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Jewish, Muslim Volunteers Do Good Christmas Day Deeds

Muslim-Jewish-relations-with-Etty Rahmawati-CC- greendoula-UrbanAcademy

Across Detroit, organizers said nearly 1,000 Jewish volunteers did good deeds on Thursday’s Mitzvah Day — an annual rite of community service on Dec. 25, when Christians typically want to be home celebrating Christmas, rather than doling servings at a soup kitchen.

Increasingly for the last six Christmases, Muslims have joined the horde of Jewish volunteers, according to the Michigan Muslim Community Council.

“We all have the day off and we’re not doing anything, so this is a great time for us to volunteer,”

(READ the story from the Detroit Free Press)

Photo credit: Etty Rahmawati and friends, CC license by greendoula-UrbanAcademy /  Story tip from Joel Arellano

Anonymous Angel Mails a Christmas Package Left on Bus

christmas-wooden-angels-CC-danna(curious tangles)

A 79-year-old retired social-services worker wants to thank the kind-hearted person who mailed a package he mistakenly left on a South Philadelphia bus.

His sister called on Christmas Day to say she received the gift — the only one Cliff Hunter was going to be able to afford to give.

The sweater was used, but lovingly cleaned and placed in a box with her address, before he left it, rushing to get off the bus at 20th and Locust Street.

Someone must have taken it to the post office and paid the $8.00 in postage to ship it to Florida.

(READ the story from the Philadelphia Inquirer)

Photo credit: danna (curious tangles) CC license / Story tip from Wendy Thorn

Boston Teacher Donates $150,000 Prize To Her School

teacher-dorchester-with-students-CapOnevideo

The mayor of Boston this week honored a Dorchester third grade teacher who won a $150,000 online contest and donated the money to her school.

26-year-old Nikki Bollerman entered an online contest called the #WishForOthers campaign.

She said she wished for her “vivacious, loving third-grade scholars” to all get new books for the holiday this year.

Contest sponsor Capitol One funded three books per student, and then went further, awarding Bollerman one of the contest’s grand prizes of $150,000, reports WBUR.

Nikki then promptly donated the prize to her school.

(WATCH the video below and READ the story from WBUR)


Story tip from Kelly Harrington

Scottish Sandwich Shop Smashes Homeless Christmas Meals Target

Josh Littlejohn sandwich shop givers

“A sandwich shop owner has been “blown away” by people’s generosity after thousands bought Christmas meals for the homeless.”

Josh Littlejohn, co-founder of Social Bite, hoped to raise enough to pay for 800 meals.

But they have massively surpassed their target, raising enough for 35,000 plates of turkey.

(READ the story from the BBC)

Story tip from Ganga

Transforming Lion Killers into ‘Lion Guardians’ in Africa

white-lions-DotOrg

“Armed with a doctorate in environmental studies, a young woman has found one solution to help the lion population in Africa grow. Her nonprofit turns Maasai warriors — who have a tradition of killing lions — into lion protectors,” reports CNN.

Hazzah realized that Maasai warriors, the leaders and protectors in their community, would be the best ambassadors for lions. She began teaching them the benefits of protecting lions, with an emphasis on preserving their culture. In turn, the lessons began rippling through the entire tribe.

(READ the story from CNN)

Photo credit: WhiteLions.org / Story tip from Mike McGinley

Soldier’s Letter Details WWI Christmas Day Truce 100 Yrs Ago

First world war soldiers playing football

“Dearest mother, I have seen one of the most extraordinary sights…”

So begins a letter from a Scottish soldier in 1914 — a letter just published that confirms the Christmas Day football match between warring sides as seen through the eyes of a soldier for the first time, according to the Independent.

The Christmas Day Truce happened 100 years ago today, between England and Germany, when both sides laid down their weapons in a 2-day respite from World War I to wish each other Happy Christmas, exchange items — and play football.

“About 10 o’clock this morning I was peeping over the parapet when I saw a German, waving his arms, and presently two of them got out of their trench and came towards ours,” wrote Captain A D Chater in the letter.

“We were just going to fire on them when we saw they had no rifles, so one of our men went to meet them and in about two minutes the ground between the two lines of trenches was swarming with men and officers of both sides, shaking hands and wishing each other a happy Christmas.“

“I went out myself and shook hands with several of their officers and men,” Captain Chater wrote.

“From what I gathered most of them would be glad to get home again as we should – we have had our pipes playing all day and everyone has been walking about in the open unmolested.”

“We exchanged cigarettes and autographs, and some more people took photos.

WWI Christmas AD Sainsburys YoutubeGrab“I don’t know how long it will go on for – I believe it was supposed to stop yesterday, but we can hear no firing going on along the front today except a little distant shelling.

“We are, at any rate, having another truce on New Year’s Day, as the Germans want to see how the photos come out!”

(READ about the letter from The IndependentWATCH a beautiful reenactment on GNN)

Thanks to Sarah for the story tip!

How Does A Homeless Man Spend $100? You Won’t Believe It

homeless-hands-out-treats-to-strangers-JoshPalerLin

Once again, the internet is proving to a YouTube prankster that they will get a lot more Shares and Views if the video can inspire a nation.

This video, from Josh Paler Lin, is a fine example and puts a beautiful exclamation point on the reminder, “You can’t judge a book by its cover.”

Watch what happens when Josh gives a homeless man $100. The man is so kind and humble and surprised — and articulate.

We were uncomfortable when Josh’s cameraman followed him around in secret to see what he would spend his cash on, because he went into a liquor store right away. But stick with the camera as it tracked what this fellow, Thomas, did next.

Click on the link near the end to see that Josh, after high viewer demand, set up a fundraising page for Thomas. It has raised $20,000 (which is double the $10K goal that was set) — and in just 24 hours. [UPDATE: By December 25, the fund has raised $85,000 to help him get his mother’s condominium back, if he wants to.]

And, by the way, as I’m posting this, his YouTube clip has racked up 3.1 million views in a day, and it probably will double by tomorrow.

(WATCH the video below)

Ohio Man’s Bucket List Grants Christmas Wish

gregg_dodd_gifts_courtesyphoto

Last January 1, Gregg Dodd of Columbus, Ohio woke up and decided he was going to do 52 things for the new year. Number seventeen on the list was ‘making a wish come true’.

“Around the holidays you start hearing about all these families in need, so I started keeping an eye open on what sort of ways I could help,” he said.

Dodd heard about a local single mom with three teens and decided they would be the family whose wish he would grant this year.

With 200 people buying gift cards and sending cash donations, with totals reaching an estimated $5,000, he said, “I’m not sure if they know that magnitude of what’s going to happen.”

Let’s hope there is an update after the family gets their surprise.

(READ the story from ABC-8)

Story tip from Kelly Harrington / Photo from Gregg Dodd

There was a Cockroach in my Bed + Other Surprises

Shocked-surprised-lego-face-CC-Pascal-pasukaru76

When I moved in with my boyfriend, about 2 months ago, I decided to play a little “I love you” prank on him. I put a rubber cockroach on the corner of the box spring just underneath the bed skirt on his side of the bed.

I figured that over time the cockroach would fall out while he was adjusting the bed skirt or changing the sheets. He would jump in shock and I would giggle in pranking victory.

Problem is… I forgot it was there.

Then today, while putting fresh sheets on the bed, I had to adjust the bed skirt for the first time since I moved in. I lifted the fabric and there it was…

A two-inch long cockroach!

I screamed. My heart raced. I dropped the mattress and ran out of the room. Then I realized it was the rubber cockroach I had put there to scare my hunni…

I had pranked myself!

I went back and looked just to make sure it was the rubber one. It was, and I could wipe the sweat off my forehead. After the jolt of surprise, I couldn’t stop laughing. The adrenalin and humor made my day.

I think it’s important to acknowledge that sometimes we literally surprise ourselves. Not just with pranks meant for someone else, but also with what we are capable of.

There is more potential inside of each of us than we realize.

As we get closer to a New Year, open yourself up to new challenges. You may discover that you have completely untapped happiness, purpose and enthusiasm for life.

Try new things. Take the road less traveled. Make up new rules for your life that align with joy. Open yourself up to new people. Take the risk of being emotionally vulnerable. Climb a tree. Sing at the top of your lungs in your car. Make your neighbor cookies. Write a love letter. Hug everyone a little bit longer than usual.

All of these serve to get you out of your comfort zone and add some extra zest (post cockroach rolling laughter) to your life. There are always ways to challenge yourself to live more, give more, and love more. And here is a way to challenge yourself to give more and love more of YOU today…

Do something today that may shock future you. Sit down and write out all of the talents, gifts, skills, and attributes that you possess that make you miraculous and unique. Add a few sentences of pure motivation and love. Fold it up, perhaps put it into an envelope, and hide it somewhere. Forget about it. You’ll find it when you least expect it and maybe need it most.

michelle-ploog-authorphoto[EDITOR’S Note: Great idea, Michelle! Especially for the New Year.]

Thank you for reading!!
Much Love and BIG smiles,

Michelle Ploog
[email protected]
www.michelleploog.com
twitter.com/michelleploog
facebook.com/michelleploog

Photo (top) by Pascal pasukaru76 (CC license)

James Patterson Gives a Million Dollars to Independent Bookstores

James-Patterson-author-CC-Susan Solie-Patterson-400px

81 independent bookstores across the United States got an early holiday gift from bestselling author James Patterson.

Patterson, who earlier this year doled out grants totaling $535,000 to 98 booksellers, has given another $473,000 to dozens more stores to place a big red bow on his $1 million #SaveOurBooks campaign.

“Here’s to a joyful holiday season for booksellers everywhere,” said Patterson in a prepared statement.

“Here’s to more parents and grandparents coming to their senses and giving their kids books—yes, books—for Christmas and other holidays. Here’s to local governments waking up to the fact that bookstores and libraries are essential to our way of life.”

A number of stores–including Kramerbooks & Afterwords in Washington, D.C., and Sherman’s Books in Bar Harbor, Maine–requested the money to fix up their physical space, while Greenlight Books in Brooklyn, N.Y., will use the money to update its computer system. – Publishers Weekly

Want to help turn-on some video-crazed youth to reading? Patterson, normally known as an author of suspense thrillers, also writes entertaining books for pre-teens. Check out this one about a kid who wants to become the world’s best stand-up comedian, I Funny: A Middle School Story; and this humor-packed adventure tale, Treasure Hunters — both meant for for 8-12 year olds.

(READ more about Patterson’s donation from Publishers Weekly)

Story tip from Harley Hahn

Oakland NFL Player Gives His Paycheck to 4-Year-Old with Heart Condition

OaklandRaider-with-4yo-ailing-fan-TonyGonzales:Raidersphoto

The NFL Oakland Raiders team recently hooked up Ava Urrea—a four-year-old with a heart condition—with a lot of gifts that made her very happy. But, the team’s second-year offensive lineman, Menelik Watson, decided to take things one step further to help out the girl and her family.

In the spirit of the holidays, Watson donated an entire week’s salary to Ava’s family. BleacherReport.com reported that the check was likely in the $18,000 range.

“Athletes like Watson don’t do this for the attention, but they do deserve praise for trying to make a difference.”

(WATCH the wonderful story below from Fox sports)

Photo credit: Tony Gonzales / Oakland Raiders – Story tip from Mike McGinley

Please Join GNN to Help One Family to Keep the Lights on This Christmas

peterCampillo-gofundme

The Good News Network didn’t send any holiday marketing messages asking you to buy one of our gift memberships, or to purchase one of our tee shirts or bumper stickers. But I am asking you right now to drop everything and help one family keep their lights on this Christmas.

A GNN reader wrote to me, worried about his lovely friend, Peter Campillo of Palmdale, California. I decided, after posting so many stories about other communities rallying around someone in need, GNN would, for the first time, appeal to its readers to do some crowd-funding of our own.

If we don’t chip in to help this family of four, they will be eating Ramen noodles for Christmas — just like they did at Thanksgiving — and they will probably be evicted from their home the day after, because they were late (again) on December’s rent.

Even more than financially, a boost from our community would provide this man, his disabled wife and mother, and 16 year old son, with HOPE, which is probably more valuable. Fourteen of his friends and relatives have donated to his GoFundMe page, and posted encouraging comments there, but the $771 pledged so far is not nearly enough to cover the overdue payments racked up in the few months since it began.

I checked out his back story which goes something like this: Years ago, when he fell on hard times, he went to school to learn how to do billing for medical offices. For six years he successfully worked in the profession, until his integrity got in the way of his boss’s blind ambition to collect on an unpaid bill, which Peter said he had already taken care of. His boss called him a liar and fired him. She tried to deny his legitimate unemployment claim, but failed. That was last February. His unemployment benefits, however, ran out months ago, and things have been unraveling since. He  has applied for seasonal-type work since Halloween but has not been hired anywhere.

He does have prospects for work, but not in his chosen career. With five schools nearby training people to do his job, the 46-year-old has decided his best course is to get a new license to become a trucker, or wait until February when his friend starts a new business and can hire him.

Peter’s wife Tiffany (left), whom he calls a wonderful woman, had previously managed two restaurants until she began suffering from depression and other mental illnesses. She currently is on medication and receives a disability check, like his mother, Luwana, who lives with the family and has numerous health issues.

Most importantly, he is the father of an honor roll teenager named Peter, “My pride and joy,” who took this family photo at our request, Friday.

“I have no self esteem left nor any pride as I feel like a total and complete failure,” he told GNN. “I cannot support my own family and I feel disgraceful to be honest… It has killed me to have to ask people for help but thank God some people out there care or else I am not sure what I would do.”

Ed, the GNN reader who wrote me on Peter’s behalf,  called Peter a “Godly man,” but on a telephone call I learned that many of the churches and agencies in his southern California district refused to help them with Christmas gifts because his son is not a young child. (The family does receive food stamps, but by the end of the month, nutrition is stretched very thin.)

Of course, we can all wonder and grouse about how there SHOULD be help available, especially at Christmas, for this family. But rather than dwell on that thought and waste time, let’s just donate and help them ourselves.

Please join us in (what might become an annual tradition) our GOOD HAPPENS for One Family Campaign here: www.gofundme.com

Go to his GoFundMe page and donate if you can. I have launched the effort with my own contribution and hope you will join me.

I asked him for his address so that we might send gift cards or presents or cards. He worried that they might be evicted by the time they arrive. *UPDATE: The Campillo family address (for now, at least — and, we hope,  for the future):  1835 East Ave R-12, Palmdale CA 93550

MERRY CHRISTMAS and HAPPY HOLIDAYS and THANK YOU to ALL! xxoo

US Captain Saved 9 Chinese Fishermen Adrift After Explosion

coast guard photo of tuna vessel rescue boat

Eleven Chinese fisherman drifted in a life raft with four of them badly burned or dying in the middle of nowhere on the Pacific Ocean after their boat burst into flames on May 2, 2014.

Heeding the signs of a smoke plume in the distance, a native of California, Capt. Gregory Virissimo, was able to race to the rescue, haul the men onto his vessel and coordinate with the U.S. Coast Guard and Air Force to fly in doctors and medical supplies.

Five US doctors were dropped by parachutes into the ocean from an Air Force C-130 transport plane on the second morning after the explosion, which was the only hope of saving those critically wounded because the location was so far from shore.

Capt. Virissimo was awarded a medal this week for his actions by the the US Coast Guard.

(WATCH the video from KGTV,  and READ more about the amazing rescue from San Diego Union-Tribune)

Story tip from Pablo Schneider

Heroic Monkey Saves Dying ‘Friend’ at Kanpur Train Station

Monkey-revives-monkey-Youtube

A monkey saved the life of another monkey who fell unconscious after being electrocuted by high tension wires at a train station in India.

The life-saving monkey put forth a heroic effort to revive his friend — biting, shaking, hitting his head and finally rolling him into a trough of water.

(WATCH the video from ITN News)

Story tip from Chris

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Dog With No Paws Runs for First Time With 3D-Printed Legs

Derby the dog gets Prosthetics-3Dsystems

A South Carolina tech company has successfully outfitted Derby the dog with 3D printed prosthetics, allowing him to run down the street for the first time ever. Derby couldn’t be happier and his adopted parents couldn’t be more amazed at the transformation.

“He runs with Sherri and I every day, at least two to three miles,” said Dom Portanova. “When I saw him sprinting like that on his new legs it was just amazing.”


Derby was born with a congenital deformity characterized by small forearms and no front paws. 3D Systems designed and built the prosthetics “customized to Derby’s morphology”.

Marshaling help from Derrick Campana, a certified Orthotist at Animal Ortho Care in Chantilly, VA, and 3DS designers, Kevin Atkins and Dave DiPinto, data of Derby’s forearms and 3D scan data of a cup design, created by Campana, were used to create the 3D design. The team utilized Geomagic Freeform, 3DS’ digital sculpting platform, which allowed them to create perfect organic shapes and smooth curves for Derby’s shape.

The designers added in comfortable cups of rubber and rigid spokes to the base. Ready in a few hours, the prosthetics were shipped to Derby for testing. The design team started with short prosthetics, to help him adjust, but now are building longer and longer ones until they fit his frame.

Through the power of 3D, Derby is now able to run alongside, and sometimes past, his newly adoptive owners.

(WATCH the inspiring video below)

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6-year-old Cancer Survivor Donates 700 Toys to Sick Kids

6yo delivers bag of toys-King5vid

A 6 year-old girl, who knows what it’s like to be sick at Christmas, collected and donated more than 700 toys to children spending their holiday at the Mary Bridge Children’s Hospital.

“I had cancer and I got lots of toys,”  Dryden Shirks told KING-5 News. “I want to make other kids happy with toys, too.”

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from KING-5 News)

Story tip – Judy Ritchie

‘Digital Nose’ on a Chip Can Sniff out Diseases

dog nose by Mark Watson-CC

Dogs and cats, with their highly developed sense of smell, have been detecting cancer or predicting epileptic seizures for some years now..

But what if we could digitize that sense and put it into a microchip, allowing us to create a breathalyzer for diseases?

For Dr. Andrew Koehl, the inventor of the microchip spectrometer technology at the heart of this “digital nose”, the technology that will allow us to do just that is already here, reports CNN.

“We can detect down to parts per billion levels,” Koehl says. “To give you an analogy that’s equivalent to one drop in an Olympic size swimming pool.”

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

Photo credit: Mark Watson (CC license) / Story tip from Mike McGinley

Police Chief of LOVE

Brimfield Township Police Chief David Oliver comforts 6yo Kashe Heffelfinger

Brimfield Township Police Chief David Oliver comforted six-year-old Kashe Heffelfinger, who was overwhelmed by the notion of shopping without his mother during a holiday shopping spree at Kohl’s.

The event, sponsored by Sarchione Chevrolet, gave 33 elementary students $200 to shop with a professional athlete and volunteer adults.

To further cheer up the boy, Chief Oliver offered a ride in his patrol car and a police station visit.

Kashe’s mother did finally accompany him on the search for a robotic dinosaur.

Photo by Erin LaBelle

NASA Just Emailed A Wrench To The International Space Station

NASA-ISS Commander Barry Wilmore 3D printed wrench-640px

Now that the International Space Station has a 3D printer, which was installed in September, tools and parts can be emailed. It happened for the first time when ground crews overheard Commander Barry Wilmore (pictured above) saying he needed a ratcheting socket wrench.

“The socket wrench that we just manufactured is the first object that was designed on the ground and sent digitally to space, on the fly,” he said. “It’s a lot faster to send digital data than it is to send physical objects, which involves waiting months to years for a rocket.”

The team started by designing the tool with CAD software on the computer. Then they converted it to a 3D-printer-ready format. The plans were then sent to the space station and received by the 3D printer, pictured below. Plastic filament was heated in the printer and the tool was manufactured layer by layer.

(READ more from Medium.com)

3D printer on ISS station-NASA

Photo credit: NASA / Story tip from Mike McGinley

For 15 Years He Collected Leftover Office Toilet Paper for the Poor

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He became known as the “Toilet Paper Guy.”

Leon Delong figured out that Seattle’s office buildings were discarding toilet paper rolls at the end of the day that were small but still had a quarter of the paper.

It bothered him, so the retired man asked the janitors to collect the stub rolls, rather than throwing them away. Then Leon delivered them to food banks.

“By the time he got pneumonia last month and called it quits at age 76, Leon was collecting partial rolls of toilet paper from nearly one-quarter of the Class A office space in downtown Seattle — hauling three heaping pickup loads every two weeks.”

“The food bank vows to keep the program going, with other drivers,” the Seattle Times reports.

(READ the story in the Seattle Times)

 

Photo credit – emdot / Story tip from Judy