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Officer’s Act Of Kindness Restores Robbery Victim’s Faith

cop hat

police hatSuffering from Parkinson’s disease, Jim Light was an easy target for a cowardly thief who attacked him in the hallway of his apartment complex. The suspect then stole his computer, his cell phone, and all the food in his kitchen.  

Light, who is a writer, considered his computer his connection to the world.  Now that it was gone, he didn’t see the point of going on.

Today, Light is back on track, thanks in large part to the compassion of a Hamilton police officer.

Mark Miller could have done the appropriate paper work and called it a day, but after seeing how shattered Light was, he went above and beyond to help alleviate his sadness.

(WATCH the video below, or read the full story at Citynews.com)

Good News About Lung Cancer: High-Tech Scan Cuts Risk of Dying

lung-cancer x-ray, National Cancer Institute image

lung-cancer x-ray, National Cancer Institute imageNo cancer kills more Americans than lung cancer. Estimates are more than 220,000 will be diagnosed this year and 157,000 will die.

On Thursday, for the first time, a major government study showed a high-tech way of screening for lung cancer can drastically reduce the death toll.

(READ the story or watch a video at CBS News)

100 U.S. Companies Help with Pakistan Flood Relief

BCLC-corporate-donations-NASDAQ

BCLC-corporate-donations-NASDAQAs of last week, $24.4 million in corporate aid had been pledged by the U.S. business community for Pakistan flood response efforts.

100 different companies stepped up with aid pledges in response to the historic, devastating floods, according to the Business Civic Leadership Center (BCLC) at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Many of these companies don’t even have significant operations in Pakistan, making the scale of the private sector response even more compelling.

Some firms pledged in-kind contributions. Four companies pledged $1 million or more in cash — The Coca-Cola Company, GE, Microsoft, and P&G.

Companies have the specific resources to address the many specific needs of disasters like the Pakistan floods.  “A lot of this is self-selecting — that is the beauty of the private sector,” said Stephen Jordan the executive director of BCLC. “Individual companies are great at individual things. So a lot of the pharmaceutical companies, a lot of the health care companies are going to focus on the health care issues,” he said.

“The engineering, construction and heavy equipment companies are going to focus on dams, roads and those kind of things.  The financial services companies are going to help say with small business capacity building, (and) micro-finance,” Jordan said.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says Pakistan ranks as the third largest recipient of disaster assistance from the business community over the past five years, behind Haiti and China.

For a list of all corporations and their generosity, visit BCLC’s Corporate Aid Tracker.

100 U.S. Companies Help with Pakistan Flood Relief

BCLC-corporate-donations-NASDAQ

BCLC-corporate-donations-NASDAQAs of last week, $24.4 million in corporate aid had been pledged by the U.S. business community for Pakistan flood response efforts.

100 different companies stepped up with aid pledges in response to the historic, devastating floods, according to the Business Civic Leadership Center (BCLC) at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Many of these companies don’t even have significant operations in Pakistan, making the scale of the private sector response even more compelling.

Some firms pledged in-kind contributions. Four companies pledged $1 million or more in cash — The Coca-Cola Company, GE, Microsoft, and P&G.

Companies have the specific resources to address the many specific needs of disasters like the Pakistan floods.  “A lot of this is self-selecting — that is the beauty of the private sector,” said Stephen Jordan the executive director of BCLC. “Individual companies are great at individual things. So a lot of the pharmaceutical companies, a lot of the health care companies are going to focus on the health care issues,” he said.

“The engineering, construction and heavy equipment companies are going to focus on dams, roads and those kind of things.  The financial services companies are going to help say with small business capacity building, (and) micro-finance,” Jordan said.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says Pakistan ranks as the third largest recipient of disaster assistance from the business community over the past five years, behind Haiti and China.

For a list of all corporations and their generosity, visit BCLC’s Corporate Aid Tracker.

Residents Across UK Offered Chance to Recycle Used Cooking Oil

fryer-oil-recycling-LivingFuels-UK

fryer-oil-recycling-LivingFuels-UKWith the addition of two recycling centers in Kirklees and Wolverhampton this week a UK company is giving environmentally-minded Brits an opportunity to divert their used cooking oil away from landfills and sewer systems, funneling it instead into green electricity.

Thanks to their innovative waste oil recycling program, Living Fuels now produces clean renewable energy from fryer oil collected at nearly 300 UK sites.

Residents Across UK Offered Chance to Recycle Used Cooking Oil

fryer-oil-recycling-LivingFuels-UK

fryer-oil-recycling-LivingFuels-UKWith the addition of two recycling centers in Kirklees and Wolverhampton this week a UK company is giving environmentally-minded Brits an opportunity to divert their used cooking oil away from landfills and sewer systems, funneling it instead into green electricity.

Thanks to their innovative waste oil recycling program, Living Fuels now produces clean renewable energy from fryer oil collected at nearly 300 UK sites.

California Climate Law Survives Challenge at Polls

air pollution adds to climate change (NPS photo)

air pollution adds to climate change (NPS photo)One of the world’s most ambitious laws to combat global warming survived a challenge on Tuesday as California voters overwhelmingly rejected a measure that would have put the state’s plans for more renewable energy and a market to curb greenhouse gases on ice.

The defeat of Proposition 23: READ the full story at Reuters.

Famous Successful People Who Failed Early in Life

Thomas Edison thinking

Thomas Edison thinkingIf you never fail, you have never lived. So says the author of this video who shows a few of the famous failures, including, Michael Jordan, Walt Disney and Thomas Edison. Life is taking risks. Don’t be afraid.

Watch a great motivational video below…

How Obama Saved Capitalism and Lost the Midterms

White House photo

obama-office-wh-photoIn an opinion column for the New York Times, Timothy Egan wrote: “If I were one of the big corporate donors who bankrolled the Republican tide that carried into office more than 50 new Republicans in the House, I would be wary of what you just bought.”

“For no matter your view of President Obama, he effectively saved capitalism. And for that, he paid a terrible political price.”

“The presidency of George W. Bush produced the worst stock market decline of any president in history. The net worth of American households collapsed. And if you needed a loan to buy a house or stay in business, private sector borrowing was dead when he handed over power”…

(READ the Op/Ed piece in the New York Times)

Vikings NFL Star Builds School, Clinic in African Homeland

NFL's Madieu Williams serves homeland in Sierra Leone (NBC video)

NFL's Madieu Williams serves homeland in Sierra Leone (NBC video)Madieu Williams is better known for his work as a free safety for the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings than for his efforts in West Africa. But when he’s not trying to stop the NFL’s best receivers, he’s committed to bringing better health and education to his native Sierra Leone.

He’s returned to Sierra Leone each year, building a school and clinic in a community where none had existed before.

Factory Orders Up in US, Service Sector Growing

shipping containers stacked on ship

ship containers stackedOrders to U.S. factories rose broadly in September, propelled by business spending on commercial airplanes, boats and machines. The Commerce Department said Wednesday that factory orders rose by 2.1 percent in September, the steepest increase since January.

Other hints that the consumer economy may be improving:

Consumer spending also rose by 1.0 percent.

The U.S. economy’s service sector, the nation’s predominant employer, grew faster in October than in the previous month and posted its 10th straight month of expansion — a surprising uptick at a time when Wall Street analysts had expected a small drop.

(READ the full AP story in NPR)

More Than 5,000 Small Business Loans Approved in First Month After Jobs Bill

photo of businessmen by Michael Connors via Morguefile
Photo credit: Michael Connors, via Morguefile.com
Photo credit: Michael Connors, via Morguefile.com

Just one month after the President signed the Small Business Jobs Act, the U.S. Small Business Administration has supported nearly $3 billion in loans to more than 5,000 small businesses across the country.

The White House estimates that the $505 million provided in the Jobs Act will support about $14 billion in small business loans. The Jobs Act also includes $12 billion in tax credits targeted specifically to small businesses and a $30-billion lending fund that will help small, community banks increase their lending to local small business owners and entrepreneurs.

“By unlocking loans for these small businesses, which are America’s biggest job creators, we are knocking down some of the barriers that stand in their way and help create the conditions where they can grow and hire.”

The president signed the bill on September 27 after it passed in Congress with the support of just two Republicans in the Senate (both retiring), and one in the House of Representatives.

Learn more facts about how small businesses are benefiting from the Small Business Jobs Act at www.sba.gov/jobsact.

Painting Wind Turbines Purple Will Save Wildlife

wind-turbines-purple-st-francis-univ-photo

St. Francis University photoEnvironmentalists have often criticized wind turbines on the grounds that they harm wildlife such as birds and bats who are caught in the blades.

Now, researchers at Loughborough University in the UK announced that by painting turbines a different color, rather than the traditional white/grey, wildlife might not be affected.

Purple seems to be the best choice.

(READ more in Inhabitat.com)

Nepal Firm Takes High Speed Internet to Mt. Everest

Mt. Everest North Face

North face of Mt. EverestA private telecom firm took high speed Internet facilities to the top of the world on Thursday when it launched Nepal’s first 3G services at the base camp of Mount Everest.

The high speed internet will bring faster, more affordable telecommunication services to the people living in the Khumbu Valley, trekkers, and climbers alike.

(READ the Reuters story in Yahoo News)

Rise in Small Business Loans Suggests Recovery is Gaining Steam

business-graphic-up

business-graphic-upSmall businesses in the US stepped up borrowing in September, suggesting the recovery is gaining steam.

The overall volume of financing to US small businesses, rose 16 percent in September from a year earlier. The index rose 15 percent in August, and is now at the highest level in almost two years.

(READ the full story in Reuters)

Record Number of Voters Cast Early Ballots

vote-button-lrg

vote-button-lrgAll eyes are on what happens Tuesday at U.S. polling stations, but across more than 30 states, millions of people already have cast their ballots.

Early in-person voting has spread to 31 states, while 30 states also have relaxed absentee-ballot rules, giving them out for convenience without requiring voters to provide an excuse.

“It is estimated that almost 26 million Americans will have already cast their ballots in the 2010 midterms by the time polls open across the country tomorrow,” writes the National Journal in a feature Monday, “up from 19.8 million in 2006.”

(Read more in the Wall Street JournalAnd, don’t forget to VOTE!)

AIG to Pay Back $37B in Bailout Cash‎

AIG logo

AIG logoInsurance giant AIG is poised to repay 36.7 billion dollars in government bailout aid.

In recent days American International Group raised the money through “the sale of one of its premier subsidiaries and the initial public offering of another,” reports the Washington Post.

Those funds will be used to repay emergency loans from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which stepped in to rescue AIG in September 2008 as it teetered on the edge of bankruptcy.

Brisk Walkers Have Lower Breast Cancer Risk

Two lively seniors - Photo by Sun Star

2-seniors-sun-smSome breast cancer risk factors you can’t do anything about — like family history. But some factors, like drinking too much alcohol, are controlled by you. One of the best ways to stave off the cancer, say the experts, is to exercise.

Women who take regular brisk walks have a lower risk of developing breast cancer after menopause—a fifteen percent lower risk—and it’s never too late to start, according to a U.S. study.

(READ the full Reuters story here)

India’s Growing Wealth Boosts Charitable Giving

congres-party-india

congres-party-indiaThe Malkani family made a fortune building one of the country’s first online travel agencies.

Now, as India’s wealth continues to expand, the Malkanis join a growing number of successful Indian entrepreneurs blazing another trail: charitable giving.

“We’ve been so blessed in our lives to benefit. We wanted to give back,” said Anjal Malkani, whose husband helped her family start the business.

The philanthropic mood extends to some of India’s biggest corporations, many of them IT companies at the forefront of India’s boom.

India has a long tradition of giving, and all major religions here – Hinduism, Islam and Buddhism – see charity as a cornerstone of a noble, happy life. Wealthy families have long built wells and schools in their native villages, and even the poorest Indians leave a rupee coin at a temple or mosque.

But organized, large-scale giving by wealthy Indians and corporations has only recently become common as India’s economy soars ahead.

“Old money really looked at alleviating poverty and community development – largely at factory sites – by providing services and facilities to their workers,” said Priya Viswanath, a philanthropy expert. “New money giving is really about empowerment.”

(READ the story at Washington Post)

First Time Ever a Female Earns Soldier of the Year Award

Soldier of the year, Sgt, Sherri Gallagher

Soldier of the year, Sgt, Sherri GallagherFor the first time since its inception nine years ago, a female Soldier has claimed the title of Soldier of the Year for 2010’s Best Warrior Competition. Sgt. Sherri Gallagher of the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit beat out 11 other competitors from the Army’s major commands.

Currently stationed at Fort Benning, Ga., Gallagher is one of the top long-range rifle shooters in the country.

Held at Fort Lee, Virginia in October, the Best Warrior competition is a multi-faceted test of soldiery, including hand-to-hand combat, urban orienteering, detainee operations, casualty evaluation, weapons familiarization and night firing.

“It’s an honor,” Gallagher said during an interview at the competition. “It’s a lot of fun to be out here, because I don’t get to do this on a daily basis. It’s neat to be able to see how you compare to everyone else.”

(READ the full story at Military.com) – Thanks to Kathleen Allen for the link!