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Super Bowl: Peyton Manning Signing was Denver Broncos’ Gamble that Paid Off Big

Peyton Manning CC-Jeffrey Beall

Peyton Manning CC-Jeffrey BeallThe Broncos’ decision to sign Peyton Manning in March 2012 — after he’d had four surgeries on his neck, missed the entire 2011 season and was released by the Indianapolis Colts — has paid off handsomely.

He led the team to a stellar year that racked up the best offensive numbers in the NFL. They earned a chance to win the Super Bowl championship trophy tomorrow in the final game of the season against the Seattle Seahawks, which have the best defensive numbers in the the league.

What the Broncos did in signing Manning was a gamble. When Manning left the Colts and was searching for a new team, there were no assurances that he would be the same player again.

(READ the story in the Washington Post)

Home Depot, Chick-Fil-A and Others Open Doors to Snow-Stranded Drivers

chick-fila manager in snow-Lauren Dango-on-FB

chick-fila manager in snow-Lauren Dango-on-FBIt only took a few inches of snow to leave thousands of drivers stranded across the South, as inaccurate weather predictions and lack of planning led to havoc on Alabama and Georgia roadways.

Thankfully, there were businesses willing to extend some Southern hospitality to the marooned drivers.

Home Depot quickly turned a number of its stores into shelters on Tuesday night. The Atlanta-based company kept 26 stores open all night long across Alabama and Georgia.

The employees from Chick-Fil-A outside of Birmingham, Ala. handed out hundreds of chicken sandwiches for free along the highway.

“We cooked several hundred sandwiches and stood out on both sides of 280 and handed out the sandwiches to anyone we could get to,” said store manager, Mark Meadows (pictured).

And they refused to take a penny from the drivers who had been stuck in their cars for as long as seven hours.

(SOURCE: Reuters)

Photo credit: Lauren Dango, FB – Thanks to Dyan Schecterson for submitting the link to our Facebook Page!

World Welcomes the Year of the Horse on Chinese New Year

horse Chinese New Year display-Flickr-CC-chooyutshing

horse Chinese New Year display-Flickr-CC-chooyutshingThe Year of the Horse gallops in today on the Chinese New Year. Celebrations around the world are in full swing with parades, fireworks, revelry, dragons (of course) and prayers for good fortune on the first day of the Lunar New Year.

The 15-day celebration of Chinese new year starts today, with the first new moon of the calendar year, marking the end of the year of the snake. To bring luck this year and welcome the horse (which in 2014 is combined with the element, wood), Chinese believers will wear red and gold and light candles and incense at local temples.

If the Year of the Horse is your Chinese zodiac birth year, you are said to be:

Persistent 10-year-old’s Hunch Leads to Life-saving Rescue

10yo Danny DiPietro hunch saves old woman

10yo Danny DiPietro hunch saves old womanOne more hour and the 80-year-old woman would have been dead from exposure, but thanks to a ten-year-old boy who wouldn’t give up on his hunch that ‘something was wrong’, she was rescued from a freezing garage.

10-year-old Danny DiPietro and his dad were driving home from a hockey game in a Detroit suburb when Danny spotted what he thought was a dog out of the corner of his eye.

“It was late at night and super cold out and their garage was open and something just didn’t feel right,” Danny told 7 Action News.

Once he was home, Danny kept thinking something should be done about what he thought was a dog, so he asked his mom if she could go check it out.

Alabama Doctor Walks Six Miles in Snow to Perform Brain Surgery

doctor walks 8 miles-in snow to do surgery

doctor walks 8 miles-in snow to do surgery

Many reports out of the southern U.S. this week hailed people who were performing kind deeds during the freak winter storm that paralyzed much of Alabama and the South. This story demonstrates how admirably some workers perform if others are depending on them.

A doctor, who was called suddenly to perform brain surgery during a life-threatening emergency, had only one option for transportation leaving the hospital where he was located, he had to walk. Up hills and (mostly falling) down hills, wearing only scrubs and slip on shoes, Dr. Zenko Hrynkiw trudged on through the wintery mix to the main road where traffic was at a dead stop in both directions.

After walking six miles he finally reached a passable roadway where a salesman picked him up to deliver him to Trinity Medical Center. He said it was miraculous the man hadn’t died before he arrived, but insisted that any good doctor would do the same thing.

(READ the story from NPRWATCH a press conference below)

Facebook Rescues Pregnant Woman, Many Others in Atlanta Storm

gasoling sharing on highway in snowstorm-FBphoto

gasoling sharing on highway in snowstorm-FBphotoRead about the Facebook group, SnowedOutAtlanta, that attracted 46,000 fans in a day and how that buzzing hive of concerned citizens helped rescue a pregnant mom and boy who had been stuck in their car for 12 hours – with only Tic Tacs to eat – with no water.

By 11 o’clock that night, Michelle Sollicito, who started the group after winter weather began causing havoc in her Georgia city, said that at least 400 people had been helped by the group. That includes a stranded man — worried about his wife who had been in a car accident and his two children who were stuck at school. He had walked a mile from his car to stay at Sollicito’s house for the night after seeing her post on Facebook according to NBC.

SnowedOutAtlanta grew so big that it split into several regional groups. One of them was started by Chris Calhoun, owner of Avalon Limousine Service, who had access to one very valuable commodity: gasoline. He said he delivered around 15 to 20 gallons of gas to stranded drivers who had contacted with him through the Facebook group, Snowed Out Atlanta Eastside.

(READ the story from NBC News)

Thanks to Joel Arellano for submitting the link on our Facebook Page!
Photo from Christle L. Fox on SnowedOutAtlanta

The Idea That Turned Russian Warheads Into American Electricity

Uranium storage tanks-USEC-600px

Uranium storage tanks-USEC-600pxLast month the final shipment of uranium from Russia arrived in the United States marking the end of a program that turned the fuel from 20,00 Russian warheads into electricity for the United States.

Thomas Neff, a physicist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology conceived of the idea, later dubbed Megatons to Megawatts, to let  Moscow sell its uranium from weapons retired after the Cold War, and dilute it for fuel to power electric utilities in the US. The result: Russians received much needed cash and the US benefited with an inexpensive source of power.

While in operation, the program fueled one in ten American bulbs.

Nuclear experts hail it as a remarkable, but little known, chapter of atomic history. The two decades of bomb recycling, they say, not only reduced the threat of atomic terrorism and helped stabilize the former Soviet Union but achieved a major feat of nuclear disarmament — a popular goal that is seldom achieved.

(READ the full story New York Times)

Photo, USEC:  Low-enriched uranium shipment, from 10,000 warheads, arrived in US in 2005

UPDATE: London Blogger Tracks Down Stranger Who Saved Him

UKstranger found FindMike

UKstranger found FindMikeA video blogger who was stopped by a stranger from jumping into the River Thames has been reunited with the man who saved him six years ago.

Jonny Benjamin, 26, was on Waterloo Bridge in January 2008 after being diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder when Neil Laybourn intervened.

This month Mr Benjamin started a campaign using the hashtag #findmike, to trace his Good Samaritan.

Mr Laybourn said that when he saw the tweet he knew it referred to him.

The pair were reunited on Tuesday.

(READ the story from the BBC)

Thanks to Andrew N. for sending the link!

Good Samaritans Hand Out Cocoa to Stranded Drivers in Snow-Shocked South

sandwiches handed out on highway-FBphoto-WSBtv

sandwiches handed out on highway-FBphoto-WSBtvThere’s some good news coming out of the rare snowstorm that hit the southern United States where localities have been paralyzed because they own no snow removal capability.

Local news teams in Atlanta are reporting on several different men who have taken hot cocoa and sandwiches on foot to stranded motorists on the interstates.

Others have offered their vehicles and even opened their homes so people don’t need to sleep in their cars.

Matthew Miller (pictured, right) heard that people had been out on the highway for 18 hours, so he packed up some peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and hot cocoa, slung on a backpack and walked to the scene. “I just thought I’d try to help out any way I could,” Miller told WSB-TV.

Hot Chocolate handed out on snowy hw-FBphotoOn the same highway, Interstate 75, Zach Haedt and Sam Tarquina (left) were serving drinks for people stuck in cars, carrying a thermos and a sign that said, FREE HOT CHOCOLATE.

The compassion and gratitude of strangers is in full bloom, evidenced by posts found on a local Facebook group called Snowed Out Atlanta, set up to help strangers affected by the weather. Check it out at SnowedOutAtlanta.

The woman who started the Facebook group is Michelle Sollicito, who had moved to the Atlanta area from London 11 years ago. She had come home early from work and noticed something when she logged onto Facebook.

“I had some friends who were asking for help, and some friends who were offering help, but none of them had been matched up,” Sollicito told NBC News. “I created the group and it just snowballed, forgive the pun.” 46,000 people joined in only one day.

(SEE more photos and stories from Business Insider)

Photos on Facebook, via WSB-TV and News 11 Atlanta

Happiness Sidewalk Event Teaches Students Power of Encouragement

signs of encouragement Riverside School-photo

signs of encouragement Riverside School-photoHigh school students in Riverside, California donned bright yellow shirts and waved mood-boosting signs to interrupt the daily routines of drivers and passersby on Tuesday.

Honking horns, hundreds of smiles, and supportive waves were their reward as the teens learned the power of positive encouragement.

The youth were joined outside their school, Arlington Regional Learning Center, by staff, parents, and community members, who all took shifts during the 8-hour flash mob, in what was billed as a Happiness Sprinkling event.

“We had some kids that weren’t sure it was cool, but they totally got into it and some of them asked if they could stay out here all day,” said Joelle Hood, Principal at Arlington Regional Learning Center.

Police cars, fire trucks, tractor trailers, buses, cyclists, pedestrians, and thousands of passing commuters had their day brightened by the sign holders. One pedestrian said, “I never come this way, but I’m glad I did today. This is really cool—I really needed it.”

“A lot of people need this—even I needed it this morning.” said Jesse Porras, a student, who was reluctant, but joined the group when he saw them out in the morning.

One woman driving a pickup truck even pulled over to the curb and got out of her car to give hugs to the students. Local television stations interviewed participants at the event, for which planning began in November.

Started by Laura Lavigne in 2012, The Happiness Sprinkling Project often solicits surprised and puzzled responses from people being ‘sprinkled’ on their way to work/home. The signs, which help people tap into their own hopeful thoughts, are then used at the location of the next event.signs of encouragement-Riverside-Schools-photo

“It is just as important to teach ‘pro-kindness’ as it is to teach ‘anti-bullying’,” said Hood. “I want to give our students as many opportunities as possible to know how good it feels to give to someone else, to do acts of kindness, and feel part of something bigger than them, making this world a better place — and that they do have the power to make a positive difference.”

Students Have Changed

“The teachers here show so much love and respect to these kids,” said Patricia Walker, a parent. “I’ve seen a big change with many of them.”

“Some of the students here have made bad decisions, but they aren’t bad kids,” added the school’s Principal. “Today, they’ve had a chance to spread kindness to the community and each other and they are really excited.”

Dad Texts His Late Son’s Phone, Gets the Perfect Reply

April Bell-text message iPhone

April Bell-text message iPhone

Out of the blue, in a country town along the Murry River in Victoria, Australia, Kaylene Bell’s daughter received a mournful text Saturday morning that read, “Love you bud -miss you more than words can say.”

The 15-year-old replied, asking, “Who is this?”

A text pinged back saying ‘sorry’, explaining that it was his son’s old phone number and that he had passed away in 2009. “I didn’t think his number was being used.”

text message for April

“Oh no, don’t be sorry,” she replied. “I’m sorry to hear that.”

“God Bless and hope you have a good Australia Day!”

Kaylene said the man rang to apologize and, “said he was sorry if he scared her, but sometimes it just helps him cope.”

The encounter brought relief to the man, who decided it was a special omen that his son passed in the month of April, which also turned out to be the girl’s name.

“I am so PROUD of my April for being a teenager with a thoughtful beautiful heart,” said Bell, who also called it uncanny that her daughter was born in April, too. “I told her she has helped to heal a stranger’s heart, using such wise and kind words.”

The man, whose son Troy was 30 years old, told April she had a very special number.

She now wants to keep it forever.

s, Dinner was Made When She got Home

homeless mother and boy-Athens-CC-Flickr-Ed Yourdon

homeless mother and boy-Athens-CC-Flickr-Ed YourdonBoe Kirner, who now lives in Perth, Australia, wrote a personal story on the Good News Network Page, after seeing a photo of Good Samaritans washing blankets for the homeless. The 21-year-old New Zealander said she was in New York City doing a 6 month stint as a paramedic.

“One of my call outs was a homeless mother and son. Wrong place, wrong time — she had been shot and would be in hospital for a while.”

“The teen wasn’t allowed to stay at the hospital, which shocked me a little bit. So I put the boy into a taxi and gave him my front door key and paid the cabbie.

That boy could’ve ransacked my home.

After a long night of dealing with some eye-popping incidences, I got home to find a meal wrapped up on my kitchen counter. It was scrambled eggs on toast with a ‘Thank you So Much’ note.

13-yr old Nathanial and his mother Natalia stayed with me for the duration of my stay. Natalia got a job as an emergency response dispatcher and Nathanial is studying to become an mechanical engineer at the Navy.”

“I’m now 28 and I still have that note Nathanial wrote me 7 years ago. They’re not the first people I’ve taken in. I enjoy being able to help when others need it. I can’t change the world, but I can make a difference along with quite a good number of you on this Facebook Page and others. You are the small difference you make in someones life.”

Unrelated Photo by Ed Yourdon via Flickr-CC

Iranian Teacher Shaves Head to Support Bullied Pupil – Class Does Too

Iran teacher shaves head for pupil-Bahman Shahbazi for Tasnim

Iran teacher shaves head for pupil-Bahman Shahbazi for TasnimWhen Iranian schoolteacher Ali Mohammadian noticed that one of his students was being bullied after going bald as a result of a mysterious illness, he decided to show solidarity and shave his own hair. In no time, his entire class shaved their heads and the bullying stopped.

Now, Mohammadian, who teaches at Sheikh Shaltoot’s elementary school in Marivan, a Kurdish city in the west of Iran, has become a national hero. President Hassan Rouhani has praised him, the government has offered financial support for the pupil’s medical treatment and his story has reached the four corners of his country.

(READ the story from the Guardian’s Iran Blog)

Photo by Bahman Shahbazi for Tasnim News
Thanks to Kate Wright and Susan McMullin for submitting the link!

You’ll Never Guess What’s Inside This Shell of a House

house on Wade Avenue-WUNC

house on Wade Avenue-WUNCIf you live or work in Raleigh, NC, there’s a reasonable chance you’ve driven by it. Maybe hundreds of times and never noticed anything out of the ordinary.

But, the house at 3215 Wade Avenue has no driveway out front. The lights are never on. And there’s no walkway to the front door.

Of course, none of those amenities are necessary, because this house is not a house at all.

Dad With Cancer Writes Daughter 826 Notes Just in Case

napkin notes-from-dad-to-daughter-Garth Callaghan

napkin notes-from-dad-to-daughter-Garth CallaghanGarth Callaghan started slipping notes into his daughter Emma’s lunchbox when she was in kindergarten.

Now in eight grade, she depends on those brief missives as a daily source of inspiration — and a reminder to never take her dad for granted.

Callaghan, 44, has battled kidney cancer twice over the last several years and in a fit of inspiration, has written hundreds of “napkin notes” to his daughter, leaving a legacy of how much he loves her.

“Dear Emma, Sometimes when I need a miracle, I look in to your eyes and realize I’ve already created one,” says one of them. “Love, Dad”

(READ the story from TODAY)

Watch What Happens When You Leave A Hotel Cleaner A $500 Tip

hotel cleaner gets 500 tip

hotel cleaner gets 500 tipKyle and Josh from Give Back Films surprised a hotel housekeeper with a pile of cash on the bed, just to make her day. They left a note scrawled with a smiley face and some assurance, ‘This is A Tip for You!’

The duo and their hidden camera have similarly lavished love on a waitress, whom they tipped $200, and people at a market buying groceries at Thanksgiving time, who are told it all is free.

The young woman’s boss says she works really hard and shows great initiative at work.

WATCH the video below…

Health Spending as Share of GDP Drops for First Time Since 1997

Spending on health care as a share of GDP in 2012 dropped slightly for the first time since 1997, as overall growth in health-care spending remained relatively low for the fourth consecutive year, the federal government announced in January.

Indigenous Athlete is Australian of the Year for Anti-racism, Youth Work

Adam Goodes 2012 Grand Final - by Timellis09 - CC

Adam Goodes 2012 Grand Final - by Timellis09 - CC Aboriginal AFL player and anti-racism campaigner Adam Goodes has been named the 2014 Australian of the Year.

Goodes, a decorated Sydney football champion, was chosen from a diverse field of nominees that represented the best of scientific, medical, arts and community leaders.

He accepted the award on Saturday, Australia Day, while his family, of the Andyamathanha tribe, wiped away tears in the audience.

According to the National Australia Day Council, Goodes was chosen “for his leadership and advocacy in the fight against racism both on the sporting field and within society – a stance which has won him the admiration and respect of people around Australia”.

Now living in New South Wales, Goodes is proud of his Indigenous heritage, and is actively involved with several Indigenous sport and community programs. He also has worked with troubled youth, in and out of juvenile detention centers.

Together with his cousin and former teammate Michael O’Loughlin, Adam established the Go Foundation which empowers the next generation of Indigenous role models in all walks of life.  Adam co-chairs the foundation, focused on promoting education, employment and healthy lifestyles.

READ the story from the Australian Broadcast Company

WATCH Goode’s acceptance speech in the video below

Photo by Timellis09 – CC

How Online Gamers Are Solving Science’s Biggest Problems

Scientist calculations-Rudolph Pariser-ELISE Communications

Scientist calculations-Rudolph Pariser-ELISE CommunicationsA new generation of online games don’t just provide entertainment – they help scientists solve puzzles involving genes, conservation and the universe.

Such games have allowed players with little or no scientific knowledge tackle some of science’s biggest problems. And gamers are already proving their worth.

In, 2011, gamers played Foldit, an online puzzle game, to research the structure of an enzyme that causes disease. To the astonishment of scientists, who had been working on the problem for years, the gamers produced an accurate model of the enzyme in just three weeks.

(READ the article in the Guardian)

NC Teen Hits Miracle Shot, With Assist From Friend who Died

basketball shot HSvideo

basketball shot HSvideoJust outside Greensboro, N.C., Bishop McGuinness boys’ basketball team is coming off what may be the most remarkable game in school history.

“I still can’t believe that even happened,” one player says.

The game, against their arch-rivals, was won in the final second, some say, because of how one player, who sunk the game-winning half-court shot, whose best friend had just died, wrote his name in gold on the ball and dedicated himself to playing for friendship.