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US Teen Sends Bikes to India’s Poor Children

Bikes for poor Indian kids

Bikes for poor Indian kidsThomas Hircock first visited India when he was 12 years old and joined his father on a business trip. He was shocked by the poverty and now he’s helping children of the ‘Untouchable’ caste by giving them bikes.

The youngsters wanted bikes so they could travel to school many miles away and lift themselves out of poverty.

Proof in the Profits: America’s Happiest Companies Make More Money

High-five at Tims Place-AOLvid

High-five at Tims Place-AOLvidEvery year around this time, a new edition of the “100 Best Companies To Work For” is released. These are the companies that go out of their way to keep their employees happy in their jobs.

But is there a direct connection between having happy workers and a company making more money?

One person who may have the answer is Jerome Dodson, the founder of Parnassus Investments, which created a mutual fund that invests exclusively in large American firms proven to have outstanding workplaces.

City Officials Kick off Happiness Initiative in Santa Fe

laughing friends Cam and Diana

laughing friends Cam and DianaThe Happiness Santa Fe Initiative kicked off its Sustainable Happiness Week on Saturday at the Santa Fe Farmers Market with a formal city proclamation, music, hugs and, of course, a message board where people could write down the things that bring them joy.

One of the driving forces behind the project is Dr. Merle Lefkoff, who was invited last year by the Prime Minister of Bhutan to help promote that country’s “Gross National Happiness” index at the United Nations.

Life is Good Builds Brand Based on Optimism

Life is Good-logo

Life is Good-logoOptimism has been good for Bert Jacobs, who along with his brother John, co-founded Life is good in 1989.

The lifestyle and clothing brand, built around Jake – a smiling, somewhat crudely drawn elongated smiley face with a huge grin and a jaunty beret – started with the pair peddling T-shirts on the streets of Boston. It has grown from the two brothers sleeping in a van while they sold T-shirts door-to-door on college campuses to a $100 million business built around the idea of spreading optimism.

Basketball Stars Gift Hundreds of Local Kids with Tickets to NBA Game

Golden State Warriors Helping Hands outreach-teamphoto

Golden State Warriors Helping Hands outreach-teamphotoHundreds of California youngsters got the chance to experience a live NBA basketball game for the first time after the athletes themselves reached out to community groups with stacks of free tickets.

Golden State Warriors players Andris Bierdrins, Andrew Bogut, Draymond Green, Jarrett Jack, Richard Jefferson, David Lee, and Klay Thompson bought 50-to-100 tickets each, and donated them to local groups in San Francisco.

Soldier’s Rescue of Orphan Leads to Reunion 40 years in the Making

vietnamese orphan meets savior- CBS video

vietnamese orphan meets savior- CBS videoKimberly Mitchell’s life story has always been missing a few important pages — like how she ended up in an orphanage in 1970’s Vietnam with war raging.

“If you’re an adopted child, you always want to know — did your mother, did your father want you?” Kim says.

She finally knows the story and got to thank the soldier who rescued her — and named her — in 1972.

(READ the story from Steve Hartman at CBS)

Goodbye Fluorescent Lights: Super Energy-efficient LED Tubes Unveiled

LED tube lamp - Phillips Photo

LED tube lamp - Phillips PhotoThe horrid green fluorescent lamps in offices and schools could be a thing of the past.

Lighting company Philips has developed an LED lamp that it describes as “the world’s most energy-efficient” — twice as efficient as those currently used in offices and industry around the world. The tube fixture offers the same amount of light while cutting the carbon emissions in half.

How a Museum Exhibit is Changing Lives in Los Angeles

space shuttle exhibit

space shuttle exhibitA 10-year-old boy who lives in L.A.’s inner-city has never been on an airplane, but that hasn’t stopped him from dreaming of becoming an astronaut when he grows up.

He was moved to tears when he saw the Space Shuttle Endeavour fly over his school on its way to its new home at the California Science Center and even more excited when he could walk around the gargantuan space craft at the museum, touching tires that flew in space.

Cast-Out Boy in New School Becomes Beloved as ‘The Doorman’

Doorman Josh Yandt - CBC video

Doorman Josh Yandt - CBC videoBullied every day for years because of his lisp, Josh Yandt and his family moved to London, Ontario, in 2011. Determined not to be “put in a box” by his new classmates, the remarkable young man dramatically changed the trajectory of his life with one small idea: he would hold open the door at school each day.

It was his chance to break out of a depression-filled past. He held the door open for hundreds of teenagers that first morning – and every morning since. At first they didn’t know what to make of the stranger who quietly offered them greetings day after day. But then, something happened.

Photo of Loyal Dog Waiting in Deceased Dad’s Truck Touches Hearts

dog on deceased drivers seat-IMGUR

dog on deceased drivers seat-IMGURA photo posted on Reddit has gone viral for its depiction of a loyal dog waiting for their deceased dad on the driver’s seat of his tow-truck. The photo caption says their father died in June, but the dog still waits for him every day in the vehicle he used to drive.

The truck is still used to move cars on their impound lot, according to the poster AmericanBulldag.

Looking for the Stranger Who Picked up Her Wedding Tab 54 Years Ago

wedding couple in 1950's - family photo

wedding couple in 1950's - family photoAn Armstrong BC woman named Karel Nordstrom has launched an international search for the mystery man who paid for her and her late-husband’s wedding 54 years ago in England. Karel and Tom Nordstrom were young and broke students when they threw a reception at a restaurant on a shoestring budget. When they went to pay they were told that a fellow diner in the restaurant had already paid.

Hidden Borneo Orangutans Provide Population Bump of 5-7 Percent

Orangutan with twins- Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme

Orangutan with twins- Sumatran Orangutan Conservation ProgrammeA team of conservationists have uncovered a hidden population of around 200 of the world’s rarest Bornean orangutans in Malaysian Borneo.

The sub-species Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus is listed as the most severely threatened orangutan worldwide with a total of between 3,000-4,500 animals, of which 2,000 live in the Batang Ai National Park and Lanjak-Entimau Wildlife Sanctuary in Sarawak.

The orangutans were found in an area of about 14,000 hectares (140 sq km) and the Sarawak government has pledged protection.

Mexican drug homicides fall 14 percent in four months

Mexico said on April 11 that killings linked to organized crime fell 14 percent in the first four months of the presidency of Enrique Pena Nieto, who has vowed to reduce murder, kidnapping, and extortion. (Reuters)

Cabbies Worthy of Praise and Riders Who Take Time to File Compliments

taxicab interior

taxicab interiorFrom the back seat of a New York City taxicab, complaints about drivers flow effortlessly.

But about twice a day, taxi passengers in New York take time to tell the city about some exemplary deeds.

The drivers’ deeds include leaving the cab to confront the assailant of a pedestrian, returning a diamond ring, and caring for a college student after a mugging.

 

(READ the full story in the NY Times)

Thanks to Nancy Peske for sending the link!

‘He Saved Hundreds’: Army Chaplain To Get Medal Of Honor

Catholic Army Chaplain holds mass in field

Catholic Army Chaplain holds mass in fieldIt took more than 60 years, but an Army chaplain who died as a prisoner during the Korean War will be awarded the Medal of Honor by President Obama on Thursday.

 

Capt. Emil Kapaun, who was a Catholic priest serving with the 3rd Battalion, will be honored for “extraordinary heroism”, for bravery and service to others — both on the battlefield and in prison following his capture by enemy troops in November 1950.

A Mother’s Fight Against ‘3-Strikes Law’ Helps Hundreds

Mom 3Strikes campaign-Sue Reams

Mom 3Strikes campaign-Sue ReamsSince the November election, 240 California prisoners facing potential life sentences have been set free. That’s because voters changed California’s tough three strikes sentencing law, which sent thousands of people to prison for terms of 25 years to life for minor, nonviolent crimes.

The ballot initiative’s success is due in no small part to Sue Reams. Her son was one of those released, after 17 years in prison.

But she isn’t done fighting having gained her son’s freedom. She believes that the initiative didn’t go far enough.

“For me this has become a way of life,” she says. “People are [still] in [prison] for stealing baby food, for stupid things. And they don’t deserve a life sentence for that.”

(READ the full story from NPR NewsWATCH an interview with Sue below)

Woman Emerges From Coma Asking for Bob Seger Concert – Tonight She’s Going

music elderly tamborine-EngAGE

music is good for the elderly - EngAGE photoSeven years ago, Evie Branan suffered a stroke that left her in a semi-coma. In May of 2011, she tumbled out of bed, bumped her head and woke up. Her first words: “I want to go to a Bob Seger concert.”

Tonight in Flint, Michigan, a limousine is going to pull up to her nursing home and take the 79 year-old patient to see Bob Seger. Not only that, she will get to meet him.

Former Microsoft Executive Finds Joy Boosting Literacy Instead of Profits

boy reads in Nepal - Room to Read photo

boy reads in Nepal - Room to Read photoSince leaving his job as Microsoft’s China business development director in 1999 and dedicating his life to improving global literacy, New York-based John Wood has put books in the hands of more than 7.8 million children in 10 countries in Asia and Africa.

His charity, Room to Read, has built more than 14,600 libraries and 1,500 schools in 12 years.

So is he happy? “Extremely. Extremely,” he told me recently when he was in Vancouver to promote his new book, Creating Room to Read: A Story of Hope in the Battle for Global Literacy, and doing some fundraising.

(READ the story in the Vancouver Sun)

Photo from Room to Read – Thanks to Craig Withers for submitting the link!

US Senators Reach Bipartisan Deal on Expanding Gun Background Checks

gun show Flickr glasgows

gun show Flickr glasgowsA bipartisan group of senators has struck a deal to expand gun background checks to all commercial sales — whether at gun shows, via the Internet or in any circumstance involving paid advertising, according to Senate aides familiar with the talks.

The amendment to the guns legislation already proposed in the Senate would not cover private transactions between individuals, unless there was advertising or an online service involved. It is more stringent than the current law, which requires checks only when purchases are made through a licensed dealer.

An overwhelmingly majority of American voters — 91 percent — support universal gun background checks, according to a poll from Quinnipiac University released last week, and other similar surveys conducted this year.

(READ the full story in the Washington Post)


Teen Girls Find Impossible Strength to Lift 3000 lbs off Dad

tractor-lifting girls - KGW video

tractor-lifting girls - KGW videoAn Oregon man pinned by his overturned tractor said his teenage daughters saved his life by miraculously lifting the 3,000-pound machine.

Jeff Smith was pulling a stump from his garden in the rural outskirts of Lebanon last week when his tractor flipped upside down pinning him beneath its steering wheel.