All News - Page 1169 of 1714 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 1169

Canada Man Wins $10,000 for Suggesting Next Donut Flavor

donut winner Tim Hortons

donut winner Tim HortonsA dreamed-up doughnut that melds together chocolate, caramel and pecans has earned its inventor $10,000.

Andrew Shepherd, from Hamilton, was crowned the winner on Monday after beating out 63,000 entries in a Tim Hortons contest.

The 39-year-old chose a “classic-flavor combination” and named it The Tortoise Torte.

Winning the Tim Hortons cash means that he is going to take his wife to Switzerland — which he could never afford — so they can savor the national specialties of cheese and chocolate, his two favorite foods/

(READ the story from CBC)

Thanks to our volunteer, Autumn Marie C., for submitting the link!

Ad Agency Gives Workers 500 Paid Hours to Pursue Passions

painting in living room - family photo

painting in living room - family photoExecutives at a Minneapolis advertising agency founded 7 years ago, decided to give each of their 18 employees a free summer. Each was given paid leave and full benefits for 12 weeks to do something meaningful.

“I think people were stunned more than anything else,” says Stuart D’Rozario, the president and creative director of Barrie, D’Rozario, Murphy, who first had the idea.

Middleman Gives Tons of Business Surplus to Charities

toilet paper leftovers for Bin Donated

toilet paper leftovers for Bin Donated Partnering with 40 hotels and dozens of businesses, Judson Kinnucan, 37, has made it his mission to collect their  donated items, like surplus shampoos and toilet paper, and get them to charities in need.

Every month, Kinnucan delivers about 200 pounds of donated shampoo, conditioner and lotion and about 1,000 rolls of toilet paper to homeless shelters Chicago. In three years, that’s more than $20,000 worth of products just to this one charity — for free.

Kids Make Their Own Fun at Camp for Kids with Cancer

Ronald Macdonald house camp for kids

Ronald Macdonald house camp for kidsA “Dance for Your Meds” party is just one of the reasons the Ronald McDonald Camp for kids with cancer is more of a raucous party than a quiet hike in the woods.

Camp Wellness Center, which children attend with their healthier siblings, teaches that almost anything can be fun — including helping others who might be going through a tougher time than you.

EPA Debuts Bee-Protective Pesticide Warning Labels

bee advisory label EPA

bee advisory label EPATo protect bees and other pollinators, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has developed new pesticide labels that prohibit use of some neonicotinoid pesticide products where bees are present.

The new labels will have a bee hazard icon and precautions about the spray drift precautions, but environmentalists say they will push the agency to remove these pesticides from the market altogether.

Photographer Asks Strangers to Touch

touching strangers photo project-RichardRinaldi

touching strangers photo project-RichardRinaldiNew York photographer Richard Rinaldi has embarked on a remarkable photo project called “Touching Strangers”. He wanders the streets of major cities looking for strangers willing to pair up for photographs that look as if the subjects are loving family members.

After Rinaldi arranges his strangers side-by-side, face-to-face, or kneeling beside — always with hands touching — a transformation takes place. “I felt like I cared for her,” a poetry teacher, Brian Sneeden, told CBS after he agreed to pose with a 95-year-old stranger.

“We think these great photographs have something positive to say about human connection . . . about a diverse society in which people have been taught not to touch each other but in which we can and do transcend the boundaries set around us,” said Chris Boot, the director of Aperture, a nonprofit foundation that wanted to publish a book of Touching Strangers.

A Kickstarter campaign raised more than $80,000 in the weeks leading up to August 5 to fund the collection of 70 photos.

Renaldi received his BFA in photography from New York University. Exhibits of his photographs have been mounted in galleries and museums throughout the U.S., Asia, and Europe.

WATCH the Kickstarter video and CBS video at bottom, READ the story from Steve Hartman)

SHARE this Story with Buttons below…

Study Confirms Bears Using Underground Wildlife Crossings

bear crosses in tunnel - MSU HighwayWilding.org

bear crosses in tunnel - MSU HighwayWilding.orgIn Canada, a significant portion of Banff’s grizzly bears are using the 23 underground wildlife crossings to safely get across the busy 4-lane Trans-Canada Highway and access important habitat, according to a new landmark study.

The “encouraging” study identified 15 individual grizzly bears and 17 individual black bears that used the highway crossings over a three-year period — close to 20 per cent of the estimated population.

Generous Donor Pays for Shopping Spree for 90 Kids

Jean Renny buys poor kids school supplies

Jean Renny buys poor kids school suppliesMore than 90 low-income students in Seattle will be boarding buses together on a shopping trip for back-to-school clothes because of the generosity of a one woman who has no children of her own.

For a decade, Mrs. Jean Renny has been donating money to the Salvation Army so that kids could buy what they need for the new school year. This year she is giving $20,000 for the shopping spree.

First-Responder’s Dream: Jet Pack Moves Closer To Market (w/ Video)

jet pack Martins Aircraft

jet pack Martins AircraftJet packs have lifted off and may be speeding to an emergency rescue team near you.

In a recent test run, the New Zealand-based Martin Aircraft Co. launched a man in its jet pack and easily reached an an altitude of 5000-feet.

The company plans to sell it on the industrial market next year targeting first-responders who could benefit from being able to cut through traffic or have an aerial view.

Watch These People Jumping to the Rescue of Animals

animal with jar rescue-YouTube

animal with jar rescue-YouTubeThis collection of YouTube clips by Russian Alexandr Mish will  give you a bit more hope that there is a lot of wonderful people who care for each other and even animals they’ve never seen before.

 

WATCH the video set to soaring music below…

Nepal Sees Tiger Population Go Up by 63% Since 2009

photo of tiger by Explore.org

photo of tiger by Explore.orgNot only are tiger populations roaring back in the three critical countries of India, Russia and Thailand, last month Nepal’s national parks reported similar results.

The number of wild tigers living in Nepal has increased by 63% since 2009, according to a government survey carried out between February and June.

South Asian governments have committed to doubling tiger populations by 2022, reports the BBC, which noted an uphill climb due to continued threats from poaching and habitat loss.

Meet the Obamas’ New Puppy

Bo and Sunny on WH grounds

Bo and Sunny on WH groundsThe Obamas welcomed another dog into their family – a puppy named Sunny.

Just like Bo, she’s a Portuguese Water Dog, which helps avoid problems with allergies in the family.

Born in June, the bundle of energy is the perfect companion for Bo, especially when the girls are in school and the President is on the road. When these two youngest Obamas tussle you can tell which one is Bo because he has two white feet.

Singing Nurse Sooths Suffering Patients (Video)

nurse sings to elderly patient-LATimesVideo

nurse sings to elderly patient-LATimesVideoPatients who overheard him walking the halls singing old love songs and Broadway hits, began requesting that he sing to them.

Soon, serenading the sick became part of his daily rounds, gaining him the moniker “The Singing Nurse.”

According to Jared Axen, his singing seems to help patients handle pain better and exhibit a host of other improvements.

Ex-con Becomes an Honorary Police Officer

Larry Lawton ex-gangland turned author

Larry Lawton ex-gangland turned author

At one time he was considered one of the most notorious jewel thieves in the United States. He spent 11 years in some of the toughest federal prisons, but on Friday Larry Lawton was sworn in as an honorary police officer — the first time in the nation an ex-con will receive such an honor.

In 2012, Lawton released his book, Gangster Redemption, that further tells of how he went from a troubled kid in the Bronx to the man and mentor he is today.

He has dedicated his life to keeping kids on a lawful and successful path, touring around the country and telling them honestly what prison is really like and what they will lose if they end up behind bars.

Lawton developed a “Reality Check Program” in 2007 after leaving prison, and uses it to help educate kids about the consequences of crime. It has a 90 percent success rate of keeping young kids out of jail. Copies of the program’s DVD are now kept in every patrol car, ready to be handed out by the Lake St. Louis Police Department.

Learn more about the program on Lawton’s website.

(WATCH the Fox video below and another at the bottom from MSNBC)

Giving Women Credit: Pro Mujer Loans $1 Billion

Peruvian Natives with crafts-Pro Mujer

The microfinance organization Pro Mujer is celebrating a milestone, having loaned to poor women one billion dollars since its inception in 1990.

“Women in developing countries hold the key to their futures,” says Lynne Patterson, founder of the nonprofit group with the name means “Pro Women” in Spanish.

270,000 women have lifted themselves and their families out of poverty in Bolivia, Nicaragua, Peru, Mexico, and Argentina.

“We are enabling them to discover their own value,” Patterson told the Christian Science Monitor. “And that is immeasurable.”

(READ the story from Christian Science Monitor)

Tourists Can Now Cycle Along Two Great Lakes on Expanded Trail

bikes in Great Waterfront Trail Adventure-GOH IROMOTO

bikes in Great Waterfront Trail Adventure-GOH IROMOTO216 touring cyclists helped launch the expansion of Canada’s Waterfront Trail that adds a second Great Lake, Lake Erie, to the now 1400 kilometer bike trail.

The original Waterfront Trail stretched 720km along the Canadian shores of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River, connecting 41 communities and over 182 parks and natural features.

Last week the trail expanded westward along Lake Erie to Windsor, adding 27 new waterfront communities to the signed, mostly on-road route.

An Unexpected Family Reunion, Seven Decades After the Holocaust

ancestor from Poland-familyphoto-HolocaustSurvivor

ancestor from Poland-familyphoto-HolocaustSurvivorFrieda’s family was decimated by the Nazis. But at 95, she discovered relatives she never knew.

More than 70 years after the Holocaust claimed both of her parents, her grandfather, all six of her siblings, her in-laws, and an almost inconceivable number of all the aunts, uncles, and cousins she had ever known, we learned the astonishing news: My husband’s grandmother had three first cousins alive and well.

Sunbathers Can Browse for Books at This Beach Library (WATCH)

beach library Albena Bulgaria-unknown

On the sands of a Black Sea resort in Bulgaria, vacationers are encouraged to indulge in their favorite old-fashioned pastime: reading a book on the beach.

The library was the brain-child of German architect, Herman Kompernas, who designed the shelves from a material that is resistant to sun and water and stabilized the structure against the wind.

The library’s stock of over 2,500 volumes in more than 10 languages is so far proving a hit for the resort of Albena, especially because all books on the shelves can be borrowed for free.

(WATCH the video above or READ the story from EuroNews)

Trash Man Creates Free Library Out of 20,000 Books Found in Garbage

50-year-old Message Found in a Jar on Jersey Shore

Mason jar by drburtoni via Foter-CC

Mason jar by drburtoni via Foter-CCDennis Komsa was 12 years old in 1963 when, while vacationing with family along the Jersey Shore, he wrote a note, put it in a glass jar and tossed it into the Atlantic Ocean.
It wasn’t until after Superstorm Sandy hit the East Coast last October, that  the Ball mason jar was found when Norman Stanton combed through storm debris in Seaside Heights, N.J.

Across the Cultural Divide, a Life Saved in Jerusalem

Israeli Arab meet after rescue-NewsVid

Israeli Arab meet after rescue-NewsVidIn Jerusalem, a city too often divided among religious and nationalist lines, unusual heartwarming encounters do take place from time to time.

An Israeli volunteer medic, who is also an Orthodox West Bank settler, was reunited Friday with the Arab from Jerusalem whom he saved in the Old City last week.

“No one came to help me, none of the brothers, no Arabs. Only one Orthodox Jewish man came to help me,” the man’s brother recalled him saying upon his awakening.