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Artist Sews Ripped Clothes for Free on SF City Sidewalks

One day a month artist Michael Swaine can be found on a San Francisco sidewalk using his vintage sewing machine with foot pedal to mend the holes in people’s clothes — all for free.

In 2002, the 34-year-old ceramics and textile artist began sewing-up pants, jackets, and shirts under an umbrella-topped cart, calling it his “Reap What You Sew Generosity Project.”

A lifelong mender, he takes his mobile sewing table, on the 15th of every month, to San Francisco’s neediest neighborhoods, where he offers all-day free mending, friendship, and conversation. He says those communities have the most holes to mend.Hope for cancer child-ShawnVanDaele Photography

Digital Artist Creates Magical Worlds For Seriously Ill Kids

 

His mending is not only about the clothes — it is about the community, the people in it, and influencing a world that is so used to throwing things away.

(WATCH the video below or READ the new story, w/ photos, in the SF Chronicle)

Photo via Studio Galli Productions on YouTube / Story tip from Sally Meek

GoodSnitch App Makes it Easy to Show Gratitude for Great Customer Service

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Feedback can be a scary word, especially for corporations that get an earful from their most furious customers, but what if there was an easy way to tell businesses what they’re doing right? Introducing GoodSnitch.

The GoodSnitch app allows mobile users to give positive feedback to any organization found in Google’s index. A quick 30 second survey is all it takes to share thoughts and highlight employees that have done a great job.

In the past, giving feedback was time consuming and the only ones willing to endure the process were those with negative comments. Goodsnitch Founder Rob Pace discovered through a study  that a speedy survey produces 80 percent more feedback. Plus, those comments skew 90 percent positive.

Talk about Customer Service! US Clothier Hand-Delivers Forgotten Pants to Costa Rica Wedding

 

Last year,  Tennessee Oncology, one of the largest physician-owned practices, successfully implemented the app to overwhelming applause. “Patients seem to love the simplicity of the tool and genuinely want to recognize those that are helping them through a challenging period,” noted Carolyn Craig who oversaw it’s roll-out.

Another great example is Albany, Oregon, the first U.S. city to encourage employee excellence through use of the app. “GoodSnitch is a simple tool that people can use to provide valuable, constructive comments about services provided by local government,” said city manager Wes Hare. “We like the whole concept and are proud to be a partner.”

Pace sees his app creating a virtuous cycle initiated when a citizen feels empowered and heard.  More than 800 employees of Albany have now been hailed as “heroes.”

From religious institutions,  to restaurants to fitness chains, the app has been making its mark.

According to research by Bersin & Associates, companies spend $46 billion dollars a year on employee recognition programs. GoodSnitch has made the process easier and cost free — and fun.

Wichita State Welcomes Opponent’s Lone Cheerleader to Join Them

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Due to conflicts with midterms, the Loyola University cheer squad could only send one cheerleader to a women’s basketball tournament this week.

After hearing the news, the Wichita State squad, which had a full complement of cheerleaders and yell leaders, immediately invited her to join them mid-court during time-outs.

“It was absolutely incredible and it really meant a lot to see the sportsmanship Wichita State displayed,” said Maddie Kenney, who even got the chance to go airborne, thanks to the dynamic Kansas squad.

(READ the story from the Wichita Eagle)

File credit: UCLA cheerleaders by Han Shot First (CC license) / Story tip from Mike McGinley

95-Year-old Smashes 200m World Record: ‘Bodies Can be Rebuilt at Any Age’

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A 95-year-old former dentist has set a new world record for his age group in the 200-meter indoor sprint, knocking a massive 2.4 seconds off the previous record. He’s only been running for a few years; bodybuilding and never retiring, says Charles Eugster, are the secrets to his success.

The medal-winning rower, runner, and body builder, finally took up serious bodybuilding when he was 87, having looked in the mirror and disliking what he saw.

“I’m very vain,” he told the Telegraph two years ago. “I hoped getting fit would stop me aging.”

But, today he insists, “I’m not chasing youthfulness. I’m chasing health.91yo-designer-TODAYshowVideo

91-Year-Old Lands Her Dream Job as a Designer in Silicon Valley

 

The Swiss resident, who speaks three languages, laments, “People have been brainwashed to think that after you’re 65, you’re finished.”

“We’re told that old age is a continuous state of decline, and that we should stop working, slow down and prepare to die,” he wrote on his celebrity Facebook Page. “I disagree.”

Retirement is a “health catastrophe,” he said. “Work is the most important thing for a healthy old age; number one is work, number two is nutrition and number three is exercise, in that order.” (His role model for a working senior? The Queen of England.)

Eugster’s intense weight training has shown him that bodies can be rebuilt at any age — even in your 90s.

“I want to change the world,” he told Sportvibe.tv. “I want to make old age something wonderful, stupendous, glorious… interesting, exciting… the best part of one’s life.”

He started sprinting in his 90s and enjoys it because it is new and different. His latest record-breaking performance came at a British Masters Athletics meet on Sunday when he ran the 200m race in 55.48 seconds.

He is currently writing a book and engaging in many media appearances. Read more about him on his website, and view his Tedx Talk here.

(WATCH him break the record below, and interview with SportsVibe.tv) – Photo used with the permission of charleseugster.net

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Waitress Receives A Note That Brought Tears To Her Eyes

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Claire Hudson, a 25-year-old waitress, got a tip and a note that melted her heart. She didn’t know it at the time, but she became part of a heartfelt tradition to honor a brother’s lost sibling.

She was working a double shift at local burger joint in Tennessee, when a couple came in and ordered a couple of hot dogs and beers. Before leaving they left a generous tip — 36$ dollars on a $28 tab.

What touched her most was the note written on the back of the receipt:

“Today is my brother’s b-day. He would have been 36 today. Every year I go eat his favorite meal (hot dogs) and tip the waitress his age. Happy B-day Wes.childes-nativity scene-jefftaylor-submitted

Nativity’s Incredible Return to Son Decades After Mom’s Death

 

Now Claire and the restaurant owner, located in Spring Hill, want to honor Wes every day with a hot dog named after him. They are looking for the anonymous diners in hopes of finding out what toppings he liked on his hot dogs.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story at WJBF) – Story tip from Stephanie B

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Cargo Ship Diverts 180 Miles to Pick Up Sick Girl

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A Dutch cargo company ship went hundreds of miles out of its way to pick up a desperately sick child on St Helena, one of the most remote islands in the world.

In an area sparse with vessels, the captain of an MV Traveller ship was the only one to respond to the call for help.

Distress calls from land are rare for mariners, but Saint Helena has no functioning airport, though one is under construction. Her parents, a doctor and a nurse were taken on board, the four adults having to sleep in the lunchroom, while the girl was in the sick bay.
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Bystanders Rush into River to Flip SUV and Rescue Teens

 

The ship’s Dutch owners, BigLift, waived the substantial fuel costs of doubling back 180 miles to the island, and then carrying the girl the 700 miles to Ascension Island.

“Assistance was requested and without hesitation, MV Traveller responded.,” said BigLift, in a statement. “We were pleased to assist and hope the girl will receive proper treatment and fully recover in time.”

(READ the story from St. Helena Online)

Dying Baby Brought Back to Life With a Cuddle

A new video tells the story of Kate Ogg and her husband David, whose newborn son was about to die in 2010 — or, so the doctors told them— after being born a twin 14 weeks premature.

Doctors worked on the baby for 20 minutes and said there was nothing left to do and gave the infant to the mother.

“He was cold and I just wanted him to be warm.”

Mrs. Ogg took off the blanket and ordered her husband to remove his shirt because she wanted as much body heat around the tiny bare body as possible. She placed him so he might hear her heartbeat and tried to “entice him into staying.”

“We told him he had a sister and her name was Emily… and that he needed to look after her.”

Astonishingly, the child, named Jamie, suddenly began to move and breathe and he opened his eyes.

Johnson Baby made a short film using home videos and photos to illustrated Kate’s remarkable story, posting it on YouTube in February.

Today, Jamie is a vibrant five-year-old, whose siblings joke about the incident. Their parents launched a fundraising appeal in September called Jamie’s Gift (on Facebook) to provide premature birth support to Australian families.

(WATCH the video below) Photo credit: Kate Ogg / Story tip from Jürgen N

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Man Expertly Grabs Pelican to Save it From Almost Certain Death (WATCH)

 

After noticing a pelican sitting on the pier with fishing wire wrapped tightly around its beak, bystanders decided they had to do something or the majestic bird would starve.

With a quick leap, one of the men lunged at the bird and deftly grabbed its foot as it began to take flight.

He pulled it down between his legs and held the pelican still on the ground while another man used a tool to remove the wire. They checked it’s throat too, after untangling the line.juvenile Golden Eagle - Wildlife Rehab Center of No Utah

Fisherman Rescues Exhausted Eagle in Amazing Video

 

People who stood nearby watching and recording the event, clapped and cheered for the random rescuers, while the can-do Samaritan strolled away into the sunset.

(WATCH the video above, which was posted on YouTube in February, 2015)

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Memory Loss Associated with Alzheimer’s Reversed for First Time

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old-couple-Flickr-CC-bravenewtraveler

Since it was first described over 100 years ago, Alzheimer’s disease has been without an effective treatment. That may finally be about to change.

In the first, small study of a novel, personalized and holistic program to reverse memory loss, nine of 10 participants who had problems with memory and disorientation displayed marked improvement in their memories beginning within three to six months.

Among the ten patients with memory loss associated with Alzheimer’s disease, six patients had discontinued working or had been struggling at their jobs at the time they joined the study; all were able to return to their jobs or continue working with improved performance, and their improvements have been sustained.

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It is the first study to suggest that memory loss in patients may be reversed — and improvement sustained — using a complex, 36-point therapeutic program that involves comprehensive diet changes, brain stimulation, exercise, sleep optimization, specific pharmaceuticals and vitamins, and multiple additional steps that affect brain chemistry.  The patient in treatment the longest has been receiving the therapy for two-and-a-half years.

SEE: All the Positive Alzheimer’s News on Good News Network

The study was conducted by Dr. Dale Bredesen of UCLA’s Center for Alzheimer’s Disease Research and the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, with the findings published in the October 2014 online edition of the journal Aging.

Bredesen said the findings are “very encouraging,” but he added that the results are anecdotal, and a more extensive, controlled clinical trial is needed.

No single drug has been found to stop or even slow the progression of Alzheimer’s, and drugs have only had modest effects on symptoms. “In the past decade alone, hundreds of clinical trials have been conducted for Alzheimer’s, without success, at an aggregate cost of over $1 billion,” said Bredesen, who is a Professor of Neurology at both UCLA and the Buck Institute.

Although other chronic illnesses such as cardiovascular disease, cancer and HIV have been improved through the use of combination therapies, comprehensive combination therapies have not been explored for Alzheimer’s and other memory disorders. However, over the past few decades, genetic and biochemical research has revealed an extensive network of molecular interactions involved in the development of Alzheimer’s.

“That suggested that a broader-based therapeutic approach, rather than a single drug that aims at a single target, may be feasible and potentially more effective for the treatment of cognitive decline due to Alzheimer’s,” Bredesen said.

brainIt’s possible that addressing multiple targets that may contribute to Alzheimer’s may be successful even when each target is affected in a relatively modest way, “with effects being additive, or even synergistic.”

The uniform failure of drug trials in Alzheimer’s influenced Bredesen’s desire to better understand the fundamental nature of the disease. His laboratory has found evidence that Alzheimer’s stems from an imbalance in nerve cell signaling. In the normal brain, specific signals foster nerve connections and memory making, while balancing signals support memory loss, allowing irrelevant information to be forgotten. But in people with Alzheimer’s, the balance of these opposing signals is disturbed, nerve connections are suppressed and memories are lost.

That finding is contrary to the popular belief that Alzheimer’s is caused by the accumulation of sticky plaques in the brain. Bredesen believes the amyloid beta peptide, the source of the plaques, has a normal function in the brain, as part of a larger set of molecules that promote signals that cause nerve connections to lapse. Thus, the increase in the peptide that occurs in Alzheimer’s shifts the balance in favor of memory loss.

brain imageBredesen therefore thought that, rather than a single targeted agent, the solution might be a multiple-component system approach, in line with the approach for other chronic illnesses.

“The existing Alzheimer’s drugs affect a single target, but Alzheimer’s disease is more complex. Imagine having a roof with 36 holes in it, and your drug patched one hole very well,” he said. “The drug may have worked, and a single hole may have been fixed, but you still have 35 other leaks, and so the underlying process may not be affected much.”

Bredesen’s approach is personalized to the patient and may include:

  • eliminating all simple carbohydrates, gluten and processed food from her diet, and eating more vegetables, fruits and non-farmed fish
  • meditating twice a day and beginning yoga to reduce stress
  • sleeping seven to eight hours per night, up from four to five
  • taking melatonin, methylcobalamin, vitamin D3, fish oil and coenzyme Q10 each day
  • optimizing oral hygiene using an electric flosser and electric toothbrush
  • reinstating hormone replacement therapy, which had previously been discontinued
  • fasting for a minimum of 12 hours between dinner and breakfast, and for a minimum of three hours between dinner and bedtime
  • exercising for a minimum of 30 minutes, four to six days per week

Bredesen said the program’s downsides are its complexity and that the burden falls on patients and caregivers to follow it. In the study, none of the patients was able to stick to the entire protocol. Their most common complaints were the diet and lifestyle changes, and having to take multiple pills each day. One patient who had been diagnosed with late stage Alzheimer’s did not improve.

Two lively seniors - Photo by Sun StarThe good news, though, said Bredesen, are the side effects: “It is noteworthy that the major side effects of this therapeutic system are improved health and an improved body mass index, a stark contrast to the side effects of many drugs.”

The results suggest that memory loss may be reversed and improvement sustained with the therapeutic program, but Bredesen cautioned that the results need to be replicated.

“The current, anecdotal results require a larger trial, not only to confirm or refute the results reported here, but also to address key questions raised, such as the degree of improvement that can be achieved routinely, how late in the course of cognitive decline reversal can be effected, whether such an approach may be effective in patients with familial Alzheimer’s disease, and last, how long improvement can be sustained,” he said.

Originally published by UCLA News – Story tip from Lee Katchen

Photo credits: (Top) bravenewtraveler, via CC flickr (bottom) Sun Star / Story tip from Aryeh Katchen

China’s Emissions Fell for the First Time in a Decade, Clean Energy Up

pollution in China

Factory in China -Wikipedia photo by High Contrast

China’s emissions of carbon dioxide fell last year for the first time in 13 years — a drop of 2 percent during a year when their GDP was still growing by 7.4%. This decoupling of economic growth from emissions is significant and should buoy clean energy efforts around the world.

Another sign that efforts to control pollution are gaining traction is the rate of greenhouse gas emissions worldwide in 2014. For the first time in 40 years, carbon emission rates did not rise over the previous year during a time when economies continued to grow, according to new data from the International Energy Agency.

New Product Should Be Climate Game-Changer

 

“This gives me even more hope that humankind will be able to work together to combat climate change, the most important threat facing us today,” Fatih Birol, the IEA’s chief economist, said in the IEA report.

One reason for the encouraging numbers is China’s shift away from coal toward cleaner sources of energy. China led the world in renewable energy construction last year with $89.5 billion invested, a third of all dollars spent globally. At the same time, its domestic coal production is falling — down 2.9 percent over 2o13 — and the nation is focused on energy efficiency.

The Chinese led in new wind power generation, adding 23.3 gigawatts, compared to the 4.8 gigawatts of wind energy that went online in the United States.

Solar is also showing impressive gains worldwide, according to a new market report by the Advanced Energy Economy, an association for clean energy companies. It shows that green energy is also earning plenty of money for the companies pursuing it. “Solar PV churned an estimated $90.3 billion in revenue with more than 10.0 GW each installed in China and Japan, and nearly 7 GW in the United States.”

China’s growth in 2014 slowed somewhat from 7.7 percent in 2013 to 7.4 percent in 2014.

(READ more from Bloomberg News) Photo by High Contrast

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

Robert-DowneyJr-with-bionic-arm-boy-LimbitlessSolutionsVid

Robert Downey Jr. took time last weekend to present Alex Pring with a new hi-tech prosthetic arm designed to look like the red metallic one worn by “Tony Stark” whenever he turns into Iron Man.

The superstar celebrity said on Facebook it was an “absolute privilege” to give the custom 3D-printed bionic arm to Alex, whom he called “the most dapper 7-year-old I’ve ever met.” (Watch the video below)

 

ironman-hand-w-bionic-boy-limbitlessSolutions-vidAlex’s mom said the change in her son’s confidence after receiving the arm, was instant. “There are no words.”

The arm — destined to be the envy of every kid on the playground — was made possible thanks to the combined efforts of Microsoft, the Collective Project, and Limbitless Solutions, a nonprofit group of engineering enthusiasts.

Albert Manero, a doctoral engineering student at the University of Central Florida, leads the team of volunteers at Limbitless Solutions. The group uses 3D printing to make inexpensive electronic prosthetics for kids. Normally, a prosthetic arm like Alex’s would cost thousands of dollars, but with 3D printing, the cost to build is cut to just $350. Children get their prosthetics from Limbitless Solutions at no cost to the family.storm trooper arm presented as prosthetic-AugustChronicleVideo

Alex is not the first to receive a superhero inspired limb replacement. In January, “Darth Vader” delivered a Storm Trooper arm to 7-year-old Liam Porter, through the global eNable organization, of which Limbitless Solutions is a part.

RobertDowneyJr-with-bionic-arm-LimbitlessSolutionsTony Stark Wants You to SHARE the Story…

99-Year-Old Woman Sews Her 1,000th Dress For Little Girls in Africa

AfricanGirlsWearingLillianWeberDresses_PhotoReleasedbyLittleDressesForAfrica

Lillian Weber kept her word. The 99-year-old woman, who sews a handmade dress every single day for small girls in Africa, reached her goal of 1,ooo dresses yesterday.

“And, as soon as I get this one done, I’ll probably go for the next one,” she told a local TV station.

Lillian, whose goal was to sew a thousand dresses before her 100th birthday in May, is the most celebrated woman in her Davenport senior community, where she and others regularly create frocks for the Christian outreach group Little Dresses for Africa.Lillian-Weber-senior-seamstress-sewing-WQADvid

Our Life, Your Life, My Life Has a Purpose!

 

As a special promise to her, the group’s founder, Rachel O’Neill, vowed that she would hand-deliver some of Lillian’s colorful dresses and send back photos of the little girls wearing them.

“She’s very selfless,” said Lillian’s daughter. “She just wants to help these little girls.”

Seamstresses in 31 countries have donated dresses to the Michigan-based nonprofit that ships them to schools, orphanages and churches.

“Nine times out of ten, they always say, ‘Well, old people don’t do anything,’ but they do,” Lillian said.

Lillian proves that point daily – one dress at a time – and she is nowhere near quitting.

(WATCH a video below or READ the story from WQAD)

Meet This Adorable 10-year-old Math Genius — She’s in College

A British-Nigerian 10-year-old looks like a typical little girl when she dresses up as Elsa from “Frozen,” but then you find out Esther is also a university student.

The talented girl from the UK’s West Midlands area enrolled in a distance learning college and is already top of the class, having recently scored 100% in a math exam.

“I’m going to do my PhD in financial maths when I’m 13,” Miss Okade told CNN. “I actually wanted to start when I was seven. But my mum was like, “you’re too young, calm down.”

(WATCH the video above and READ the full story from CNN via PIX-11) – Story tip from Kelly Harrington

 

“Smiley” Dog Born Without Eyes Serves as Beacon for Disabled

“Smiley” Dog Born Without Eyes Serves as Beacon for Disabled – Joanne George, FB

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Rescued from a puppy mill, “Smiley,” a dog born without eyes, is living up to his name, inspiring others with his sweet disposition after overcoming a heartbreaking past.

Rescued ten years ago by Ontario dog trainer Joanne George when he was around two-years-old, it wasn’t all smiles in the beginning. The untrained dog was destructive and fearful, even cowering at the sound of another dog eating.

“The scars on his face and ears told me the stories of what it was like living with so many dogs in such deplorable conditions,” George wrote on her dog training website.

She said the golden retriever changed her way of training. He did not know one verbal command so she needed to communicate through her energy and love.dog-in-river-Team Peak Performance-KristerGöransson

Scruffy Stray Dog Follows Extreme Sports Team Through Miles of Mud and Water

 

But Smiley’s best teacher was the family’s partially deaf Great Dane, Tyler, whose happiness was infectious. “Life was grand to Tyler and soon enough that rubbed off on Smiley,” said George.

Eventually she noticed how well he interacted with groups of people and realized his destiny was therapy. Smiley now warms hearts as a service dog in Stouffville area hospitals and nursing homes.

After the dog’s regular visits with a man named Teddy, who never spoke at all and never communicated, eventually a smile broke out across his face. The staff was amazed, she told ABC news, because they’d never seen Teddy smile before.

Patients aren’t the only ones Smiley has touched. He made his mark at home. “He went on my first date, and was the ring bearer at my wedding,” George told CBS News. “He changed my life.”

“The message is, it doesn’t matter where or how a dog starts his life – he is able to overcome and become a stable, happy dog,” she wrote on her website, trainingthek9way.com. “For dogs do not dwell in the past – they only live in the moment.”

(WATCH a video of Smiley from RuptlyTV)

Photo Credit: Joanne George via Facebook / Story tip from: Kristen Johnson Elder

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Burger King Pulls Sugary Soda from Kids’ Menu

burger-king-sign-600px-cc-JeepersMedia

After years of pressure to stop marketing sugary sodas to children, Burger King has announced that it will be removing all soda pop products from their kids’ menus, effective immediately.

Burger King joins three other fast food chains, Wendy’s, McDonald’s and Arby’s, in providing healthier options as the default beverage in their kids meals — fat-free milk, low-fat chocolate milk or 100 percent apple juice.

MomsRising.org and the Center for Science in the Public Interest, has been urging the changes for years. The change is significant because soda is the leading source of calories in children’s diets, according to the Center.

“Restaurant chains that market soda as part of their children’s meals are making life harder for parents, most of whom want to reserve soda as a special, occasional treat if they allow it at all,” said the Center in a statement released after the Burger King policy change. “Fewer kids will become conditioned to think that soda should be a part of every eating out occasion.”

“While this is a great first step – we urge all fast-food restaurants to further improve upon their healthy options for children and adults by serving whole grain rolls, offering more fruit and vegetable options, reducing sodium across the menu, and adopting a comprehensive policy to limit the marketing of unhealthy food to children,” said a spokeswoman for the grass-roots organization, MomsRising.org.

When a Cheerleader with Down Syndrome was Bullied, 3 Players Walked Off the Court

A cheerleader with Down syndrome being bullied at a Lincoln Middle School basketball game in Kenosha, Wisconsin spurred three of the basketball players to walk off the field in her defense.

Desiree Andrews moves to her own internal rhythms while cheering on the sidelines. After someone in the stands began criticizing her, some eighth grade players, Miles Rodriguez, Chase Vazquez and Scooter Terrien stepped in to stop it.

“A couple of us went over there and were like, can you guys just stop, that’s not right,” Miles Rodriguez, told WTMJ-4 News.

In honor of Dee’s enthusiasm and sweet smile, the school’s athletic director said he was going to hang a banner that proclaims the school’s gym to be “D’s House” — a nicknamed that has stuck over the past year.

A community business owner saw the story in a newscast and said they would donate the banner.

(WATCH the video above or READ the story, w/ photos, from Kenosha News)

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Solar Plane Attempts Round the World Flight Without a Drop of Fuel

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Two Swiss pilots attempting the first flight around the world in a solar-powered plane completed the maiden leg of their voyage from Abu Dhabi to Oman.

Solar Impulse 2 took off on Monday to start a five-month journey of 22,000 miles (35,000 km) organized to focus the world’s attention on sustainable energy.

The two pilots, organization co-founders, Bertrand Piccard and André Borschbergtaking, will take turns in the single-seat aircraft hope to finish circumnavigating the Earth by July of this year. Several legs of the trip will span thousands of miles, carrying the alternating pilots over two oceans without a single drop of fuel.

The plane’s giant wings, which are longer than a Boeing 747, include 17,000 solar cells that harvest energy for its three lithium-ion batteries that will keep four propellers going all night.

(WATCH the video below or READ more from Reuters)

Photo credit: Solar Impulse

Honey on Tap Directly From Your Beehive Without Disturbing Bees

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Veteran beekeepers are calling it “mindboggling.” A father-son team in Australia invented the Flow Hive which allows users to collect honey on tap directly from their beehives without bugging their winged workers.

“It really is a revolution,” said Graham Anderson, a beekeeper of 40 years. “I was completely amazed.”

Cedar Anderson and his father Stuart have long lamented the difficult and messy task of gathering honey from their bees. So they designed a completely new system. After ten years of testing prototypes, they unveiled their Flow Hive on the crowd funding platform, Indiegogo.

Within five minutes they reached their initial goal of $70,000, needed to purchase specialized manufacturing equipment. In the two weeks since, they have raised more than 5.6 million dollars in funding — promising their amazing products in return for upfront cash.

More than one thousand people have ordered their full beekeeping system at a cost of $600.

In the past, harvesting honey has been too difficult for the average joey — put on the bee suit, split the boxes from the hive, calm the bees with smoke, remove frames, cut wax caps from honeycombs, extract the honey. Whew.

Taking all the hard work out of harvesting, Flow Hive‘s frames don’t need to pulled out of the hive. The cells are arranged upon channels that open with every turn of the tap. Voila, the honey flows down.

Having exceeded their crowdfunding expectations, the Andersons hope to expand their business internationally. The father-son duo wants to ease new beekeepers into the trade by introducing this system to urban areas. A win-win for the ecosystem, local food markets and the world’s bee population.

WATCH their inspiring story below…

Story tip from Jürgen N

Left in Dumpster, Puppies Raised by Inmates Now Find Forever Homes

 

In the frigid month of January in Sioux Falls, six puppies left in a dumpster were rescued and handed over to inmates to be raised and given round the clock care.

After eight weeks of supervision by the Paroled Pups Program at the South Dakota State Penitentiary, the dogs are now ready to move to their forever homes.

But they will be missed.

“We were just looking at a picture of how small they were before,” inmate Lance Przybylski told KDLT News. He helped care for the pups when they were struggling to survive.

“It’s just incredible how big they are, and healthy.”

While the inmates are sad to see them go, it won’t be long before the humane society brings in a new litter to raise.

From behind bars, the six adorable puppies were moved to the Sioux Falls Area Humane Society adoption center last week and each one found a new home within hours.

(WATCH the video above or READ the story from KDLT News)

 

Costco Customers Unite to Send Terminally-ill Employee Who Always Smiles On a Vacation

 

Despite living with M.S. and terminal cancer, 45-year-old Arlie Smith couldn’t be more positive about life.

He has worked at the Costco store in Danville, California for 21 years, always smiling and cheerful as he looked at shoppers’ receipts at the door.

Yesterday those customers surprised Smith and his wife after raising about $2,500 to send he and Shari on a vacation to their favorite beach spot.

Arlie is also thrilled to be raising as much money as possible during a store-wide fundraiser in May for Children’s Hospital, “a fundraiser in which he has previously finished in the top ten in North America,” reports KTVU-TV.

(WATCH the video above or READ the story from KTVU)

Story tips from Mike McGinley and Jim Kelly