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China Signs Historic Trade Pact With Taiwan Easing Half Century of Tensions

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chinese-currency.jpgA historic trade deal between China and Taiwan will ease 60 years of hostility and push their economies closer than ever, the latest sign that Beijing’s strategy of wooing the self-ruled island with carrots instead of sticks is paying off.

At the signing of the deal on Tuesday, negotiators on both sides spoke of a new era in ties across the Taiwan Strait — where the threat of military conflict has lingered since Taiwan and China split amid civil war in 1949.

(READ more of the AP article at Natl Public Radio)

G8 Pledges $5 Billion for Maternal, Child Health Goals

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baby-in-diapers.jpgAs the G8 summit in Toronto came to a close on Saturday, health advocates hailed the Canadian-led Muskoka Initiative for elevating maternal and child health to a flagship cause for the group’s development agenda.

Recognizing the importance of child and maternal health, leaders of the G8 industrialized nations pledged an additional $5 billion of aid over the next five years toward the goal of saving 1.3 million children.

Positive Radio Station Run By and For Palestinian Women

Palestinian womens radio, VOA photo

palestinian_womens-radio-voa.jpgPalestinian women are hoping to improve their lives by using the air waves. A group of women in the West Bank this month launched one of the first all-women’s radio stations in the Arab world.

Halla Bazzar, a young professional woman in her 20s, begins her afternoon show. For Halla, the job is more than just running a show. It is about giving women living in conflict a key to success. “We talk about issues that would inspire women in the future,” she said.

Giving women hope for the future is one of the goals of the station, Nisaa FM, which broadcasts from the West Bank town of Ramallah.

Founder and manager Maysoun Odeh (pictured, right) says the station wants to entertain, but also empower women. “We broadcast success stories of women regionally, internationally, or locally in which they can take example from, and they know that they can do something and they can achieve something regardless of the situation,” she said.

The day-to-day situation for many Palestinian women living under occupation involves supporting their children while their husbands are in prison, finding housing after their homes are demolished, and navigating their way through Israeli checkpoints.

Wafa Abdel Rahman, a woman’s activist with the West Bank group Filastiniyat, says Palestinian women also face cultural issues.

“We suffer, as the rest of the women in the Arab world suffer, political Islam – the interpretation of Islam, which actually, is putting more burden on the women,” she said. “It portrays women as if they are the key to the honor of the family.  If you are a good Muslim or not depends on how is your woman. Is she covered?  Is she following all the instructions, etcetera. This is really hard on women.”

Abdel Rahman welcomes the new station.  “We need a radio that brings out all those issues,” she said. “But also to take it a step further and think how we can – not only women but also men – how we can together change the status of women and make it better.”

The station, whose name “Nisaa” means “woman” in Arabic, began operations this month with the help of Smiling Children, a Switzerland-based humanitarian foundation.

(LISTEN to the report at VOA News)

Positive Radio Station Run By and For Palestinian Women

Palestinian womens radio, VOA photo

palestinian_womens-radio-voa.jpgPalestinian women are hoping to improve their lives by using the air waves. A group of women in the West Bank this month launched one of the first all-women’s radio stations in the Arab world.

Halla Bazzar, a young professional woman in her 20s, begins her afternoon show. For Halla, the job is more than just running a show. It is about giving women living in conflict a key to success. “We talk about issues that would inspire women in the future,” she said.

Giving women hope for the future is one of the goals of the station, Nisaa FM, which broadcasts from the West Bank town of Ramallah.

Founder and manager Maysoun Odeh (pictured, right) says the station wants to entertain, but also empower women. “We broadcast success stories of women regionally, internationally, or locally in which they can take example from, and they know that they can do something and they can achieve something regardless of the situation,” she said.

Financial Reform Bill is Good News for US Consumers

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money.gifLawmakers have been working hard to come together on a financial reform bill, and on Friday finished crafting their joint version.

The bill is good news for consumers. It contains many provisions aimed directly at protecting consumers, starting with the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau whose role is to create laws to prevent unfair practices in consumer loans and credit cards.

(READ more from the Boston Globe)

Gala for Animals Lebanon Raises $45K for Critter Welfare

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gala-animals-lebanon.jpgAnimals Lebanon took center stage for animal welfare in Lebanon less than two years ago, but the determination of its five founders quickly built a movement involving schools and businesses that has spayed and neutered 600 animals in that time and rescued countless more.

This month, the group held its first Gala for Change in the majestic Palais Mouawad Gardens where 350 people from all sectors of society came together for the sold out event raising nearly $45,000 to support the vital work.

The Palace Gardens is known as one of the most beautiful locations in Beirut, but it was given that special ‘animal’ touch. A vegetarian dinner was served, while the tables were decorated with animal shapes and pots of natural grass and local flowers.

Protestants Repent for Churches’ Role in Oppressing First Nations

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native-american-sculpture-alb.jpg A global Protestant group representing 80 million Christians has issued an apology for the role played by churches in perpetrating abuse against Native Americans, First Nations and other indigenous peoples.

“We repent of our history littered with ways in which we betrayed Gospel values of justice, fairness, and love for our neighbor by the confiscation of land, and mass killings,” delegates at the founding meeting of the World Communion of Reformed Churches said in a 26 June statement.

In their statement, they said they hoped that through “genuine repentance” they would have courage to repair broken relationships and begin new paths of reconciliation.
 
(READ more of the Ecumenical News article in JMM)

Panera Co. Will Open More Pay-What-You-Want Cafes

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panera-bread-flickr-samatha-celera.jpgAs the first crowd of customers filed into Panera Co.’s nonprofit restaurant, only the honor system kept them from taking all the food they wanted for free.

Ronald Shaich, Panera’s chairman, admitted as he watched them line up that he had no idea if this experiment would work. The idea for Panera’s first nonprofit restaurant was to open an eatery where people paid what they could. The richer could pay full price — or extra. The poorer could get a cheap or even free meal.

A month later, the verdict is in: It turns out people are basically good — and many are very good.

The cafe, in an upscale St. Louis suburb, has convinced Panera Foundation officials to open two more restaurants elsewhere.

(READ the AP story at WTOP.com)

Thanks to Chris Cloud for submitting the link! – Flickr photo by Samatha Celera

Last Lakota WWII Code Talker Dies at 86: Tribute

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lakota-code-talker-voa.jpgDuring World War II, General Paul Mueller, commander of the U.S. Army’s 81st Infantry, recruited a handful of soldiers from native Sioux tribes for a special mission that would keep the Japanese from intercepting vital communications. The General intended to confuse the enemy by sending all strategic messages in a coded Native American language.

On Wednesday, the last of the Lakota code talkers, Clarence Wolf Guts, died at 86 and was buried with honors in the Black Hills National Cemetery.

Wolf Guts was Gen. Mueller’s personal code talker, and traveled with him and the 81st division as it moved from island to island in the Pacific, headed for Japan.

A total of 11 Lakotas from South Dakota joined the mission and learned how to operate military radios to transmit communications between their units on the battlefield. Their special language helped the army to move troops and supplies undetected, and eventually win the war. German and Japanese cryptographers never were able to decipher any of the Native American-based code.

Another unit of Navajo code talkers were commended for their skill, speed and accuracy working with the U.S. Marine Corps. At Iwo Jima, six Navajo code talkers worked around the clock during the first two days of the battle, sending and receiving over 800 messages, all without error. Their commander stated, “Were it not for the Navajos, the Marines would never have taken Iwo Jima.”

The once-classified units were finally publicized in a book and a subsequent 2002 film called “Windtalkers.” Nicolas Cage played a body guard sent by Marines to protect the valuable and vulnerable code talker, to ensure that he would never be captured alive.

WATCH a video below, and READ the story of Wolf Guts in a news report via the Rapid City Journal.

(For more of the story, read a longer feature article in South Dakota Magazine)

YouTube Video Brings Tears to USA World Cup Hero Donovan

crowd cheers at USA FIFA goal

crowd-cheering-bar-usa-fifa.jpgEven though the U.S. team lost to Ghana in the World Cup tournament over the weekend ending its string of unlikely successes, one compilation video posted to YouTube by a USA fan remains noteworthy.

The video replays the raw jubilation expressed by fans around the world, when Landon Donovan kicked in the winning goal against Algeria with barely 4 seconds to play.

The soaring music and displays of emotion brought tears to the eyes of many of the 2.2 million people who have viewed it so far — even Donovan himself, who posted on his Twitter account,  “This brings tears to my eyes every time. Thanks you all so much…”

Enjoy the video below…

YouTube Video Brings Tears to USA World Cup Hero Donovan

crowd cheers at USA FIFA goal

crowd-cheering-bar-usa-fifa.jpgEven though the U.S. team lost to Ghana in the World Cup tournament over the weekend ending its string of unlikely successes, one compilation video posted to YouTube by a USA fan remains noteworthy.

The video replays the raw jubilation expressed by fans around the world, when Landon Donovan kicked in the winning goal against Algeria with barely 4 seconds to play.

The soaring music and displays of emotion brought tears to the eyes of many of the 2.2 million people who have viewed it so far — even Donovan himself, who posted on his Twitter account,  “This brings tears to my eyes every time. Thanks you all so much…”

Enjoy the video below…

Turning Old Tires Into Stylish Shoes

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shoes-rebelsoles.jpgAlemu, a 30 year-old woman, runs a trailblazing business in Africa making shoes from old rubber tires. SoleRebels handcraft their “zero-emission” sandals and shoes from organic and recycled materials of many types, like camouflage material cut from old army uniforms.

The business takes inspiration from the original old car tire shoes worn by soldiers who fought Italy’s invading forces, but their style is chic and their shoes exude comfort.

Alemu and her family launched the business in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, in 2005 and already it is stepping out onto the global stage with clients like Amazon, Urban Outfitters, and a host of Web sites outlets and bricks and mortar companies in the U.S.

Visit SoleRebels and see their product lines…

WATCH the video below, or read the story at CNN

Turning Old Tires Into Stylish Shoes

shoes-rebelsoles.jpg

shoes-rebelsoles.jpgAlemu, a 30 year-old woman, runs a trailblazing business in Africa making shoes from old rubber tires. SoleRebels handcraft their “zero-emission” sandals and shoes from organic and recycled materials of many types, like camouflage material cut from old army uniforms.

The business takes inspiration from the original old car tire shoes worn by soldiers who fought Italy’s invading forces, but their style is chic and their shoes exude comfort.

Alemu and her family launched the business in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, in 2005 and already it is stepping out onto the global stage with clients like Amazon, Urban Outfitters, and a host of Web sites outlets and bricks and mortar companies in the U.S.

Visit SoleRebels and see their product lines…

WATCH the video below, or read the story at CNN

Memphis Ballet School Gets a Hand Training Inner City Kids

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new-ballet-memphis.jpgAl Roker of the Today Show went on a nationwide tour to Lend A Hand to five charities in need. He helped raise $3 million, but the highlight for me was the New Ballet School in Memphis which offers low-income and troubled students the inspiration to dance — hip hop style, flamenco, or ballet — regardless of their ability to pay.

New Ballet Ensemble is the professional company of performers who dance on main stages or in schools where they engaged students and recruit kids for scholarships.

Katie, the founder, calls the arts a necessity for kids.

“Dancing was the one thing that made sense for me.” said a student whose live was changed. “If they had never found me, I probably would have been in jail.” Now the student is mentoring inner city kids and credits Katie as his guardian angel.

WATCH the video below, or see more LEND A HAND projects from Today Show...

Free Prom Provides Respite for Teens With Life Threatening Illnesses

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prom-life-threatening-illnesses.jpgAnna Rahm spent her senior year of high school enduring chemotherapy sessions, blood and platelet transfusions and multiple surgeries, including the amputation of her right leg in October.

But last week, the 18-year-old from Chatsworth, California, was able to receive her diploma and attend a one-of-a-kind prom with nearly 200 other teenagers also living with a life-threatening illness.

The annual No Worries Now prom is the brainchild of 20-year-old Fred Scarf. The event is intended to give the teens an opportunity to celebrate their life and their youth in an environment of acceptance and camaraderie.

WATCH the video below, or read the CNN Heroes story here

An Eco Friendly Floor Finish – From Cows

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cow.jpgAndrew Meyer believes that he’s found a “whey” to help Vermont’s dairy farms by turning their cheesemaking byproduct into an eco-friendly wood finish.

Like other water-based substitutes for traditional (oil-based) polyurethane, Vermont Natural Coatings‘ PolyWhey dries fast and emits no toxic fumes. It releases very low levels of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), about one-quarter the amount released by some polyurethanes. Unlike other waterborne finishes, its hardness makes it a viable option for professional-grade work, experts say.

Building Green, a private publisher that researches green building products and practices for contractors and policymakers, named PolyWhey one of its Top 10 products in 2008. “I’m not aware of any other clear coating that combines its high level of performance with such low VOC emissions.”

(READ the story at CS Monitor)

Electrolux Turning Plastic From the Ocean Into Vacuum Cleaners

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vacuum-recycled-concept-electrolux.jpgTalk about the right marketing at the right time. Electrolux is launching Vac from the Sea, an initiative that will turn plastic pollution from the ocean into Electrolux vacuum cleaners.

The company has already begun collecting plastic from our seas to recycle into a series of green concept vacuum cleaners.

The project is intended to highlight the fact that not enough plastic is recycled by consumers to fill the needs of sustainable appliance makers.

Hans Stråberg, President and CEO, Electrolux says, “Our oceans are filled with plastic waste. Yet on land, there is a shortage.”

He writes, on the Vac From the Sea website, “I hope you will join us in raising awareness about the threat plastic poses to marine habitats, and the urgent need for taking better care of the plastic that already exists.”

WATCH the video below, or read more from Ariel Schwartz at Fast Company

Electrolux Turning Plastic From the Ocean Into Vacuum Cleaners

vacuum-recycled-concept-electrolux.jpg

vacuum-recycled-concept-electrolux.jpgTalk about the right marketing at the right time. Electrolux is launching Vac from the Sea, an initiative that will turn plastic pollution from the ocean into Electrolux vacuum cleaners.

The company has already begun collecting plastic from our seas to recycle into a series of green concept vacuum cleaners.

The project is intended to highlight the fact that not enough plastic is recycled by consumers to fill the needs of sustainable appliance makers.

Hans Stråberg, President and CEO, Electrolux says, “Our oceans are filled with plastic waste. Yet on land, there is a shortage.”

He writes, on the Vac From the Sea website, “I hope you will join us in raising awareness about the threat plastic poses to marine habitats, and the urgent need for taking better care of the plastic that already exists.”

WATCH the video below, or read more from Ariel Schwartz at Fast Company

World On Track to Cut Poverty in Half, But Turner and Gates Called in to Boost Other Goals

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kids-round-earth.jpgDespite the global economic downturn, the world is still on track to meet a key U.N. goal of halving the number of people living on less than $1 a day by 2015, according to a report released Wednesday.

The UN confirmed that the overall poverty rate is expected to fall to 15 percent by 2015, which is half the number seen in 1990, meaning the U.N. goal would be met.

Cutting global poverty is the first of eight Millennium Development Goals adopted by 189 world leaders at a U.N. summit in 2000.

This week’s UN report provides a mixed picture of past efforts to achieve all 8 goals, with progress lagging in the areas of sanitation, women’s equality, and maternal mortality.

With these challenges in hand, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon named a star-powered committee on Wednesday that will try to spark progress against all the welfare problems targeted in the Millennium Goals (MDGs).

World On Track to Cut Poverty in Half

kids-round-earth

kids-round-earth.jpgDespite the global economic downturn, the world is still on track to meet a key U.N. goal of halving the number of people living on less than $1 a day by 2015, according to a report released Wednesday.

The UN confirmed that the overall poverty rate is expected to fall to 15 percent by 2015, which is half the number seen in 1990, meaning the U.N. goal would be met.

Cutting global poverty is the first of eight Millennium Development Goals adopted by 189 world leaders at a U.N. summit in 2000.

This week’s UN report provides a mixed picture of past efforts to achieve all 8 goals, with progress lagging in the areas of sanitation, women’s equality, and maternal mortality.

With these challenges in hand, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon named a star-powered committee on Wednesday that will try to spark progress against all the welfare problems targeted in the Millennium Goals (MDGs).