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New Muppet on Sesame Street Struggles With Hunger

Muppet Lily is face of poverty

Muppet Lily is face of povertyNot since the cute, yellow HIV-positive Muppet premiered in 2009 on Sesame Street in South Africa has a new character from the Workshop taken such a lead role in educating kids about a societal woe.

The furry 7-year-old girl named Lily, will appear first tonight on an hour-long PBS special to raise awareness of the issue of hunger in America. Growing Hope Against Hunger, produced by Sesame Workshop, will star Brad Paisley and the Muppet gang and air nationwide at 7:00 PM ET/ PT.

The TV special presents Lily’s family as one that deals with hunger but also grows stronger in the process. Lily organizes a food drive for the pantry after it provides them with groceries.

Racer Saves Competitor From Burning Car

Car race fire screenshot

Car race fire screenshotAn Oklahoma race car driver is being hailed as a hero after pulling a fellow racer from his burning car. It happened Saturday night at the Stock Car Nationals in Oklahoma.

As soon as racer Kip Hughes saw another driver spin out of control and his vehicle burst into flames, he jumped out of his car to help get Terry Muskrat to safety, tearing away the protective window net and pulling Muskrat from the car.

Racer Saves Competitor From Burning Car

Car race fire screenshot

Car race fire screenshotAn Oklahoma race car driver is being hailed as a hero after pulling a fellow racer from his burning car. It happened Saturday night at the Stock Car Nationals in Oklahoma.

As soon as racer Kip Hughes saw another driver spin out of control and his vehicle burst into flames, he jumped out of his car to help get Terry Muskrat to safety, tearing away the protective window net and pulling Muskrat from the car.

Crossing Guard Jumps in Front of SUV to Save Child

crossing school sign- by jdurham Morguefile

crossing school sign- by jdurham MorguefileA substitute crossing guard helping elementary kids stay safe at a San Anselmo school dove in front of a moving car to save a young boy from being hit.

Jeff James, with his stop sign waving, “hit the ground in a tuck-and-roll move, landing his 6-foot, 3-inch, 265-pound body directly in front of the SUV’s tires.”

$800 Million Kansas Wind Farm Set for 2012

wind turbines at Victorville prison - CA

wind turbines at Victorville prison - CABP announced plans on Monday to build an $800 million wind farm in Kansas next year, providing a lift for the US wind power industry at a time when the expiration date looms for federal tax credits.

The 419-megawatt wind farm will include 262 General Electric turbines placed 43 miles from Wichita, in what will be the largest installation for both the state and BP Wind Energy.

Both Love Me (No Matter What) Divine God and Canine Mutt

Dog and God by Wendy J Francisco

Dog and God by Wendy J FranciscoA beautiful, short video written, performed and animated by Wendy J. Francisco.

With this simple piece of wisdom turned into poetry, Wendy has racked up 3 million hits on YouTube in two years.

The God and Dog book is also available for sale.

Strong Consumer Sales and Big-Ticket Purchases for Businesses

business-graphic-up

business graphic upConsumers ignored the scary headlines and handwringing and went clothes shopping anyway in September, creating solid sales gains for the nation’s biggest retailers.

Overall, chain-store sales rose 5.5% and luxury sales climbed 10.4%.

Another positive economic report this week showed businesses ordering more big-ticket items in August. If you

Businesses ordered more computers, communications equipment, and other big-ticket items in August, a hopeful sign for the slumping economy. Orders for capital goods, which are considered a good measure of business investment plans, rose 0.9 per cent in August, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. It was the second gain in three months.

(READ the AP story in Seattle P-I)

Three Women’s Rights Activists Awarded Nobel Peace Prize

Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf-CC-Antonio Cruz-ABr

Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf-CC-Antonio Cruz-ABrLiberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, activist Leymah Gbowee of Liberia and rights activist Tawakkul Karman of Yemen share the honor of being awarded this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, the Norwegian Nobel Committee announced Friday.

They were chosen “for their nonviolent struggle for the safety of women and for women’s rights to full participation in peace-building work,” the committee said in Oslo, Norway.

“We cannot achieve democracy and lasting peace in the world unless women obtain the same opportunities as men to influence developments at all levels of society.”

(READ the story in CNN)

Tribute: Apple Co-founder Steve Jobs (1955-2011)

Steve Jobs Tribute on the Apple home page

Steve Jobs Tribute on the Apple home pageThe world lost an island of genius yesterday when Steve Jobs, the co-founder and CEO of Apple died at age 56 of pancreatic cancer.

There is no better tribute to Mr. Jobs than the script from a famous Apple TV commercial, created in 1997, the year he returned to the company after being forced out, invited back to save the struggling technology company from obscurity. The new ad campaign was called, Think Different.

“Here’s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently…”

“They’re not fond of rules. And they have no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you can’t do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do.”

Apple announced the news that Jobs had died with a statement: “We are deeply saddened to announce that Steve Jobs passed away today. Steve’s brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives. The world is immeasurably better because of Steve. His greatest love was for his wife, Laurene, and his family. Our hearts go out to them and to all who were touched by his extraordinary gifts… Apple has lost a visionary and creative genius, and the world has lost an amazing human being.”

Apple’s website dispensed with all product advertising and instead greeted visitors with a simple page showing Jobs’ name and lifespan next to his black and white portrait (photo above), and invited the public to share their memories, condolences, and thoughts via email.

Forbes last month penned the Top Ten Lessons Steve Jobs taught us, including, “Never fear failure,” and “Listen to the voice in the back of your head that tells you if you’re on the right track.” His most endearing trait as a leader, perhaps, is his shunning of focus groups.

itunes-graphicTo forge the iconic path Apple envisioned, Jobs looked inward. “He was one of the first businessmen to say (a focus group) was a waste of time: The customers today don’t know what they want, especially if it’s something they’ve never seen, heard, or touched before. When it became clear that Apple would come out with a tablet, many were skeptical. When people heard the name (iPad), it was a joke in the Twitter-sphere for a day. But when people held one, and used it, it became a ‘must have.’”

The Apple co-founder’s death has prompted some extraordinary tributes and links to memorials around the web. The Guardian collected 10 unique tributes on a nice page here.

And, oh-by-the-way, one year after the computer visionary was sent packing by the Apple board in 1985, he purchased The Graphics Group and renamed it Pixar, releasing the first digitally animated feature film, Toy Story, in 1995 and a string of similar blockbusters before selling the company to Disney, becoming that company’s single largest stockholder.

In 1997, a floundering Apple brought Jobs back as “interim” CEO.

Sometimes it’s hard to fathom the amazing turn-around he engineered in the 14 years since then. It was world-changing. But, one of the greatest leadership lessons is revealed not in the amazing products — iMac, iPod, iTunes, iPhone — but in what Jobs had to do to rescue Apple, which was teetering on the brink of existence. He did what had been, until the very moment he announced it, unthinkable: He joined with Apple’s fiercest rival, Microsoft. (Read that story from John Shinal and Market Watch.)

Google chairman Eric Schmidt explained it this way to Charlie Rose, “If you go back and look at the press in 1994 and 1995, Apple had been completely written off, was allegedly near bankruptcy when Steve came in. Imagine fighting against those odds as an executive, as a leader, as a person. And look at what he achieved in that period. . . By sheer force of will he built a platform that is now the
best in the world for what it does.”

One of my sincere regrets in life was not buying Apple stock back then, in the 1990’s when people said the company was finished, their market share stuck at miniscule. I was a Mac addict, an artist who appreciated the user-friendly style of every Apple endeavor. I never cared what the “masses” thought. I saw the genius and I wanted every bite of that fruit.

If only I had channeled my financial investments through the lens of my own heart. Rest in peace.

(WATCH a video tribute from Bloomberg)

Ode to the Crazy One: Apple’s Co-founder Steve Jobs (1955-2011)

Steve Jobs Tribute on the Apple home page

Steve Jobs Tribute on the Apple home pageThe world lost an island of genius yesterday when Steve Jobs, the co-founder and CEO of Apple died at age 56 of pancreatic cancer.

There is no better tribute to Mr. Jobs than the script from a famous Apple TV commercial, created in 1997, the year he returned to the company after being forced out, invited back to save the struggling technology company from obscurity. The new ad campaign was called, Think Different.

“Here’s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently…”

Starbucks Wants to Create Jobs — for Other Businesses

Indivisible bracelets by Starbucks

Indivisible bracelets by StarbucksStarbucks Corp CEO Howard Schultz, decrying a lack of leadership in Washington, said his chain of coffee shops is helping to launch a nationwide fund designed to stimulate U.S. job creation.

The fund, seeded with a $5 million donation from the Starbucks Foundation, is a partnership with a group of private financial institutions that normally provide affordable loans to low-income people and communities.

African-American Surge into Computer Sciences

boy-paints-sun

boy-paints-sunA report released last week by the Council of Graduate Schools found that first-time enrollment in science graduate programs increased last fall.

But the study’s most intriguing number was hidden beneath the headlines: 33.6%. That’s the reported percent increase, between the fall semesters of 2009 and 2010, in the number of black and African-American students entering math and computer science graduate programs.

India Announces $35 Tablet Computer to Help Lift Villagers out of Poverty

India official launches supercheap tablet computer

India official launches supercheap tablet computerIndia introduced a cheap tablet computer Wednesday, saying it would deliver modern technology to the countryside to help lift villagers out of poverty.

At $35-$45, the computer, called Aakash, or “sky” in Hindi, is the latest in a series of “world’s cheapest” innovations in India that include a $2,040 compact Nano car, a $15 water purifier and $2,000 open-heart surgery.

Radiation-loving Fungi Can Remove Toxic Waste

Mushroom Gomphidius glutinosus - Wikimedia Commons

Mushroom Gomphidius glutinosus - Wikimedia CommonsUsing radiation-loving mushrooms, scientifically referred to as ‘radiotrophic fungi,’ to clean up radioactive or other types of waste is an emerging technique (mycoremediation) that promises to be far less expensive than other competing methods.

In 1987, at the Chernobyl disaster site, a yet unknown species of mold was growing in one of the most hostile environments on the planet, with radiation levels high enough to give a lethal dose in minutes. But these fungi weren’t just growing, they were thriving.

Video Shows Deaf Woman as She Hears Voice for First Time With Implant

Deaf woman amazed by own voice-YouTube

Deaf woman amazed by own voice-YouTube29 year-old Sarah Churman describes herself as born deaf.

8 weeks ago she received the Envoy Esteem Implant, a device that uses the natural ear to pick up vibrations and turn them into sound.

Sarah posted a video on YouTube showing the moment it was turned on, and she heard her voice and laughter naturally for the first time.

Video Shows Deaf Woman as She Hears Voice for First Time With Implant

Deaf woman amazed by own voice-YouTube

Deaf woman amazed by own voice-YouTube29 year-old Sarah Churman describes herself as born deaf.

8 weeks ago she received the Envoy Esteem Implant, a device that uses the natural ear to pick up vibrations and turn them into sound.

Sarah posted a video on YouTube showing the moment it was turned on, and she heard her voice and laughter naturally for the first time.

Denzel Washington Donates $2.25 Million to Alma Mater

Denzel on CNN with Youth-of-Year

Denzel on CNN with Youth-of-YearDenzel Washington has donated $2.25 million to Fordham University, his alma mater, to endow a Theatre program.

$250,000 will establish a scholarship for a minority undergraduate student studying theater at Fordham.

AP reports that a famous actress will be the first Chair of the program.

U.S. Vehicle Sales Soared 10% in September; U.S. Manufacturing Expands for 26th Month

autos off the assembly line

auto center - King Richards RIAuto sales defied a downcast economy in September, climbing 9.9 percent to their highest level in five months as new models arrived at dealerships and inventory shortages eased.

All three of the Detroit automakers reported gains, led by a 27.2 percent year-over-year increase for Chrysler.

Auto executives and analysts said shoppers had not been dissuaded by a declining stock market, bleak consumer confidence surveys, a sluggish housing market or high unemployment.

Dog Who Saved Owner on 9/11 Named Top “American Hero Dog”

Hero dog from 9/11, Roselle, wins award

Hero dog from 9/11, Roselle, wins awardMichael Hingson was at his desk on the 78th floor in the World Trade Center on the morning of 9/11 when an airline crashed into the building, 18 floors above. He lived to tell the tale because of his guide dog, Roselle.

The yellow lab calmly guided her blind charge 1,463 steps out of the building and, as debris fell and dust billowed, found a subway station and led them both underground to safety.

Roselle died in June at the age 13, but her heroism lives on. At a star-studded red carpet event in L.A. Saturday night the yellow lab was was honored as the American Hero Dog of the Year.

Woman Wins $25 Million After Store Clerk Mistake

Georgia Lottery winner Kathy Scruggs

Georgia Lottery winner Kathy ScruggsA store clerk’s mistake led to a $25 million lottery win for an unemployed Georgia woman. Kathy Scruggs, 44, asked for the sale of a Mega Millions ticket, but when she was handed a Powerball drawing along with the first ticket, she accepted them both.

She discovered her good fortune the night after the drawing and woke up the entire house.

“We were screaming and hollering, and everybody came running,” she said. “I could not believe it.”

Scruggs had been unemployed and trying to find a job for many months.

“I’ve been looking and looking and looking,” she said.

She will finally own a car, she says, and plans to help her family and others.

“I’m going to build my mom and grandmother a home,” she said. “That’s my first focus.”

She also wants to start foundations to help the homeless and to provide dental assistance to those in need.

Scruggs selected the cash option and will receive $15,124,017 before taxes.

As with all other Georgia Lottery games, proceeds from Powerball will benefit education in the state of Georgia. Since its first year, the Georgia Lottery Corp. has returned more than $12.7 billion to the state of Georgia for education.

(WATCH the video of Kathy)