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Teen with Autism Meets His Idol Bill Nye the Science Guy

Michael de Groot familyphoto Bill Nye

Nothing makes Michael de Groot more excited than being a scientist. His bedroom is full of science experiments and his idol has always been Bill Nye the Science Guy.

The middle school student who has autism got to meet Nye recently when the celebrity scientist was presenting about space exploration before the Senate Committee on Science, Space and Technology.

Michael’s sister had a thoughtful friend who interned for the committee and offered to help set up a meeting. The Richmond, Virginia family made arrangements to travel to Washington, DC, but had no idea if their son would get anything more than a handshake and an autograph — a dream come true for Michael.

After the de Groots arrived they were shocked and delighted when they were ushered into a private room where Nye, who knew beforehand the teen was autistic, provided some major one-on-one time with the budding scientist. The quiet room, with no media having been contacted about the event, was the perfect safe haven for an excitable child with autism.Robert Downey Jr-quicheisinsane

CHECK Out: Robert Downey Jr. Showed His True Heart to a Bleeding Stranger in the 90’s

The celebrity spent 20 minutes with the family taking pictures and talking. Michael showed Bill some drawings he had created including his elaborate concept for a futuristic “Nye Science Lab.”

On her blog, Seriously Not Boring, Jennifer Roberts Bittner wrote: Bill noticed Michael was wearing a lab coat and offered to sign it, and Michael thought that was incredibly awesome. He also received a Planetary Society pin, which was proudly pinned to his autographed lab coat.

“When it was all over Michael proclaimed, ‘This was the best day EVER!'”

(WATCH the video below from Richmond station WRIC)

Photo credit: de Groot family / Story tip from Joel Arellano

Teen Can Finally Play Guitar Thanks To 3D-Printed Hand

Diego Corredor-3D_Gluck_Photo

A teen who wanted to play guitar but had no right hand since birth is now rocking out thanks to a new prosthesis by the creative team at 3D Gluck.

The designers worked with Diego Corredor in Colombia, to build the custom prosthetic and even emblazoned the arm with the logo of his favorite band Linkin Park.

(WATCH the video below or READ more from TechCrunch)

Story tip from Mike McGinley

After Rescuing Him From Heart Attack Medics Return to Finish Shoveling His Driveway

Greenfield FireDept shovels snow-FBPage

On Sunday, after snow walloped the Milwaukee area, one resident of Greenfield suffered a cardiac emergency while attempting to shovel 12 inches of heavy snow from his driveway.

Paramedics took the man to the hospital, but then hatched a plan in the fire station to return and finish shoveling.

The Greenfield Fire Department posted this photo on their Facebook page and wanted the kindness to spread. They started a hashtag, #ShovelItForward, encouraging others to pitch in for those who may need help dealing with heavy snow.

The man’s daughter told WISN-TV, “They just saw that somebody needed help, and they took time out of their day and their busy schedules to do something like that. It’s amazing. It’s awesome.”

Story tip from Kim Campbell

Run on 100% Renewables, Burlington, Vermont Powers Ahead (Video)

Renewable-Energy-Vermont-nonprofit-wind-turbines

“Burlington, Vermont, the state’s largest city, recently became the first in the country to use 100 percent renewable energy for its residents’ electricity needs. In a state known for socially conscious policies, the feat represents a milestone in the growing green energy movement.”

The PBS NewsHour‘s William Brangham reports on the implications for the country’s green movement.

(WATCH the PBS video below)

Photo by Renewable Energy Vermont

SHARE to inform and inspire / Story tip from Madrid Perry

3 Brothers Recreate Childhood Photos as Gift to Mom (Adorable)

bathtub-photo-redo-three-brothers-Familyphoto-framedThree Pennsylvania men made a calendar for their mom as a Christmas gift by recreating old photos from their childhood.

Now two million people have seen “three grown men in a bathtub”.

Their mother, who maintains very close relationships with her “boys” loved it. She laughed and laughed, and afterward came tears.touching strangers photo project-RichardRinaldi

CHECK Out: Photographer Asks Strangers to Touch, Magical Pictures Result

 

The photos were a big hit on Reddit.com where the older brother, Matt MacMillan, shared them. The men had plenty of pictures to choose from, and got their father to recreate a couple, too, like the heartwarming kiss below.

(SEE more photos at Imgur.com)

halloween brother redo photo-Matt-MacMillan

fathers kiss redone in photo calendar-Familyphotos-MacMillan

Photos via Matt MacMillan

South Carolina Teens Fight Racist Vandalism With Positive Message

Multiracial Hands Making a Circle

After racist graffiti showed up outside a Rock Hill high school, three art students showed the town their true colors Monday afternoon painting a message of equality.

Advanced Placement art students, Andrew Swiger, Madison Wightman and Quinton Cole painted an image of the Earth on a large rock outside South Pointe High School with the words “We are all =”.

“While the district is disappointed in the actions of those who painted the rock, we will not let them take from us our joy or success in the progress our community has made, and will continue to make, in racial relations,” wrote the Rick Hill School District 3 on their Facebook Page.

(READ the story, w/ photos, in the Herald Online)

Photo from Sal Falko – CC license / Story from Maureen Green

Coast Guard Rescues Dog From Frozen Lake Michigan Waters


Coast Guard crews rescued a dog from a frozen channel alongside Lake Michigan lake on Tuesday morning, after the dog jumped into a channel and fell through a sheet of ice.

Lucky for the lab she took the plunge near a Coast Guard station, and a crew of rescuers were able to put their training to use to save a beloved pet.

(WATCH the video recorded by an eyewitness and READ the story from MichiganLive.com)

Photo from YouTube via Oliver Art Center / Story tip from jim kelly

Loyal 56yo Man Who Walks 21 Miles to Work Sees $250K in Donations for Car

GoFundMe-Buy James a Car

No one can say James Robertson didn’t pay his dues or deserve a break during these long winter months in Detroit.

Today, thanks to a college student studying computers, Robertson won’t be trudging 21 miles to his factory job, five days a week. It will be easier on his soles — and his soul — to keep up that perfect attendance record, now that tens of thousands of dollars in donations were raised to buy him a car.

Two days ago a front page story in the Detroit Press featured Robertson’s incredible work ethic and humble spirit, and inspired a 19-year-old techie to start a campaign to buy him a car. Just like the story yesterday about the young beautician raising more than a quarter million dollars for a disabled mugging victim, Evan Leedy started off with a goal to collect just $5,000.

”I just wanted to get him a car to get back and forth to work,” wrote Evan Leedy in an update on his fundraising page. “But thanks to everyone’s generous donations, this is skyrocketed into more than just a car.”

A day later, the soft-spoken machine operator got to meet the student from Wayne State University and said, “I’m always going to be in your debt — I will never forget this.”

The single man of 56 told a group of reporters that he was thinking about buying the Ford Taurus, which he thought was a lot like himself, “plain on the outside, sturdy on the inside.”

People across the country were touched by the toil of his long daily commute. Gene Bowen of Las Vegas, wrote: “Dedication and pride obviously drives this man to do what most everyone else would simply conclude was not worth $400 before taxes a week. He is a very special human being.”

The banker who originally introduced the story to the Michigan newspaper, after noticing James on his arduous journey in all kinds of weather due to lack of bus service in outer Detroit, has assembled a board of advisors at Robertson’s request to manage the huge influx of donations.

(WATCH his inspiring story below or READ it here, along with the admiring comments)

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Yvel Jewelers Helps Save A Child’s Heart This Valentine’s Day

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A luxury jewelry designer is partnering with the non-profit Save A Child’s Heart in order to help raise money for life-saving treatment for children from the developing world.

This Valentine’s Day, YVEL has decided to not just offer a 10% discount on its award winning jewelry, but actively participate in saving the lives of children from around the world by contributing 5% of sales from this online campaign to Save A Child’s Heart Foundation – an incredible organization dedicated to providing life-saving heart surgeries on children from the developing world; regardless of race, religion, financial status or gender.

The Israel-based organization treats roughly 250 kids each year, with no charge to their families. To date, SACH has saved the lives of over 3,400 children from Africa, South America, Europe, Asia, and throughout the Middle East – including Syria, the West Bank and Gaza.

YVEL is an award winning high-end jewelry designer and manufacturer based in Jerusalem. Their designs are sold in stores worldwide and online, and have been seen on numerous red carpets worn by some of Hollywood’s biggest celebrities. Long known for their philanthropic activities, especially through their Megemeria School for Ethiopian immigrants (whose jewelry is sold on the Home Shopping Network), YVEL’s founders, Isaac & Orna Levy are proud to contribute to such an amazing cause.

“We are honored to be part of such an incredible campaign and actively contribute to saving the lives of children from around the world who otherwise would not be able to survive. We commend Save a Child’s Heart’s work and have the utmost respect for the doctors, staff and all of the volunteers involved in making the world a better place”, says Isaac Levy.

For more information about Yvel’s Valentine’s Day partnership with SACH, please see the Yvel.com magazine.

Roald Dahl’s Heartfelt Message About Measles Vaccines

Sunday 24th July 2005, 3.25pm.

Measles encephalitis caused the death of author Roald Dahl‘s daughter Olivia when she was seven years old. He became an ardent supporter of measles vaccination as a result. He wrote this letter to parents encouraging them to get their children vaccinated… (Note: Author uses British spelling, which is different than American.)

Olivia, my eldest daughter, caught measles when she was seven years old. As the illness took its usual course I can remember reading to her often in bed and not feeling particularly alarmed about it. Then one morning, when she was well on the road to recovery, I was sitting on her bed showing her how to fashion little animals out of coloured pipe-cleaners, and when it came to her turn to make one herself, I noticed that her fingers and her mind were not working together and she couldn’t do anything.

“Are you feeling all right?” I asked her.

“I feel all sleepy,” she said.

In an hour, she was unconscious. In twelve hours she was dead.

The measles had turned into a terrible thing called measles encephalitis and there was nothing the doctors could do to save her. That was twenty-four years ago in 1962, but even now, if a child with measles happens to develop the same deadly reaction from measles as Olivia did, there would still be nothing the doctors could do to help her.

On the other hand, there is today something that parents can do to make sure that this sort of tragedy does not happen to a child of theirs. They can insist that their child is immunised against measles. I was unable to do that for Olivia in 1962 because in those days a reliable measles vaccine had not been discovered. Today a good and safe vaccine is available to every family and all you have to do is to ask your doctor to administer it.

It is not yet generally accepted that measles can be a dangerous illness. Believe me, it is. In my opinion parents who now refuse to have their children immunised are putting the lives of those children at risk. In America, where measles immunisation is compulsory, measles like smallpox, has been virtually wiped out.

Here in Britain, because so many parents refuse, either out of obstinacy or ignorance or fear, to allow their children to be immunised, we still have a hundred thousand cases of measles every year. Out of those, more than 10,000 will suffer side effects of one kind or another. At least 10,000 will develop ear or chest infections. About 20 will die.

LET THAT SINK IN.

Every year around 20 children will die in Britain from measles.

So what about the risks that your children will run from being immunised?

They are almost non-existent. Listen to this. In a district of around 300,000 people, there will be only one child every 250 years who will develop serious side effects from measles immunisation! That is about a million to one chance. I should think there would be more chance of your child choking to death on a chocolate bar than of becoming seriously ill from a measles immunisation.

So what on earth are you worrying about? It really is almost a crime to allow your child to go unimmunised.

The ideal time to have it done is at 13 months, but it is never too late. All school-children who have not yet had a measles immunisation should beg their parents to arrange for them to have one as soon as possible.

Incidentally, I dedicated two of my books to Olivia, the first was ‘James and the Giant Peach’. That was when she was still alive. The second was ‘The BFG’, dedicated to her memory after she had died from measles. You will see her name at the beginning of each of these books. And I know how happy she would be if only she could know that her death had helped to save a good deal of illness and death among other children.

Woman Rallies to Raise $475K For Disabled Mugging Victim Too Scared to Return Home

goFundme page for Alan Barnes reaches 350K

A 21-year-old beautician was so upset last week after hearing about a disabled elderly man injured in a mugging that she started an online campaign to help him.

Donations for the Englishman, Alan Barnes, surged when the campaign went viral and so far has raised more than $474,000 (£316K).

Katie Cutler explained on her GoFundMe page that 67-year-old Alan Barnes was born with a number of defects after his mother contracted German Measles during Pregnancy. He was taking out the trash at his home in Gateshead when a thug demanded money and knocked him down after finding his pockets empty. After being treated for a broken collar bone, the man went to stay with his sister and was “too frightened to return to his home.”


Katie set a goal of raising £500, but well-wishers from as far away as New Zealand pushed the total to 600 times that amount. The money raised should make easy work of his search for new accommodations in a safer neighborhood.

“We can’t take away what has happened,” she wrote on her fundraising page. “But with a little donation we can make the future a prettier one & help towards the cost of his new home.”

“We’ve showed him that there are more good than bad people in this world,” wrote donor Sara Phillips on the webpage.

(WATCH a video of Alan thanking supporters from the The Telegraph *NOTE auto-playing audio, so adjust your speakers)

SHARE the Love with the Buttons Below / Story tip from Jay Beck

5,000 Super Bowl Pizzas Sent to US Troops in Afghanistan

Pizzas4Patriots-FBphoto-soldiers enjoy pizza and beer in Afghanistan

Pizzas 4 Patriots teamed up with international shipping provider, DHL Express, to hand off piping hot pizzas to troops serving abroad. 5,000 pizzas touched down in Afghanistan just in time for Super Bowl Sunday so that soldiers can enjoy a taste of home while watching the NFL championship game.

For the seventh year in a row, DHL Express is donating its resources to the non-profit effort, sending enough pizza to feed every U.S. soldier stationed in Afghanistan. The 5000 pizzas, with all natural ingredients and no preservatives, were provided this year by Rich Products Corporation, of Buffalo, New York.

“Having served overseas, I personally know that having a taste of home on Super Bowl Sunday is a powerful experience for troops stationed abroad,” said Retired Master Sergeant Mark Evans, the founder of Pizzas 4 Patriots, who regularly enjoys deep dish pizza in his Chicago hometown.

DHL Express employees loaded the perishable pizzas onto direct U.S. flights to the Middle East, re-icing the pies along the route. The pizzas were distributed from Bagram Airbase to the Forward Operating Bases in Afghanistan. DHL Express provides the final, door-to-door delivery of the pies, working closely with the U.S. military to ensure the pizzas are delivered fresh and ready to eat.

Over the last seven years, Pizzas 4 Patriots and DHL has sent nearly 150,000 pizzas to military personnel serving in Afghanistan. Donate to the effort below.

They told Good News Network that their next big shipment will be for the Fourth of July holiday. “At that time we will be shipping pizzas to the troops in the Middle East and delivering pizza parties to veterans across the United States. This past Veterans Day we delivered to 65 Veterans hospitals across the country.”

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from ABC-7 Chicago)

 

Photo via Pizza4Patriots on Facebook / Story tip from Mike McGinley

From Fast Food Fail to Unlikely Super Bowl Hero: Malcolm Butler

Malcolm Butler Football Star CBSThisMorningVid

A guy, who just five years ago was working part-time at Popeyes after being kicked out of school, became the unlikely Super Bowl hero on Sunday stealing the ball from Seattle at the goal line with just seconds to play, giving his New England Patriots the NFL championship.

After playing just two seasons of high school football, Malcolm Butler started playing at Hinds Community College in Jackson, Mississippi, but, in 2009 was kicked out of school and took a part-time job at Popeyes.

His time off from football made him realize how much he really wanted to play the game. His athletic talent got him invited back to Hinds in 2011, and he went on to complete his college career at West Alabama.

Apparently, the scouts weren’t impressed enough, because no professional team chose him in the 2014 NFL draft.

But in May, the New England Patriots asked him to try out for their 90-man roster and Malcolm’s perseverance paid off. His interception yesterday in the biggest game of the year, snatching victory from the Seahawks’ hands in the closing seconds, will go down in history.

“I just had a vision that I was going to make a big play and it came true,” the rookie cornerback told reporters afterward. “I’m just blessed.”

“(He’s) had to work for everything he’s ever had in his life,” his college coach, Will Hall, told AL.com. “It’s just the beginning for him.”

(WATCH a CBS interview below and READ the story from Alabama.com)

Photo credit: CBS This Morning video

NFL Names Man of the Year Award for Good Works Off the Field

Carolina Panthers player Thomas Davis-NFLvideograb

Carolina Panthers football player Thomas Davis is one of the best linebackers in the NFL football league, but his work off the field is what earned him this year’s Walter Payton Man of the Year award.

He and his wife Kelly founded the Thomas Davis Defending Dreams Foundation, which is dedicated to enhancing the quality of life for more than 2,000 underprivileged children and their families.

Among other charitable acts, his annual free football camp provides more than 350 children with instruction in sports and life skills.

Two other players were also honored, including Aaron Rodgers.

(READ the story from Reuters or WATCH the award presentation at NFL.com)

Photo: NFL.com video

These 3 Fans Have Attended Every Super Bowl Since 1967

3 aging football fans-old men-familyphoto-DonCrisman

Since the first game in 1967, millions of people have gone to see a Super Bowl. But these three men have gone to every single NFL championship game.

“The three men came to Los Angeles that January day in 1967 as strangers, but now through the game, have become lifelong friends.”

“With the help of the NFL, which makes tickets available for them to buy, they reconvene every year to retell the tales of their dedication.”

(READ the story from NBC Sports)

Family photo via Don Crisman

Love Letters Discovered at Thrift Shop Reconnect Dementia Patient With Her Past

Sara Redlich was sorting the bins at a Goodwill store in Oregon when something stood out. A pile of love letters all written to a woman named Rose Hill. She had no idea of how about they got there, but followed her instincts to find the owner.

The pink-haired employee also didn’t know how much these would mean to Rose, a 64-year-old woman who is currently suffering with symptoms of dementia.

She strives every day to remember things, and these letters from her ex-husband sent from the Vietnam war brought back memories of value.Photo by Cohdra via Morguefile

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“I remember!” Hill exclaimed. “You smell the smells. You hear the sounds. You feel like you are back in time and place.”

“Any recollection feels like total joy.”

(WATCH the video above or READ the story from Steve Hartman *NOTE auto-playing sound, so adjust your speakers)

Polish Baby is Named After Fallen US Soldier Who Saved his Father

Sgt Michael Ollis-familyphoto-Afghanistan

A Polish soldier became a proud father in January and named his newborn baby in honor of the young U.S. soldier who saved his life two years ago.

SILive.com in Staten Island reported that U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Michael Ollis (pictured above) sacrificed his life in 2013 while shielding Lt. Karol Cierpica from a suicide bomber in Afghanistan.beatup car-FB

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Ollis’s parents, who visited Cierpica in Poland last summer, called the tribute to their son “unexpected” and “wonderful.”

Ollis family photo Polish baby tribute to fallen hero“I thought of the baby as a grandson,” Ollis, Sr. said “We are very happy and honored.”

(READ the story in SILive.com)

Story from Joel Arellano

US/Russian Balloon Pilots Make History Crossing the Pacific

balloon earth aerial TwoEagles-TroyBradleyrelease

An Albuquerque balloonist and his Russian partner are now in the history books.

The pilots of a helium balloon named Two Eagles completed their crossing of the Pacific on Saturday with a sea-landing off Mexico, setting new milestones on the week long journey.

Using a hi-tech and lightweight Kevlar and carbon-fibre balloon, American Troy Bradley and Russian Leonid Tiukhtyaev claim to have beaten the world distance and duration records with their flight lasting six days, 16 hours, and covering 6,646 miles (10,695 Km).

(WATCH the video from KRQE – or READ more at the BBC)

Raccoon Rescued From Peanut Butter Jar

raccoon-in-snow-LoriTaggart-submittedAnimal Enforcement Officers in Brevard County, Florida rescued a raccoon that got his head stuck in a peanut butter jar.

The raccoon was dangling from a tree branch, 25 feet in the air, over a pond, when rescuers arrived.

“Once the raccoon was freed from the jar, cheers were heard from the small crowd that gathered to watch.”

(WATCH the video below, or see photos at Fox Chicago)

Photo submitted in December by Lori Taggart

 

How to Slow Down Your Life and Enjoy the Ride – Right Now

spaceodissey, CC license

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Do you tend to always worry, rather than embracing the moment? If so, it means you are thinking about the future, rather than sitting in awe of how lucky you are to be alive right now.

No matter how lovely the present circumstances might be, you habitually live psychically 30 minutes — or 30 days, or 30 years — into the future

Are we doomed to this torrent of stress which distracts us from enjoying our life? We don’t have to be.

An older man came up to me after a speech I’d delivered, grabbed my hand, and said he wished he’d heard me speak decades ago. After I asked why, he said that when he was eating lunch on break or dinner with his family, he was always thinking about what he had to do after the meal, which represented his daily life. “At the age of 97,” he said, “I’ve officially lived my life 30 minutes ahead of whatever I was doing.”

Here are three things to remember:

• Don’t cry before you are hurt. Don’t put up your umbrella until it rains. Worry restricts your ability to think and act effectively, and it forces your mindset into fear and anxiety about something that may never occur. Laughter is the opposite. When you laugh, you’re living almost completely in the moment, and it’s one of the best feelings you can have. Dad_cries_over_grades-sm-thumbnailSo, laugh more often.

WATCH: Camera Catches Dad Wailing With Joy as Son Earns a “C”

• No one can ruin your day without your permission. As much as we cannot control in life – our genes, our past and what has led up to today – there is much control we may take upon ourselves. Today, for example, we can realize that life picks on everyone, which is helpful when our daily life becomes difficult, so we don’t need to take it personally. When we do take misfortune personally, we tend to obsess, giving our days a legacy of distress.

• Cure your destination disease. Live mostly for today, less for tomorrow, and almost never about yesterday. How? You might have to repeatedly remind yourself that yesterday is gone forever, yet we perpetually have to deal with now, so why not live it? And what if tomorrow never occurs? There is a difference between working toward the future, which is inherently enjoyable in the light of hope, and living in an unrealistic future that remains perpetually unknowable. If tomorrow never comes, would you be satisfied with the way today ended?

It is not how you start in life or how you finish. The true joy of life is in the trip, so enjoy the ride!

Steve Gilliland (www.stevegilliland.com) is a member of the Speaker Hall of Fame, focusing on how to gain success in one’s career, relationships and life. His books include Enjoy the Ride: How to Experience the True Joy of LifeMaking A Difference, and Hide Your Goat: Strategies To Stay Positive When Negativity Surrounds You. His new one, “Detour, Developing the Mindset to Navigate Life’s Turns,” will be released in May 2015. Gilliland’s comic storytelling can be heard daily on SiriusXM Radio’s Laugh USA and Blue Collar Radio.

Photo credit: Space Odissey on Flickr (CC)