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Officer Honored for Buying Shoplifted Sandwiches for Homeless Man

A New Hampshire Police Officer, Jeffrey Wholley, responded to a shoplifting complaint at a convenience store to find a 32-year-old man with four sandwiches in his coat valued at $9.16. The man admitted he was trying to steal the sandwiches but said he did so because he was homeless and hungry.

After consulting with his sergeant, as well as the Laconia Cumberland Farms store which issued the call, Wholley decided to refrain from prosecuting the man. He then purchased the sandwiches for the man so he would have something to eat.

Wholley received a letter of commendation from his boss and Cumberland Farms followed up this week with a donation of $1,000 in Wholley’s honor to the Laconia Police Relief Fund and $2,500 to the New Hampshire Food Bank.

(READ the report in the Convenience Store News)

Laid off? Start a Business

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key.jpgThe midst of a nasty recession may seem like the worst time to start your own business. But history shows plenty of corporate legends, including Microsoft, Genentech and Southwest Airlines, were founded during economic downturns.

And while the credit crunch is making it harder for those without severance or savings to strike out on their own, the recently passed economic stimulus legislation includes a number of measures to loosen the financing logjam.

So if you are laid-off, consider starting a business.

(Read the story in Fidelity.com)

Captain “Sully” Sullenberger Says People So Ready for Good News

I realize how this event (the “Miracle on the Hudson”) had touched people’s lives, how ready they were for good news, how much they wanted to feel hopeful again. We’ve had a worldwide economic downturn, and people are confused, fearful and just so ready for good news. They want to feel reassured that all the things we value, all our ideals, still exist. – Captain “Sully” Sullenberger

2 Ex-Beatles Encouraging Troubled Kids to Meditate

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paul-mccartney-website.jpgMore than 40 years after they traveled to India to study transcendental meditation, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr will reunite in New York City for a benefit concert that will help fund the teaching of meditation for at-risk kids.

Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr will perform at the David Lynch Foundation’s benefit concert, called “Change Begins Within,” at Radio City Music Hall in New York on Saturday, April 4th, 7:30 p.m. Featured artists include Sheryl Crow, Donovan, Eddie Vedder, Ben Harper, Moby, Paul Horn, Bettye LaVette, and Jim James.

Tickets just went on sale at 11 a.m. through www.ticketmaster.com, or by calling 866-858-0008.

Change Begins Within will raise funds to teach one million at-risk children to meditate—giving them life-long tools to overcome stress and violence and promote peace and success in their lives.

Cruise Line Program ‘Ship to Shelter’ Donates Items Once Discarded

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cruise-ship-holland-air.jpg Until recently thousands of shampoo bottles and soaps, used or unused, from Holland Cruise ships all went one place: landfills. But now their Ship to Shelter program found a use for the once discarded items. They are now collected, separated into bins and brought through Customs at the San Diego Port to be distributed to homeless shelters. (Read the full story at CNN)

Thanks to Harriot for the story tip! 

East Bay Workers Get Jobs they Prayed For (Video)

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mi-pueblo-employee.jpg A Pittsburgh area food store has hired more than 200 workers and is helping the community during tough economic times.

Opening March 14 in East Bay, the Mi Pueblo Food Center will pump more than a million dollars in sales revenue back into the area.

Watch the video below, or click to visit their NBCBayArea.com.

In Egypt, a Village Boasts the Nation’s First Female Mayor

Photo by Sun Star

3-woman-chanting.jpgA single woman of 53 wearing faded bluejeans and a pink blouse, with her late father’s spirit and wisdom, is Egypt’s first woman to hold the office of mayor. Eva Habil Kyrolos knows she is part of history and wears the distinction lightly as she tends to law and order and social matters in Komboha, the village her great-great-grandfather was granted in the 19th century.
(Read about her in the LA Times)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star 

AIDS: Microbicide Gel ‘Highly Encouraging’ in Lab Tests

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stethoscope.jpg The dogged search for a vaginal gel to thwart the AIDS virus earned some good news on Wednesday as scientists announced that a cheap, commonly-used compound shielded monkeys from a lethal cousin of HIV.

They cautioned that a long road lies ahead before the microbicide can be verified as safe and effective for humans but hailed the outcome as a tremendous boost. (Read full report from AFP via Yahoo )

Optimists Live Longer and Healthier Lives Says New Study

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elderly-banana-smiles.jpgOptimists live longer, healthier lives than pessimists, US researchers said on Thursday. In a Women’s Health Initiative study initiated by the University of Pittsburgh, women who were optimistic — those who expect good rather than bad things to happen — were 14 percent less likely to die from any cause than pessimists and 30 percent less likely to die from heart disease after eight years of follow up in the study. Optimists also were also less likely to have high blood pressure, diabetes, or smoke cigarettes. (Read the full report in Reuters)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star 

11-yr-old Girl Shaves Her Head for Africa

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girl-shaves-head-uganda.jpgAn 11 year old girl has shaved her head to raise money to build a school in Uganda. Her goal is to raise donations of $10,000 through her family’s website. Watch her talk about her hopes and her hair on YouTube:

Thanks to Harry Tucker for the link...

Hero Dog Saves Family and Neighbors From Fire

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brooklyn-mutt-hero-w-owner.jpgEight families were saved from a fire in the middle of the night by “Ace,” a german shepard-mix dog who would not stop barking. The Brooklyn mutt hero sounded the alarm for the fire within the Bedford-Stuyvesant brownstone and continued until all were out of the building to safety. (Read full story from 1010wins.com)

Thanks to Twitterer WebAddict for the link! 

Grandmother, 84, Rides Again for Birthday

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motorcycle-1924-w-ladies.jpgRon Borowski rode his Harley 65 miles to give a dying Florida grandmother a ride she will never forget. Sitting on the back of a motorcycle had been her most fond memory for over 50 years. Now, thanks to her daughter and the ad she posted on CragsList, June Pearce got to ride again in her waning days on her 84th birthday.

(Read more, and see her smile beneath her helmet, on MSNBC)

Audiences Want Good News, NBC News Anchor Says

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brian_williams_by_david_shankbone.jpgNBC news anchor Brian Williams’ viewers wrote in droves last week to urge him to uplift the ‘Nightly News’ broadcasts with some good news. He was shocked at the thousands of responses he received in less than two days after asking viewers to suggest some good news to report.

‘I’m looking at a stack of printed e-mails,’ Williams said Friday. ‘We have more stories than we could humanly cover if we combined all three network newscasts. It’s hit an unbelievable nerve.’

Williams said he’s been hearing it repeatedly from people he meets on the street or viewers who send e-mails: The news is so bad every night that it’s a burden to watch. (Read full AP story at MSNBC.com)

Photo of Brian Williams at 2008 Tribeca Film Festival by David Shankbone 

Doing Chores for Families With Sick Children Began as Simple Kindness

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delivering-food.jpgVolunteers for Normal Moments, Inc. give parents of critically ill children relief from daily chores like housecleaning, lawn mowing, and meal preparation so they can spend as much time as possible sharing the most normal moments with their sick children.

What started as a neighborly act of kindness by Chicago-area graduate assistant David Orlicz – helping a single mother and her terminally ill daughter – has turned into a network of angels that have benefited more than 70 families in Chicago and northwest Indiana during the past year. (Photo, volunteer Julie Domres delivers food for Normal Moments)

Orlicz, a fine arts major, didn’t suspect that anything out of the ordinary would happen when he first befriended Patricia Fragen and her daughter, Melissa, in 2003, and took a job tutoring the girl in clarinet, oboe and saxophone.

But in August 2005, Melissa was diagnosed with osteosarcoma cancer. Orlicz stepped in by housesitting whenever Melissa faced an extended hospital stay and the Fragens’ three dogs needed care. Staying just a few days at first, Melissa was eventually treated out of state and David gladly managed their home affairs for two full months.

Melissa died in April 2007. But before she did, she told her mother, “Everybody deserves a David” – someone they can rely on for help.

“Without my dear friend David, who stepped in to care for the dogs, plants and house during extended hospital stays both locally and out-of-town, I never would have survived,” Fragen writes on the Normal Moments volunteer website.

“Sometimes, when we had to be at the hospital on a cold winter morning, I discovered that my neighbor had gotten up early and shoveled my driveway. On those special days, I had some extra time to share with my daughter and one less cause for exhaustion.

When Melissa stopped eating everything but sushi, friends and family created the ‘Sushi Fund’ at her favorite restaurant so the family wouldn’t go broke feeding her. And when no one else really understood what it was like to sit by your child’s side while her body struggles to survive, Sheryl Diller, a close friend and now a Normal Moments board member, was there to reminisce about her similar experience. ” I knew I was not alone,” said Fragen.

Those were the sparks that led to the idea for Normal Moments and Patricia Fragen herself runs the 501(c)(3) charity as its president.

david-orlicz-normal-momnts.jpg David Orlicz (left) – when he’s not directing his marching band or working toward his teaching certificate – is the vice president, recruiting and training volunteers.

They now have about 30 qualified volunteers serving local families. Those who provide moral support, by simply listening or being a sounding board to parents’ venting,  are called “I-Beams.” Those who help in the home are called “Davids”.

Their work has received national attention after a segment on the Martha Stewart TV show, after which people across the country, from Seattle to Tampa, called wanting to start chapters in their communities.  Orlicz is looking for financial support and volunteers to serve Indianapolis.

So far, though, he’s happy with the progress they’ve made.

“It’s remarkable,” he says, “especially considering the percentage of startup non-profits that don’t make it through the first year. We’re going really strong.”

And it all started with a small act of kindness.

See how you can help: Visit NormaMoments.org
Normal Moments was also featured in the Daily-Herald

Optimism Boosts Florida Housing Market

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riggio-homes-norleans.jpgIn January, Lee County, Florida, which includes Cape Coral, registered a 43 percent increase in home sales compared to a year earlier. In a state hit early by the economic downturn, there’s hope it will be on the leading edge of a recovery — and the rise in real estate activity provides some evidence to support the optimism. (NPR Weekend Edition)

Seniors Turn Crimefighters on City Streets (Video)

Two lively seniors - Photo by Sun Star

2-seniors-sun-sm.jpgMore and more retired seniors are patrolling the streets of Glendale, CA, with radios, becoming the eyes and ears of the police. The Retired Seniors Volunteer Patrol (RSVP), includes more than 30 seniors giving back to the community. They are also saving the city thousands of dollars in the process. RSVP website Thanks to Mohay Rix for the link!

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

Main Street Community Banks Going Strong

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cmmty-bank.jpgFar from the carnage on Wall Street, thousands of banks in the U.S. are still going strong, and still making loans on Main Street. Small banks that are deeply rooted in their communities are foreclosing on far fewer properties than bigger banks, extending loan terms and lowering interest rates to keep customers solvent.

Bionic Eye Helps Blind Man See

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eye-iris.jpgRon, 73, is one of only three patients in the UK to be fitted with a bionic eye and after 30 years of being completely blind he can now see. The operation was carried out at Moorfields Eye Hospital in London seven months ago and Ron’s sight has steadily improved since then. (Read more in the Telegraph)

Also, watch the video at BBC 

Good Samaritans Lift Car From Pinned Puppy

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‘”I’ve never seen anything like this,” said an official from the animal control unit, who responded to the accident. A young dog named Jenna had been hit by a car and was pinned underneath. Six people came to her aid lifting the car and moving it back to free her from the vehicle. She was then taken to a vet hospital and is expected to recover. A wonderful story of people coming together to help an animal in need. (Read more in Star Gazette)

Matt Damon Visits Refugees Fleeing From Zimbabwe (Video)

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matt-damon-refugees.jpgActor Matt Damon visited refugee centres in Musina on the South African border with Zimbabwe as part of his work with the human rights organization he started with a number of other celebrities.

Damon says conditions in the camp are unlivable and wants officials to do something about it.