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Biden Says US on Track to Double Renewable Energy Capacity by 2012

solar troughs

Solar trough, govt photoGovernment stimulus spending has put the country on track to double renewable energy production capacity by 2012 and halve solar power costs by 2015, Vice President Joseph Biden said on Tuesday.

President Barack Obama’s stimulus spending poured $814 billion into the U.S. economy, including more than $100 billion for science, technology and innovation projects.

“The government plants the seeds. The private sector nourishes and makes it grow,” Biden said. “And in the process, if we’re as innovative as we’ve been in the past, we launch entire new industries.”

(READ the Reuters report via Newsdaily)

Pakistan Thanks World for Opening Wallets

Pakistan floods - WFP photo

Pakistan floods - WFP photoPakistan thanked the world Friday for opening its wallets and said more than 20 million flood victims now know that nations and people around the globe are standing with them during the worst disaster the country has ever faced.

Pakistan’s U.N. Ambassador Abdullah Haroon said the initial outpouring from some 70 countries was ‘indeed heartening’ and ‘a good beginning,’ reports the AP news service.

As of yesterday, 70 percent of the $460 million initially sought by the UN and its humanitarian partners to provide food, shelter and clean water for to up to 8 million flood victims over the next three months has either been contributed or pledged so far, while another $600 million has been provided or promised outside of that appeal, said John Holmes, who also serves as Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs.

So far UN agencies have reached almost 2 million Pakistanis with emergency food supplies and an estimated 2.5 million with clean drinking water. Medical treatment has been provided to about 3 million people, while more than 115,000 tents and 77,000 tarpaulins have also been distributed.

(DONATE to the UN relief effort at the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs at http://ochaonline.un.org)

 

Jimmy Carter Wins Release of American from North Korea

Carter Center photo

Carter Center photoFormer President Jimmy Carter left North Korea this morning having secured the release of Mr. Aijalon Mahli Gomes. Mr. Gomes was imprisoned by Pyongyang officials in January and later sentenced to eight years of hard labor with a fine of about $600,000 for the crime of illegal entry into North Korea.

At the request of President Carter, and for humanitarian purposes, Mr. Gomes was granted amnesty by the Chairman of the National Defense Commission, Kim Jong-Il.

Ailing Dad Finally Sees Son Play

from MLB broadcast

from MLB broadcastYou might have considered Wednesday night’s Major League Baseball game between the Florida Marlins and New York Mets to be just another game, but it meant everythingto Marlins outfielder Logan Morrison and his dad, Tom.

Tom, you see, has been battling inoperable lung cancer. When the 51-year-old non-smoker was diagnosed, his first question to his doctor was whether he’d live long enough to see his son Logan reach the big leagues and get his first hit.

“Logan Morrison was with his father when he received the diagnosis and began sobbing instantly,” says the coverage in the Miami Herald

This week, Tom traveled 30 hours by train to New York and sat in the stands to see Logan hit his first triple. (Watch the highlights of Tom watching the triple at MLB.com.)

(READ more of this story in Yahoo Sports)

US Retail Sales, Factory Output Rebound

business-graphic-up

some business indicators are upWhile U.S. economic data this summer have tended to suggest that the recovery from the recession is slowing, several releases this month painted a more optimistic picture.

The Federal Reserve said factory output increased 1.1 percent in July, the biggest increase since August 2009. Total industrial production rose 1 percent.

Teens ‘Repair the World’ and Win Big Awards

teen-award-graphic-tikkun-olam-2010

teen-award-graphic-tikkun-olam-2010Five honorees took home checks for $36,000 after winning the Teen Tikkun Olam Awards (Hebrew for ‘repair the world’) for being outstanding teen role models in California.

Presented by the Helen Diller Family Foundation, the winners included:

A marine preservation program also that sparked youth-created environmental activist groups from coast to coast also received the award.

This is the fourth consecutive year that the Diller Teen Tikkun Olam Awards were offered to Jewish teens. Find more winners on the Web, and watch their video (second one) below.

WATCH the video below… (More to read at KGO-TV in San Francisco)

The Diller Family Foundation video below, highlights all five winners in detail:

In 2007, Helen Diller and the Helen Diller Family Foundation created the Tikkun Olam Award program to recognize teens who are exceptional role models in their communities and beyond.

Each year up to five teens from throughout California are awarded $36,000 each for outstanding leadership, community service, and commitment to improving the world.

Transforming Villages One Bridge at a Time

American helps build hanging bridges in Kenya

American helps build hanging bridges in KenyaMore than 13 years after his parents drowned in a flash flood, David Kakuko is at the Moruny River, building a bridge that might have prevented their deaths.

The hanging footbridge will provide safe passage over the frequently flooded waterway.

“Before the bridge, there [were] so many people who lost their lives,” said Kakuko, 32. “I know, because I have no parents.”

He and other local residents work with Harmon Parker, an American and master mason who has been building bridges through Kenya’s mountainous terrain since 1997.

“I saw that building a bridge could change lives and transform communities.”

Rapper DMC Co-Founds Camp for Foster Kids in Need

DMC with Camp Felix kids

DMC with Camp Felix kidsRap pioneer, Darryl “D.M.C.” McDaniels, better known as one of the founding members of Run-D.M.C., is all about giving back. The 46-year-old recently co-founded Camp Felix — a summer camp intended to provide a getaway for foster kids in upstate New York. With 171 campers from New York City currently attending, the camp has become a beacon for kids looking to establish a sense of family outside of their foster homes.

“These kids say, ‘I am just a foster kid. I have nothing going for me other than just being miserable,” McDaniels told New York Daily News. “I tell them, ‘You are wrong. Your situation doesn’t define who you are.”

(See the latest news from camp, via NY Daily News)

Co-Founded with Sheila Jaffe, Emmy Award-winning Casting Director of “The Sopranos” and “Entourage”, the camp grows out of the fact that both were adopted and have searched for their birth families. They realized how fortunate they were, having been raised by loving families. Things could have gone very differently had they not been adopted.

 

Bill Gates’ Favorite Teacher

khan-academy-youtube

khan-academy-youtubeSal Khan, you can count Bill Gates as your newest fan. Gates is a voracious consumer of online education. This past spring a colleague e-mailed him about the nonprofit KhanAcademy.org, a vast digital trove of free mini-lectures all narrated by Khan, an ebullient, articulate Harvard MBA and former hedge fund manager.

Gates replied within minutes. “This guy is amazing,” he wrote. “It is awesome how much he has done with very little in the way of resources.” Gates and his 11-year-old son, Rory, began soaking up videos, from algebra to biology.

(READ the rest of this story in CNN Money)

 

Bill Gates’ Favorite Teacher

khan-academy-youtube

khan-academy-youtubeSal Khan, you can count Bill Gates as your newest fan. Gates is a voracious consumer of online education. This past spring a colleague e-mailed him about the nonprofit KhanAcademy.org, a vast digital trove of free mini-lectures all narrated by Khan, an ebullient, articulate Harvard MBA and former hedge fund manager.

Gates replied within minutes. “This guy is amazing,” he wrote. “It is awesome how much he has done with very little in the way of resources.” Gates and his 11-year-old son, Rory, began soaking up videos, from algebra to biology. 

(READ the rest of this story in CNN Money)

WATCH the video: Instructor to the World! – Math, Science Whiz Shares Lessons via YouTube

Generous Lottery Winner Donates Ticket to Charity

Powerball lottery ticket

Powerball lottery ticketSomewhere in Kansas a Powerball lottery player shines as a hero for sending their winning ticket anonymously by mail to a local hospital.

The only message from the generous donor was, “Please accept this gift for the Mitchell County Regional Medical Foundation for the good work you do. God Bless!”

The hospital staff had no idea how much money the ticket might represent so they checked online and found four numbers matching the Powerball jackpot for July 17.

The ticket was worth $10,000.

The winnings will be added to their current fundraising campaign to complete new accommodation where patients’ families can stay overnight if they need to.

 

 

Generous Lottery Winner Donates Ticket to Charity

Powerball lottery ticket

Powerball lottery ticketSomewhere in Kansas a Powerball lottery player shines as a hero for sending their winning ticket anonymously by mail to a local hospital.

The only message from the generous donor was, “Please accept this gift for the Mitchell County Regional Medical Foundation for the good work you do. God Bless!”

The hospital staff had no idea how much money the ticket might represent so they checked online and found four numbers matching the Powerball jackpot for July 17.

9-year-old Hero Saves Drowning Brother with CPR

Family photo shows hero in the pool

Family photo shows hero in the poolUnlikely hero Logan Hearn kept his cool under frightening circumstances when his baby brother Brendan was found by their mother floating face-down in the family’s pool on Thursday night.

The articulate 9-year-old is being credited with saving the 2-year-old’s life after a swimming pool accident in Joliet, Illinois, thanks to a life-saving CPR class.

WATCH the video below, or read the story at ABC Local

3 Year-old Saves Dad by Walking Two Blocks to Fire Station

3yo-walked-to-firehouse-for-help

3yo-walked-to-firehouse-for-helpAlesaundra Tafoya’s parents have been teaching their daughter about safety, pointing out such safe havens as the local fire stations if she ever finds herself in trouble.

Lesson learned, the toddler did exactly what she was taught Friday after her father collapsed in their Manteca, California, home. The three-year-old walked two blocks to reach Fire Station to ask for help because her daddy was “frozen”.

Doctors were quoted later as saying the man likely would have died had not the firemen arrived and transported him to an area hospital.

WATCH the video below, or read the story at CNN

Motivational Speaker Trades Talking for Finding Jobs for Homeless

Frank Kelly finds jobs for homeless, NBC video clip

Frank Kelly finds jobs for homeless, NBC video clip“My stereotype of homeless people was so far from the truth,” admitted Frank Kelly, who was invited to speak to them, presenting his motivational talk.

He discovered that they are simply “everyday Americans” who ultimately inspired him to stop “talking” and help to get them jobs.

He founded Project Vacant Streets in Miami, an intense program that reintroduces confidence, and prepares them for job interviews.

Frank now hits the streets himself, to find employers willing to listen and hear the real qualities of these temporarily homeless men and women.

WATCH the inspiring video below, or at MSNBC’s Making A Difference

RELATED: Professional Makeovers Lift the Homeless (GNN, Aug, 2009)

Motivational Speaker Trades Talking for Finding Jobs for Homeless

Frank Kelly finds jobs for homeless, NBC video clip

Frank Kelly finds jobs for homeless, NBC video clip“My stereotype of homeless people was so far from the truth,” admitted Frank Kelly, who was invited to speak to them, presenting his motivational talk.

He discovered that they are simply “everyday Americans” who ultimately inspired him to stop “talking” and help to get them jobs.

He founded Project Vacant Streets in Miami, an intense program that reintroduces confidence, and prepares them for job interviews.

Frank now hits the streets himself, to find employers willing to listen and hear the real qualities of these temporarily homeless men and women.

WATCH the inspiring video below, or at MSNBC’s Making A Difference

RELATED: Professional Makeovers Lift the Homeless (GNN, Aug, 2009)

Hero Saved 30 Neighbors From Brutality in Kyrgyz-Uzbek Conflict

Uzbekistan family, file photo, USAID

Uzbekistan family, file photo, USAIDThere were many horror stories coming out of the Kyrgyz-Uzbek conflict this summer, but at least one hero emerged, who risked his life to save his neighbors.

A group of Uzbek women credited him with saving many lives that day.

I was in an Uzbek neighborhood in Osh one day, speaking with people who had fled the violence. They returned and had to live in tents provided by the UN’s refugee agency, often in the courtyards of their former homes, now burned beyond the possibility of habitation. The Uzbeks were displaced people living on their own property.

A group of women were taking me on a tour of the destruction in their neighborhood. One of Uzbek woman came up and said I had to come with her and see someone just around the corner.

That someone turned out to be a Kyrgyz man in his mid-20s who was standing in front of the gates to his inner courtyard and home, which had not been touched while the neighborhood around was torched.

The women explained to me that this young man protected some 30 of his Uzbek neighbors, mostly women, as a Kyrgyz mob descended on the neighborhood. He ushered them into his courtyard then went out, shut and locked the gate, and waited, alone, for the mob to arrive.

The Kyrgyz man remained quiet as the women told the story, but at this point he spoke up and told me the Kyrgyz that came to that neighborhood that day were not from Osh.

Although the mob knew there were Uzbeks behind his gate, this young and slender man told them the people behind the gate were his neighbors and that they, the Kyrgyz, were not from his neighborhood and should go, immediately.

And the mob left.

Unfortunately, some of the bravest deeds and those who perform them are destined to pass with little or no notice.

I asked the man to tell me his name, but he declined. In fact, he asked me not to say anything about what he had done or where it happened or take his picture. He was afraid. Since he was still living among Uzbeks it wasn’t difficult to understand whom he was afraid of.

His anonymity is a great pity, since he was one of the few people I met who had a story of which person could be proud and remember with honor. I waited to write about it and purposely made no mention of which part of Osh he lives in out of respect for his wishes.

But I couldn’t leave the story of such a brave and decent person untold.

(Source: Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty)

 

Man Makes Giant Bubbles Float Above the Beach

Bubble-smith Sterling Johnson makes floating giants across Stinson Beach accompanied by music from incompetech.com…

 

City Water Works to Turn Toxic Sludge Into Green Profit

construction worker with VADOT

construction worker VADOTDuring the last two years, Natchez Water Works has hauled 3,300 tons of toxic sludge to a special-permitted dump site, incurring transportation costs of $400,000 every year.

Now, with a grant of federal stimulus money, Natchez Water Works Wastewater Treatment Plant in New Hampshire is investing in a green makeover that will eliminate those costs and cut the carbon footprint of the city.

The upgrade, partly funded by a 20-year loan at 1.57 percent interest, will convert the sludge into a class-A biosolid that can be sold for agricultural purposes. The facility will be online in late September.

(READ full story at The Natchez Democrat)

Ethiopia Has Halved Malaria Deaths in Just Three Years

Global Fund net recipient, Ethiopia

malaria net in Ethiopia, via The Global FundThe number of people who die from malaria in Ethiopia has been halved in just three years through the distribution of nearly 20 million insecticide-treated bed nets and widespread use of antimalaria drugs. The dramatic fall in deaths from a disease that kills one in four people was made possible with money from the Global Fund To Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and a small army of health workers.

In 2005, only two percent of households owned an insecticide-treated net and almost half the population had no access to any health care services at all. A plan to get nets out to farming families was floundering, partly because of the sheer number of nets required and partly because of the challenge of distributing them to remote areas.