All News - Page 1086 of 1703 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 1086

National Hockey League Looks to Sustainability for Sport’s Very Survival

ice-hockey-pond-cc-flickr-Doug_Eastick-640px

Ice hockey marks the change of seasons in cold climates. As freshwater ponds and lakes freeze, hockey players of all ages gather their gear to play winter’s pastime. Outdoor ice hockey is like neighborhood soccer, schoolyard basketball and sandlot baseball. It is, in many ways, the spirit of the game.

Long before many of the most iconic players in the National Hockey League (NHL) took their first strides in a professional arena, they learned how to skate on frozen lakes, ponds and backyard rinks across North America and Europe. NHL legend Bobby Orr, for example, began skating at the age of four on the Seguin River in Parry Sound, Ontario. He often reminisces about the local game of “shinny,” referring to ice hockey played outdoors and often without pads or protection – just winter ski gear, skates and a “twig,” a common term for a stick amongst “hockey bros.”

“Most of the time we would be on the ice from early morning until darkness. Sometimes there would be 30 of us, chasing after the same puck,” said Orr, nicknamed the ‘King of Shinny.’

So what if, due to climate change and freshwater scarcity, there were no more frozen ponds on which to skate?

“If there were no more outdoor rinks, the memories would vanish. Ponds, lakes and outdoor rinks are where kids master their craft,” said minor league player and former Pennsylvania State Ice Hockey Captain Thomas Westfall. “Ice time in large arenas is also expensive so it’s not the limitless practice time you get outdoors.”

In an effort to preserve the outdoor game, the National Hockey League launched NHL Green™, an initiative to detail the environmental impacts and challenges of the sport, and to track the steps taken to become responsible for the tons of carbon emitted while conducting business.

Among the goals of NHL Green, launched January 1, 2010 with help from the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), is to reduce the use of natural resources.

The NHL acknowledges that its hockey games are energy intensive. In its latest study, the 2014 NHL Sustainability Report, the league disclosed its big “carbon footprint” – approximately 530,000 metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year, including energy and water use, operational waste and nearly two million miles of team air travel per season.

frozen-pond-hockey-winter-CC-Randy_von_Liski-cropped“It is an aspirational document, reporting on the meaningful ecological accomplishments achieved throughout the league during the past few years,” says NRDC’s Dr. Allen Hershkowitz. It is the “first ever such report produced by a professional sports league, and it illuminates an extraordinary level of commitment to responsible environmental stewardship by one of the most beloved and prominent sports leagues in the world.”

Leading by example, the league hopes to use its influence to inspire fans, partners and businesses to be environmentally conscious. The league has one of the largest and most passionate fan bases in all of professional sports. According to the report, there are 68 million NHL fans in North America, and the league’s total social media audience exceeds 10 million followers. The frozen fields on which the sport depends may be the unifier needed to ignite these millions toward environmental action.

The NHL is transparent about its vested interest in this cause. It believes its efforts toward sustainability are not only the right thing to do for the environment but for the long-term success of hockey. The league hopes to continue to host world-renowned outdoor hockey events such as the NHL Winter Classic, NHL Heritage Classic or NHL Stadium Series, played in iconic venues like Yankee Stadium and Soldier Field amongst others. These events have drawn huge crowds in recent years, such as the record setting 2014 Winter Classic at Michigan Stadium with an attendance of more than 105,000 people. The league also wants outdoor hockey to keep breeding creative and innovative skaters, rooted in the history and culture of the sport.

So maybe it’s a bit self-serving of the NHL to promote environmental change to protect the quality of its product, but there are worse things sports leagues – or any organization in a position of power – could be doing. The NHL has, and will hopefully continue to do its part and invites you to do yours: if not for future generations, for shinny’s sake.

Jessica Goddard is an avid online contributor on human interest topics including uplifting news, health and travel. She is passionate about spreading compelling and inspiring content to make cyberspace a worthwhile place.

Photos by Doug Eastick (top) and Randy von Liski (bottom), via CC licenses on Flickr

Bridge Dancer Shares Love, Cheers Up Commuting Audience

bridge-dancer-holds-heart-SFGateVid

In one of the noisiest, windiest stretches of concrete in San Francisco, a young man with a big red heart in his hands has been dancing joyously twice a week for more than a year – just to make people happy.

It works. And if anyone could use a little cheering up, it’s this guy’s audience.

He dances for the commuters grinding their way along Highway 101 during the afternoon commute.

(WATCH the video and READ the story from the San Francisco Chronicle)

Non-Celiac Gluten Sensitivity May Have Other Cause

breads-at-farmers-market-DC-800px

In 2011, a professor of gastroenterology at Monash University provided the key evidence of gluten sensitivity in people without celiac disease.

But recently Peter Gibson published follow-up papers, equally as scientific as the first, that show the opposite.

In the latest study, gluten, which is a protein found in grains like wheat, rye, and barley, appears to cause the gastrointestinal distress because of the placebo effect.

(READ the story in the Business Insider)

Photo by Geri Weis-Corbley, Washington, DC farmers market

 

Photo of the Day – Gourmet Picnic Delivery Services Trend Worldwide

picnic-in-central-park-CC-Flickr-ep_jhu-850px

Picnic delivery programs are popping up in major cities like Paris, London and New York, where summers are short and patches of green real estate in short supply.

For instance, in New York, Perfect Picnic offers a range of hampers that start at $14, but can go up to $1,000 for the ultimate picnic experience.

(READ the story in the New Age)

Photo by Flickr’s ep jhu via CC license

Boy Lost In NYC Calls It ‘Greatest Day Of My Life’

Central Park bridge

Central Park bridge

Chris Villavicencio, 9, got separated from his parents at the Central Park Zoo Saturday. The boy was missing for two hours before cops found him — having the time of his life — in Midtown, Manhattan.

Fortunately, the child’s parents, Peruvian natives who do not speak English, went to see police in the park and and reported their child missing.

Police found him in the bus terminal an hour later, but the boy’s adventure wasn’t quite finished.

He was thrilled by this new opportunity to ride in a police car.

(READ the story in the Daily News)

Photo: Central Park bridge

French Hospital Opens Wine Bar to Cheer Up Terminally Ill

wine-glasses-sunset-Morguefile-MarcoMaru

A hospital in the French city of Clermont-Ferrand is opening a wine bar where terminally ill patients will be able to enjoy a glass or two with their families, because they had the right to “enjoy themselves”.

“Why should we refuse the charms of the soil to those at the end of their lives? Nothing justifies such an prohibition,” the Clermont-Ferrand University Hospital Center said in statement.

(READ the story from Reuters)

CEO is So Loved That a 3-Continent Flashmob is Only Suitable Farewell

flashmob-for-CEO-youtube

His employees call Mark Sebba the world’s most loved CEO and one day in July they decided to show their appreciation by staging a three-continent flashmob.

Sebba thought it was just another day at work in London, but when he walked up the escalator an elaborate production was touched-off as a tribute to the Englishman’s 11 years at the helm.

They created new words for the song, “The Man” by Aloe Blacc and included a gospel choir, drum corp and mariachi band.

“It’s time to say job well done
You’re the best, you’re the greatest one”

The main action switches to video screens with choreographed sequences from offices in New York, New Jersey, Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Charlton.

Rather than throw a hum-drum retirement party, the Executive Chairman and Founder of the Net-A-Porter Group, an online luxury fashion retailer, agreed with her fellow executives who wanted to do something special.

Clearly these hundreds of employees really love their boss.

(WATCH the heartwarming production below)

Story tip from Allison Conner Whitten

Milwaukee Neighborhood Rallies To Put Young Boys On The Right Path

hope-sign.jpg

black-boy-jumping-wildly

In Milwaukee, there’s an experiment underway to set at-risk boys on the right path. They’re offered pay for doing neighborhood chores and they receive guidance from older men in the community.

(LISTEN the story or READ the transcript from Public Radio’s KQED)

Story tip from Theresa deBoer – Photo by Sun Star

Blind Cyclists Put Their Faith in a Tandem Rider

NottinghamTrentUniversity-CC-para-cycling-British-coach-Chris-Furber

I have been watching the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, Scotland and I am so inspired by the tandem riders, I had to share it!

Apparently para-cycling has been introduced in this Commonwealth Games, and it involves tandem bike riders racing around the track at up to 60km/hr (about 37 mph). Picture a bike with two seats, the front taken by a ‘pilot’ and the back seat by a vision impaired cyclist who must put their trust in the pilot to act as their eyes on the track.

The trust between the two riders is so inspiring. The other morning I watched a tandem sprint with Australia and Scotland up against each other, the pairs each had to react quickly when the other pair made a move, it was so exciting. In the race I watched, it went to the third and final decider to award the medal.

The other thing that really motivated me to write this post was the fact that this race came on just after I watched able-bodied athletes compete. I love the integration of the athletes at the Commonwealth Games. Everyone came out together at the opening ceremony, all medals add up on the same tally.

Indeed it was at the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne that the first athlete with a disability carried her country’s flag (Canadian Chantal Petitclerc) in the integrated opening ceremony. It gives me great hope for our world, improvements do happen.

Oh and if you must know, Scotland won.

(READ a related news report in the Australian)

Photo credit: Nottingham Trent University via CC license, British para-cycling coach, Chris Furber

Effective Phone Alerts Help Uganda Nab Forest Criminals

Forest stream deep green Tasmania DSEWPaC-attribution

forest Congolese timber protection-ForestPeoplesProgramme

A forest monitoring system that uses text messaging on mobile phones has helped the Ugandan government to intercept six cartels involved in forest crimes, within just four months of its launch.

Anyone who witnesses suspected illegal activity in a Ugandan forest can send an SMS message to a common code: 6006.

(READ the story from Thomas Reuters Foundation)

Photo (top): Forest Peoples Programme, the Congo

Congress, White House Passes Bill to Allow Unlocking of Cell Phones

cell-phones-cc-OndraSoukup

Mobile phone service just got a little easier for Americans who want to keep the phone they have, and shop around for service providers.

President Obama yesterday signed the bill from Congress to make it legal for people to unlock their cell phones, and in doing so, achieved a rare trifecta, according to the White House.

“This is a win for American consumers (and) a win for wireless competition,” wrote Jeff Zients, the Director of the National Economic Council. He also praised a bipartisan Congress for responding directly to a call for action from the American people.

”As long as their phone is compatible and they have complied with their contracts, consumers will now be able to enjoy the freedom of taking their mobile service – and a phone they already own – to the carrier that best fits their needs,” the White House said in a statement.

The effort began with a digital petition on the White House’s ‘We the People’ site, an online platform where citizens can offer ideas to the Administration. A digital rights activist named Sina Khanifar submitted a simple request: restore an exception to the law to let consumers take their mobile phone to the carrier of their choice by “unlocking” the device.

The petition attracted more than 114,000 citizen signatures and comments. And within two weeks, in March 2013, the White House announced its support for the idea and laid out steps the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), industry, and Congress could take.

Last month, the Senate and the House both unanimously passed the Unlocking Consumer Choice and Wireless Competition Act — the first time a We the People petition has led to a legislative fix.

The bill not only restores the rights of consumers to unlock their phones, but ensures that they can receive help doing so if they lack the technological savvy to unlock on their own. The Administration and FCC worked with wireless carriers to reach a voluntary agreement to make their unlocking process transparent and reliable.

The President called this “another step toward giving ordinary Americans more flexibility and choice, so that they can find a cell phone carrier that meets their needs and their budget.”

(LEARN more at PC Magazine)

Photo credit: Ondra Soukup via CC license, on Flickr

 

Photo of the Day – Artists Document Lost Tasmanian Wilderness

Blacktipped-goldinger-courtesy-Vera_Möller-TasmanianLandConservancy

When conservationist and philanthropist Rob Purves decided to preserve a lost Tasmanian wilderness, he also wanted to share it.

He arranged for 11 artists to camp out at Skullbone Plains in the Australian Central Highlands over four days in February last year – and be inspired by the experience.

Thus, he created The Skullbone Experiment.

(READ the story or WATCH the report from Australia’s ABC)

Photo credit: Blacktipped goldinger by Vera Möller, courtesy of the Tasmanian Land Conservancy

Homeless Man Cries Tears Of Joy Over Birthday Surprise (WATCH)

homeless-man-shakes-hands-gift-reKindle

Over the past year, Chris Hooley and his daughter have recruited friends and taken supplies of sports drinks and granola bars to homeless people on the streets of Phoenix, Arizona. It felt so good, they wanted to do it every week. They made videos and held MeetUps that moved other people to hit the streets until it became a full-fledged charity.

ReKindle.org now regularly organizes “I Got Your Back” Backpack Drives to help the homeless live more comfortably. It was one of these drives in Chicago that resulted in a wonderful video posted July 28.

The marketing group CopyPress partnered with Hooley, who is also in that field, to create a free internet marketing conference with the cost of attendance being a fully-stocked backpack donated to reKindle. The next day, Stefan Winkler of CopyPress hit the streets with Hooley to hand out the free goodies to Chicago’s least fortunate.

The highlight of the day was this encounter with Albert, because they found out it was his birthday. During the conversation, they learned that his birthday wish was to “see a show.” He wanted to catch a movie downtown, so Winkler reached into his pocket and gave him money to buy a ticket and dinner for himself. Albert was so overwhelmed with joy, saying he knew that “God was good,” and this was proof. Watch it now…

This is what reKindle is all about — to try to brighten someone’s day with a bit of kindness. They also want to inspire others to do the same, through sharing videos and stories. Seeing Albert might make you inspired to hand out bags of supplies on the street. If you want to go bigger, reKindle has a tutorial about running your own backpack drives.

You can learn a simple way to help in a 2013 video posted by a Tacoma, Washington couple who share their ideas for what to stock in backpacks for under $20. Some on social media have called these, Blessing Bags.

 

This reminds us of a story we featured six months ago about a woman who simply asked on Facebook. She received boxes of donations from friends, and then handed out 73 decorated shoeboxes fully-stocked with small gift items. It was so rewarding for all.

SHARE this Beautiful “Albert” Moment (Click below)

Saying Thanks in Public to Favorite Teachers = Heart-warming

hugs for students from teacher-WCNCvid

Stevenson Elementary teachers show off new tees from Good News Network

With the onset of August comes preparations for a new school year for many families and young adults.

Some people were given an opportunity recently to broadcast their thanks to a favorite teacher.

When they say a few words before a camera about how those teachers changed their lives for the better, the video becomes a moving testament to millions of teachers. It becomes a “thank you” that millions of us can relate to when recalling our own favorite teachers.

#ThankYouTeachers

(WATCH the video below created by Walmart)

 

Photo (Top): Stevenson Elementary teachers show off new tees donated by Good News Network fans a few years ago.

Teenager Invents Shoe Insoles to Generate Energy With Every Step

piezoelectric-shoe-insole-invented-by-teen-Angelo-Casimiro

A 15-year-old boy living in the Philippines has invented a shoe insole that produces electricity from the energy of every footstep — with the potential to charge small USB devices.

Angelo Casimiro constructed his device using piezoelectric materials, which can generate an alternating current voltage every time they are squeezed. He won a local award with his invention and earned a spot as a regional finalist in Goggle’s Science Fair 2014.

______________________________________________ ______________________________________________

His project is Open Source and available for the DIY community to develop further. His research shows the device is perfect for powering “smart clothing” and blue tooth transmitters, and could potentially be improved to power USB devices and cell phones. His project are detailed on Instructables.com.

(WATCH his video below)

 

U.S. Economy on Growth Track with Strong Second Quarter

Appliance-store-CC-IndependentWeStand-640px

The U.S. economy grew sharply in the second quarter as consumers stepped up spending and businesses restocked, putting it on solid footing.

The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that gross domestic product expanded at a 4.0 percent annual rate, much stronger than the 3.0 percent economists had expected.

(READ the full story from Reuters News) – Photo by Independent We Stand via CC license

Dog Saves Owner From Choking to Death on a Sweet

Springer_Spaniel-CC-Flickr-Anne_Hornyak-600px

We reported on another dog in April that jumped on her companion while she was choking, creating a Heimlich maneuver-like rescue. Turns out, this type of miracle isn’t so rare.

Within a few weeks, Rachel Hayes was doubled over gasping for breath when her worried springer spaniel hit her on the back and dislodged the strawberry pastille stuck in her throat.

She had been pushing Mollypops away, but the animal persevered.

“She came up behind me put her paws on me and bashed on my back with such force the sweet came out,” she told the Mirror.

Ms. Hayes thought she would die right there in her kitchen, and says her beloved dog now has a new name, Hero.

(READ the story in the UK Mirror)

Photo by Anne Hornyakvia CC license on Flickr – Story Tip from Sergio Belli in Italy 

New Gadget Helps the Vision Impaired to Read Graphs

Blind-gadget-invention-scientists-CurtinUniversityPhoto

People who are blind can now read more than just words, such as graphs and graphics, following the development of an affordable digital reading system by Curtin University researchers in Australia.

Opening up new career paths and educational opportunities for people with vision impairment, the system combines a number of pattern recognition technologies into a single platform and, for the first time, allows mathematics and graphical material to be extracted and described without sighted intervention.

Senior Lecturer Dr Iain Murray and PhD student Azadeh Nazemi of Curtin’s Department of Electrical and Computing Engineering developed the device to handle the extraordinary number of complex issues faced by the vision impaired when needing to read graphics, graphs, bills, bank statements and more.

“Many of us take for granted the number of graphics and statistics we see in our daily lives, especially at work. We love to have graphics and diagrams to convey information, for example, look at how many statistics and graphs are used in the sports section of the newspaper,” Dr Murray said.

Dr Murray said the small device, which uses audio format with navigation markup, runs on very inexpensive platforms, with an expected production cost as low as $100 per device, which could make a difference in third world countries.

He said previously there have been many methods to convert graphical material but all are very labour intensive and generally not easily transferable to other users.

“Our system is easily operated by people of all ages and abilities and it is open source, meaning anyone with the skill can use and modify the software to suit their application,” Dr Murray said.

The player has built-in user instructions and a speech engine that converts to more than 120 different languages.

Dr Murray said he was now looking for philanthropic finance to set up production.

(Source: Curtin.edu) – Story Tip from K. Alexander

Photo of the Day – World Ranger Day

Park-Rangers-Alaska-CC-flickr-Marina-900px

Today is the sixth annual World Ranger Day, first organized by the International Ranger Federation to honor the work and sacrifice of park and wildlife reserve employees worldwide.

park-ranger-yellowstone-450pxOn July 31, we remember the approximately 1,000 rangers killed or injured around the world in the line of duty in the last ten years –103 in 2013, and 56 so far this year. Many in remote areas deal every day with the realities of extreme violence amid their anti-poaching efforts, and live in hard conditions, often earning low wages.

For more info, visit the Thin Green Line Foundation, an Australian group that works to protect rangers, or the excellent website of the International Rangers Federation.

Photo credit: Park Rangers in Alaska by Marina via CC license on Flickr

Transit Company Surprises 102 Year-Old Rider With ‘Birthday Bus’ Party

Bus-passenger-wooed-on-birthday-OregonLiveVid

Portland’s transit company sent a special bus to pick up one of their regular riders, 102 year old Vida Trout.

The distinguished East Portland retiree uses the bus to travel to her many volunteer positions and last Wednesday was surprised when the sign identifying the approaching bus read, “Happy Birthday Vida”.

Inside was a TriMet employee who led the passengers in a birthday song, and passed out cupcakes and a gift for Vida — free rides for the rest of her life. OregonLive.com reports that Vida’s sister lived to be 104, so she might be enjoying her special status on the bus for a long time.

Obviously TriMet deserves one check one box for excellent customer service and another for the appreciation shown its customers — at least on this July 29 run

(WATCH the short video below or READ the story at Oregon Live)