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Canada’s Jobless Rate Drops to 4-year Low

job classified ads - Kevin P. via Morguefile

classified section photo by Kevin P via Morguefile.comCanada produced a surprising 40,000 new jobs in December, built on the back of a larger-than-expected 30,000 uptick in Ontario.

Statistics Canada reported Friday in its Labour Force Survey that Canada’s unemployment rate dropped to 7.1 per cent last month, the lowest level in four years.

Good News is Good For You, Reports WTOP Radio

Good News Network party on the Potomac

Good News Network party on the Potomac Journalist Bob Madigan came along on our “Good News Goes to Washington” cruise on the Potomac River. His report features sound from our chartered 85-ft yacht and, although it is just a minute long, really captures the spirit and message of the Good News Network.

“Good News is Good For You,” the headline screams, and he talked to one of our Good News Ambassadors on board, positive psychologist Caroline Miller, saying there is science to prove it.

The yacht party on September 9 celebrated the 15th anniversary of the Good News Network’s launch in 1997. The public as well as friends and reporters were invited on the free cruise aboard the second oldest yacht in the United States still being chartered.

yacht group shotWe were told that the vessel, Finished Business, was once used by President Richard Nixon during the Watergate hearings to escape to the Bahamas for some relaxation.

On a sunny Sunday, a large banner, reading “Good News Goes to Washington”, was tied to the starboard side as she motored up the Potomac just offshore of the Jefferson Memorial and Washington monument.

(LISTEN to the story from WTOP News)

Why a German Pilot Escorted a U.S. Bomber to Safety During World War II

WWII bomber German plane side-by-side

WWII bomber German plane side-by-sideOnce in a while, you hear an old war story that restores your faith in humanity.

A new book explores the incredible encounter of two WWII pilots in mid-air — a rookie American on his first bombing mission, piloting a crippled aircraft that was missing an engine and a German flying ace who not only saluted, then spared the rookie, but escorted him out of enemy airspace.

Why a German Pilot Escorted a U.S. Bomber to Safety During World War II

WWII bomber German plane side-by-side

WWII bomber German plane side-by-sideOnce in a while, you hear an old war story that restores your faith in humanity.

A new book explores the incredible encounter of two WWII pilots in mid-air — a rookie American on his first bombing mission, piloting a crippled aircraft that was missing an engine and a German flying ace who not only saluted, then spared the rookie, but escorted him out of enemy airspace.

12-Year-old Boys Save Drowning Fisherman in New Zealand

blue-water-scene-natanh-morguefile

blue-water-scene-natanh-morguefileIt was hope in the form of a 12-year-old boy that saved Vincent Shao from sinking beneath the waves and drowning at Waihi Beach on Saturday.

“I thought I was going to die,” the 32-year-old Auckland resident said after he lost his footing in waist-deep water while checking crab pots.

Although he was a good swimmer, Shao succumbed to a rip current as he tried swimming against the tide toward shore.

UPDATE: ‘Golden Voice’ Ted Williams – Once Homeless Now Giving Back

Golden voiced Ted Williams-NBCvid

Golden voiced Ted Williams-NBCvidDo you remember the story two years ago about the homeless man with the golden voice who was discovered pan-handling for change on a cold Ohio street?

It turns out, he didn’t fall back into old habits and end up on the street again as some had worried. Williams now works and helps the homeless and drug-addicted whenever he can.

He maintains an apartment and continues recording voice-overs for Kraft Mac and Cheese commercials.

Last May, Williams claimed to be one-year-sober and walked his daughter down the aisle at her wedding. At 54, he cowrote a book released last year with Brett Witter entitled, A Golden Voice.

The book details how he went from being a popular Ohio DJ to a homeless crack addict to a YouTube sensation after 17 hard years on the streets.

“All through that journey, I never stopped praying,’’ said Williams, who says a relationship with God is one of his top priorities.

(WATCH the new video below – READ the earlier story from TODAY)
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UPDATE: ‘Golden Voice’ Ted Williams – Once Homeless Now Giving Back

Golden voiced Ted Williams-NBCvid

Golden voiced Ted Williams-NBCvidDo you remember the story two years ago about the homeless man with the golden voice who was discovered pan-handling for change on a cold Ohio street?

It turns out, he didn’t fall back into old habits and end up on the street again as some had worried. Williams now works and helps the homeless and drug-addicted whenever he can.

He maintains an apartment and continues recording voice-overs for Kraft Mac and Cheese commercials.

The Day William Shatner Tweeted at an Astronaut (and the Astronaut Replied)

Twitter exchange w WilliamShatner

Twitter exchange w WilliamShatnerThis makes me giddy…. The Atlantic shared this Twitter exchange between Star Trek legend, William Shatner, and a Canadian astronaut who is currently serving aboard the International Space Station.

On January 3, Shatner sent a tweet to Chris Hadfield, whose Twitter handle is @Cmdr_Hadfield:

@Cmdr_Hadfield Are you Tweeting from Space?Canadian astronaut, Chris Hadfield Twitter photo

Man Offers His House to Homeless Family for a Year (Watch)

Tony Tolbert gives house for year - CBS video

Tony Tolbert gives house for year - CBS videoTony Tolbert, a Harvard-educated lawyer in Los Angeles, decided to move into his mother’s home so he could offer his own fully-furnished house to a homeless family of five, and give it to them rent-free for a year.

Felicia Duke had been sharing a single room at a shelter with three of her children. But it was for kids only and her older son couldn’t join them. So not only was the family homeless and broke, but separated.

“Kindness creates kindness. Generosity creates generosity. Love creates love,” Tolbert said. “And I think if we can share some of that and have more stories about people doing nice things for other people, and fewer stories about people doing horrible things to other people, that’s a better world.”

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

Man Offers His House to Homeless Family for a Year (Watch)

Tony Tolbert gives house for year - CBS video

Tony Tolbert gives house for year - CBS videoTony Tolbert, a Harvard-educated lawyer in Los Angeles, decided to move into his mother’s home so he could offer his own fully-furnished house to a homeless family of five, and give it to them rent-free for a year.

Felicia Duke had been sharing a single room at a shelter with three of her children. But it was for kids only and her older son couldn’t join them. So not only was the family homeless and broke, but separated.

Record Number of Women Sworn into New U.S. Congress

On January 3, 2013, a record number of women were sworn in as members of the 113th U.S. Congress. 80 new congresswomen joined a total of 20 female senators to produce a record number serving in both chambers.

How a Limbless Iraqi Orphan Has Found Happiness

buttercups-field-sun

buttercups-field-sunA 12 year-old became the center of international attention early in the Iraq war when television pictures showed him crying in a hospital after suffering severe burns during a botched US bombing raid in 2003 that destroyed his home and entire family.

Ali Abbas, now 21, lost both his arms and suffered serious burns. But today, since being fitted with artificial arms in a British Hospital, he lives in prosperous south-west London, is attempting to set up a charity for limbless children, and has married a childhood friend.

(READ the story, w/ photos, from the Telegraph)

Photo by Sun Star

Tax Break Extension Blows New Life into U.S. Wind Power

wind-turbines-sunset Photo by David Loudon via Morguefile.com

wind-turbines-sunset Photo by David Loudon via Morguefile.comThe US wind industry is powering up once again after Congress extended a critical tax credit that wind companies say will save tens of thousands of domestic jobs and allow more clean energy projects to ramp up in 2013.

The extension and several other clean energy tax breaks came out of a Senate Finance Committee  and was included in the deal to avert the ‘fiscal cliff’.

(READ the story from Reuters

Photo by David Loudon via Morguefile.com

Inmates Find Health and Solace in Yoga

Yoga room SF airport

Yoga room SF airportThree times a week, Robbie Norris, a lean, 50-year-old yoga teacher, hops into his 1992 Volvo and heads to his class in Richmond, Va. past barbed wire and armed guards to a windowless room where a dozen women, scarred and tattooed, are waiting on donated yoga mats.

When many states have cut their wellness and education programs for inmates, citing cost and political pressure, some wardens are looking for a low-cost, low-risk way for inmates to reflect on their crimes, improve their fitness and cope with the stress of overcrowded prison life are turning toward yoga.

‘Mobile Lab’ App Detects Allergens in Food

peanuts in shell-Cohdra Morguefile

peanuts in shell-Cohdra MorguefileDo you have a serious food allergy and want to know if there’s any culprits in your cookie? Now there’s an app for that.

It will take you 20 minutes to get the answer using a new application developed by UCLA researchers for your smartphone.

The app comes with a device, called the iTube — like a test tube — which allows your phone to scan and test a food item before you eat it.

So far, the lightweight device, which attaches to your cell phone, can detect traces of peanuts, almonds, eggs, gluten and hazelnuts with the same high level of sensitivity found in a professional laboratory.

Lab App Detects Allergens in Food

peanuts in shell-Cohdra Morguefile

peanuts in shell-Cohdra MorguefileDo you have a serious food allergy and want to know if there’s any culprits in your cookie? Now there’s an app for that.

It will take you 20 minutes to get the answer using a new application developed by UCLA researchers for your smartphone.

The app comes with a device, called the iTube — like a test tube — which allows your phone to scan and test a food item before you eat it.

So far, the lightweight device, which attaches to your cell phone, can detect traces of peanuts, almonds, eggs, gluten and hazelnuts with the same high level of sensitivity found in a professional laboratory.

Food allergies affect as many as 8 percent of young children and can trigger severe and even life-threatening reactions. And while consumer-protection laws regulate the labeling of ingredients in pre-packaged foods, cross-contaminations can still occur during processing, manufacturing and transportation.

Although several products that detect allergens in foods are currently available, they are complex and require bulky equipment, making them ill-suited for use in public settings, according to the UCLA researchers.

The iTube weighs less than two ounces, and uses the cell phone’s built-in camera, along with an application to run a test that analyzes allergen-concentration in a test tube.

To test for allergens, food samples are initially ground up and mixed in a test tube with hot water and an extraction solvent; this mixture is allowed to set for several minutes. Then, following a step-by-step procedure, the prepared sample is mixed with a series of other reactive testing liquids. The entire preparation takes roughly 20 minutes. When the sample is ready, it is measured optically with the camera in your phone.

Phone device iTube-UCLAresearchersBeyond just a “yes” or “no” answer as to whether allergens are present, the test can also quantify how much of an allergen is in a sample, in parts per million.

The UCLA team’s research was recently published online in the peer-reviewed journal Lab on a Chip and will be featured in a forthcoming print issue of the journal.

“We envision that this cell phone–based allergen testing platform could be very valuable, especially for parents, as well as for schools, restaurants and other public settings,” said Aydogan Ozcan, leader of the research team and a UCLA associate professor of electrical engineering and bioengineering. “Once successfully deployed in these settings, the big amount of data — as a function of both location and time — that this platform will continuously generate would indeed be priceless for consumers, food manufacturers, policymakers and researchers, among others.”

Allergen-testing results of various food products, tagged with a time and location stamp, can be uploaded directly from cell phones to iTube servers to create a personalized testing archive, which could provide additional resources for allergic individuals around the world. A statistical allergy database, coupled with geographic information, could be useful for future food-related policies — for example in restaurants, food production and for consumer protection, the researchers said.

iTube could be available commercially in about 18 months, Ozcan told a writer at the LA Weekly, who quipped, “Now if only they could come up with an EpiPen app.” No word yet on what the device would cost.

Keeping Hands Busy Working on Cars Helps Disabled Soldiers to Heal

soldier auto-mechanic therapy-Race2Recovery photo

soldier auto-mechanic therapy-Race2Recovery photoIt’s more than just a hobby. Working on cars and motorcycles, Read said, fills the aching void in his life left when his war wounds stripped him of the ability to be a combat Marine.

“My hands are meant to be dirty,” he said.

Next month, he’ll travel to Peru to be a ride-along mechanic for a team of wounded U.S. and British military personnel during the 6,000-mile Dakar Rally. The team is sponsored by an organization called Race2Recovery, supported by the royal family.

12-Year-Old Girl Saves Up, Donates Doggie Treadmill to Shelter

Dog Treadmill - Doug Foster Photo

Dog Treadmill - Doug Foster PhotoKam Gottlieb of Wilmette, Illinois was inspired by photographs of charity work a friend’s mom did in Haiti so she decided to do some good work of her own.

She loves animals but didn’t want to simply walk dogs at the local shelter, especially because of the winter temperatures near Chicago. But she was concerned about the animals getting enough exercise. Her mother mentioned the rising popularity of dog treadmills. She instantly knew it could be her passion to raise money to buy treadmills for the pups stuck in shelters.

Ga. Plans Tunnels as Safe Road Crossings for Bears

Brown bear in wild

Brown bear in wildGeorgia transportation officials are planning to add a half-dozen bear tunnels beneath a highway in what will be a first-of-its-kind project for the state.

A project manager for the Georgia Department of Transportation says preliminary plans have already been completed and the state is now buying land along State Route 96, according to the AP report from WSPA.

Similar engineering efforts have helped other animals cross roads, including endangered panthers in Florida for whom tunnels were built. The passageway under the highway that bisects the 18,000-acre Paynes Prairie wetland in Gainesville has been a huge success at reducing roadkill.

A $5 Light For The Developing World With An Ingenious Fuel: Gravity

GravityLight-prototype

GravityLight-prototypeThe GravityLight gets power from the slow lowering of a weight. All it takes is enough elbow grease to hoist the bag, and you can light a room with nothing but a bag of sand.

The need is enormous: more than 1 billion people still lack electricity.

Two socialpreneurs wanted to find a replacement for the dangerous and dirty kerosene lamp–which is also relatively expensive to run, highly polluting, and comes with multiple health and fire risks.