All News - Page 1396 of 1714 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 1396

Why the New Hawaii Governor is Taking on Anti-Obama ‘Birthers’

Hawaii Gov. Abercrombie, by Ricky Li, via CC license

Hawaii Gov. Abercrombie, by Ricky Li, via CC licenseIt’s the rumor that won’t go away, despite multiple investigations by fact-checking groups that declare it bogus: the claim that President Obama was not born in the US, and is therefore ineligible to be president.

Now, the newly elected governor of Hawaii, Neil Abercrombie, says he wants to end the debate once and for all. He wants to enact a new state law that allows disclosure of additional proof, saying he was acting because of his personal disgust with the claims. He knew Obama’s parents back in college when Obama was born and is deeply offended at claims he knows to be false.

(READ the story in the CS Monitor)

All New First-class Stamps to be ‘Forever Stamps’

New USPS stamps to be forever - always

New USPS stamps to be forever - alwaysGood news for American households: No need to keep digging for one- and two-cent stamps after a postal rate hike.

The US Postal Service has announced that all new first-class stamps will be “Forever Stamps” beginning next month — meaning, they will hold sufficient postage for a first-class letter, no matter when they are used.

(READ the good news at CNN Money)

Surprise! Women Started More Firms Than Men

Photo by Sun StarBetween 2002 and 2007, women created almost twice as many businesses as men, according to data from the Census Bureau — and they continue to open start-ups in the post-recession era.

The tendency of women entrepreneurs to take out fewer loans and grow more slowly is well known and that may be the right strategy for this era: Those businesses that right now are taking on less debt are going to be those that are much stronger coming out of the recession.

Here are some examples…

(READ the story in the CS Monitor)

Photo by Sun Star

California Snowpack is Deepest in 17 years – Good News for Water Supply

tree and snow, photo by Geri Weis-Corbley, 1986

tree and snow, photo by Geri Weis-Corbley, 1986Blessed with a brilliant blanket of early winter snow, California’s snowpack is double its average for this time of year — and the deepest it’s been in 17 years.

State officials delivered the good news for California’s water supply Tuesday after the first official monthly snowpack measurement of the season.

(READ more at MercuryNews.com)

Underdogs Triumph in 2010’s Best Sports Stories

butler-bulldogs-win-trophy

butler-bulldogs-win-trophyThe best story in sports, whether success is achieved through a solo performance, by a team, or a whole nation of fans, is that of the underdog. Looking back on 2010, we noted an inspiring trend among the top news this year: Underdogs who surged ahead, turning doubters into believers. These six stories are our favorites:

Underdogs Triumphed in 2010’s Best Sports Stories

butler-bulldogs-win-trophy

butler-bulldogs-win-trophyThe best story in sports, whether success is achieved through a solo performance, by a team, or a whole nation of fans, is that of the underdog. Looking back on 2010, we noted an inspiring trend among the top news this year: Underdogs who surged ahead, turning doubters into believers. These six stories are our favorites:

Business Schools Embracing Do-gooders With Degree Programs

photo of businessmen by Michael Connors via Morguefile

photo by Michael Connors via MorguefileThe popular image of students in modern-day business schools dreaming of pinstriped suits and spreadsheets is increasingly being turned on its head.

Many students today are pursuing business school degrees with a view toward working with non-profits, or launching socially responsible enterprises.

And many business schools are racing to meet the demand for such “social entrepreneurship” programs. Some are even offering stand-alone social enterprise degrees.

(READ the story at MSNBC)

GM Teams Up With Hawaii to Push Hydrogen Cars

GM joins Hawaii Hydrogen Fuel Cell Initiative

GM joins Hawaii Hydrogen Fuel Cell InitiativeHawaii may be the first state in the nation to successfully build a fueling infrastructure that will support thousands of hydrogen fuel cell cars.

This month, General Motors, in partnership with Hawaii’s Gas Co., and 10 other public and private groups, announced a plan to tap into Oahu’s 1,000-mile utility pipeline and supply hydrogen to the many fuel-cell vehicles expected to come on the market in 2015.

General Motors is providing 20 Equinox fuel cell vehicles to the project known as H2I, or the Hawaii Hydrogen Initiative. The Gas Co., which makes hydrogen as a byproduct of the state’s synthetic natural gas production, is providing the hydrogen.

(READ the story from the LA Times)

Video: Pilot Uses Helicopter to Blow Calf to Safety

calf stuck on frozen pond lost its footing

calf stuck on frozen pond lost its footingThe same Oklahoma TV news helicopter pilot who four years ago pushed a deer on an icy pond to safety using the wind from his rotors, has once again made national news saving a trapped calf — pushing with the same gusty wind, after the animal lost all footing and was stuck on the ice.

WATCH the video below via AP – and watch the 2007 deer rescue on GNN

Video: Pilot Uses Helicopter to Blow Calf to Safety

calf stuck on frozen pond lost its footing

calf stuck on frozen pond lost its footingThe same Oklahoma TV news helicopter pilot who four years ago pushed a deer on an icy pond to safety using the wind from his rotors, has once again made national news saving a trapped calf — pushing with the same gusty wind, after the animal lost all footing and was stuck on the ice.

WATCH the video below via AP – and watch the 2007 deer rescue on GNN

Small Town Doctor Has Charged $5 a Visit for 55 Years — and Never Taken a Day Off

NBC features this video of Doc Russell

NBC features this video of Doc RussellThere is a treasured hero in Rushville, Illinois: a doctor who has kept his fees the same as they were back in 1955 — five bucks a visit — and who has never taken a day off.

Dr. Russell Dohner has been looking after his neighbors, going anywhere, at any time, to help those in need, often arriving before emergency crews.

“In a mercenary world,” a waiting patient told me, “this place is an oasis.”  

WATCH the video below, or read the story at MSNBC

Small Town Doctor Has Charged $5 a Visit for 55 Years — and Never Taken a Day Off

NBC features this video of Doc Russell

NBC features this video of Doc RussellThere is a treasured hero in Rushville, Illinois: a doctor who has kept his fees the same as they were back in 1955 — five bucks a visit — and who has never taken a day off.

Dr. Russell Dohner has been looking after his neighbors, going anywhere, at any time, to help those in need, often arriving before emergency crews.

“In a mercenary world,” a waiting patient told me, “this place is an oasis.”  

Obama Spends Part of Christmas with Troops

Obama hugs families of troops, WH/VOA

Obama hugs families of troops, WH/VOAPresident Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama greeted members of the military and their families during Christmas dinner at the Marine Corps Base in Kaneohe, Hawaii.

Mr. Obama and the first lady are encouraging the public to support military communities, especially during the holidays when separation from family can be difficult.
(Video included below)

Christmas Hero Brings Cheer to New Orleans Homeless Children Every Year

gift-yellow-redbow-cohdra-morguefile

photo by cohdra via morguefileTo put a smile on hundreds of homeless children this time of year, one man in New Orleans organizes a Christmas party for those he calls the “Forgotten Angels.”

Looking for a job 16 years ago, Clarence Adams applied to be a counselor at a New Orleans homeless shelter. He knew very little about homelessness then.

“After the interview, they gave me a tour in the building and it was lunch time,” Adams says. “And I saw children there. That really bothered me. I just never thought about a child being homeless.”

Adams got the job and took it upon himself to help the kids coming to the shelter in any way he could. He went with their parents to register them for school and organized donation drives for school supplies. One day as the holidays neared, he talked to a friend about what it might be like for homeless children to celebrate Christmas.

“Basically the only thing that these kids had to look forward to was having their Christmas dinner in the shelter with hundreds of people who they didn’t know,” he says. “I mentioned to my friend that if I ever got rich, I would just have a big party for homeless children. She said, ‘Well, let’s do it.'”

That’s how the Christmas for Forgotten Angels party started 12 years ago.

party by Ozanam Inn“The first year we had 50 children. And my food service manager from the shelter cook fried chicken and macaroni and cheese,” Adams says. “We had some desserts and we were able to give all the kids toys and we had Santa Claus.”

But organizing that party all alone, he says, was overwhelming.

“I swore I would not do that again because it was too much work,” he says. “But at the party, seeing the faces on these kids, having them come up and give me a hug and say, ‘Thank you,’ to see how much joy this brought to these children who would otherwise have nothing. I determined at the end I had to do this every year.”

Reports about his Christmas party now appear in local newspapers every year. That’s resulted in having dozens of volunteers contact Adams to donate their time as well as clothing, toys and food.

Despite the economy, “People are still very generous,” Adams says. “We had a group of volunteers that came for like three years in a row from Georgia. I know that last year, we got checks from four different states. I had a family that brought some toys last week. Their 7-year-old son had a $20 bill that he had saved up money from his allowance all year so he could help.”

Helping out

Volunteers who can’t afford to donate money come and help wrap the gifts and prepare for the party. Tiffani Hicks, a 29-year-old single mother, helped out for the first time this year.

Doing something to make homeless children happy is important to Hicks. She says she knows exactly how they feel at Christmastime, because she was homeless as a child herself.

“I felt like I wasn’t loved. I felt like I didn’t deserve it,” Hicks says. “I just felt like nobody cared about me. My Mom died when I was five years old and my aunt, she took care of us. She did what she could do for us. So we never really had a Christmas or whatever like that. It just makes you feel awful. Then after the holidays you have to go back to school and everyone is talking about what they got for Christmas, so you’re kind of making up things that you wish you would have gotten, so you can fit in.”

With dozens of volunteers like Tiffani Hicks, Clarence Adams says they were able to serve more than 200 homeless kids this year. The Christmas for Forgotten Angels organizer says he’d like to see his community’s support and commitment to making homeless children feel special continue all year round and not just during the holidays.

(Source: VoA News)

A Kiss to Build a Year on – If Your Brain’s Chemistry Agrees

kiss-clarita-morguefile

image by clarita, via morguefile.comA kiss at midnight to ring in the new year. That’s what Friday night should bring, right?  And there’s pressure to get it right.

There ia a scientific basis for those high stakes. Whom you kiss can set the course for a good year. Really. It’s not magic – it’s chemistry and neuroscience.

Story of Patton’s Army Hero Draws Tears and Cheers During Repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell

Admiral Mullen, a proponent of the repeal, at signing ceremony

Joint Chiefs head, Admiral Mullen, at WH cerremonyPeople in the audience listened with rapt attention at the White House last week during the signing ceremony for repealing the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy.

The entire event was profound, but perhaps the most moving part was when President Obama told a dramatic rescue story from WWII.

“Sixty-six years ago, in the dense, snow-covered forests of Western Europe, Allied Forces were beating back a massive assault in what would become known as the Battle of the Bulge. And in the final days of fighting, a regiment in the 80th Division of Patton’s Third Army came under fire. The men were traveling along a narrow trail. They were exposed and they were vulnerable. Hundreds of soldiers were cut down by the enemy.

Airline Wraps Gifts to Send Through the Baggage Chute for Christmas Eve Travelers

gifts enter baggage conveyor belt at Spanair

gifts enter baggage conveyor belt at SpanairThe Spanish airlines, Spanair, created a memorable holiday evening for passengers traveling on Christmas Eve to La Palmas. After arriving from Barcelona to collect their baggage, 190 people found a stream of colorful gift packages flowing out onto the conveyor belt delivering presents for each and every traveler.

Knowing their customers’ flight would be landing after midnight while others were already home celebrating with their families, the airline decided to do something special.

Airline Wraps Gifts, Sends Them Out Baggage Chute for Christmas Eve Travelers

gifts enter baggage conveyor belt at Spanair

gifts enter baggage conveyor belt at SpanairThe Spanish airlines, Spanair, created a memorable holiday evening for passengers traveling on Christmas Eve to La Palmas. After arriving from Barcelona to collect their baggage, 190 people found a stream of colorful gift packages flowing out onto the conveyor belt delivering presents for each and every traveler.

Knowing their customers’ flight would be landing after midnight while others were already home celebrating with their families, the airline decided to do something special.

Filmmaker Tyler Perry to Rebuild Woman’s Burned Home

Tyler Perry

Tyler PerryEntertainment mogul Tyler Perry is reaching out to help a great-grandmother of seven who lost everything in a fire. 

On Tuesday, an 88-year-old woman and her 4-year-old great-granddaughter escaped a fire that destroyed her home of 40 years. Firefighters began soliciting for donations from and dozens of calls came in.

With the community’s help, Ransby was climbing up the stairs to a new rental home just 48 hours after the fire.

Renewal in Kansas City Jazz Scene Encouraging

sax player in Austin, TX

sax player in Austin, TXMuch as prognosticators claim to see green shoots in the nation’s struggling economy, Kansas City’s jazz scene demonstrated encouraging signs of renewed vigor after an extended period fraught with challenges.