All News - Page 1099 of 1702 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 1099

Teen Finishes 40-mile Walk While Carrying Brother

brother-walks-40mi-with-brother-onboard-VID

A teenager can’t put into words how much his little brother means to him. Instead, the high school wrestler walked 40 miles with his sibling strapped to his back to show his admiration and help raise awareness for the 7-year-old boy’s cerebral palsy.

Hunter Gandee, 14, met with more difficulties than he had imagined during, what was dubbed, the CP Swagger. Heat, rain, fatigue and sores unnerved the brothers over the two days.

The pair, followed by friends, family and even other wrestlers who’d been inspired to join him, were met at the finish line on the University of Michigan campus by thunderous applause and cheers from those who had gathered to see the boys finish the 40-mile trek.

(WATCH the video or READ the story in the Lansing State Journal)

Stranger Halfway Round the World Donates Car to Mom, Son With Cancer

truck-with-boy-thumbs-up-52-lives-dotorg

Jaime Thurston aims to be the catalyst for change in one person’s life every week this year. She achieved that BIG TIME last week when a gift was delivered to a family half way around the world, because they were struggling through two cancer diagnoses at the same time.

In Mid-May Jaime’s website, 52-lives.org, was focused on helping a mother and son in Queensland Australia, who both have cancer. With their 30 year-old car badly in need of repair, Kerry Lumsden had relied on friends to bring her little boy, Kybie, to his hospital appointments.

The website was both asking if anyone knew an auto mechanic who would do it for free, and contemplating whether to raise money for the repair. Suddenly, on a Sunday evening, an email arrived from Scotland from a couple who had read the story on Jaime’s website.

“Since reading this story, (Kybie and Kerry) have been on my mind,” wrote the couple, who remain anonymous. “I would like to buy Kerry and Kybie a car.”

They sent $7000 (AU), and when Jaime called her with the news, Kerry was “overwhelmed that someone she had never even met would be willing to give so much.”

Since the gift was anonymous, Kerry wanted to express her gratitude for all to see on 52-lives.org.

“To the couple in Scotland, I don’t know how to say thank you enough. I was in shock when I received the call, I just could not believe it. From our hearts to yours, thank you so much. And I can only begin to say thank you to Jaime and 52 Lives for the unbelievable support and kindness they have given us. We are not alone on this monster of a journey.”

The family chose a truck to carry his wheelchair and later, his four-wheeler, when he’s healed. A Kind-hearted business, Cricks Auto Group, offered to supply a much more expensive car for the money, as well as a 6-year warranty. Cash donations totaling $190 meant they could also insure the vehicle.

Smog-busting Roof Tiles Could Clean Tons of Pollution, Study Says

la-sci-sn-smog-roof-tiles-20140605-001
A lab experiment concluded that the two tiles on the left, coated with a titanium dioxide mixture, removed up to 97% of nitrogen dioxide pollution from the air.  (UC Riverside)

University of California students at Riverside say they have discovered an inexpensive roof coating that can eat smog-forming particles in the air and, if applied to the thousands of tiled rooftops in Southern California, could clean tons of pollution from the atmosphere every day.

The coating is made up of titanium dioxide, a common inexpensive compound found in everything from food to cosmetics. For just $5.00 in materials an average-sized residential roof could be coated, the students calculated, and for one year it would break down the same amount of smog particles as what is generated by a car driven 11,000 miles.

The researchers studying at Riverside’s Bourns College of Engineering earned honors and prize money with their research in an Environmental Protection Agency student design competition.

Nitrogen oxide gas emitted by vehicles and power plants, react every day in sunlight to form smog. In the experiment, coated clay tiles removed 88% to 97% of nitrogen oxide pollution from the air, breaking it down into less harmful compounds.

The students calculated that 21 tons of nitrogen oxides would be eliminated daily if tiles on one million roofs were coated with their titanium dioxide mixture. 500 tons of nitrogen oxides are emitted daily in Orange County and the urban portions of Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

The current team of students, Carlos Espinoza, Louis Lancaster, Chun-Yu “Jimmy” Liang, Kelly McCoy, Jessica Moncayo, and Edwin Rodriguez, are all set to graduate this month, but are hopeful a new team of students will continue with this project and test other variables.

For example, they want to see what happens when they add their titanium dioxide to exterior paint. They are also considering looking at applying the coating to concrete, walls or dividers along freeways. Other questions include how long the coating will last when applied and what impact changing the color of coating, which is currently white, would have.

(READ the details from UC Riverside)

 

Dog Stayed By Man’s Side 23 Days After He Died

80-yo-with-maltese-dog
Family photo

An elderly man who vanished nearly a month ago was found dead, with his beloved pet Maltese dog watching over him, 23 days after the two went for their final afternoon drive.

“I love that dog,” said the daughter of Jimmy Wilkerson, an 80 year-old resident of Georgia.

“We’re going to take care of BeBe, like he took care of my father, up to the last minute.”

The small dog had scratches and bite marks, probably from fending off an attack by a wild animal.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from the Detroit Free Press)

Story tip from Lisa Bauman

Pool Repairman Brings Drowned Prairie Dog Back to Life (WATCH)

squirrel-cpr-Rick-Gruber-video

Rick Gruber said he would do the same for anybody.

In this case, the drowning victim last month was a tiny prairie dog (or a squirrel, if CNN is correct).

He did what most people would not. He spent 30 minutes trying to resuscitate the animal, performing chest compressions as best he could.

The Phoenix, Ariz. man, whose nickname is now “Squirrel Whisperer,” shot a video of the entire operation hoping that he would catch the moment the juvenile would spit up and come back to life.

“C’mon little guy. You can’t die,” said Gruber, as he tried to revive it.

The treatment worked and the squirrel, or prairie dog, went scampering off into the desert.

(WATCH the video below – READ the story at the Daily Mail)

New Fund Protects Amazon Rainforest for 25 Years

Potaro-river-Kaieteur-falls-Amazon-cc-Allan_Hopkins
Kaieteur Falls in Guyana, South America is 4x higher than Niagara Falls and twice the height of Victoria Falls – by Allan Hopkins (Flickr-CC)

An agreement signed May 22 will commit $215 million for expanded protection of the Amazon rainforest.

The move will guarantee funds for the next 25 years to ensure long-term protection of the world’s largest network of protected areas over more than a quarter million square miles (60 million hectares) of the Amazon rainforest.

The Amazon Region Protected Areas program (ARPA), which aims to permanently protect 15 percent of the Amazon, an area equivalent to the size of Spain, will receive money from the Brazilian government, WWF and other partners.

“We convened leading financial thinkers and philanthropic partners to create a plan for a first-of-its-kind bridge fund to ensure ARPA’s inspiring success continues,” said Carter Roberts, president and CEO of WWF-US.

ARPA is considered the single largest tropical forest conservation program in history. Created in 2002,  and coordinated by Brazilian Ministry of Environment it is a joint effort by Brazil’s federal government, regional state agencies, private institutions and civil society.

Hero Who Stopped Seattle Shooter Gets Wedding Gifts And Honeymoon Paid For By Strangers

Jon_Meis-with-fiance

Washington state residents were relieved that a 22-year-old college student at Seattle Pacific University tackled a gunman and thus prevented any more killings at the school Thursday.

The young man, jumped up from his desk and pepper-sprayed the shooter when he paused to reload, and quickly subdued him with the help of another man. A police source who saw the security camera video called Jon Meis’s response an “amazing act of heroism.”

News reports revealed that Meis and his fiancé are planning to be married later this month.

Realizing that these should have been happier days for the couple, strangers began buying all the wedding gifts on the couple’s online Target registry, according to a collection of tweets posted by Buzzfeed. When there were no more left to purchase, people began contributing money to pay for a honeymoon — all to say “Thank you”.

The campaign quickly spread online and in local media, after an online fundraising page was set up by a stranger, Jessamyn McIntyre. She set a goal of $5,000 and within hours on Friday the total shot to $6,000.

By Sunday, more than 1300 people had donated $41,400.

McIntyre said, “People asked why I started the fund page for Jon Meis. I don’t know him, and nobody asked me to do it. People found his registry online for his wedding and bought all the presents they could. Then started to wonder what else they could do. The community support for Jon has been so strong, and I wanted to give it a place to continue.”

Jon and his fiancé Kaylie are scheduled to be married on June 21.

Once Polluted, The Milwaukee River is Now Clean and Valuable

MKE Glow
Milwaukee River at night by CJ Schmit Photography (CC license via Flickr)

30 native fish species, including sturgeon, are now living and swimming in the lower Milwaukee River, another milestone in the rehabilitation of this waterway, an urban center of life.

Buoyed by tougher environmental regulations and $5 billion in improvements, from the building of the deep tunnel system to the removal of dams and reduction in phosphorus, the Milwaukee River is cleaner and more valuable economically and ecologically than at any point in the past 100 years.

(READ the story with photos in the Journal Sentinel)

Story tip from Nancy Peske

New $80 Million Fund to Save World’s Wild Cats

Lions, Krugersdorp game reserve
Photo by Derek Keats (Flickr via CC license)

Donors from China, India, the United Arab Emirates and the United States provided $80 million as cornerstone funding to save wild cats.

Panthera, a leading organization dedicated to ensuring the future of wild cats, announced on June 1 the 10-year commitment from several environmental philanthropists and the crown prince of Abu Dhabi.

Unprecedented in its scale and scope, Panthera said the money will immediately fund the most effective solutions for conserving big cats: poaching for local and international trade; retaliatory and punitive killing from conflict with humans; unsustainable hunting of prey; and the loss and fragmentation of habitat.

As the animals at the top of the food chain, these cats help maintain the delicate balance of the ecosystems in which they live and upon which humans depend, and serve as the flagship species for conserving large, wild landscapes.

The founding members of the global alliance are H.H. Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, the Jynwel Charitable Foundation in Hong Kong, the Wildlife Conservation Trust in India, and Panthera’s Founders, Dr. and Mrs. Kaplan.

“Today marks a turning point for global cat conservation, and we at Panthera are deeply moved by His Highness’ leadership in this noble cause,” said Panthera Founder and Chairman of the Board, Dr. Thomas Kaplan. “His support is a game changer, opening a path for us to create what has become an unprecedented alliance of philanthropists from Arabia, China, India and America, now united in a common cause.”

The Sheikh’s support builds upon his late father’s legacy, the founder of the UAE, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, who was a passionate advocate for wildlife conservation many decades before the cause became mainstream.”

The multi-year pledges catalyze Panthera’s inclusive plan to help conserve all 38 species of wild cats, with a core focus on tigers, lions, jaguars, snow leopards, cheetahs, clouded leopards, cougars and leopards. Solutions that will be funded as a result of this commitment include:

  • Protecting and stabilizing more than half of the world’s most important Asian tiger and African lion populations
  • Securing the largest carnivore corridor in the world for jaguars across 18 countries in Latin America
  • Creating community-based conservation projects in nearly all countries with snow leopard populations
  • Reducing killing and poaching in more than half of cheetah and leopard range countries
  • Designing and implementing a range-wide conservation strategy for cougars, inclusive of creating corridors and recovery landscapes across North America.

For more information on how to join Panthera in their efforts, visit www.panthera.org.

Child, Dog Who Were Both Abandoned Form Bond

queensland-cattle-dog

girl-with-dog-CJOnlineVidTwo tragedies intersect and become a beautiful story, from the Topeka Capital-Journal:

A 5-day-old baby, umbilical cord still attached, abandoned at a bus stop in China.

A puppy, worm-infested, vomiting blood and starving to death on a porch in Topeka.

Two creatures born to misery worlds apart but brought together to teach each other about love, family, faith and, above all, about trust.

(READ the full story from the Topeka Capital-Journal)

Photo credit: Screenshot from CJ Online video

250K LIKES on Facebook Because of These Stories

quarter-million-fans-GNN-facebookThanks to our Facebook Fans, who have shared these stories since 2008, we are closing in on the quarter million mark for followers of our page. To celebrate, I posted a montage at Facebook.com showing some of our most popular stories.

Check out our favorites, with thousands of uplifting comments posted from around the world:

first-row-Facebook-favorites
Homeless Blankets
 –  The Human Bench  –  Grieving in Pink –  Boy Pays Lunch Debts 

middle-row-facebook-favorites

Free Snow Shoveling  –  Help Noah Like Glasses – Big Dog Rescue  – Diss Inspires Free Shop

bottom-row-facebook-favorites

Death Bed Giraffe Kiss  –  Daily Waves Spread Joy  –  Color Uprising in Turkey –  Gas Pump Singer

Dog Saves Choking Owner’s Life by Performing Heimlich-style Maneuver

elderly dog-Joy Session photo

doggie airlift-Wings of Rescue-400pxA pet owner owes her life to her dog after the much-loved mutt saved her from choking on a piece of toast in April – by performing a Heimlich-style maneuver on her.

The clever labrador-springer-spaniel-cross named Judy, raced across the kitchen and jumped on her owner’s back, forcing her to cough up the toast on which she was choking.

(READ the story in the Express.uk)

File photo unrelated – Story tip from katherine

Ongoing global education crisis and what young people can do to change it

afghan-girls-school

A_World_at_School_Youth_Ambassador_logoAs a newly-appointed Global Youth Ambassador for A World at School, I want to bring attention to the 57 million children around the world currently being denied their human right to an education. I am joined in this call to action by over 500 other young advocates for global education. Together, we make up the Global Youth Ambassadors group – recently launched by the United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the UN Special Envoy for Global Education, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Gordon Brown.

Shazia and Kainat are two of my fellow Ambassadors. Along with Malala Yousafzai, they were shot by the Taliban for going to school in Pakistan just over a year ago. Their story, and that of so many other of the youth advocates I have joined forces with, inspires me to stand up for the millions of children that are kept out of school because of poverty, early marriage, child labour and different forms of discrimination.

As firm believers that education is the answer to the greatest challenges we face as a society, we ask for your help in urging leaders to raise budgets, build schools, train teachers and improve learning for all children.

It has been shown that we could lift more than 170 million people out of poverty simply by teaching every child in low-income countries basic reading skills. So why are we not making this a reality?

I believe education is the key to building a better future for us all. I hope that together we promote this message and show that we cares about every child’s human right to go to school and learn.

Zohaib Nawaz Tarar
[email: [email protected]]
A World at School Global Youth Ambassador

Join our  digital mobilization initiative to help children to realize their full potential through quality schooling.
Follow us on twitter (www.twitter.com/aworldatschool)
Like us on Facebook (www.facebook.com/AWorldAtSchool).

“Man’s Blessed Friend”

File photo: Marine adopts dog

I came across this really nice story about a dog. It was out of the National Geographic magazine I was reading while on an airplane. This is quoted from the article:

“Layka, the dog pictured on our magazine cover, was two when she was sent to help clear an enemy compound in Afghanistan. During her search she was shot by enemy forces and took four rounds from an AK-47 at point – blank range. Despite her injuries, she attacked and subdued the shooter, protecting her handler, Staff Sgt. Julian Mcdonald, and other members of the team. It took seven hours of surgery, including the amputation of a limb, to save her. In 2012 Layka was presented with a medal of heroism and adopted by Sgt. McDonald, who now trains dogs and their handlers at Fort Benning, Georgia.”

“When Layka bounded out of the van that delivered her to Sergeant McDonalds’s home–a special brace allows her to run as if she’d never lost a leg–she instantly recognized him, even though they’d been together only a month before she was shot. “Her excitement brought me to years,” McDonald says. “She was the sole reason why I was living and breathing and able to come home to my son and wife.”

“Our cover story, “The Dogs of War,” is about a special bond. Dogs have been our best friends for at least 14,000 years. The relationship is in our genes and theirs.”

READ the story, with photos, at Natl Geographic.

John

’57 Chevy is More Than a Gift, it’s a Promise from a Little Boy

Growing up, Michael King said, his dad always dreamed of owning a 57 Chevy Bel-air.

“He grew up poor, in a family of 7 children. He never thought he would be able to own his dream vehicle, but would talk about it all the time,” says his son on YouTube.

“When I was 8 years old I promised him that on his 57th birthday I would buy him a 57 bel-air. I never forgot, and was able to fulfill my promise.”

Michael had been showing his father pictures of the Bel-air in recent years to gauge how much he would enjoy it. He would get very excited but admit he knew he never would be able to own one like it.

The aqua-blue vintage car had been in King’s possession for two years waiting until the 57th birthday.

In the video above, watch his father break down in tears…

High School Surprises Janitor With $1900 So He Can Meet New Granddaughter

janitor_gifted_with_1900_bucks-LEX18

Wednesday marked the last day of school for students in Anderson County, Kentucky and they celebrated by surprising the janitor with a special gift– enough money to see his family stationed overseas.

The students and faculty had secretly donated cash to the fund, collecting $1900 for Ricky Spaulding who had never met his new granddaughter.

“My son is stationed in Italy and we are going to see him,” Spaulding said. “Words can’t describe the joy that I feel right now,” Spaulding told a Lexington TV reporter.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from Yahoo News)

Story tip from Nancy Peske

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Sick 8-year-old boy Becomes Yosemite Park Ranger for a Day

yosemite-park-ranger-for-a-day-FB

A Gainesville, Florida boy dealing daily with a debilitating tissue disorder became an Honorary Ranger-for-a day in Yosemite National Park Tuesday.

8 year-old Gabriel Lavan-Ying donned a yellow coat in a fire exercise and patrolled Yosemite Park on horseback, thanks to the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

(WATCH the video below, or READ the story, w/ more photos, in from TODAY)

IF YOU LIKE THIS STORY, Please SHARE Using the Buttons Below

Friday Funny: Cat Plays Jenga Better Than Owner

A Jenga-playing cat is amazingly talented at dismantling the tower of blocks—one brick at a time.

And, we thought this was a game of skill only for humans…

RELATED: Watch This Rescue Bunny Reign as the Furry Champ of Jenga

SHARE the Fun With Your Cat Friends on Social Media…

Cops to Issue More “Tickets” This Summer Using “Profiling”

Brimfield-Police-Chief-David-Oliver-no-mopes-cup
Brimfield Police Chief David Oliver has a “No Mopes” policy

The Brimfield, Ohio Police Department announced this week that they are redoubling their efforts in the name of safety, pulling over as many citizens as they can. Not only that, they are profiling a certain group known to “travel in groups”.

Before you ask where the good news lies in this disturbing information, read part of the full announcement that Chief David Oliver posted on Facebook, to the delight of 18,500 people:

Under my command, we have always been an agency which has not issued a lot of tickets. We make a good amount traffic stops and arrests, yet we issue few citations. That all changes on Monday, June 9th, 2014.

For the summer, we will become an agency with a mission to write tons of tickets. We are not doing this for the revenue. We are doing it for your own good.

As part of this mission, we will be profiling a certain group of people. If you belong to this group of people, I will not apologize for the inconvenience if you are stopped. It is not harassment, so don’t go there. I am ordering my officers to stop anyone belonging to this specific group, we will immediately stop the person or persons (sometimes they travel in groups) and give them a ticket.

As part of “Operation Safe Summer,” officers are ordered to stop anyone appearing to be 15 years of age or under who is riding a bicycle and wearing a helmet while doing so. They will then issue the youthful offender a ticket for a free ice cream cone from Frank’s Drive-in.

Last year we gave away nearly 200 free ice cream treats. It sent a strong message… and we are sending one again this year. Thank-you to Frank’s for the support again this year!

Chief Oliver has become quite the Facebook sensation. Even though his town has a population of only 10,000 with 14 full time officers, he’s managed to accumulate over 70,000 fans. His initial plan was to connect with the community and promote positive communication. Not only has he achieved this, but he’s been praised worldwide for his insistence that officers issue at least one goodwill ticket per shift, especially while “targeting” small children.

No_Mopes_Allowed-coverHe is also the author of a book, No Mopes Allowed: A Small Town Police Chief Rants and Babbles about Hugs and High Fives, Meth Busts, Internet Celebrity, and Other Adventures . . .

Story tip from Jeffery Scharn

French Families Adopt U.S. Soldiers for the Week, in Town for D-Day

French-family-hosts-US-soldiers-ArmyPhoto
Sgt. Tami VanZandt, Spc. Forrest Krenke and Spc. Ray Ortega, all assigned to the Special Troops Battalion, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, pose for a photograph with their French hosts before driving to their home June 4, 2014.

While dignified and solemn ceremonies today mark the courage and loss of life 70 years ago during the D-Day invasion, the long-lasting partnership between the U.S. and France is also on display. This friendship dates back to the American Revolution in 1780 when French troops arrived to help their American allies and George Washington to win their bid for independence.

50 French families opened their homes – and their hearts – this week to American soldiers visiting France to commemorate the Normandy Landing. The hosts showed the young Americans how well the French treat their guests.

“I had such an amazing time,” said Spc. Jessika Hurst, serving with the Commanding General’s Mounted Color Guard. “They just kept coming out with more and more food. It was crazy, yet so delicious.”

”We did this so our child could meet an American Soldier,” said Stephanie Folloit, a mother of two who opened her home up to four Soldiers. “He loves American Soldiers. He loves to read about them, he really looks up to them. But we also did this to say ‘thank you’ for what your grandfathers did for us.”

Folloit said she hoped her family could experience the visits again. “This was a great night,” she said. “I am happy to have met these Americans tonight.”