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Emma Watson New UN Women Goodwill Ambassador

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UN Women, the United Nations organization dedicated to gender equality and the empowerment of women, announced yesterday it has tapped British actress Emma Watson as Goodwill Ambassador.

Known for playing the leading role of “Hermione Granger” in the Harry Potter saga, Watson has been involved with the promotion of girls’ education for several years, and previously visited Bangladesh and Zambia as part of her humanitarian efforts.

“Emma embodies the values of UN Women,” said Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka.

“Women’s rights are something so inextricably linked with who I am, so deeply personal and rooted in my life that I can’t imagine an opportunity more exciting” said Watson.


“The engagement of young people is critical for the advancement of gender equality in the 21st century and I am convinced that Emma’s intellect and passion will enable UN Women’s messages to reach the hearts and minds of young people globally” stressed Mlambo-Ngcuka.

The role of the Goodwill Ambassador is to promote the empowerment of young women and to serve as an advocate for UN Women’s HeForShe campaign in fostering gender equality. That campaign is a solidarity movement which brings women and men together to fight against gender inequalities faced by women and girls globally.

“Being asked to serve as UN Women’s Goodwill Ambassador, a chance to make a real difference, is not an opportunity that everyone is given and is one I have no intention of taking lightly,” Watson said.

Photo by Kingsley Huang

Germany’s Soft-spoken Klose Sets World Cup Scoring Record

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Scoring in his fourth consecutive World Cup, Germany striker Miroslav Klose broke the tournament’s all-time record with his 16th goal during a semi-final win over Brazil yesterday.

A humble man, Klose, 36, is the best German striker of his generation whose tremendous sense of fair play has won him admirers in his homeland and in Italy where he plays for Lazio.

(READ the story from Reuters)

Photo: Klose in 2010 World Cup win against England (4-1) by seriouslysilly via CC, Flickr

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How a Password Changed One Man’s Life For the Better

Tomkins Square Park, Apr 2010 - 17

Can password therapy really improve your life? Mauricio Estrella, an associate creative director in Shanghai, developed a unique way to create and remember passwords. He used a personal goal to create an affirmation and it became a password infused with the power of positive thinking. Here’s his story…

“How could she do something like this to me?” said the voice in my head, over and over.

It was 2011 and I was stuck in middle of a pretty bad depression due to my divorce.

Thankfully, I think I was smart enough (and had great people around me) so I managed my way out.

One day I walk into the office, and my computer screen showed me the following message:

“Your password has expired. Click ‘Change password’ to change your password.”

I read this dumb message in my mind with angry grandpa voice: The darn password has expired.

old-screen-Password-Authenticity-Required-CC-flickr-Dev_ArkaAt my workplace, the Microsoft Exchange server is configured to ask thousands of employees around the planet to change their passwords. Every 30 days.

Here what’s annoying: The server forces us to use at least one UPPERCASE character, at least one lowercase alphabetic character, at least one symbol and at least one number. Oh, and the whole thing can’t be less than 8 characters. And I can’t use any of the same passwords I’ve used in the last 3 months.

I was furious that morning. A sizzling hot Tuesday, it was 9:40 a.m and I was late to work. I was still wearing my bike helmet and had forgotten to eat breakfast. I needed to get things done before a 10 a.m. meeting and changing passwords was going to be a huge waste of time.

As the input field with the pulsating cursor was waiting for me to type a password — something I’d use many times during every day — I remembered a tip I heard from my former boss.

And I decided: I’m gonna use a password to change my life.

It was obvious that I couldn’t focus on getting things done with my current lifestyle and mood. Of course, there were clear indicators of what I needed to do — or what I had to achieve — in order to regain control of my life, but we often don’t pay attention to these clues.

My password became the indicator. My password reminded me that I shouldn’t let myself be victim of my recent break up, and that I’m strong enough to do something about it.

My password became: “Forgive@h3r”

I had to type this statement several times a day. Each time my computer would lock. Each time my screensaver with her photo would appear. Each time I would come back from eating lunch alone.

In my mind, I went with the mantra that I didn’t type a password. In my mind, I wrote “Forgive her” every day, for one month.

That simple action changed the way I looked at my ex wife. That constant reminder that I should forgive her led me to accept the way things happened at the end of my marriage, and embrace a new way of dealing with the depression that I was drowning into.

In the following days, my mood improved drastically. By the end of the second week, I noticed that this password became less powerful, and it started to lose its effect. A quick refresh of this ‘mantra’ helped me. I thought to myself “I forgive her” as I typed it, every time. The healing effect of it came back almost immediately.

One month later, my dear exchange server asked me again to renew my password. I thought about the next thing I had to get done.

My password became: Quit@smoking4ever

And guess what happened. I quit smoking overnight. This password was a painful one to type during that month, but doing it helped me to yell at myself in my mind, as I typed that statement. It motivated me to follow my monthly goal.

One month later, my password became: Save4trip@thailand …Guess where I went 3 months later. Thailand. With savings.

So, I learned that I can truly change my life if I play it right. I kept doing this repeatedly month after month, with great results.

Here are some of my passwords from the last 2 years, so you get an idea of how my life has changed, thanks to this method:

Forgive@her (to my ex-wife, who started it all.)
Quit@smoking4ever (It worked.)
Save4trip@thailand (It worked.)
Eat2times@day (It never worked, still fat.)
Sleep@before12 (It worked.)
Ask@her4date (It worked. I fell in love again.)
No@drinking2months (It worked. I feel better.)
Get@c4t! (It worked. I have a beautiful cat.)
Facetime2mom@sunday (It worked. I talk with my mom every week.)
And the one for last month:

Save4@ring (Yep. Life is gonna change again, soon.)
I still anxiously await each month so I can change my password into something that I need to get done.

Asian-designer-Mauricio_Estrella-Twitter-portraitThis method has consistently worked for me for the last 2 years, and I have shared it with a few close friends and relatives. I didn’t think it was a breakthrough in tiny-habits but it did have a great impact in my life, so that’s why I’m sharing it with you. If you try it with the right mindset and attitude, maybe it could help change your life, too.

Oh, and remember: for added security, try to be a bit more complex with the words. Add symbols or numbers, or scramble a bit the beginning or the ending of your password string. S4f3ty_f1rst!

Written by Mauricio Estrella @manicho  – Reprinted with permission
Photos: (top) Ed Yourdon (middle) Dev.Arka [CC licenses] and (bottom) Mauricio Estrella 

At-Risk Philadelphia Teens Shatter Expectations – 98% Going to College

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A commencement ceremony recently celebrated 39 high school students who beat the odds. All these teens thrived given free tuition from Girard College (a boarding school for kids and teens established in 1848 to serve orphans).

Most of the students are from areas of Philadelphia where it’s assumed that they won’t go to college. They’re from neighborhoods where less than 60% of the kids graduate high school and only a small fraction of those continue their education.

“98% of these amazing Girard students sitting in front of me are not only graduating, they’re going on to colleges like the University of Pennsylvania, Wesleyan and Howard,” wrote Brad Aronson on his blog.

(READ the story from BradAronson.com)

Captain Orders 50 Pizzas Delivered to Airline Passengers Stuck on Tarmac

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Frontier Airline Passengers flying from Washington, D.C. to Denver Monday arrived after midnight, five hours late, but most did not complain.

While they were waiting on a tarmac in Wyoming for stormy weather to clear in Denver, the captain ordered pizzas delivered to the plane.

Passenger Logan Marie Torres sent photos of the pizza party to news outlets showing 50 pies being passed among grateful passengers.

The engines had been off and the plane’s cabin was hot when the announcement came that pizza was on its way: “Ladies and gentleman, Frontier Airlines is known for being one of the cheapest airlines in the U.S., but your captain is not…”

(WATCH the video below, or read the story from KDVR.com)


Photo credit: Logan Marie Torres – Story Tip from Rick Adams

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Orphaned Elephant Thrives With Buffalo Family That Adopted Her

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An elephant named Nzou, orphaned when poachers killed her parents for their ivory, has become the towering gentle giant among her adopted family, a herd of water buffalo.

For years Nzou eschewed the nearby elephant herd, preferring to stay with the buffalo.

Now, decades later, she is a protective matriarch watching over new births of calves in the herd and becoming distressed whenever separated from them.

Together they roam on a 10,000 acre game reserve in Zimbabwe, interacting with the area’s natural wildlife during the day, but protected from poachers at night.

Conservationists Gill and Norman Travers opened the Imire Rhino and Wildlife Conservation park in the 1970s. During the 1980s, a decade which saw some of the worst rhino poaching in Zimbabwe’s history, Norman was awarded custodianship of seven orphaned baby Black Rhino. Thus began Imire’s Black Rhino breeding program. With 11 releases of rhino back into the wild over the next two decades, the park has become a success story and a destination for volunteers and eco-tourists.

Photo from the Imire Rhino and Wildlife Facebook Page
Story Tip from Leija Haabe

Women Activists Clean Up and Revitalize Libyan City

Benghazi-Libya_Kids_Playground-USAIDphotoIn downtown Benghazi, a dark and deserted park is now bustling with life. Fathers and mothers bring their children to play on the new playground and enjoy the safe space. With four schools in the surrounding area, teachers now bring their students to the park for physical education classes.

The project was implemented by Ayadina, a women-led civil society organization that seeks to support and engage youth in Benghazi. The park and other projects to spark positive change are supported by the USAID.

Ayadina also spearheaded campaigns to clean up Benghazi’s littered beachfront, raise awareness of the importance of environmental protection, and distribute information on the development of Libya’s new constitution.

Last September, the group led a series of beach cleanups at four locations with help from dozens of Boy Scouts. Local businesspeople donated 40 metal garbage bins that were placed along the shorefront. The campaign spread to the sea as four scuba divers volunteered to collect waste underwater.

Ayadina uses such community improvement projects — and the media attention they attract — as a platform to promote civic engagement and political involvement. During the cleanup campaigns, for example, flyers were handed out with basic information on constitutional principles and processes prior to the election of a Constitution Drafting Assembly that will write Libya’s first new constitution in 40 years.

“We have received a lot of positive feedback from community residents,” said Haneia Muftah Gamatti, chairperson of Ayadina. “I see the activity at the park and know that we have done something good that will contribute to improving Benghazi.”

Photo: Libya Transition Initiative 

Guy Pretends to Be Homeless, Then Rewards Whoever Gives Money

A young man with a YouTube channel wanted to reward people who were handing money to homeless people because, he says, “Thousands of people give everyday and it goes unnoticed.”

He made at least a few drivers smile after they stuck out their hand to give money. He turned the table on them, putting down his homeless sign and giving them each five dollars.

“These kind people could have kept their eyes forward and ignored me… Unlike like the hundreds that passed by, these few were giving,” wrote MAD BAM on his YouTube page. “I rewarded them for that.”

(WATCH the video at the top)

Story tip from Madeline Muñoz-Bustamante

P&G Brings Clean Water to Burma and Beyond

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USAID and Procter and Gamble have been partnering to provide clean drinking water and promote sanitation practices for some of Burma’s poorest residents.

Millions of the county’s people lack access to clean drinking water, and the effects of consuming unsafe water can be deadly. P&G’s water purifying packet can make undrinkable water clean and clear in just 20 minutes.

P&G has been providing clean drinking water for nearly a decade through its not-for-profit Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program, sharing hundreds of millions of its award-winning P&G Purifier of Water packets to water insecure populations across the world. The packets contain 4 grams of powder that clean 10 liters of water. In April, the group announced it had transformed 7 billion liters of water. In November 2012, The Economist magazine recognized it as one of the world’s best social innovations. To date, this simple but powerful innovation has saved an estimated 37,000 lives and prevented over 280 million days of diarrheal illnesses across 75 countries.

P&G Purifier of Water has been particularly effective in Burma, which is prone to natural disasters including floods, cyclones, droughts, and earthquakes. The program was first deployed to address a severe shortage of clean drinking water that resulted from Cyclone Nargis in 2008. Working with NGO partners, P&G responded to the crisis by providing over 30 million liters of clean drinking water to disaster victims there. Since 2011, P&G and its NGO partners have provided an additional 45 million of liters of clean drinking water to families affected by floods, droughts or chronic water scarcity across the country. You can Donate to the program here.

In this photo, a child in the township of North Okkalapa learns how to drink water that has just been made safe by dissolving a packet and stirring.

Photo by Kelly Ramundo, Feb. 27, 2014 for USAID

Teen Creates Backup Emergency System for Local Fire Station

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An 18-year-old in Palm Harbor, Florida came up with a project to earn his Eagle Scout rank that also will provide critical backup communications for emergency responders should 911 communications ever fail.

Parker Mitchell got the okay to proceed after bringing the idea for the hurricane preparedness project to his local fire station. He then found equipment donations equal to $4,000 before installing the HAM radio station in the dispatcher’s office.

He next got a volunteer to climb the station’s tall tower to install the antennae for the new backup communication station.

Lastly, he trained eight firefighters to become radio operators and all eight passed to receive their licenses.

“It makes me feel really good,” Parker told the news crew from Bay-9.

(WATCH their video or READ the story at BayNews9.com)

Image: Screen grab from BayNews9

Dutch Man Leads Dehydrated Swan Family to Pond (Photo)

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A 63-year-old Dutch man was surprised but worried when he awoke Thursday morning to find a family of nine swans drinking from the ditch. A local draught had dried up most of the water in his yard so Jos Maas decided to do more.

Believing them to be lost, he asked them to follow as he walked toward the road. Father, mother and seven chicks waddled after him.

Like the children’s book, Make Way for Ducklings, he held up his hands to stop traffic and lead the birds to a safe habitat.

“It seemed like they really understood me,” he said, reports the Omroep Brabant. “And once they arrived at the pond, they started beating the wings as if they wanted to thank me.”

Some people seeing the procession began following as Jos’s son took photos.

“I thought it was really beautiful.”

(READ the story in original Dutch– from Omroep Brabant – or CLICK Translate at the top)

BC Boy’s Lemonade Stand Raises $24K for Friend’s Surgery

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A seven-year-old Canadian boy from Maple Ridge has raised $24,000 for his friend’s expensive surgery thanks to a homemade lemonade stand and social media.

After learning that his friend needed expensive surgery in the U.S., Quinn Callander set up a lemonade stand and, with his parents’ help advertising on social media, the donations have been pouring in.

On Sunday, the community was out in full force, including the fire department with the boys wearing shirts that read, “When Life Hands You Lemons”.



Since the above CBC article was posted on Saturday, another $20,000 has been donated for a total of $48,000.

(READ the story from the CBC)

RELATED: Eight-Year-old Sells Lemonade to Free Slaves; Raises $50K in Two Months

ALSO: Nine-Year-old Boy Sells $3,000 in Lemonade to Raise Money for City of Detroit

Story tip from Shannon Pinkney West

Families of Slain Israeli and Palestinian Teens Turn to Each Other for Comfort

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The families of murdered Israeli teen Naftali Fraenkel and murdered Palestinian teen Mohammed Abu Khdeir are drawing comfort from an unexpected source: each other.

Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat took to Facebook on Sunday to post this photo and write about an “emotional and special telephone conversation between two families that have lost their sons.”

Palestinians from the Hebron area also showed up at the door of the Jewish Fraenkel family, to offer their own condolences.

(READ the story in the Jewish Daily)

Story tip from Larisa Silbert

Today is World Chocolate Day

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There may be health benefits to a daily piece of dark chocolate, so feast today during World Chocolate Day.

Lauded for its tremendous antioxidant potential, the flavonoids in cocoa, along with polyphenols, vitamins, and minerals, have been associated with benefits that include lowering cholesterol and stress levels, reducing blood pressure, preventing cognitive decline, and reducing the risk of cardiovascular problems. Studies have also shown possible benefits treating migraines and other vascular issues.

Note: Consuming milk chocolate or white chocolate, or drinking fat-containing milk with dark chocolate, appears to largely negate the health benefit.

Pictured above is a decadent chocolate walnut torte brushed with nocino (an italian walnut liqueur) and filled with fig preserves and and ganache. Surrounded by Belgian chocolate leaves, it is crowned with figs drenched in nocino, stuffed with ganache, & dipped in chocolate — all nestled in chocolate cups.

Photo by DistopianDreamgirl via CC license

RELATED ARTICLE: Dark Chocolate May Help Prevent Obesity, Diabetes

ALSODark Chocolate Improves Calmness

Foster Families Find Support with Elderly in Housing Community

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About 15 percent of seniors in the U.S. live below the poverty line and many struggle to find affordable housing. But a unique community in Oregon is offering low-income seniors reduced rents, in exchange for volunteering time.

Bridge Meadows is a supportive housing development for families who adopt foster children. 27 apartments are filled with seniors who agree to volunteer about 10 hours a week with the adoptive families.

(WATCH the video or below READ the story from PBS Newshour)

Oyster Shell Recycling Program Opens for New Orleans Restaurants

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“After you shuck ‘em, don’t just chuck ‘em,” is the motto for a new oyster recycling program which aims to help restore Louisiana’s Gulf coast.

Restaurants in New Orleans that join the program will not only be happy to reduce their own waste, they will be helping to restore oyster reefs and shoreline habitat across coastal Louisiana.

Bourbon House, a seafood establishment on Bourbon Street is already singing the program’s praises. “Thanks to the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana (CRCL), we’ve got oyster shells going back where they belong — in the Gulf!”


“Oyster shell is a naturally created and valuable material,” said Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana (CRCL) Restoration Director, Hilary Collis. “By returning it to our coast it can serve as a foundation for oyster reefs and help protect our eroding shoreline.”

A $1 million philanthropic gift from Shell Oil is funding the program.

CRCL is currently working with Acme Oyster House (New Orleans and Metairie locations), the Bourbon House, Redfish Grill, Peche Seafood, Felix’s Restaurant and Oyster Bar, and Luke, and hopes to expand the program to other restaurants as the program continues to grow.

“The main reason we want to be involved in recycling oyster shells is because we’re such a large user of the resource,” said Paul Rotner, Chief Operating Officer of Acme Oyster House. “It’s in our best interest. We need the shells in order to enrich the life span of our current oyster beds and to build new reefs.”

Oyster reefs not only provide wildlife habitat, they are a natural water filter. Louisiana currently is experiencing a shell deficit – more shell is removed from Louisiana’s coast than is returned to help maintain oyster reefs. The CRCL Oyster Shell Recycling Program will return at least 1,500 tons of shell to Louisiana’s coast each year.


CRCL contracted with the New Orleans-based recycling company, Phoenix Recycling, to facilitate shell collection and transport to a holding facility at the Buras Boat Harbor. The recycled shell will be used to provide material for CRCL oyster reef restoration projects and a portion of the shell will be donated to the Louisiana-Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) for use in their management of the public oyster seed grounds and for “spat setting” research, which places larval oysters onto shell before it is deployed along the coast.

Photo from Bourbon House Facebook Page

A New Battery That’s Cheap, Clean, Rechargeable, and Organic

USC-battery-researcher-Sri-NarayanScientists at USC have developed a water-based organic battery that is long-lasting and built from cheap, eco-friendly components — no metals or toxic materials.

The new battery is intended for use in power plants, where it could make the energy grid more resilient and efficient by creating a large-scale means to store energy for use as needed.

This could pave the way for renewable energy sources to make up a greater share of a country’s energy generation by economically storing energy at night.

“The batteries last for about 5,000 recharge cycles, giving them an estimated 15-year lifespan,” said Sri Narayan, professor of chemistry at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Science.

“Lithium ion batteries degrade after around 1,000 cycles, and cost 10 times more to manufacture,” said Narayan, whose paper was published online by the Journal of the Electrochemical Society.

“Such organic flow batteries will be game-changers for grid electrical energy storage in terms of simplicity, cost, reliability and sustainability,” said collaborator Surya Prakash, professor of chemistry and director of the USC Loker Hydrocarbon Research Institute.

The batteries could help to make renewable energy sources a greater share of the world’s energy generation. Solar panels can only generate power when the sun’s shining, and wind turbines can only generate power when the wind blows. That inherent unreliability makes it difficult for power companies to rely on them to meet customer demand.

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Photos from USC researchers

With batteries to store surplus energy and then dole it out as needed, that sporadic unreliability could cease to be such an issue.

“‘Mega-scale’ energy storage is a critical problem in the future of the renewable energy, requiring inexpensive and eco-friendly solutions,” Narayan said.

The new battery is based on a redox flow design – similar in design to a fuel cell, with two tanks of electroactive materials dissolved in water. The solutions are pumped into a cell containing a membrane between the two fluids with electrodes on either side, releasing energy.


The design has the advantage of decoupling power from energy. The tanks of electroactive materials can be made as large as needed – increasing total amount of energy the system can store – or the central cell can be tweaked to release that energy faster or slower, altering the amount of power (energy released over time) that the system can generate.

(READ more about the research from USC)

City Helps Turtles Cross the Road

Turtle on rock with duckweed at Inniswood Metro Gardens in Westerville, Ohio by Lori Taggart
Turtle on rock with duckweed at Inniswood Metro Gardens in Westerville, Ohio by Lori Taggart
Turtle on rock with duckweed at Inniswood Metro Gardens in Westerville, Ohio by Lori Taggart

They have survived ice ages, asteroid collisions and what the 19th century naturalist George Perkins Marsh called the “destructive agency of man,” but turtles need a hand every now and then.

A newly built “turtle tunnel” provides threatened turtles with safe passage beneath a stretch of county highway in Minnesota that cuts their watery habitat and breeding grounds in two.

(READ the story from Minneapolis Star-Tribune)

 

An Immigrant Tariq Farid Made Fruit Baskets a $400 Million Business

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Tariq Farid says his family would “still be struggling” if they were in Pakistan. Instead, they opened a flower shop in Connecticut and Tariq later became the CEO of the very successful Edible Arrangements.

Farid moved to the United States at the age of 12 with his parents and five siblings. He began working at odd jobs right away.

A lady who lived down the street told him, “Honey, keep working this hard and you’ll be a millionaire by the time you’re 35.” That stuck with him.

There are now more than 1,100 Edible Arrangements stores worldwide, with combined revenues of about $422 million.

(READ the full story from Inc.)

Photo by John Phelan with CC license – Story tip from Noman Minai

Ontario: Where Did All the Smog Go?

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Southwestern Ontario’s hot and sticky weather is back, but a close cousin — serious, even dangerous smog — is noticeably missing.

The London region hasn’t had a smog advisory for 18 months, a dramatic reversal for a region that once suffered through dozens of smog days a year and traditionally has some of Canada’s dirtiest air. Rewind just a decade ago, and the city couldn’t go a few days without a smog advisory.

(READ the story from Sun News)

Photo by Joe Nicholl, Toronto, Ontario – CC Flickr