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Barber Gives Free Haircuts to Kids If They Read Stories to Him

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It’s a deal you can’t beat — an Iowa barber traded free haircuts to kids if they would read to him while in his chair.

Courtney Holmes says he wanted to help kids read more — and because of that, he got an earful about proper nutrition from 9-year-old customer Tayshawn Kirby reading a book called “Fats, Oils and Sweets.”

Businesses, churches, and non-profit groups pitched in for Dubuque’s annual Back to School Bash, which included more than 100 people learning about before-and-after-school resources for kids and their parents.postman delivers books screenshot KSL

Mailman Sees Boy Reading Junk Mail for Lack of Books; He Has Books Now!

 

Holmes the barber also got something out of it — the satisfaction of helping kids read, and the insight from Tayshawn that the average person eats 150 pounds of sugar every year.

(READ more, w/ photo, from the AP)  Photos by edenpictures, triviaqueen, and russelljsmith, CC – Story tip from Danielle Nunnally

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Town Installs Outdoor Refrigerator so Locals Can Feed the Hungry in Spain

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People in the Basque town of Galdakao, Spain, put their leftovers in the fridge — not just the ones in their homes, but the one on the street, too.

The city of about 30,000 created the country’s first communal refrigerator to help the hungry.

Alvaro Saiz, who used to run a food bank in Galdakao, came up with the idea for the “Solidarity Fridge” during the recession when he saw people going through trash bins looking for food. He figured there had to be a better way for restaurants and even individuals to give away unused food.bangladesh farming - Shykh Seraj

Bangladesh Slashes Hunger Rates in Half, Becomes Model for Rest of World

 

He went to the mayor with his plan to put a refrigerator on the street where people could deliver leftovers and the hungry could take what they needed.

“When he came to city hall with this idea, I thought it was both crazy and brilliant!” Mayor Ibon Uribe told NPR. “How could I say no?”

It took some legal research and money, but the city finally came up with $5,500 for the project and changed the law to keep the city from being sued if people get sick. No raw meat or eggs are allowed and food has to be thrown out after four days, but people who maintain the Solidarity Fridge says nothing lasts more than a few hours.

Man Installs Refrigerator Outside his Home to Feed the Needy

 

Restaurants now put leftover tapas in the fridge and some people actually cook whole meals just to put in it. And schools are organizing field trips to the fridge, to teach young students how to share and not be wasteful.

(READ the full story from NPR)  Photo by Akhbaar24 shows fridge for the needy in Saudi Arabia

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Padres Baseball Team Keeps Disabled Pitcher on Payroll for 20 Yrs to Give Insurance

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When folks say a ball team has a lot of heart, they usually mean that, win or lose, the players give it their all, every single time. For the past 20 years, though, the San Diego Padres have been showing their heart through the quiet stroke of a pen in the back office.

The Major League Baseball team has gone on renewing the contract of beloved former pitcher Matt LaChappa, year after year, decade after decade, even though the kid never threw a ball in the big leagues. They wanted to keep providing the medical insurance he would need.cop mows lawn Downtown Kalamazoo Cops facebook

Officers Manicure Lawn for a Man in Wheelchair Who Was Trying to Mow

 

In the spring of 1996, LaChappa was a 20-year-old left-hander with a sharp-breaking curveball—and the Padres’ best pitching prospect. The team had drafted him straight out of high school in Lakeside, California, a couple years earlier.

matt_LaChappa-bb-card-small-150x150But on a cool April evening, while warming up as a relief pitcher in a minor league game, LaChappa was felled by a massive heart attack. Although help came quickly for the athlete barely out of his teens, he suffered debilitating brain damage and has been confined to a wheelchair ever since.

It could have spelled the end of LaChappa’s association with the San Diego Padres, but no.

“Matt LaChappa is a Padre for life,” said Priscilla Oppenheimer, who for 25 years was the team’s director of minor-league operations. She was the one who asked the question: Was there any reason they couldn’t just go on paying LaChappa, renewing his basic minor-league contract, complete with medical benefits?

“It was the right thing to do, the right and proper thing,” Oppenheimer told MLB.com during a game honoring LaChappa in April. “He’s such a good kid… and I’m so happy the Padres have kept it up after all these years.”wheelchair swing Facebook SmarterEveryDay

Dad Builds “Awesome” Giant Swing so Daughter in Wheelchair Can Play

 

The team further honored LaChappa a couple summers ago by renovating a Little League field near Lakeside where the young pitcher used to play and renaming it Matt LaChappa Field.

In April, with his brother at one shoulder and his nurse at the other, LaChappa stood and greeted the Padres crowd, grinning broadly. Though still sharp as a tack, according to family members, he doesn’t speak and has only limited use of his limbs. But, come game time he is usually found—whether in a VIP suite at the Padres’ stadium or back home on the Barona Indian Reservation where he grew up and now lives—ready to cheer, wearing the team cap on his head and holding a baseball in his left hand.

(WATCH the MLB video below)   Image credit: MLB Video – Story tip from Maria Morris

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Sign Up This Ball Girl Who Made Amazing Catch During Game (WATCH)

Padres Ball Girl screenshot MLB

It was the Major League Baseball play of the day — but the athlete wasn’t even on a team.

A San Diego Padres ball girl casually snatched a ripping foul ball out of the air before it could fly into the stands, then nonchalantly tossed it to a kid in the seats behind her.Jen Welter NFL coach screenshot TODAY

NFL’s First Female Coach Hired by Arizona Cardinals

 

Fans gave former college softball player J.J. Hartung a standing ovation for her spiraling catch and the broadcast team declared it the “Play of the Game.”

They replayed it over and over — to give Padres fans something to cheer about. Their team would go on to lose the game to the Philadelphia Phillies 5-3.

(WATCH the MLB video below) — Image Credit: MLB Video

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101-Year-Old Woman Rappels Down Skyscrapers for Charity (WATCH)

Rappelling Doris Long screenshot Spinnaker Tower

At 101-years-old, Doris Long occupies herself with charity work — defined as rappelling down the sides of skyscrapers to raise money for others.

Her latest descent was down the side of the 560-feet tall Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth, England to support a hospice in her hometown of Waterlooville. It’s the 14th time she’s done it for The Rowans Hospice.

She didn’t even take up rappelling, or abseiling as it’s called in the UK, until she turned 85.Ernest-Andrus-screenshot-hooplaha

91-Year-old WWII Vet Running 3,000 Miles For Ship That Won The War

 

That excursion down the Spinnaker Tower also let Long reclaim her title in the Guinness Book of World Records as “The World’s Oldest Abseiler.”

She already has plans to repeat the stunt next year, increasing the $17,000 total she’s raised for charity by continuing to lower herself off tall buildings.

(WATCH the video or READ more at Mashable) Photo: Spinnaker Tower video

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Young Woman Approaches Elder Eating Alone, Now Have Weekly Lunch Date

dining alone elderly-Jeremy Stebens-CC-640px

Many of us have been there: we see a senior citizen eating alone and think, maybe I should go talk to them, or sit with them…but we’re not sure what the response will be.

Brooke Oacha of  Texas,  decided it was worth a try—and the elderly lady sitting at the “table for one” by herself (pictured below) was absolutely elated.

Today I Went to eat at a restaurant for lunch and I saw this elder lady coming from afar so I waited to hold the door...

Posted by Brooke Ochoa on Thursday, August 6, 2015

 

As it turned out, Delores was pretty lonely—she has just lost her own mother and was having a hard time living alone.

On Thursday, though, it was all smiles, and now, the women have a standing lunch date to eat together every week.Nursing Home Present Perfect-Evan Briggs Kickstarter Page

When a Preschool Opens Inside a Nursing Home All Heaven Breaks Loose

 

(Photo: Brooke Oacha on Facebook; (top) Jeremy Stebens, CC)

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Woman Helps Pet Owners in Poverty and Her Program is Now in 28 States

A lot of attention is paid to helping pets get adopted—but one woman saw a need to help furry ones who already had homes.

Amanda Arrington, who was the North Carolina State Director for The Humane Society of the United States a decade ago, started the Pets For Life program to provide care and information for pet owners who are sometimes 20 miles away from a vet.

“A lot of us take for granted that we know what heartworm is, and its prevalent in the south because of mosquitos, but if you’ve never seen a vet and your parents and neighbors and friends don’t take animals to vet, then your just not familiar with it,” Arrington told Good News Network.

“There are no pet supply stores, no retailers, people don’t have access to what they need.”

The issue caught her attention during Hurricane Katrina rescue efforts, when she saw the high rate of pets not spayed or neutered.

“There was no access between Louisiana and Mississippi for people struggling financially to get vet care. There was one spay neuter clinic between the states,” she said.

In 2011, she got Pets For Life off the ground by sending teams to literally knock on doors, introduce themselves, and tell people about the services they provide.

“We build a presence in neighborhoods with three days each week of outreach,” she said. “People know that if they have a question, we’re coming back in two days.”

Everything is free, from vet checkups to transportation to the vet and any other services (except very expensive surgeries).

The program was incredibly well-received and, after a year, Amanda realized every town needed something like this—but their volunteers could only handle a few.

As the director of Pets for Life, she decided to reach out to local rescue groups and begin a mentorship program with the help of PetSmart Charities, providing grants and direct training to local groups.

Mentorship programs are operating in 30 cities and 28 states from Florida to New Jersey, they’ve even on a Native American reservation in Montana.

SEE More Inspiring Pet Stories Here, on Good News Network

Working in underserved areas isn’t without its challenges, though.

“We deal with everything you can imagine. We console families when they lose someone or help someone who took in a dog because cousin went to jail,” Arrington said. “It’s all related. You can’t just say, ‘I’m here to work on this one issue.’”

Sharonda Byrd knew something was wrong when their two-year-old dog, Treasure, refused to eat and began to lose weight. She wouldn’t go near water and developed sores on her skin. They didn’t have a car to take the 50-pound-pup to a veterinarian, and taking her on an Atlanta city bus wasn’t an option either.

Luckily, they found the organization’s walk-in warehouse space nearby, and one of their staffers swung by the house the next morning to drive Treasure to the vet. Treasure made a full recovery from intestinal parasites, thanks to the free treatment Pets for Life provided. She’s now back to waking everyone up with a face full of kisses and tail wag to the neck.

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Astronauts Grow Salad Greens, Eat Fresh Food in Space, a NASA First

Astronaut cuisine has always consisted mainly of freeze-dried foods, but now a freshly grown vegetable garden is taking off.

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station tweeted their excitement Sunday about an off-planet first: the next day’s menu would include veggies grown on board.

“Fun watching these (salad greens) grow,” astronaut Kjell Lindgren tweeted, as he shared the photo above. “Almost sad to eat them tomorrow. Almost.”

For weeks he and the rest of the crew had tended the ‘patch’ of “Outredgeous” red romaine lettuce. Though it was not the first crop cultivated in space, this time they were actually going to get to eat it.NASA Scientists celebrate -NASA

SEE More Good News About NASA in the Good News Network Archives

 

“Lettuce take a #selfie,” crew mate Scott Kelly joked in his tweet. Behind him in the photo, fresh romaine leaves hover within a transparent box bathed in magenta light.

It is the classic image of science project–because that’s what it is.

For decades, NASA and other space agencies have experimented with plants in space, but the results were always sent to earth for examination, rather than eaten. Likewise, half of this week’s crop will be withheld from the salad bowl and sent back to earth– just the latest results of ongoing experiments in zero-gravity gardening.

NASA’s aim with space farming, as it’s called, goes beyond the need to feed a few astronauts within the cramped confines of the International Space Station. With planned deep-space missions to an asteroid by 2025 and to Mars in the 2030s, NASA needs to figure out how to grow food not only aboard spacecraft, but also on other planets.

Field of Greens: Baseball Stadiums Grow Veggies on Roof to Feed FansBallpark-Farms-Green-City-Growers-Facebook-cropped

 

The Veggie Plant Growth System that produced Monday’s momentous salad is “aeroponic,” designed to cultivate vegetation in an air or mist environment without soil. Even on earth, plants grown this way mature up to three times faster than those grown in soil and require far less water and fertilizer, NASA explained. Such plants are much less prone to disease and, sealed safely away from the world of bugs, never need pesticide.

Besides, NASA said, on-board gardening gives astronauts something fun to do during long missions, between their systems checks, spacewalks and other official duties.

We’re sure it tasted out of this world.

(READ more at CNN) — Photos: Kjell Lindgren, Twitter

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Survival Rates for Ovarian Cancer Reach All Time High – Up 50%

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Women today are far more likely to survive ovarian cancer than their mothers’ would have been.

After comparing the survival rate of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer between 1975 and 2011, researchers found that women diagnosed in 2006 or later were 50% less likely to die from the disease than those diagnosed in 1975.

The survival rate has improved for women with all stages of ovarian cancer, according to Dr. Jason Wright, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City. He led the study that looked at medical histories of 50,000 women diagnosed over 36 years.Melanoma-CT-Scan-NewEnglandJournalofMedicine

In Successful Cancer Trial, Therapy “Dissolves” Stage IV Tumor in 3 Weeks

 

“They’re living with the disease for longer and longer periods of time as we have new chemotherapies, new drugs, new way to deliver drugs for ovarian cancer,” Dr. Wright told CBS News.

He also credits improvements in early detection of the disease, which isn’t always easy.African-Am-black-lab-worker-teen-Kevin Stonewall-IntelVideo

Meet the Chicago Teen Who May Cure Colon Cancer

Ovarian cancer is difficult to diagnose in the early stages and has a high recurrence rate, but new research is beginning to change that, allowing doctors to treat the disease earlier.

The study was published in the June issue of the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology.

(WATCH the CBS News video below)  Photo: ReSurge International, CC

Americans Can Donate AC Units to Seniors Who Can’t Afford Repairs

Thermometer heat wave CC Mr.TinDC

Instead of roasting in the oppressive heat of a Mississippi summer, an 81-year-old woman is breathing easier thanks to a donated air conditioner.

It’s more than just a cool thing to do. Donating an air conditioner, new or used, can save someone’s life.

John Armstrong of the Harrison County Senior Resource Center, installed the donated air conditioner in Annie McLaurin’s home after her old one stopped working.

When a Preschool Opens Inside a Nursing Home All Heaven Breaks Loose

 

As the hottest days of summer are baking much of the country, charities are grateful for donations of air conditioners, which are not just luxuries. Heat is one of the most dangerous weather conditions in America, according to the National Weather Service, causing hundreds of death each year.

Electric utilities also are assisting by giving portable air conditioners to people in need. For example, Reliant Energy joined the health department in Houston, Texas, to distribute 315 air conditioners for senior citizens earlier this year.Senior learns computer skills-AFPvideo

Brilliant Idea: Free Housing for Student Volunteers in Senior Home (w/ Video)

 

Seniors can contact the local LIHEAP (Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program) for air conditioning help. The public can donate units by contacting their city or county health department. If you have AC technical experience,  you might be able to fix units that are broken and provide relief to someone for the rest of the summer.

(WATCH the WLOX News video) – Photo: Mr.TinDC, CC

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Stranger Pays Parking Ticket for Mother Staying with Baby at Hospital

parking ticket note Facebook

The last thing an Australian woman needed after spending days in the hospital with her sick, infant son was a parking ticket.

Fortunately, a stranger felt the same way.

When the mother returned to her car—after days of sitting up with her nine-week-old son in the hospital—she found a note on the hood.Firefighter thank you note Facebook Tim Young

Firefighters Pay it Forward Big Time After Waitress With Heart of Gold Picks Up Tab

 

“I saw your car had a parking ticket on it,” the note read. “I’m sure whatever you’re going through at the hospital is tough enough so I have paid for you.”

The note even included the receipt number for the payment.

The stranger left only her first name, Laura.

The simple act of kindness brightened her day, but she had no way to track down the stranger and thank her.Letter to Heaven screenshot KFOR

Balloon Released at Gravesite Flies 25 Miles, Straight Home to Family

 

So the mother posted a photo to the Canberra Mums Facebook page, a virtual meeting place for new mothers, hoping Laura would see it.

There’s a pretty good chance she has by now — the post has been shared almost 15,000 times in the last four days.

(READ more at TODAY) — Photo: Canberra Mums, Facebook

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6-yo Boy Who Lost Both Parents Has New Purpose: Making Strangers Smile (WATCH)

Jaden Hayes screenshot CBS

Jaden Hayes lost his father when he was only four, and his mother earlier this year.

But the six-year-old is tired of being sad—and seeing everyone sad all the time–so he is cheering up strangers in his hometown.

The adorably outspoken child asked his new guardian, Aunt Barbara, to help him with his master plan to give out small toys, “rubber duckies and dinosaurs” – the things that make people smile. Haylen-ice-cream-Facebook-cropped

Sassy 5-yo Sets Up Ice Cream Shop So He Can Buy Medicine for Sick Kids

 

On four separate occasions, he approached people on the streets of Savannah, Georgia, who weren’t smiling and handed them a toy.

It worked like a charm: the little gifts instantly put smiles on strangers faces.

“The more people he made smile, the more his light shone,” Barbara DiCola, told CBS’s Steve Hartman.Lucas Hobbs With Mom Food Truck ChefLucasFood Facebook

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

 

At least 500 people have gotten one of Jaden’s gifts — and given the little orphan a big smile in return.

“I’m counting on it to be 33,000,” said the little smile collector.

(WATCH the video below from CBS News) Photo: CBS – Story tip from Bryan

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It’s Unanimous: Every Country in the UN Signs Agreement to Protect Wildlife

CC, Mara 1

baby elephant CC Mara 1

In an international body where it seems no one gets along, the United Nations has found something everyone likes – wild animals.

It took three-years, but all 193 member countries of the U.N. have signed on to a resolution to create new and stronger protections for the world’s wildlife.galapagos-baby-tortoise-James Gibbs

Baby Tortoises Survive on Galapagos Island for First Time in 100 Years

 

The resolution calls on countries to beef up courts and law enforcement to protect wildlife, and encourage communities to join the fight against poaching, trafficking, and selling illicit goods taken or made from threatened animals.

“The resolution sends a message that wildlife crime, and the global criminal syndicates profiting from it, will not be tolerated,” Leigh Henry, of the World Wildlife Fund, told ABC News.cecil the lion zimbabwe CC vince o'sullivan

Trophy-Hunted Lion’s Tragedy Leads to Animal Rights Triumphs

 

Starting next year, the UN Secretary General will have to file an annual report on the state of the world’s wildlife and progress countries have made toward fulfilling the requirements of the resolution. The General Assembly is also looking into the idea of creating a special envoy to help keep pressure on countries to live up to their promises.

It’s rare for all the member countries to agree to any one thing, but animals have an appeal that reaches across borders, and attracts tourists.rescue dog Rosie CC pocketwiley

Arizona City Mandates All Dogs Sold in Pet Stores Will Come From Shelters

 

Gabon and Germany proposed the original initiative, and 84 other nations joined as co-sponsors of the resolution.

(READ more from AP News) — Photo: Mara 1, CC

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Precious “Lost” Tolkien Story to be Published For the First Time

Tolkien-book-publicdomain-photo

“Not all those who wander are lost” — and not all lost manuscripts stay that way.

Fans of “The Hobbit” and “Lord of the Rings” have a new book to look forward to — one that J.R.R. Tolkien wrote more than 100 years ago. It was his first fantasy work and, though never finished, it laid the foundation for every book he’d go on to write.

Brand New Book by Dr. Seuss–Was Lost–Now Published 55 Years Later

 

Tolkien wrote “The Story of Kullervo” while at Oxford University in 1914. World War I interrupted his work on it, but he later called it “the germ of my attempt to write legends of my own.”

It’s about a young man who seeks revenge against an evil magician and Tolkien used the title character as a basis for the hero in “The Silmarillion” years later.go-set-a-watchman-book-cover

Harper Lee Novel, Watchman, Released After 50 yrs of Anticipation

 

The Story of Kullervo will be available in the UK on August 27, and in the U.S. October 27, but is available for pre-order now. It will include Tolkien’s drafts and notes on the work.

(READ more from The Verge)

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Baby Elephant Chasing Birds is Only Video You Need on World Ele Day

In honor of World Elephant Day, we are trumpeting the best videos on the web showing these adorable babies using their trunks to play.

No matter how many you watch, nothing beats this video (above) of a baby elephant discovering baby birds for the first time.

If you want more—and how could you not—check out these other elephant babies at play:

Baby Elephant Swirls a Ribbon Just Like a Child

At the Elephant Nature Park juveniles regularly engage in cute behavior. Watch Faa Mai enjoying her playtime with a steaming ribbon.

After Years Apart, Watch This Mother Elephant Reunite With Her Baby

Baby MeBai was only three years old when taken from her mother, Mae Yui, and forced to give rides to tourists in Thailand. Too young and small for the job, the young animal steadily lost weight until she could no longer carry passengers. Elephant Nature Park stepped in, rescuing MeBai with their “Pamper a Pachyderm” program. The reunion with its mother was a lovefest of touching and cuddling.  (READ More here)

Baby Elephant Throws a Tantrum

This Little Elephant Loves Cuddling with Humans, Particularly Arthur

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Young Sisters Raise $650,000 Folding Origami to Build Wells Across World

katherine-and-isabelle-at-table-paper-for-water-FB-750

Normally, paper and water create a soggy mess, but add origami to the mix and you get clean water flowing through the hearts of two sisters and 70 newly drilled wells in Africa, India, Mexico, Peru, and the U.S.

It all started after 5-year-old Katherine Adams began folding origami with her father after they dropped off her older sister at school.

When Katherine learned that millions of people go thirsty every day—and many girls can’t even go to school because they spend all day hauling water—she decided to put her paper-folding skills to good use.

With the help of her dad, she would try to raise money to build a well in Ethiopia by hosting an origami sale at a local Starbucks in Dallas, Texas. Her mom and 8-year-old sister, Isabelle, began to fold, along with other volunteers who asked to join the effort.

The girls set a $500 goal and got busy folding dozens of origami ornaments in the autumn of 2011. The ornaments sold out by the end of their first day at Starbucks and, just eight weeks later, the girls had raised over $10,000, enough to cover the cost of a new well to benefit the entire village.Brothers named Sportskids of 2012

SEE More Inspiring Kids’ Stories at Good News Network

 

Almost four years later, the sisters—now 9 and 11—are co-presidents of Paper for Water, an organization whose hundreds of paper-folding volunteers have helped raise over $650,000. The girls have been tapped as keynote speakers and have even been given what amounts to a lifetime achievement award from nonprofit Living Water International.

Paper for Water kids at well Living Water International submittedGlobally, 783 million people lack access to clean water and more than a billion lack appropriate sanitation facilities, a problem the girls’ dad, Ken Adams, M.D., said would cost some $20 billion to solve.  Sounds like a lot, but when you consider that people in the U.S. spend over $400 billion during holiday gift-giving season each year, his daughters see it as “definitely doable” to eradicate global thirst in their lifetime.

“If everyone in this world helps a little, it all adds up to a lot,” Isabelle told Good News Network. “Folding origami is an easy way for people of any age to help change the world.”

The Adams family has visited two of the wells made possible through Paper for Water —one in India a couple Christmases ago, and one this past Monday on a Navajo Reservation in New Mexico. Eager to meet as many of the families as possible who have benefited from Paper for Water’s work, the family is planning a 2017 world tour.

Paper for Water many ornaments Deborah Watters Adams submittedThe girls teach their craft wherever they go.

“It’s fun and it’s social and it’s a good way to use your brain to help other people,” Katherine said.

The simplest Paper for Water ornament takes an hour to make—and some can take more than five. One volunteer put over 22 hours into a single ornament, which will be on display at the girls’ exhibit at the Paper Discovery Center in Appleton, Wisconsin, starting in September.

You can buy the ornaments online at their website.

Photos via Paper for Water, Facebook

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Robin Williams’ Compassion Lives On Through Son’s Service in Prisons

A year after Robin Williams’ death, his son Zak is carrying on the comedian’s legacy of humanitarian service.

The actor’s oldest child is using his business education to teach prison inmates how to manage their finances after they’re released.

Zak Williams, by his own estimate, could have coasted through life, riding on the wealth of his famous father. Instead, he wanted to “take pride and joy” in his work, using his MBA degree from Columbia to give something back.

CELEBRITY Related: Prince William Makes History by Taking a Job– AND Donating His Full Salary

To do that, the 32-year-old started teaching a finance class at California’s San Quentin Prison last October.

Williams teaches the weekly course alongside one of the inmates, Curtis Carroll, whose prison nickname is “Wall Street” because he has studied stocks and predicts which ones will do well. Their course teaches inmates how to write resumes, look for a job, manage finances, and plan for retirement. Williams hopes to develop the program into one that will work outside prison, expanding it to low-income neighborhoods.

MORE: Michael J. Fox Climbs North Dakota Mountain to Fund Parkinson’s Research

“It’s not hard to be compassionate,” Williams told TODAY.

Robin Williams once told a forum on Reddit: “My children give me a great sense of wonder. Just to see them develop into these extraordinary human beings.”

Photos: Eva Rinaldi, CC; and Twitter, @zakwilliams

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California Restores Voting Rights for 60,000 Former Felons

Vote CC Renee Silverman

A court settlement has just given 60,000 felony offenders the right to vote again in California.

They all committed low-level offenses and were released, placed under community supervision to ease prison overcrowding. They never regained their right to vote and a lawsuit was filed on their behalf to get those voting rights back.

A Superior Court Judge agreed back in May saying the idea of the community supervision sentence “was to reintroduce felons into the community, which is consistent with restoring their right to vote.” After initially appealing the case, the state agreed to a settlement last week.heroin crime rehab story gloucester-police-department photo permission

Cops Decide Heroin Addicts Will Be Helped With Rehab, Not Arrested

 

California Secretary of State Alex Padilla said, “If we are serious about slowing the revolving door at our jails and prisons, and serious about reducing recidivism, we need to engage—not shun—former offenders.”Prison garden screenshot MD Dept Public Safet

Inmates Grow Along With the Gardens They Tend Behind Bars

 

The Sentencing Project says roughly six million Americans are not allowed to vote because of  criminal convictions in their past. A bill before Congress and a possible referendum in Florida may restore voting rights to thousands more ex-offenders who’ve completed their sentences.

(READ more at Mother Jones) — Photo: FutUndBeidl, CC

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Stranger Pays Unpaid Court Fines to Break Cycle of Jail for Ex-Con

2 families-Jim Moses-submitted-TayRowe-FB

A good Samaritan has volunteered to pay off a former convict’s debt to the court — long after the man had finished paying his debt to society.

Shaunte “Tay” Rowe had been struggling for 11 years to pay off $4,700 in court fees and restitution in Spokane, Washington. After reading a news article about his plight, a stranger paid off the remaining $1,200 owed by Rowe.

It can be hard for an ex-offender to find a steady job, and Rowe has been sent to jail four times because he didn’t have enough money to make payments. While in jail, Rowe can’t earn the money needed to pay off his debt to the court, plus he runs up more fees — with the 12% interest rate.Jonathan Fleming Indigogo

Hundreds of Strangers Help Innocent Man After 24 Years in Prison

 

Jim Moses, an Arizona archaeologist and owner of Antigua Archaeology, LLC, told Good News Network he decided to help immediately after reading about Rowe’s struggle to gain a fresh start.

“The thought of charging released felons 12% interest on their administrative costs is appalling,” he said in an email today. “These people do their time… and then struggle to re-enter the world while laboring under an oppressive interest rate in an era of near 0% interest from the Federal Reserve. It is a horrible practice that must end.”

Moses believes debt is the biggest cause of economic inequality and thought helping Rowe would finally allow him a chance to start a new life.

The archeologist has not spoken or communicated with Mr. Rowe, yet, but said he may try to contact him to say hello.Bryant-Collins-saves-baby-on-road-iphone

SEE More Inspiring Stories About Ex-Offenders

 

(READ the full story at Aljazeera America)   Story tip: Gal Adam Spinrad – Photo submitted, and Facebook

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Mom Starts Dog Treat Biz So Special Needs Adults Can Bake for Bucks

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The chefs at this local Greensboro, North Carolina kitchen only work with a few ingredients: peanut butter, oats, oil, flour…and, of course, love.

ArcBARKS boy with dog facebookPat Clapp started ArcBARKS Dog Treat Company as a way to help her son, David, and other special needs adults find a fulfilling way to spend their time.

David has Down Syndrome, and Clapp says that opportunities for him are few, and far between, in their community.

“One of my chefs told me, ‘If ArcBARKS wasn’t here, I’d be sitting at home like a couch potato right now,’” said Clapp. “We have fun every single day, and the pickiest of picky dogs eat our treats.”

arcBARKS cookie tray smike facebookAll of the 18 ArcBARKS chefs may have development disabilities, but it’s not even close to being a setback for the amateur treat chefs who hand-craft these natural, locally sourced biscuits.

Their treats are distributed at nearly 150 locations across North and South Carolina from grocery stores to animal hospitals.

ArcBARKS also prepares the young adults for careers outside of the treat-making business, training them in the art of collaborations, sales, customer service, and eye-contact.

Happiness, confidence, and acceptance are also amazing by-products of their work.

The company gets help from Arc of Greensboro, whose mission is to create opportunities for people with developmental and intellectual disabilities. Find out how to buy the treats, here.

(WATCH the video below from WFMY)  Photos: ArcBARKS Facebook

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