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100-Year-olds Say a Positive Attitude is the Secret to Longevity

A new survey finds that 60 percent of Americans who have reached their 100th birthday say they do not “feel old.” On average, they feel more than two decades younger than they are.

They point to a positive attitude as the key to a long, happy life.

According to the tenth annual UnitedHealthcare poll of 100 adults over 100, more than 60% of centenarians see themselves as “very positive people.”

“Year after year, we hear from centenarians that there is a correlation between healthy aging and a healthy mindset,” said Rhonda Randall, D.O., chief medical officer of UnitedHealthcare Retiree Solutions. “It’s a good reminder for us all to take care of our mental, emotional and social health.”

They also acknowledged the importance of family, with half saying they would rather spend time with their family than with anyone else in the world–although comedic actress Betty White was a close second. Thanks to modern technology, 83 percent of centenarians said they were able to keep in touch with family members on a daily or weekly basis.

When asked who they thought of as a role model growing up, nearly half of centenarians chose their parents over any other individual, teacher, or celebrity.

Meet The Newest Royal Baby: Princess Charlotte’s First Photo

 

What a way to welcome the month of May with the arrival and the naming of a new royal.

The Kensington Palace tweeted Monday that Duke William and Duchess Catherine had named their baby girl, Charlotte Elizabeth Diana.

Her name, Elizabeth, is connected to her great-grandmother and her great-great grandmother. The name, Diana, is connected to William’s late, beloved mother.

The baby girl will be known as Her Royal Highness Princess Charlotte of Cambridgequeen-Elizabeth_II_2007-public-domain

Royal Daughters Win Equal Right to Ascend to British Throne

 

According to officials, the royal couple welcomed Charlotte on Saturday at 8:34 a.m., weighing in at 8 pounds, 3 ounces.

Watch the video above to hear more about exciting event and view some photos below tweeted by Kensington Palace.

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101-Year-Old Man Found Alive in Rubble 7 Days After Nepal Quake

Nepal Earthquake Man Rescued Video Screen Grab Reuters

Cheering onlookers hailed it a miracle as rescuers pulled a 101-year-old man from beneath the ruins of his house where he was buried for a week following the Nepal earthquake.

Funchu Tamang had only minor injuries and survived for seven days on flour and water as he waited for people to dig him out.Bernese mountain dog in ocean-KTLAvideo

Bernese Mountain Dog Rescues Two Swimmers Caught in Riptide (Watch)

 

Rescue crews airlifted the man to a hospital where he’s recovering from injuries to his left ankle and hand. Doctors say Tamang is in stable condition and his family is with him.

And there’s another glimmer of hope in the country — five babies born to survivors in a makeshift, tent-hospital in Katmandu — giving Nepalese reason to celebrate survivors born a century apart.

April’s 7.9 quake is the second major earthquake Tamang has survived. He was in his 20s when an magnitude 8.0 quake woke him from his sleep in the very same village on January 15, 1934.

(READ more at Hindustan Times)

Art Therapy Helps Children in Nepal Cope After Earthquake

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As Nepalese struggle to recover from the devastation of last week’s 7.9-magnitude earthquake, art therapy is helping children cope with the traumatic experience.

Children are especially vulnerable during emergencies. Over the years, art therapy has been used in disaster relief as a highly feasible means of reaching out to traumatized children and victims of natural catastrophes and war. Children put on paper the unspeakable – their fears, their emotions, their mourning. The creative process allows them to reveal their suffering, thereby relieving themselves of their psycho-emotional burden.

Sneha Shrestha, founder of Nepal’s first Children’s Art Museum is collecting funds to provide art therapy to children affected by the earthquake.

“We know that our role is going to be so vital over the next several years helping children cope with the disaster,” Shrestha said.

Several organizations have been delivering tonnes of humanitarian supplies to Nepal as part of ongoing efforts to reach at least 1.7 million children living in areas hardest hit by the earthquake.

A group of museum volunteers is now collaborating with UNICEF in child friendly spaces set up in informal camps across Kathmandu. Even as simple as a tent or an outdoor classroom, these ‘oasis’ play an enormous role in giving a child a sense of normalcy amid chaos. Children are given a safe space to run, interact, and play together.

“The spaces we have set up in informal camps offer children a chance to have fun and continue learning when going to school is no longer an option – while providing them with psychosocial support,” Rupha Joshi, an emergencies communication officer for UNICEF, said.

Children need stimulation and play on a regular basis. Child friendly spaces are widely used in emergencies as a first response to children’s needs and an entry point for working with affected communities. According to the International Child Art Foundation research shows that earthquakes increase the rates of mental health problems in the communities they strike. Art therapy services were found to be instrumental in accessing young victims’ internal processes and helping children be children again.

To support the Children’s Art Museum’s Indiegogo campaign, here. Click here support UNICEF Nepal.

Solar Solution: MIT Creates Way to Make Salt Water Drinkable

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The world is awash in seawater that we can’t drink or use for crops. To help people in drought-stricken areas from California to India, new technologies are harnessing the sun to make saltwater drinkable.

MIT researchers recently won an award for their system that can remove salt from 2,100 gallons of water a day. To provide the necessary energy, the team used solar power and so was able to keep operating costs low.

Their system works through a process called electrolysis. Salt in water is made up of positive and negative ions. In the MIT system, the salt water passes between two electrodes with opposite electrical charges and the salt ions are pulled to the sides of the stream, leaving a current of fresh, drinkable water flowing down the middle.

The researchers won the $140,000 Desal Prize for desalination innovations from the U.S. Agency for International Development. The prize money will help the team continue its work, testing the process in 16 villages across India.

A California desalination project Good News Network told you about last year also uses solar power to create fresh water. The WaterFX project doesn’t turn sunlight into electricity, but concentrates the heat of the sun, using solar arrays, to cook the salt right out of the water.

WaterFX officials have promised to cut the cost of desalination in half and the MIT system is nearly twice as efficient as older desalination systems — cleaning 90% of the water it treats. Chemists, engineers and humanitarian groups hail both systems as potential game changers in the effort to bring drinkable water to people around the world.

WaterFX did not return our phone calls when we tried to get an update on their progress.

(READ more from RT News) – Story tip from Michael

Eating More Cheese May Explain Healthier Hearts in France

cheese-CC-SkanskaMatupplevelser

A small study that looked at diets rich in cheese found some yummy results.

The report published by Danish scientists offers another possible theory to explain why the French don’t seem to suffer from cardiovascular disease, even while eating high saturated fat and high cholesterol diets.

Red wine is one possible reason. Cheese might be another. The average French person eats 57 pounds of cheese each year, significantly more than people in other countries.

The study, published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, and funded by Dairy interests in Denmark, found that those who ate cheese had higher levels of butyric acid, a compound which has been been linked to reduced obesity and higher metabolism. The higher butyrate levels were also linked to a reduction of inflammation and cholesterol.

(READ more in the Telegraph) – Photo by Skånska Matupplevelser, CC

Health Insurer Aetna Raises Wages for 5700 Workers To $16 an Hour

Red Mailbox with Cash Hundred Dollar Bills Sticking Out Isolated on White Background.

Red Mailbox with Cash Hundred Dollar Bills Sticking Out Isolated on White Background.

Aetna became the latest large corporation to announce a voluntary minimum wage hike. The health insurer joins Wal-mart, Target and McDonald’s in enacting large raises for its lowest earning workers.

Around 5,700 Aetna employees in the U.S. earned the new wages in checks issued on April 24 which paid $16 per hour.

On average, the company’s CEO Mark Bertolini said, it means an 11% raise for employees, but some, who were earning $12/hour, got a 33% increase.

Most of the employees benefiting are the public face of the company to customers every day, centered in customer service departments, claims administration, and and billing.

Higher hourly wages also lead to the possibility of higher bonus and 401(k) contributions.

(READ the story from NPR) – Photo by Sal Falko, CC

At 81, The Man Behind Big Bird Sees ‘No Reason To Quit’

i_am_big_bird_Caroll-Spinney-Kermit-Film release

The new documentary, I Am Big Bird, profiles Caroll Spinney, the man who has been Sesame Street’s Big Bird for over 40 years.

He’s dined with heads of state, won Emmys and been named a living legend by the Library of Congress. But the 81-year-old puppeteer can’t bare to say goodbye to the character he cherishes, so will continue donning the yellow feathered suit, keeping his white-haired, bearded presence happily hidden underneath.

Carroll_Spinney_and_Oscar_the_Grouch_2014-CC-Neil GrabowskyWhile Caroll’s peers have long since slipped into cozy retirements or passed away, he has held on with no intention of retiring. He has handpicked a successor who has waited, quite literally, in the wings, as the understudy for almost 20 years. Caroll also is the hand and voice of Oscar the Grouch, but Big Bird is the true expression of his soul, a character that he cherishes like a child.

Pure love runs through Caroll’s life: he found it first in his mother, a woman who not only handcrafted his first puppets, but protected Caroll from an abusive father. When Caroll’s first marriage to a woman “embarrassed” by his career ended in divorce, Caroll would find caroll-spinney-big-bird-326pxDebra, the love of his life. And then there was Jim Henson, who grew from boss to friend and whose death shattered Sesame Street colleagues.

The unconditional love that envelops Caroll’s life is captured in the hours of home video that went into the documentary, I AM BIG BIRD.

The film opens May 5th in selected theaters and on iTunes and On Demand. Check the locations and learn more at IamBigBird.com

(WATCH the trailer below, or LISTEN to Scott Simon interview Caroll on NPR)

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7-Year-Old Discovers New Dinosaur Species, a T-Rex That Eats Plants

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If he had gotten credit when he made the discovery, seven-year-old Diego Suárez would, instantly, have been the most popular kid in his school. As it was, scientists needed 11 years to figure out just what an amazing discovery the little boy made back in 2004. They announced this week he had uncovered an entirely new species of dinosaur.

Little Diego discovered Chilesaurus diegosuarezi while his geologist parents were studying rocks in Chile. He and his sister were collecting decorative stones when he stumbled onto the fossils. He found so many fossils, in fact, scientists now believe the new species was probably the most common dinosaur in the region 145 million years ago.

DiegoSuárez-digging-by-father-manuelPalaeontologists first thought Diego had found fossils of several different Jurassic species. Only after finding a full skeleton, did they realize they were working with what some of them called an “evolutionary jigsaw puzzle.” With its mash-up of features from several different dinosaur groups, Chilesaurus has a long neck, like the herbivorea, but a small head and two-fingered hands. Although closely related to the notorious carnivore Tyrannosaurus rex, this one preferred to graze upon plants. Their findings were published this week in the journal, Nature.

“It’s amazing to have found this new species,” Diego, now an 18-year-old university student, told USA Today. “I feel this incredible joy from being able to be part of something big.”

Diego may be happy with the honor more than a decade later, but how cool would it have been to be seven years old — and have your own dinosaur named after you?

(READ more from the University of Birmingham) – Photo from Manuel Suarez – Illustration by Gabriel Lio

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Israel Pledges to Reconstruct an Entire Village in Nepal

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Israel has vowed to fully rebuild a village in Nepal that was destroyed by last Saturday’s earthquake.

“We decided to adopt a village in Nepal, to assist with its reconstruction and to do our utmost to help,” Foreign Minister Liberman announced Thursday.

The work on the yet undetermined village will include clearing away the debris, building infrastructure and houses, and making sure residents have drinking water.

Israel is currently operating a field hospital in Kathmandu, and will likely begin the new project after that closes, and after they get assistance from Nepal as to which village to help, he said.

(READ the full story in the Times of Israel) – Story tip from deb thompson

Lake Michigan Is So Clear You Can See Shipwrecks From the Air

Lake Michigan shipwreck-USCoastGuard-FB

With the winter ice melted on the Great Lakes, the blue waters of northern Lake Michigan are clear enough to give airplane pilots a great view of some legendary shipwrecks lying on the lake bottom.

During a routine April flyover, an aircrew from The U.S. Coast Guard Air Station in Traverse City captured some unique photos of a handful of the many shipwrecks along the Lake Michigan shoreline.

This photo (click to enlarge) shows the wreckage of the Rising Sun, a 133 foot long wooden steamer that became stranded just north of Pyramid Point in 1917, near Leland, Michigan.

Her wreckage now rests in 6 to 12 feet of water.

See the rest of the photos posted by the Coast Guard on Facebook, and also, check out this list of the 13 most famous shipwrecks of Lake Michigan at Lakepedia.com

Watch This Sweet Injured Baby Fox Get Rescued in the Wild

fox-baby-rescued-YouTube

A Virgina couple hunting for gems in the great outdoors stumbled upon something much more precious.

Beau Ouimette had his camera handy last year when he and wife discovered a severely injured baby fox. Apparently orphaned, the one-month-old kit was “severely dehydrated, weak and had a bloody wound to it’s neck.” Fortunately, Ouimette’s wife is a veterinarian and both have been vaccinated against rabies. The couple scooped up the baby and brought it home to begin nursing her back to health.

A few days later the little one was strong enough to be taken to the Blue Ridge Wildlife Center in Millwood, Virginia where 2,000 native animals are rehabilitated each year.

After six months outside, the kit became healthy and was eventually released back into the wild.

WATCH Ouimette’s videos that show them bonding with the injured baby and saying goodbye, once.

Tesla Unveils Insanely Efficient Battery That Can Power Your House

tesla-powerwall-battery-TeslaMotors

Electric car maker Tesla Motors has rolled out a new battery for homes and businesses that they say could end electric bills while creating a cleaner world. In announcing the Powerwall Home Battery, billionaire CEO Elon Musk called it “a fundamental transformation about how the world works — about how energy is delivered across the earth.”

It is an opportune moment for such an introduction, a time when solar panels and battery costs are falling fast. The Powerwall is based on the same technology used in Tesla’s cars — which have the longest range of any electric autos on the road. But these are big enough to power whole houses, and can be scaled-up or used with other batteries to supply electricity to businesses. Tesla says the battery will let owners cut the cord with traditional electric companies, by allowing them to produce and store their own electricity. Coupled with solar panels, the batteries can power homes, stores and factories around the clock.

“The problem with solar power is the sun doesn’t shine at night,” Musk mused during his press conference (in video below). His new battery changes that. He says it overcomes a lot of problems with older battery systems, by cutting costs, increasing reliability and lasting longer. That means people can use their solar panels during the day to provide electricity and be assured there’s enough juice in the Powerwall to get them through the night and any cloudy days.

The standard, 10 kilowatt-hour Powerwall home system will cost around $3,500 with the first deliveries coming this summer. Even without solar panels, the batteries can charge overnight, when electricity from power companies is cheaper, then power the house during peak billing hours. Tesla executives say that alone could cut electric bills by 25% for most people.

Musk also believes his new battery will address social and humanitarian issues. He says it can supply power to remote places where the stringing of power lines is costly or impossible — on high mountain peaks, in distant jungle villages or in empty deserts. And he sees it as a way to cut the amount of greenhouse gases pumped into our air by making solar power more reliable.Solar-light-in-India-MlindaFoundationPhoto

“World’s First Solar Battery” to Run on Light and Air Invented at OSU

A pilot program has tested 300 of the systems in the San Francisco region. Larger one-megawatt versions of the system have also been installed to power 11 California Wal-Mart stores and a 200,000 square foot Cargill packing plant.

(WATCH a Bloomberg video below – or the 18-min announcement at the bottom)

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Girls From Nepal Group Home Jump Into Action Providing Earthquake Relief

Group Home Girls Nepal Earthquake Nurse Unatti Foundation Facebook Photo

When disaster struck, twenty of Nepal’s most impoverished–and most fortunate–young ladies immediately stepped in to help their neighbors.

The young women of the Unatti Foundation‘s group home have been cooking for thousands of their neighbors impacted by last Saturday’s 7.8 magnitude earthquake. They have also been helping to distribute first aid kits, and one young lady is even tending to injured civilians directly.

“Our area was hit pretty heavily, and everyone has been weathering the night outside in open rice and vegetable fields, as they’re fearful of going into their homes,” Stephanie Waisler-Rubin, the Unatti foundation’s founder and president, told People.com.

Girls as young as four have been preparing rice and lentils, and others, like 19-year-old Sangita, have directly administered emergency health services to those who have been hurt. Sangita has lived at the group home for 13 years and is two months shy of completing her nursing college education.

The Unatti Foundation has been providing food, shelter, and education for girls in the underserved region of Bhaktapur for the past 13 years.

(WATCH their FB video below – not available on YouTube or website)

Our girls are cooking food for people in need !

Posted by Ramesh Pradhananga on Friday, May 1, 2015

Teacher Surprises Wisconsin Town By Leaving $1 Million Estate to Students

Old classroom in sixties-teacher

This teacher left her students with more than just a love of learning.

Before her recent passing, Violet Laack of Chilton, Wisconsin, allocated all of the funds from her estate–worth about $1 Million–to the students of Calumet County, where she had taught for fifty years.

The money from her estate will be used to set up scholarship funds via the Chilton Area Community Foundation.

Laack may not have had any children of her own, but she made a world of difference in the lives of those she taught.

“She had energy, enthusiasm. She had a sparkle in her eye all the time,” Nanci Micke, a former student of Laack’s, told WBAY. She now works in the communications field and credits her English teacher for her success. “She gave me that sense of empowerment and confidence to move forward.”

While she was surprised that Laack was able to accrue so much money, Micke’s not the least bit surprised that she would donate it all in the name of education.

(WATCH the video at WBAYPhoto by ajari, CC

Bride Surprised WWII Groom Wearing Gown Made of His Parachute

parachute-bridal-dress-WFIEscreenshot

Before eco-designing with recycled materials became a “thing”, there was Phyllis Hill. She and her husband James recently celebrated their 66th wedding anniversary unveiling once again her treasured keepsake gown.

In 1948, one year before their wedding, James offered his WWII silk parachute to his best gal, Phyllis, saying she could do whatever she wanted with it. The next time he saw it, his bride was wearing it while walking down the aisle.

The Gibson, Indiana couple has been approached by the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC about donating the gown for their collection, but the Hills decided they’d like to pass it down within the family. Fortunately, the museum has another U.S. parachute wedding dress from that era in their collection, a nylon model that saved Maj. Claude Hensinger’s life in 1947. That gown was worn by his bride, daughter and son’s wife before being gifted to the Smithsonian’s archive.

(WATCH the video or read the story from WFIE-TV)

Story Tip From Carilyn

Pit Bull Love Prompts Autistic Teen to Kiss Mom for First Time

Roxy pitbull autism story credit Best Friends Animal Society

Evidence that Pit Bulls are actually incredibly sweet just keeps piling up.

When Amanda Granados adopted Roxy the Pit Bull from a Los Angeles animal shelter, her 14-year-old son Joey was so excited that he gave his mother a hug and a kiss for the first time ever.

Joey, who has Asperger syndrome, had never before let his mother hug or kiss him.Pitbull Autism Submitted Amanda Grenados

“I get emotional thinking about it,” Granados told TODAY. “For all those years, he wouldn’t hold my hand, he wouldn’t hug me — it was all part of the autism — but this dog has taught him how to give and show affection. He holds my hand now! He hugs me! The first time I got a kiss on the cheek was when Roxy came home.”

Joey had been asking his mother for a dog for some time, and once she caught wind of a Best Friends adoption event taking place nearby and saw Roxy’s photo (above), she knew it was fate.

Like teenagers living with Autism, Pit Bulls are also commonly “misunderstood,” a connection that she believes helped bring the two pals together.

Joey now finds it easier to make friends, after previously spending most of his free time alone.

“Roxy has a very goofy and loving personality. She lights up the room with she enters,” Granados told Good news Network. “Joey has been training her, he taught her to give high fives, shake, sit and he even taught her to give hugs. He takes care of her, walks her, and feeds her.”

Photo credits: Best Friends Animal Society and Amanda Granados

New York State to Turn Lights Out for Migrating Birds

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The bright lights of New York attract millions of people to the big city, but they’ll be attracting fewer birds–which is a good thing for endangered songbirds that travel up America’s East Coast every year.

New York’s state government buildings are officially joining the National Audubon Society’s Lights Out initiative to help migrating birds bypass the city and its dangers. The state order follows decisions made at some of the most famous landmarks in The Big Apple — including Rockefeller Center and the Chrysler Building — to dim their lights. Other cities, including Baltimore, Washington, Minneapolis, San Francisco and Chicago, are also doing their part to dim the lights for birds passing through town– helping annual migratory flocks in the Midwest, too.

CHECK Out: London’s Thames is Coming Back to Life With Whales, Dolphins, and Seals

Migrating birds often suffer from “fatal light attraction,” a condition that draws them to bright lights and leads them off their flight paths, often causing casualties when they fly into tall buildings in Spring and Fall.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo ordered that non-essential lights be turned off between 11:00 pm and dawn during peak migration times until May 31, then again from August 15 to November 15.

New York leaders have also launched an I Love NY Birding website, highlighting the 450 different species of birds which live inside New York’s state borders.

While the bright lights are a threat to some species, others — like this peregrine falcon seen soaring near the Chrysler Building — thrive in them, nesting atop skyscrapers and soaring on the updrafts created by the city’s man-made canyons.

TerryTurner-Peregrine Falcon flying over Chrysler bldg-verticle-frame-submitted

SHARE (below) with other bird lovers…  / Photo credits: (top) dolbinator, CC; (falcon) Terry Turner

Crippled for 30 Years by Misdiagnosis, Woman Walks Again

Jean Sharon Abbott-with-husband-Blog-coutesy

This woman is celebrating five years of being diagnosed with a rare disorder.

Why?

Because for thirty years, she thought she’d been living with something else, something a lot more serious.

When she was four-years-old, Jean Sharon Abbott, now 38, was told she had a form of cerebral palsy which caused painful muscle spasms and tremors. What she actually has, as she found out in 2010, is a rare disorder called Dopa-Responsive Dystonia, which can be treated with just a single pill.

Within two days she was able to walk. Now she enjoy simple pleasures like cooking dinner, walking with her children to the bus stop, and driving them to their after-school activities.chinese student carries friend WEIBO

Chinese Student Carries His Disabled Friend To Class For 3 Years

 

“I was able to maintain a positive attitude and be a joyful person throughout this whole ordeal,” she wrote on her blog, Rainy Day Friend, A Journey from Wheels to Heels.

Jean is the poster child for gratitude, saying, despite the pain and incapacitation, she still had a “fantastic childhood” – thanks in large part to the support of her family and real friends – and says she has no regrets. “My life experiences made me who I am today – and I like me,” she told the Daily Mail.

Jean Sharon Abbott-with-kids-Blog-coutesy

According to the National Institutes of Heath DRD is frequently misdiagnosed, since it also causes involuntary muscle movements.

Abbott is now an advocate for raising DRD awareness through social media, YouTube and blog posts. Her followers say she’s helped them recognize the symptoms in themselves and others.

(READ more in the Daily Mail)

Photos via Jean Abbott’s Facebook Page, A Rainy Day Friend

Jon Stewart Buys a Farm to Help Animal Victims of Cruelty

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As he prepares to end his 16-year run as host of “The Daily Show,” Jon Stewart has spent some money and time on greener pastures of the farm variety. He and his wife Tracey bought a farm in New Jersey that will soon provide a new home for rescued farm animals.

On the Daily Show, Jon has shown some disdain for the worst practices of the livestock industry. He devoted an 8-minute comedy segment to the absurdity of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie’s refusal to sign a bill that would end the lifelong confinement of pigs in crates so small they can’t even turn around. And in an April episode, he interviewed the president and co-founder of Farm Sanctuary, a national group dedicated to changing the way society views and treats farm animals. They discussed his new book, Living the Farm Sanctuary Life: The Ultimate Guide to Eating Mindfully.

In November, Tracey Stewart purchased Farm Sanctuary sponsorships for all of the family’s Thanksgiving guests. She also brought their children to meet the animals at one of the three shelters run by the group.

The animal loving Stewart household includes four dogs, two horses, two pigs, three rabbits, two guinea pigs, two hamsters, one parrot and two fish. Even with all those pets, “promises of animal shelter visits in exchange for completed homework” are motivational gold for the parents.

Do unto animals book cover by tracey stewart Tracey discovered Farm Sanctuary after finding a copy of Changing Hearts and Minds About Animals and Food in a rental house where she was staying. The 2008 book, also authored by the group’s founder Gene Baur, inspired Tracey to reach out to the organization because she was busy writing her own book, Do Unto Animals, How We Can Make Their Lives Better.

Hazelton-lamb-with ewe-FarmSanctuary-blogFor all of these reasons and more, Farm Sanctuary named a pair of rescued sheep in their honor. Jon and Tracey gave birth to a lamb, too, which was named Hazleton in honor of the couple’s son.

Learn more about Farm Sanctuary, which operates three shelters in New York and California providing lifelong care for nearly 1,000 rescued farm animals, and their efforts to change laws to promote compassionate, visit farmsanctuary.org.

(WATCH Jon Stewart’s interview with Gene Baur below)

Photo credits: (Jon Stewart) David Shankbone (CC) – (Animals) Farm Sanctuary

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