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Students Raise Funds for Teacher to Donate Kidney to Husband

Kayla and Matt Losh wedding photo-WCNCvid

A local high school teacher desperate to help her husband, who was in need of a kidney transplant, got some unexpected help from her students.

The hospital told Kayla and Matt Losh there was a problem with Medicare and they needed to come up with $2500 before they could move forward with the transplant, scheduled in four days.

Students teamed up to help, “and they came through big– raising almost $600 in one afternoon.”

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from WCNC *NOTE auto-playing audio, so please adjust your speakers)

Story tip from Kelly Harrington

Kindness Bag Changes Homeless Vet’s Life, Now He Delivers Them on LA Streets

The Giving Spirit-LA homeless bags-graphic-Givingspirit-org

Many people in America mark the Martin Luther King Day holiday by making it a day of service – painting schools, cleaning parks and helping the homeless. But, volunteers for a group called The Giving Spirit work throughout the year in Los Angeles personally distributing survival kits to people living on the streets.

“There is so much in this bag,” one recipient told a volunteer. “Everything on my list that I prayed for is in here! How did you know exactly what we need?”

Ezzie Richey, a 57-year-old homeless veteran was one of those who was given a duffel bag containing over 60 items, like food, blankets, clothing and toiletries. He not only was grateful for the bag, but for the love and hope that came with it. The moment so influenced his life that he is now off the streets and employed.

Now he is giving back as a volunteer, handing out bags with the nonprofit group’s founder, Tom Bagamane, who has become a good friend.

The Giving Spirit, founded in 1999, is always looking for in-kind donations of items to include in their kits. Check the list on their website to see what items you or your company might provide to help the effort.

The LA Times caught up with Ezzie and featured his story in a video and feature article.

(WATCH the video below and READ the story from the LA Times)

 

Story tip from Jacqueline McLean – Jones

Join a Free Online Course in Positive Psychology

Rafael Reyes, CC license

friends-happiness-Japan-winter-snow-AgustinRafaelReyes-CC

The science of positive psychology, now in its twentieth year, offers evidence-based approaches to help people live meaningful lives. The studies in this field can help steer us towards mental health and flourishing outcomes.

A new online course from Coursera not only showcases the visionary scientific work of Barbara Fredrickson and her colleagues in the field of positive psychology, but it also features practical applications of this science that you can put to use immediately.

”Together we will ‘lift the hood’ of positive psychology to discover the tiny engines that drive it: Positive emotions.”

Emotions like creativity and resilience are subtle and always fleeting,but are  “remarkably consequential for our physical health.”

No background in science or psychology is needed for the free course.

(Sign up for the course at Coursera.com)

Photo by Agustin Rafael Reyes (CC license) / Story tip Mike McGinley

Colorado Doctor Discovered Natural Way To Treat Common Vertigo

Vertigo remedy CarolFosterVid

More than seven million people in the U.S. suffer from vertigo. The symptoms, which come on suddenly, make the victim feel like their surroundings are spinning.

A couple years ago there was a breakthrough that delivered a do-it-yourself way to treat the most common form of vertigo.

ALSO:  Using Essential Oils Is a Cheap, Easy Way to Unwind and Heal at Home

It was discovered by Dr. Carol Foster at the University of Colorado School of Medicine who has personally experienced vertigo and discovered the natural technique herself.

Foster’s experience led her to develop the Half Somersault maneuver and eventually to write a book, “Overcoming Positional Vertigo”, which is available on Amazon.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from CBS Denver)

SHARE the Remedy… (below)

Temporary Tattoo Device Monitors Blood Glucose Without Needles

temporary-tattoo-for-diabetes-glucose-test-UCSDnews

California researchers have developed a temporary tattoo that both extracts and measures the level of glucose, a promising step forward in noninvasive testing for patients with diabetes.

The flexible, easy-to-wear sensor was developed and tested by graduate student Amay Bandodkar along with colleagues at the University of California, San Diego’s NanoEngineering Department and the Center for Wearable Sensors. Bandodkar said this “proof-of-concept” tattoo could pave the way for the Center to explore other uses of the device, such as detecting important metabolites in the body or delivering medicines through the skin.

At the moment, the tattoo doesn’t provide the kind of numerical readout that a patient would need to monitor his or her own glucose. But that is being developed by researchers is the electrical and computer engineering departments. “The readout instrument will also eventually have Bluetooth capabilities to send this information directly to the patient’s doctor in real-time or store data in the cloud,” said Bandodkar.

The research team is also working on ways to make the tattoo last longer while keeping its overall cost down, he noted. “Presently the tattoo sensor can easily survive for a day. These are extremely inexpensive—a few cents—and hence can be replaced without much financial burden on the patient.”

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The Center “envisions using these glucose tattoo sensors to continuously monitor glucose levels of large populations as a function of their dietary habits,” Bandodkar said. Data from this wider population could help researchers learn more about the causes and potential prevention of diabetes, which affects hundreds of millions of people and is one of the leading causes of death and disability worldwide.

People with diabetes often must test their glucose levels multiple times per day, using devices with unpleasant needles to extract a blood sample, so researchers have been searching for less invasive methods.

Wang-sensor-3In their report, “Tattoo-Based Noninvasive Glucose Monitoring” published December 12 in the journal Analytical Chemistry, Professor Joseph Wang and his co-workers in the laboratory describe the flexible device, which consists of carefully patterned electrodes printed on temporary tattoo paper. A very mild electrical current applied to the skin for 10 minutes forces sodium ions in the fluid between skin cells to migrate toward the tattoo’s electrodes. These ions carry glucose molecules that are also found in the fluid. A sensor built into the tattoo then measures the strength of the electrical charge produced by the glucose to determine a person’s overall glucose levels.

“The concentration of glucose extracted by the non-invasive tattoo device is almost hundred times lower than the corresponding level in the human blood,” Bandodkar explained. “Thus we had to develop a highly sensitive glucose sensor that could detect such low levels of glucose with high selectivity.”

The researchers say the device could be used to measure other important chemicals such as lactate, a metabolite analyzed in athletes to monitor their fitness. The tattoo might also someday be used to test how well a medication is working by monitoring certain protein products in the intercellular fluid, or to detect alcohol or illegal drug consumption.

(Source: University of California San Diego)

Story tip Kelly Harrington

Selfless Student Surprises Special Classmates with iPads

“Kids at a middle school in Burien, Washington got quite the surprise Friday — a stack of iPads with software to help them in the classroom. The gift did not come from a big company, a non-profit or a wealthy donor, but a girl in the seventh grade.”

Special software on the iPads will help the non-verbal children in the special education classroom communicate with teachers and their family.

12-year-old Cassidy Huff, who has a case of dwarfism syndrome, led a fundraising campaign to help others because, “There are always people worse off than me.”

(WATCH the video above or READ the story from KING-5  *NOTE: auto-playing audio on the site, so adjust your speakers)

Story tip from Judy Ritchie

Hollywood A-List Talent Agents Spend Time Mentoring Compton Youth

William Morris Agency building_Beverly Hills-CC-Zepolekim

Compton eighth-grader Edgar Ruelas wants to be the first in his family to attend college. He has some help: high-powered talent agents from Beverly Hills.

For the past four years, a few dozen agents from the William Morris Agency have been mentoring students from two Compton schools.

The centerpiece of the mentoring initiative  are regular visits that students make to the agency’s sleek, marble-clad headquarters on Wilshire Boulevard.

(READ the story w/ photos from the LA Times)

Photo: WME headquarters in Beverly Hills by Zepolekim (CC) / Story tip from Steve G.

Fighting America’s Invasive Plants: Eco-Goats to the Rescue

Goat eating plants-CC-Kabsik Park-750px

Invasive species have long been dealt with using a mixture of powerful chemicals and earth movers. But a new weapon has proven more powerful — the goat.

Brian Knox’s herd of Eco Goats have been clearing hundreds of acres of invasive species, like kudzu, multiflora rose and bittersweet, up and down America’s  East Coast, more efficiently and effectively than previous methods. They also enjoy eating plants like poison ivy.

”We started using them around this property on some invasive species,” Knox told the BBC. “It worked really well, and things grew organically from there.”

One of the reasons goats are so effective is that the plant seeds rarely survive the grinding motion of their mouths and their multi-chambered stomachs. Other techniques leave seeds in the soil to spring back.

(READ the full story from the BBC)

Photo credit: Kabsik Park (CC license)

Pope Francis Changes Schedule to Visit Sri Lankan Buddhist Temple

Pope Francis became only the second pontiff to visit a Buddhist temple on Wednesday, changing his schedule at the last minute to pay his respects at an important place of worship for Buddhists in Sri Lanka’s capital.

He was given the honor of witnessing a key Buddhist ritual and viewing rare relics from two important disciples of the Buddha, which are normally only displayed once each year.

The AP reports the Vatican saying, “Francis listened respectfully as Buddhist monks chanted and prayed while opening the stupa.”

John Paul II was the first to visit a temple, in 1984 in Thailand .

(WATCH the video above – READ the AP story via the Guardian)

In other papal news, Pope Francis also made an unscheduled stop at a center for street children in Manila Friday shortly after celebrating mass in the Filipino capital. Vatican News reported the Pope spent almost a half an hour with some 320 children.

The Second Disease Ever Eradicated on Earth (Thanks, Jimmy Carter)

Jimmy Carter Center Guinea Worm treatment

In 1986, the painful Guinea worm disease plagued more than 3.5 million people in Africa and Asia. Last year, there were only 126 cases left, and thanks to the Carter Center’s nearly 30-year campaign, the infectious disease is about to be eradicated.

Continuing efforts may soon rid the world of this tropical disease forever, making it only the second human disease ever eradicated, after smallpox. It will be the first disease to be eradicated without the use of a vaccine or medicine.

President Carter reported the latest Guinea worm numbers this week during a New York press conference to open Countdown to Zero: Defeating Disease, a new exhibition on disease eradication at the American Museum of Natural History created in collaboration with The Carter Center.

In 1991, there were 23,735 villages with endemic transmission of Guinea worm disease in 21 countries in Africa and Asia. Today, there are only 30 villages in four Africa countries where it is regularly transmitted, mostly in South Sudan.

Considered a neglected tropical disease, Guinea worm disease (dracunculiasis) is contracted when people consume water contaminated with Guinea worm larvae.

The ancient disease is being wiped out mainly through community-based interventions to educate and change behavior, such as teaching people to filter all drinking water and preventing contaminated people from entering water sources.

The Carter Center, together with ministries of health, local communities, and other partners, has reduced cases by more than 99.99 percent since 1986. The Center estimates that the eradication campaign has averted more than 80 million cases among the world’s poorest and most neglected people.

“The potential for disease eradication to permanently improve quality of life worldwide is tremendous,” said eradication expert Dr. Donald Hopkins, Carter Center vice president for health programs.

Story tip from Craig Withers 

Caught on Dashcam: A Cop’s Hilarious Lip Sync to “Shake it Off”

How many of us dramatically sing along with our favorite songs while undercover in our cars? Now we know that cops do the same thing, as shown in this dashcam video lifted from the patrol car of a 20-year veteran.

The Dover, Delaware Police decided to release a series of dashcam “confessionals,” to help humanize the public image of their officers.

“While reviewing dashcam footage, we come across some interesting sights to say the least,” reads the introduction to the video posted on YouTube. “We decided we would share some with you in a new web series called ‘Dash Cam Confessionals.'”

Their debut video features Cpl. Jeff Davis lip syncing to Taylor Swift’s “Shake It Off.” While driving his car, Davis gyrates his head and punctuates the song with girly gestures like eye rolls and hand gestures.

(WATCH the video above)

Story tip from Jürgen

Shopping Mom Gets Touching Note From Stranger “I’m a Good Parent”

shopping with kids-AmberStrocel-CC

A stranger came up to a woman in Windsor, Canada while she was shopping with her children and gave her a very touching note that made her day. She posted the surprising story on a website called Spotted In Windsor.

“I was walking through Wal-Mart this morning doing some regular shopping with my two daughters. As we were walking through the store…we were joking about how quickly we can shovel the snow if it snowed a lot this week. We talked about what I was going to make for dinner today and joked about how we pick the person who is going to have to do dishes. We played some ‘I spy’ as we walked through the isles…just random conversations as we typically do to make it fun while we shop.”

”After we paid for our stuff and made our way towards the exit this man who was standing there with his daughter stopped me and his daughter handed me an envelope. I asked what this was for and they said, ‘It’s a gift and we would like it if you accepted it. There is a note inside explaining why.'”

“His daughter asked if she could hug me and I said yes, so she did, and I felt such a warm hug. We said bye and went on our way. When I got into the car with my girls I opened this card up. It said, ‘Just listening to you talk to your daughters reminded me of my mother who I lost 2 years ago. I made my dad follow you around for a little so I can hear you guys talk because I wanted to pretend that it was my mom talking to me.”

The mother was in tears while posting the story and said, “You just assured me that I am a great mother even though sometimes every parent questions themselves.”

(READ the rest of her post at Spotted In Canada)

Photo Credit: Amber Strocel (From our image file, via CC license) / Story tip from Sandhan Sandhan

7 Countries Where College Students Can Study Abroad in English, For Free

college student smiling with books-cc-CollegeDegrees360

Since 1985, U.S. college costs have surged by almost 500 percent. Yet Germany’s universities are now tuition-free.

The German government fully funds not only the education of its own citizens, but foreigners as well, with some programs in English.

Other countries do the same. The Washington Post looked at the surprising — and very cheap — alternatives to pricey American college degrees.

(READ the story from the Washington Post)

Photo credit: CollegeDegrees360 (CC license)

Hero Cat Jumps in Box to Keep Abandoned Russian Baby Warm

 

A homeless cat named Masha has become a neighborhood hero after she kept warm a baby boy who was dropped off in an apartment building hallway amid frigid Russia temperatures.

The baby, estimated to be 2-3 months old, was left in Masha’s cardboard box, and the feline was only too happy to snuggle for several hours until daybreak when he began meowing loudly to alert neighbors in the city of Obninsk.

When the baby, who was later deemed fit and healthy, was carried to the ambulance, neighbors say Masha “followed him and pitifully meowed and tried to jump into the ambulance to follow the boy.”

The mama cat then “sat for hours on the road waiting for the car to return and bring him back, neighbors said.”

One local resident told Central European News, “We have all spoiled her rotten by giving her her favorite food.”

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

 

Muslim Hero in Paris Supermarket Attack to be Given French Citizenship

A hero Muslim employee from Mali who helped hide hostages in a walk-in refrigerator at a Jewish supermarket during last week’s Paris attacks will be awarded French nationality in a ceremony on Tuesday.

Lassana Bathily has lived in France since 2006 and applied for French nationality last year.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve, who applauded Bathily’s “act of bravery,”  will lead the naturalization ceremony after more than 300,000 people signed an online petition calling for Bathily to be made a citizen.

(WATCH the video above or READ the story from France 24)

Philadelphia Cab Driver Gets $1,000 Tip For Two-Minute Drive

 

Freedom-Taxi-fare-with-1000-dollar-tip-FreedomTaxi-release

A taxi driver in Philadelphia was “shocked and overjoyed” when he received a $989.98 tip on a $4.31 fare 12 days before Christmas.

Taxi driver Oumar Maiga, who always has a smile on his face, was working the late shift for Freedom Taxi service when the generous passenger flagged down his cab for a quick two-minute ride. He asked how Maiga was doing and if he was having a rough night. Mr. Maiga responded that things were OK but the night was a little hectic. After that, the man told him that he would “take care of him” when they arrived at the destination.

When Maiga saw the tip he asked repeatedly if he realized how much he had tipped. The mystery rider told Mr. Maiga that he appreciated how professional he and his cab were.

AFP reported that the driver looked at the tip and said, “Sir, I think you made a mistake.” But he replied, “That’s what I want to give you, I know what I did.”

Freedom Taxi owner Everett Abitbol said the tip “couldn’t have happened to a nicer man,” adding that Maiga had been with the company since it opened in 2011.

In a US first, New Orleans Finds Homes for All its Homeless Veterans

HOMELESS-VET-gets-apt key-courtesy-UNITY of Greater NewOrleans

“More than 300 mayors have vowed to end military veteran homelessness by the end of 2015. New Orleans celebrated the new year by becoming the first city to do so,” reports the CS Monitor.

On Jan. 2, social workers moved the city’s last known homeless veteran into his new apartment – becoming the first US city to effectively eliminate veteran homelessness. In total, the city has placed 227 veterans in housing since the start of 2014.

The New Orleans model is being hailed by cities around the country who want to end homelessness, not just for veterans, but for anyone needing a permanent home.

Here’s How 11 New Orleans Veterans Got Homes in Time for Holidays

(READ the story from CS Monitor)

Photo courtesy of UNITY of Greater New Orleans – Story tip from Kim Campbell

Central Park is Still Neat, Even on a Gray Day (Video)

Central Park bridge in winter-LawrenceKreger-submitted

It doesn’t have to be a sunny day to enjoy NYC’s Central Park. It’s a neat place even on a grey Winter day…

“The great Big City can never spoil
The Dreams of a Boy and Goil,
We’ll turn Manhattan
Into an Isle of Joy!!”

– from the Rodgers-Hart song, ” I’ll Take Manhattan”

(WATCH the video below)

Scientists ‘Delete’ HIV Virus From Human DNA for the First Time

Kamel Khalili HIV virus lab-TempleUnivVid

The HIV-1 virus has proved to be tenacious, inserting its genome permanently into its victims’ DNA, forcing patients to take a lifelong drug regimen to control the virus and prevent a fresh attack. In 2014, a team of Temple University School of Medicine researchers designed a way to snip out the HIV-1 genes for good.

The team created molecular tools to permanently delete the HIV-1 from DNA. From there, the cell’s gene repair machinery takes over, soldering the loose ends of the genome back together – resulting in virus-free cells.

“This is one important step on the path toward a permanent cure for AIDS,” said Kamel Khalili, PhD, Professor and Chair of the Department of Neuroscience at Temple.

Dr. Khalili and his colleague, Wenhui Hu, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of Neuroscience at Temple, led the work which marks the first successful attempt to eliminate latent HIV-1 virus from human cells.

”Since HIV-1 is never cleared by the immune system, removal of the virus is required in order to cure the disease,” said Dr. Khalili, whose research focuses on the neuropathogenesis of viral infections. The same technique could theoretically be used against a variety of viruses, he said.

The research shows that these molecular tools also hold promise as a therapeutic vaccine; cells armed with the nuclease-RNA combination proved impervious to HIV infection.

The HIV-1 eradication approach faces several significant challenges before the technique is ready for patients, Dr. Khalili said. The researchers must devise a method to deliver the therapeutic agent to every single infected cell. Finally, because HIV-1 is prone to mutations, treatment may need to be individualized for each patient’s unique viral sequences.

The research was published July 21, 2014 by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

(WATCH the video below or  LEARN more from Temple University NewsStory tip from Joel Arellano

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Principal Raises $17,000 to Buy Shoes for Her Needy Students (w/ Video)

students get shoes-WDRBvid

The principal of a school in Harrison County, Indiana, outside of Louisville, KY, where 75 percent of students live below the poverty line, realized her students were so poor that most didn’t have decent shoes.

So, in December, Nissa Ellett decided to hold a fundraiser. She wrote letters to community leaders and parents asking for donations.

Money and notes of support poured in from all over the country, doubling the amount she hoped to raise — enough to buy each child not only shoes, but winter boots with hats and gloves, too.

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

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MULTIPLY the Good with the Buttons below…  (Story tip from Kelly Harrington)