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Curry Power: Turmeric Compound Boosts Brain Cell Growth

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“Scientists have found that a chemical component in the spice turmeric—commonly used in Indian cuisine and curries—increases the regeneration of new neurons in cell cultures and in lab rats,” reports Newsweek.

As with other organs, the brain has an impressive ability to repair itself (within reason), and in a study published last week in the journal Stem Cell Research & Therapy, turmeric extract offered a possible avenue to healing, according to the new article here.

Preliminary findings from numerous animal and other laboratory studies suggest that a chemical found in turmeric—called curcumin—may have anti-inflammatory, anticancer, and antioxidant properties.

The US National Institute of Health’s National Center for Complimentary and Alternative Medicine has funded studies looking at the active chemicals in turmeric and their effects—particularly anti-inflammatory effects—in human cells to better understand how turmeric might be used for health purposes. NCCAM is also funding basic research studies on the potential role of turmeric, which has an excellent safety profile, in preventing acute respiratory distress syndrome, liver cancer, and post-menopausal osteoporosis.

Previous studies suggested that curcumin, the active phenolic compound in turmeric, may be an effective treatment for other neurodegenerative diseases. Specifically, a couple of studies showed that curcumin inhibited the formation of amyloid ß plaques, which is thought to destroy neurons in Alzheimer’s disease, but all these findings have not yet been confirmed in actual patients.

Recently, a group of National Eye Institute-funded researchers found that curcumin may also be effective in treating retinitis pigmentosa (RP), an untreatable disease that leads to severe vision loss and blindness that affects more than 1 in 4,000 people worldwide.

The amounts used in her study of lab rats are more than one would get in a normal diet. “We need to test the effective dose of curcumin in patients,” Dr. Radha Ayyagari Ph.D., associate professor of ophthalmology at the University of California San Diego, who grew up in India with a great appreciation for the therapeutic potential in curries.

Some Indians credit turmeric for that country’s low incidence of Alzheimer’s. The flavor is not very strong, so it’s easy to incorporate in various dishes. Try adding it to cooked rice.

Photo by Steven Jackson Photography (CC license)

 

India’s New Leader Wields Broom in Nationwide ‘Clean India’ Campaign

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On the birthday of Mahatma Ghandi this week, the new prime minister of India, Narendra Modi, launched the Clean India movement by picking up a broom and dust pan, and leading thousands of citizens into the streets.

Modi has made cleanliness and hygiene a major plank in recent speeches since taking office

With sanitation a big public health problem, millions of schoolchildren, officials and ordinary people followed Modi’s lead, cleaning up garbage heaps, toilets and ditches.

(READ the story from the AP News)

Photo by Chris John Beckett (via CC license)

 

Cancer-causing Air Pollution Drops More Than Half in LA

Los Angeles, California

The average risk of developing cancer as a result of pollution found in the Los Angeles area has dropped by more than 50 percent, according to a new report from the South Coast Air Quality Management District.

Officials said the reduction is part of a decades-long improvement of the region’s air quality.

(READ or LISTEN to the story from KPCC)

Photo credit: Pedro Szekely, via CC license

 

The First Ever Baby Born to a Woman After Uterus Transplant

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In a historic first, a baby was born to a woman after she received a womb transplant from a post-menopausal donor, the successful outcome of a fertility project at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden.

The goal of the Gothenburg project started in 1999 is to enable women who were born without a womb or who have lost their wombs in cancer surgery to give birth to their own children. Seven more Swedish women having received uterus transplants from living donors, hope to become pregnant soon.

The seven have received a womb from their mothers or other family members or close friends and had their own embryos (produced through in-vitro fertilization) reintroduced to the transplanted uterus.

The first pregnancy was confirmed in the spring for a woman in her mid-30s, a little over a year after her transplantation. Last month, the woman successfully delivered a son, making her the first woman in the world to deliver a child from a transplanted uterus, in this case donated by a 61-year-old unrelated woman.

According to Professor Mats Brännström, the perfectly healthy newborn boy is developing normally.

‘The baby screamed right away and has not required any other care than normal clinical observation at the neonatal unit. The mother and child are both doing well and have returned home. The new parents are of course very happy and thankful,’ says Brännström, who is leading the research project.

(WATCH the video below)

Air Conditioners Not Needed in Helsinki With Huge New Underground Reservoir

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Helsinki, Finland is pioneering a huge cooling system that will use cold water from its lakes instead of of electricity-powered air conditioning, reports Fast Company.

“Hundreds of feet beneath an ordinary-looking downtown park, a local energy company built a huge reservoir filled with nearly 9 million gallons of lake water. When the system is fully operational next summer, the water will be pumped to local buildings in the area to keep them cool. At night, the water will flow back underground, where waste energy will be used to cool it down again.”

(READ the full story from Fast CoExist)

Photo from Helsinki Energy

 

London’s Red Phone Box Goes Green as Solar Powered Charging Station

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Some of London’s iconic red telephone boxes are being transformed into free solar-powered mobile phone charging stations painted green.

The first “Solar-box” was unveiled Wednesday on Tottenham Court Road, with support and funding from the Mayor of London, as a pilot before turning more traditional phone boxes green early next year.

‘Solarbox’ is the brainchild of two graduates from the London School of Economics, Kirsty Kenney and Harold Craston, who won £5,000 and mentoring support as runners-up in the Mayor’s 2014 Low Carbon Entrepreneur competition this summer, enabling them to bring their new business to London’s streets.

The solar paneled phone boxes provide a clean, carbon-neutral source of energy for phones, tablets, cameras and other devices. Costs are covered through in-booth advertising space enabling the public to power-up free of charge.

“It’s fantastic to see our young entrepreneurs already up and running with this brilliant idea,” said Mayor Boris Johnson. “In our modern world, where hardly any Londoner is complete without a raft of personal electronic gizmos in hand, it’s about time our iconic phone boxes were updated for the 21st Century, to be more useful, more sustainable, and just as striking with a marvelous new green makeover.”

Co-founder of ‘solarbox’ Kirsty Kenney said, “Our idea was born out of our interest in the use of public space and renewable energy and is all about providing a service that people really need… Phone battery life just can’t keep up with the pace of our modern lives.”

solarbox2“It’s been an amazing journey, from winning in the competition, to now be bringing our first ‘solarbox’ to the streets of London, and we can’t wait to expand with more green boxes across the capital in the new year.”

London’s rapidly growing low carbon goods and services sector is worth around £25 billion a year to the UK economy, and employs over 160,000 people. The Mayor’s Low Carbon Entrepreneur competition invites student entrepreneurs to generate and pitch their carbon-busting business ideas to a panel of expert judges.

The 2015 competition, once again sponsored by Siemens, will take entries from 20th October this year, closing in mid-February next year ahead of the grand final at the end of March 2015.

Photos from London Mayor’s Office

 

World Smile Day Today Honors Artist Behind the Smiley Face

The bright yellow smiley face is one of the most recognizable, iconic symbols across the globe. What many people don’t know is that the original smiley face – which is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year – was actually created, not in the way depicted in the humorous 1994 Forest Gump scene, but in Massachusetts by local artist, Harvey Ball.

“Smiley” was born in the early 1960’s when a Worcester insurance company launched a campaign to boost employee morale and hired Ball to create smile posters, stickers and buttons. The pins were designed to help employees remember to smile while using the phone, but the buttons became popular with their families and friends too, and orders being flowing in.


Ball was paid $240 for the entire smiley campaign – and never received any further profit from his design. He never applied for a trademark or copyright, and the insurance company, State Mutual, similarly, did not make any money from the design. Ball’s son, Charlie, reportedly said his father never regretted not registering the copyright. Telegram & Gazette quoted Charlie as saying “he was not a money-driven guy, he used to say, ‘Hey, I can only eat one steak at a time, drive one car at a time'”.

Others began creating products with the sunny logo and by 1971, more than 50 million smiley face buttons had been sold, along with coffee mugs, tee shirts and the posters.

“I couldn’t be more proud to have my dad create the smiley face icon 50 years ago,” Ball’s son Charlie told the Good News Network. “It’s truly a unique event in that he didn’t create happiness or good will itself, but he created the symbol for it. Everyone knows the smiley face and it crosses all boundaries, religions, races, and beliefs.”

To ensure the original meaning and intent behind the smiley were preserved despite its commercialization, artist Harvey Ball launched World Smile Day® in 1999 – one day each year, on the first Friday in October, dedicated to spreading smiles and acts of kindness across the globe.

Smiley face flagAfter Ball died in 2001 at the age of 79, Charlie began licensing Smileys to raise money for the Harvey Ball World Smile Foundation, a non-profit charitable trust that supports children’s causes. Charlie also dedicates himself to organizing World Smile Day, which is honored every year by the Worcester Historical Museum.

He recalls a moment when the historical aspect of his father’s design really hit home.

“15 years ago in Worcester, when he was still alive, the US Postal Service unveiled a Smiley face postage stamp, and I think that was a moment where he really realized what his legacy was and what it had meant to so many people.”

(WATCH the video below from the History Channel, featuring Dick Clark telling the story of Smiley)

Scientists Create Crystal That Would Allow You to Breathe Underwater

Navy Diver-Southern Partnership Station

Bulky oxygen tanks and face masks may no longer be needed to breathe underwater, thanks to the creation of the “Aquaman Crystal.”

Professor Christine McKenzie of the University of Southern Denmark said that because the crystalline material is able to store oxygen at super high concentrations, it could be valuable for lung cancer patients who must carry heavy tanks and for cars using fuel cells that need a regulated oxygen supply.


“Also divers may one day be able to leave the oxygen tanks at home and instead get oxygen from this material as it ‘filters’ and concentrates oxygen from surrounding air or water.”

Just one spoon of the substance is enough to absorb all the oxygen in a room. The stored oxygen can be released again when and where it is needed.

“The material is both a sensor, and a container for oxygen — we can use it to bind, store and transport oxygen — like a solid artificial hemoglobin,” says McKenzie.

“It is also interesting that the material can absorb and release oxygen many times without losing the ability. It is like dipping a sponge in water, squeezing the water out of it and repeating the process over and over again,” Christine McKenzie explains.

Once the oxygen has been absorbed you can keep it stored in the material until you want to release it. The oxygen can be released by gently heating the material or subjecting it to low oxygen pressures.

The key component of the new material is the element cobalt, which is bound in a specially designed organic molecule.

(READ more in the news release at Science Daily)

Story tip from Sarah – Photo by the US Navy 

US Unemployment Falls To 5.9 Percent, 248,000 Jobs Added

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For the first time since 2008, the U.S. unemployment rate dipped below 6 percent, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today.

Businesses created 248,000 new jobs in September, with a hefty jump in professional and business services, and increases in retail trade and health care.

The Bureau also adjusted the numbers upward from July and August to reflect 69,000 more jobs added than the government first reported.

(READ more from Maine Public Broadcasting)

World’s First Surviving Panda Triplets Thrive in China

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Photo: Pandas at one month old courtesy of Guangzhou’s Chimelong Safari Park

The world’s only surviving panda triplets to be born in captivity are now out of danger. And they are growing quickly — and more cute — every day.

The cubs, one female and two males, reached two-months old on Monday, having just opened their eyes for the first time in the previous week.

An NBC TV crew was invited to visit China’s Guangzhou’s Chimelong Safari Park to meet the babies.

A worldwide naming contest is underway and includes a big cash prize.

(CLICK the video below to play, or READ more from the Daily Mail)

Photo: Pandas at one month old courtesy of Guangzhou’s Chimelong Safari Park

15 Years Later, Great Lakes Levels Finally Rebound

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With the wettest weather in 116 years, the Great Lakes of Michigan and Huron have rebounded after more than a decade of historic low water levels. Government scientists say the lakes rose above their historic average in September.

(READ the story from Michigan Public Radio)

Photo: Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois

 

Act of Kindness in a New Zealand Checkout Line

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“When Pak’nSave checkout operator Rebecca Mclean, 18, helped an elderly customer pay for her groceries last week she did not intend to tell anyone,” reports the New Zealand Herald.

Ms Mclean did not want to been seen to be bragging, or worse get in trouble with her boss.

However, Northern Advocate editor Craig Cooper witnessed Ms Mclean’s generosity, which he wrote an editorial about in the paper.

(READ the story, w/ her photo, in the New Zealand Herald)

Photo credit: Wil Stuckey (CC license on Flickr)

 

Syrian Ambulance Driver Feeds 150 Stray Cats Abandoned by Fleeing Refugees

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“When he’s not treating casualties of the Syrian civil war, an ambulance driver named Alaa spends $4.00 every day feeding the four-legged victims in Aleppo.”

For months, he has been keeping alive scores of cats that have been orphaned since their families fled the shelling

(READ more and View the Reuters photos via the Daily Mail)

Photo credit: Feral Cat Rescue Project – Chriss Haight Pagani

After Tragedy, Couple Gives Court Case Money Back to Community

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Until a catastrophic car accident changed their lives, Massachusetts residents Marcia and Harold Rhodes didn’t realize how much they would come to need and value the community around them.

Before the crash that left Marcia a paraplegic, when he was a technology consultant and his wife an antiques collector, they had never thought about such issues. They didn’t understand how much could be done to help the people in their town of Milford.

Now they are giving back, funding playgrounds for kids with special needs, and helping families coping with disabilities.

(READ the story from the Boston Globe)

Photo credit: Croatian playground built by US Army Corps of Engineers (CC license)

 

Blind Card Shark Amazes With Astounding Skills

Richard Turner is considered the world’s greatest card cheat. But the San Antonio man’s slight of hand helps him overcome his disability.

“No matter what hand you’re dealt, don’t let anyone tell you you can’t play or that it can’t be done” – Richard Turner

(WATCH the video above from CBS Sunday Morning Feb. 2014)

Firefighters’ Simple Act of Kindness Helps Elderly Woman Stay Safe

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After responding to a call on September 20 to assist an elderly resident who had fallen in her yard, a crew from City of Santa Barbara Fire Department had an idea of how to prevent future tumbles.

The Mesa, California woman tripped on the the overgrown shrubs lining the walkway, so Engine #6 returned a few days later to do some yardwork.

”Captain Bryant, Engineer Brousseau and Firefighter Kramer seized the opportunity to remedy the situation by trimming the offending hedge,” wrote Gary Pitney, the Department’s Public Information Officer, on their Facebook page.

Though the woman was treated at an emergency room for leg and shoulder injuries, she will feel a lot safer now that three bags of branches have been cleared away from her sidewalk.

The company posted a couple photos on Facebook, but didn’t want to publicize it further. A local TV station, however, picked up the story and asked for interviews.

City-of-Santa-Barbara-Fire-Department-sweeps-up-branches-for-elderly-lady-who-fell-permission“If you knew these guys,” joked Capt. Pitney, who is retired after 30 years as a firefighter and now helps part-time behind a desk, “They would sooner run into a burning building than go in front of the camera.”

Santa Barbara, of course, is not unique in their dedication to public service. In August, firefighters in Baytown, Texas finished mowing the lawn for an elderly man who had collapsed before completing the chore.

“I guess the public is just hungry for these types of stories, with all the bad news these days,” added Pitney in a phone call with the Good News Network.

(WATCH the video below from KEYT)

Photo used with permission of the Santa Barbara City Fire Department – Story tip from Glen Eric Larson

Barbara Walters Gives $10 Million to NY Hospital for New Care Facility

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In 2010 broadcast journalist Barbara Walters received excellent care from NewYork-Presbyterian hospital when she needed open-heart surgery.

“Doctors gave her a new aortic valve and she, in return, she has given the hospital a series of gifts to improve its patient and family facilities,” according to the Wall Street Journal

Today, ABC announced she had given $10 million toward the creation of the Barbara Walters Acute Care Treatment Center.

That new space, at the heart of the hospital’s adult emergency department, will be dedicated on Wednesday.

(READ the story from the Wall Street Journal -or- GossipCop with no subscription required)

Life-changing Experience Bonds NFL Player and Healing Stranger

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With all the headlines about nasty and abusive NFL players these days, it’s time for some good news. Many of these athletes are great guys.

Take Rahim Moore, of the Denver Broncos. He heard about a Bronco fan who had the same uncommon type of serious illness Moore had faced. He showed up at the man’s hospital bedside 30 minutes later.

The two continue to stay in contact, praying, sharing experiences and offering each other tips for recovery.

One black, one white – they share a bond forged by their good hearts.

(READ the full story, w/ photos, from the Denver Broncos)

Story summary by Ed Zerylnick – Photo by Jeffrey Beall (CC license)

Thank You Chicago! GNN Party is a Big Success

 

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Our Chicago GNN Meet-and-Greet could not have been more fun! With sunny skies and a beautiful beach stretching right alongside our tables, we ate lunch at the busy outdoor restaurant, The Dock. Our youngest guest, Liz’s little girl, started telling jokes and we all joined in. Even our server, Derek, enjoyed the positive vibes and made us laugh.

We gave out a bunch of bumper stickers, a GNN canvas bag, and talked about our favorite good news stories.

beach-uptown-chicago-640pxAfter lunch, I wanted to sink my bare feet into the warm sand of Montrose Beach. Inspired by our little redhead and me jumping around waving our arms, Heyward took off his shirt and ran into Lake Michigan for a swim. That inspired me to wade in the cool sandy shallows.

I have organized parties in DC, Vancouver, BC, and Chicago. It will be hard to top this one (unless I hire a yacht again, like I did for my 15-year anniversary).

Thanks to all my guests, especially those who drove across town. I will never forget our time together.

By the way, if you haven’t received your free bumper sticker after pledging support at the $24 membership level (or higher) during my 17th anniversary campaign, email me and I will send it out right away.

With No Aerospace Schools in South Sudan Youth Builds His Own Plane

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Despite the conflict in South Sudan a 23-year-old is teaching himself aeronautics and building an airplane with local parts he finds and brings home to his makeshift workshop.

The soft-spoken young man, George John Male, calls his operations Aero Tech Research. He teaches himself the skills needed using the internet because there are no schools in his country that offer the coursework.

His family thinks he’s crazy and wasting money. The country’s Air Force said they wanted to recruit John, but nothing was done about it.

Despite the lack of funding, he is optimistic that with the right support he can become one of Africa’s greatest aerospace innovators.

[Editor’s Note: Maybe we should raise some funds for this young man. Any thoughts?]

WATCH the inspiring video below from CCTV Africa’s Susan Mwongeli…

Photo of Engineering Students above by TJ Coffey (CC license)