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The Choice Bus – Half School Bus, Half Prison Bus Teaches Kids Consequences

Choice_Bus_Mattie_C_Stewart_Foundation
The Mattie C. Stewart Foundation was named after an Alabama man’s mother, who was shot by his father in front of his eyes when he was boy.

The Birmingham youth ended up homeless and in poverty, and might have chosen the wrong path, were it not for a school teacher who encouraged him to do his best.

Today, Dr. Shelley Stewart is a successful businessman who wants to make an impact on youth. His Choice Bus, fabricated to be half school bus and half jail cell, creates a dramatic and lasting impression on middle and high school students across Alabama.

Instead of creating programs to keep students in school, Stewart developed a fleet of three buses, a dramatic film and learning tools that help young people understand the consequences and rewards of the choices they make.

The front of the bus looks like a normal school bus, but the back is a replica of a jail cell complete with authentic prison bars, bunk beds and a standard issue stainless toilet.

“We designed our tools to let young people and their families experience first-hand the powerful benefits of education and the likely consequences that await high school dropouts,” said the Foundation’s Executive Director Sherri Stewart. “We know from student and teacher testimonies that we’re having a positive impact on their choice to stay in school.”

(READ the story from The Daily Home – Visit www.mattiecstewart.org or check out their Facebook page)

Thanks to Mike McGinley for submitting the link!

 

Husband In Pink Tutu Still Helping Breast Cancer Patients (New Film)

Tutu Project - photo by Bob Carey

 


In March 2012 we featured the story of a man wearing pink tutus and making brilliant photographs for his wife, who had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Their Tutu Project has since gained many fans. Their Carey Foundation has raised funds to provide support for breast cancer patients and their families. They also won the opportunity to be featured in a beautiful short film from Deutsche Telekom.
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Tutu Project - photo by Bob Carey

For photographer Bob Carey and his wife Linda, a big hairy man in a pink tutu has taken on special meaning in their fight against breast cancer.

When Linda was recovering from surgery, Bob discovered something he could do to ease the stress. He took photos of himself in odd locations wearing a pink tutu.

“It makes us laugh,” Linda told Yahoo News.

Oddly enough, the cancer has taught the couple that life is good.

“Dealing with it can be hard,” they wrote on their website. “But, sometimes the very best thing—no, the only thing—we can do to face another day is to laugh at ourselves, and share a laugh with others.”

Mr. Carey has now shot more than 110 images of himself in tutus — in the desert, in Times Square, in a snow storm. So far, there has been a tremendous response to the series of photos.

He plans to compile them into a book called ‘Ballerina’ which will be published this fall and raise money to assist others suffering from the disease.

In the first week after the website’s launch on March 12, it raised $8000 from pre-sales of autographed books, tee shirts and donations.

Visit the site to see more photos or contribute –  www.theTutuProject.com

Thanks to Kimberly Nielsen for submitting a link to the new video!

 

Positive April Jobs Report Blows Past Expectations

businesswoman w colleagues-MConnors-Morguefile

businesswoman w colleagues-MConnors-MorguefileThe U.S. economy added 288,000 jobs in April, many more than economists and Wall Street analysts had predicted. The unemployment rate also fell to 6.3%, the lowest level in more than five years.

The biggest gains were in the professional and business services sector, which includes everything from temporary help services, which added 24,000 jobs in April, to company management. New jobs in retail sales, construction and health services also helped fuel last month’s gains.

(READ more at MSNBC)

Photo by MConnors – CC via Morguefile

 

A Farm Grows in Brooklyn—on the Roof

chicago-rooftop-farm_ChicagoBotanicGardenPhoto

You’ve heard of rooftop gardens? Now there are rooftop farms, complete with chickens, starting to appear across the globe on sunny expanses of warehouse roofs.

Rooftop farming was born out of the green-roof movement, in which building owners cover roofs with vegetation atop special waterproof membranes.

The benefits are numerous to the building owner, as well as the community.

  • provides insulation for the building
  • keeps cooling costs down because the roof doesn’t get as hot
  • absorbs storm runoff, particularly helpful during flooding
  • adds more oxygen and absorbs carbon in the air
  • creates a habitat for local birds, butterflies and bees
  • brings color to an otherwise drab landscape

Rooftop farms take the green-roof concept a step further, with plots that provide fruits and vegetables for local residents and the chance for urban volunteers to become part-time farmers.

(READ the story from National Geographic)

(READ more about rooftop farming at NPR)

Photo: Harvesting lettuce at the Chicago Botanic Garden’s 20,000-square-foot vegetable garden atop McCormick Place West, courtesy CBG

 

Teenager Takes His Great-Grandmother to Prom

senior_prom_with_great_grandmother-YouTube

A  student from Rockford, Ohio who learned that his great-grandmother had not gone to the prom when she was in high school would not relent until she agreed to let him escort her to his own high school formal.

Austin Dennison first took Delores Dennison, 89, for dinner at Bob Evans (her favorite restaurant) and then the two took the dance floor — and video of their slow-dancing has gotten national attention.

The two were home by 9 p.m., which is later than Delores normally goes to bed, the Times Bulletin reported. Next up, Austin, a senior and an Eagle Scout, plans to attend Florida Gulf Coast University.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from Yahoo News *NOTE Auto-playing audio, so adjust your speakers)

Thanks to Lisa M. Bauman for submitting the news!

Violence Against US Children Drops

A comparison of 50 types of violence against American children revealed significant declines of up to 50-63% in 27 of the categories, including assault, bullying, and sexual victimization — and no increases — between 2003 and 2011. – Study by Crimes Against Children Research Center. (CNN)

Giving Your Ideas Some Legs: Study Finds Walking Improves Creativity

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Steve Jobs, the late co-founder of Apple, was known for his walking meetings. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg has also been seen holding meetings on foot. And perhaps you’ve paced back and forth on occasion to drum up ideas.

A new study by Stanford researchers found support for the intuitive urge to move. Creativity levels in people rose by an average of 60 percent if they walked instead of staying seated.

The study, co-authored by Marily Oppezzo, a Stanford doctoral graduate in educational psychology, and Daniel Schwartz, a professor at Stanford Graduate School of Education, found that walking indoors or outdoors similarly boosted creative inspiration. The act of walking itself, and not the environment, was the main factor. Across the board, creativity levels were consistently and significantly higher for those walking compared to those sitting.

Walking vs. sitting

Other research has focused on how aerobic exercise generally protects long-term cognitive function, but until now, there did not appear to be a study that specifically examined the effect of non-aerobic walking on the simultaneous creative generation of new ideas and then compared it against sitting, Oppezzo said.

A person walking indoors – on a treadmill in a room facing a blank wall – or walking outdoors in the fresh air produced twice as many creative responses compared to a person sitting down, one of the experiments found.

“I thought walking outside would blow everything out of the water, but walking on a treadmill in a small, boring room still had strong results, which surprised me,” Oppezzo said.

The study, published this week in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition, also found that creative juices continued to flow even when a person sat back down shortly after a walk.

Gauging creative thinking

The research comprised four experiments involving 176 college students and other adults who completed tasks commonly used by researchers to gauge creative thinking.

Participants were placed in different conditions: walking indoors on a treadmill or sitting indoors – both facing a blank wall – and walking outdoors or sitting outdoors while being pushed in wheelchair – both along a predetermined path on the Stanford campus. Researchers put seated participants in a wheelchair outside to present the same kind of visual movement as walking.

Different combinations, such as two consecutive seated sessions, or a walking session followed by a seated one, were also compared. The walking or sitting sessions used to measure creativity lasted anywhere from 5 to 16 minutes, depending on the tasks being tested.

Two lively seniors - Photo by Sun StarThree of the experiments relied on a “divergent thinking” creativity test. Divergent thinking is a thought process or method used to generate creative ideas by exploring many possible solutions. In these experiments, participants had to think of alternate uses for a given object. They were given several sets of three objects and had four minutes to come up with as many responses as possible for each set. A response was considered novel if no other participant in the group used it. Researchers also gauged whether a response was appropriate. For example, a “tire” could not be used as a pinkie ring.

The overwhelming majority of the participants in these three experiments were more creative while walking than sitting, the study found. In one of those experiments, participants were tested indoors – first while sitting, then while walking on a treadmill. The creative output increased by an average of 60 percent when the person was walking, according to the study.

A fourth experiment evaluated creative output by measuring people’s abilities to generate complex analogies to prompt phrases. The most creative responses were those that captured the deep structure of the prompt. For example, for the prompt “a robbed safe,” a response of “a soldier suffering from PTSD” captures the sense of loss, violation and dysfunction. “An empty wallet” does not.

The result: 100 percent of those who walked outside were able to generate at least one high-quality, novel analogy compared to 50 percent of those seated inside.

No link to focused thinking

But not all thought processes are equal. While the study showed that walking benefited creative brainstorming, it did not have a positive effect on the kind of focused thinking required for single, correct answers.

walking-trail-trust-public-land.jpg“This isn’t to say that every task at work should be done while simultaneously walking, but those that require a fresh perspective or new ideas would benefit from it,” said Oppezzo, now an adjunct faculty member at Santa Clara University.

Researchers gave participants a word-association task, commonly used to measure insight and focused thinking. Given three words, participants had to generate the one word that could be used with all three to form compound words. For instance, given the words “cottage, Swiss and cake,” the correct answer is “cheese.”

In this test, those who responded while walking performed mildly worse than those who responded while sitting, according to the study.

Productive creativity involves a series of steps – from idea generation to execution – and the research, Oppezzo said, demonstrated that the benefits of walking applied to the “divergent” element of creative thinking, but not to the more “convergent” or focused thinking characteristic of insight.

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The study’s strong findings will have legs, leading to further research on the neurological and physiological pathways, Schwartz predicts. One possible future research issue: Is it walking per se or do other forms of mild physical activity have similar elevating effects?

In the meantime, “we already know that physical activity is important and sitting too often is unhealthy. This study is another justification for integrating bouts of physical activity into the day, whether it’s recess at school or turning a meeting at work into a walking one,” Oppezzo said. “We’d be healthier, and maybe more innovative for it.”

May Wong is a writer for the Stanford News Service – Reprinted with permission
Top Photo: h.koppdelaney / (CC BY-ND 2.0) – Middle Photo: Sun Star

San Diego Airport Is First in World to Be Certified LEED Platinum

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San Diego International Airport became the first in the world to be awarded LEED Platinum — the highest environmental certification possible — for its new energy-efficient green terminal.

Sustainable features of the new terminal include a 3.3-megawatt solar array, low-flow water fixtures, drought-tolerant landscaping, energy-efficient or natural lighting, reflective roofs, storm drainage management and non-toxic interior construction materials and paints.

“Not only were we able to reduce our environmental footprint during the construction process, but we’ve constructed a new terminal that will be 32 percent more energy efficient than the standard code,” said Turner Construction operations manager Dan McGuckin.



The $907 million Green Build project, which installed ten new gates with parking, was completed $45 million under budget.

The solar panels on the terminal rooftop and parking lot will be installed under a separate contract to be completed later this year. A private investor will pay for the installation and sell the energy it produces back to the airport at a lower cost than would the local utility. The 20-year contract is a win-win deal for both Borrego Solar Systems and the Airport Authority, which expects to save 10-13% on their energy costs over the period.

In 2012, San Diego also became the first commercial airport in the US to install LEDs on its runways, guard lights, and airfield signs, lowering the airport’s electricity costs by $27,000 per month, according to Clean Technica.

(Read about more of the airport’s sustainability successes at CleanTechnica.com.)

Muslims Pursue Happiness in Viral Dance Video

Continuing the #HappyDay video theme of people dancing to the, now iconic, Pharrell Williams song, Chicago Muslims dance together at their favorite city landmarks during one weekend in April.

Band of Secret Strangers Giving “Crumbs of Hope” to Needy

Biscuit-Fund-logoPhilanthropy is often associated with millionaires. The Biscuit Fund is an anonymous army of around 50 ­volunteers who are mainly on low incomes – and have mostly met only through social media.

Many have disabilities and mental health issues, many are themselves going through tough times, all are dedicated to helping people in crisis with what small amounts they can spare.

They call themselves The Biscuit Fund because of the amount spent by ministers on biscuits. Last year, health ministers alone spent £100,000 on tea and biscuits in six months while savaging the NHS with cuts.

(READ about the stories of helpfulness in the Mirror)

[NOTE- This editor cautions: The video at the bottom of the Mirror story is entirely depressing.]

Thanks to Sarah for submitting the link via our Facebook page!

They are Learning to Say Sorry in the Middle East

Arab_and_jew-solidarity-CC-flickr spectraversaIn the past week, not one but two leaders – Turkish and Palestinian – made rare acknowledgements of the suffering of the ‘other.’

On the eve of the 99th anniversary of the deportation and massacre of Armenians under Ottoman rule, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan conveyed the country’s “condolences” to the grandchildren of the 600,000 to 1.5 million killed in what many regard as a genocide.

And just as Israel began marking Holocaust Remembrance Day, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas called the killing of 6 million Jews “the most heinous crime”  of the modern era and expressed “sympathy with the families of the victims and many other innocent people who were killed by the Nazis.”

(READ the story in the CS Monitor)

After Death Nanny Revealed to be Masterful Photographer: Vivian Maier

By “accident” a huge trunk filled with 100,000 films and negatives were discovered in 2007 that revealed, although Vivian Maier worked as a nanny, her great passion was photography. She died alone and no one knew her secret.

This video clip, from a documentary, “Finding Vivian Maier“, shows that once uncovered, her street photos — mostly taken in Chicago — took the art world by storm.

“Finding Vivian Maier traces the life story of the late Vivien Maier, a career nanny whose previously unknown cache of 100,000 photographs has earned her a posthumous reputation as one of America’s most accomplished and insightful street photographers.”

(READ a story in the Washington Post)

Thanks to Rafael Jimenez for submitting the news!

 

Giants Team to Honor Inspirational Boy

Raymond_Beasley-family-photoRaymond Beasley V, a fifth-grader from Brentwood and survivor of multiple brain tumor surgeries, will be honored before Wednesday night’s Giants game in San Francisco, the result of an optimistic award-winning essay he wrote for a Major League Baseball contest (read it here).

“Most people think I’m brave but I’m just committed to thinking only good thoughts, even when I’m sad or afraid.”

(READ the story from the SF Chronicle)

Thanks to Mike McGinley for submitting the link!

 

 

California’s High School Graduation Rate Passes 80% for First Time

graduation day hats-cnnvidFor the first time in California history, the high school graduation rate has surpassed 80%, mirroring a trend nationwide, officials announced Monday.

The numbers of Latino and African American students getting diplomas are increasing more rapidly than those of their white and Asian peers, suggesting that the state is succeeding in narrowing its academic achievement gap among racial groups, California education officials said.

(READ the story in the LA Times)

20 Ways to Show Your Mom Some Love on Mother’s Day (or Any Day!)

mom_and_daughter_look_like_sisters-SunStarMother’s Day comes early this year – on May 11 in the U.S.

Moms just want to be appreciated, so be sure to celebrate her whether you have money to spend or not. Here are some ways to make her laugh, to make her smile, and create some memorable moments.

DO IT!

If you’re light on cash, why not spend some quality time helping her usher in the digital age? Check out these five ways you can help your mom with her devices, or teach her a few things about tech. Think of it as a digital hug!

•   Transfer her photos to a DVD

•    Teach her how to Skype

•    Make her some iPod playlists

•    Show her some tips for her smart phone

•    Set up a Facebook or Twitter account

If she’s a techie already, give her some other personal service in a coupon book.

•    How about coupons for a home cooked meal so you can get together and enjoy a dinner – food always tastes better when someone cooks it for you!

•    Offer to clean the house or garage, wash her car, or do the laundry.

•    Teens can offer babysitting services, breakfast in bed, a foot massage, or keep their room clean for a month!

MAKE IT!

If you’re even a little bit creative, gather your art supplies and make these simple, personalized gifts that your mom will enjoy and cherish forever!

•    Make her a word cloud like the one pictured above using your family names. Wordle.net lets you choose colors that will match her home décor and print out your design. Frame it or put it on a t-shirt transfer. (Don’t have time to make your own? You can order a personalized word cloud on Etsy.com and download it at home.)

•    Fold her a bouquet of origami flowers – there are many places on the web to find instructions. Your local craft store is loaded with gorgeous paper.

•    Find a pretty note card and write her a thank you note for a fabulous childhood memory or ritual. When we were kids, my parents used to take us out and pick lilacs when they were in bloom – to this day, it is my favorite flower and the scent always brings back that incredible childhood memory. Moms want to know that you remember those little things!

You_Are_MY_Rock-painted-rock•    Gather your favorite family photos and make her a photo book or calendar. If you’re a Mac user, IPhoto is easy to use – click the ‘book’ or ‘calendar’ buttons on the bottom of the screen and you’re on your way. PC users can use Publisher software templates. (But leave time for delivery, with Mother’s Day falling on May 11.)

•    Gather some smooth river stones and some paint, and let your mom know that ‘home is where my mom is’.

BUY IT!

Don’t have a creative bone in your body? Check out these links where you can buy any of the Make it suggestions from above.

•    Family Personalized Word Cloud on Etsy

•    Mother’s Day Origami Flower Kit (Amazon.com)

•    Mother’s Day Do-it-yourself Poem Kit (Amazon.com)

•    Awkward Family Photos 2014 Wall Calendar (Amazon.com)

•    Mother’s Day – Handicraft Card Making Kit (Amazon.com)

•    Reason’s “I Love You” Stones (Amazon.com)

 

13 year-old Spreading Love

sidewalk-smiles-campaign-FB13 year old Julia from Morristown, NJ launched her Sidewalk Smiles Campaign hoping to inspire others to commit random acts of kindness.

Here is her FaceBook page to give you more info.

 

Optimism Associated with Lower Risk of Heart Failure

Optimistic older adults who see the glass as half full appear to have a reduced risk of developing heart failure, according to the latest study on the topic.

Researchers from the University of Michigan and Harvard University found that optimism—an expectation that good things will happen—among people age 50 and older significantly reduced their risk of heart failure. Compared to the least optimistic people in the study, the most optimistic people had a 73-percent reduced risk of heart failure over the follow-up period.

RELATED: Optimistic People Have Healthier Hearts, Study Finds

Eric Kim, a doctoral student in the U-M Department of Psychology and the study’s lead author, and colleagues analyzed data on 6,808 older adults from the Health and Retirement Study, a nationally representative panel study of people over age 50. Respondents, who were followed for four years, provided background information about themselves, health history and psychological data.

In order to help rule out the possibility that other factors could better explain the link between optimism and heart failure, the researchers adjusted for factors that might impact heart failure risk, including demographic factors, health behaviors, chronic illnesses and biological factors.

Higher optimism was associated with a lower risk of heart failure during the study’s follow-up period—a finding that could eventually contribute to creating new strategies in the health care industry to prevent or delay the onset of this epidemic, Kim said.

The researchers said that the protective effect of optimism might be explained by previous research, which has shown that optimism is associated with important health behaviors (eating healthier diets, exercising more, managing stress), enhanced physiological functioning and other positive health outcomes that are strongly linked with a decreased risk of heart failure.

MORE: Optimistic Spouse Better for Partner’s Health

A 2010 study was the first American research to find a very strong link between positive emotions and a lower risk of heart disease, an “independent relationship” spelled out through clear data, as opposed to just being based on a person’s own report of their attitude. A 2006 Dutch study showed a 50% lower risk from cardiovascular death for the elderly men identified as optimistic and studied over 15 years.

The study’s other authors were Jacqui Smith, a professor in U-M’s Department of Psychology and Institute for Social Research, and Laura Kubzansky, a professor at Harvard’s Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences. The findings appear online in the new issue of Circulation: Heart Failure.

– Photo by Sun Star

When Life Gives You Cancer, Make Lemonade (Stephen’s Story)


A 19 year old teenager with incurable cancer was just trying to enjoy life as much as possible, but now he is inspiring the world.

Stephen Sutton has been battling cancer since age 15. On January 13th 2013, shortly after finding out his disease was incurable, Stephen made a bucket list of 46 things he wanted to achieve in the near future. Since creating the list on Facebook Stephen has inspired a half million fans with his positivity and passion for life. He has achieved more than most would in a lifetime; resulting in him winning countless awards in recognition of his inspirational work, most notably he has raised over £560,000 for charity in just one year. This is not a sob story, this is Stephen’s Story.

Optimistic Spouse Better for Partner’s Health

old-couple-Flickr-CC-bravenewtraveler

elderly-couple-w-applesIf your spouse expects good things to happen, you may be reap better health as a result.

Having an optimistic spouse predicted better mobility and fewer chronic illnesses over time, even above and beyond a person’s own level of optimism, according to a new University of Michigan study of 3,940 adults.

Researchers used data from the Health and Retirement Study, a national study of American adults over age 50. The study’s 1,970 heterosexual couples were tracked for four years and reported on their physical functioning, health and number of chronic illnesses.

“A growing body of research shows that the people in our social networks can have a profound influence on our health and well-being,” said Eric Kim, a doctoral student in the U-M Department of Psychology and the study’s lead author. “This is the first study to show that someone’s else optimism could be impacting your own health.”

Past research found that social support may partly explain the link between optimism and enhanced health. Optimists are more likely to seek social support when facing difficult situations and have a larger network of friends who provide that support.

In addition, optimists engage in healthier lifestyles that simultaneously minimize health risk factors for illness, said Kim.

In close relationships, optimism predicts enhanced satisfaction and better cooperative problem-solving, like focusing on ways to protect against declining health.

“So practically speaking, I can imagine an optimistic spouse encouraging his or her partner to go to the gym or eat a healthier meal because the spouse genuinely believes the behavior will make a difference in health,” Kim said.

The study’s other authors included William Chopik, a graduate student in psychology, and Jacqui Smith, a professor in the Department of Psychology and Institute for Social Research. The findings appear in the current issue of Journal of Psychosomatic Research.

Photo (c) Sun Star

Muslim Man on Bus Gives His Shoes to Homeless Guy Who Had None

running shoes-Morguefile-Krosseel

Muslim_man_gives_shoes-graphic-Surjit_Singh_VirkPhotos
An off-duty bus driver saw a man without shoes on a bus in Surrey, B.C. and witnessed a stranger deciding to quietly do something about it.

The 27-year-old Islamic man, who didn’t want anyone to see his kind action, slipped the shoes under the man’s legs without a word. He said later that it was no big deal, just part of his Islamic faith and he wanted to remain anonymous.

The young man got off at the next stop while the off-duty bus driver, hoping to spread this story of compassion, asked the homeless man if he could take a picture.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story at CBC)

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Thanks to Shannon Pinkney West for submitting the link on our Facebook Page!