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Cancer Survivor Plants Sunflower Field, Sending Ripples Throughout Community

sunflower-group

Photo by Sun StarNancy Siegler of Cameron Park, California knows first-hand the hope, strength and power of the sunflower. She started planting sunflowers last year after she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

This year, her original 30 plants turned into 310, with 26 species, some sending flowers 16 feet into the air.

Siegler wanted to share this symbol of hope with her community, so she devised a garden fundraiser for breast cancer. The seed of her idea inspired the people so much that she received four times the number of donations expected, in turn catapulting her into various follow-up projects that have blossomed like weeds.

Cancer Survivor Plants Sunflowers, Sending Ripples Throughout Community

sunflower-group

Photo by Sun StarNancy Siegler of Cameron Park, California knows first-hand the hope, strength and power of the sunflower. She started planting sunflowers last year after she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

This year, her original 30 plants turned into 310, with 26 species, some sending flowers 16 feet into the air.

Siegler wanted to share this symbol of hope with her community, so she devised a garden fundraiser for breast cancer. The seed of her idea inspired the people so much that she received four times the number of donations expected, in turn catapulting her into various follow-up projects that have blossomed like weeds.

Cheap Pill May Save Lives When Given Before Surgery

surgery room photo by WHO

surgery room photo by WHOPatients at risk of a heart attack who are having surgery can cut their death risk by 35 percent simply taking a drug called a beta blocker.

The cost: A dollar per patient.

The new study looked at the effect of beta blockers in nearly 39,000 surgeries. Similar studies since 1996, suggested the drug could lower death risk by up to 90 percent for those with known risk factors such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol and smoking.

(READ the story at NPR)

Good News on Unemployment, Small Businesses and New Hiring

factory-workers-retraining-plant

factory workers learing hi tech skillsMore than a few articles reached my news desk this week reminding me that Americans need not declare, “There’s no one is hiring!”
Here are some examples:

Toys R Us to hire 45,000 workers for holidays

Toys R Us will double its US workforce over the coming months, hiring 45,000 workers for the holiday season — more seasonal workers than in the past three holidays. (USA Today)

There’s some good news out there about small businesses

Many small businesses are thriving during these tough times: Sales are up, managers are hiring and territories expanding, according to a recent survey of 1,100 businesses.

Frogs Thought to be Extinct Found After Decades

reed frog, by Jos Keilgast

reed frog, by Jos KeilgastConservationists on a mission to find out whether 100 species believed to be extinct are in fact still alive have uncovered their first successes.

The expedition has turned up two West African frogs not seen in more than a quarter century, “particularly intriguing, as both countries are subject to fairly intensive habitat loss.”

(READ the story in the BBC)

Reed frog, by Jos Keilgast, Conservation Intl.

General Mills Reverses Palm Oil Policy, Saves Rainforest

general-mills-logo

general-mills-logoU.S. food-maker General Mills is the latest multinational firm to announce it will stop buying palm oil from companies accused of destroying rain forests. Other U.S. companies — Unilever, Nestle, Kraft and Burger King — have announced similar shifts in policy.

The maker of popular brands like Cheerios, Betty Crocker and Hamburger Helper said this week it would try to procure all of its palm oil from ‘responsible and sustainable sources’ by 2015, according to a report in USA Today.

General Mills Reverses Palm Oil Policy, Saves Rainforest

general-mills-logo

general-mills-logoU.S. food-maker General Mills is the latest multinational firm to announce it will stop buying palm oil from companies accused of destroying rain forests. Other U.S. companies — Unilever, Nestle, Kraft and Burger King — have announced similar shifts in policy.

The maker of popular brands like Cheerios, Betty Crocker and Hamburger Helper said this week it would try to procure all of its palm oil from ‘responsible and sustainable sources’ by 2015, according to a report in USA Today.

$500,000 Out of the Blue for 23 Geniuses – No Strings Attached

Bee researcher Marla Spivak, courtesy of MacArthur Foundation

Bee researcher Marla Spivak, courtesy of MacArthur FoundationThe 2010 MacArthur Foundation ‘Genius Award’ recipients were announced yesterday and include a stone carver, a quantum astrophysicist, a jazz pianist, a high school physics teacher, a theater director, a marble sculptor, and a scientist working to save the world’s honey bees. All were selected for their creativity, originality, and potential to make important contributions in the future.

The recipients learned through a surprise phone call from the Foundation, that they would each receive a $500,000 “no strings attached” grant for their work over the next five years. MacArthur Fellowships come without stipulations and reporting requirements and offer Fellows unprecedented freedom and opportunity to reflect, create, and explore.

“This group of Fellows, along with the more than 800 who have come before, reflects the tremendous breadth of creativity among us,” said Robert Gallucci, president of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. “They are explorers and risk takers, contributing to their fields and to society in innovative, impactful ways. They provide us all with inspiration and hope for the future.”

According to the Foundation’s website, “the fellowship is not a reward for past accomplishment, but rather an investment in a person’s originality, insight, and potential.”

Among the 2010 recipients are:

* a type designer crafting letterforms of unequaled elegance and precision that span the migration of text from the printed page to computer screens (Matthew Carter);
* a biomedical animator illuminating cellular and molecular processes for a wide range of audiences through scientifically accurate and aesthetically rich animations (Drew Berry);
* a sign language linguist focusing on the unique structure and evolution of sign languages and how they differ from spoken languages and each other (Carol Padden);
* a population geneticist mining DNA sequence data for insights into the mechanisms of evolution, origins of genetic diversity, and population migration (Carlos D. Bustamante);
* a sculptor transforming her signature medium of marble into intricate, seemingly weightless works of art (Elizabeth Turk);
* a public high school physics teacher instilling passion for the physical sciences in young students through an innovative curriculum that integrates robotics (Amir Abo-Shaeer);
* an American historian disentangling the interracial bloodlines of Thomas Jefferson to shed fresh light on our colonial past (Annette Gordon-Reed);
* a fiction writer drawing readers, through spare and understated storytelling, into compelling explorations of her characters’ struggles in both China and the United States (Yiyun Li);
* a computer security scientist peeling back the interactions among software, hardware, and networks to decrease the vulnerability of computer systems to remote attack (Dawn Song); and
* an entomologist protecting one of the world’s most important pollinators — honey bees — from decimation by disease (Marla Spivak).

Including this year’s crop, 828 people have been named MacArthur Fellows, ranging in age from 18 to 82 at the time of their selection, since the program began thirty years ago in 1981.

Some of the most famous ‘Genius Award’ winners include poet-writer Robert Penn Warren, filmmaker John Sayles, choreographers Paul Taylor and Twyla Tharp, novelist Thomas Pynchon, jazz musicians Max Roach and Ornette Coleman, writer and cultural critic Susan Sontag, and Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web.

The selection process begins with formal nominations. Hundreds of anonymous nominators assist the Foundation in identifying people to be considered for a MacArthur Fellowship. Nominations are accepted only from invited nominators, a list that is constantly renewed throughout the year. They are chosen from many fields and challenged to identify people who demonstrate exceptional creativity and promise. A Selection Committee of roughly a dozen members, who also serve anonymously, meets regularly to review files, narrow the list, and make final recommendations to the Foundation’s Board of Directors. The number of Fellows selected each year is not fixed; typically, it varies between 20 and 25. (More about program at MacFound.org)

$500,000 Out of the Blue for 23 Geniuses – No Strings Attached

Bee researcher Marla Spivak, courtesy of MacArthur Foundation

Bee researcher Marla Spivak, courtesy of MacArthur FoundationThe 2010 MacArthur Foundation ‘Genius Award’ recipients were announced yesterday and include a stone carver, a quantum astrophysicist, a jazz pianist, a high school physics teacher, a theater director, a marble sculptor, and a scientist working to save the world’s honey bees. All were selected for their creativity, originality, and potential to make important contributions in the future.

The recipients learned through a surprise phone call from the Foundation, that they would each receive a $500,000 “no strings attached” grant for their work over the next five years. MacArthur Fellowships come without stipulations and reporting requirements and offer Fellows unprecedented freedom and opportunity to reflect, create, and explore.

Woman Leads Town To Lose 15,000 Pounds

exercise-shapeup-vicksburg-cbsvid

exercise-shapeup-vicksburg-cbsvidLinda Fondren is leading a one-woman crusade against fat in her hometown of Vicksburg, Mississippi, a state with the dubious distinction of being the fattest in the nation.

So far, her plan, which includes free passes to her gym on Saturdays, has worked. In the past year, the city of Vicksburg has lost a combined 15,000 pounds with many residents dedicating their efforts to obese loved ones who have died prematurely.

WATCH the video below, or read the story at CBS News

(For more info, visit Shape Up Vicksburg)

Woman Leads Town To Lose 15,000 Pounds

exercise-shapeup-vicksburg-cbsvid

exercise-shapeup-vicksburg-cbsvidLinda Fondren is leading a one-woman crusade against fat in her hometown of Vicksburg, Mississippi, a state with the dubious distinction of being the fattest in the nation.

So far, her plan, which includes free passes to her gym on Saturdays, has worked. In the past year, the city of Vicksburg has lost a combined 15,000 pounds with many residents dedicating their efforts to obese loved ones who have died prematurely.

WATCH the video below, or read the story at CBS News

(For more info, visit Shape Up Vicksburg)

4,100-Student School Busts Myth that Small Classes Are Better

Gov. Deval Patrick visits Brockton HS, by Eugena Ossi, Gov's office

Gov. Deval Patrick visits Brockton HS, by Eugena Ossi, Gov's officeA decade ago, Brockton High School was a case study in failure. Among the 4,100 mostly low-income students, one in three dropped out.

Then a handful of teachers decided to take action. They persuaded administrators to let them organize a schoolwide campaign to improve instruction with a focus on reading and writing.

Their efforts paid off quickly. This year and last, Brockton outperformed 90 percent of Massachusetts high schools.

A new movie, Waiting for Superman, portrays five small charter schools — most with only a few hundred students — as the way forward for American schooling.

But, the success of Brockton and other large schools, is featured in a new Harvard study, “How High Schools Become Exemplary,” which essentially busts the myth that small class size is a requirement for solving the educational crisis.

(READ the article in the NY Times)

Thanks to Barry Stevens for submitting the story! Photo credit: Gov. Deval Patrick visits Brockton HS, Eugena Ossi, Gov’s office

Washington Couple Offers Homeless Free Showers From Mobile Trailer

photo credit: Alex France via morguefile

photo credit: Alex France via morguefileLouise and Frank Fargo started an unusual ministry outside churches in Everett, Washington two years ago. The effort is summed up by a large sign that reads, “Shower to the People.”

With classical music playing in the background, the couple provides homeless people the opportunity to indulge in a comfort most of us take for granted: A shower, towels and toiletries;  toothbrushes, soap and deodorant; new underwear, socks and clean, used T-shirts.

(READ the story w/ photos at the Daily Herald)

Photo credit: Alex France via morguefile

Four Cities Receive $12 Million to Improve College Graduation Rates

graduation-cap

graduation capHistory shows that less than one-quarter of low-income students at community colleges overcome the challenges of earning a degree.

Yesterday, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced that New York City, San Francisco, Mesa, Ariz., and Riverside, Calif., will each receive $3 million over the next three years to fund programs designed to boost college graduation rates.

(READ the AP story in WTOP)

A Host of Western States Could Benefit From California’s Push to Use More Renewable Power

wind-turbine-rainbow

wind power holds promise for Western statesOn Thursday, California mandated state utilities to increase by 33 percent their use of wind, solar, and other renewables by 2020.

And although most of that wattage could come from new power sources planned within the state, experts and industry representatives say it could be a boon to wind developers in Montana and Wyoming; solar entrepreneurs in New Mexico, Arizona, and Nevada; and other companies planning major transmission lines that would criss-cross the region.

(READ the AP story in the LA Times)

Truck Rescue for Beached NZ Whales

whale rescue video from BBC

whale rescue video from BBCIn a historic effort to rescue the 24 survivors of a pod of 80 pilot whales that beacame stranded on a stormy beach in New Zealand, officials are utilizing trucks and cranes to transport them 30 km away to calmer waters.

Officials have already successfully transported six of the animals.

(WATCH the video from BBC News)

Wind May Have Helped Moses Part the Red Sea

moses-red-sea

moses-red-seaCarl Drews, a software engineer studying a weather phenomenon known as “wind set-down” has used a computer model to simulate how Moses may have witnessed the “parting of the sea” on his exodus out of Egypt.

Moses is an important religious figure in Judaism, Christianity and Islam, too. Now science has provided a convincing theory for the rest of us, as to how Moses was able to lead the Hebrew people out of Egypt and across the Red Sea.

The biblical account describes high winds gusting through the night prior to the escape route being uncovered. Drews matches the descriptions of the local geography to come up with a computer model that resulted in the “miracle” being readily duplicated.

Uganda Animal Populations Soaring in Post-War Decade

elephants on the population upswing

elephants on the population upswingThe number of animals in Uganda’s national parks and game reserves has surged over the past decade.

The latest figures show that the population of some species has doubled since 1999, benefiting from improved monitoring and the expulsion of rebels from the country.

Species on the rise include buffalos, giraffes and elephants. 

(READ more in the BBC)

How To Survive When Your Elevator Plunges

elevator photo by Allen Conant via morguefile

elevator photo by Allen Conant via morguefileWhat’s the best way to survive inside a falling elevator?

As for jumping up in the air just before the elevator hits bottom, it only delays the inevitable.

The best way to survive in a falling elevator is to lie down on your back (using your buttocks as a cushion).

(READ the Sciencey Blog by Robert Krulwich via NPR)

Photo by Allen Conant via morguefile.com (aconant)

White Descendants of First Black Physician Buy Tombstone for Unmarked Grave

buttercups-field-sun

photo courtesy of Sun StarWhite descendants of the nation’s first professionally trained African-American doctor gathered in a cemetery on Sunday to dedicate a tombstone at the unmarked grave where he was buried in 1865.

Antoinette Martignoni, the 91-year-old great-granddaughter of James McCune Smith, learned recently of the family connection.

(READ the AP story via Google)