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Wild Baby Deer Cozies up in Michigan Couple’s Home

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deer-in-house.jpgBaby the wild deer has adopted a family in Michigan, coming and going as she pleases, stepping inside their kitchen to feast on goat milk and other snacks.

The couple found the fawn in the woods, abandoned by her mother and since they were already wildlife rehabilitators, they decided to take her in.

Video below, from  WSJV, may take a moment to load:

Wild Baby Deer Cozies up in Michigan Couple’s Home

deer-in-house.jpg

deer-in-house.jpgBaby the wild deer has adopted a family in Michigan, coming and going as she pleases, stepping inside their kitchen to feast on goat milk and other snacks.

The couple found the fawn in the woods, abandoned by her mother and since they were already wildlife rehabilitators, they decided to take her in.

Video below, from  WSJV, may take a moment to load:

Obama Surprises Daughters with New Swing Set

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obama-swingset3.jpgFirst daughters Malia and Sasha Obama “squealed with delight” when presented with a big surprise after school yesterday: a brand-new swing set.

While the girls were at school, the Obamas had the playset installed on the south lawn within sight of the Oval Office. It includes three swings, a tire swing, a slide, rope ladders and a tent. A shiny plaque proclaims it to be “Malia and Sasha’s Castle.”

(AP has story and photos from the White House)

Ailing Man Finds Kidney Donor on Craigslist (w/ Video)

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kidney-donor-craigslist.jpgA California woman who had never visited CraigsList before arrived in search of a volunteer opportunity and found a message that read, “Please Help us, My Dad Needs a Kidney!”

Daniel Flood’s three daughters had posted their plea in the Volunteer section of the online classified site, which offers everything from cars to real estate, piano lessons and pet services.

Facing a waiting list for kidney donors of 2-6 years — and a dire diagnosis that gave him six months to live without one — the family was desperate.

His daughters’ ad was answered by Dawn Verdick (photo above), who had just experienced the death of a loved one. Her rare O-negative blood type was a match to the 68-year old father, so she flew to New York.

Now the three sisters have set up a service to do the same for other people. (FloodSisters.org)

(Read the inspiring story at CNN)

Ethical Journalism

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newspaper vendorThe International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) launched a new website today (www.ethicaljournalisminitiative.org) to promote its Ethical Journalism Initiative (EJI) Campaign.

 

Doctor Recycles Prescription Drugs for Canadian Homeless

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azt.jpgA prominent Canadian doctor has begun to recycle unused prescription drugs to homeless people in Ottawa because he says they could not afford them otherwise, CBC News has learned.

Dr. Jeff Turnbull, chief of staff at the Ottawa Hospital in Ottawa, acknowledges the practise is controversial but says it is one way to ensure that homeless people get the medication they desperately need.

“We make sure that they are the right medications and the right dose, that they haven’t been opened and are completely new and sealed.”

(Read the full report at CBC)

Tree Kangaroos Saved as Villagers Sign Rainforest Conservation Deal

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tree-kangaroo-ci.jpgPapua New Guinea has created its first conservation area to save a swath of pristine rainforest larger than Singapore and protect rare animals like the adorable tree kangaroo. Conservationists said on Tuesday that the plan includes 35 villages representing 10,000 people who have pledged to create a safe zone for forests and wildlife.

(Read story and see photos at CNN.com)

Additionally, the Seattle Times reports, “Conservation biologists from Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo worked with residents of some 35 native villages to seal the country’s first-ever conservation deal.”

(Photo, right – A juvenile tree kangaroo in newly created conservation area of Papua New Guinea, C/I photo by Russell A. Mittemeier)

Pair Finds ‘Toxic Assets’ a Good Investment

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sold_sign.jpgFormer hedge fund manager Raj Bhatia and mortgage broker Albert Behin are convinced they can make money buying “toxic assets” — the stuff that’s killing banks’ balance sheets. The two have lined up a couple of investors, and now they’re getting ready to buy some mortgages.

What Bhatia and Behin are doing is a free-market solution to the crisis. But they’re only two guys.

“There are not enough of us out there to absorb what’s out there,” Bhatia says. “You got to remember, there’s trillions of dollars of product right now that has to be worked through.”

(Hear or read the story at NPR’s All Things Considered)

Why it’s Foolish to Get Out of the Stock Market Now

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stocks-graphic.jpgA star investor for the Yale endowment, David Swensen, says investors should stay the course and not follow their instinct to sell their stocks. The money that people are investing in the market today is buying stocks at prices that are far more attractive than 18 or 36 months ago. (Morning Edition at NPR – story and audio)

The Front Line of Health Reform: Teaching Parents How to Treat Their Own Kids

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girl.jpgThe innovative program that provides a dose of hands-on health care training, boosting parents’ ability to care for common childhood ailments at home while saving Medicaid millions annually, has been awarded a $1.1 million grant by the U.S. Office of Head Start to train thousands more families nationwide.        
 
The new grant will expand the UCLA/Johnson & Johnson Health Care Institute’s successful model of providing low-literacy healthcare training for Head Start parents. The national rollout will train an additional 8,000 families over three years, further reducing health care costs, ER and doctor/clinic visits and missed school and workdays.
 
Since 2001, the program, called I Can Help My Child Stay Healthy, has reached nearly 27,000 families nationwide. UCLA researchers have shown that if the training were provided for the nearly one million families served by Head Start, potential savings to Medicaid could reach $554 per family in direct costs – or over half a billion dollars annually.  (Photo above, by David Nolan)

Ford To Build Cleaner Engine At Ohio Plant

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ford-logo.jpgAn auto plant in suburban Cleveland, closed since 2007, was chosen to make Ford’s new EcoBoost engines that will be standard on the Ford Taurus, a more fuel-efficient engine that will help the company deliver 20 percent better fuel economy and 15 percent lower CO2 emissions. (Read more at CBS News)

Kashmir Invests in Saving Endangered Snow Leopards

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Authorities in Kashmir have launched a special project to save endangered snow leopards, and plan to spend nearly half a million dollars to train people and buy equipment to curb poaching and habitat loss. (Read more at Reuters)

Snow leopard, by photography winner Steve Winter

 

Lead Levels Plummet in Young Children

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Stethoscope2.jpgIn a stunning improvement in children’s health, far fewer children have high lead levels than 20 years ago, a testament to aggressive efforts to get lead out of paint, water, and soil.

Federal researchers report that 1.4% of children in 2004 had high lead levels in their blood, down from 9% in 1998.

“It has been a remarkable decline… a public health success story,” said the study’s coauthor from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Read AP story at LA Times)

Sales Tax Deduction Encouraging Car Sales

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honda-clarity.jpgA new federal incentive allows car and truck buyers to deduct the sales tax on vehicles purchased between Feb. 17 and the end of the year — just the encouragement some buyers needed to commit to a purchase.

“It’s the first good news the automotive industry has had in long time,” said James T. Fleming, president of the Connecticut Automotive Retailers Association. “I’ve talked to a number of dealers around the state and they said they’ve actually seen an uptick in traffic.” (Read more in the Norwich Bulletin)

Optimist Opens Retail Business to Fight Recession

elderly-couple-w-apples.jpgYou can’t sit around grumpy, moping and feeling sorry for yourself in this recession,” the retired 76-year-old said. “You’ve got to get off your duff and do something. And what more can you do but open up a retail store to provide quality goods at good prices?

Bill Weisberg opened a discount athletic wear shop called Fabulous Buys in St. Louis Park, Minnesota and hired his grandkids to run it on weekends, convinced that his gamble can help jump-start Minnesota’s limping economy. (Minnesota Star-Tribune)

(Photo courtesy of Sun Star) 

Thanks to GraemeThickins on Twitter for the news tip! 

Organic Food Expert Chosen for No. 2 Agriculture Slot

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farmers-market-tomatoes.jpgPresident Barack Obama has chosen Kathleen Merrigan, an organic food expert who helped the US Senate develop labelling rules for organic food, to be second-in-command at the Agriculture Department. Sustainable and organic farmers are thrilled that someone who has been associated with these issues her whole career is going to be at such a high level in the department.

The Consumers Union praised the choice. “We would expect her to be a strong defender of USDA’s organic standards, which have been under repeated attack for the last several years,” said Jean Halloran, director of Food Policy Initiatives at the organization.

Merrigan currently is an assistant professor and Director of the Agriculture, Food and Environment M.S. and Ph.D. Program at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University, Boston.

Stock Buying by Corporate Insiders Almost Tripled in Feb

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business-graphic-up.gifTwo good news stories in the financial sector caught our eye this week:

Hefty stock purchases by company officers and directors is growing evidence that insiders believe their companies have the worst of the recession behind them and their stocks should rise this year, analysts said last week.

California Wind Farms Providing Energy and Jobs

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American Public Power Association

wind-turbines-spinning-nrel-credit.jpgA new crop of wind turbines will be generating not only electricity but steady income for refugees of the ravaged housing and automotive industries.

“This is the best job I ever had,” said one of the new ‘windsmiths’ strapping on his climbing gear to perform maintenance on the wind turbines. (McClatchy News, via the Sac Bee)

More info on the Obama administration’s investment in energy, visit the US Dept. of Energy office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy

Right: Dillon Wind Power Project, CA- photo by Iberdrola Renewables 

Human Sewage to Power Buses in Norway

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oslo-city-bus-norway.jpgBiomethane from human waste will soon power public transportation in Norway’s capital city. Starting in September 2009, the methane gas normally contributing to Global Warming, will be captured from one of Oslo’s sewage plants and converted into biomethane fuel to run 200 of the city’s public buses. (Read more at EcoWorldly.com)

Thanks to Brooke Estin for the story tip via Twitter!

(Photo by Seansie via Flickr, under a Creative Commons license)

US Halts Medical Marijuana Raids (w/ Video)

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U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced Friday he’s halting federal raids on medial marijuana distributors in the 13 states that allow marijuana use for patients with cancer and other painful medical conditions.

(Read story at MSNBC, or watch the following two videos – one of which shows how a burn victim is helped by the medical marijuana laws in California)

Note: New Jersey is also moving to allow medical marijuana. 

Below: AG Halts Medical Marijuana Raids, and, Making the Case for Medical Marijuana