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104-year-old Sets 2 New World Swimming Records

104yo swimmer Jaring Timmerman-Flickr

104yo swimmer Jaring Timmerman-FlickrA 104-year-old Winnipeg man swam his way into the record books, finishing two races and becoming the world’s oldest masters swimmer.

Pan Am Pool was packed with family members, friends and swimming fans who cheered on Jaring Timmerman as he completed the 50-metre backstroke and 50-metre freestyle races at a masters swimming meet Friday night.

Simply by finishing, Timmerman — who turns 105 in February — has established two world records and created a new competition category for swimmers aged 105 to 109.

(READ the story from the CBC)

Thanks to Cynde Fetherston for sending the link!

LEGO Donates $3 Million to Educate Refugee Children

LEGOs for refugees UNHRC

LEGOs for refugees UNHRCThe LEGO Foundation presented a $3 million donation to the UN refugee agency on Friday to help improve access to quality primary school education for more than 200,000 refugee children.

The donation will fund UNHCR’s Educate a Child initiative in the 12 countries that have some of the largest refugee populations in the world.

Cop on Patrol Stops to Throw Football With Lonely Kid (WATCH)

cop dashcam shows football toss with lonely boy

cop dashcam shows football toss with lonely boyThousands of people have watched a police officer near Houston get out of his car to toss a football with a boy in a neighborhood after noticing he was all alone.

Sgt. Ariel Soltura’s act of kindness has melted hearts around the world after the Rosenberg Police Department posted the Dashcam video on their Facebook page.

“It was awesome,” Soltura told KTRK-TV news.

“If we see a kid kicking the can, they want us to go out there and replace that can with a ball,” he said of his department’s policy. “Hopefully we’ve made an impact on these kids’ futures for the rest of their lives.”

(WATCH the video below, or READ the story from KTRK)

U.S. Navy Warship Stops To Help Out Tangled Turtles

wildlife caught in netting-USNavyPhoto

wildlife caught in netting-USNavyPhotoCrew members aboard the navy warship USS Rentz recently traded in their anti-organized crime hats to become wildlife protectors for a few hours and rescue a group of helpless sea turtles caught in a tangle of netting.

While patroling off the coast of Guatemala, the ship’s helicopter detachment was conducting a routine flight when Lt. Chris Gokey and his co-pilot, Chief Warrant Officer Rob Antonucci, spotted a debris field near a group of fishing buoys tethered together.

Hero Mom Pulls Car Accident Victim To Safety For 2nd Time In Two Years

Keenia Williams saves drivers twice

Keenia Williams saves drivers twiceA 24-year-old California woman was being hailed for her bravery once again after pulling a driver from an overturned vehicle on an interstate highway Wednesday morning, her second live-saving intervention during a freeway accident in the last two years.

“The officer was like, ‘What made you do that?’ I’m like, ‘Well, it’s not the first time that I saved somebody,'” said Keenia Williams.

It was back on October 19, 2011, when Williams was driving with her young daughter when a big rig had crashed and burst into flames.

At that accident, Williams got out of her car, jumped over a stream of leaking fuel and pulled the unconscious big-rig driver to safety.

– From a KTVU archived story, read more from Yahoo.

Sugar Battery May Offer Green-powered Gadgets Within 3 Years

Battery powered by sugar-VATechPhoto

Battery powered by sugar-VATechPhotoA Virginia Tech research team has created a battery that runs on sugar and has an unmatched energy density for long-lasting power. The development could replace conventional batteries with ones that are cheaper, refillable, and biodegradable.

In as soon as three years, Zhang’s new battery could be running some of the cell phones, tablets, video games, and the myriad other electronic gadgets with ten times the battery life that lithium-ion offers, said Y.H. Percival Zhang, an associate professor of biological systems engineering in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and the College of Engineering, in a paper published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications.

“Sugar is a perfect energy storage compound in nature,” Zhang told Virginia Tech News. “So it’s only logical that we try to harness this natural power in an environmentally friendly way to produce a battery.”

(READ the story in the Guardian)

Photo: Virginia Tech – Thanks to Andrew N. for sending the link!

Finally, There’s Reason for Optimism on U.S. Voting Laws

Voter registration - MobileVoter.org photo

Voter registration - MobileVoter.org photoAfter three years of pitched battles in the states over who can vote and how much trouble they should have to go through to do so, two bipartisan initiatives out of Washington, D.C., are providing real hope that reform may be around the corner.

On Wednesday, the bipartisan Presidential Commission on Election Administration, co-chaired by the lawyers for Barack Obama and Mitt Romney’s presidential campaigns, issued a report recommending critical reforms to tackle long lines and other election challenges. And last week, a bipartisan group in Congress introduced a bill to fill the hole created by the Supreme Court’s 2013 decision gutting the heart of the Voting Rights Act.

(READ the story in the Atlantic)

Photo credit: MobileVoter.org

Waitress in Financial Need Gets $1,075 Tip

waitress holds tip receipt for thousand dollars

waitress holds tip receipt for thousand dollarsA waitress at a Knoxville restaurant says she is still in shock after a customer tipped her $1,075 this week.

When Khadijah Muhammad left for work at Cheddar’s on Wednesday, she did so with a notice on her doorknob from the local power company saying they would shut off her electricity if a past-due bill wasn’t paid by the next day.

Her mother had just suffered a heart attack and Khadijah went to visit her, losing out on some paid days at work earlier in the month.

After serving a small family, she unexpectedly received a note and then saw the thousand dollar tip left for a meal that totaled just $29.30.

“We were led to give it to you,” the note said. “God Bless!”

— READ the full story from USA Today

WATCH the video below. but NOTE, this is only available from WBIR-TV in Flash players, which do not play on iPhones and many mobile devices.

Buddhist Chemist Invents Non-Toxic Paint Stripper

paint stripper

paint stripperA Buddhist chemist quietly plying his trade in B.C.’s Fraser Valley may be on the verge of curing one of ­humanity’s most poisonous ­practices — stripping paint.

Kham Thiphavong of Maple Ridge has developed a water-based paint remover he believes will address the world’s growing revulsion with lethal chemical strippers.

Thiphavong’s family of eco-friendly cleaning products blends his 35 years of experience in the paint industry with Buddhism’s 2,500 years of compassion for life forms.

 

(READ the full story, w/ photo, from the Province)

College Friends Find Out They’re Actually Half-Sisters

friends have same sperm donor-FBphoto-Tulane

friends have same sperm donor-FBphoto-TulaneTwo college freshman who applied to find roommates at Tulane University found that they were a lot alike.

They became fast friends on Facebook and joked to their friends that they were probably half-sisters, but they never thought it might be true — even knowing they both were conceived with the help of a sperm-donor.

“We had a lot in common,” said one of the young women, Mikayla Stern-Ellis.

For instance, they both love acting.

Then, she and Emily Nappi discovered during winter break that they, indeed, are half-sisters because they share the same Colombian sperm donor.

(READ the story in the Tulane Hullabaloo)

Facebook photo

How Internet Sleuths Unraveled a Family’s 20-Year-Old Mystery

Code in family solved-familyphoto

Code in family solved-familyphotoThe Internet loves a challenge. Case in point: When a woman asked an online forum for help decoding her dying grandmother’s “cancer-addled puzzles,” users began to unravel the decades-old mystery in a matter of minutes.

Janna Holm went to the site Ask MetaFilter on Monday and posted images of an index card scrawled with long strings of letters, explaining that her grandmother while dying of brain cancer in 1994, left the cards to her grandchildren as puzzles.

The family had never been able to solve them.

(READ the story from Mashable.com)

Thanks Gary C Li for sharing the link on our Facebook Page!

New York Trio Hauls Van Full of Clean Water to People in West Virginia

church sign-Thanks for water-FBphoto-Leslie Jennings Young

church sign-Thanks for water-FBphoto-Leslie Jennings YoungI’ve got an incredible story for you that starts with a high school senior who heard about the toxic chemical spill that poisoned the tap water for more than 300,000 people in West Virginia, and wanted to help.

Angelina Sarro and her father, Frank, remembered the generosity of people who drove to their neighborhood of East Rockaway, New York after Superstorm Sandy bringing trucks loaded with water and food. Now they wanted to pay that kindness forward.

On January 12, she texted her teacher, Don Poland, to ask about gathering donations of water. Within days, local families had delivered 227 cases — and more than 100 gallons — of bottled water. 15 students from East Rockaway High School volunteered to load it all into Frank’s truck. All they needed was a specific drop-off point somewhere in the effected area of Charleston.

Clendenin (almost Heaven), West Virginia

The water fountains were still closed in the church gym when Pastor Charles LaRue called for a board meeting January 15 to discuss the upcoming basketball games scheduled for Saturday. A large crowd of several hundred people would descend on the Clendenin Church of the Nazarene for the weekly community K-6 league games.

The town, 20 miles north of Charleston, was in a “really bad situation” with their water supply. Originally told not to use tap water for drinking, cooking, washing or bathing after the chemical, 4-methylcyclohexane methanol, leaked into the Elk River January 9, Clendenin had still not been given the green light to restart their water usage, unlike other towns.

Normally, the church sells water at concession stands during sporting events to cover the facility costs, but because the community was still reeling from more than a week without H2O, the Board voted to give away all the bottled water they had on hand.

“How can we sell water when people are without it?” LaRue said in a phone interview with the Good News Network. “The tap water was not something we wanted to let people drink.”

Even after Clendenin residents were told on Friday that it was safe, and they flushed the water system at the church, the chemical still lingered, making the water smell like licorice.

He told the board, “God has a way of returning the blessing when we put people first.”

Pay It Forward (Again)

Don Poland started the Facebook group in May of 2013 called Pay It Forward East Rockaway, to help people affected by the deadly tornado in Moore, Oklahoma. Poland had already been teaching his students how to be generous, even screening in his classroom the movie “Pay It Forward”.

water stacked in cases-FBphotoSo it was no surprise that he volunteered to help drive the relief van loaded with water to West Virginia. The trio of Angelina, her dad, and Don covered 537 miles in twelve hours, traveling through a couple snowstorms, to arrive in the Charleston metro area on Sunday morning, the 19th.

They’d heard that Clendenin was the last locale to be given the go-ahead to use their water again. Maybe it was the street sign, Elk River Rd, that prompted them to exit the highway at exactly the intersection that led to LaRue’s church. They told him later they were compelled to stop at his building.

“They passed 4 or 5 other churches,” Pastor LaRue said with amazement. “It isn’t by coincidence that they stopped by my church first: We just gave away several cases of water instead of selling it, believing God would bless us for it.”

A Full Circle Sunday Morning

LaRue was in the sanctuary for morning prayer and getting things ready for his service when a man came in and told him that he and two others were from East Rockaway, New York. They had driven all night with a van full of drinking water for the people of West Virginia. The vehicle was so heavy, it squatted down in the back.

It was also carrying greetings for neighbors far away to lighten their load. 100 homemade cards from school kids were decorated with sayings like, “East Rockaway’s got your back!” LaRue and his wife distributed them to the congregation and hung some on the wall. (Poland and the East Rockaway Facebook group also sent hand-crafted cards to the people of Moore, Oklahoma, including residents like Ange Humes, who sill has hers and says it meant more then anyone could know.)

The Pastor marveled at the blessing which multiplied after they chose to give away a few armfuls of water bottles as charity in the gym the day before. “Talk about a hundred-fold!”

He ruminated that teenagers from his congregation back in 2005 raised money so they could go and help the residents devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Now, teenagers from New York came to aid them in their time of need.

“You couldn’t imagine this… you couldn’t make it up in your wildest dreams,” he repeated.

“We felt led to give our water away instead of profiting from it, and they felt led to stop by my church first.”

“Everyone went home after church that Sunday with plenty of drinking water and the board will probably be able to give away water during the entire season of Upward Basketball,” he wrote on Facebook.

“Don, who was driving as they pulled up, even turned out to be a school basketball coach,” he told GNN.

“That isn’t a coincidence, that is a God thing!” he wrote on Facebook. “Our efforts in giving were so much smaller than what He gave back to us through these people.”

cards for West Virginia-FBphoto

Photos courtesy of Pay it Forward East Rockaway Facebook Page

RELATED:

NYC Marathon Runners Help with Relief Efforts (Video)

Veterans to the Rescue in Oklahoma, Doing the Heavy Lifting in Tornado Ravaged Towns

Mormons Skip Church for Weeks to Volunteer for Families Flooded by Sandy

Today is National Handwriting Day – Celebrities are Tweeting in Cursive

Handwriting Day tweet by Moleskine

Handwriting Day tweet by MoleskineIs handwriting becoming a lost art? Will schools stop teaching cursive writing? Could we be happy giving up writing in notebooks, never again to place pen to soft paper?

Ever since I was a teenager I have written my thoughts, hopes, and troubles in the blank pages of journals. Thus, you know where I stand, and I am in good company.

Today we celebrate National Handwriting Day in the United States and acknowledge the power of a great signature along with the hand-written letter. Established in 1977, National Handwriting Day is celebrated on January 23, the birthday of John Hancock, the American founding father remembered for his large and stylish signature at the center of the Declaration of Independence.

Mystery Knitter Ties Scarves Around Statues in Frigid Canada

statue with knit scarf in Ottawa -FBphoto

statue with knit scarf in Ottawa -FBphotoAn anonymous do-gooder trying to keep Ottawa residents warm has been leaving dozens of handmade scarves outside wrapped around the necks of city statues, brightening the landscape of Canada’s war heroes.

In response to deeply frigid temps in Ontario, the scarves include friendly notes that read: “I am not lost! If you are stuck out in the cold, take this scarf to keep warm.”

(READ the story, w/ more photos, from CTV)

 

Thanks to Lauren Connolly for submitting the link on our Facebook Page!

Printing $100 limbs in Six Hours for Sudan War Amputees

prosthetic-DIY-Project Daniel-Not Impossible photo

prosthetic-DIY-Project Daniel-Not Impossible photoA Californian non-profit has set up a lab for 3D-printing artificial limbs in Sudan so that the local community can supply the low-cost prosthetics to victims of war.

Mick Ebeling founded Not Impossible Labs with the aim of helping create low-cost, open source, DIY solutions to healthcare problems.

This latest project was inspired by a 14-year-old boy who told Time magazine he lost both hands in the war and wanted to die without them.

$1 Billion Offered for Perfect NCAA Tournament Bracket

billion dollar bracket challenge

billion dollar bracket challengeTalk about March Madness. With a little luck — maybe a lot of luck — you could become a billionaire overnight.

Detroit-based Quicken Loans, America’s fourth largest mortgage lender, has joined forces with Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway to pay a billion dollars to anyone who completes a perfect bracket, predicting the winner of every game in the March 2014 men’s college basketball championship tournament.

Any U.S. citizen over 21 years of age who correctly enters the contest and predicts the winner in all 63 tournament games will win, or share, the $1 billion prize. In addition to the potential grand prize, Quicken Loans will award $100,000 each to the contest’s 20 most accurate “imperfect” brackets submitted by qualified entrants in the contest to use toward buying, refinancing or remodeling a home.

Kenya to Generate Over Half its Electricity With Solar Power by 2016

sunset African Masai-angela7dreams-CC-Flickr

sunset African Masai-angela7dreams-CC-FlickrKenya currently gets most of its power from hydroelectricity, but by 2016 fifty percent will be renewable energy from the sun.

Construction of the plants, expected to cost $1.2 billion (£73 million), is set to begin this year and initial design stages are almost complete, according to the Guardian.

The move, which is funded by both the state and private companies will protect the environment while bringing down electricity costs.

(READ the full story from the Guardian)

Texas Police Officer’s Kind Gesture Caught on Camera

cop gives boots to homeless man in Odessa

cop gives boots to homeless man in OdessaPolice Cpl. Jeremy Walsh’s gesture of kindness toward a homeless man was captured in a photograph that is touching hearts on Facebook and elsewhere.

The picture, taken through a shop window, shows Walsh giving a new pair of boots and bottle of water to Anthony Young, who spends a lot of time keeping to himself on the streets that make up the cop’s beat in Odessa, Texas.

Walsh said he was only doing what anyone would do.

The photo, which was taken by Ronda Fox while inside her family’s storefront, was posted by Odessa on its official Facebook page. Odessa Police spokesman Cpl. Steve LeSueur said the photo was good way to show the other things that police officers do.

The new boots had been sitting in the officer’s closet not being used because they were too small.

(READ the full story in the Osessa American)

 

Flash Mob Teaches Shoppers to Tango in the Market

tango taught in the marketplace

tango taught in the marketplaceOn a blustery day in Darlington market, English video artist Anton Hecht brought a flash mob of one to teach the people there to dance the tango.

“It was a great day, and we really saw a new side to the people, who were great about getting involved,” Hecht told the Good News Network.

WATCH the video below – More info at: www.artplayer.tv…

Outdoorsman Makes Final Journey by Boat Instead of Hearse

casket gets to funeral in a boat-Chris Dunn

casket gets to funeral in a boat-Chris DunnEvery year when the weather warmed enough, Ronald Bloss Sr. would tow his fishing boat to the river. The Pennsylvania man would spend all day on the water.

Bloss died of cancer Saturday at age 78, but he took one last boat ride.

His family brought his boat to the Diehl Funeral Home in Mount Wolf and hoisted Bloss’ casket aboard his johnboat for one final trip to the cemetery.

Surely someone might have already hung a sign on the headstone that says, “Gone Fishing”.

(READ the story from the York Daily Record)

Photo by Chris Dunn via the Daily Record