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Good Samaritan Pays Bus Fare for Riders All Day After Wallet is Returned

Free bus fares sign

Free bus fares signThe holidays are upon us and the spirit of giving is already in full swing in Minnesota.

An anonymous good Samaritan paid it forward Thursday giving free fares to every bus rider for the day.

The man from Duluth experienced good fortune when a lost wallet made it’s way back to him with everything accounted for.

He was so overjoyed after it was mailed back to him that he decided to bring some happiness to strangers on their commutes.

(WATCH the video below, or read the story in the Northlands News Center)

 

Good Samaritan Pays Bus Fare for Riders All Day After Wallet is Returned

Free bus fares sign

Free bus fares signThe holidays are upon us and the spirit of giving is already in full swing in Minnesota.

An anonymous good Samaritan paid it forward Thursday giving free fares to every bus rider for the day.

The man from Duluth experienced good fortune when a lost wallet made it’s way back to him with everything accounted for.

He was so overjoyed after it was mailed back to him that he decided to bring some happiness to strangers on their commutes.

Beloved Teddy Bear Flown Home by Caring Airline

Teddy bear flown home by caring airline

Teddy bear flown home by caring airlineA woman’s frantic search for her daughter’s “irreplaceable” teddy bear left on a Ryanair flight to Lanzarote at the start of November ended on Wednesday night after the bear, called Besta, was found and flown home to be reunited with its owner.

The teddy was given to the girl years ago by a close relative who has since died.

Number Starving in Somalia Drops by Half a Million Thanks to Rain and Intl Aid

UN aid supplies arriving

US aid suppliesThe drought-induced famine crisis in Somalia has eased somewhat, United Nations officials said on Friday, with the number of people facing imminent starvation dropping to nearly 250,000 from 750,000 because of rainfall and increased aid deliveries.

“Substantial humanitarian assistance has mitigated the most extreme food deficits and reduced mortality levels.”

Sick Boy Gets Fantasy Bedroom Makeover Courtesy of Design Gives Back

Kelee with Charlie, a recipient of a Design Gives Back Miracle Makeover

Kelee with Charlie, a recipient of a Design Gives Back Miracle MakeoverA courageous boy battling life-threatening brain tumors received a Miracle Makeover from a designer who makes it her business to give back to suffering cancer patients. This boy was especially deserving. He started an annual toy drive—Charlie Santa Day—where he collects toys from family and friends and distributes them to kids at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. “Charlie believes he was put here on this earth to help others.

Kara and John Grady weren’t normally daunted by challenges. They were a Navy family, after all. They held fast to their faith and forged on.

That’s how they’d managed during John’s deployments in Iraq. That’s how they coped with their youngest child’s Neurofibromatosis-1, a disorder that causes tumors in the tissue surrounding the nerves.

At age five, Charlie had developed an inoperable brain tumor that grew around the optic nerve and made him blind in his right eye. After fifteen months of chemotherapy, Kara and John hoped their son was in the clear.

But the doctors said his next MRI scan showed three new brain tumors. Charlie, now 7, needed 50 more weeks of chemo. This time, even the Gradys were shaken. Nothing dimmed Charlie’s spirit, but the chemo sessions required him to spend a lot of time in bed. His family wanted to do something to brighten his room, but couldn’t afford to remodel.

bedroom before makeoverSo Charlie’s grandmother Carol, who’d read in Guideposts about the “Miracle Makeovers” I’d done for others, e-mailed me. I’m an interior designer, and I do these inspirational projects free of charge, with the help of generous donations and hard-working volunteers (see my blog, Design Gives Back).

“The last time Charlie did chemo, his daddy installed a train track around his bedroom because he knew how happy it would make him,” Carol wrote. “But the train can’t run anymore because the plastic track supports have warped. We all feel like we’ve had the wind knocked out of us after hearing about the new tumors. I don’t know if we’re up to getting Charlie’s train running again. Do you think you could help?”

A new train track? I could do that. I asked them to e-mail me pictures of Charlie’s train tracks. When I saw what his bedroom looked like—chipped paint on the walls, old roller shades, worn-down furniture—I knew I had to do more than get his train running again.

(WATCH the inspiring story unfold in this video or continue reading, and see photos, below...)

I called the Gradys and found out more about the Missouri family. Kara and John told me Charlie has an 8-year-old brother, Liam, who shares his room, and a sister, Katie, 13.

“It’s Charlie who keeps our family upbeat,” Kara said.

I said to my staff, “We could totally remake his room, don’t you think?”

To make it a space that’s positive and fills him with hope, I asked Charlie, “What do you like best?”

“Thomas the Tank Engine,” he said. I should have guessed, I thought. Charlie and Thomas were both like ‘The Little Engine That Could’.

Turned out Charlie also loves trucks. All kinds—dump trucks, Hummers, garbage trucks—anything big and noisy that rumbles on four wheels. His dream, he confided, was to run his own truck-repair shop. Maybe we can create some kind of theme that connects trucks and trains, I thought.

Charlie could really help bring his room to life by telling us which colors spoke to his heart. I sketched out a cartoon, called Charlie’s Repair Shop, about a mechanic’s shop that fixed huge trucks, all delivered by a freight train.

“Color it in for me,” I said. I didn’t tell him how I planned to use it. Quickly he handed me the finished product, our template for the redo. I don’t think I’ve ever left a design meeting so inspired!

truck bed for Charlie makeoverIt took our construction team three days to transform Charlie’s room. Most of the volunteers came from McCarthy Building Companies, a national commercial construction firm where Charlie’s dad works. “McCarthy Heart Hats” they called themselves, and I saw why. They put heart and skill into their work. We ripped up the old carpet and replaced it with new wood flooring, so Charlie’s beloved dachshund Hauns could stay with him (easier to clean up the aging dog’s accidents). On the wall, ceiling and furniture we painted using Charlie’s “heart colors” and we put up a Thomas the Tank Engine mural.

Between the windows, we hung a sign: Charlie’s Repair Shop. To make the room look like a real repair shop, we used a mechanic’s tool chest for a dresser. We installed a pair of corrugated aluminum panels as window awnings. We made a desk with a tabletop set on sawhorses.

The key elements were the bed designed as a huge truck and the Thomas the Tank Engine train high above on its track.

It’s perfect!” Charlie said when he and his family walked into the finished room for the first time. His bed was fitted inside what looked like a giant dump truck, complete with a steering wheel, rearview mirror and odometer.

“Crawl underneath,” I said. Charlie got down on his hands and knees, climbed upon an authentic mechanic’s dolly and shimmied beneath. “Awesome,” he said.

Miracle Makeover surprises boyHigh above his head, almost to the ceiling, a freight train ran and whistled around the room on a sturdy metal track. Charlie grinned like a kid without a care in the world.

Liam and Katie were grinning too. Not only for Charlie. We’d remodeled their rooms as well. Their brother’s illness had been hard on them. They deserved a feel-good present of their own. Liam’s favorite movie is Tron, so we built him a loft bed with his own “Tron station” underneath, including a futuristic, half-moon-shaped white chair on rollers. For Katie, who was born in Italy when her parents were stationed there and loves all things Renaissance, we installed a dreamy four-poster canopy bed with pleated white curtains, soft pillows and shelves for all her books on music and art.

That first night in his redone room Kara and John asked me to tuck Charlie in. He lay back in his bed and I smoothed the comforter around him. Charlie looked up at me and said, “I love my new room. Thank you so much.”

Really I should have thanked him. All I did was make his room as bright and inspiring as he is.

Learn more about Miracle Makeovers on Kelee’s Design Gives Back blog.

Sick Boy Gets Fantasy Bedroom Makeover Courtesy of Design Gives Back

Kelee with Charlie, a recipient of a Design Gives Back Miracle Makeover

Kelee with Charlie, a recipient of a Design Gives Back Miracle MakeoverA courageous boy battling life-threatening brain tumors received a Miracle Makeover from a designer who makes it her business to give back to suffering cancer patients. This boy was especially deserving. He started an annual toy drive—Charlie Santa Day—where he collects toys from family and friends and distributes them to kids at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. “Charlie believes he was put here on this earth to help others.”



Kara and John Grady weren’t normally daunted by challenges. They were a Navy family, after all. They held fast to their faith and forged on.

That’s how they’d managed during John’s deployments in Iraq. That’s how they coped with their youngest child’s Neurofibromatosis-1, a disorder that causes tumors in the tissue surrounding the nerves.

American Millionaires Rewrite Their Own Image

Patriotic Millionaires in DC

Patriotic Millionaires in DCA group called Patriotic Millionaires for Fiscal Strength came to Washington this week to ask the debt reduction “Super Committee” to raise taxes on millionaires so that everyone can pay their fair share.

Emphasizing community responsibility over greed, 200 millionaires signed a letter that calls for the Bush-era tax cuts to end for those earning more than a million dollars a year, leaving behind the Clinton-era rate of 39% that coincided with strong job growth and a revenue surplus.

“Private jets shouldn’t have been tax deductible in the first place,” said the group in a statement.

American Millionaires Rewrite Their Own Image

Patriotic Millionaires in DC

Patriotic Millionaires in DCA group called Patriotic Millionaires for Fiscal Strength came to Washington this week to ask the debt reduction “Super Committee” to raise taxes on millionaires so that everyone can pay their fair share.

Emphasizing community responsibility over greed, 200 millionaires signed a letter that calls for the Bush-era tax cuts to end for those earning more than a million dollars a year, leaving behind the Clinton-era rate of 39% that coincided with strong job growth and a revenue surplus.

“Private jets shouldn’t have been tax deductible in the first place,” said the group in a statement.

Good Buddies: Grizzled Truckers Transport Rescued Animals to Safety

Trucker with dog - photo from Operation Roger

Trucker with dog Operation RogerAn ever-growing network of burly alpha males are transporting abused dogs, cats, and even bunnies to loving homes located hundreds of miles down American highways and away from their neglected environments.

Since 2005, the network of volunteers called Operation Roger has been powered by truckers, regional and long-haul drivers who transport pets in the cabs of their trucks as they deliver freight all across the country.

The effort was started after Hurricane Katrina left an estimated 250,000 pets stranded and struggling to survive.

(READ the story from TODAY at MSNBC)

Visit Operation Roger for more information.

Second Experiment Confirms Faster-Than-Light Particles

hubble-eskimo

hubble-eskimoA second experiment at the European facility that reported subatomic particles zooming faster than the speed of light — stunning the world of physics — has reached the same result, scientists said late Thursday.

The “positive outcome of the [second] test makes us more confident in the result,” said Fernando Ferroni, president of the Italian Institute for Nuclear Physics, in a statement released late Thursday.

A Coffee Angel for Cancer Patients Inspires Detroit

Dans Coffee Run Facebook photo

Dans Coffee Run Facebook photoEvery Thursday morning around 10:30 Dan walks into a Starbucks in Metro Detroit, takes out a list and proceeds to order dozens of drinks. The number depends on who is in the Michigan Cancer Center getting chemotherapy treatments.

Does Dan work there? Nope. So why would this man spend his own money every week to buy cappuccinos for strangers?

In 2007, he accompanied his father to the MCI for Thursday chemo treatments. One afternoon as Dan looked around he got the idea to go and buy everyone who was enduring treatment a drink of their choice from Starbucks. Dan’s father has since passed away, but one of his dying wishes was for Dan to keep the tradition going. Now, Starbucks fans far and wide are donating to the cause via a website and Dan’s Coffee Run Facebook page.

The local baristas look forward to filling his Thursday orders and seeing his smiling face. For years, customers asked why the man buys so many drinks, and upon hearing the story they are inspired to donate.

In response, the baristas set up a custom Starbucks card with “Dan’s Coffee Run” on it for anyone who would like to help purchase the drinks — from espressos to strawberry smoothies — for the cancer patients up the road.

 

(WATCH the video below from Fox-2 Detroit)

A Coffee Angel for Cancer Patients Inspires Detroit

Dans Coffee Run Facebook photo

Dans Coffee Run Facebook photoEvery Thursday morning around 10:30 Dan walks into a Starbucks in Metro Detroit, takes out a list and proceeds to order dozens of drinks. The number depends on who is in the Michigan Cancer Center getting chemotherapy treatments.

Does Dan work there? Nope. So why would this man spend his own money every week to buy cappuccinos for strangers?

In 2007, he accompanied his father to the MCI for Thursday chemo treatments. One afternoon as Dan looked around he got the idea to go and buy everyone who was enduring treatment a drink of their choice from Starbucks. Dan’s father has since passed away, but one of his dying wishes was for Dan to keep the tradition going. Now, Starbucks fans far and wide are donating to the cause via a website and Dan’s Coffee Run Facebook page.

Frog Jumps Back From Extinction in Israel

Hula painted frog - Israel Nature and Parks Authority

Hula painted frog - Israel Nature and Parks AuthorityMissing for a half-century and listed as extinct in 1996, the Hula painted frog has been spotted again in northern Israel, its only known habitat.

“It’s an amazing find,” said Israel’s Nature and Parks Authority. “Now we have a second chance to preserve the species.”

The restoration of water back into wetland areas is believed to have saved the species.

US Unemployment Applications at 7-month Low, Building Permits Jump

job classified ads - Kevin P. via Morguefile

image by Kevin P via MorguefileThe number of people applying for new unemployment benefits last week fell to its lowest level since April 2, signaling continued progress in the U.S. jobs market.

In other good news, U.S. home building fell less than expected in October, while a gauge of future construction surged, a sign the long-suffering housing sector might be stabilizing.

Friendship Between Dog and Elephant Ends, But Compassion Remains

elephant and dog in TN sanctuary

elephant and dog in TN sanctuarySteve Hartman has a sad update to one of our favorite stories from 2009 involving the elephant sanctuary in Tennessee. A story of compassion between the most unlikely of friends.

For nearly a decade, Tara the elephant had been best friends with a dog named Bella — a mutt who wandered onto the sanctuary grounds and into the heart of the gentle giant.

Although the last chapter of this story is sad, the same compassion that warmed your heart the first time will surely make you smile again.

RELATED: A California Sanctuary for Elephants in Need (Video)

WATCH the video below from CBS News…

Friendship Between Dog and Elephant Ends, But Compassion Remains

elephant and dog in TN sanctuary

elephant and dog in TN sanctuarySteve Hartman has a sad update to one of our favorite stories from 2009 involving the elephant sanctuary in Tennessee. A story of compassion between the most unlikely of friends.

For nearly a decade, Tara the elephant had been best friends with a dog named Bella — a mutt who wandered onto the sanctuary grounds and into the heart of the gentle giant.

Although the last chapter of this story is sad, the same compassion that warmed your heart the first time will surely make you smile again.

Once Lawless Indian State Turns Guns into Hoes

water-jug-africa-ashoka

water-jug-africa-ashokaHundreds of thousands of illegal arms seized by police in India are being melted down and turned into agricultural tools to help impoverished farmers in the east of the country, officials said.

“The farming tools made from life-threatening arms will now produce food grains which will feed the hungry,” Bihar’s director-general of police, Abhay Anand, said.

Chelsea Clinton to Report on Good News Stories for NBC

Chelsea Clinton, 2008 photo by Kyle Cassidy - CC

Chelsea Clinton, 2008 photo by Kyle Cassidy - CCThe president of NBC News talked to Chelsea Clinton recently about what she wanted to do now that she’s completed her undergraduate work at college.

She expressed the inspiration she felt while talking to community volunteers during her mother’s 2008 presidential campaign. Lucky for Chelsea, NBC promotes just such a niche interest on its Nightly News show. The resulting videos have been featured on the Good News Network regularly.

US Economy Shows Signs of Momentum in 4th Quarter

shoppers in Fredricksburg, VA

shoppers in Fredricksburg, VARetail sales were up .5 percent in October outpacing forecasters. Consumer spending was up, spurred by producer prices that fell in October, especially for gasoline and food.

The manufacturing sector in the Northeast also picked up, for the first time in five months.

“The economy seems to be in solid shape,” said Alex Hoder, an economist at FTN Financial in New York.

American Girl, 12, Builds 27 Homes in Haiti

Girl, 12, builds 27 homes in Haiti - NBC video snapshot

Girl, 12, builds 27 homes in Haiti - NBC video snapshotIn just three years, Rachel Wheeler raised more than $250,000, which helped build brand new earthquake-proof homes that have given shelter to 27 families that were living in tent cities since Haiti’s earthquake.

What’s next for the determined Florida pre-teen? Building a new school in the disaster-ravaged country.

WATCH the Making a Difference video below…

(You can also READ the story at Huffpost)