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Bamboo School is Earthquake and Hurricane Safe

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bamboo-bldg.jpgTraditional brick school facades could become a thing of the past as educational institutions aim for sustainability. Take, for example, the first U.S. school building constructed entirely of sustainable bamboo:

The 1,200 square foot building in Maui, Hawaii, uses bamboo that has twice the compression strength of concrete and a higher strength-to-weight ratio than steel. That means it’s an ideal material for hurricane and earthquake-prone areas.

In 1991, 20 bamboo houses built for the National Bamboo Foundation in Costa Rica survived a 7.5 Richter scale earthquake, and Bamboo Living homes held up against three Cook Islands hurricanes in 2005 with winds up to 175 MPH. 

(Continue reading Ariel Schwartz blog at Fast Company)

Encouraging Economic Data Overshadows GM Bankruptcy Filing

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money.gifUS stocks rose sharply Monday to hit seven-month highs as investors took the General Motors bankruptcy filing in their stride and focused on encouraging economic data.

Stocks were further boosted by better than expected US manufacturing data suggesting the economy was bottoming out. Separate data showed that the income of Americans increased in April.

(Continue reading in Financial Times)

Dog Jumps at Chance to Be Mom to Orphaned Kittens

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dog-nurses-kittnes.jpg It was a sad day when Colleen and Robert’s 1-year-old black cat, Velvet, was killed by a car near their farm house and left behind four orphaned kittens. But a faithful friend, an Australian Shepherd named Lakota, stepped in and made it her duty to help them. 

(Rest of the story from MSNBC)

Bride Helps Save Neighbors From Burning Home

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bride.gifGeorgette Fogarty-Clemons was heading home from her wedding Sunday evening.

That’s when she spotted smoke from the side of her neighbor’s house in Bridgeport.

Still in her wedding gown and high heels, she jumped out of the car and pounded on the door.

“We have no way of knowing what would have happened had she not come to the door,” said Susan Schneiderman, who owns the house that caught fire.

Rest of the story from Daily Local

Brain Surgery Activates Hidden Art Genius

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alan-brown-art-surgery.jpgWhen window salesman Alan Brown, 49, emerged from a gruelling 16-hour operation following his stroke, he found he had become a reborn ‘Michelangelo’ and was able to paint and draw with incredible detail.

Mr Brown, who freely admits that before he went under the knife he could barely draw a stick man, is poised to complete a fine arts degree and plans to open a gallery displaying his works.

(Continue Reading in the Daily Mail)

World’s Most Energy Efficient Skyscraper Under Construction

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pearl-river-tower-china.jpgOne of the world’s tallest buildings under construction in China — the Pearl River Tower — is being billed as the most energy efficient superskyscraper ever built.

With wind turbines, solar panels, ­sun-shields, smart lighting, water-cooled ceilings and state-of-the-art insulation, the 310-metre tower is designed to use half the energy of most buildings of its size and set a new global benchmark for self-sufficiency among the planet’s high rises.

(Continue reading in The Guardian)

US State Mows with Goats to Go Gently on Environment

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irish_goat.jpgOfficials in Maryland have come up with an innovative, cost-saving way to protect the environment: they use goats to mow the grass.

The State Highway Administration came up with the novel idea while building an 85-million-dollar road bypass near the town of Hampstead, northwest of Baltimore, after it found that the construction site was home to bog turtles, the smallest turtle in the United States and a threatened species.

(Continue reading AFP article)

Positive Psychology, Person-Centered Therapy, and Happiness

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Mental Health Minute: A New Column By Cristina Frick… This new Monday Morning weekly column will showcase recent news developments and topics in the area of mental health from a positive and inspirational perspective as well as provide information that can help those who may be struggling with mental health issues.

I would like to dedicate this column to my wonderful, kind, and supportive father, who was a Humanistic psychologist and with whom I was very close. He died when I was fifteen, but I know he is looking down on me from Heaven and is very proud.

Tomato Pill Beats Heart Disease says Study

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tomatoes-cherry.jpgScientists say a natural supplement made from tomatoes, taken daily, can stave off heart disease and strokes.

The tomato pill contains an active ingredient from the Mediterranean diet – lycopene – that blocks “bad” LDL cholesterol that can clog the arteries.

Preliminary trials involving around 150 people with heart disease indicate that the pill can reduce the oxidation of harmful fats in the blood to almost zero within eight weeks.

(Continue reading at BBC)

Boy Hears Back From Heaven After Writing Letter

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balloon-in-sky-by-incurable-hippie.jpgThere may or may not be a God, but there certainly are good people in the world.

Bailey, 11, tied a letter to God to a helium balloon and sent it flying into the sky, asking what it was like in heaven and whether miracles actually happened.

While God never replied, a Brampton criminal lawyer did, and their unlikely paths have created an experience neither will forget.

(Continue reading in the Toronto Star)

Photo courtesy of incurable hippie on flickr 

Lay-offs Stopped as Co-Workers Rally to Save Jobs

photo by Sun Star

joy-jumper.jpg The hospital needed a miracle as it faced a $20 million deficit. It looked like 600 layoffs were inevitable. And most of those would be the lowest-paid employees, people who needed their jobs the most. But when asked, all 6,300 employees were willing to pitch in to save the jobs of their co-workers. 

The 13 department heads took pay cuts that totaled $350,000. And doctors took out their checkbooks: The checks came in, some for $500, some $10,000 or $15,000. 401-K matching funds were turned down.

Now most of the cooks, janitors and cashiers have been rescued, thanks to the compassionate hospital CEO who wanted to do the right thing and the workers who agreed.

GNN reported months ago on this story, but this week, CBS news produced a follow-up with the latest news on Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. 

Read the story at CBS News, or watch the video below…
(Reload the page if video doesn’t play)

 


(Photo, above, courtesy of Sun Star)

Good News Network on 2009 Rolling Stone HOT List!

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Now we know we’re HOT. . . The Good News Network made Rolling Stone magazine’s Hot List for 2009!

Listing their HOT INTERNET picks on page 89, only two websites are mentioned, with the Good News Network headlined as HOT WISHFUL THINKING.

“Economic meltdown, Shmeconomic shmeltdown,” is how the short article begins.

“People want good news now more than ever,” says GNN founder Geri Weis-Corbley, who says the site got its biggest traffic spike since 9/11 the day after Lehman Brothers tanked.

The reporter who interviewed me said this issue is always a top seller on news stands, and with Lady GaGa on the cover, this year should be no different.

I hope to use this HOT LIST award to springboard into landing a spot on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart, and eventually, the Ellen show (which I believe just went on summer break).

 

Red Wings Give Detroit Reason to Cheer (Video)

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playoff-cheering-detroit-hockey.jpg Detroit may be hit hard by the economic downturn and the troubled auto industry, but the Red Wings are giving the city a lift as they soar to the the Stanley Cup hockey finals and a win in game one last night.

Hear what fans are saying as they packed the house Saturday for the opening game. 

Video below may take a moment to load… 

Yusuf Islam’s Songwriting Journey Leads to Musical Called Moonshadow

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The musician former known as Cat Stevens talks about his new album ‘Roadsinger,’ which came about because of a musical he’s been working on for six years, called, Moonshadow.

Yusuf Islam says when he picked up a guitar after so many years, it was magical.

Video below may take a moment to load…

Mazda Extends Range With Hydrogen Hybrid

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premacy-hydrogen-re-hybrid-1.jpgMazda is still pushing forward with its hydrogen dreams by delivering the first of its Premacy Hydrogen Rotary Engine Hybrids.

The new Premacy (a model Americans know as the Mazda5) has twice the range, running on both hydrogen and gasoline, making it a much more viable vehicle, as a person too far from a hydrogen refilling station can operate on petrol for the time being, solving range anxiety problems.

(Continue reading at Gas 2.0)

Helicopter Pilot Flies After Burglar

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helicopter.jpgEnglish businessman Jeremy Taylor had just lifted off from his timber yard in his helicopter when he spotted a suspicious white van. He quickly figured out that he was being burglarized. Noticing the helicopter, the van sped off but Taylor followed him — down roads and into town.

Taylor said, “I was determined to catch him because I have had break-ins before, and it annoys me that people are prepared to break into other people’s property.”

(Read the rest of the story at Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association)

Stem Cell-Coated Contact Lens Restores Vision

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contact-lens-eye.jpgA team from the University of New South Wales in Sydney has harnessed the power of stem cells to improve the loss of vision caused by corneal disease.

They removed small samples of stem cells from the eyes of two men and a woman with corneal disease and grew them on a contact lens.

The groundbreaking operation brought significant improvements in vision within a matter of weeks. 

(Read more at the Daily Mail) 

Netherlands to Close Prisons for Lack of Criminals

Photo by Sun Star

sunflower.jpgThe Netherlands is closing eight prisons due to a decline in crime that has left many cells empty. The Dutch ministry’s research department expects the decline to continue.

(Read more in the NRC Handelsblad)

Now, I wonder if other countries can’t figure out how this happened and try to replicate it…

(photo courtesy of Sun Star)

US Unveils $4bn Plan to Upgrade Public Housing With Green Jobs Project

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housing-project.jpgThe Obama administration unveiled a $4bn plan to upgrade public housing for low-income Americans, as part of an ambitious green job-creation project. 

The renovation program will replace windows, insulation and even light bulbs in aging and neglected housing stock.

The labor secretary, Hilda Solis, will also announce $500m to train up workers for the new jobs. Of those funds, $50m will be directed to regions that have been hardest hit by the recession – such as the rustbelt state of Michigan where the unemployment rate is now 12%

(Continue reading at UK’s Guardian)

Community Foundation Giving Increased 6.7 Percent Despite Economy

Even in the face of a worsening economy, the nation’s 717 community foundations raised their giving by an estimated 6.7 percent in 2008 to a record $4.6 billion, and outpaced corporate foundation funding for the first time, according to Key Facts on Community Foundations, a May 2009 report from the Foundation Center.