Katrina Fund and another $46 million to victims of the 2004 tsunami. The hugs are free, and all in a day’s work. 

“It’s an expression of my love for people,” says Amma through her Swami interpreter at one of her tour appearances in a Toronto hotel.

(Toronto Star has the story)

Photo courtesy of Amma.org 

Hero Brothers Pulled Boy, 4, Out of Burning SUV

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angel_of_lights.jpgFirefighting brothers John and Joel Rechlitz arrived on the scene within minutes of the accident which flipped the SUV on its side. A group of good Samaritans were already at work, struggling to free the family from the blazing vehicle — but it took guts and a combined 29 years of firefighting experience to save the life of the 4-year-old boy trapped inside by his car seat.

They took turns trying to wrest the child free from his seat restraint, both burning their hands badly in the process. Another quick-thinking neighbor had a garden hose at the ready to douse the boy in cold water to stop the burning.

He is in critical condition in an area hospital.

“It just shows the true spirit of this city,” Milwaukee Police Lt. Mark Wroblewsk said. “Everybody’s willing to help.”

(Continue reading and see the brothers at NBC’s Today)

Photo courtesy of John Stone, eyeclectic.net 

UN Gives Technological Boost to 500,000 Albanian School Students

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albanian-students-undp.jpgAlmost half a million Albanian students now have access to modern computer laboratories, high-speed Internet and training in information technology skills thanks to a new United Nations-backed initiative aimed at improving their employment prospects.

As a result of the “e-School” program, some 379 high schools and 800 elementary schools across Albania have been equipped with up-to-date computer technology, benefiting some 450,000 students and 25,000 teachers. (UNDP Administrator Kemal Dervis greets Albanian students, UNDP photo)

Paris Gets its Own Beach for Summer

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beach-in-paris.jpg For Parisians who cannot make it to the beach, the city is bringing the beach to them. For the eighth year in a row, “Paris Plage” (Paris Beach) has imported sandy shores, chaise longues and a decidedly more relaxed feel to the banks of the Seine river.

Live tall palm trees wave in the breeze, taken out of storage for their eighth year of service.

Watch the AFP video below, or at Clip Syndicate

 

Dog Licks Woman Helping her Find Brain Aneurysm

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maltese-poodle.jpgA growing body of scientific evidence suggests that dogs and cats can sniff out cancer. What about blood clots?

When a Maltese poodle began furiously licking Mary Phillips’ right temple as though it had been smeared with bacon grease, it was a clear sign to the hospice nurse that her headache was serious.

The unlikely gesture, Phillips said, convinced her to go to the emergency room where doctors discovered a brain aneurysm the size of a walnut.

She’s been a hospice nurse for 14 years and has seen animals behave in peculiar ways as death drew near, she said.

(Read the full story in the St. Louis Post Dispatch)

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READ RELATED Good News Network Stories:

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Dogs and Cats Can Sniff Out Cancer 

You Don’t Look a Day Over 102

elderly-couple-w-apples.jpgIt’s starting to get crowded in the 100-year-olds’ club. The number of centenarians has jumped from a few thousand in 1950 to more than 340,000 worldwide today. Their numbers are projected to grow at more than 20 times the rates of the total population by 2050, making them the fastest growing age segment.

Demographers attribute booming long-livers to decades of medical advances and improved diets, which have reduced heart disease and stroke.

(Continue reading in the Toronto Star

Photo courtesy of Sun Star 

Electric Cars Poised to Give Auto Industry a Jolt

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maya-elec-altcar.jpgIn the next year or so, after only a century or so of trying, the electric car may break free of the lunatic fringe and become a mainstream transportation option for everyday drivers.

The next step forward for electric cars will come on Aug. 2, when Nissan is expected to unveil the first of three electric models in three vehicle segments that the automaker will reportedly sell en masse by 2013 in the United States, Japan and Europe.

In fact, fanatics (aka “early adopters”) have been gutting regular car cars and packing them with a thousand pounds of golf cart batteries for years. But very soon it will be possible for drivers other than those who already have a home-brewed solar array atop their home to have a chance to whir quietly to work using household electric current for propulsion. (Photo, Canadian electic vehicle, the Maya 300)

Dog Wet Nurse Saves Panda Cubs in China (Link fixed)

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2-legged-dog.jpgTwo red panda cubs abandoned by their mother shortly after birth at a north China zoo are now healthy and content thanks to the milk and care given by a dog that was brought in from a nearby farm, zoo workers said Thursday. The dog had given birth three days before the mother panda.

(Read the story and see the cute photo at LA Times)

Bright Spots in the Economy This Week

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business-graphic-up.gifHighlight of some of the bright spots in the world’s economies:

Stocks are up around the world as China and US economies rebound and American jobless claims fall

Asian stocks jumped Thursday after China’s brisk economic growth quickened and U.S. companies posted stronger-than-expected quarterly results, boosting faith in a global recovery. European stock markets closed higher on Thursday as Wall Street saw three straight days of gains after better than expected U.S. jobless claims data fed into the prevailing view of an imminent U.S. economic recovery. New applications for unemployment insurance plunged by a seasonally adjusted 47,000, surprising experts who expected a surge of jobless claims. (Read more from AP)

sold_sign.jpgU.S. Housing Starts, Permits Jump in June

New U.S. housing starts and permits jumped in June, propelled by a rise in ground-breaking for single-family homes and suggesting the battered housing sector was beginning to stabilize, a government report showed on Friday. Housing starts unexpectedly climbed 3.6 percent in June, Commerce Department data showed.  (Contine Reading in Reuters)

The Worst of US Credit Crisis is Over, says Expert 

The worst of the US credit crisis is over, and high-yield bonds are poised for modest gains in the second half of 2009, according to a veteran high-yield bond analyst. ‘Certainly what the market is saying is that we are well past the worst of the credit crisis,’ Martin Fridson, chief executive officer of Fridson Investment Advisors in New York told Reuters on Thursday. (Continue reading in Reuters)

Canadian Conference Board says Slump All but Over 

Canada’s painful recession appears close to an end after the economy received two key votes of confidence Monday suggesting the turnaround is just around the corner: A summer survey of businesses revealed an upbeat mood among Canada’s leading executives, with 39 percent planning to start hiring in the upcoming 12 months. The Conference Board of Canada also predicted the recession would finally end this summer.

In a related development, home sales are up in June, with the largest markets of Toronto and Vancouver posting strong gains. (Continue reading in the Canadian Press)

My Favorite Summer Recipe: Cold Oriental Peanut Chicken Salad

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chicken-salad-something-sweet-by-karen.jpgI want to share my favorite summer recipe for lunches or picnics: Oriental Peanut Chicken Salad.

In this dish, chicken, red peppers, asparagus and scallions are caressed by a peanut dressing with terrific Asian ginger zing, a much simplified version of the Ina Garten recipe, Chinese Chicken Salad, featured in the book, Barefoot Contessa Parties.

Ingredients for 12 servings (party size)

– 8 split chicken breasts (bone-in, skin-on)
**or substitute boneless chicken, boiled until just cooked, then, cooled
– 1 pound asparagus, ends removed, and cut in 2 1/2 ” diagonals
– 2 red bell peppers seeded and thinly sliced in 3″ strips
– 4 to 6 scallions (white and green parts), sliced diagonally (save some for the top)

Saying Goodbye to Walter Cronkite: A Video Retrospective

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walter-cronkite.jpgWalter Cronkite, once called the “most trusted man in America” has died at the age of 92.

As a journalist he covered all the major events of his lifetime; landing with the Allied troops on the beaches at Normandy on D Day; speechless with amazement, like every American, when a man first landed on the moon; telling the nation the news that President John F. Kennedy had been shot dead.

He called himself a liberal, saying, “I define liberal as a person who is not doctrinaire. That is a dictionary definition of liberal…open to change, constantly, not committed to any particular creed or doctrine, or whatnot, and in that respect I think that news people should be liberal.”

The famed CBS news anchor died at his home in New York after a long illness with his family by his side.

These videos look back at his career, and also feature thoughts from his admirers as well as his own thoughts about the news business and his life…

100% of Onion Waste Powers Largest Factory

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onion-production-line.jpgThe largest onion processor in the nation began this week to convert 100 percent of its onion waste — 300,000 pounds per day — into ultra-clean electrical energy to power its entire factory, reducing its greenhouse-gas emissions by up to 30,000 tons per year.

By extracting the juice out of onion waste and letting it ferment, Gills Onions creates biogas — enough to completely power its factory, the equivalent of 460 homes —  saving the company $700,000 in annual electricity costs. It saves another $400,000 in shipping costs which used to be used to carry away the onion waste.

The company’s onion juice-fueled Advanced Energy Recovery System debuted Thursday at its Oxnard, Calif., headquarters. After extracting the juice from onion waste, it is allowed to ferment in a special processing system. The methane gas produced is sent to fuel cells which create heat and water and a tiny amount of CO2. The little bit of pulp left over is trucked out to California’s central valley and fed to cows, completing the virtual zero-waste process.

Great Lakes Fish Stocks and Water Levels on the Mend

Lake Huron

lake-huron.jpgGreat Lakes water levels are rebounding after a decade-long slump that hammered the maritime industry.

The three biggest lakes — Superior, Huron and Michigan — have risen steadily since fall 2007, when for a couple of months Superior’s levels were lowest on record and the others nearly so. Erie, shallowest of the lakes, actually exceeded its long-term average in June... (Continue reading in Detroit Free Press)

And, though chemical toxins remain in the Great Lakes, Lake Huron fish are less contaminated, says a new report. In 36 categories of fish for Lake Huron, 11 became safer to eat over the last four-years.

Lake Huron had the greatest improvement of any of the Great Lakes. (Read more in Canada’s Observer)

Finally, king salmon seem to be back on the rise in Lake Michigan. The anecdotal evidence from Lake Michigan’s charter captains, according to a Detroit Free-Press column, seems to support a recovery of the king salmon (also known as chinook salmon) over the past several years, likely due to a rebound of their forage base, or food supply.

Thanks to GNN supporter Gisele up in Canada for submitting the link!

 

Kindness Sticky Notes are Contagious for High School Class

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sticky-note-of-kindness.jpgKatherine Cornthwaite’s Grade 10 class went silent when she read aloud a small story about a garbage collector’s kindness, from the newspaper.

Her class’s focus on the story prompted a 20-minute discussion about acts of kindness. “I thought,`I can’t leave this,'” she says.

She passed out red, yellow and green blank sticky notes and asked them to jot down their own kindnesses. “I told them if they filled my bulletin board, I’d give them a pizza party.”

Last month, she anted up six pizzas and a student in the class provided the soft drinks.

(Read the story in the Toronto Star)

Calif. Teen Arrives Home Youngest Person to Sail Solo Around World

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sail-boat-silouette-intrepid.jpgMore people have gone into space than have sailed solo around the world. But the obvious maritime dangers didn’t stop 16 year-old Zac Sunderland from reaching for his dream. He set off from California 13 months ago in his 36-foot sloop, Intrepid, before he even had a license to drive.

He met storms, maybe pirates, and barely slept, but today the homeschooler has achieved his goal – one that can never be taken away. He became the first person under the age of 18 to sail solo-circumnavigating around the globe.

Watch the video below, and read the extensive feature story in the LA Times

Visit his website, where you can buy DVDs documenting his adventure.