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200,000 Solar Panels Mounted on Utility Poles in New Jersey

photo credit: Petra Solar

photo credit: Petra SolarAT&T announced Wednesday an agreement that will provide the communication network for 200,000 solar panels being installed on utility poles throughout New Jersey for supplying renewable electricity directly to the grid.

Petra Solar, a company that makes photovoltaic panels especially for utility poles, is currently installing their products on existing state poles, outfitting each location with the smart grid technology that eventually will deliver energy efficiency and cost-savings to consumers’ homes via the NJ utility company.

200,000 Solar Panels Mounted on Utility Poles in New Jersey

photo credit: Petra Solar

photo credit: Petra SolarAT&T announced Wednesday an agreement that will provide the communication network for 200,000 solar panels being installed on utility poles throughout New Jersey for supplying renewable electricity directly to the grid.

Petra Solar, a company that makes photovoltaic panels especially for utility poles, is currently installing their products on existing state poles, outfitting each location with the smart grid technology that eventually will deliver energy efficiency and cost-savings to consumers’ homes via the NJ utility company.

Good News for Gluten Sufferers: Celiac Disease Culprits ID’ed

photo by geri

photo by geriThe precise cause of the immune reaction that leads to celiac disease has been discovered.

Three key substances in the gluten found in wheat, rye and barley trigger the digestive condition, UK and Australian researchers say, bringing new hope for the development of treatments and even a vaccine.

(READ more in the BBC)

South Africa Lifts GDP With World Cup Investments

South Africa’s economy is one percent higher than it would have been without the spending and infrastructure development that went into hosting the soccer World Cup, Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said on Thursday. (Reuters, July 2010)

Britain Closes Budget Gap With Green Measures

Image courtesy of Sun Star

Image courtesy of Sun StarBritain has saved up to 70 million pounds a year by making government departments more energy efficient and the effort could help cut a huge budget deficit, a state watchdog said on Thursday.

In the annual report, the Sustainable Development Commission said the adoption of green measures in 2008-2009 amounted to 60-70 million pounds in cost savings and equivalent benefit for British society.

(READ the story in Reuters)

India Develops World’s Cheapest “Laptop” at $35

laptop-gadget-35-bucks-reuters-clip

laptop-gadget-35-bucks-reuters-clipIndia has come up with the world’s cheapest laptop, a touch-screen computing and internet device that costs $35.

The low-cost computing device is designed for students, and talks have started with global manufacturers to begin mass production.

The Indian official said the gadget was packed with Internet browsers, PDF reader and video conferencing facilities but its hardware was created with sufficient flexibility to incorporate new components according to user requirement.

(READ the story at Reuters)

Oyster Workers Lose Jobs, but Not Hope, Thanks to Strangers

oyster workers NBC video

oyster workers NBC videoMore than 40 workers were laid off when the Ameripure Oyster Co. had to shut down operations because of the BP Gulf oil spill, but the company employees were equally stunned by the generosity shown to them by complete strangers — including many NBC Nightly News viewers.

WATCH the video below, or at MSNBC

British Economy Grew Twice as Fast as Expected in Q2

business-graphic-up

business-graphic-upBritain’s economy grew almost twice as fast as expected in the second quarter of this year propelled by a sharp pick-up in services and the biggest rise in construction in almost 50 years.

(READ more from Reuters)

Ten Hero Kids Voted Most Huggable, Each Awarded $10,000

Huggable Heroes 2010

Huggable Heroes 2010Ten youth judged as this year’s Huggable Heroes were honored today for their volunteer efforts at making the world a better place — in total, raising funds and collecting items valued at more than $22.5 million.

They gathered at the Build-A-Bear Workshop company headquarters in St. Louis, after having volunteered an average of more than 650 hours each month dedicating their time to:

— Support U.S. troops
— Advocate for literacy
— Provide medical care to disadvantaged youth
— Help build and fund schools in underdeveloped countries
The Huggable Heroes program is now in its seventh year. Each Huggable Hero was elected by online voters and will receive $10,000, $7,500 in the form of an educational scholarship and $2,500 from the Build-A-Bear Workshop Foundation to be donated to the charity of their choice.

The ten, in their generous spirit, have exhibited intelligence, drive, and entrepreneurship.

“Each of these youngsters, ages 11-18, has essentially built a business,” said Maxine Clark, founder and chief executive bear of Build-A-Bear Workshop. “The big difference is that they are totally selfless and the funding raised goes entirely to causes closest to their hearts.

Introducing the 10 Huggable Heroes of 2010:


rileycRiley Carney, 17, Englewood, CO — Riley created Breaking the Chain, a non-profit organization designed to break the chains of illiteracy and poverty through education by building schools, creating literacy centers and providing books for classrooms around the world.
ashlees
Ashlee Smith, 11, Reno, NV — Ashlee created Ashlee’s Toy Closet, a foundation that collects toys and books for kids in need across the United States, as well as in Canada and Haiti.

melissamMelissa Monette, 18, Mililani, HI — Melissa is president of Kids Helping Kids with Diabetes, an organization that educates, raises funds for research and provides support services to people with Type I diabetes. Melissa also manages A Harvest for Many Inc., a 501(c)(3) that collects food for those in need.
tatianag
Tatiana Grossman, 15, Palo Alto, CA — Tatiana works with the African Library Project to help increase early literacy in Africa. She has spoken before thousands of people on two continents about literacy and facilitating the creation of libraries.

dylanmDylan Mahalingam, 14, Derry, NH — Dylan co-founded Lil’ MDGs to help meet the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. He mobilizes and rallies youth in all parts of the world to work together to raise funds and resources to build schools, dorms, libraries, playgrounds, community gardens and more in several countries such as Uganda, Indonesia, Cambodia, India and Sudan.

alisonmAlison Mansfield, 15, Fort Wayne, IN — Alison has gathered and shipped more than 47,000 items to soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. She also has collaborated with the Fort Wayne Museum of Art and local artists to illustrate a coloring book for Afghan children.

charlesrCharles Rappazzo, 17, Castleton, NY — Charles started Literacy Education for All People, a multi-year initiative to help reduce illiteracy and increase literacy education and awareness both on local and global levels.

jourdanuJourdan Urbach, 18, Roslyn Heights, NY — Jourdan is founder and director of Children Helping Children, which raises funds for cutting-edge research and the eradication of neurological diseases through a national benefit, Concerts for a Cure. He has inspired 700 young professional musicians, to join him in performances and in building satellite chapters.

mattaMatthew Armstrong, 18, Fort Saskatchewan, AB — Matthew has raised more than $300,000 to help kids in need. His organization, Matthew’s Challenge, has raised money through letter-writing campaigns, selling handmade magnetic bookmarks, hosting galas, walk-a-thons and fundraisers.

alainapAlaina Podmorow, 13, Lake Country, BC — Alaina founded Little Women for Little Women in Afghanistan, an organization that raises funds to educate girls in Afghanistan. She has helped raise more than $137,000 through silent auctions, bottle drives and other events. Alaina also speaks to schools and groups to raise awareness about Afghan issues.

From Jan. 15 through Feb. 26, 2010, Build-A-Bear Workshop accepted nominations for Huggable Heroes. More than 1,200 young leaders were nominated for their volunteer and community service efforts. Entries were narrowed down to a field of 75 semi-finalists, 25 finalists and ultimately 10 Huggable Heroes.

Build-A-Bear Workshop launched the Huggable Heroes program in 2004 to search for and recognize young people making a difference in their communities and/or worldwide.

Brides Across America Help Make Military Brides’ Dress Dreams Come True

bride in DC shop via Wash Post video

bride in DC shop via Wash Post videoHeidi Janson, a boutique owner from the bridal industry, started Brides Across America three years ago to help female soldiers who are shipping overseas or brides of military men.

The organization hosts twice-yearly bridal events in two dozen cities across America giving away hundreds of dresses donated by bridal shops and designers to female soldiers and the intended brides of male soldiers who’d been deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan.

(READ the story at their website)

A New Henge Discovered Near Stonehenge

stonehenge-like finding, artist rendition

stonehenge-like finding, artist renditionA remarkable finding within a few hundred yards of the Stonehenge monument will completely change the way archeologists think about the iconic circle of stones and the people who created it 5,000 years ago.

The newly discovered circular monument is believed to have been created around the same time as Stonehenge, but constructed using 19 foot tall wooden posts. Just like Stonehenge, its two entrances are aligned every year on the summer solstice.

Professor Vince Gaffney, of Birmingham University,  found the Late Neolithic circle using ground-based imaging techniques and believes more monuments will likely be found during an ongoing 3-year study called the Stonehenge Hidden Landscapes Project.

“This finding is remarkable – it will completely change the way we think about the landscape around Stonehenge,” he said. “People have tended to think that as Stonehenge reached its peak, it was the paramount monument, existing in splendid isolation.”

Supported by the landowner, the National Trust, and facilitated by English Heritage, the archeology project aims to map 5.5 square miles of the Stonehenge Landscape, bringing together the most sophisticated geophysics team ever to be engaged in a single archaeological project in Britain.

Dr Amanda Chadburn, Stonehenge archaeologist at English Heritage, said:  “This new monument is part of a growing body of evidence which shows how important the summer and winter solstices were to the ancient peoples who built Stonehenge. The discovery is all the more remarkable given how much research there has been in the vicinity of Stonehenge, and emphasizes the importance of continuing research within and around the World Heritage Site.”

Mr Paul Garwood, prehistorian at the Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity at the University of Birmingham, said “This discovery is of great importance for our understanding of the Stonehenge landscape in the 3rd millennium BC. Its location, a short distance from Stonehenge, and the fact that the two monuments were inter-visible, raises exciting new questions about the complex sacred landscape that existed around Stonehenge when the sarsen and bluestone monument was constructed.”

(For more info, see an article in the Daily Mail)

A New Henge Discovered at Stonehenge

stonehenge-like finding, artist rendition

stonehenge-like finding, artist renditionA remarkable finding within a few hundred yards of the Stonehenge monument will completely change the way archeologists think about the iconic circle of stones and the people who created it 5,000 years ago.

The newly discovered circular monument is believed to have been created around the same time as Stonehenge, but constructed using 19 foot tall wooden posts. Just like Stonehenge, its two entrances are aligned every year on the summer solstice.

Professor Vince Gaffney, of Birmingham University,  found the Late Neolithic circle using ground-based imaging techniques and believes more monuments will likely be found during an ongoing 3-year study called the Stonehenge Hidden Landscapes Project.

Upbeat Corporate Earnings, Forecasts Send US Stocks Surging

dollar-sign-morguefile

dollar-sign-morguefileStocks are surging in early trading after another strong batch of earnings and some encouraging signs of growth in Europe.

Caterpillar, 3M, UPS and AT&T all topped earnings forecasts and raised their outlooks.

The scope of earnings releases throughout Thursday provides a good picture of the health of the global economy because they provide details about how much consumers are shipping, shopping and borrowing and manufacturers are producing.

(READ the AP story on Google News)

Photo via Morguefile.com

Banner Year for Salmon Returning to Columbia-Snake Rivers

Photo via Idaho Fish and Game Service

Photo via Idaho Fish and Game ServiceThis summer, the Columbia-Snake River Basin is witnessing the biggest sockeye salmon returns since at least 1938. The record-breaking run has provided a boon harvest for the region’s sport and Native American fishermen.

Scientists credit favorable ocean conditions along with the court-ordered spill of water over some of the basin’s dams for dramatically swelling the ranks of fish. The increases in spill—won by conservation attorneys—helps many more baby salmon survive their epic migrations from mountain streams to the sea where they grow to adulthood. Scientists also credit this spill with significantly contributing to a chinook salmon return currently 140 percent above the 10-year average.

(READ the story at Earth Justice, whose efforts won the day for salmon)

Thanks to Shanti Services for sending the link!

AIDS Breakthroughs in Africa Give Women Hope in H.I.V. Fight

Photo by Sun Star

Photo courtesy of Sun StarWith an AIDS vaccine still out of reach, two rigorous new studies have found different ways to sharply cut H.I.V. infections among women and schoolgirls, who make up a majority of the newly infected in sub-Saharan Africa.

After two decades in which researchers searched fruitlessly for an effective vaginal microbicide to block H.I.V., South African scientists working in two AIDS-devastated communities of South Africa say they have finally found something that shows real promise.

The gel lowered HIV infection rates in women by 39 percent, compared to those women using a placebo gel.

(READ the story in NY Times)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

Britain’s Annual Swan Count on River Thames Squawks with Pageantry, Conservation

The Swan Master, by Dalyndigitalphotography.com

The Swan Master, by Dalyndigitalphotography.com Clad in red-and-white outfits emblazoned with the royal livery, palace boatmen embarked on their annual five-day journey up the River Thames to count the population of the waterway’s swans, which have theoretically belonged to the monarch since the 12th century.

“Swan Upping” — so called because the boatmen catch the swans by lifting them up from the river — dates from medieval times, when swans were served as delicacies at banquet tables.

Today, the census is used to save the swans. The counting, measurement and documentation enables conservationists to tailor methods to protect the regal birds.

(READ MORE of the AP story w/ photo at NorthJersey.com)

The Swan Master, photo by Dave, Dalyndigitalphotography.com

London Opens Bike “Superhighways”

photo by Jack999 on flickr

photo by Jack999 via Flickr CC license London wants to become a better city for cycling and Mayor Boris Johnson’s new bike lanes are clearly a big improvement. They’re big. They’re blue. And, eventually, 12 of these commuter routes will radiate out from the center of London like spokes in a wheel.

On Monday, he announced the opening of the first two, and called them, “cycle superhighways.” Each is five feet wide, and has two lanes, so as to accommodate traffic in both directions.

(READ the story and see the map in GOOD magazine)

Photo by Jack999 via Flickr undrt CC license

New Insurance Rules: Free Preventive Health Care Required for New Plans

obama-michelle-jill-biden

obama-michelle-jill-bidenEach year chronic conditions, such as heart disease, cancer and diabetes, are responsible for 7 of 10 deaths among Americans and account for 75% of the nation’s health spending.

A rare area of agreement during last year’s heath care debate in Congress was the need for preventative care. If people got free preventative care, like cancer screenings, cholesterol screenings and physicians’ advice about high blood pressure and obesity, we could save millions of dollars in future health care costs and avoid those costly emergency room visits.

First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden, the Vice-President’s wife, announced on Monday new prevention benefits that will effect all new health insurance plans.

Starting in September, insurance plans will be required to pay the entire cost of recommended, preventive services. That means that, without paying a deductible, co-pay or coinsurance, many Americans will be able to take the preventive steps needed to keep themselves and their families healthy.

Crime Falls to Lowest Since 1981 in England, Wales

photo by McKinley

photo by McKinleyThe level of crime in England and Wales has fallen to its lowest since records began in 1981, figures showed on Thursday. The annual British Crime Survey showed offenses fell by 9 percent in 2009/10, allaying fears a deep recession would cause a jump in criminality.

Actual crimes recorded by police forces across England and Wales fell by eight percent, a separate report showed, and particularly a “notable” fall in theft, burglary and fraud.

(READ more from Reuters)

Millions Turn Out for Party on German Autobahn Highway

autobahn photo by alphafux, via flickr CC license

autobahn photo by alphafux, via flickr CC licenseAn estimated three million people turned out for a celebration on the super highway in western Germany where cars were forbidden Sunday. Bicycles and roller blades glided along the famed Autobahn between Dortmund and Duisburg with dancing and music along the way.

Germany’s Ruhr region was named this year’s European Capital of Culture, which entails a year’s worth of celebration and arts events.

WATCH the video below, or at Clip Syndicate...

Autobahn photo by alphafux, via flickr under CC license