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5 Year-old Sings Grace for Homeless Man in Diner, Brings Tears (WATCH)

5yo boy waffle-house-homeless-Ava Faulk

When 5-year-old Josiah Duncan saw a homeless man with a backpack idling outside of his local Alabama Waffle House, he started asking his mother, Ava Faulk, a lot of questions. It was likely his first encounter with anyone who was homeless. “What does that mean?”

“He doesn’t have anywhere to live,” she explained to her son.

What bothered Josiah most was that the man looked hungry, so he decided to get him a menu and implored his mom to pay for the man’s meal. Of course, she obliged.

What brought everyone to tears, including the homeless man, was when the small boy insisted on singing a blessing, “…We thank you, for our many blessings, for our many blessings, Amen.”

(WATCH the video below or READ the full story at WFSA-12) – Photo by Ava Faulk

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This Bike Path Paved With Solar Panels Can Power One Home For a Year

Solar-bike-path-PhotoCredit-SolaRoad

A bike path made of solar cells has shocked it’s creators with just how much electricity it’s generating.

In its first six months, the 230-foot bike path in a village outside Amsterdam, Netherlands, has cranked out 3,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity — enough to power a single-person household for a year.

“We did not expect a yield as high as this so quickly,” SolaRoad spokesman Sten de Wit said in a statement. “It was a successful first half year.”

The short bike path is a pilot project to show what a longer solar road could do. It’s creators hope to one day allow electric cars and bikes to recharge wirelessly as they cruise along highways embedded with solar panels.

(WATCH the video below and READ more from the CS Monitor) – Photo by SolaRoad

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Tiger Woods Writes Personal Letter to Encourage Boy, “I also stuttered”

Tiger Woods photo by Chase McAlpine on Flickr (CC license)

Golf Pro Tiger Woods wrote an encouraging note to a high school student struggling with a stutter.

The 14-time majors champion also stuttered in his youth. “I know what it’s like to be different and to sometimes not fit in,” Woods wrote in the letter. “I also stuttered as a child… I took a class for two years to help me, and I finally learned to stop.”

The boy –only identified as Dillon– heard from Woods after his mother reached out to Swedish golfer Sophie Gustafson, who has a severe stuttering problem. Golf Digest reported that Dillon’s mom told Gustafson her son had tried out for the football team, but quit because of the constant teasing.(Photo by Terry Gilliam)

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

 

Woods also told Dillon about other trials, like being the only minority in his sport.

“But I didn’t let that stop me, and I think it even inspired me to work harder,” he wrote.“I know you can do that too. You have a great family, and big fans like me on your side. Be well and keep fighting. I’m certain you’ll be great at anything you do.”

Thanks to Woods’ letter to Dillon, Gustafson tweeted, “He got so happy! It’s being framed and hanged.”

(READ more at ESPN)  – Photo of letter via Golf Digest

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Skype Is Testing a Real-Time Translation Feature in Four Languages

 

Skype has revolutionized the way people around the world communicate with one another. Now, a new tool is taking it a step further, translating conversations in real time as folks speak to each other in their native language.

Microsoft initially released the software –which is currently invite-only– last December. It’s currently being test-run in English, Spanish, Italian, and Mandarin.

Joe Pinsker of The Atlantic recently tried out the software and took readers through his experience, step by step.

After he finished speaking, the software transcribed his words in a sidebar, then dictated, or “spoke,” the sentence to the other person out loud.Surprised teachers get 50K from Ellen Show

Ellen Surprises A Deserving School With $50,000 (WATCH Their Joy)

 

Right now, two people cannot “interrupt” each other during their conversation, and thoughts are best expressed in short sentences, but improvements are likely to come soon. When they do, developers are hoping eventually to bring the instant-translation feature to Skype’s 300 million monthly users.

(WATCH the Skype video above and READ more at The Atlantic)

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My Heart at 50: Pity Party Turns Into Inspiring Day With The Homeless

Heart hands graffiti-Flickr-CC-id-iom-700px

A few years ago, I was whining to my daughter about my imminent crossing of that dreaded age Rubicon: the Big Five-O. “The best of my life is behind me. I’m entering the period of throat wattles and colonoscopies every five years … and uselessness. Irrelevance.”

Being both blunt and wise she said, “Ya know … someone who feels as sorry for herself as you do ought to go out and do something for someone who’s got real problems.”

Whoa! A knife to the heart of my pity-party.

But how could I not take her advice? Two weeks later I set out to “do good”—or maybe just to give a little spritz to my ego via an evening emulating Mother Teresa—at Raphael House, a shelter for homeless San Francisco families.

I don’t know what I expected, but Raphael House was not it.

Most remarkably, it was founded in the 1970s by a woman who was already in her eighties! (Clearly she wasn’t self-absorbed and snivel-y.) It occupied a 1940s three-story building—originally constructed as Golden Gate Hospital—at the edge of San Francisco’s tenderloin district.

hearts on wall-RaphaelHouse-FB-750Every wall was freshly painted; worn carpets vacuumed, toilets crisp with wintergreen disinfectant. Corridors and rooms brightly lit. Children’s art, painted with rich tempera colors, hung straight and proud as in a Soho gallery. The Raphael House philosophy: every element, every routine, was structured to establish continuity and predictability for traumatized children and their defeated parents.

Families generally stayed at Raphael House for three-to-six months—the goal being to get them firmly back on their feet so they wouldn’t find themselves homeless again.

That first night I met the Davis family, who had arrived at Raphael House just that afternoon.

I introduced myself. Mrs. Davis’ fingers twitched as if counting worry beads. Mr. Davis shook my hand with palms as rough as tree bark. Working-man’s hands. Wiry brick-red eyebrows hooded chocolate eyes that refused to meet mine.

Emily, the size of a second-grader, hugged a heavy-weave red and green sweater that looked as if it might have been hand knitted just for her. Zack, gangly and thin as a French-cut green bean, looked about thirteen. Two bright red zits spackled the milky way of freckles on his cheeks. Thin, carrot-colored hair fringed a brow creased with anger. He slouched with arms tightly crossed over a SF Giants t-shirt.

At dinner Mr. Davis was rigid against his rocked-back chair, right arm stretched forward, fingers curved into claws on the tablecloth. Gaze focused inward. In an attempt to relieve the tension, I taught Emily how to make corncob art, nibbling and picking a design. When she asked her dad to make one with her the only part of him that moved was his eyes. They flicked toward his daughter, softened with a love and regret that rent my heart. He leaned in. Fished a cob from the bowl.

My years long volunteer experience at Raphael House was instructive; and heart-changing.

What I learned about Homeless Families:

They are me. The parents wanted for their children the same things I wanted for mine: Safety. Security. Love.
They are me. They worked every day or took vocational training classes or looked for a job. (One big difference: They expected to be paid at the bottom of the wage scale.)
They are me. They worried about their kids’ education. (Homelessness frequently means uprooting kids from their school routine.) They wished for their children a better future than the present they were able to give them.

What I learned About Myself:

Some part of me went there, to my great liberal surprise, with an unconscious stereotypical expectation: They would be different from me. Less ambitious, comfortable in their dependence, less proud.

I had lived for a number of years as a single mother, one paycheck—one disaster—away from homelessness myself; but I managed to get by “without a handout.” Why hadn’t they? The answer: I had better luck.
The surprise epiphany? Buried within me—even having been so close to walking that mile in their shoes—was a soupçon of arrogant, judgmental superiority.

Certainly I had read stories about individuals who are always working the system—shysters who have no qualms preying on the compassion of people who come to their aid.

My experience at Raphael House taught me that the most unfortunate thing about those scam artists is not that they wrangle a bit of undeserved generosity. It is that they are the bright, shining object that draws attention away from struggling families whose only goal is to survive. Like the families I met at Raphael House.

But what I found was the biggest difference between me and the homeless families I met was this: There but for the grace of God, go I. I never had to bear the burden of their shame, the guilt of “failing my family.” I never had to put aside my pride, hold out my hand and ask for help from a total stranger.

Elaine Taylor-author-headshotI am embarrassed by my Mother Teresa act. I went to Raphael House thinking I was doing a favor for someone less fortunate. Instead, they did a favor for me. They reminded me of what it is like to live with the constant fear of an uncertain future. They showed me the courage, strength and resilience those “less fortunate” must summon every day, just to survive. I was humbled to be in their presence.

Elaine Taylor is the author of Karma, Deception and a Pair of Red Ferraris. She is a former volunteer, and Board member, of Raphael House. Learn more about Taylor at www.KarmaDeception.com and connect on Twitter.

Stranger Buys Patrol Car at Auction to Give to Fallen Deputy’s Teenage Sons

Brownlee-squad-car-PhotoCredit-Weld-County-Sheriff-Department

Tanner and Chase Brownlee came to the police auction with $3,000 to buy their late father’s squad car.

Their father, a Weld County, Colorado deputy, died in the line of duty five years ago. His squad car is one of the last physical links Tanner and Chase have to him.

The county decided to auction the car, which was retired this year, to raise money for charity.

Bidding quickly shot past the sum the two boys raised, and the car finally sold to a local rancher, Steve Wells, for $60,000.bass-boat-FB

Winner of Boat Hands Over Keys to Less Fortunate Fisherman

 

Wells didn’t keep the car for long. As soon as he took the keys, he turned to Tanner in the auction’s front row and handed them over to the young man, whom he’d never met before.

“Tanner, here’s your car,” Wells said, and the room erupted in applause.

(WATCH the video below or READ the full story at KMGH *NOTE autoplaying audio, adjust your speakers)

Photo by Weld County Sheriff’s Department – Story tip from Sara Nettles

Hero Homeless Migrant Rewarded After Rescuing Drowning Woman in Rome

bangladesh-migrant awarded-State Police Rome-released

A homeless, undocumented immigrant is being hailed as a hero, and given a residency permit, after saving a drowning woman in Rome.

Sobuj Khalifa, raced down the banks of the Tiber River when he saw the woman floating in the water. He called out to people on the Sublicio bridge to phone for help right before he dived in and pulled the woman to safety.

The Bangladeshi migrant, scraping by on $55 a week, selling roses in restaurants and umbrellas on the street, became an instant hero in the Eternal City. Rome’s mayor called Khalifa to personally thank him for his heroism, and authorities gave him a one-year residency permit to stay in the city legally.bank on Dave featured photo-screenshotYouTube

Frustrated Man Opens His Own Bank: The Wild Success of “Bank On Dave”

 

And the local lifesaving story is getting a lot of play across the Mideast and South Asia. Both Arab and Jewish media are highlighting the fact that a Muslim man saved the life of an Israeli woman living in Rome.

(READ more in the Telegraph)

Photo credits: State Police in Rome; and Gobbler, CC

At 92, She Feels Young Again, Takes Joy Ride in Fave WWII Fighter Plane (WATCH)

Spitfire-Lofthouse-PhotoCredit-Airwolfhound-CC

Joy Lofthouse hasn’t flown a fighter plane since she was in her 20s. Taking the controls of the iconic Spitfire recently made the 92-year-old pilot feel “young” again.

As she took to the skies for the 70th anniversary of V-E Day, Lofthouse declared that flying the Spitfire was “the nearest thing to having wings of her own.”

Lofthouse and hundreds of other women flying for the UK’s Air Transport Authority in World War II delivered planes from factories to air bases, freeing combat pilots to fight. By the time the war ended, Lofthouse was experienced in piloting 18 different kinds of aircrafts, but her favorite was always the Spitfire.

(WATCH the video below or READ the full story from BBC)

Photo credits: Airwolfhound, CC, and BBC via YouTube

Johnny Depp Becomes Foster Father to Orphaned Bat

Johnny Depp Bat QLD Facebook Photo

Pirates of the Caribbean star Johnny Depp embraced his “batty” side on the movie set of his new sequel by getting to know some tiny winged creatures of the night.

baby bat-Australian Bat Clinic + Wildlife Trauma Centre-CarlaHarp-FBIt all happened in Australia after award-winning actor and wildlife advocate Johnny Depp heard about a baby bat discovered orphaned following a recent thunderstorm. After the tiny winged ‘flying fox’ was rescued, Depp agreed to sponsor her, becoming its “foster father.”

The Australian Bat Clinic announced on Facebook that the rescued bat was named “Jackie Sparrow,” an ode to Depp’s onscreen pirate character.

To further show his support of bat rescue and conservation, Depp invited members of the volunteer non-profit rescue group, Bats Qld, to his movie set.

Volunteers Ashley and Paula Fraser introduced Depp, to Fifi, another rescued flying fox.

“It was an amazing opportunity; he was so kind and thoughtful,” Ashley Fraser told Brisbane Times. “It was an absolute pleasure and honor to have met him.”

(READ more at the Brisbane Times)animal with jar rescue-YouTube

Photo: (top) Bats Qld; (middle) Australian Bat Clinic & Wildlife Trauma Centre

Watch These People Jumping to the Rescue of Animals

 

From Gross to Green: Toxic Dump Will Become Solar Farm in San Fran

Solar-powered landfill with geomembrane

Solar-powered landfill with geomembrane

Local and federal officials announced plans to build a solar farm at a San Francisco area garbage dump to “serve as a model for innovative ways to combat climate change.”

The 19,000 solar panels planned for the closed-down West Winton Landfill in Hayward will be the signature piece of an unusual four-county effort to equip nearly 200 public buildings — city halls, fire stations, medical facilities — with the solar energy equivalent of powering more than 5,000 homes.

(READ the story in the SF Chronicle)

File Photo from East Coast – Story tip Mike McGinley

Dolls with Disabilities Designed to Make All Kids Feel Special

Dolls with Disabilities Makies Facebook photoA campaign called Toys Like Me started on Facebook has inspired a new line of dolls designed for children with disabilities.

British toy company Makie has officially begun giving parents the option to buy customized dolls with birthmarks, hearing aids, walking aids, and more.

“We put a bunch of things on hold and jumped into designing toy hearing aids, toy walking aids, working out how to do facial birthmarks,” the Makie website declares. “Plus (we) are working on a new 3D printed toy wheelchair, too!”

The Toys Like Me campaign spurred kids and their parents to design toys on their own, using everything from Legos to Barbies, to represent the diverse group of children currently living with disabilities today. Check out the Facebook page and all the uploaded photos.

Photo courtesy of Makie/Facebook.

 

Ecuador Breaks World Record for Planting Most Tree Species in 8 Hours

WackyBadger, CC license

Forest-Canopy-PhotoCredit-wackybadger-CC

Thousands of people teamed up this weekend to break a world record while doing something good for the earth. They planted the most species (237) of seedlings over an eight hour-period Saturday.

57,512 people in Ecuador planted 765,073 plants at 150 sites, reforesting 5600 acres (2,269 hectares) and snatching the Guinness World Record from a group in the Philippines, who broke the world record last year.

This was the most diverse single-day planting program anywhere in the world, which will soak up carbon dioxide and pump out oxygen.

Ecuador holds another environmentally friendly record — the most plastic bottles recycled in a single week—87,363 pounds.

The nation also aims in 2017 to reach a target of zero deforestation, according to the Guinness World Records organization, which monitored the plantings.

17-Year-Old Blind Pole Vaulter Wins Bronze at State Championship

 

Pole vaulting is a tough sport for anyone to master–and it’s that much tougher when you can’t see anything at all.

Seventeen-year-old Charlotte Brown fell in love with the sport long before cataracts reduced her vision to a “jigsaw puzzle of light and dark shades.” Even after they did, she found a way to overcome her situation so she could compete.

She told BBC News that she’s able to succeed by counting the seven steps of her left foot upon her approach and listening for the faint sound of a beeper placed on the mat, which alerts her when it’s time to plant the pole and push up.

RELATED: Blindness Doesn’t Hinder Her Flawless Make-Up Tutoring on YouTube

After competing for two years, finishing in eighth place, then fourth, Brown cleared 3.5 meters.

The high school student proudly accepted her medal with her guide dog Vador by her side.

(WATCH the video above or READ more at BBC News)

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China Makes Jaw-Dropping Cuts to Carbon Emissions in 2015 Equal to UK’s Total Output

China-Smokestsck-PhotoCredit-Jonathan Kos-Read

China is on course to set a world record this year for the largest voluntary reduction of carbon dioxide emissions of any country in history.

In the first four months of the year, China reduced its CO2 emissions by an amount equal to what the entire United Kingdom produced in that same period.

China leads the world in both coal consumption and CO2 emissions, using 48% of the world’s coal since 2010. In recent years, the country has ordered 1,000 coal mines to close and has cut coal imports by 38%.

As a result, coal consumption has gone down 8% and CO2 emissions have dropped by 5 percent so far this year.Ma Jun App Video Capture 1

Millions of Chinese Crack Down on Polluters, Using App and Government Help

 

If the decline continues at this rate, China is on track to set the world record for a country cutting CO2 emissions in a single year.

The nation now promises to close the last remaining coal plant in Beijing by the end of next year and slash use of the fossil fuel by 160 million tons over the next five years.

Greenpeace/Energy China crunched the numbers from three different sources to find the results, and found that this is the first time in history any country has reduced both coal use and carbon emissions without an economic downturn.

(READ more at The Independent) Photo by Jonathan Kos-Read, CC

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Girl Raises $15K to Rebuild Parents’ Burned Home After Contractors Fled Without Finishing

lemonade flyer-AlyssaDeLaSala

It’s been two years since a fire destroyed the De La Sala family’s Tampa, Florida home. Her parents are struggling after their insurance money was paid to a builder who they say “ran off” after completing less than half the job, and leaving sub-contractors unpaid.

“Now my mommy and daddy are stuck trying to come up with enough money to finish it so we can finally get home,” wrote Alyssa De La Sala in a letter to a local radio station.

Over the weekend, the 10-year-old took matters into her own hands and opened up a lemonade stand to try and and raise some funds herself. Working alongside her brother, and with free advertising from the radio hosts, she began selling the drinks along with cupcake she baked herself.

The turnout was so large that police officers were dispatched to help direct traffic.Boys-arm-and-arm-NBCvideo

7-Year-old Makes Viral Video to Aid Buddy Who Lost Toys in a Fire

 

“She took it upon herself to do something to help mommy and daddy, I don’t think she expected it to be anything like this,” Alyssa’s mother, Jenn De La Sala told WFTS-TV.

For those who couldn’t make it to the lemonade stand, a GoFundMe campaign was created to collect contributions. Between the success of the lemonade stand so far and her GoFundMe campaign, she has raised $15,000.

(WATCH the WFTS video below)

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Children’s Book Grows Into a Tree When You Plant It

Tree-book-tree-Screengrab (1)

Kids learn pretty quickly that paper used for books comes from trees.

One children’s book lets kids literally recycle their storybook directly in the ground, where it will once again grow into a tree.

A pair of publishers in Argentina collaborated on Mi Papa Estuvo en la Selva (My Dad Was in the Jungle), a book made with acid-free paper, eco-friendly ink, and jacaranda seeds stitched into the cover.

After a child has had their fill of reading the book, they can plant it in the soil and watch it sprout.Dominic Bergfield in wheelchair writes novel as quadriplegic

With Teacher Who Believed in Him, Quadriplegic Teen Publishes Book

 

Bookstore displays across the country are actually designed to display the book as it germinates, with roots running down into a terrarium-style case.

The story was originally published in 2008, but the new Earth-friendly design, made for kids ages 8-12, is meant to show that “trees and children can grow together.”

WATCH the video below to see how it works and READ more at AdWeek

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Two Former Debt Collectors Want to Help Pay Your Medical Bills

Men Pay medical Bills submitted credit Bess Adler Metro

Ironically, two men who worked for decades as medical debt collectors have launched RIP Medical Debt, a nonprofit with a goal of raising $14 million to abolish $1 billion of medical debt.

The organizers, Jerry Ashton and Craig Antico, saw the inequities and “couldn’t take it any more.”

“We switched sides and now use the same software systems and data we once used to collect this debt,” they wrote on their website. This time, they will purchase the debt for pennies on the dollar in order to free “good, hard-working responsible people from its stranglehold.”

As newly designated debt buyers, the nonprofit will be able to, for instance, buy a hospital debt worth $5,000 for $50. They have already raised $74,000 in what they believe to be the first effort in the world focused on freeing people from medical debt.

(READ the full story at Metro.US) – Photo courtesy of Bess Adler/Metro

A Simple Iron Fish is Helping Hundreds in Cambodia by Tackling Anemia

Lucky-Iron-Fish-YouTube

An iron fish is giving Cambodian families more strength and better health.

Six million Cambodians, about half the population, are currently iron deficient. But the Lucky Iron Fish — a simple lump of metal dropped into cooking pots — is beating anemia, improving strength, boosting energy and improving overall health for families who use it.

CHECK Out: Colorado Doctor Discovered Natural Way To Treat Common

The idea was dreamed up by Canadian scientist Christopher Charles, who’s been running trials with his invention in Cambodia. The fish — a symbol of luck in that culture — is made by local craftsmen from recycled iron.

Families drop the Lucky Iron Fish into boiling soup or water for 10 minutes. Iron leaches out of the fish to enrich the broth for cooking. Used properly, Charles says it can provide 75% of the daily requirement of iron.

The people who’ve taken part in the trials were cured of anemia in just 12 months. Charles now wants to get his Lucky Fish into the hands of one million Cambodian families in the next five years.

(WATCH the Lucky Iron Fish at work in the video below)

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Teen Wins Intel Prize for Keeping Airborne Germs From Spreading on Planes

Raymond-Wang-Intel-ISEF

Ever been afraid of catching someone’s cold or flu on an airliner while you’re breathing everyone else’s air? A 17-year-old Canadian teenager has invented a system to keep those germs contained.

Raymond Wang (pictured above, right) took home the top prize of $75,000 Friday in the world’s largest high school science competition for an invention that corrals germs on airplanes.

His ventilation system cuts the number of germs by 5,500% while nearly tripling the amount of fresh air in the cabin– and it only costs about $1,000 per airplane to install.

To do it, he had to teach himself the complicated science of fluid dynamics.

CHECK Out: Homeless Teen Named National Science Prize Finalist, Gets Housing and Help

Right now, the air inside an airliner circulates in two swirls, quickly spreading germs throughout the cabin. Wang designed fin-shaped devices that fit in the air inlets — effectively giving every passenger what he calls a “personalized ventilation zone” that pushes germs out of the cabin before they can spread

You can see the cabin air flow with Wang’s invention in the video below. See more winners of the Intel Fair, here.

(READ more in the Washington Post) – Photos by Intel

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Ozzy Osbourne Sends Big Check to Kids After Seeing Their “Crazy Train” Cover

Louisville-Loepards-Ozzy-Osborne-Crazy-Train-Screengrab

Rock star Ozzy Osbourne was so blown away after seeing some Kentucky kids playing a unique version of his signature song that he sent them a $10,000 donation.

“Myself, my whole family and my fans all loved your rendition of ‘Crazy Train,’” Osbourne wrote in a letter to the Louisville Leopard Percussionists. “Keep up the good work.”

The group is made up of more than 60 kids — age 7-14 — from 48 different schools in the Louisville area. Their percussion version takes the heavy metal hit and transforms it into a multi-textured version using marimbas, bells and drums.letter to george lucas-jedi-marriage

7-yo Star Wars Fan Asks George Lucas If Jedis Can Marry, Gets Great Answer

 

The Louisville Leopards have already performed onstage with the rock band My Morning Jacket and worked with jazz performers Dave Samuels and Louie Bellson. Their excellent version of Led Zepplin’s Kashmir drew 4 million views and praise from Jimmy Page on Facebook earlier this year.

(WATCH the “Crazy Train” get mellow in the video below or READ more at the Louisville Courier-Journal)

Homepage photo by Portal Focka, CC

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