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Volunteers of All Faiths Join Assisi Friar, Bring Joy to Poor Kids

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In America today, something truly amazing is going viral — a new spirit of unity and giving.

In that rising spirit, hundreds of volunteers are powering a new program for children from lower income neighborhoods who are growing up amid poverty, crime and neglect. Called Francis in the Schools, it aims to uplift children through the transformative power of music, drama, and entertainment. And now, a famous singing friar from Assisi is lending his “voice of joy” to the effort.

Alessandro Brustenghi is a 36 year old Franciscan friar whose radiant tenor voice has been compared to Andrea Bocelli and whose first album, “Voice from Assisi” reached number one on England’s classical chart. Why would a friar who has sung for the Pope, has a million hits on YouTube, and recorded albums on a major label make his first trip to America only to give free concerts for children? Simple. Like the volunteers for the Francis in the Schools program, the friar believes people should use their gifts in service to others. Inspiring children with love, joy, self-worth and hope can have an enduring impact on their lives.

Francis in the Schools started in California three years ago when retired clinical psychologist, Dr. Carol Conner, concerned about the wealth disparities in San Francisco, conceived of a daylong field trip, completely free, for school children from the economically hardest hit neighborhoods of the Bay Area. The purpose of the field trip was to inspire children with a deeply rooted civics lesson: the positive role model of their city’s namesake, Saint Francis, and his timeless principles of brotherhood, compassion and selfless service. She envisioned a day of “perfect joy” in which school children of all faiths and backgrounds would experience the genuine respect and caring so lacking in their lives. But it was an idea that couldn’t be realized alone; it would require the time and resources of many volunteers.

At this point, hundreds of people as well as local businesses emerged and collaborated in the finest American tradition of goodwill and generosity, just to create one magical day for children whose lives have known little of magic. Volunteers of all ages, professions, cultures and faiths set to work to produce a musical play on the life of Francis, followed by an Umbrian Renaissance style “Faire” in a nearby park. Writers, actors, singers, and costume-makers created a musical. Cooks prepared delicious lunches and treats, and local restaurants donated food and preparation facilities. Teens and retired teachers organized games. Young adults choreographed easy-to-learn dances. Artists created face-painting designs. Florists and growers donated fresh flowers so each child could arrange his or her own bouquet. Volunteers worked out of homes, abandoned storefronts, a hospital and school kitchens, anywhere they could find the space and equipment they needed. There were teams for bus arrangements, teams to transport tents, food and flowers, and teams of “pied pipers” to escort the children. Everything possible was done to shower the children with love and respect and to make the day as perfect as possible for them.

And it worked. The first event (see the video below) was such a success it led to another…and another…and another. The events got bigger; donations and volunteers increased; more vendors offered discounts. The positive force of Francis as a role model began to take hold in the children and the community.

When Dr. Conner heard Friar Allesandro’s recordings, she thought the tender strength of his voice, the purity and conviction, carried a fragrance of joy the children would respond to. She reached out, and he felt compelled by the program to accept Dr. Conner’s invitation in 2013 to make his first trip to America to sing for 1400 children in Oakland, California. The children were indeed spellbound.

“This was the happiest day of my life,” said one.

“The trip was great because the people…treated me like family,” said the Friar.

One teacher observed, “It was a magical day of beauty and learning and is a potential life-changing event in the lives of our children.”

To date, the Francis in the Schools program has served more than 4000 children from public as well as parochial schools. The program has been so successful that it’s been invited to come east. In October, some 300 volunteers will host more than 2000 children in Washington, D.C. and Baltimore for their own perfect days of joy. Friar Allesandro will also return to sing at each one. The volunteers have been working for months to make the East Coast events as special as California’s, in a vibrant example of the power for change when we all join together to serve those in need.

What inspires these volunteers and donating organizations? True prosperity comes from a loving sharing with others. They through their efforts thousands of children are deeply touched and offered new, positive, life-affirming self-identities.

Upcoming Concerts and Faires are at Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in America, on October 10, in Washington, DC; and on October 17, at the Baltimore Basilica.

(WATCH the video below)

 

Thousands of Food Bags Donated to Pop-up Foodbank in Glasgow

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About 2,000 bags of food have been donated to an impromptu foodbank in central Glasgow that started amid a gathering of peace campaigners.

Andrew Carnegie was in George Square delivering a speech on unity when members of the public began dropping off bags of groceries when they heard about his foodbank.

(READ the story from the BBC)

Photo by Katherine Stokes – Story tip from Victoria Cormie

8 Year Old Fan Autographs Baseball Player’s First Home Run Ball

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In his first Major League Baseball game, 27-year-old rookie Chris Dominguez could not stop smiling after his home run ball was retrieved from a little girl who signed the ball with an encouraging note and drew a heart.

The souvenir ball to mark his first at-bat with the San Francisco Giants, will forever bear Estella’s “Congrations” — and her friend’s initial note to Estella, who was celebrating her eighth birthday, “Happy Birthday, love M.”

In an interview, Dominguez described his feelings about the ball (in the video below at :40) saying, “That is awesome… I think it’s great for the memories.”

The photo was tweeted by Comcast SportsNet’s Andrew Baggarly on his Twitter feed: @CSNBaggs

(READ the story from Yahoo Sports)

Story tip from Mike McGinley

Fisherman Rescues Exhausted Eagle in Amazing Video

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A man fishing in Nanoose Bay near Vancouver Island happened upon a juvenile bald eagle floundering in the water.

He recorded video of the amazing rescue during which the bird tries to swim toward the boat.

After the man turned off the motor and showed him a ledge on the back of the boat, it grabbed on by a wing.

Then, you can hear the fisherman thinking aloud about what to do next.

Because the man did all the right things, the malnourished eagle is now in the capable hands of the Orphaned Wildlife Rehabilitation Society.

(WATCH the incredible video below)

Photo via screenshot by Youtube/irsrugby1 – Story tip from Brigitte B.

One Man’s Planting Equals More Monarch Butterflies

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“Tom Landis planted a patch of milkweed the size of a card table last spring with seeds he collected himself, hoping his ‘if-you-plant-it-they-will-come’ project could mean regular visits from rare monarch butterflies, perhaps as early as next year.”

But, the flowering plot of fuzzy white plants in Oregon has already produced five caterpillars from monarchs that recently bred there.

Other milkweed gardens planted specifically to draw migrating monarch butterflies are paying off around the Rogue Valley,

(READ the AP story in the Houston Chronicle)

Treasury Announces New Steps To Reduce Corporate Tax Dodges

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The U.S. Treasury announced steps on Monday to reduce the number of American companies who are dodging taxes by moving their parent companies overseas.

“These transactions erode the U.S. tax base, unfairly placing a larger burden on all other taxpayers, including small businesses and hardworking Americans,” said the Treasury in a statement today.

“These first, targeted steps make substantial progress in constraining the creative techniques used to avoid U.S. taxes, both in terms of meaningfully reducing the economic benefits of inversions after the fact, and when possible, stopping them altogether,” said Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew. “While comprehensive business tax reform that includes specific anti-inversion provisions is the best way to address the recent surge of inversions, we cannot wait to address this problem. Treasury will continue to review a broad range of authorities for further anti-inversion measures as part of our continued work to close loopholes that allow some taxpayers to avoid paying their fair share.”

“Genuine cross-border mergers make the U.S. economy stronger by enabling U.S. companies to invest overseas and encouraging foreign investment to flow into the United States. But these transactions should be driven by genuine business strategies and economic efficiencies, not a desire to shift the tax residence of the parent entity to a low-tax jurisdiction simply to avoid U.S. taxes.”

Treasury-Building-colonnade-LothSpecifically, today’s action eliminates certain techniques inverted companies currently use to gain tax-free access to the deferred earnings of a foreign subsidiary, significantly diminishing the ability of inverted companies to escape U.S. taxation. It also makes it more difficult for U.S. entities to invert by strengthening the requirement that the former owners of the U.S. company own less than 80 percent of the new combined entity. For some companies considering mergers, today’s action will mean that inversions no longer make economic sense.

(Source: US Treasury) – Image by Sal Falko, CC

Bystanders Rush into River to Flip SUV and Rescue Teens

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After a vehicle flew off a Salt Lake City bridge and landed upside down in the Jordan River last Thursday, bystanders rushed into the river and were able to flip the huge car upright, helping three teens to escape.

The response was captured on video by witness Adelana Mookie Oneal who posted the video to her Facebook page.

– WATCH the news report and also Adelana’s video at the bottom

– READ the story from DeseretNews

Story tip from Jae Bird – FB Photo capture

Bachelor Police Detective Adopts Two Abused Pittsburgh Boys

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Two brothers in an abusive Pittsburgh foster home found a new father in a lifelong bachelor police detective who took pity on the boys and wanted to give them a better life.

– WATCH the Steve Hartman video below

– READ the story from CBS News (NOTE: The sound auto-plays on that page)

Teary 1-Minute Ad is Perfect Farewell to Baseball’s Gentleman Derek Jeter

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Now that beloved baseball great Derek Jeter is headed for retirement, a new Gatorade commercial has baseball fans getting misty-eyed.

Frank Sinatra croons “My Way” in the background of the advertisement, as Jeter walks among Yankees fans in the Bronx.

And now, the end is near
so I face the final curtain

Jeter’s last game will likely be Sept. 28 in Fenway Park, home of New York’s biggest rival, the Boston Red Sox.

(WATCH the video below)

NFL Football Shows Teen with Special Needs that He Has ‘No Limits’

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A young Carolina Panthers fan with cerebral palsy found the opportunity to fulfill his dream of playing the sport he loves so much, thanks to a special NFL program for kids with disabilities.

The boy’s entire demeanor went from ‘Woe is me for having cerebral palsy’ to ‘I can lead, I can be in charge.’

(WATCH the video below or READ more from TODAY)

 

Charming Prince Harry Lifts Little Girl on His Shoulders to See Concert

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Prince Harry organized the Invictus Games in London to lift the spirits of more than 300 wounded and injured military service members.

During the closing ceremony he also lifted up — literally — a 5-year-old who was crying because she couldn’t see the stage. Little Isabelle Nixon couldn’t see the stage where the Foo Fighters were playing, so the 30-year-old prince scooped her up and put her on his shoulders.

Taryn Nixon posted this photo on Twitter after the charming prince rescued her friend’s daughter.

 

Woman ‘Miraculously’ Finds Rare Liver and Donor Becomes His Wife

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Doctors diagnosed Nicole Munda with a rare liver disease and the guidelines for a donor were strict. If the 29-year-old didn’t get the perfect liver soon, she would die in six months.

She met a stranger at a NASCAR race who started dating her and they fell in love.

It was a one in a million chance that he would be a perfect medical match, too, but he was and became her donor.

Now they’re married.

(WATCH the video below or READ more from TODAY)

Salmon Numbers Jump at Central Idaho Mountain Lake

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More endangered sockeye salmon have made the 900-mile journey from the Pacific Ocean to central Idaho’s high-elevation Redfish Lake this year than in the previous six decades.

Some 1,400 fish have returned so far from a population that in the 1990s bumped along with one and sometimes no fish returning, ultimately becoming the focus of an intense state and federal effort, which included dam removal, to prevent the unique population from extinction.

(READ the AP story from the Post-Bulletin)

Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Three Paintings Charted the Stars

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Historian Scott Lund has released evidence to support his theory that Da Vinci’s last three paintings have been found to form a complete solar grouping that represented constellations during the solstices and equinoxes at the time of the Catholic church’s Grand Jubilee celebration of 1500 AD.

He has identified remarkably accurate alignments of the paintings with the constellations Sagittarius, Capricorn, and Perseus, indicating that their composition was entirely derived from the shapes of the stars in the sky.

Previously, Lund revealed that the “Mona Lisa” depicted Christmas sunrise during the Church’s jubilee year, with a land survey line in Rome becoming momentarily joined to a “celestial” survey line at the instant the Sun appeared. Lund says the other two paintings, “The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne” and “Saint John the Baptist,” support his original conclusion, and portrayed the Autumn equinox and Summer solstice of 1500 AD, respectively.

Now we know why it took Da Vinci so long to paint the Mona Lisa and the other two paintings. He may have only work on them when there were ‘favorable aspects’ with the planets.

According to Wikipedia, Da Vinci was a “painter, sculptor, architect, musician, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist, and writer.” Lund says: “What they didn’t say was that Da Vinci was an astronomer, and unquestionably the greatest one of his age.” He adds that Da Vinci viewed the three paintings from his deathbed as he contemplated the immortality of his soul.

For more information visit www.MonaLisaCode.com

Subway Follows McDonald’s in Australia to Use Cage-free Eggs

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Australia cheered another win for animal welfare as Subway, a chain of 1400 stores, announced that it will source cage-free eggs for all its restaurants within the next 12 to 18 months.

This comes after McDonald’s Australia announced on Sunday night it would also begin phasing out cage eggs next year.

(READ the story from the Weekly Times)

Texas Homecoming Queen Gives Crown to Bullied Friend

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“When Texas teens Anahi Alvarez and Naomi Martinez were nominated for homecoming queen at Grand Prairie High School, they made a secret, selfless pact,” reports TODAY.

In a touching show of friendship, the two seniors decided that if either one of them won, she would give up the crown to a classmate who had been the victim of a cruel prank.

“In all my time at this school, this is my greatest moment,” said the principal, Lorimer Arendse.

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

With Medical Bills Climbing, Waitress Gets $1,000 Tip on $14 Bill

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Medical bills were piling up for Chrisi Kemp after her daughter got sick and an appliance had just broken at home, reports ABC.

The North Carolina waitress told ABC11 that she had a breakdown right before coming into work at the One Whirled Cafe in Raleigh last Thursday.

Her evening got brighter very quickly when a male customer, who wants to remain anonymous, settled his $14.01 tab by adding a $1,000 tip.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from The Indy Channel)

Story tip from Tonya Brown Wright

School Kids Show Gratitude With Positive Picketing

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A middle school in Lawrence, Kansas gave their students an impromptu class on kindness, helping them to shower gratitude on a group of construction workers building an addition onto the school.

The principal at Corpus Christ Catholic School had the idea of serving lunch to the guys in hard hats, but the teachers took the idea a step further.

“The picketing idea was cooked up at a faculty meeting,” said Jill Hilton LaPoint, who posted this photo on Facebook. “Our art teacher made the signs for kids to carry back and forth as they went to lunch or PE. It was a happy afternoon here!”

The kids served them lunch from Bigg’s BBQ.

“It was much appreciated,” added LaPoint. “I heard that some of the guys even got a little teary.”

(CORRECTION: The original story had the incorrect school name and location.)

Lion King Performance Planned For Autistic Audience

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The New England chapter of Autism Speaks is teaming up with Disney Theatrical Productions and Broadway in Boston to provide an “autism-friendly” performance of The Lion King on Oct. 11 at 2 p.m.

During the matinee performance, house lights will be at half capacity, sounds will be at a lower intensity, there will be no strobe lights, and the only people in attendance will be those in need of a “sensory-free show” along with their family and friends.

(READ the story from CBS Boston)

Photo from Lion King Broadway via Facebook – Story tip from Eileen Croghan O’Brien

Brisbane Volunteers Save Local Farmer’s Broccoli Crop

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“A group of 30 volunteers have harvested acres of broccoli just north of Brisbane to help a struggling vegetable producer,” reports an Australia’s ABC News.

Food Connect, a community food co-operation that connects city residents with farms around Brisbane and the Scenic Rim region, organised the free labour after a personal family tragedy prevented the Birkdale farmer from being able to harvest.

(READ the story from Australia’s ABC)

Photo supplied by FOOD-CONNECT – Story tip from Noelene Francis