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Millions Paying Less Than $100 Per Month for Obamacare

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Many Americans doubted whether the Affordable Care Act passed by Congress — also known as Obamacare — would be able to offer low prices on health insurance for consumers.

Now the numbers are coming in, and it appears that for many Americans the health-insurance plans bought under the new government program are fairly affordable. Almost seven out of 10 people who bought plans through federally run marketplaces and who receive tax credits are paying monthly premiums of less than $100, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said on Wednesday.

Since October 1, 2013, over eight million Americans have selected a private health insurance plan through the the Health Insurance Marketplace where consumers can purchase health insurance plans in a competitive market.

69 percent of individuals selecting plans with tax credits have premiums of $100 or less after tax credits—nearly half (46 percent) have premiums of $50 or less after tax credits.

(READ the story from CBS News)

Google Pushes Girls into Coding with ‘Made With Code’ Program

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Writing software to run computer programs in 2014 is a world where men are seen doing all the “techie stuff, programming and computer science.”

Now Google is trying to change the gender disparity in its own workforce, and in the pipeline of potential workers.

A new website features female role-model techies and simple, fun coding lessons aimed at girls, along with a directory of coding programs for girls. The search giant is also offering $50 million in grants and partnering with the nonprofit Girls Who Code.

(READ the AP story in the San Jose Mercury-News)

A Wilderness Solution for Vets

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“Vets often go from a world with deep camaraderie, commitment, and excitement to a world where they are isolated, at loose ends, and bored,” said Nick Watson, explaining the concept of  Veterans Expeditions.

Watson speaks from experience—he is a former U.S. Army Ranger—and he knows just how psychologically perilous the military experience can be.

Having worked as an alpine guide and a counselor in wilderness therapy programs for over a decade, Watson, 40, also believes in the healing force of nature and was convinced that a vigorous outdoor experience would be tonic for veterans, a way for them to “reconnect with fellow soldiers, get outside, and push themselves in a healthy environment.”

(READ the full story from National Geographic)

Photo credit: Ross Vernal (Scottish Dream Photography) – CC license

Fewer Australians Reliant on Welfare Since 2001

A report shows working-age Australians are less reliant on welfare than they were a decade ago, with 5% fewer 18 to 64-year-olds receiving payments. (ABC)

Dance Teacher Pairs Jewish and Palestinian Children With Award-Winning Results

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“What I am asking them to do is to dance with the enemy,” says Pierre Dulaine in the 88-minute documentary, Dancing in Jaffa.

Dulaine, a four-time world champion ballroom dancer, is fulfilling a life-long dream, having taken his New York City program, Dancing Classrooms, back to his city of birth, Jaffa.

For generations, Jaffa has been a city divided by two communities that continue to grow increasingly apart. Palestinians and Israelis live together but often segregated lives.

Over a ten-week period, Dulaine teaches Jewish and Palestinian children to dance side by side, hand in hand, and compete together, working as a team. The 2013 film directed by Hilla Medalia focuses on the lives of three children, all of whom who are forced to confront issues of identity, segregation, and racial prejudice as they dance with their enemy. We watch this dance program transform their lives, confirming his belief that dance can overcome hatred and provide the first steps towards real change.

Dancing Classrooms, is still going strong two years after the ballroom dance legend began the program in his ancestral home. The film has won several audience awards after its world debut at the Tribeca Film Festival.

WATCH the fantastic video trailer below – Story tip from Judy Ritchie

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U.S. States Sign Regional Pact to Restore Chesapeake Bay

“An agreement to restore the Chesapeake Bay by protecting its vast drainage area from pollution was signed on Monday by officials that included governors from six U.S. states.”

“The Chesapeake Bay Watershed Agreement is aimed at restoring and conserving the 64,000-square-mile (166,000-square-km) watershed that drains into the bay, the biggest U.S. estuary.”

“The accord updates an existing agreement and marks the first time that Delaware, New York and West Virginia have pledged to work toward restoration goals in the bay that go beyond water quality.”

(READ the full story from Reuters)

“An Awakening” Thanks to Cancer

Karen-Rice-author-poetWhen I was diagnosed with Breast cancer a few years back, I reacted like most who receive that kind of news; first thing that came to mind was a “death sentence”. However, I found out later that it was truly “an awakening” for me. I began questioning God, why would you do this to me? What had I done in life so bad to have this placed upon me? But instead of bemoaning my fate, I decided to look for the positive side of it. There has to be a reason for it all.

I also realized that I was about to face a new beginning, new hopes to do and see more with a whole new perspective on life. When I think of the “gift of life” that was given to me, I know that I will develop and gain strength from all my experiences.

After going through all that I did during my breast cancer period, I was left with a few complications I now have to live with; one being daily pain. For a while, I wasn’t happy with the way I looked around my breast area after my first surgery, nor the pain I had to endure each day, but I decided to snap out of it — even after being diagnosed with another cancer (colon) a few years later, which totally took me by surprise. I thought to myself. Why another one? I even make jokes at times, while crying inside.

But even with the pain I had to endure through each diagnosis, and all the struggles I’ve dealt with all my life, I still feel truly blessed. I think about the individuals that are no longer among us. I also realized that there will always be someone worse off than I am. I reminded myself, that “I still have my life”, so who am I to complain.

One day, during one of my surgeries, I experienced something of a miracle, as if I went to the other side, so I felt the compulsion to write it down. I turned that experience into a poem and I called it “Peace”.

Writing had become therapy for me. I took that poem, along with many others I had composed during my breast cancer period and placed them into book form. I was blessed enough to have that book published and it’s titled “True Simple Poems of Life, Faith and Survival”. I later had another inspirational children’s book published and the third one should be out very soon, which talks about my whole experiences with both cancers. I’m hoping that anyone who has the opportunity to read the poems of my first book, will get out of them what I placed in all of them. My poems are from the heart, as real as any could ever be. With the words and phrases of each poem a statement, I wish to make a positive impact on someone who’s ill or otherwise, where they could develop the strength to embrace life in a whole new way.

True-Simple-Poems-of-Life-Faith-and-Survival-book-coverI never anticipated becoming a writer, I just became one. I truly believe when you survive a horrific tragedy or a horrible disease as cancer, it’s for a reason, “you have a purpose” and I want to live to find out exactly what that is for me.

That’s what I’m all about now, inspiration. I would have never become a writer, producing inspirational poems and stories, if I had not gone through all that I did. I’m a true example that you can survive cancer not once, but twice, providing you catch it in time, have faith and allow that faith to direct your path. I’ve not saying all will be easy, I had my moments from the beginning; when my breast cancer wasn’t found by the mammogram, it was detected by an Ultrasound. Either way, you must be tested, and no matter the outcome; be strong, deal with it and believe.

Karen Rice
x2 Cancer Survivor/Author

Instead of Sad Ads for Animal Rescue, Happy Dogs Walking Humans See 100% Adoption

Most pet adoption campaigns make us feel pity for the animals but in this one, it was the sad humans working all day in Melbourne, Australia offices that needed rescuing.

Cue the happy dogs ready to go for a walk in the park, and suddenly you had workers falling in love with dogs, with the result being a 100 percent adoption rate.

The Human Walking Program brought cute poodles and pugs in need of adoption and offered them as partners for a lunchtime walk.

(WATCH the cool video from Jake Barrow)

Cadillac Ranch Patron Remembered

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The Texas multimillionaire art prankster who paid people to plant 10 Cadillacs in the Texas dirt in the 1970s as “a monument to the American Dream” has passed away.

Beyond the Route 66 landmark known as “Cadillac Ranch,” Stanley Marsh 3 also commissioned a series of 200 crazy street signs around his hometown of Amarillo. Examples: “Road Does Not End”; “I Have Traveled a Great Deal in Amarillo”; “I Don’t Suppose Anyone Has a Tomato?”; “It Begins With a Hanging”; “What Is a Village Without Village Idiots?”and “My Grandmother Can Whip Your Grandmother.”

(READ more about Cadillac Ranch on Wikipedia)

‘Smart Glasses’ Help Fix Failing Vision

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Researchers from Oxford University say they’ve made a breakthrough in developing smart glasses for people with severe sight loss.

The glasses enhance images of nearby people and objects on to the lenses, providing a much clearer sense of surroundings.

They have allowed some people to see their guide dogs for the first time.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from BBC)

Approved Leukemia Drug Boosts Immunity Against Many Cancers

Fotointeresantes, CC license

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A class of drug currently being used to treat leukemia has the unexpected side-effect of boosting immune responses against many different cancers, reports a new study.

The drugs, called p110δ inhibitors, have shown such remarkable efficacy against certain leukemias in recent clinical trials that patients on the placebo were switched to the real drug. Until now, however, they have not been tested in other types of cancer.

The new study, led by scientists at University College London and the Babraham Institute, Cambridge and published in Nature, provides the first evidence that such drugs can significantly restrict tumor growth and spread and reduce the chances of relapse for a broad range of cancers. The researchers at UCL, the Babraham Institute and Queen Mary University of London, together with scientists from Genentech, South San Francisco, showed that inhibition of the p110δ enzyme helps to boost the body’s immune system to kill tumor cells. The research was funded by Cancer Research UK, the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council and the Wellcome Trust.

“Our study shows that p110δ inhibitors have the potential to offer effective immunity to many types of cancer by unleashing the body’s own immune response,” says study co-leader Professor Bart Vanhaesebroeck of the UCL Cancer Institute, who first discovered the p110δ enzyme in 1997. “p110δ is highly expressed and important in white blood cells, called ‘leukocytes’. Given that leukemias are the result of leukocytes becoming cancerous, they are a natural target for p110δ inhibitors. Now, we have shown that blocking p110δ also has the remarkable effect of boosting the body’s immune response against leukemias as well as other cancers.”

The team showed that inhibiting p110δ in mice significantly increased cancer survival rates across a broad range of tumor types, both solid and hematological cancers. For example, mice in which p110δ was blocked survived breast cancer for almost twice as long as mice with active p110δ. Their cancers also spread significantly less, with far fewer and smaller tumors developing. Survival after surgical removal of primary breast cancer tumors was also vastly improved, which has important clinical implications for stopping breast cancer from returning following surgery. The team’s data further show that following p110δ inhibition, the immune system could develop an effective memory response to completely fight off the cancer.

Lead author Dr Khaled Ali, who is now based at Amgen, San Francisco, says: “When we first introduced tumors in p110δ-deficient mice, we expected them to grow faster because p110δ is important for the immune system. Instead, some tumors started shrinking. When we investigated this unexpected effect, we found that p110δ is especially important in so-called regulatory T cells which are suppressive immune cells that the tumors engage to protect themselves against immune attack.”

The p110δ enzyme is a member of the PI3-kinase family, and is sometimes called PI3Kδ. p110δ and the other PI3Ks are hot drug targets for the pharmaceutical industry as they are implicated in many cancers and are readily treatable.

“Our work shows that p110δ inhibitors can shift the balance from the cancer becoming immune to our body’s defenses towards the body becoming immune to the cancer, by disabling regulatory T cells,” says study co-leader Dr Klaus Okkenhaug of the Babraham Institute, which receives strategic funding from the BBSRC. “This provides a rationale for using these drugs against both solid and blood cancers, possibly alongside cancer vaccines, cell therapies and other treatments that further promote tumor-specific immune responses.”

Professor Nic Jones, Cancer Research UK’s chief scientist and director of the Manchester Cancer Research Centre, said: “Treatments that train the immune system to recognize and kill cancer cells are showing huge promise in several types of cancer. This new finding, although only at an early stage, offers the potential to develop more treatments that can do this in many more cancers, including ones that have real need for more effective treatments such as pancreatic cancer.

“If the findings hold true in cancer patients this could make a big difference to many of them. The good news is that because the drugs used in this study are already being used in the clinic, we could see rapid translation of this research into patient benefit.”

(Source: UCL.ac.uk) Image by fotosinteresantes on Flickr, CC license

Homeless Runner Embraced by San Francisco Marathon

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Homeless runner Ronnie Goodman longed to run in the San Francisco Marathon in July. His story so touched the race’s organizers that they have made him a special part of the event.

Not only that, readers pooled their resources, after The S.F. Chronicle ran a story, so they could pay the $120 entry fee for the 53-year-old artist who sleeps under a San Francisco freeway.

Now, race organizers are featuring him as a fund-raiser for one of his favorite organizations — Hospitality House, a homeless resource center whose community arts program has helped Goodman hone his craft for years.

(READ the story in the San Francisco Chronicle)

Painting by Ronnie Goodman – Story tip from Jola Zandecki

Ex-con Saves Baby on Side of Road, Plays Gospel to Calm Her

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A Georgia man who served ten years for manufacturing cocaine is being credited with saving a 15-month-old baby he found alongside a highway.

Bryant Collins, an auto repair man who says he has been free and clean for five years, spotted the girl crawling alongside a Madison County highway, east of Atlanta.

“I had seen something out of the corner of my eye, and I thought it was a baby,” he said. “I just stopped and, when I got out, there was a baby…almost in the highway.”

Collins waited two hours until authorities concluded their questions, and played gospel music from his iPhone when the baby cried.

(WATCH the 11-Alive video below, or READ the story from WFXG)

Story tip from Lisa Bauman

Visiting Sick Kids, Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban Serenade Hospital Staff

The Monash Children’s Hospital in Victoria, Australia enjoyed an intimate concert in the neonatal ward Friday when Keith Urban began strumming a guitar and his actress wife, Nicole Kidman joined in.

The couple were in their home country to attend the Swisse Celebrate Life Ball, a charity event for the Celebrate Life Foundation.

Hospital staff and patients were treated to photos and autographs, and even a duet of Amazing Grace. Nicole, displaying a lovely voice, was one of the few in the room who knew the second verse.

The Australian couple will celebrate their eighth wedding anniversary on June 25 next week.

WATCH the video above…

Man Cuts Open Truck to Save Kitten

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Errand Frazier of Vero Beach wasn’t quite sure what to do at first when he heard purring coming from his Chevy pickup, parked outside his house.

Later he heard it again and took matters into his own hands. He reached for his toolbox, took out some sheet metal cutters and cut back the metal on the side of the truck bed. As he peeled it back, he spotted a kitten.

The cat was taken to a shelter and has since been adopted by a family. After the shelter shared the story of the rescue on their Facebook page, several people offered to help pay for the cost to repair Frazier’s vehicle.

(WATCH the video below, or READ the full story at CNN)

Hospital Gives Executive Bonus Pay to Low-Income Workers as a Raise

 

SEIU Janitors Protest Firing by JPMorgan Chase

Parkland Health & Hospital System in Dallas announced Wednesday a new plan to raise the minimum wage to $10.25 for 230 janitors, cafeteria workers and other low-wage employees. The $1.50 per hour raise will be funded with bonus checks previously paid to executives.

The hospital’s 60 vice presidents and top executives made the decision to cover the cost of $350,000 for a year. They hope that by providing a living wage they can improve workers’ morale.

“It is the right thing to do,” said Paula Dobbs-Wiggins, MD, chair of the Board’s Employee Relations Executive Compensation Committee. “(We are) recognizing the importance and value of all our employees to fulfilling our mission.”

Paying higher wages can make good economic sense for companies because it can result in lower employee turnover and save money on training.

“It helps us recruit and maintain a higher caliber of staff at all levels inside Parkland,” said Jim Dunn, PhD, Executive Vice President and Chief Talent Officer at Parkland.

Other companies have voluntarily raised their minimum wages lately, including the retailer Gap, which boosted its lowest pay to $10 an hour.

[Photo credit: SEIU workers, New York City – CC license]

Major Democratic Achievement for Afghanistan

Last week’s presidential election in Afghanistan marked the first-ever democratic transfer of power from one elected leader to another in Afghan history.

Check Out This Photo of the Bahamas From Space For Caribbean Heritage Month

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To celebrate Caribbean Heritage Month decreed to be June in the United States, we wanted to show you this photo captured by a crew member on the International Space Station: Tidal flats and channels on Long Island, Bahamas.

The islands of the Bahamas in the Caribbean Sea are situated on large depositional platforms (the Great and Little Bahama Banks) composed mainly of carbonate sediments ringed by fringing reefs — the islands themselves are only the parts of the platform currently exposed above sea level.

The sediments are formed mostly from the skeletal remains of organisms settling to the sea floor; over geologic time, these sediments will consolidate to form carbonate sedimentary rocks such as limestone. This detailed photograph provides a view of tidal flats and tidal channels near Sandy Cay on the western side of Long Island, located along the eastern margin of the Great Bahama Bank.

The continually exposed parts of the island have a brown coloration in the image, a result of soil formation and vegetation growth. To the north of Sandy Cay an off-white tidal flat composed of carbonate sediments is visible; light blue-green regions indicate shallow water on the tidal flat. Tidal flow of seawater is concentrated through gaps in the anchored land surface, leading to formation of relatively deep tidal channels that cut into the sediments of the tidal flat. The channels, and areas to the south of the island, have a vivid blue coloration that provides a clear indication of deeper water.

(NASA, 11/27/10)

Cop Becomes Foster Dad, Sacrifices to Provide 2 Boys a Good Life

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A Pittsburgh police pursuit drove Detective Jack Mook, a perennial bachelor, to become a father.

Mook, a trainer at Steel City Boxing, told himself that the troubles of brothers Josh and Jessee Lyle were not his own as long as the boys arrived at the North Side gym for their almost-daily workouts. Then they stopped showing up and their guardian fled from police, crashing into a car and an embankment in the North Side.

“I said, ‘Enough is enough. I want those kids,’ ” said Mook, 44. “They could’ve been in that car.”

And he’s pursuing permanent adoption with the support of the boys’ mother, a drug addict.

“This is an amazing story about a cop (who I grew up with) stepping up and adopting two at risk youth,” said Christopher Lazzara, who sent the link to us.

(READ the story, with photos, from Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)

(Above) Unrelated Photo by Elliot Margolies on Flickr – CC license

Rescue Workers in Turkey Help Dog Rescue her Pups

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A heroic stray dog has saved her puppies from a drainage canal after rescue teams asked for her help in the southwestern Turkish province of Muğla on June 7.

Erhan Erol, a resident, called firefighters as he noticed eight puppies that were stuck in a drainage canal at the beach near the tourist town of Bodrum. The puppies were about to be drowned as the canal was slowly filling with seawater.

(READ the full story, with more photos, from Hurriyet Daily News)