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Vet Crawls Into Rescued Dog’s Crate to Show Her How to Eat (WATCH)

A veterinarian won over a jittery stray dog — and the hearts of millions of people — after he crawled into the pup’s crate and shared a meal with her.

The little rescue dog that Dr. Andy Mathis would later name “Graycie” was brought into his office about two weeks ago, emaciated and in poor health. The vet was afraid he’d have to put her down, but decided to ask his Facebook followers for advice.

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The dog made improvements but still wouldn’t always eat — until Dr. Mathis started climbing into her crate and having regular breakfasts with her.

Dr. Mathis has been documenting Graycie’s progress on his Facebook and Instagram pages and she’s doing better — perhaps proving breakfast really is the most important meal of anyone’s day.

CHECK OUT: Our Stream of Good News Pets Stories Here

(WATCH  the full video from Dr. Mathis below) — Photo: Dr. Andy Mathis, Instagram

 

Dr. Mathis Facebook video:

 

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‘Help Me Lie Down!’ Grandma Wants to Make Snow Angel on 85th Birthday (WATCH)

Snow Angel FB Sherry Proper Spangler CC geralt

There’s something about snow that brings out the kid in just about everyone.

Whether it’s cops joining kids in a snowball fight, a 101-year-old woman making snowballs of her own, or this woman making snow angels, the white stuff just seems to turn back the clock.

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Sherry Proper Spangler’s daughter recorded this video of her grandmother celebrating birthday number 85 by fanning her arms and legs in the Pennsylvania snow.

Since she posted it to Facebook on January 30, interest has, well, snow-balled. More than a million people have enjoyed the fun.

(WATCH the video below) — Photo: Sherry Proper Spangler, Facebook: geralt, CC

Mom making a snow angel on her 85th birthday!

Posted by Sherry Proper Spangler on Saturday, January 30, 2016

 

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Single Mom Parlays Small Lottery Win into Fund For Homeless Man In the Cold

lottery winner helps homeless man screenshot WCVB

A single mother may have won the lottery, but it was a homeless man’s lucky day when she turned a two dollar bet into nearly $15,000 to help the man get back on his feet.

Sofia Andrade spent her last two dollars on an instant lottery ticket and won $200. On her way home with her winnings, she noticed a homeless man at a stop sign.

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She invited the man, Glenn Williams, for a cup of coffee and he was so grateful he couldn’t stop crying on the drive.

With temperatures forecast to plunge in New Bedford, Massachusetts that night, Andrade found out local shelters were full — so she used her winnings to put Williams up for the night in a hotel.

CHECK OUT: Teen Invents Rain, Fire-proof Sleeping Bag for Homeless, and Offers Jobs

She posted about the encounter on Facebook, and soon other people were pitching in. A barber gave Williams a free haircut, friends donated cold weather gear and a kid even sent the homeless man a Valentine’s card.

Andrade wasn’t done helping Williams. She set up a GoFundMe page hoping to raise $5,000 for the homeless man. In just two days, it’s raised $14,891.

Photo: WCVB video

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(CORRECTION) First Native American Woman Federal Judge

Diane Humetewa cc Activedia and PD US Govt

CORRECTION: Using a February 16, 2016 United Press International article as the main source, we incorrectly dated this story. The Senate confirmation actually took place in May, 2014. Good News Network apologizes for the misinformation but will leave this article posted as background for an “On This Day in History” mention, that we previously published here.

______________________________

A former prosecutor and judge for her Hopi tribe has become the first Native American woman to become a federal judge.

The U.S. Senate unanimously confirmed Diane Humetewa to a District Court bench in Arizona on Monday (see correction above). She’s only the third Native American to serve as a federal judge, and the only one currently to be serving.

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The National Congress of American Indians issued a statement saying it hoped her appointment would lead to more highly qualified Native Americans being appointed to judgeships.

There are 21 Native American reservations in Arizona and all felonies on those lands are tried in federal court.

CHECK OUT: Taiwan’s First Woman President Becomes Most Powerful Woman in Chinese Speaking World

“We do not have a bench that reflects the community it serves,” Former U.S. Attorney Paul Charlton told the Arizona Republic. “And now, for the first time in our nation’s history, we’ll have a representative.”

Photo: Activedia, CC; U.S. Govt 

German Shorthaired Pointer Wins Best in Show at Westminster (WATCH)

2016_best of show Westminster dog winner-German Shorthaired pointer

A German shorthaired pointer named C.J. won Best in Show at the 140th Westminster Kennel Club dog show in New York on Tuesday, besting nearly 3,000 contestants over the two-day competition.

Dogs from all 50 states and around the world were whittled down to just seven final contestants, but the three-year-old pointer “California Journey” took the top prize – an upset for those who favored German shepherd named Rumor.

(WATCH the report below from CBS)

 

Photo credit: Westminster Kennel Club

Teen With Down Syndrome Sinks Game-ending 3-point Shot (WATCH)

 

When team manager Robert Lewis hit a game-ending 3-point basket for his school on Senior Night, fans from both sides went wild.

Robert, who has Down syndrome, got to suit up and play for the team he had managed throughout high school.

With five seconds left in the game a player passed the ball to Robert who sank the shot, as cheers filled the auditorium.

WATCH: Ohio State Football Team Acts as Loving Family to Boys With Incurable Illness

Watch students rush the basketball court of Franklin Road Academy to congratulate Robert and hoist him into the air in a champion’s embrace.

Community Wants a Statue of the Man Who’s Waved to Them for 50 Years

Bunny screenshot WGGB

A man who’s clapped and waved to drivers for a half century may soon be getting his own statue — if neighbors get their way.

Bernard Murray, who everyone in Chicopee, Massachusetts calls “Bunny,” has been waving to people in his neighborhood since the 1960s. Neighbors want to erect a statue of him to make sure he continues to wave for decades to come.

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They’ve even created an online petition — with 4,830 signatures — to “make a bunny statue waving forever.” It’ll be delivered to city leaders when they get 5,000 people to sign online.

“I think it’s the greatest thing in the world,” neighbor Mike Carmody told WGGB/WSHM news. “You could say he’s a pillar of Chicopee.”

(WATCH the video below from WGGB/WSHM) — Photo: News video

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GNN Hit A Major Facebook Milestone This Week

Thumbs-Up-Owned-by-Good-News-Network

When I was working in the TV news business decades ago, I was told, “Good news doesn’t sell.”

I guess that is true for network program directors, but I keep finding proof to the contrary.

Thousands of people have donated money over the years to support our network—and this week, our Facebook community crossed a milestone, as we passed the half million mark with 500,000 fans.

We are a truly global community too, which is really cool. Lewis Jacob, who was gave us our 500,000th LIKE on Facebook, lives in Zambia and studied clinical neuroscience at University of Oxford. 14,000 of our FB fans live in Pakistan, and the same for Australia— while 39,000 live in India.

Thank you for all of your kindness and support shown to us over to years.

xxoo Geri

1.8 Mil Acres of Beautiful Desert Are Now Protected As Nat’l Monuments

 

A giant swath of fragile, desert ecosystems half the size of Connecticut has just received permanent protection — creating a migratory superhighway for endangered animals.

Three new national monuments designated by President Obama will link already protected lands, including Joshua Tree National Park and the Mojave National Preserve which are 100 miles apart, by setting aside an additional 1.8 million acres as safe from development.

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Adjacent to 15 other wilderness tracts protected by Congress, the California areas known as Mojave Trails, Sand to Snow, and Castle Mountains are now protected “in perpetuity.”

mojave night white house

The areas are home to a diverse population of wildlife ranging from mountain lions and bobcats to antelopes and bighorn sheep to golden eagles and desert tortoises. The Sand to Snow Monument also will protect sacred, archaeological and cultural sites, including some 1,700 Native American petroglyphs.

CHECK OUT:  Farmer Returns 700 Acres of California Coast to Native American Tribe

Tying the different areas together will make it easier for wildlife to safely migrate, and plant species to expand into other elevation ranges, especially if they experience climate stress in future decades.

mojave2 White House

“Permanent protection of these desert regions will mean a chance of survival for endangered wildlife and rare plants that need space to migrate and adapt in this era of climate change,” Dan Smuts, California Senior Regional Director of the Wilderness Society said.

WATCH:  Rare Wildflower Superbloom Paints Death Valley in Brilliant Color (VIDEO)

The announcement in February doubles the amount of land or ocean that President Obama has set aside for conservation during his term. His use of the Antiquities Act to designate areas for protection, is consistent with Republican presidents who have created 82 national monuments since 1906 and Democratic presidents who have created 105 monuments, including such wonders as the Grand Canyon.

(READ more at Smithsonian) — Photos: The White House

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10 Meaningful Ways to Carry Out Random Acts of Kindness

Group Celebration

Let’s continue celebrating Random Acts of Kindness Week (Feb. 14–20).

Although few of these ideas are actually random, these 10 acts of kindness will make you and the recipient feel wonderful.

1. Invent a holiday for someone you love. I have “Mia Appreciation Day” for my wife. Your appreciation day can be as simple as picking a date and writing a thank you note each year to read out loud on that day.

2. Think of the people who have made a difference in your life. Take 45 minutes to write those people a letter telling them why they’re wonderful.

CHECK OUT: 5 Side Effects of Kindness on Health

3. Take a few minutes to send postcards to sick children who are fighting serious illnesses and want to receive mail.

4. Send cards to lonely seniors. Love for the Elderly will distribute your mail to seniors in need.

5. Put a dozen paper hearts or smiley faces in a box or on a card. Write something special on each heart about someone close to you. Make someone’s day with this gift.

6. Look for opportunities to share compliments. It takes no time, costs nothing, and will make someone feel awesome. Don’t just think it. Say it.

7. Listen. The greatest gift we can give people is our time. We can put down our phones, lift our heads up from our computers and really listen without interrupting.

LOOK: Spree of 318 Random Acts of Kindness Across Boston

8. Donate items you’re not using to people who need them. (Here’s a list of places to donate things in the US). And, it doesn’t get easier than this – through Give Back Box you can box up household items, games, clothing or other items you no longer need, and Give Back Box provides a prepaid shipping label so you can ship the items to Goodwill at no charge. This is only offered in the US. (Goodwill is a nonprofit that provides job training and jobs.)

9. Follow up. When my friend Mary was diagnosed with cancer, she received overwhelming support. However, as her lengthy treatment progressed, the support waned. Because of that, Mary now finds a reason to send a note or reach out every few weeks when someone she knows has cancer. A divorced friend told me something similar. He said it felt like everyone forgot about him a few months after his divorce, even though it was still tough.

Let’s reach out months after a trauma (disease, divorce, death, etc.). My friends said that even an occasional note makes a big difference, and even if the person sending the note wasn’t a close friend.

This is a great week to send a few notes.

10. Only have a minute? Text or email someone right now, to tell them you’re thinking about them.

Adapted from Brad Aronson’s blog. For Brad’s full list of Random Acts of Kindness, check out 98 Random Acts of Kindness on Brad’s blog.

Harvard Tells College Applicants: Focus on Kindness, Not Overachieving

College Students CC Taber Andrew Bain

At least 85 of America’s top colleges are now endorsing the idea of emphasizing community involvement over personal success in their admissions policies.

A new Harvard report is basically saying the best way to succeed for students who are applying to college is to relax, and be nicer to your family and neighbors.

GNN-app-banner-ad-optThe change is one of several reassessments of current admission policies — including de-emphasizing standardized test scores and more attention to home life — contained in a new report from the Harvard Graduate School of Education called “Turning the Tide.”

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The report focuses on reducing pressure on students applying to college, promoting the common good across communities, and making it easier for students of different races and income levels to compete for a spot at college.

“Too often, today’s culture sends young people messages that emphasize personal success rather than concern for others and the common good,” Richard Weissbourd, Senior Lecturer at the graduate school said.

RELATED:  Affluent Parents Use Their Know-How to Get Needy Kids Into College

The report concludes that it is unhealthy to increase the pressure on students to constantly achieve — blaming that pressure for higher rates of anxiety, depression, and substance abuse among college bound teens.

It makes multiple recommendations to improve the quality of their lives and contributions from students applying to college:

• Decreased emphasis on college AP (advanced placement) classes and ACT and SAT scores. The report even suggests making the tests optional and discouraging students from taking them more than twice
• Encouraging students to take on a local community project or volunteer with a diverse group for a cause they believe in, rather than performing “exotic” volunteer trips overseas
• Encouraging students to forego big name schools for those that are a “best fit” for the individual student
• And placing a high value on a student’s contributions at home — including simple chores that make life easier for the rest of their family

WATCH: Brilliant Idea: Free Housing for Student Volunteers in Senior Home

Some colleges, such as Yale University, have already begun incorporating the report’s findings into their admissions process. Its admissions survey next year will require applicants to explain contributions they have made to their family.

Photo: Taber Andrew Bain, CC

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Homeless Woman and Her Dog Stop Burglary, Receive Thousands for New Home

Lottie and Marley Homeless heros gofundme

After a homeless woman and her dog tracked down a burglar and and returned his stolen loot, more than 400 people have donated thousands of dollars to get her a trailer to live in.

Lottie Pauling-Chamberlain and her dog Marley (named after reggae singer Bob Marley) routinely sleep outside a Lush cosmetics store in Oxford, England.

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She and the staff know each other, so when a suspicious man coming out of the store around four in the morning Wednesday woke Lottie up, she knew he wasn’t a store employee and confronted him.

The man was holding a laptop and about $1,500 in cosmetics, but he surrendered his haul to the woman and her large, growling dog before running off. She returned the stolen goods the next morning.

RELATED:  Guy Brilliantly Sticks Out His Leg to Trip Man Running From Police

The store manager started a GoFundMe page to “Support Lottie & Oxford’s Homeless” that has raised more than $11,000 in just two days.

He wants to buy her a trailer parked on a piece of land, then use any leftover money to help other homeless people in town.

(READ more at The Telegraph) — Photo: GoFundMe

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Officer Talks Distraught Woman Off Ledge of Towering Bridge (LOOK)

Suicide Rescue Bridge Calif highway Patrol FB

It was tense-time 200 feet above San Francisco Bay as a California motorcycle cop inched toward a woman sitting on the edge of the Bay Bridge, apparently contemplating suicide.

Fortunately, Officer J. Maya was also a trained Crisis Intervention Trained (CIT) Officer — and had nerves of steel as strong at the cables suspending the bridge.

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Officer Maya borrowed a tow strap from a wrecker, tied one end around his waist, the other to a bridge railing, and went out to help the woman after she failed to respond to questions from Maya and his partner, Officer Ribergaard.

Standing over the icy waters of the bay below, he used his training to talk the woman into following him back over the railing, and she was taken to a hospital.

WATCH: Motorists Form Human Chain to Pull Trucker Back From Brink

“We are extremely proud of our officers for risking their lives and for saving a life,” the California Highway Patrol posted to its Facebook page along with photos of the rescue Wednesday.

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70 Teens Bring Valentines to Old Lady Who Always Waves to Their Bus

Waving Granny Heart-Bombed screenshot CHEK news

Students surprised their town’s famous “Waving Granny” with a Valentine’s Day show of thanks for all her years of encouragement delivered on every school morning.

Each day, 86-year-old Tinney Davidson sits in her front window and waves at students on their way to Highland Secondary School in Comax Valley, British Columbia.

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This year, 70 of the students showed up Friday to “heart-bomb” her yard with dozens of Valentines before lining up to each give Tinney a hug. Before they were done, red hearts covered her lawn and a wide smile spread across her face.

RELATED:  Terminal Cancer Survivor Spends Days Smiling and Waving at Drivers

“You’re making me cry!” Tinney told the students in front of a CHEK News camera. “I had no idea, it’s just shock, I’m in shock and I am just so overwhelmed once again.”

Tinney has been waving to kids passing her house for years, and students surprised her with a Valentine’s Day assembly in 2014.

(WATCH the video at CHEK News) — Photos: CHEK News

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New Zealanders Crowdfund $2Mil to Buy Private Beach for Public Enjoyment

Abel Tasman Beach givealittle

A pair of brothers-in-law, talking politics during a Christmas get-together, hatched a plan to buy a local private beach and turn it into a public park. From that whimsy has emerged a serious effort that might allow ordinary people a chance to soak in the sun and natural glory of the property, adjacent to a national park.

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Close to 40,000 people have donated to the fund that soared past the $2 million mark on Friday. Money continued flooding in to boost the total and improve the chances that the seller would accept the offer.

The Awaroa Inlet is private land just outside the heart of New Zealand’s Abel Tasman National Park. The Department of Conservation (DOC) would love to manage the land as a public beach, but currently can’t afford the $2 million asking price.

If the brothers raise enough money to present the highest bid, they will give the 18 acres of pristine land outright to the DOC.

CHECK OUT: Farmer Returns 700 Acres of California Coast to Native American Tribe

The exact amount raised is being kept secret so the other 100, or so, potential buyers won’t be able to easily outbid the crowdfunding campaign. With 6,000 people having donated since hitting the two million dollar mark, there might be a new public beach in town.

(READ more at the New Zealand Herald) – Photo: Givealittle

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Girl With Half Her Brain Becomes Speech Pathologist as Adult (Video)

Christina Santhouse half brain screenshot Scientific American

An 8-year-old girl who had the right side of her brain removed in a life-saving surgery has grown up to earn a Master’s degree and become a speech pathologist.

Christina Santhouse was suffering from Rasmussen’s encephalitis — an extremely rare autoimmune disorder that caused 150 seizures every day.

With the condition worsening, doctors agreed the only way to save her life was to remove the right half of her brain.

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As she was wheeled into the operating room, Christina was upbeat and excited about getting her life back after having experiencing so many seizures. Dr. Ben Carson — who would one day run for President — performed the surgery.

People who undergo the radical procedure — called a hemispherectomy — usually have very limited options for the rest of their lives. One of Christina’s teachers believed her job options would be limited to answering phones.

But as Christina grew up, she held on to her goals. Even though she lost motor skills on the left side of her body, the use of her left hand, and half her vision, she was determined to do everything her classmates were doing.

RELATED: Colorado Doctor Discovered Natural Way To Treat Common Vertigo

Christina learned to walk with a brace, made the honor roll, captain of her high school bowling team, got her driver’s license, and went on to college and graduate school.

She received her Masters in speech pathology in 2010 — just five years after graduating high school.

On the 20th anniversary of the surgery that should have limited her life, Christina is living it to its fullest — buying her own home and just married in 2014. Her husband, Vince Paravecchia, says he didn’t even know about her condition until months after he met her.

ALSO:  14 Years After Decriminalizing Heroin, Here’s What Portugal Looks Like

She says her work lets her give back to the world that “gave me so much.”

“If I could talk to myself as a seven-year-old,” Christina told Scientific American in 2014, “I think I would say, ‘You’re stronger than you know. You’re going to have difficult times, but you need to find the strength within yourself and when you can’t find that strength, look to the others around you.”

(WATCH the video from Scientific American below and READ more at the Philadelphia Inquirer) — Photo: Scientific American video

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Paralyzed at Columbine, Shooting Victim Forgives Mother of Gunman

Anne Marie Hochhalter Columbine screenshot KUSA

Saying she looks to the future and at what’s positive in her life, a woman paralyzed in the 1999 Columbine, Colorado high school shooting has publicly forgiven the mother of one of the killers.

Anne Marie Hochhalter says it took her years to get over her anger and move beyond the tragic events that left her paralyzed from the waist down.

“I have forgiven you and only wish you the best,” Anne Marie Hochhalter wrote to Sue Klebold in a Facebook post Thursday.

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Hochhalter’s decision to go public comes as Sue Klebold is releasing a book about her son Dylan, who was one of the two shooters. All the profits from the memoir, A Mother’s Reckoning: Living in the Aftermath of Tragedy, will go to help people with mental illness.

Hochhalter admitted that mental illness is a common bond between her family and the Klebolds’. Her own mother struggled with it before committing suicide six months after the shooting.

“It means a lot to me that you wouldn’t keep those proceeds for yourself, but to help others that suffer from mental illness,” Hochhalter wrote on her Facebook page.

RELATED:  Pro-Lifer Takes Flowers to Planned Parenthood to Apologize and Say Thanks

After the shootings, Sue and Tom Klebold sent hand-written apologies to the 23 people injured and families of another 13 who lost their lives — baring their hearts and sharing their grief.

Though she’s only read it three times, Hochhalter held on to that note and recently posted a photo of it to her Facebook page.

letter from Columbine shooter family-FB-Anne Marie Hochhalter

“Though we have never met, our lives are forever linked through this tragedy that has brought unspeakable heartbreak to our families and our community,” the Klebolds wrote in 1999. “With deepest humility we apologize for the role our son, Dylan, had in causing the suffering you and your family have endured.”

After nearly 16 years, Hochhalter replied in public on Facebook: “I have no ill-will towards you. Just as I wouldn’t want to be judged by the sins of my family members, I hold you in that same regard.”

(WATCH the video from KUSA News below) — Photo: KUSA video

As principal of Moses Brown School, Matt Glendinning decided to get creative when announcing to the kids of Providence, Rhode Island that school was canceled due to bad weather.

The community was hit by a blizzard with 3 feet of snow – but they also got a hilarious Adele cover.

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In a sepia-toned parody video, Matt tells his students to stay home to the tune of Adele’s “Hello”.

“Oh it snowed a lot out siiiiiiiiide,” Matt crooned, ”and now it’s not safe to driiiiiiive.”

With his surprisingly soulful voice and witty replaced lyrics, is it possible that Matt did Adele better than Adele?

(WATCH the video above – and SHARE the idea)

Boy With Cerebral Palsy Runs the Skate Park in a Wheelchair (WATCH)

8-year-old Atticus Edwards may not be able to do any grinds, but he’s surely shredding it at the skate park.

Born with cerebral palsy in Sacramento, California, Atticus’ mother describes wheelchair skateboarding as her son’s chosen form of therapy. Due to his condition, Atticus doesn’t talk much – but if you watch the video above, he can’t help but let out a yell of excitement after his dad rolls him through the turns.

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“That was fantastic!” Atticus shouts with a smile.

Not only is the self-prescribed therapeutic activity fun, but it makes for great bonding time between Atticus and his father, Jared.

(WATCH the video above)