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Haiti Factory Cuts Malnutrition and Poverty at the Same Time

Factory in Haiti-peanut nutrition-ParntnersInHealth

Factory in Haiti-peanut nutrition-ParntnersInHealthA crew of Haitian workers clad in white lab coats, rubber-soled boots, safety goggles, and hair nets pass through a corridor and into a sterile production area that’s lined with hulking stainless steel devices, one of which looks like a giant KitchenAid Mixer. At 8:30 a.m., the machinery starts whirring and roaring. Before long, the distinct aroma of crushed peanuts hangs in the air.

From the outside, the two-story white building looks like a standard warehouse you’d see on the outskirts of any American city. But located in Haiti’s Central Plateau, the Nourimanba Production Facility is a state-of-the art operation that’s helping tackle one of the country’s most pressing challenges—malnutrition. It also uses only locally grown peanuts, making it a reliable market for local farmers to sell their yields.

In Haiti, malnutrition is the leading cause of death among children 5 years old and younger. And it’s not just children who are affected—pregnant women and teenagers also experience the disastrous consequences of poor nutrition.

For decades, Partners In Health has tackled malnutrition through a multipronged approach targeting clinical, economic, and social factors that drive the condition. A key component of the strategy is Nourimanba, this ready-to-use therapeutic food. It tastes similar to peanut butter, but it’s fortified with vitamins that are crucial to physical and cognitive development.

Within a few months of officially opening this year, the facility has already created more than two dozen jobs and churned out more than 6,000 kilograms of the lifesaving treatment.

“This center will have a major impact on the community—a lot of people are working here, and new industries help develop communities,” says Myrlene Arthus, production supervisor at the facility. “I love what I do because I am working for children that are sick. The product I make is helping save children’s lives.”

RELATED: June 2013: New hospital in Haiti, fully powered by solar energy, solves the problem of how to provide modern health care amid intermittent power shortages. (Tags – Partners In Health, Haiti)

Steller Sea Lions Rebound Off Endangered List

sea lions eastern Steller-AlaskaDeptFishGame-JamieKing

sea lions eastern Steller-AlaskaDeptFishGame-JamieKingA five year plan to shore up dwindling populations of eastern Steller sea lions, the threatened species that roams from Alaska to California, has succeeded. NOAA Fisheries announced last week it will be delisting the animal as a threatened species, having exceeded its goal for annual population growth by more than thirty percent.

As marine predators that forage on a variety of fish, squid, and other species, Steller sea lions are a vital component of North Pacific Ocean ecosystems. Their recovery is a testament to the value and success of the Endangered Species Act in ensuring the health of marine ecosystems for future generations.

Kindness Spreads as More Schools Vote for Special Kids at Homecoming

Down Syndrom homecoming queen-KGUNvid

Down Syndrom homecoming queen-KGUNvidIn Tucson, Arizona, the idea is spreading to elect special teens into the Homecoming Courts at school dances.

Mountain View High School followed in the footsteps of Canyon Del Oro High School which voted for a senior named Kevin for homecoming king.

In the report below, Lani was only nominated, but on Saturday, Mountain View students watched as Lani Fuentes-Cordova was selected as the Homecoming Queen for 2013.

Grumpy Guy at Gas Pump Starts Singing With Strangers (WATCH)

grumpy guy sings-PumpcastNewsVid

grumpy guy sings-PumpcastNewsVidAll he wanted to do was go home after a long flight and “be grumpy about the price of gas.” But, when asked by an announcer in the gas pump monitor if he wanted to sing Karaoke, he belted out Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing!”

This video joins another great “Pumpcast” video from the Tonight Show with Jay Leno that featured a married couple talked into singing Bon Jovi. In fact, the couple suddenly appears next the grumpy guy’s car as “backup singers,” ready to support his urge to sing.

How a Radical New Teaching Method Could Unleash a Generation of Geniuses

classroom in Mongolia-One Laptop Per Child

classroom in Mongolia-One Laptop Per ChildThe current educational system in the US was constructed almost two centuries ago to meet the needs of the industrial age. Now that our society and economy have evolved beyond that era, our schools must also be reinvented.

We can see what the future looks like in places like Mexico where one teacher fueled his low-income students to rise to the top of the nation by letting go of the reigns of teaching, to allow for child-led natural learning.

Or we can look to Finland, where they adopted this new philosophy nationwide—with outsize results.

Everyone in This Sailor’s Family Surprised by Homecoming

military reunion-WSBTvideo

military reunion-WSBTvideoAn Indiana member of the military surprised everyone in his family by coming home almost a month early from serving overseas. He also got a surprise of his own, after arriving back to the house he’d left eight months earlier.

Navy Lieutenant, Pete Sharrai, a big fan of Good News Network, submitted this story because it features an officer who worked for him while deployed in Bahrain.

His orders were cut by a month and, instead of telling his family he was coming home early, he opted to surprise them.

Hiker Hero Finds Wounded Pitbull, Carries Him Down the Mountain

injured pitbull arizona

injured pitbull arizonaNo one knows exactly how long the 2-year-old pit bull had been left to die alone in the Arizona mountains.

This photo taken by Andi Davis, the hiker who found him, shows the dog half standing, half collapsed, his head resting on the rocks.

Davis had walked about a half mile uphill last Friday, October 18, along a deserted trail in Phoenix when she found the dog, suffering from bullet wounds.

She hesitated for a moment before approaching the pit bull, Nelson said. But when he lifted his head as she reached for her water bottle, Davis put her apprehension aside, gave him a drink and then lifted the 47-pound dog into her arms. Then, she began walking.

(READ the story, w/ photo of new family, from WHO-TV)

Main Street Comeback: How Independent Stores are Thriving

bookstore window sm-CC-MorBCN-Flickr

bookstore window sm-CC-MorBCN-FlickrDespite behemoths like Starbucks and Amazon, the number of independent bookstores, coffeeshops, and other businesses is growing.

At the annual Business Alliance for Local Living Economies conference, where more than 600 high-energy people strategized about the transition to a more localized, Main Street economy, I learned that independent retailers are thriving.

One surprising comeback, even in the age of the behemoth Amazon, is independent bookstores.

(READ the story from Yes Magazine)

Photo credit: Flickr user, MorBCN – CC (cropped)

College Basketball Player Surprised With Full Scholarship (w/ Video)

college-ball-player-scholarship-northwestern

college-ball-player-scholarship-northwesternNorthwestern guard James Montgomery’s reward for making a good impression on his new head coach was more than he ever expected.

Coach Chris Collins announced to the team before practice on Thursday that he was awarding the 6-foot-4 player with a scholarship.

(WATCH the spontaneous video or READ the story from Yahoo Sports)

A Plan to Turn Every Lightbulb Into an Ultra-fast Alternative to Wi-Fi

Light trails-Flickr-CC-surfzone

Light trails-Flickr-CC-surfzoneCurrent wireless networks have a problem: The more popular they become, the slower they are. Researchers at Fudan University in Shanghai have just become the latest to demonstrate a technology that transmits data as light instead of radio waves, which gets around the congestion issue and could be ten times faster than traditional Wi-Fi.

Using Li-Fi, a standard proposed just two years ago, LED bulbs can be altered to transmit data around ten times as fast the fastest Wi-Fi networks.

 

(READ the full story at Quartz)

 

Photo credit: Flickr user, surfzone – CC

Wind Energy Surges in Ohio Over Five Years

Wind power generation has exploded in Ohio with the capacity increasing from 7.4 megawatts in 2008 to 428 megawatts in 2012. With utility companies erecting 423 turbines, the output grew from enough to power 1,300 homes to more than 100,000 homes.

Nonprofit Retrofits Buses as Mobile Showers for the Homeless

Buses of Lava Mae-logo

Buses of Lava Mae-logoFor the 3,000 people living homeless on the streets around San Francisco, there are only a total of 16 public shower stalls.

To remedy the problem, a consortium of non-profit groups has transformed a decommissioned city bus into a mobile bathroom to offer toilets and 10-minute showers to those in need.

The project, called Lava Mae, will hook into fire hydrants — and the city is on board with the plan. San Francisco Municipal Transit (MUNI) has already donated one bus for the pilot project, which has been retrofitted to contain three showers. Each shower has a toilet and a private area to dress.

Delivering dignity one shower at a time, Lava Mae is being funded by donations on its website and through an Indiegogo campaign that just ended, in which it raised just over $58,000 of the $75,000 it will need to open.

Help out if you can by donating here. The annual budget to run each bus still needs to be met.

(WATCH the video from May 2013 or READ the current story in TriplePundit)

Paying it Forward, One Drive-through at a Time

drive-thru patron pays it forward

drive-thru patron pays it forwardGenerous patrons at coffee, bagel shops and fast food drive-throughs have been spreading a little kindness to fellow restaurant-goers by becoming the anonymous benefactors of other people’s meals, paying their orders before they even get to the window.

WATCH the video below from NBC’s Making a Difference…

Forgiveness Can Set a Prisoner Free and That Prisoner is You

Suffering Flickr-CC-Hani Amir

Suffering Flickr-CC-Hani AmirMany of us go through life carrying a grudge, anger, hurt, or disappointment about things that happened during our childhood or at some point in our adult lives. They are equally painful and can often remain buried in our heart, possibly the cause of disease, for years. As much as we would like to forgive, we sometimes can’t conceive of forgiveness because we think it means condoning the wrong that we believe was done to us.

About four years ago while immersed in study, I learned a different method of forgiveness–a method I refer to as “energetic forgiveness.” It was an amazing concept to me and helped me unload a long-held resentment I held for my father, who left our family when I was a mere 11 years old. I welcomed the open-minded viewpoint and accepting principles that surround this very powerful concept.  It was liberating.

‘Backwards Bill’ Runs NYC Marathon in Wheelchair to Show Disabled Kids How to Stay Active

Marathon AWD Bill Reilly with guide Harold

Marathon AWD Bill Reilly with guide HaroldEvery one of the more than 45,000 runners expected to finish the 2013 ING New York City Marathon on November 3 brings to the race their own motivation and reason for running. Some race the 26.2 mile, five-borough course to break records and make history, and others for the sense of personal accomplishment following a long road of training. Bill Reilly is running in his 30th marathon to demonstrate the great strides people living with cerebral palsy can make when offered access to the right services.

A veteran of more than 20 NYC Marathons, the 61-year-old from Queens is known as “Backwards Bill” because, lacking the ability to use his arms, he navigates by pushing his specially built wheelchair backwards with one leg.

Born with cerebral palsy, he always dreamed of taking part in the sports other children participated in. Now, with every race, he inspires not only families impacted by CP but the greater running community.

White House Bathed in Pink Tonight for Breast Cancer Month (Photo)

White House bathed in pink-by Sonya Hebert

White House bathed in pink-by Sonya HebertThe White House is lit up in pink tonight, October 24th, in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and remembrance of the millions of families who have battled the disease.

Please, women, prioritize your health by exercising regularly, eating well and getting your regular checkups. In America, preventive care, such as mammograms, are now free for women, with no out-of-pocket costs.

U.S. Insurance companies are also now restricted from charging women higher costs simply because they are women, or because of any pre-existing conditions, including breast cancer.

Photo credit: White House-Sonya Hebert

Vet’s Dogs Denied on Airline, Wrigley Heiress Sends Private Jet

Dogs with Marine piloted by heiress

Dogs with Marine piloted by heiressA Marine family was set to book tickets on a cross-country flight for their move to North Carolina when, at the last minute, their dogs were denied passage because they were too large.

But luck and good karma was on their side. When an heiress to the Wrigley Gum fortune read on Facebook that the dogs were rescued from abuse in Afghanistan but not allowed to fly commercially, she ordered her private jet from Jettly to take the veteran’s whole family from San Diego to their new home as a gesture of gratitude for his service and kindness.

“He’s fought for our freedom and he’s a hero because he rescued two dogs,” said Helen A. Rosburg.

While deployed in 2011, Andrew Morales rescued the two anatolia shepherd dogs – brothers from the same litter – after their tails and ears had been cut off to prepare them for fighting.

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

Calif. Firefighters Shave Heads In Support Of Kids With Cancer

shaving-head-firefighter-CBSvid

shaving-head-firefighter-CBSvid“Whenever we can help a sick kid, we’re going to do everything we can,” said one Orange City firefighter Tuesday as he and his colleagues shaved their heads to show support for patients at the children’s hospital.

Between 40 and 50 firefighters visited patients at the hospital in a fun hair-shaving ceremony of solidarity.

The fire department was inspired by Orange City firefighter John Voris’ 15-year-old daughter Saylor, who was recently diagnosed with leukemia and is scheduled to undergo a bone marrow transplant.

Some firefighters also donated blood and/or platelets while others passed out honorary badges and hats to children batting cancer and other illnesses and injuries.

(READ the story from CBS Los Angeles)

Purring Monkey Discovered in the Amazon

purring Caqueta titi monkey -WWF-Javier Garcia

purring Caqueta titi monkey -WWF-Javier GarciaA purring monkey and a vegetarian piranha are among the new species of animals discovered during scientific expeditions in the Amazon rainforest.

Discovered by researchers between 2010 and 2013 and compiled for the first time by WWF, the new species add up to at an astounding 258 plants, 84 fish, 58 amphibians, 22 reptiles, 18 birds and the “purring” Caqueta titi monkey.

Callicebus caquetensis (pictured here), of the Colombian Amazon, endeared itself to the scientists because, “All of the babies purr like cats.”

As part of its Sky Rainforest Rescue, WWF is helping to save one billion trees in the Brazilian state of Acre. “Working together with local people and the state government, we’re finding alternatives to deforestation that can make the trees worth more standing than cut down,” says WWF in a press release. To date, over 5,000 people have committed to keeping the rainforest standing on their land.

(READ the story with more photos at the WWF)

WWF photo by Javier Garcia

Research Shows Doing Good is Good for You

Doing Good is Good for You-graphic

Doing Good is Good for You-graphicIt is generally accepted that volunteering is a good thing to do for others. But is it true volunteering also benefits the volunteer? UnitedHealth Group wanted to look into this phenomenon further so they decided to conduct a comprehensive survey and analysis on the positive effects employees and employers receive from volunteering.

The 2013 Health and Volunteering Study used a nationwide sample of 3,351 volunteers and non-volunteers. Through this survey they found evidence to support the idea that when employees volunteered they felt less stressed and an overall increase in their physical, mental, and emotional well-being.