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Teens Won’t Rest Until Vets Do: App Aims to Stop Night Terrors

Tyler myBivy app Screenshot KARE

A teenager’s concern for his dad has kept him up at night worrying, but his ultimate solution could help millions of veterans sleep better.

Tyler Skluzacek’s father returned from a year’s service in Iraq suffering from post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The veteran would wake up from deep sleep with night terrors or panic attacks.

Now an app to track heart rate and movement has been created by Tyler and his friends to gauge what the onset of an attack looks like in terms of physical benchmarks. When the symptoms occur, the app could nudge the wearer out of deep sleep — away from a night terror — without fully waking him.

The Android phone app can connect to a Bluetooth watch (costing as little as $30), which would be worn at night. Essentially, the system would detect the onset of night terrors and prevent them from happening.

The team, who call themselves “The Cure,” created the app in just 36 hours during Hack DC — an annual coding contest that had a theme of “hacking PTSD” this year. The Cure team took first place for their myBivy app, short for “bivouac,” a place where soldiers sleep in the field.

CHECK Out: All the Inspiring Stories About Veterans at Good News Network

Tyler set up a Kickstarter page to further develop the app for Android, iOS, and Pebble devices. It has raised nearly $14,000, more than 10 times its original goal, in just nine days.

They plan to begin tests in January and make the app available sometime before summer of 2016.

If successful, this innovation could mean a good night’s sleep for many of the more than three-and-a-half million veterans in the U.S. with PTSD.

RELATED: Once Speechless, Teen Finds His Chatty Voice Among Veterans at VA Hospital

“My team and I have a saying right now,” Tyler told KARE News, “‘We won’t sleep until the veterans can.’”

(WATCH the KARE News video below) Photos: KARE video

Mom Turns Canceled Wedding Into a Feast for the Homeless

Thanks to one mother’s enlightened thinking, a canceled wedding resulted in a huge feast for nearly 100 of Sacramento’s homeless on Saturday.

When Kari Duane learned that her daughter and groom-to-be would not be going through with the ceremony, she decided to put that $35,000 reception to good use by inviting families who were going through hard times.

The decision drew the diners to one of the California city’s best hotels.

RELATED: Homeless Find New Life Working at 22-Acre Organic Farm and Restaurant

A grand total of 90 people—including parents with newborn babies— gathered at Citizen House hotel to dine on food from its four-star restaurant.

“When you’re going through a hard time and a struggle, for you to get out to do something different with your family is really a blessing,” Rashad Abdullah, a homeless man who attended the dinner with his family, told KCRA.

For the bride’s family and so many others, Saturday still turned out to be a night they’ll never forget.

(WATCH the video above from KCRA)

Muslim Woman Disarms Anti-Islam Protester With A Hug (WATCH)

signs Muslim protestor-Cynthia Eugenia Cox DeBoutinkhar-permission

What do you do when a protester stands outside your place of worship preaching words of hatred and intolerance?

If you attend the Noor Islamic Cultural Center, you give them a hug and free breakfast.

The mosque was prepared for angry protesters and signs after a Facebook campaign tried to organize picketing at dozens of mosques around the United States on Oct. 10.

With police and heavy hearts at the ready, the people who gathered to defend the mosque in Columbus, Ohio were surprised to be met with just a single protester–and, with a single act of kindness, that number went from one to zero.

Muslim hugs protestor-Micah David Naziri-permission
Photo by Micah David Naziri

While many tried to welcome the lone protester and offer her coffee and bagels, she repeatedly refused and stayed outside holding two signs denigrating Islam.

Then an inspiration came to Cynthia DeBoutinkhar, who bravely went up to “Annie” and asked a daring question – could she embrace the protester with a hug? The answer was a reluctant yes.

The newlywed later wrote on Facebook, “I felt her body go from tense to soft and I asked her to please come inside with me.” With this small act of kindness Annie agreed to walk into the building that housed a culture and religion that she honestly believed she hated.

Muslim-hug-permission-Cynthia Eugenia Cox DeBoutinkhar

DeBoutinkhar promised to stay by Annie’s side in the mosque to provide comfort and a guarantee of safety–an offer that was quickly deemed unnecessary the moment the two women stepped into the lobby and were welcomed with a grand applause.

Annie was asked another daring question, and to everyone’s surprise she agreed to accompany the group on a complete tour of the mosque. DeBoutinkhar led Annie to the ladies room to watch her take off her hijab, “so she could see that I’m just a normal person under my scarf.”

“I usually don‘t wear them, actually,” she told Good News Network days after being inundated with media requests for interviews about the incident.

CHECK Out: 6 Quran Quotes That Teach Love, Tolerance and Freedom of Religion

“It’s been an overwhelming response. I think it struck a nerve with people. I think Muslims see it as finally some good press–and non-Muslims seem to like it because it shows the religion in a good light.”

Comfortable with her new acquaintance, Annie confided in DeBoutinkhar the source of her beliefs regarding Islam–a friend from Turkey who told her terrible things about Islam, and Fox News.

By the end of the tour, which included classrooms filled with children, and a glimpse of afternoon prayers in session, the protester began to ask her own questions that the president of the mosque answered enthusiastically. He also presented the Annie with an English Quran as a gift.

RELATED: Muslim Groups Give $100K To Help Detroit Residents Without Water

Afterwards the two women were both enraptured by open discussions on topics from holy books to Jesus, miracles and more, for two hours.

“You were all really nice,” Annie told them when she finally turned to go. “I had no idea Muslims could be nice to me, even after I stood out there with those signs… Sorry.”

DeBoutinkhar gave her one last hug, and the protester left without her signs.

(Watch the video below from In The Now)

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John Williams (Star Wars) is First Composer Honored With AFI Lifetime Achievement Award

John Williams-AFI-website

For the first time in AFI history, America’s highest honor for a career in film will be bestowed upon a composer–John Williams, who has written the soundtrack to our lives.

“Note by note, through chord and chorus, his genius for marrying music with movies has elevated the art form to symphonic levels and inspired generations of audiences to be enriched by the magic of the movies,” said Sir Howard Stringer, Chair, AFI Board of Trustees. “AFI is proud to present him with its 44th Life Achievement Award in 2016.”

Other Show Biz News: Bill Murray Drives Taxi So Cabbie Can Practice Saxophone

John Williams’ storied career as the composer behind many of the greatest American films and television series of all time boasts over 150 credits across seven decades. Perhaps best known for his enduring collaboration with director Steven Spielberg, his scores are among the most iconic and recognizable in film history, from the edge-of-your-seat Jaws motif to the energy of Raiders of the Lost Ark, and the haunting notes of Schindler’s List. Always epic in scale, his music has helped define over half a century of the motion picture medium. Three of Williams’ scores landed on AFI’s 100 Years of Film Scores — a list of the 25 greatest American film scores of all time — including the unforgettable Star Wars soundtrack, at number one.

With five Academy Award wins and 49 nominations in total, Williams holds the record for the most Oscar nominations of any living person.

RELATED: Ringo Starr Cleans His House, Fills Rockin’ Auction for Charity

Williams will be honored at a gala Tribute on June 9, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. The AFI Life Achievement Award Tribute television special will air on TNT later that same month, followed by an encore presentation on Turner Classic Movies.

Dad’s Touching Anti-Bullying Song for Daughters is Now a Global Inspiration

A California father of three, has turned a negative into a positive after his six-year-old daughter was bullied at school. He used his talent as a spoken word poet and musician to create a positive family-oriented rap music video called Love Yourself.

Khari said people love his anti-bullying song.

“It’s resonated with so many people who tell me it’s empowering,” he told the Meredith Vieira Show. “They’ve internalized the words and it’s changed their lives.”

RELATED: 8-Year-old’s ‘Buddy Bench’ for Lonely Kids in the Schoolyard is Catching On

On September 24 he reported on Facebook that he has already performed “Love Yourself” at three public schools in the Bay Area and now is being asked to perform at more schools.

“I’m currently in the process of finishing a Love Yourself Children’s Book and new album. Hopefully, I’ll be able to perform at schools throughout the country once my book and album are released in December, 2015.”

WATCH the video below and Download his song on iTunes

Kids Learn Compassion From ‘Grandma In The Window’ (WATCH)

 

93-year-old Louise Edlen had been waving to students riding their school bus every day for five years in Arlington, Washington.

One day everyone on the bus noticed she wasn’t in her normal spot–and was gone for the next few days.

The bus driver discovered she had suffered a stroke, so she sent a greeting of flowers from her and the kids, which was just the beginning of their show of compassion.

(WATCH the video at NBC News)— Photo: Arlington Public Schools Facebook

Band Asks People To Hum a Secret Tune While They Play Along (WATCH)

cellist-singing-submitted-AntonHecht

With a small band known as Ho Hum, we went out onto the streets of Newcastle and asked the public to hum a tune of their choice, which the band would try and play along with.

At no time were they given the name of the tune – they just went by the hummers.

I was amazed at how easy-going the public were in getting involved, and the great tunes they gave us.

 

94-yo Hockey Player Dominates On Ice Like Man Half His Age -Video

 

In northern Minnesota, most men either have played hockey in their youth or still are playing in a senior league – but this 94-year-old is still skating in 3-4 games a week, like a man half his age.

With handle bar mustache, Mark Sertich says, “You’ve gotta challenge yourself a little bit.”

“I think that’s what keeps you going.”

(WATCH the profile above from CBS’s Steve Hartman)

Orphaned Sisters Reunite Working at Same Hospital Half World Away

orphanage pictures-korean sisters reunited

“I can’t believe I finally found my sister… I knew she was somewhere out there.”

But Holly never thought she would find that sister working in the very same hospital in the United States where she worked. An orphan from Korea adopted by an American couple when she was nine, there had been no record of a sister in the orphanage.

Meagan and Holly, 46, hired three months apart at Doctors Hospital in Sarasota, grew curious when they realized both shared the same last name of Shin.

Baby Taken From Mother in WWII Hugs Her for the First Time in 70 Years

After “comparing notes on their dramatic similarities,” Meagan insisted they take a DNA test, which is how they unraveled the truth–that they grew up 300 miles from each other in Virginia and New York and each moved to Florida in their later years to pursue careers of service in the health profession. And the sisters wound up working on the fourth floor of the same hospital.

Paramedic Saves Doctor Who Saved His Life 30 Years Earlier

“Oh my god,” Meagan told the Herald Tribune. “I was in shock. I have a sister.”

“I never gave up on her,” said Holly.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from the Sarasota Herald Tribune)

Stanford Engineers Create Artificial “Skin” to Allow Prosthetics to Feel

prosthetic hand-with-real hand-Stanford-Bao Lab-released

Stanford engineers have created a plastic “skin” that can detect how hard it is being pressed and generate an electric signal to deliver this sensory input directly to a living brain cell. The work brings closer the day when a sense of touch is added to prosthetic limbs.

Zhenan Bao, a professor of chemical engineering at Stanford, has spent a decade trying to develop a material that mimics skin’s ability to flex and heal, while also serving as the sensor net that sends touch, temperature and pain signals to the brain. Ultimately she wants to create a flexible electronic fabric embedded with sensors that could cover a prosthetic limb and replicate some of skin’s sensory functions.

Bao’s work, reported Thursday in Science, takes another step toward her goal by replicating one aspect of touch, the sensory mechanism that enables us to distinguish the pressure difference between a limp handshake and a firm grip.

“This is the first time a flexible, skin-like material has been able to detect pressure and also transmit a signal to a component of the nervous system,” said Bao, who led the 17-person research team responsible for the achievement.

WATCH Boy Get New Bionic Arm From ‘Tony Stark’ Himself (Robert Downey Jr.)

Digitizing Touch

The heart of the technique is a two-ply plastic construct: the top layer creates a sensing mechanism that can detect pressure over the same range as human skin, from a light finger tap to a firm handshake. The bottom layer acts as the circuit to transport electrical signals and translate them into biochemical stimuli for nerve cells.

Five years ago, Bao’s team members first described how to use plastics and rubbers as pressure sensors by measuring the natural springiness of their molecular structures. They then indented a waffle pattern into the thin plastic, which adds further springyness.

To exploit this pressure-sensing capability electronically, the team scattered billions of carbon nanotubes through the waffled plastic. Putting pressure on the plastic squeezes the nanotubes closer together and enables them to conduct electricity.

RELATED: Breakthrough Bionic Hand Restores Amputee’s Sense of Touch

This allowed the plastic sensor to mimic human skin, which transmits pressure information to the brain as short pulses of electricity, similar to Morse code. Increasing pressure on the waffled nanotubes squeezes them even closer together, allowing more electricity to flow through the sensor, and those varied impulses are sent as short pulses to the sensing mechanism.

The team then hooked this pressure-sensing mechanism to the second ply of their artificial skin, a flexible electronic circuit that could carry pulses of electricity to nerve cells.

Translating to the Cells

Bao’s team has been developing flexible electronics that can bend without breaking. Through a partnership with researchers from PARC, a Xerox company, an inkjet printer was used to deposit flexible circuits onto plastic.

For the electronic signal to be recognized by a living neuron, a technique was used developed by Karl Deisseroth, a Stanford professor of bioengineering, that combines genetics and optics, called optogenetics. They bioengineered cells to make them sensitive to specific frequencies of light, then use light pulses to switch cells on and off from the electronic pressure signals in the artificial skin.

Bao said other methods of stimulating nerves are likely to be used in real prosthetic devices that could replicate, for instance, the ability to distinguish corduroy from silk, or a cold glass of water from a hot cup of coffee.

This will take time. There are six types of biological sensing mechanisms in the human hand, and the experiment described in Science reports success in just one of them. But the current two-ply approach means the team can add sensations as it develops new mechanisms.

“We have a lot of work to take this from experimental to practical applications,” Bao said. “But after spending many years in this work, I now see a clear path where we can take our artificial skin.”

Reprinted (in edited form) with permission from the Stanford News Service – Photo from Bao Labs, Stanford

Breathtaking 2-Mins of Europe From 5000 Miles On Motorcycle (WATCH)

 

This Summer I motorbiked across the Balkan States: I traveled 8,000 kilometers across 15 countries completely alone.

I’ve just published a 2-minute video about the trip with all the beautiful sights I saw. Enjoy! – Jacob Laukaitis at Chameleon John

Man Harvests Water for 10K People in Driest Part of India (WATCH)

Bhagwati Agrawal CNN Hero screenshot CNN

When groundwater started disappearing in the Indian state of Rajasthan, Bhagwati Agrawal invented a way to tap a “river in the sky.”

For most of the year, Rajasthan is so dry, people use sand to clean their dishes. But during monsoon season, there is plenty of rain — enough water to last villages for an entire year if they could capture enough of it.

Agrawal invented a way to do that, a water collection system called Aakash Ganga – Hindi for “River from the Sky” – which now supplies 10,000 people with year-round clean, healthy drinking water.

Navajo Lady Delivers Water 75 Miles a Day to Homes Without Plumbing

A public-private partnership rents rooftops and sets up collection networks of pipes and underground storage tanks. Part of the rain captured by his system goes to the homeowner, the rest through a series of pipes to community reservoirs.

Agrawal is spreading the systems through Indian villages through his nonprofit, Sustainable Innovations, but he’s also spreading a better quality of life. When families no longer have to spend precious time hauling water long distances, adults can spend more time working and children can spend more time in school.

In the villages where he’s deployed the rain harvesting systems, overall health has improved and dairy cattle are producing twice as much milk.

Once a Desert, Ethiopia Turns Wasteland Into Fertile Farms

His work has made Agrawal one of CNN’s Top Ten Heroes of the Year.

You can vote for him as your choice for Hero of the Year at CNNHeroes.com. The network will announce the winner at their annual televised award show December 6, and present the 2015 winner with $100,000 for continuing his or her good work.

(WATCH the CNN video below) — Photo: CNN video

Arizona University Gives Free Tuition to MBA Students in 2016

asu-mall CC Kevin Dooley

Arizona State University is just giving away MBA degrees.

OK, students still have to study and complete the program — but it won’t cost incoming MBA students a penny next year.

There are 85 students in this year’s 2015 class, but starting next fall, up to 120 new students will have their entire tuition for the MBA program paid in full.

‘Big Bang Theory’ Funds Science Scholarships to UCLA

ASU’s W. P. Carey School of Business wants to attract non-traditional business students, such as people who want to work for nonprofits but might be scared away by the normally high tuition — $54,000 for in-state students, $90,000 for out of state residents.

The tuition giveaways are coming from a $50 million dollar donation from real estate tycoon William Carey. The donation not only spurred ASU to name its business school after him, but paid for the recruitment of new faculty.

The school’s administrators decided it was time to start using some of Mr. Carey’s donation to help students.

Administrators want to see what kind of business majors they will attract if cost isn’t a barrier — and what those graduates might be inspired to create if they didn’t have student loans on their back.

LeBron James Pays for College Scholarships For 1,100 Students

The Carey School of Business is regarded as a top school in its field, with 90% of graduates landing jobs within three months of graduation paying an average of $90,000.

The school hopes these grateful alumni will repay some of the free education with donations or mentoring  of business students in the future.

(READ more at the Wall Street Journal) — Photo: Kevin Dooley, CC

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Malaria Protein Accidentally Found to Be Cancer-Killing Weapon

malaria infects red blood cell Publicdomain NIH NIAID

Scientists for decades have been searching for similarities between a placenta and a tumor, because both grow so aggressively. Now they have stumbled upon one–and inadvertently, a possible powerful treatment for multiple kinds of cancer.

The researchers were looking for something completely different — a vaccine to protect pregnant mothers and their children from malaria – and in their quest found a malaria protein that effectively destroyed 90% of a wide range of cancer cells, from leukemia to brain tumors.

RELATED: Meet the Chicago Teen Who May Cure Colon Cancer

They noticed the carbohydrate that the malaria cells attach itself to in the placenta is identical to the one found in cancer cells. They then took the protein in malaria and added a toxin to it, turning it loose on cancer. The modified malaria protein latched onto cancer cells in the tests, released the toxin, and destroying almost all cancer cells in their tracks.

Since scientists use only the protein created in a laboratory instead of the actual malaria cell, there’s no risk of the patient developing malaria.

The teams working at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and the University of British Columbia in Canada published their findings this week in the journal Cancer Cell.

CHECK Out: Blood Cells “Retrained” to Destroy Cancer Leads to More Remissions

“It appears that the malaria protein attaches itself to the tumor without any significant attachment to other tissue,” said an optimistic Thomas Mandel Clausen, a Ph.D. student at the University of Copenhagen. “And the mice that were given doses of protein and toxin showed far higher survival rates than the untreated mice. We have seen that three doses can arrest growth in a tumor and even make it shrink.”

“I think there’s some irony to the fact that you can take a serious disease such as Malaria…and then use it to target another dreadful disease,” said Mads Daugaard, Senior Scientist at Vancouver Prostate Center, and one of the authors of the research.

Human trials for the cancer treatment are now being planned.

(WATCH the video below) — Photo: National Institutes of Health

People-Powered Grocery Store Lowers Food Prices for Volunteers

storefront-FB-Good-Grocer

A nonprofit grocery store offers healthy foods and a boost of self esteem for less fortunate customers.

Founder Kurt Vickman lets people volunteer to work in his Good Grocer store in Minneapolis, Minnesota for discounts on food. Every item in the shop is marked with two prices — one for regular customers, another, 25% lower price for people who volunteer to work in the store.

We love seeing that Membership card at work! Anyone can shop at Good Grocer, but working Members help keep our prices...

Posted by Good Grocer on Tuesday, August 4, 2015

 

Volunteers keep the prices in check by cutting labor costs – and some people donate their time without taking the discount, so the money goes back into the store.

Good Grocer has an emphasis on fresh produce to promote healthy diets. While it doesn’t fit the pattern of modern food co-ops, its volunteer business plan is similar to early model cooperative stores.

Pastor Turns Food Desert into Garden of Eden for the Poor

The store has about 375 members but Vickman says most customers are non-members who pay the higher prices to help keep costs low for other people in the community.

Vickman came up with the idea while running a food bank and noticing how difficult it was for people who came there to ask for help.

“Because people weren’t able to contribute something, whether it’s their time or money, I think it eroded people’s dignity and … sense of self-motivation,” Vickman told the Star Tribune.

Homeless Find New Life Working at 22-Acre Organic Farm and Restaurant

Allowing people to work gives people back their dignity and the self-motivation is easy to see. Volunteers provide 75% of Good Grocer’s labor and community leaders say they’ve seen neighbors take a “sense of ownership” in the store by donating their time.

Photos: Good Grocer, Facebook

College Student’s Device Can Turn Polluted Air into Printer Ink

kaala pollution printer demo video screenshot

This device doesn’t just suck soot out of the air—it repurposes the stuff as printer toner.

Anirudh Sharma, co-leader of a student-run science lab at MIT, has invented something called Kaala, a device that adds alcohol and oil to polluted air and creates printer ink.

The idea first came to him while channeling childhood memories.

High School Boy Invents Solution For Paraplegic Mom To Use Baby Stroller

“(It was) a minor itch that led me to build something cool from observations arising from nostalgia of the days back in India,” he said on the device’s website. “There’s so much soot/pollution around us, in crowded cities. What if the same could be repurposed to generate ink for printers?”

Sharma, a Masters student and Research Assistant at the Fluid Interfaces Group, also wrote that he believes the model makes good business sense for existing ink providers.

“Companies like HP/Canon make 70 percent of their profits by selling these cartridges at 400% margin.”

For the First Time, Artificial Feet Can Feel the Ground

Sharma is basically an unstoppable force of human innovation.

He won the ‘Innovator of the Year’ award from the MIT Tech Review TR35 for his work designing footwear to provide the visually impaired better mobility, by connecting insoles to your smartphone via bluetooth that will guide you hands free.

(WATCH the video below to see how ink is made) Photo: Kaala video

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College Kid Is Running A Highly Rated NYC Restaurant in His Dorm Room

Jonah Reider Pith screenshot WNBC

While many college students subsist on ramen noodles, this culinary genius is running one of New York’s highest-Yelp-rated new eateries out of his dorm room.

Jonah Reider is the creator of “Pith,” an exclusive dining experience that only serves four people at a time. He whips up five to eight-course meals for just $10 to $20 a person – all prepared in his Columbia University dorm’s common kitchen.

New Organic Drive-Thru: Vegan Fries With Your Non-GMO Burger

The college senior began cooking for friends and classmates, but when word spread about his intricate menus, people outside the school decided they wanted to sample his fare.

He began taking reservations through Yelp!, where he’s racked up a nearly impossible to achieve five-star rating.

Pith already has a wait list of hundreds of people and is booked solid through January.

12-Yr-Old Uses ‘Make-A-Wish’ For Food Truck To Feed Others

Reider, an economics major, said that he’s not really sure he wants to make cooking a career, but for now, he’s happy to be the toast of the town.

(WATCH the video below from WNBC or READ more at Grub Street) — Photo: WNBC video

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Rescued Baby Possum’s Favorite Nurse? A Stuffed Kangaroo (Here’s Why)

This stuffed kangaroo may not be its real mama, but it’s a pretty great surrogate, providing comfort for a possum rescued by a wildlife group.

Little Bettina, now four months old, was recently found alone in the Sydney suburb of Mosman, Australia.

Wild Baby Kangaroo Still Comes Home to Hug His Teddy Bear After Release

These photos of the possum cozying up to the toy during sleep time and feeding time show the wee marsupial is recovering well.

possum bottle feeding stuffed kangaroo Taronga zoo Facebook

The brushtail possum of Australia is named because of its resemblance to the opossums of the Americas, the most common marsupial in the Western Hemisphere.

The soft animal gives the baby possum a chance to cling to something wooly using her claws and teeth, which is what it would do with a natural mother in the wild.

The Taronga Wildlife Hospital staff also carries Bettina around in a pouch. When she is strong enough, she will be released back into the wild.

Photos: Taronga Zoo Facebook

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Even Oil And Coal CEOs Want Climate Action This Year, and Sign Petition

By Scheherazade Al-Arab, CC license

Sad Earth cc John LeGear

As world leaders sit down in Paris to decide how to cut greenhouse gas emissions, 14 corporations with massive carbon footprints have officially joined the call to rein in these atmospheric contributors to global climate change.

The companies, which include oil producers Shell and BP and coal mining giants BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto, issued a joint statement calling the UN Climate Change conference a “critical opportunity” to address the threats of climate change.

43 CEOs: Climate Debate Is Over, Carbon Cuts Are Good for Business

“As businesses concerned about the well-being of our investors, our customers, our communities and our planet,” the statement reads, “We are committed to working on our own and in partnership with governments to mobilize the technology, investment and innovation needed to transition to a sustainable low-carbon economy.”

“These are companies with real skin in the game–either they’re large emitters or their products are,” said Bob Perciasepe, president of the Center for Climate & Energy Solutions, which organized the statement.

Ex-NASA Engineer to Plant One Billion Trees a Year Using Drones

Almost 200 countries are taking part in the Paris conference with the goal of having a global agreement by the end of this year on how to cut carbon emissions that lead directly to climate change.

Hewlett-Packard, Intel, and PG&E, also joined the call for action.

(Photo (top) John LeGear; (homepage) Scheherazade Al Arab, CC)

Person Sends $500 to Make Amends for Park Vandalism 25 Years Ago

Money letter FB City of Orem Utah

A desire to make things right has gotten this Parks Department one step closer to helping local kids with special needs join their friends on the playground.

Earlier this week, the Public Works Department in Orem, Utah received an anonymous letter from someone apologizing for taking part in the vandalism of a city park bathroom in 1990.

It read:

“Many years ago in my youth, I and a couple of friends vandalized the bathroom partitions at Bonneville Park on 800 West. I regret the actions of my youth but need to make right the financial burden I created. I am including money that would or should be able to cover that expense.”

The writer enclosed $500 to make things right again.

Valedictorian Anonymously Posts Kind Words About all 657 Schoolmates

None of the employees at the city’s Parks Department remember the vandalism from 25 years ago, but they do plan to put the money toward an “All Abilities Playground” the city is building.

When it opens in the spring, this new addition will let kids with mobility problems, even kids in wheelchairs, join their friends for play dates in the park.

These Photos Confirm the Goodness of Humanity

It’s one of those ‘feel good’ stories that makes you believe in humanity,” Reed Price, with Orem’s Public Works department told KSL News.

(WATCH the KSL News video below) — Photo: City of Orem, Facebook