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Former Corporate Shark Feeds The Hungry

Food Server at Loaves and Fishes-FBphoto

Food Server at Loaves and Fishes-FBphotoDavid Gerson drives an aging Volvo station wagon with a coffee stain on the passenger seat –hardly the type of car usually driven by successful corporate tax lawyers who negotiate billion-dollar mergers in Silicon Valley. David, 62, however, is what some might call a reformed lawyer.

That 25-year law career never quite fulfilled him, so in 2011 he took a job feeding the poor.

As the executive director of Loaves and Fishes of Contra Costa, a nonprofit that operates five East Bay dining rooms, David has steered the organization that had been struggling with reduced funding and increased demand, toward greater stability.

Beyond that, his fresh perspective, born of years as a corporate shark for high tech companies, has led to a strategic shift toward forming partnerships with other nonprofit, faith-based, and government organizations.

Increasingly, however, Loaves and Fishes is using its dining rooms to host organizations that offer services ranging from health care and job training to transitional and permanent housing for homeless veterans. David says that the people who come to the dining rooms for meals often have no access to health care, need training in order to find jobs that pay a livable wage, and are, in some cases, homeless or in need of mental health services. It was a natural step to efficiently connect them with available services.

This integrated services approach isn’t widely used in the suburban county of Contra Costa, and the effort is meeting broad support, adding fuel to Loaves and Fishes’ growth.

David’s desire to act as a positive force for change speaks to an infectious optimism he traces to his childhood. “I came of age in the Sixties,” he says with a smile. “I’ve always felt, from those years, a broader sense of community. It felt empowering to be part of a larger whole and to treat everyone as an equal and provide opportunities to everyone.”

Even during his years as a lawyer, David volunteered in his community. He was on the board of Shelter Inc., a nonprofit focused on ending homelessness in Contra Costa County and a current partner of Loaves and Fishes. (He’s quick to add that his former partners were good people and always contributed generously to community causes.)

“The hardest challenge for me (today) is going out to our dining rooms and seeing people who were living in poverty, and then every evening driving back over the hill into Lafayette,” he says of the disparity between his affluent neighborhood and the problems so close at hand.

But he has the right to be content, knowing he is a big part of the solution. So, each morning David climbs into his trusty Volvo and heads out to feed the hungry, and he feeds his soul at the same time.

Contact Loaves and Fishes of Contra Costa to donate food or money, as well as volunteer. Also check their schedule for an April poker tournament and June garden party and follow them on Facebook.

(Originally published by Truth Atlas, reprinted with permission)

Couple Wins Lottery 3x in a Month: “Baby, We Did Again!”

lottery winners win 3x in a month-VAlottery

lottery winners win 3x in a month-VAlotteryWhile everyone else is complaining about the weather, Calvin and Zatera Spencer experienced a March to remember.

It sounds like an April Fool’s joke, but the Virginia couple actually did win big money in three different Virginia lottery games all within a single month.

They won $1 million in the March 12 Powerball drawing. Then on March 26, Mr. Spencer won $50,000 with 10 winning tickets in the Virginia Lottery’s Pick 4 game, for which he played the numbers 6-6-6-6.

Teen Shows US Can Save $100 Million by Switching Fonts

font can save 100mil-CBSvid

font can save 100mil-CBSvidA 14-year-old from Pittsburgh says he’s found a way to save taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars, and his idea started as a school science fair project.

Suvir Mirchandani was still in middle school when his science fair project showed that changing the typeface on printed documents could save a lot of ink — and, ink, it turns out, is much more expensive than paper. By following Suvir’s font style recommendation, 24% less ink would be used and $20,000 per year could be saved in a single Pennsylvania school district.

Baby, 2, Dials Police All By Himself When Mum Collapses

boy dials 999 to save mom

boy dials 999 to save momA two-year-old toddler in the UK dialed the emergency number, 999, after his mum collapsed on the floor.

East Midlands Ambulance Service said Riley Ward told operators “mummy’s asleep”.

Paramedics rushed to the house in Barrow upon Soar, Leicestershire, and took his mother to the hospital for emergency surgery for a blood clot.

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

Humanitarian Drones to Deliver Medical Supplies to Roadless Areas

drone by Matternet

drone by MatternetAndreas Raptopoulos wants to use aerial drones to save  lives.

Unmanned vehicle technology makes remote and hazardous areas accessible, whenever a family needs medicine but floods and muddy roads have cut off travel, a seasonal occurrence in some parts of Africa.

That idea soon became a start-up called Matternet – a network for transporting matter – which aims to help the one billion people who do not have year-round access to roads.

(READ the story in the Guardian)

 

Study Shows We Work Harder If We’re Given Chocolate

chocolates Flickr-eszter-CC

chocolates Flickr-eszter-CCEconomists testing the idea that happy employees work harder found that doses of chocolate or laughter made people 12% more productive at their jobs.

The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Warwick, included four different experiments with more than 700 participants.

Firefighting Robot Can Walk Through Flames

robot firefighter-SAFFIR-USNavalResearchLab

robot firefighter-SAFFIR-USNavalResearchLabFighting fires, with their extreme unpredictability, high temperatures and the resulting damage to structures, can prove challenging for even the most seasoned firefighter. Autonomous robots that can walk directly into flames and see through black smoke would be a handy assistant to any fire chief for the control and assessment of fires.

It turns out the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory has for several years been developing just such a safety tool to be used aboard Navy ships.

Sisters Find Each Other After 66 years Apart (Video)

sisters reunite after 66 years-NBCvid

sisters reunite after 66 years-NBCvidA pair of sisters left at an orphanage and adopted by different parents more than 60 years ago never lost hope that one day they would reunite.

They started searching online many years ago, until one day recently when they talked for the first time in 66 years.

“Ever since we started talking, it’s like we’ve never been apart.”

(WATCH the video below from NBC News)

School Hosts Event Encouraging Random Acts of Kindness Toward Strangers

smiles on Ayden Byle chalkboard TorontoStarvideo

smiles on Ayden Byle chalkboard TorontoStarvideo15-year-old Lexi Di Benedetto and her parents spread out around the neighborhood on Saturday morning talking part in Our Lady of Peace School’s first “Love It Forward” event.

The teen met a homeless man and asked him if he’d like some lunch, and handed him a Del Taco bag and some water.

“Thank you, Lexi, thank you,” he said with a smile on his face.

100 or so community members showed up at the school and were given a list of 105 ideas to spread love in the North Hills area of Los Angeles.

(READ the story in the LA Daily News)

U.K. Renewable Electricity Generation Rose 28 Percent in 2013

According to the Department of Energy and Climate Change, renewable power generation in the U.K. rose 28 percent in 2013 as more wind farms and solar plants came online. (Bloomberg)

12 Million More Kids in School is Ethiopian Success

classroom Africa-USAID

classroom Africa-USAIDThe number of children attending primary school in Ethiopia has skyrocketed since 1994 when just 3 million pupils were being educated. By 2008, primary enrollment had risen to 15.5 million – an increase of over 500%.

“Benefiting from sustained growth, the Ethiopian government, in  partnership with donors, has invested heavily in improving access to education,” according to a report funded by the Gates Foundation. “Key measures have included abolishing school fees, increasing expenditure on school construction and maintenance, and hiring and training thousands of new teachers.”

(READ the story from Ethiopian Time)

Photo from Ethipia’s Rift Valley, USAID

‘Soup Ladies’ Cook Up Comfort for Landslide Search Crews

Lunch Ladies disaster volunteers-NBCvideo

Lunch Ladies disaster volunteers-NBCvideoFew things offer as much comfort as a home-cooked meal.

A big-hearted restaurant owner known as “Momma” leads a group in Arlington, Washington called the Soup Ladies. They are feeding hot meals to search and rescue workers at the site of a tragic mudslide 70 miles away in Oso.

They’ve been doing it for ten years now, serving food to responders wherever disaster strikes — Hurricane Katrina, the tornado in Joplin, Missouri, and Superstorm Sandy. This time, the tragedy struck in their own back yards.

Other people near Oso, are also doing what they can to help. Boy Scouts organizing a food drive for families left homeless, and a high school that made 1300 lunches for search teams.

(WATCH the Making a Difference video from NBC News)

Media Helps Mom Give Lonely Autistic Boy a Memorable Birthday

autism boys 12th bday-FB

autism boys 12th bday-FB11 year old Jeaden had one wish — to have a birthday party with lots of people.

Because he struggles socially, with mild autism and sensory processing, his birthdays have sometimes been a disappointment with only family members showing up.

For his twelfth birthday his mom was determined to give him a childhood party to remember. With the help of local media, who spread the word, businesses that donated, and a Facebook page she set up, the gathering, held at a local roller rink in Prince George, B.C., was a huge success.

The town rallied. The boy’s mom, Jolene, said about 200 people showed up. A bakery made a huge cake and Walmart donated drinks. The PG Rollergirls decorated the rink, and a girl’s softball club stayed to clean up. Hasbro toys heard that the boy loved Nerf battles and asked if they could send 9 huge Nerf guns.

The giant Nerf battle that resulted was Jeaden’s favorite part of Saturday’s soiree. The soft and foamy ammo flew all around, while participants dodged behind barricades set up across the roller derby floor.

“I’d heard about it on the radio and it just tugged my heart,” said Lisa Mayhew, who brought her whole family to the party. “I felt this was something I’d like to bring my kids to.”

People who heard about the story but couldn’t attend sent cards — some all the way from the Czech Republic. He was sent a local team jersey, and an autographed picture of a Canucks hockey star.

READ the story from CBC

-More photos on Facebook

Thanks to Craig Withers for submitting the link!

Town Rallies to Keep Animals From Starving at Ukrainian Zoo

deer in zoo

deer in zoo

Thousands of people in Ukraine lined up to bring fresh food for the animals and money for the operation of the Kharkiv Zoo when its officials declared an emergency after government funds had dried up.

Two days after the announcement, the zoo announced that it had received 77,603 visitors over three days. From families to business people, friends of the zoo brought vegetables, fruit, bread and money – lots of it. $124,159 was earned through ticket sales and donations during that weekend.

“We sincerely thank everyone who helped the zoo during these difficult days,” said the zoo in a statement. “To our call of ‘Save the Kharkov Zoo!’ it seems like the entire city responded. This weekend our zoo saw huge lines for tickets, tons of food, and lots of positive emotions. Your help and support for our neighbors on planet Earth revealed the compassion, kindness, and love that will always be part of humanity.”

”Everyone who came to the zoo during these days was able reach out to the wonderful world of animals, observe them, look into their eyes, and become more pure and more kind. Your actions showed us that the zoo is our city’s treasure, cared for and protected by all its residents.”

The zoo, which opened more than a century ago, also received support from caring people outside of Kharkov and the Ukraine. Moved by the plight of the elephant living there, Kate Woolf, the founder of the Lotus Elephant Sanctuary, set up an online fundraiser at GoFundMe for international supporters, and it raised $5,000 in five days. An expat American living in Kharkov first blogged about the problem, and later set up a Facebook page to spur donations and let people know what is happening. Get Katherine‘s updates at Facebook.com/KharkivZooFriends.

Watch the Zoo’s video below…

(Enable the translate feature on YouTube to hear the zoo’s words in language other than Russian)

Water, Wildlife Surge Back into Once-parched Colorado River Delta

water flow at Morelos Dam-AzwaterDotGov

water flow at Morelos Dam-AzwaterDotGovOsvel Hinojosa knew that an infusion of water would bring the Colorado River delta back to life. But in just a few days, a U.S.-Mexican experiment to revive the delta environment has exceeded his expectations.

The water is running deeper, faster and wider than anticipated in a channel that was once bone-dry. Hinojosa has spotted hawks, egrets and ospreys flying above the newly flowing water. He’s even seen beavers.

“It’s just amazing to see that we can recover the river and see it alive again,” said Hinojosa, water and wetlands program director at Pronatura Noroeste, a Mexican water conservation group.

The release of water is historic because the river itself hasn’t seen its delta or reached the sea for half a century.

(READ the story from the LA Times)

Goodyear ‘Highway Hero’ Risked Life at Burning Tanker Wreck

feed-the-children-truck.jpg

trucker of the year-2914-GoodyearA truck driver who rescued another trucker who had fallen from a burning tanker truck that was hanging over the side of a freeway overpass has been named the 31st Goodyear Highway Hero.

Chosen from four finalists, Ivan Vasovic of Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., accepted the 31st Goodyear North America Highway Hero Award Thursday during the Mid-America Trucking Show.

Vasovic was in his truck in Los Angeles, Calif., last October when he witnessed a double tanker truck hit the concrete divider of a freeway overpass, careen off a wall and slam into a guard rail. Its tanks, which were full of diesel, ripped open and the truck came to a stop with its tractor and first tanker hanging over the side of the overpass.

The truck’s driver was trapped inside when the diesel ignited. The driver, now on fire, kicked out a window, slid down the truck and fell to the ground, breaking an arm and leg. By that point, the suspended truck was engulfed in flames with black clouds of smoke billowing from it.

Vasovic and another bystander tried to pull the injured driver to safety. However, due to the intense heat, they could only drag him a few yards at a time. Vasovic dashed back to his truck and poured water on himself, which enabled him to drag the badly injured driver 20 yards away from his original position. Moments later, the burning truck crashed to the ground.

“Ivan’s quick thinking and brave actions saved a fellow truck driver from a life-threatening situation,” said Gary Medalis, marketing director, Goodyear Commercial Tire Systems. “He literally put himself in harm’s way to save another person’s life. Ivan’s decision to interject himself into this deadly scenario is a powerful example of the selflessness exhibited by professional truck drivers. He has earned the right to be called a Highway Hero.”

As the 31st Goodyear Highway Hero Award winner, Vasovic receives a special Highway Hero ring, a $5,000 prize and other items.

Vasovic and three other truck drivers were selected as finalists for the 31st Goodyear Highway Hero Award. Other finalists include:

Highway Heros Goodyear logoBrian Dunn, a driver from Knoxville, Tenn. Dunn was driving down a highway in Oklahoma when he saw a car crash through a guard rail and land on its roof in the middle of the road. He ran to the car as its engine caught fire. Running back to his truck to grab his fire extinguisher, Dunn heard a child crying. He spotted a two-year-old boy who was trapped in the back seat of the burning car. Braving the flames, Dunn yanked on the car’s door until it gave way, allowing him to rescue the child, whom he then handed to bystanders. Dunn ran back to his car for his fire extinguisher while other bystanders tried to rescue the boy’s mother, who had driven the car. They later learned that she died as a result of the crash.

Tim Horton, a driver from Sheridan, Ark. Horton was driving outside Tuscaloosa, Ala., when a small car passed his truck, lost control and drove into a 35-foot-deep ravine, landing upside down in a creek bed. The car’s driver, a teenager, was trapped inside the car and had suffered a large cut on his head. Horton flagged down the driver of another vehicle, who happened to be a volunteer firefighter. The two men made their way down the steep, brush-covered embankment. They found the teenager alive, but bleeding heavily. Horton cut the teenager’s seat belt and pulled him from the car. After Horton and the volunteer firefighter stabilized the teenager’s condition, Horton called for additional help. It took 10 men using a 50-foot fire ladder to transport the teenager to a waiting ambulance.

Scott Rosenberg, a driver from Isanti, Minn. Rosenberg had just completed a delivery in Stillwater, Minn., when he spotted a pickup truck that was upside down in a pond with steam rising from it. At the time, Rosenberg was driving a trailer with a boom crane used for loading heavy concrete products. Acting quickly, he positioned his crane in place, hoping to flip the pickup over and back onto its wheels. In the meantime, two other men had reached the pickup and were trying to pry its doors open, to no avail. Using his crane, Rosenberg turned the pickup right-side up. Its driver, a college student who had fallen asleep at the wheel, was still alive. Police then arrived and pulled him from the vehicle.

“Each of our Highway Hero Award finalists is a hero in his own right,” said Medalis. “We are honored to recognize these selfless individuals for their acts of courage and compassion. They truly are a credit to their profession.”

Established in 1983, the Goodyear Highway Hero Award honors professional truck drivers who put themselves in harm’s way to help others as they travel the highways and roads of North America. The Highway Hero Award is one of several Goodyear awards, such as Goodyear’s “Put More Good on the Road” Award, that recognizes deserving individuals for their selfless deeds.

RELATED: Truckers Who Saved Others are Finalists for Highway Hero Award

ALSO: Trucking Hero: ‘Something Inside Me Made Me Stop’

Greece Is Pulling Off an Amazing Recovery

Athens by Rob and Lisa Meehan-CC

Athens by Rob and Lisa Meehan-CCOn the week of their nation’s Independence Day, Greece has a reason to celebrate with its friends once again. Just like in the 1820s, when British, French, and Russian naval forces arrived to help Greece overthrow the Ottoman Empire, which had ruled there since 1453, the inexpensive loans offered by the European Union in the 21st century rescued Athens from financial catastrophe to preserve that hard-fought independence.

Just two years ago, Greece was on the ropes. Today, investors are increasingly confident of the nation’s ability to pay its debts. Rarely has a country repaired its image with creditors so quickly.

In the short run, cheap loans from foreign lenders gave them the time needed to adjust their spending to the point that now, they are expected to return to economic growth this year.

(READ the story from Bloomberg News)

Thanks to Harley Hahn for submitting the link.
Photo by Rob and Lisa Meehan-CC

Long-Lost Renoir Returned to Baltimore Museum

painting-Renoir-On the Shore of the Seine

painting-Renoir-On the Shore of the SeineA tiny Renoir painting has returned home to a gallery in the Baltimore Museum of Art nearly 63 years after it was stolen and then kept mysteriously hidden for decades until it resurfaced in 2012.

Museum officials were thrilled and a little teary-eyed when it was returned to its rightful home.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s painting “On the Shore of the Seine,” from about 1879, will be unveiled Sunday as the centerpiece of a new exhibition, “The Renoir Returns.”

“It’s a moment we’ve been looking forward to,” said museum director Doreen Bolger. “I always believed in my heart that it would come back … It’s what we’re about: preserving works of art.”

(READ the story from ABC News)

Deaf Woman Shocked to Hear for the First Time (Video)

cochlear implant video-Midlands Centre-UK

cochlear implant video-Midlands Centre-UKA 39-year-old woman in the UK  burst into sobs when hearing someone speak for the first time.

Joanne Milne, from Gateshead, was born deaf and began going blind in her 20s, but thanks to cochlear implants received at Midlands Implant Centre at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, she can now live a more full life.

“Hearing things for the first time is so, so emotional, from the ping of a light switch to running water. I can’t stop crying.

Mother’s Invention Helps Disabled Son and Countless Others to ‘Walk’

A revolutionary harness designed by a mother to give her wheelchair-bound son a chance to walk has parents cheering.

Debby Elnatan, whose son Rotem has cerebral palsy, said the idea for a support harness came from her own “pain and desperation”, but will go on to make lives easier for countless families across the world struggling with disability.

It was designed to enable Rotem to stand upright and, by attaching it to herself, Ms Elnatan and her son could take steps together.

The mom is from Israel, but a Northern Irish company agreed to manufacture a commercial version in 2014. Called the Upsee, it can facilitate gradual weight-bearing, standing and walking with the assistance of an adult.

The mobility harness for children with motor impairments is selling on Amazon.com for $625.

WATCH the videos below

READ the story in the Independent

Thanks to Sue Leland-Mckenzie for submitting the link on our Facebook Page!