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Bamboo Packaging on Dell Computers Saves 70,000 Trees

bamboo packaging for Dell

bamboo packaging for DellAll the hard-to-recycle packaging that keeps new Dell computers snug in their cartons but ends up in landfills is being replaced by environmentally-friendly bamboo material.

Not just good for the Earth, as with most eco-friendly upgrades, the step is easily taken for the computer giant because of its money-saving benefit for Dell’s bottom line.

Dell estimates that the decision to switch to sustainable bamboo will save about 70,000 trees this year alone. Because of this switch, Dell’s packaging is now easier to recycle as well as less expensive to produce.

Bamboo Packaging on Dell Computers Saves 70,000 Trees

bamboo packaging for Dell

bamboo packaging for DellAll the hard-to-recycle packaging that keeps new Dell computers snug in their cartons but ends up in landfills is being replaced by environmentally-friendly bamboo material.

Not just good for the Earth, as with most eco-friendly upgrades, the step is easily taken for the computer giant because of its money-saving benefit for Dell’s bottom line.

Dell estimates that the decision to switch to sustainable bamboo will save about 70,000 trees this year alone. Because of this switch, Dell’s packaging is now easier to recycle as well as less expensive to produce.

School Turns Abandoned Field into Organic Farm, Growing Ton of Produce for Cafeteria

Garden at Denver Green School - Sprout City Farms video

Garden at Denver Green School - Sprout City Farms videoJust eight months ago, a one-acre plot at the Denver Green School was an unused athletic field, but now that land has come to life with food-bearing vegetation.

“We have harvested over 3,000 pounds of produce from this ground,” said Megan Caley, a coordinator for Sprout City Farms, which partnered to create the garden.

“Kids are eating healthier,” said Frank Coyne, of the public school. “They are excited to eat the tomatoes on the salad bar, they are excited to eat the cucumbers.”

School Turns Abandoned Field into Organic Farm, Growing Ton of Produce for Cafeteria

Garden at Denver Green School - Sprout City Farms video

Garden at Denver Green School - Sprout City Farms videoJust eight months ago, a one-acre plot at the Denver Green School was an unused athletic field, but now that land has come to life with food-bearing vegetation.

“We have harvested over 3,000 pounds of produce from this ground,” said Megan Caley, a coordinator for Sprout City Farms, which partnered to create the garden.

“Kids are eating healthier,” said Frank Coyne, of the public school. “They are excited to eat the tomatoes on the salad bar, they are excited to eat the cucumbers.”

Counterfeit Clothes Are Finally Put to Good Use

Label His Church

Label His ChurchInstead of handing counterfeit designer clothes to customs or trading standards to be destroyed, they are being donated to a charity for redistribution to the homeless and vulnerable.

A huge pile of fake Tommy Hilfiger jeans is now in the custody of the His Church charity, which will patch over their labels with the His Church logo.

New Delhi Man Helps One Child, Now Dozens Call Him ‘Father’

India toddler saved from begging by Sunshine Prokect

India toddler saved from begging by Sunshine ProkectA businessman has taken charge of local slum children in New Delhi, including some as young as two years old whose impoverished parents sent them out begging on the streets.

He envisioned a brighter future for the youngsters outside his door and agreed to be their daily caretaker, giving them food and hiring tutors to teach them to read.

Over the past decade, he and his wife have brought about 150 children under their wing, eventually operating as the Sunshine Project.

It all began in 2002 when a tailor named Kuku Arora met a tiny toddler called Roshni (right) on his way to work. She had only one hand and was in a state of absolute neglect.

Kuku and his wife Priti started bringing her a bit of food every day, until one morning she had disappeared. The couple missed the girl and started looking for her. They found the two-year-old begging in a very busy main street.

They visited the parents and volunteered to look after the child during the day, providing food, healthcare and education. As the discussion with Roshni’s parents, who lived on the street, became rather heated, more and more children came close to listen and began asking eyes wide open whether they could come, too.

India classroom - Sunshine ProjectThe Sunshine Project was born. It was the very next day that Kuku and Priti began their day care center, helping no less than 17 children.

They rented a room to care for the children between 9 am and 6 pm. The group received tutoring for school, played and danced, visited a nearby park and even watch TV together. They received the gift of a “normal” childhood.

New young children are tutored by older ones, who learn to assume responsibility.

Kuku’s own family has to live without some of the “luxuries” they might otherwise enjoy so they can provide the kids with their community home and one meal a day — often no more than one banana and a biscuit.

But looking into the faces of all the grateful children provides a reward all its own.

To donate or sponsor a child visit the Sunshine Project website.

(READ more about Kuku’s story in CS Monitor)

Thanks to Joel Arellano for submitting the link on our Facebook page!

New Delhi Man Helps One Child, Now Dozens Call Him ‘Father’

India toddler saved from begging by Sunshine Prokect

India toddler saved from begging by Sunshine ProkectA businessman has taken charge of local slum children in New Delhi, including some as young as two years old whose impoverished parents sent them out begging on the streets.

He envisioned a brighter future for the youngsters outside his door and agreed to be their daily caretaker, giving them food and hiring tutors to teach them to read.

Over the past decade, he and his wife have brought about 150 children under their wing, eventually operating as the Sunshine Project.

It all began in 2002 when a tailor named Kuku Arora met a tiny toddler called Roshni (right) on his way to work. She had only one hand and was in a state of absolute neglect.

Inspiring Woman Paints the Sunrise Every Day

Sunset paintings by Debbie Wagner

Sunset paintings by Debbie WagnerAfter a life-threatening cancer diagnosis from her doctor, a Kansas woman realized the fragility of life and began painting the sunrise each morning.

The talented artist working in pastels now has a visual diary of the expansive prairie sky that started one morning in 2005 and continues almost unabated through the present day.

(WATCH the inspiring video below)

See more of her artwork at her 3 Rivers Gallery website…

 

Inspiring Woman Paints the Sunrise Every Day

Sunset paintings by Debbie Wagner

Sunset paintings by Debbie WagnerAfter a life-threatening cancer diagnosis from her doctor, a Kansas woman realized the fragility of life and began painting the sunrise each morning.

The talented artist working in pastels now has a visual diary of the expansive prairie sky, which started one morning in 2005 and continues almost unabated through the present day.

(WATCH the video below…)

Beer and Wine at Starbucks? Coming Next Year to Chicago

starbucks mug

starbucks mugTrying to boost evening traffic to their stores, Starbucks will begin offering beer and wine, along with new options like cured meats in Chicago by the end of 2012.

Starbucks has also been experimenting with live entertainment, including music, poetry readings or theater, depending on the neighborhood.

Wealthy Lottery Winners Make Good on Promise of Philanthropy

Lottery winners give to Veterans

Lottery winners give to VeteransThree Connecticut wealth managers who won a $254 million jackpot followed through on their promise to put the money toward philanthropy, today announcing donations to five charities that help veterans reintegrate into everyday life following deployment.

The first recipients will each receive $200,000. They are: The Bob Woodruff Foundation, Building Homes for Heroes, Services for the Under Served, Operation First Response and the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund.

The lottery-winning trio formed a trust after claiming the largest prize in Conn. lottery history. It was also the 12th largest Powerball jackpot ever.

Their Putnam Avenue Family Trust opted for the one-time after-tax cash payout which totaled more than $103 million dollars.

(READ the ABC News story on Yahoo)

Thanks to Julia Frerichs, and Anne, for sending the link!

Wealthy Lottery Winners Make Good on Promise of Philanthropy

Lottery winners give to Veterans

Lottery winners give to VeteransThree Connecticut wealth managers who won a $254 million jackpot followed through on their promise to put the money toward philanthropy, today announcing donations to five charities that help veterans reintegrate into everyday life following deployment.

The first recipients will each receive $200,000. They are: The Bob Woodruff Foundation, Building Homes for Heroes, Services for the Under Served, Operation First Response and the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund.

82-year-old Vet Sends Thousands of Care Packages to Soldiers as “Spam Czar”

Don Downer by David Pecor -Patch.com

Don Downer by David Pecor -Patch.com

It means a lot when any soldier receives a package sent from the United States loaded with treats to remind him of home.

82 year-old Don Downer has sent more than 1,400 such packages to American troops deployed overseas and was honored in Maryland recently as Howard County’s Volunteer of the Year.

Downer has been sending care packages since 2008, filling them with snacks like candy and chips as well as other items such as books and wool hats. His trademark? Inside every one is a can of Spam, the iconic low-cost canned meat product made in America since the late 1940s.

(READ the story in Patch.com)

Kentucky Church Reverses Ban on Interracial Couples

interracial couple cuts wedding cake by kakisky, via Morguefile

interracial couple cuts wedding cake by kakisky, via MorguefileAn eastern Kentucky church under a firestorm of criticism since members voted to bar mixed-race couples from joining the congregation overturned that decision Sunday, saying it welcomes all believers.

The Gulnare Free Will Baptist Church in Pike County, told The Associated Press that the vote by nine people last week was declared null and void after it was determined that new bylaws can’t run contrary to local, state or national laws. 

Dog Missing for 8 Years to be Reunited With Family

dog

dog A stray dog brought to a Northern California animal shelter turned out to have been reported missing in Virginia eight years ago.

Now, officials are planning a reunion between the long-lost dog and her grateful owners in time for the holidays.

In Autumn 2003, Petunia, then 3 years old, walked away from her family’s farm in Virginia.

8-Year-Old Entrepreneur Builds Online Fortune Selling Marbles

Marble King is 8 years old

Marble King is 8 years oldHarli Jordean found his true passion before most other entrepreneurs — at eight years old.

While his friends are playing computer games, he is busy liaising with suppliers, buying stock and handling orders for his internet marble empire.

“Harli has been obsessed with marbles ever since he was six,” said his mother.

The tiny tycoon from London has been running the thriving marbleking.co.uk website for two years, selling anything from tubs of marbles to £599 limited edition Duke of York solitaire tables.

(READ the full story in the Daily Mail)

U.S. Medical ‘Trash’ Saving Lives Abroad

insulin-in-treating-diabetes-ga-2-main fullDoctors will often prepare for surgical procedures by opening instrument and supply kits that contain up to 100 items.

Many of these items, such as scalpels, needles or sponges, go unused; they’re just not needed for that particular procedure. But because of government or hospital regulations in the United States, they are frequently thrown away, even when they are still wrapped.

Fortunately, a nonprofit organization founded by a New York cardiologist, Doc2Dock, is finding ways to salvage these items and get them to people who need them desperately around the world.

Hard Plastic Bottles, Reborn as a Bridge

Axion recycled plastic used for bridge

Axion recycled plastic used for bridgeThe town of York, Me., is putting up what could be a bridge to a better future, not because of it where it goes but because of what it is made of: plastic.

Some manufacturers have already melted plastic bottles into boards for beach house decks, carpets and clothing materials.

Now comes Axion International, a New Jersey-based company founded in 2007 that has developed a process to make a building material that is strong enough to supplant steel and concrete but is made out of discarded laundry detergent containers and milk cartons.

Cuddly Puppies Help Law Students De-stress Before Exams

Puppies at GWU destress law students-WashPostvid

Puppies at GWU destress law students-WashPostvidThe stress of looming exams at George Mason University School of Law lifted for a couple of hours Thursday, thanks to the arrival of 15 homeless and adoptable puppies with velvety ears, soul-searching eyes and names like Doughboy, Sugar and Sue.

“Especially this time of the year, law school seems to ruin your life,” said Allison Tisdale, 24, a third-year from Texas who didn’t go home for Thanksgiving because she had to study.

Santa’s Mailroom Helpers Moved by Letters to Help

Letters to Santa Post office note

Letters to Santa Post office noteSanta gets a helping hand from Operation Santa Claus hidden away in New York City’s main Post Office.

The organization lets donors help fulfill wishes expressed by needy children in their letters to Santa.

Across the US, 75 Post Offices are helping, six times many as last year. You can volunteer at www.beanelf.org.

(WATCH the video from NBC Nightly News)