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Florida Hero Rebuilds Endangered Coral Reefs

Coral Reef nursery - CNN Video

Coral Reef nursery - CNN VideoOver a 40 year span, scuba enthusiast Ken Nedimyer watched helplessly as two of the most important corals went into drastic decline. Today, they are on the endangered species list and the reefs of the Florida Keys are among the most threatened in the world.

Reefs are often referred to as the rainforests of the sea. They attract more marine life than anywhere else in the ocean because of the natural shelter they provide. They also provide protection from storms for our coastal areas.

That passion led to Nedimyer starting the Coral Restoration Foundation, which has grown more than 25,000 staghorn and elkhorn corals in underwater nurseries. He and his staff of volunteers work three days a week maintaining the nurseries just off Key Largo, which cover more than an acre of the ocean floor.

John Mayer’s Spring Tour will Benefit U.S. Troops

John Mayer with veterans

John Mayer with veteransSeven-time Grammy Award-winning singer and musician John Mayer launches his first U.S. tour in two years on April 9, with 18 concerts that will raise money to benefit US veterans. The tour leads into Mayer’s upcoming fifth album Born and Raised, which will be released in May.

Mayer became passionate about supporting U.S. war veterans following a visit to the Marine Corps’ Camp Lejeune in North Carolina four years ago. He has since spent time with active military and veterans while touring, and partnered with the Northern California Institute of Research and Education (NCIRE) to provide veterans with a healthy reintegration into civilian life, helping to heal the battle scars caused by the trauma of war.

John Mayer’s Spring Tour will Benefit U.S. Troops

John Mayer with veterans

John Mayer with veteransSeven-time Grammy Award-winning singer and musician John Mayer launches his first U.S. tour in two years on April 9, with 18 concerts that will raise money to benefit US veterans. The tour leads into Mayer’s upcoming fifth album Born and Raised, which will be released in May.

Mayer became passionate about supporting U.S. war veterans following a visit to the Marine Corps’ Camp Lejeune in North Carolina four years ago. He has since spent time with active military and veterans while touring, and partnered with the Northern California Institute of Research and Education (NCIRE) to provide veterans with a healthy reintegration into civilian life, helping to heal the battle scars caused by the trauma of war.

Indian Engineering Students Light Up Rural Homes With Solar

India Engineering students - E Cell initiative

India Engineering students - E Cell initiative At a time when many States are facing a power crisis in India, a group of electrical engineering students have taken up an initiative to use solar lamps to light up study centers in remote villages reeled under constant power cuts.

The E Cell initiative team from SSN College of Engineering plans to scale up this social venture. “We plan to rope in our juniors so that they can take it forward. We are also confident of getting in more sponsorship so that we can buy more lamps.”

Early Relic Suggests First Americans Were Stone Age Europeans Who Traveled West 20,000 Years Ago

Paleo-Indian spear heads - Smithsonian Anthropology photos

Paleo-Indian spear heads - Smithsonian Anthropology photosArchaeologists have long held that North America remained unpopulated until about 15,000 years ago, when Siberian people walked or boated into Alaska and then moved down the West Coast.

But a dark, tapered stone blade, nearly eight inches long and still sharp, found near the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, turned out to be 22,000 years old, suggesting that its makers probably paddled from Europe and arrived in America thousands of years ahead of the western migration.

How Our Golden Retriever Lost Her Sight — But Kept Her Love of Life

Golden Retriever Shakira with tennis-ball - photo via Dr. Marty Becker

Golden Retriever Shakira with tennis-ball - photo via Dr. Marty BeckerFor years, our Golden Retriever, Shakira, had the ability to track an incoming missile – a yellow tennis ball, I mean – better than the air defenses of most of the world’s countries. Her ability to lock on to a target and pull in the prize, coupled with her speed in the 100-yard dash, would have made NFL scouts drool like a Bloodhound, sure they’d found the next hall of fame wide receiver.

Shakira is an athlete, a hard-bodied, golden phenom who never has an off day. If you threw it, she would retrieve it. And beg you to throw it again. And again. My arm would fall off long before my tail-wagging retriever would allow me to put down the ball.

These days, though, she wouldn’t notice if I stopped throwing the ball because she can’t see what I’m doing anymore. In just two days, 12-year-old Shakira went from being able to track an airborne tennis ball at a dead run to not being able to see a spoonful of canned dog food held two feet in front of her nose. (Read more of the article by By Dr. Marty Becker, below)

How Our Golden Retriever Lost Her Sight — But Kept Her Love of Life

Golden Retriever Shakira with tennis-ball - photo via Dr. Marty Becker

Golden Retriever Shakira with tennis-ball - photo via Dr. Marty BeckerFor years, our Golden Retriever, Shakira, had the ability to track an incoming missile – a yellow tennis ball, I mean – better than the air defenses of most of the world’s countries. Her ability to lock on to a target and pull in the prize, coupled with her speed in the 100-yard dash, would have made NFL scouts drool like a Bloodhound, sure they’d found the next hall of fame wide receiver.

Shakira is an athlete, a hard-bodied, golden phenom who never has an off day. If you threw it, she would retrieve it. And beg you to throw it again. And again. My arm would fall off long before my tail-wagging retriever would allow me to put down the ball.

These days, though, she wouldn’t notice if I stopped throwing the ball because she can’t see what I’m doing anymore. In just two days, 12-year-old Shakira went from being able to track an airborne tennis ball at a dead run to not being able to see a spoonful of canned dog food held two feet in front of her nose. (Read more of the article by By Dr. Marty Becker, below)

Army of Strangers Pitch in to Help Tornado Victims

tornado victims hug NBC video snapshot

tornado victims hug NBC video snapshotHundreds of volunteers pitched in to help the American communities hit hard by tornadoes that ravaged the Midwest and the South.

Young people worked alongside the very old, strangers helping strangers. Some took time off from their regular jobs to labor for their neighbors.

“It doesn’t matter if you know them or not… It’s a small town; it’s what you do,” said a nurse who hauled debris alongside a retired school teacher.

 

(WATCH the Making a Difference video below from MSNBC)

 

Army of Strangers Pitch in to Help Tornado Victims

tornado victims hug NBC video snapshot

tornado victims hug NBC video snapshotHundreds of volunteers pitched in to help the American communities hit hard by tornadoes that ravaged the Midwest and the South.

Young people worked alongside the very old, strangers helping strangers. Some took time off from their regular jobs to labor for their neighbors.

“It doesn’t matter if you know them or not… It’s a small town; it’s what you do,” said a nurse who hauled debris alongside a retired school teacher.

Eco-friendly Chinese ‘Amateur’ Wins Most Prestigious Architecture Prize

Xiangshan Campus China Academy of Art

Xiangshan Campus China Academy of ArtAn architect who uses recycled building materials from historic buildings torn down to make way for China’s megacities has won architecture’s most prestigious international award, the 2012 Pritzker Architecture Prize.

Wang Shu, 48, whose Hangzhou-based firm Amateur Architecture Studio has just four permanent staff, was widely regarded as a long shot to win the $100,000 prize that has previously been awarded to celebrity architects such as Norman Foster and Frank Gehry, CNN reported.

“For myself, being an artisan or a craftsman, is being an amateur or almost the same thing,” Wang said in a press release, using the word in its true meaning as one who does something for love rather than money or professional accolades.

Old-Fashioned Play Builds Serious Skills

kids playing, photo by Sun Star

kids playing, photo by Sun StarHoward Chudacoff, a cultural historian at Brown University, recently published a history of child’s play arguing that for most of human history what children did when they played was roam in packs large or small, engaging in freewheeling imaginative play: “They improvised their own play; they regulated their play; they made up their own rules.”

But, in the second half of the 20th century, Chudacoff says, the way that children spend their time has changed. A growing number of psychologists believe that these changes in what children do has also changed kids’ cognitive and emotional development.

Oprah Joins Lady Gaga to Launch Her Youth Foundation at Harvard

Lady Gaga Oprah Harvard Foundation

Lady Gaga Oprah Harvard FoundationPop star Lady Gaga launched her new foundation with some powerful friends at Harvard Wednesday, a non-profit charity whose mission is to “foster a more accepting society” and help youth “challenge meanness and cruelty”.

The singer was joined by Oprah Winfrey, spiritual leader Deepak Chopra, and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to kick off the online Born This Way Foundation.

Northern Ireland People Are the Happiest in the UK

Pierce Brosnan at Cannes by Rita Molnr -CC

Pierce Brosnan at Cannes by Rita Molnr -CCIt may come as a surprise to some, but people in Northern Ireland are the happiest in the UK, new data from the Office of National Statistics has shown.

14 years after the Irish Peace Accord ended decades of violence and established self-rule for Northern Ireland, the new data demonstrates that two-thirds of citizens there feel happier in their lives than ever before.

New EV Battery Technology Could Lower the Price of a Volt to $20K

jaquar electric car

jaquar electric carA California company says it has built a better battery that could make electric vehicles more efficient and much more affordable.

Envia Systems, a startup that has conducted research with funding from the Department of Energy and GM’s venture capital arm, says its proprietary anode, cathode and electrolyte battery could cut the cost of an EV battery in half.

South Sudan Rebel Group Lays Down Arms

rawandan-soldiers

rawandan-soldiersUntil the death of this group’s leader in 2010, the South Sudan Democratic Movement was considered the strongest of several militias challenging the central government of Africa’s youngest country, which is searching for stability so it can develop after decades of war with the north.

The group, around 1,800 strong, declared a ceasefire yesterday, accepting an amnesty offered by President Salva Kiir last July when South Sudan gained independence from the north.

Nasdaq Breaks 3000 as Stocks Tally Best February in Years

stock shares

stock sharesThe Nasdaq composite index broke through 3,000 on Wednesday for the first time since the collapse in dot-com stocks more than a decade ago marking the best February on Wall Street in 14 years.

The milestone for the Nasdaq, heavy with technology stocks, came a day after the Dow Jones industrial average closed above 13,000 for the first time since May 2008.

Man Wins 2011 Amway Hero Award for Generosity

Guatamala child gets home from Habitat-Amwayvideo

Guatamala child gets home from Habitat-AmwayvideoBy the end of this week, twelve families in Guatemala will have a home, a direct result of one man’s philanthropic efforts.

For the last seven years, Tim Foley has traveled one thousand miles from his home in Tavares, Florida, to work in a small town in Guatemala constructing houses for low-income families. Not only that, the Amway businessman subsidized the trip for 100 volunteers, and donated $250,000 to Habitat for Humanity to build a community of 40 homes over the next five years. Since 2005, Tim and his team have built 54 homes and for his selflessness, he was recently granted the 2011 Amway Hero Award for Generosity.

“I believe if ‘The Guy In Charge’ lets you make some money, then you ought to do something valuable with it,” says Foley.

Tim’s impact on other people’s lives was lauded by the independent panel of judges invited to choose the winners of the 2011 Amway Hero Awards, which also includes prizes for Patriotism, Leadership and Determination.

WATCH a video about Tim’s generosity, and continue reading about the 3 other winners below…

 

The annual winner of the 2011 Amway Hero Award for Patriotism devotes himself to reducing suicide and divorce among military families. Mike Schindler, a Navy veteran, founded Operation Military Family, an organization that provides guidance to help military personnel preserve their families, strengthen their marriages, and curb domestic violence and suicide. On average, the company has offered support to 1,500 people each year since 2007.

In another country, the Dominican Republic, Ulises Feliz uses his impressive charisma as a tool to teach business and entrepreneurship to teenagers through Junior Achievement. Discovering talented young adults and coaching them to excel is what earned Feliz the 2011 Amway Hero Award for Leadership.

“I want to be remembered as a person who gave everything possible to help others excel, as someone who stood out as a leader for his aptitude in doing the just thing, and for helping to discover and to develop the talent of others,” he said.

The winner of the Hero Award for Determination was Stephen Willoby, of Waddell, Arizona. He survived a tour of duty in Iraq only to break his neck in a diving accident back home. After nearly dying, the Air Force bomb disposal technician was left with no movement in his legs and no control of his hands. “In the military, we always said, ‘Adapt and overcome.’ That’s all anyone can do in the face of adversity. How you adapt determines how you’re going to live the rest of your life,” believes Willoby, who has become a successful Amway Independent business owner.

Among more than 300 nominated for the Amway awards, the initiatives of these four businessmen were evaluated by a group of professionals whose backgrounds include foundation work, the not-for-profit sector, community agencies and the ministry. Last December, Schindler, Feliz, Foley, and Willoby received the awards to the ovation from a crowd of more than 4,000 Amway Independent Business Owners.

Amway created the Hero Awards program to recognize the efforts of hundreds of its Independent Business Owners who give their time and resources to improve the world. The annual program started in 2010 with prizes of $10,000 awarded  to each of the winners.

READ ABOUT last year’s Amway Hero Awards for 2010 in AchieveMagazine.com

Man Wins 2011 Amway Hero Award for Generosity

Guatamala child gets home from Habitat-Amwayvideo

Guatamala child gets home from Habitat-AmwayvideoBy the end of this week, twelve families in Guatemala will have a home, a direct result of one man’s philanthropic efforts.

For the last seven years, Tim Foley has traveled one thousand miles from his home in Tavares, Florida, to work in a small town in Guatemala constructing houses for low-income families. Not only that, the Amway businessman subsidized the trip for 100 volunteers, and donated $250,000 to Habitat for Humanity to build a community of 40 homes over the next five years. Since 2005, Tim and his team have built 54 homes and for his selflessness, he was recently granted the 2011 Amway Hero Award for Generosity.

World’s Richest Man to Helm Rescue for Crime-weary Acapulco

Mexico Acapulco BlackWaterPatrol -CC

Mexico Acapulco BlackWaterPatrol -CCMexican billionaire Carlos Slim will spearhead a project to rescue the Pacific port of Acapulco, a once glamorous haunt of Hollywood stars that has lately become mired in violent crime.

Slim, the world’s richest man and owner of Latin America’s biggest cell phone company, will be the president of a council that will pool funding for new hotel developments, mostly in the oldest part of the resort.

North Korea to Suspend Nuclear Activities

North Korea-flag

North Korea-flagThe United States said Wednesday North Korea has agreed to suspend nuclear activities and accept a moratorium on nuclear and long-range missile tests, in a breakthrough in negotiations with the secretive communist nation.

In a key concession, North Korea said it had agreed to allow International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors to verify and monitor a moratorium on uranium enrichment activities at its main Yongbyon nuclear complex, “with a view to maintaining positive atmosphere’ for the US-North Korea talks”.