Tobacco sales to minors fell to an all-time low in 2010, a new report shows.
Retailers in the US sold tobacco to minors 9.3% of the time — the lowest in the 14-year history of surveys by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
Tobacco sales to minors fell to an all-time low in 2010, a new report shows.
Retailers in the US sold tobacco to minors 9.3% of the time — the lowest in the 14-year history of surveys by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
The outlook is increasingly positive for the Puerto Rican parrot, which has hovered near extinction for decades, with slightly more than a dozen left in the wild at one point.
‘Everything is moving in a positive direction,’ said Tom White, a Fish and Wildlife biologist who helps manage the island’s wild parrot populations.
A start-up in Northern California is working on creating “solar windows” that could act as solar panels at the same time as blocking sunlight from entering office buildings to reduce their energy needs, according to a story in Sunday’s San Francisco Chronicle.
The company, Pythagoras Solar, won a $100,000 prize last week in GE’s Ecomagination Challenge, for its idea.
Shyness and introversion — or more precisely, the careful, sensitive temperament from which both often spring — are not just normal. They are valuable. And they may be essential to the survival of our species.
Shy and introverted people have been part of our species for a very long time, often in leadership positions. Charles Darwin, Marcel Proust, Albert Einstein, Google’s Larry Page, and Harry Potter’s creator, J. K. Rowling were all considered timid in social situations.
Plenty of people this spring wanted to send a wedding gift to Prince William and Kate Middleton, even after the couple asked that donations be made to one of 26 chosen charities instead.
More than $1.7 million (over a million pounds) was raised for the occasion for the Royal Wedding Charitable Gift Fund, according to Buckingham Palace.
Israel on Sunday began tearing down a section of its contentious West Bank separation, marking a major victory for the village residents of Bilin, which lost half its land to the barrier.
The dismantling of the section comes four years after Israel’s Supreme Court ordered it torn down, rejecting the military’s argument that the route was necessary for security.
Warby Parker is a new web-based company with a mission that goes far beyond profit.
They want to help people find affordable eyeglasses by cutting out the middleman that normally marks up prices ten to 20 times the manufacturing cost.
They also want to make a difference, by donating one pair of glasses to a person in need for every pair sold.
So far, in one year, the startup has sold 60,000 glasses with prescription lenses.
(WATCH or READ the story from CBS News “Sunday Morning”)
In the long history of bad industrial design, the flight attendant call button on commercial airlines takes top prize.
Usually located next to the reading light button and often indistinguishable from it, the dreaded button causes flight attendants to make countless pointless trips down the aisles, only to hear embarrassed passengers say they were just trying to switch on the light.
Not for much longer, thanks to a new interior design on Boeing’s 737 passenger jet.
Stories of people helping each other, often without being asked and demanding nothing in return, were a heartwarming counterpoint to the destruction from unprecedented flooding along the Souris valley in north-central North Dakota. Brought together by word of mouth, church and civic networks, social media and random encounters, those with housing and supplies to spare gave willingly to those without.
“They just showed up on Tuesday and carted stuff off for us,” said one local in the flood zone.
(READ the article from NPR News)
In a country that prizes physical perfection, Korean Pastor Lee Jong-rak, his eyes opened after caring for his own disabled son, has been taking in unwanted infants, who if not for the drop box in the front of his building would be left in the street.
To Pastor Lee Jong-rak, babies with Down syndrome or cerebral palsy are all perfect. And they have found a home here at the ad hoc orphanage he runs with his wife and small staff. It is the only private center for disabled children in South Korea.
(READ the article from the LA Times)
Food banks around the country are trying to keep their shelves stocked as more people in the U.S. struggle to get enough to eat. That means finding new ways to salvage food that would otherwise go to waste.
One innovation is being tested at the Second Harvest Food Bank of Northeast Tennessee, where a vacuum packaging machine is being used to test dented food cans for quality.
The machine can show whether a damaged can has any leaks that would jeopardize the quality of the food.
Second Harvest also plans to approach other potential donors, like hospitals, hotels, caterers, and restaurants that could donate prepared food that has not been utilized.
(READ the story at NPR)
Almost every developed nation in the world was hit by the financial crisis. Their economies became paralyzed. And then there’s Sweden.
The Scandinavian nation has accomplished what the United States, Britain and Japan can only dream of: Growing rapidly, creating jobs and gaining a competitive edge. The banks are lending, the housing market booming. The budget is balanced.
Optimism is something Hanks has never been shy about bringing to his movies. Whether it is Forrest Gump’s naïve faith in people or the dogged determination to survive and be rescued in “Cast Away,” Hanks identifies with characters he describes as “one of the faithful.”
His new film, “Larry Crowne,” opening Friday, July 1, gives that optimism a real test torn straight from the American zeitgeist.
Like many Americans during the recent recession, Crowne goes back to Community College after losing his job. Searching for something positive, that is what he finds.
Planned Parenthood of Indiana expects to start offering services to Medicaid patients again Saturday after a federal judge ruled the state is not allowed to cut off the organization’s public funding for general health services, thereby restricting Medicaid recipients’ freedom to choose their health care provider.
One obstacle for large standalone solar projects is the disruption of land that could be used for other purposes including nature conservation and farming.
This week, the U.S. Department of Energy launched a $1.4 billion loan guarantee project to build 733 megawatts worth of solar panels, which is nearly the equivalent of all the photovoltaic installations in the U.S. in 2010.
The program, called Project Amp, which will create more than 1,000 green jobs, is unique compared to other big solar programs because instead of focusing on one giant standalone tower or array, it involves the use of 750 existing rooftops.
Winners of the 23rd DuPont Awards for Packaging Innovation, represent breakthrough developments in sustainability from brand giants like Coca Cola, Intel and Heinz.
“Sustainability considerations are driving innovation” said Shanna Moore, a director of DuPont Packaging & Industrial Polymers. “The innovations stem from use of organic or renewably sourced materials to the relentless drive to reduce waste and weight.”
The independent jury panel, which evaluated more than 200 entries, said nearly all of the winning innovations related to reducing waste in the system.
Winners of the 23rd DuPont Awards for Packaging Innovation, represent breakthrough developments in sustainability from brand giants like Coca Cola, Intel and Heinz.
“Sustainability considerations are driving innovation” said Shanna Moore, a director of DuPont Packaging & Industrial Polymers. “The innovations stem from use of organic or renewably sourced materials to the relentless drive to reduce waste and weight.”
The independent jury panel, which evaluated more than 200 entries, said nearly all of the winning innovations related to reducing waste in the system.
A California teen had already been in and out of three high schools and arrested once before he learned his girlfriend was pregnant.
“I just thought school was a waste of time. All I would ever do is get in trouble.”
Then, toward the end of his sophomore year, after his girlfriend told him the news that would change his life — for the better, he dropped his trouble-making friends and started caring about school once again.
His own father wasn’t a part of his life growing up, he said, and he resolved not to let the same thing to happen to his daughter.
A group of Republican former Environmental Protection Agency administrators, governors and members of Congress are throwing their public support behind a fuel economy target of 60 miles per gallon.
In a letter sent to President Barack Obama, the 15 signatories – including recently retired Michigan Congressman Vernon Ehlers – say that to reduce dependence on foreign oil and maintain a clean environment, upcoming Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards for 2017 to 2025 should be aggressive.
Many bird species in the Amazon rainforest previously isolated and thought to be extinct in the quarter-century following deforestation have reappeared in these same areas.
Lead author Philip Stouffer, an ornithologist at Louisiana State University and his co-authors measured bird populations over 25 years in 11 forest fragments of varying sizes as small as 2.5 acres in Brazil’s rainforest.
In the first decade of the long-term study, birds abandoned forest fragments and, ornithologists believed, went extinct. Then in the past 20 years, many bird species returned.