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‘Israel Loves Iran’ Initiative Takes Off On Facebook

Iranians, Israelis Love You - Facebook page

Iranians, Israelis Love You - Facebook pageAn online call for peace started by an Israeli couple is bypassing the official realms of government and targeting the hearts of Iranian people via the internet. Both Israelis and Iranians have responded over the weekend, posting photos with messages of love for the citizens of their Mideast foes.

Ronny Edry and his wife Michal Tamir uploaded pink and green posters to Facebook last week depicting images of themselves with their children alongside the words, “Iranians, we will never bomb your country… We love you.”

Happstr, the App That Finds Your Happy Place … Literally

Happstr app tracks happiness

Happstr app tracks happinessLooking for happiness? Now there’s a map for that.

Mobile web app Happstr lets users mark the locations at which they’re happy on a map and browse for happy spots left by others nearby.

It was built last week during a mobile hackathon called The Startup Bus. The team of six entrepreneurs completed the project en route to South by Southwest.

Fewer Kids Dying From Leukemia, Study Shows

girl with shaved head

girl with shaved headKids with one type of leukemia are living longer than they used to, most likely thanks to new drug combinations that mean fewer patients are relapsing after a first round of treatment.

In a study including more than 20,000 children, patients’ chances of surviving at least five years after their diagnosis increased from 84 percent in the early 1990s to over 90 percent a decade later.

From Stage Coach Trail to Electric Car Highway on Nation’s Second Busiest Interstate

Volt change-up - GM photo

Volt change-up - GM photoWhile many drivers are paying up to $4.00 per gallon of gasoline across America, Volt owners and others with EV’s are finding more charging stations open for business.

On Friday, following a trail blazed by Indians and pioneers in covered wagons, electric car drivers hit the road to inaugurate the first major section of a West Coast ‘Electric Highway’ dotted with stations where they can charge up in 20 minutes.

The stations go from the California border north to the Oregon city of Cottage Grove and are located at gas stations, restaurants and motels just off the nation’s second-busiest interstate.

College Student Drops Out to Start Secret Cookie Service – Now He Thrives in Disguise

Cookie delivery service not so secret anymore

Cookie delivery service not so secret anymoreA UCSD grad student has traded in his lab coat for an apron and sunglasses, disguising his identity and keeping his new cookie service a secret, to avoid criticism from friends and family.

Now, the passionate cookie-maker is seeing his dream pay off and the “secret cookie service” is not so secret anymore.

The young man known as “Agent Snickerdoodle” delivers his famous cookies to hungry UCSD students who simply text or call him requesting a delivery.

College Student Drops Out to Start Secret Cookie Service – Now He Thrives in Disguise

Cookie delivery service not so secret anymore

Cookie delivery service not so secret anymoreA UCSD grad student has traded in his lab coat for an apron and sunglasses, disguising his identity and keeping his new cookie service a secret, to avoid criticism from friends and family.

Now, the passionate cookie-maker is seeing his dream pay off and the “secret cookie service” is not so secret anymore.

The young man known as “Agent Snickerdoodle” delivers his famous cookies to hungry UCSD students who simply text or call him requesting a delivery.

The Amazings: Join a UK Website to Teach Your Skills and Get Paid

Photo by Sun Star

Photo by Sun StarEveryone has a skill. Now retirees and other talented individuals in London are invited to share their passions by joining “The Amazings”, a new social enterprise that helps people with skills to teach others by way of group classes and activities.

The website explains, “We handle the advertising and payments – all the Amazing has to do is decide when they want to run their experience, turn up, be amazing, and then collect the cash.”

Upcoming scheduled classes include “Introduction to Crochet,” “Steel Pan Drumming” and “Cooking Hungarian Food”.

The website, run by a trio of young entrepreneurs, offers gift vouchers for classes, which start at just £10. They see it as a way for people to make a bit of extra cash, and in the process enrich the lives of others.

“She gave great advice,” one pupil said of the teacher in her “Alterations Workshop” in February. “In the process we also transformed three items of clothing.”

Co-founder Katie Harris told the website HowToHome, “We initially were just going to work with the retired but when we started doing the on-street research what we found was a variety of amazing people who wanted to share their skills.”

Katie says it’s all about community, and there are more ideas planned for branching out. “The thing is we want it to be a real social thing, and we’re going to try running a social evening for the current Amazings, where we meet in a different pub each time – the Amazings can come together, people that might want to go on the course can come and chat to the Amazings, new Amazings can come and learn about the experience of other Amazings.”

Interested Londoners should check the website often for more classes in foraging, dancing, Thai Chi and more, at TheAmazings.org.

Photo by Sun Star

Babies Fed on Demand Do Better at School

bottle-feeding baby, photo by Kahanaboy via Morguefile

bottle-feeding baby, photo by Kahanaboy via MorguefileA large scale study in Britain suggests eight-year-olds who were fed on demand as infants had higher IQs — and did better in school — than did children who were fed on a schedule.

Researchers from Essex and Oxford Universities looked at more than 10,000 children born in the Bristol area in the early 1990s and studied their performance at ages five, seven, 11 and 14.

The study takes into account background factors such as a parent’s education, family income, the child’s sex and age, maternal health and parenting styles.

New York Beekeepers Quadruple

honey bee photo by John Stone, eyeclectic.net

honey bee photo by John Stone, eyeclectic.netThe number of beekeepers in New York City has quadrupled since the ban on keeping bees was lifted two years ago, figures show. Hives are now on skyscraper rooftops, in community gardens, and school backyards across the five boroughs.

Locally produced food growers pushed hard for the ban to be overturned.

Ancient Incan Plant Remedy Set to Replace Dental Injections

herb dental remedy, Acmella oleracea

herb dental remedy, Acmella oleracea

The herbal remedy for toothache, used for centuries by an indigenous tribe in the Amazon is being turned into a commercial treatment for dental pain, thanks to an anthropologist’s chance wisdom tooth problem.

A researcher from Cambridge University living among a remote Peruvian tribe suddenly experienced “excruciating pain” and was given a piece of the rare Acmella oleracea plant, which completely eliminated her symptoms.

Through a Cambridge commercialization arm, two clinical trials have been very successful in the pursuit of a commercial gel that could replace dental injections and cure tooth aches, among other applications.

Ancient Incan Plant Remedy Set to Replace Dental Injections

herb dental remedy, Acmella oleracea

herb dental remedy, Acmella oleraceaThe herbal remedy for toothache, used for centuries by an indigenous tribe in the Amazon is being turned into a commercial treatment for dental pain, thanks to an anthropologist’s chance wisdom tooth problem.

A researcher from Cambridge University living among a remote Peruvian tribe suddenly experienced “excruciating pain” and was given a piece of the rare Acmella oleracea plant, which completely eliminated her symptoms.

Through a Cambridge commercialization arm, two clinical trials have been very successful in the pursuit of a commercial gel that could replace dental injections and cure tooth aches, among other applications.

Freed After 20 Years of Injustice, He Hits the Books

Franky Carillo wrongly convicted - family photo

Franky Carillo wrongly convicted - family photoFranky Carrillo spent 20 years behind bars for a murder he did not commit. Now he is free, thanks to a lawyer who took his case pro-bono, giving up weekends, summers and vacations to prove Carrillo’s innocence.

The California public defender, Ellen Eggers, was convinced of Carrillo’s innocence after meeting him just once, and not just because his earnestness and manners.

Rare Wild Giraffe Population Makes a Comeback

Giraffe Niger rare species-Roland H-Flickr-CC

rare species of giraffe in Niger - Roland H's Flickr photo -CCThe last West African giraffe population living in the wilds of southwestern Niger is making a comeback with numbers reaching 310 last year, up from a count of 50 in 1996, the environment ministry said.

The ‘giraffa camelopardalis peralta’, distinguished by its light-coloured spots and found only in the Sahel region south of the Sahara, was nearly extinct when a campaign was launched to protect it from poachers — supported by the African Wildlife Foundation.

‘Welcome Home’ Program Inspires U.S. Soldiers for Last Time

Welcome Home A Hero DFW-Facebook-photo

Welcome Home A Hero DFW-Facebook-photoEvery day in the past 8 years, more than 100 US soldiers passed through the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport on their way home for two weeks of rest and recuperation. Each soldier was greeted with applause and hearty handshakes from volunteer “greeters” who traveled to the airport just to show their thanks.

On Wednesday, more than a thousand greeters delivered a thunderous welcome, along with flowers and high-fives, to the 230 troops aboard the final arriving military charter that will use DFW airport, ending the unique Texas “Welcome Home A Hero” program

(Watch the video below)

As military troop reductions continue overseas, the United States Army is ending its charter flights to DFW, consolidating the fewer flights instead to Atlanta-Hartsfield Jackson International Airport. Following the final arrival Wednesday, the U.S. Army and the Airport paid tribute to the volunteers who turned their affectionate welcome into a nationally recognized community service project that lasted eight years.

“You, the Welcome Home A Hero volunteers made it your individual, personal, mission to extend a warm welcome to our military troops coming home through DFW,” said Jim Crites, DFW executive vice president for operations. “You were able to see in the eyes of those who served, someone who knew they were appreciated and loved. This was and is priceless.”

Sal Giunta, a retired U.S. Army Staff Sergeant who became the first Congressional Medal of Honor recipient in forty years, told the crowd about his personal experiences coming through DFW Airport on two different occasions.

“I felt like a true hero walking through those doors,” said Giunta. “I felt that way because of the amount of support. People don’t just give up their jobs in the middle of the day to shake anyone’s hand, Soldier returns - FB photo "Welcome A Hero" pagecheer for them and bake cookies and take time out of their busy lives. Here at this airport, this group of people, they do that every single day.”

The “Welcome Home a Hero” program has been nationally recognized as a model for civic participation and grew into one of the largest public service projects in the Dallas/Fort Worth area. Volunteers greeted over 460,000 inbound soldiers transiting through DFW on their way home from active duty in Iraq and in Afghanistan. Hundreds of local organizations and more than 10,000 individual volunteers have greeted about 2,700 incoming flights during the life of the program. (See more of the photos from the group’s Facebook page, here)

(WATCH the NBC tribute video below, from Nightly News)

 

‘Welcome Home’ Program Inspires U.S. Soldiers for Last Time

Welcome Home A Hero DFW-Facebook-photo

Welcome Home A Hero DFW-Facebook-photoEvery day in the past 8 years, more than 100 US soldiers passed through the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport on their way home for two weeks of rest and recuperation. Each soldier was greeted with applause and hearty handshakes from volunteer “greeters” who traveled to the airport just to show their thanks.

On Wednesday, more than a thousand greeters delivered a thunderous welcome, along with flowers and high-fives, to the 230 troops aboard the final arriving military charter that will use DFW airport, ending the unique Texas “Welcome Home A Hero” program

(Watch the video below)

Secret Hero Leaving Envelopes of $13,000 Around German Town

angel of lights

angel of lights photo by John Stone, eyclectic.netSomeone has been leaving envelopes of $13,000 in various locations like a church, a hospice and soup kitchen in the town of Braunschweig, Germany.

Everyone around town is currently playing: Guess who?

“Maybe it’s a kind of Robin Hood … or someone with no family who wants to give something back to society.”

101-Year-old Woman Gets Her House Back Thanks to Author Mitch Albom

Mitch Albom with Mrs Hollis - S.A.Y. Detroit photo

Mitch Albom with Mrs Hollis - S.A.Y. Detroit photoLast fall, Texana Hollis, 101, was evicted from her Detroit home after almost 60 years. A Good Samaritan from church took her in, while others tried to find funding to get her foreclosed home back. Unfortunately the building was in bad condition and condemned as not fit to live in, especially for the wheelchair bound great-grandmother.

But, now her house is being given back to her – in better shape than ever – thanks to Detroit resident Mitch Albom, the best selling author of “Tuesdays with Morrie” and his charity for the homeless, S.A.Y. Detroit.

In January, after hearing about Hollis’s troubles, Albom offered to buy the severely distressed property from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for $100 and take responsibility for repairs. HUD agreed to the deal, and on Wednesday Hollis and Albom returned together to the home, which is being renovated with volunteer labor and more than $20,000 worth of materials paid for by Albom’s charity, S.A.Y. Detroit.

Hollis had been evicted from the home after her son failed to make tax payments.

(Original story posted in Jan: Donors Step Up for 101-year-old Evicted Woman in Detroit)

“Everyone deserves a home,” Albom said. “Especially one they have lived in for 60 years. I am blessed to be able to help this sweet and deserving woman, who told me her husband got her that house after returning from World War II.”

HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan added, “We moved heaven and earth to find a solution to get Texana back into her home.  Working with Mitch and his organization offered the perfect solution that will give her not only a new home, but peace of mind.”

Hollis’ house is getting a complete make-over, from walls to ceilings to appliances, using funds from S.A.Y. Detroit, which the author formed in 2006 to help the homeless with the Detroit Rescue Mission Ministries.

Since its inception, S.A.Y. Detroit has raised nearly $2 million in funding for such projects as a Family Health Clinic, the first medical clinic for homeless children in America; Working Homes/Working Familes, which refurbishes decaying properties and fills them with deserving families; a new kitchen for Michigan’s Homeless Veterans, and a daycare center at COTS for mothers who are in shelters or treatment.

Through Albom’s volunteer corps, A Time to Help, the organization has engaged over 6,000 metro-Detroit volunteers in projects throughout the city, and volunteers will put the finishing touches on Hollis’ house before turning it back to her.

Chad Audi, President of Detroit Rescue Mission Ministries and director for S.A.Y. Detroit operations said, “I cherish the partnership with Mitch Albom and it makes you feel proud, humble, and happy to bring joy to a 101 year old lady.”

DONATE to the S.A.Y. Detroit effort HERE.

101-Year-old Woman Gets Her House Back Thanks to Author Mitch Albom

Mitch Albom with Mrs Hollis - S.A.Y. Detroit photo

Mitch Albom with Mrs Hollis - S.A.Y. Detroit photoLast fall, Texana Hollis, 101, was evicted from her Detroit home after almost 60 years. A Good Samaritan from church took her in, while others tried to find funding to get her foreclosed home back. Unfortunately the building was in bad condition and condemned as not fit to live in, especially for the wheelchair bound great-grandmother.

But, now her house is being given back to her – in better shape than ever – thanks to Detroit resident Mitch Albom, the best selling author of “Tuesdays with Morrie” and his charity for the homeless, S.A.Y. Detroit.

In January, after hearing about Hollis’s troubles, Albom offered to buy the severely distressed property from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for $100 and take responsibility for repairs. HUD agreed to the deal, and on Wednesday Hollis and Albom returned together to the home, which is being renovated with volunteer labor and more than $20,000 worth of materials paid for by Albom’s charity, S.A.Y. Detroit.

5 African Countries Form World’s Biggest Wildlife Conservation Area

white rhino photo by Enaud Fulconis - IRF.org

white rhino photo by Enaud Fulconis - IRF.orgFive nations have agreed to launch the world’s largest international conservation area to protect nearly half of Africa’s elephants and a vast range of animals, birds and plants, many of them endangered by poaching and human encroachment.

At a ceremony in Namibia on Thursday government ministers from Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe put their official seal on a transfrontier treaty set to combine conservation in 36 nature preserves and surrounding areas.

Man Walks All Day to Create Intricate Snow Art on Frozen Lakes

Snow Art by Simon Beck - Facebook photo

Snow Art by Simon Beck - Facebook photoIn the beautiful valley of Savoie, France, Simon Beck creates patterned snow art to decorate the large expanse of frozen lakes and delight the local skiers — until the next snowfall.

With each layer of fresh snow, Beck walks the lakes with mathematical precision to design and redesign his incredibly intricate snow flakes and three dimensional star bursts and spirographs.