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Gutsy British WWII Hero was a Woman, and a Muslim Princess

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In a time of anti-Islamic sentiment in Britain, especially since Parliament voted for military action in Iraq on September 26, it is important to remember our history.

“In the last century alone, hundreds of thousands of Muslims volunteered to fight for Britain — in notably large numbers during World Wars I and II — with many sacrificing their lives.”

Historian Dr Dominic Selwood wrote in the Telegraph, “This year marks the 70th anniversary of the death of one British war hero — who happened to be a woman and a Muslim.”

He thinks this is a good time to tell the story of Noor Inayat Khan, an Indian princess — a direct descendant of Tipu Sultan and a non-violent Sufi — who became one of the Special Operations Executive’s bravest agents to be deployed behind enemy lines.

(READ the fascinating story from the Telegraph)

 

Generous Cop Pays Vet Bill for Service Dog Injured in Hit and Run

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When Detective Ryan Salmon happened upon the scene of an accident in Takoma, Washington, he found the service dog for a wheelchair bound girl lying injured after being hit by a car that fled.

The policeman brought the dog, named Spice, which had leg fractures, to the veterinary hospital.

Later that day, when he called to check up on Spice, he learned that the girl’s mother, a single mom, could not afford the X-rays and treatment needed for the dog.

So he “did the right thing” and told the vet to send him the $200 bill.

The girl’s mother was astounded that a total stranger would do such a wonderful thing.

(WATCH the video below, or READ the story from KIRO-7)

Photo used with permission of KIRO News – Story tip by Jim Kelly

 

Diabetes Breakthrough: Scientists Coax Human Stem Cells Into Making Insulin

Public Library of Science by Nissim Benvenisty, CC 2.0.

Since his infant son Sam was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes 23 years ago, Harvard scientist Doug Melton has dedicated his career to finding a cure for the disease. Today he announced that he and his colleagues have taken a giant leap forward, for the first time producing massive quantities of human insulin-producing beta cells.

With human embryonic stem cells as a starting point, the new cells are equivalent in most every way to normally functioning beta cells.

He hopes to be underway with human transplantation trials using the cells within a few years.

“We are now just one pre-clinical step away from the finish line,” said Melton, whose daughter Emma also has type 1 diabetes, a condition that affects an estimated 3 million Americans at a cost of about $15 billion annually.

A report on the new work has today been published by the journal Cell.

“You never know for sure that something like this is going to work until you’ve tested it numerous ways,” said Melton, co-scientific director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, and the University’s Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology. “We’ve given these cells three separate challenges with glucose in mice.” The results were clear and fast, Melton told NPR news. “We can cure their diabetes right away — in less than 10 days.”

The stem cell-derived beta cells are presently undergoing trials in animal models, including non-human primates, Melton said.

Elaine Fuchs, the Rebecca C. Lancefield Professor at Rockefeller University, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator who is not involved in the work, hailed it as “one of the most important advances to date in the stem cell field… a remarkable achievement.”

“For decades, researchers have tried to generate human pancreatic beta cells that could be cultured and passaged long term under conditions where they produce insulin. Melton and his colleagues have now overcome this hurdle and opened the door for drug discovery and transplantation therapy in diabetes,” Fuchs said.

“Doug Melton has put in a lifetime of hard work in finding a way of generating human islet cells in vitro,” said Jose Oberholzer, MD, Associate Professor of Surgery, Endocrinology and Diabetes, and Bioengineering at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “He made it. This is a phenomenal accomplishment.”

“It was gratifying to know that we could do something that we always thought was possible, but many people felt wouldn’t work,” Melton said. “If we had shown this was not possible, then I would have had to give up on this whole approach. Now I’m really energized.”

READ more on the research from the Harvard Stem Cell Institute

File photo by Public Library of Science / Nissim Benvenisty, CC license

Another Record Year for Sea Turtles in Florida

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Leatherback turtle nesting reached a new record this year in Florida while the number of loggerhead sea turtle nests remained high, according to Fish and Wildlife Research Institute scientists.

“Sea turtles face many important threats at sea and on land, which need to be addressed for the recovery of these charismatic and endangered species, but the results of the 2014 nesting season in Florida are encouraging and provide a positive outlook for the future”, said Dr. Simona Ceriani, FWC research scientist.

The monitoring program for turtle nesting in Florida is an outstanding collaboration involving more than 2,000 individuals with diverse backgrounds who share a common passion for sea turtles. The extensive data collection from more than 800 miles of beach is made possible with the help of FWC-trained and authorized surveyors from conservation organizations; universities; federal, state and local governments; and hundreds of private citizens.

Green turtle nesting trends show an exponential increase over the last 26 years, although counts in 2014 were much lower than last year. This was expected because green turtle nesting patterns tend to follow a two-year cycle with wide year-to-year fluctuations. Green turtle nest counts set two consecutive high records in 2011 and 2013.

The trend in leatherback nesting also shows an exponential increase over the last 26 years.

For more information about trends in sea turtle nest counts, visit MyFWC.com/Research, click on “Wildlife,” then click on “Nesting” under the “Sea Turtle” heading. To purchase a sea turtle license plate to help fund FWC’s efforts, visit BuyaPlate.com.

Photo credit: Fish and Wildlife Research Institute – CC 

 

Wilderness on Wheels Helps Disabled Kids Connect With the Colorado Outdoors

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A special camp in Park County, Colorado is offering disabled children a chance to connect with all the fun and wonder of experiencing the great outdoors.

Photojournalist Bryant Van Der Weerd and anchor Boris Sanchez show us Wilderness on Wheels, which offers a unique experience.

(WATCH the video from KDVR below)

Photo by Christine Saetre (CC) – Story tip from Mike McGinley

 

Business Forum in Cleveland to Focus on Purpose Over Profit

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Call it flourishing. It’s a movement beyond traditional notions of corporate sustainability, demanding more than just doing less harm. The vision for flourishing companies builds on best practices toward a higher purpose than profits. It’s about creating a world where enterprises prosper, people excel, and nature thrives.

Business thought-leaders are joining together on October 15-17 to co-create these possibilities at the Third Global Forum For Business as an Agent of World Benefit. The theme for the gathering at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland is “Fourish and Prosper.”

The two-and-a-half day summit will focus on recognizing there’s profit in doing good. Notable speakers include Nobel Peace Prize winner and former President of Finland Martti Ahtisaari, President and CEO of Vitamix Jodi Berg, and Naveen Jain, entrepreneur, philanthropist, and former Microsoft senior executive.

“After 30 years of exposing corporate misconduct, what a radical change to discover and support corporate innovation,” said Roberta Baskin, Chief Communications Officer for the Fowler Center for Business as an Agent of World Benefit at Case Western Reserve University. “I’m eager to meet the visionaries and celebrate business leaders who recognize there’s profit in doing good.”

David Cooperrider, founder of the Center, will lead the Summit using his signature Appreciative Inquiry method of strength-based dialogue. Through interactive mini-design workshops, and connections with tomorrow’s game-changers, heads and hearts will come together to co-create the world we all want.

Follow the discussion on Twitter at the hashtag, #BAWBflorum. Registration for the “Flourish & Prosper” forum is open at both the corporate and student levels here: GlobalForumBAWB.com.

(WATCH their updated 2015 video below)

Illinois Teen Pulls Woman From Path of Moving Train

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A high school student from West Frankfort, Illinois is being hailed a hero after pulling a grandmother off the railroad tracks in the path of an oncoming train, when “there was no time to think.”

“I had an obligation to help and if I wouldn’t have made it there in time, I couldn’t really live with myself,” Colton Essary told KFVS-12 News. “Seeing that happen right in front of me and knowing I didn’t do anything to help.”

(READ the story, w/ photos, from KFVS-12)

Story tip from Tonya Brown Wright – Photo of train by jazzowl2003, via CC license

Americans are Living Longer

Life expectancy in the US is at an all-time high of 78 years and 9 ½ months, according to a report released today by the CDC. (ABC)

Pesky Beavers Put to Work Restoring Streams

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“Landowners typically trap or kill beavers that block irrigation canals and flood homes in the Yakima Valley. But biologists are using the skills of nature’s best engineers, relocating the troublemaking creatures to the headwaters of the Yakima River, where their talent for chewing willows and constructing lodges can be put to use, helping to restore streams and salmon habitat,” the AP reports.

(READ the AP story via the Detroit News)

Photo by Mark Round, in Ottawa, via CC license

 

Pro Basketball Team Signs 5-yo Boy w/ Leukemia to One-Day Contract

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The Utah Jazz signed 5 year-old JP Gibson, who is suffering from leukemia, to a one-day contract and brought him on the court to play with the big boys.

On their NBA website, the Utah Jazz announced Monday that the team signed the little boy from Layton as free agent guard. (They chose not to disclose his salary.)

An adorable video shows announcers and players getting into the spirit as Gibson takes the court for an intra-club scrimmage.

“When he was just over a year old, he would sit with my husband Josh watching games,” said his mom, Megan Gibson. “He started insisting on shooting hoops for an hour each night before bedtime when he was just 15 months old.”

“He knows he has to be six before he can play Junior Jazz, and he reminds us all the time that he can’t wait until he’s six.”

(WATCH the beautiful video below, or READ the story here)

Story tip from Owen West – Photo from Utah Jazz video

Teens Trained as ‘Young Doctors’ Help Tackle D.C.’s Poverty Problem

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“Washington, D.C. has one of the highest concentrations of graduate degrees in the country. It’s a place full of smart, wealthy and educated people. It also has the highest poverty rate of any U.S. city, and the youth feel it especially badly.”

Some D.C. startups and local organizations have stepped forward, filling in the gaps where government stops short, according to a CNN “Most Innovative Cities” report.

One example is the Young Doctors Project. Founded in 2012, it trains African-American high school freshman through intensive summer programs and Saturday academies at Howard University, to provide things like blood pressure screenings and vision exams to underserved communities.

After the first summer these “young doctors” work at free health clinics under the supervision of YDDC staff doctors. Through their own initiative, the teens also conduct nutrition seminars and educate their families and communities about healthy lifestyle options.

(READ the story from CNN Money)

Photo: Young Doctors DC Facebook page

 

An Instagram Photo Journal Helped Me Survive Cancer

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About a year and a half ago, the life I was living ceased to exist. I was diagnosed with stage 2a Ewing’s Sarcoma, a rare pediatric bone cancer. The harrowing experience that came after that fateful day has transformed not only my body but also my emotional and mental identities.

My existence up until that terrible announcement was carefully planned and under my control as much as it could be. I was finally taking strides to become the person I had always envisioned for myself: I was intently focused on my schoolwork and was on track to become a valedictorian, I had just earned my first job as a sales associate at LUSH, I was watching what I ate, and in addition to going to the gym more often, I was, for the first time in my life, becoming happy with my body image. I played men’s volleyball for my state championship high school team and for the number one club team in Las Vegas. It seemed as if everything in my life was going the way I wanted.

But one of life’s greatest peculiarities is sharp, unexpected turns in the road, and the most profound of those turns came May 2013, when I woke up from general anesthesia with my orthopedic surgeon standing at the foot of my hospital bed. On either side of me, my parents stood, staring emptily like their worlds were just flipped upside down. My mom’s cheeks bore the remnants of tears wiped away and her lips carried the burden of holding back unrelenting sobs. Before I could even contemplate the reason for their somber faces, my surgeon explained that during a bone biopsy, the pathologist had found a tumor with cells consistent with Ewing’s Sarcoma.

Everything around me ground to a halt. His words seemed to hang in the air like a suffocating gas and reverberated in my brain so fiercely that any cognizant thought was unachievable.

Life after that quickly turned into a blur. One of the only ways I could envision making order of all of the confusion and chaos was to let all of my friends and family know what had happened. The best way to do that, I decided, was to upload a photo of my bandages to Instagram, the photo sharing application.

Getting my port put in and starting chemotherapy only six days later, allowed no time for me to process all of the ramifications that came with a cancer diagnosis at seventeen. My left femur had been so badly deformed that I was wheelchair bound all of summer. After eleven weeks of chemotherapy, I had my left hip replaced in order to resect the riddled femur being eroding  ferociously by the cancer.

IMG_9115-1With a surgery as major and invasive as a hip replacement, I was given a list of limitations I would have to live with for the remainder of my life: never again could I run or jump, and every ten to fifteen years, I would have to get the replacement replaced. After that surgery I then completed 27 more weeks of chemotherapy.

Throughout this time, it was important to me to remain connected with the outside world. As an outlet for my creativity and calling on the skills and passion that I discovered in photography class in high school, I turned to Instagram. Before this time, I was an avid Instagram user, but through my diagnosis and entire experience, I learned the real power of Instagram—the power to connect. I have enjoyed many followers and messages of encouragement and support and have had the honor in giving first-hand advice to other teens that are going through similar things.

In addition to having access to a creative outlet and connecting with others, I was also able to retain my sense of agency over how my story was received—to tell my story the way I wanted. Because I lost control in many ways over my own body, it was important for me to have control of what I put out into the world. I wanted control over my own narrative and my story. I was also attracted to the platform because it allowed me to keep a photo journal and track my progress and change throughout this experience. I can, at any time, go back and look at the memories I felt and shared.

Moving forward with my life has a completely new definition now. I have to be much more judicious in my lifestyle choices. Living has been redefined for me, and even though I am still getting used to this new homeostasis, I have learned through this experience that I have the strength to get through whatever life can throw my way.

[Editor’s Note: Michael received the good news from his doctor that he is in recovery with no evidence of disease. He is attending the University of Texas in Austin studying environmental chemistry. When his hair grows back he plans to dye it lavender. ]

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Today marks the end of a long journey; for the past 10 months I have been constantly redefining my state of normalcy. This is no different; except now my normal will look a lot like everybody else's. Through this experience, I have learned a lot, including the strength that can come from a loving and supportive community. So for any of you who said kind words either to me, my family, or in private, I thank you. The collective positive attitudes make all the difference. I can't wait to make this just a part of my story and no longer a defining characteristic.

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UPDATED: Instead of Issuing a Ticket, Michigan Cop Buys Car Seat for Family

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Lexi DeLorenzo knew she could have been fined for letting her five-year-old ride in a car without a car seat. But her car had been repossessed with the booster seat still inside, after the family fell on hard times and couldn’t pay their bills. When she and her friend were pulled over, with her daughter secured only in a seat belt, she feared the worst.

But, instead of giving her a ticket, Emmett Township Public Safety Officer Ben Hall led her to a nearby Walmart in Battle Creek, Michigan and bought the family a car seat to keep her safe.

“A ticket wouldn’t have solved the problem,” said the kind-hearted officer later.

”This officer has changed my life, not just because he purchased a car seat for my 5 year old, but because he has opened my eyes and given me hope,” the young mom wrote on the Facebook page of the Emmett Township Department of Public Safety, when they posted photos of the good deed.

“As soon as I can afford it, I will be paying forward,” she added.

Officer Hall said he was not looking to be paid back. “It’s a pay-it-forward situation completely,” he told a WXMI-17 news reporter.

UPDATE: “The only the reason the photo was put on Facebook was the little girl wanted to get a photo of the officer and her new car seat,” Lt. Tony Geigle told Good News Network Wednesday. “The only one of them with a camera at Walmart was the ‘loss prevention officer’ on duty. She snapped a few photos, emailed them to the family and sent them to the Department… The little girl was really happy,”

One of the officers at headquarters told Geigle, ‘I just got this picture from Amanda at Walmart.’

When other officers in the department heard about it they were pulling out their wallets to help pitch in and reimburse him. But, Hall refused any contributions telling them, “I wanted to do it, it made me feel good.”

“It has been pretty overwhelming for him,” said Geigle, referring to all the media attention. “For the most part, it has been very positive.”

The Emmett Township runs all their police, fire and EMTs out of a single office with everyone training together. “We are very community oriented and created our Facebook page to provide info to our public, to let people see what we are doing. We even post all our calls.”

(WATCH the video below or READ more from WXMI-17 News)

Photos courtesy of Emmett Township Public Safety Department Facebook Page

‘Blood Moon’ Eclipse To Be Visible Beginning Tomorrow Morning

Christian Ronnel, CC license

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Tomorrow morning North Americans may be in a position to see a “Blood Moon” full lunar eclipse for the second time this year. Viewers in Australia, the Pacific islands and eastern Asia will, on a cloudless night, be able to view this event on the evening of October 8th.

“If you’re in the central or western parts of the U.S. and Canada, you’ll see the total eclipse high in a dark sky well before sunrise. Easterners will find dawn brightening and the Moon sinking low in the west while the eclipse is in progress — offering particularly interesting photo opportunities,” according to Sky & Telescope magazine.

The photo above is a great example, by Christian Ronnel taken in April, 2014 using a 600mm lens.

(READ more about the lunar eclipse from Nat’l Geographic)

Photo courtesy of Christian Ronnel via CC license

Baby Elephant Falls in a Ditch – Herd Races to the Rescue

A cute video captured by visitors to the Switzerland zoo in Zurich shows a 2-month-old baby elephant falling into a ditch.

She can’t get up, but within seconds, the adult herd rushes to her aid, turning her upright again like a toy.

(WATCH the adorable video that has almost four million views so far)

 

As Oil Prices Tank, New Era Dawns: From Scarcity to Abundance

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“As oil production swells, demand falters and prices slide, the global oil market appears on the verge of a pivotal shift from an era of scarcity to one of abundance,” Reuters reports.

“Oil prices have fallen as much as 20 percent since June, despite a host of rising supply risks.”

“The implications of such a shift would likely accelerate shifts in the global balance of power, with consumer nations such as the United States becoming less dependent on producers like Russia or Iran.”

[Editor’s note: Renewable energy sources are still the wave of the future and increased investment needs to continue, but lower gas prices will help low-income families in their quest for a better life, which is another reason to see this as a positive development.]

(READ the Reuters story via Yahoo News)

 

Persistent Iowa Man Retrieves Long-stolen Artwork by Grant Wood

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Andrew Wallace vividly recalls the email he received one afternoon in 2013 telling him that a sketchbook of famed Iowa artist Grant Wood was for sale at a Chicago fine arts auction house.

As the manager of collections for Davenport’s Figge Art Museum, he also serendipitously received a request from a Wood scholar that resulted in discovering a ledger listing items in the Figge’s extensive collection from Wood’s sister that included “a small sketchbook of ideas for a memorial window.”

So Wallace, a humble yet persistent man, set about to retrieve the stolen art.

(READ the story in the Quad City Times)

Story tip from Lisa Santer- Unrelated Photo by Julie, Your Secret Admiral (CC license)

EU’s Student Exchange Program is Building a More Tolerant Europe

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EU’s Erasmus Study Exchange Programme has become a catalyst for creating a common cultural identity among young Europeans and future generations.

A study released by the European Commission that measured the program’s impact on a sample of over 80,000 students showed Erasmus has an extremely positive effect on both the job prospects and the cultural tolerance of its participants.

The Erasmus Impact Study, which was carried out in close collaboration with businesses from across Europe, determined that 92% of employers look for skills developed and enhanced by living abroad. Moreover, 64% of employers held that candidates with international experience are more likely to be employed and given more responsibility. Erasmus graduates were half as likely to face long-term unemployment as their non-travelled peers.

What is even more encouraging, though, is that a third of the participants end up in transnational relationships, setting up cross-cultural families. A minimum of one million trans-European babies are estimated to have been born from these unions so far. What we may be witnessing here is the creation of a new generation of Europeans who do not define themselves by nationality and difference, but who, rather, renegotiate their identities within various cultural contexts, worldviews and sets of values. Set up in 1987, the student exchange program has since helped more than three million students study overseas and lay the foundation for a more tolerant future within a culturally united Europe.

Named after the well-travelled Dutch philosopher Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam, it covers the 28 EU countries as well as Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland and Turkey.

In time when good news about European integration is scarce, this comes as an important message that the European project has much further-reaching integrative potential. While politicians and technocrats in Brussels busy themselves with economic indicators and new directives, love can prove to be an equally efficient tool for constructing a common Europe.

Photo: Interracial couple’s selfie by Salihan (CC license)

NY College Earns Money for Students With Airport Shuttle Service

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College students in a business class saw a need and organized a service, which now earns the school hundreds of thousands of dollars for scholarships and other programs.

The state college near an airport in the New York City suburbs is using a big parking lot to operate a shuttle service for passengers.

“Purchase College runs a 24-hour valet parking and shuttle service for travelers headed to the Westchester County Airport, where finding a parking spot can be a pricey problem.”

(READ the story in the Press-Telegram)

Photo by Michael Hall (CC license)

Football Star More Proud of His Reading Than His Playing

One of the best wide receivers in American college football met Kathy Rackley by chance at a bookstore.

She had no idea who he was and began telling him about her book club. Malcolm Mitchell, who was trying to improve his reading skills, insisted on joining, even though the club members were all older women.

So now, once a month, this black athlete gathers at a home in Athens, Georgia to discuss novels with a gaggle of women, who eventually found out about his national identity.

Reading novels is a feat Mitchell is more proud of, than any of his acrobatics on the University of Georgia football field. “That came natural,” Mitchell told Steve Hartman. “That’s a gift.”

“I had to work to read.”

(WATCH the video above or READ the story at CBS, but NOTE* Beware the auto-play audio and adjust your volume)

Photo was auto-generated by posting the YouTube video from CBS