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Fishermen Rescue Rare Whale From Nets Thanks to New Training Program

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An extremely rare type of whale has been saved from almost certain death thanks to a training program for Pakistani tuna fishermen.

The February 10 rescue was the first time that any whale has been successfully freed since the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) training program began two and a half years ago teaching fishermen how to free endangered species from gill nets. And what makes it even more extraordinary is that the whale has been identified as most probably a Longman’s beaked whale (Indopacetus pacificus) – one of the rarest species of whale in the world and one that has never been recorded in the seas off Pakistan before.

Usually, the whale’s fate would have been sealed the moment its tail became entangled in the gillnets, which are notorious for the number of animals that they unintentionally trap and kill.Forest_Man-film-YouTube-screenshot

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Launched in 2012, the initiative has provided training to many tuna fishermen so that they know how to release threatened large species from their nets. So far 15 whale sharks, 3 manta rays and 2 sunfishes have been rescued from gillnets – and now a Longman’s beaked whale as well.

The distribution of the Longman’s beaked whale is not fully known, but it appears to be limited to the Indo-Pacific region – primarily the waters between South Africa, Somalia and Sri Lanka. However, there is very little information about the species because of its rarity.

But this unique sighting shows that its range is more extensive than previously thought. And gathering new data like this is an important component of the project. Along with the training, WWF-Pakistan has posted observers on tuna boats operating in the North Arabian Sea and this has already produced considerable information about key by-catch species, including turtles, sharks, dolphins and manta rays.

“Not only are the fishermen trying hard to release endangered species from their nets, but their efforts are also providing us with data that will help us to protect our ocean’s biodiversity,” said Muhammad Moazzam Khan, WWF-Pakistan Technical Advisor for Marine Fisheries.

Source: WWF –  Photo © Iqrar Muhummad / Story tip from Dianne Cunningham

Hero Who Stopped German Tanks in Battle of the Bulge, Dies at 99

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Leon Kent, who led a group of American soldiers that knocked out five German tanks and held up the enemy advance during the Battle of the Bulge, has died at age 99.

The young Army lieutenant was given an order that seemed impossible. His battery wasn’t trained in anti-tank warfare and had only an anti-aircraft gun, yet Kent and his three soldiers succeeded.

(READ the story from the LA Times)

Yarn Bombing Movement Spreads to Share Scarves, Hats in Public Places

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“Chase the Chill” has become a social media movement that inspires people to leave warm scarves, often with a note, in public places for anyone to take.

“I’m not lost,” it says on many of the homemade tags. “Take me if you’re cold.”

Scarves draped on trees, posts, signs, and other public locations first appeared in downtown Easton, Pennsylvania, in the fall of 2010, according to the original Chase the Chill group on Facebook.

Susan Huxley, a crochet teacher, writer and blogger, who started the Easton group with some friends, says she saw homeless people walking to the shelter down the street, often without the proper clothing to keep them warm.street-store-cape-town-800px

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“I wanted to do more. Something that allowed people the freedom of personal choice and dignity,” said Huxley, whose charity-centered ‘yarn bombing’ spread widely to Boston, Winnipeg, Georgia and elsewhere.

Photos, like this one from the Winnipeg group, are shared on Facebook and knitters start their own groups wherever they live. The latest group in Detroit scarf bombed trees with mittens, hats and scarves this week in four locations.’

Photo courtesy of Chase the Chill in Winnipeg

Homeless Man’s Garden of Hope Blooms on L.A. Median

 

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“Los Angeles has many scruffy, unmanicured median strips, but there’s one that draws attention for another reason: It’s really nice, with constant improvements such as rock and seashell gardens, and terraced landscaping.”

The credit does not go to city workers, reports the LA Times. It goes to a homeless guy.

“I like to think of it as a contribution to the universe,” said Jeff Harmes, a 46-year-old Colorado native who has been homeless a long time.

“I just put in a rosebush,” Harmes told columnist Steve Lopez with great excitement. “Someone brought it to me last night.”

(READ the story, w/ photos, from the L.A. Times)

File Photo: Atwater Village rock sculpture, Jennifer Gaillard (CC license) / Story tip from S. Ghent

Community Saves the Day for 6-yo After No One Came to Birthday Party

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When none of his classmates showed up for his birthday party, 6-year-old Glenn Buratti and his mother were broken-hearted.

Ashlee, whose son has autism, wrote of her disappointment on a local Facebook community page. Her post on Osceola Rants Raves & Reviews, a page with more than 10,000 members, changed everything.

Strangers soon began sending messages of support and asked if they could come over with their children. About 15 kids and 25 adults showed up, some bearing gifts.

One woman even brought a new bike, reports the Osceola News-Gazette.

The Sheriff’s Department saw the post and their deputies pooled money to buy gifts. Their helicopter did a fly-over of the home with personnel waving down to the little boy.

(WATCH the video below from WKMG or READ the story from the Osceola News-Gazette)

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Story tip from Jeannine Madden, Jim Kelly and Jae Bird

Teen Stops Car to Finish Shoveling for Old Man With a Walker

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Teresa Adams was driving the car in Nottoway County, Virginia when her teen-aged son startled her by shouted “Mamma stop the car.”

“I got scared and asked ‘what’s wrong?’”

He said, “There’s an older man with a walker shoveling snow,” and he wanted to help.

The man looked surprised as Tommy walked up and asked him for the snow shovel. He had been trying to clear the barricade of snow and ice at the end of his driveway left by snow plows that had cleared the street.cop helps elderly black widow to shop-Jessica Huerta-FB-700px

“I was so proud, I started to cry.” Teresa said.

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She shared a photo of her son’s good deed on the WTVR News Facebook page and they later interviewed the two for their broadcast.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story at WTVR – See all the kudos for the boy on their Facebook Page

Dachshund and Goliath: Persistent Wiener Saves St. Bernard Pal (Video)

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A little dachshund’s persistence is being hailed in the rescue of his 180-pound buddy, Jazzy.

After Razor the weiner dog would not stop making a ruckus, Belen, New Mexico firefighters and police officers were finally called to the rescue to save Tim Chavez’s St. Bernard.

The gentle giant was believed to have been stuck in the icy, muddy ditch for about 18 hours.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from KRQE)

Norway Muslims Form Human Shield Around Jewish Synagogue

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Europe’s Jews face rising anti-Semitism in some countries, but multiculturalism is far from dead. Today, more than 1,000 Muslims formed a human shield around Oslo’s synagogue, offering protection and solidarity with Jews following a violent attack in Copenhagen last weekend.

Chanting “No to anti-Semitism, no to Islamophobia,” Norway’s Muslims and others formed what they called a ring of peace during the event organized on Facebook.

“Humanity is one, and we are here to demonstrate that,” Zeeshan Abdullah, one of the organizers told the crowd of Muslim immigrants and ethnic Norwegians who filled the street around Oslo’s only synagogue.sillouettes-holding-hands-family-cc-Justice_Beitzel

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An English translation of the Facebook page reads: “Islam is about protecting our brothers and sisters, regardless of which religion they belong to. Islam is about rising above hate and never sinking to the same level as the haters… Muslims want to show that we deeply deplore all types of hatred of Jews, and that we are there to support them.”

(READ the story in the Jerusalem Post)

Iowa Bill Would Give Excess Solar Energy to the Poor

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“When rooftop solar systems generate more power than can be used on site, the local utility typically ends up acquiring the excess – often for very little money or none at all,” begins an article at Midwest Energy News.

Iowa state Rep. Mary Mascher, who has been investigating the best way to have solar panels installed at her Iowa City home, has come up with an alternative: why not donate that power to low-income customers in peril of having their electricity shut off?

She recently introduced a bill to do just that. House File 149 would require utilities to plan a system for giving excess solar energy to people who’ve fallen behind in their utility payments.

(READ the full story from Midwest Energy News)

Girl Wanted Snow So Bad, Her Grandfather Hauled a Truckload to Her

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For years, all 4-year-old Sophia White has dreamed about was building a snowman, like the princess in her favorite film, Frozen.

But her neighborhood outside Baltimore has stayed green, no matter how much snow has been dumped upon cities just north of her in New England.

Finally, her grandfather in Rhode Island had an idea. He would bring the snow to her.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story, w/ photos, at CBS)

Story tip from Megan Kelty

DC Comics Responds To Girl’s Letter By Making Her A Superhero

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Rowan Hansen, 11, has always loved reading comics and watching superheroes on TV and films. But she has always been bothered by the lack of female superheroes.

Last month, the Champaign, Illinois, fifth-grader wrote a letter to DC Comics — whose characters include Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman — to express her frustrations. “I love your comics,” she wrote, “but I would love them a lot more if there were more girls.”

She get a pair of tweets back from the company, saying they were “working hard to create more superhero fun for girls,” and there was a Wonder Woman movie and Supergirl TV show “in the works, with more exciting girl power announcements” coming soon.

They also surprised her with an original piece of art featuring Rowan as a superhero, wearing glasses and all.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story, w/ photos from TODAY)

Story tip from Joel Arellano

Portland’s New Pipes Harvest Electricity From Running Water

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“If you live in Portland, your lights may now be partly powered by your drinking water. An ingenious new system captures energy as water flows through the city’s pipes, creating hydropower without the negative environmental effects of something like a dam.”

Fast CoExist reports, “Small turbines in the pipes spin in the flowing water, and send that energy into a generator.”

(READ the story from Fast CoExist)

Community Rallies to Assist York Animal Shelter After Devestating Fire

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“In the last two days, since a fire destroyed three structures at the York-area animal shelter and adoption center, killing 16 dogs, countless visitors, donors and volunteers have called and offered help to help Richardson Rescue get back to normal.”

South Carolinians have offered money, toys, blankets, food, medicine and their time to try to fix what the fire took away, which included thousands of dollars in medication, microchip equipment, and office supplies.

(READ the story from the Herald Online)

Story tip from S. Ghent

Teen Builds Excellent Tiny House, Donates to Homeless

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After an arduous three-and-a-half-years building it in her California backyard, Kendall Ronzano is donating the excellent “tiny home” she started at age 16.

Last week, it was pulled on its portable trailer to Austin, Texas where it will provide shelter to a homeless person or family in a cooperative housing community there,  a twenty-seven acre transitional homeless community called Community First.

Now a 20-year-old Dartmouth College sophomore, Ronzano solicited public donations of cash in materials amounting to nearly $16,000 from more than 200 people.

“My parents have always encouraged me to dream big, and one idea that really stuck with me is that I want to learn to build a house from the ground up,” she wrote on her construction blog, Nerd Girl Homes. ” I’ve always loved building things. When I was little I created contraptions and structures out of Knex, Legos, Playmobile, and much more. I’ve learned to weld, use plasma cutters, power tools and to light the wood stove with a blow torch!”

(READ the story, w/ more photos, from the Monterey Herald)

Photos via FB, Flickr / Story tip from Mike McGinley

Boy Superhero in a Cape Helps Detroit’s Homeless

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Last May, an adorable boy with red curly hair told his mom that when he was a teenager he wanted to dress up like a superhero and bring food and clothes to homeless people in Detroit.

His mom told seven year-old Ewan Drum that he didn’t have to wait. Why not start now?

That was the beginning of a Super Ewan, Inc, a non-profit dedicated to super adventures of helping the homeless.

Ewan-superhero-bow-tie-SuperEwanIncEvery month on the fourth Saturday, Ewan pulls a red cape over his jacket and takes cases of water and nutritious lunches, along with bags of winter clothes to Roosevelt Park in Detroit.

The beautiful charity effort now involves others in the community, like the Boy Scouts, who have collected food, and families who want to help pass out the goodies.

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“Ewan has always had a big heart,” said his mother, Angela Drum, who operates the non-profit, organizes donations and volunteers, and also cares for Ewan’s two younger siblings.

When he’s not saving the world or sorting donations, Ewan enjoys playing video games, writing stories, practicing his trumpet and riding his mini bike around his hometown of New Haven.

Ewan says doing it makes him feel happy. The strangers who meet him in the park say Ewan makes them happy.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from Detroit Free Press)

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Student Develops Tattoo Removal Cream

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A 27-year-old PhD student at Dalhousie University in Halifax is developing a topical cream that he says will make tattoo ink eventually fade away.

His initial research in the pathology department has shown great result.

“When comparing it to laser-based tattoo removal, in which you see the burns, the scarring, the blisters, you won’t see a lot of inflammation,” said Alec Falkenham. “In fact, based on the process that we’re actually using, we don’t think there will be any inflammation at all and it would actually be anti-inflammatory.”

(READ the story from the CBC)

Photo credit: Randy Son Of Robert (CC license) / Story tip by Mike McGinley

Ring in the Year of the Sheep With These Fun Facts

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Asia said goodbye to the Year of the Horse yesterday and rang in the New Year on Thursday with parades and fireworks celebrating the Year of the Sheep (or Goat or Ram).

According to the Chinese lunar calendar, February 19, 2015, begins the celebration of the animal considered to be a general symbol of plenitude and good fortune and emblematic of kindness.

People born in the Year of the Sheep are tender, polite, filial, clever, and kind-hearted, according to the Travel China Guide. “They have special sensitivity to art and beauty and a special fondness for quiet living. They are wise, gentle and compassionate and can cope with business cautiously and circumspectly. In their daily life, they try to be economical. They are willing to take good care of others, but they should avoid pessimism and hesitation.”

If you have never encountered sheep, the animals are complex creatures with qualities that make them good CEOs. They also can remember your face for up to two years, especially if you are smiling. Here are a few little known facts about sheep from the Farm Sanctuary, which operates three shelters in New York and California that provide lifelong care for nearly 1,000 rescued farm animals.

1) Sheep are famously friendly

Sheep wag their tails like dogs, they know their names, and they form strong bonds with other sheep, goats, and with people.

2) Sheep experience emotion similarly to humans

A study published in Animal Welfare showed that sheep experience emotion in ways similar to humans. The authors concluded that “sheep are able to experience emotions such as fear, anger, rage, despair, boredom, disgust, and happiness, because they use the same checks involved in such emotions as humans.

3) Sheep have panoramic vision

Thanks to their cool rectangular pupils, sheep can see almost 360 degrees, including directly behind themselves!

4) Sheep know how you feel

Another study from Cambridge University found that sheep — like humans and some primates — can pick up emotional cues in both humans and other sheep. Not surprisingly, they strongly preferred smiling and relaxed expressions over angry ones.

5) Sheep never forget a face

Researchers in the United Kingdom, writing for Nature, found that sheep have the same “specialized neural mechanisms for visual recognition” that humans do, which allows them to remember the faces of at least 50 individual humans and other sheep for more than two years, “and that the specialized neural circuits involved maintain selective encoding of individual sheep and human faces even after long periods of separation.”

6) Sheep are the CEOs of the barnyard

Sheep can learn how to solve puzzles, remember what they’ve learned, and adapt to changed circumstances — all much more quickly than monkeys. The researchers note what they call the “impressive cognitive abilities of sheep” and find that “sheep can perform ‘executive’ cognitive tasks that are an important part of the primate behavioral repertoire, but that have never been shown previously to exist in any other large animal” other than humans and some other primates.

Wal-Mart Gives 500,000 Employees A Pay Raise

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Starting in April, 500,000 Wal-Mart employees will be getting a pay raise. Full and part-time workers will earn at least $9.00 an hour — $1.75 above today’s federal minimum wage.

“The retailer says wages will jump to at least $10.00 one year from now,” reports NPR News

(READ the full story from NPR)

Story tip from S. Ghent

NYC Mom Brings Vegan ‘Chili on Wheels’ to Homeless

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A vegan family, Michelle Carrera, and her 4-year-old son Ollie, realized the city’s soup kitchen meals all contained meat, so the two started bringing their warm homemade vegan chili to those in need, calling it ‘Chili on Wheels’.

They raised $2,600 to buy more equipment and start a non-profit so they can do it every week for people in Brooklyn and Manhattan.

(READ more from AM New York)

Story tip from Joel Arellano

John Kitzhaber Grants Clemency to Gang Member Who Made Good in Prison

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Before leaving office, Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber is freeing a young prisoner, Sang Dao, a move that has enormous support from prosecutors, police, a judge, and correctional staff who’ve applauded his remarkable transformation.

Dao will be freed in March, his sentence cut short by at least 3 ½ years.

“To say that I was impressed with Sang would be such an understatement,” said the judge who sentenced the boy in 2008. “I am so proud of the young adult that he has become and I am inspired by his accomplishments. He is emotionally and spiritually grounded; he is fiercely bright; he has tremendous potential to accomplish his educational and professional goals.”

(READ more from The Oregonian)

Story tip from Joel Arellano