All News - Page 1440 of 1714 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 1440

Milkman Honored by Queen at Buckingham Palace for Lifetime of Crime-busting

milkman-honored-by-queen.jpg

milkman-honored-by-queen.jpgTony Fowler, a milkman with a daily route that takes him 100 miles through 25 towns in Leicestershire, is being hailed a hero by the Queen of England for having contributed to the capture of a string of criminals. Throughout his 20-year career his watchful eye and quick response has foiled burglaries, stopped drug deals and blocked car thieves trying to escape by positioning his milk truck in their path.

Tony keeps an eye on people’s homes when they are still asleep or away on holiday and has even rescued an elderly woman with Alzheimer’s from a fire. He also aligns himself with good causes, raising money for charity and passing out leaflets.

Mr Fowler will collect the MBE from the Queen at an investiture ceremony at Buckingham Palace today. He was also a Local Champion winner of the Pride of Britain Award in 2008.

The MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) is awarded to UK citizens who are dedicated in their field and set an example for others.

Fowler insisted on wearing a suit jacket decorated like a cow, even though the Palace officials asked that he reconsider. See the photos of occasion in the Daily Mail.

“My wife Anne is not pleased about me going as a cow but I just want to do something different. Milkmen and women are very quiet people usually, except for me,” he told the British press.

(READ the story at Mirror.co.uk – His FULL BIO is featured in the Pride of Britain Awards)

Photo from Pride of Britain Awards

Milkman Honored by Queen at Buckingham Palace for Lifetime of Crime-busting

milkman-honored-by-queen.jpg

milkman-honored-by-queen.jpgTony Fowler, a milkman with a daily route that takes him 100 miles through 25 towns in Leicestershire, is being hailed a hero by the Queen of England for having contributed to the capture of a string of criminals. Throughout his 20-year career his watchful eye and quick response has foiled burglaries, stopped drug deals and blocked car thieves trying to escape by positioning his milk truck in their path.

Tony keeps an eye on people’s homes when they are still asleep or away on holiday and has even rescued an elderly woman with Alzheimer’s from a fire. He also aligns himself with good causes, raising money for charity and passing out leaflets.

Mr Fowler will collect the MBE from the Queen at an investiture ceremony at Buckingham Palace today. He was also a Local Champion winner of the Pride of Britain Award in 2008.

The Secret Mall Gardens of Cleveland

mall-as-greenhouse.jpg

mall-as-greenhouse.jpgUnder its towering glass atrium, a shopping mall in Cleveland is alive with fresh food still on the vine — cucumbers, lettuce and herbs are growing, with strawberries and tomatoes on the way.

In the former Galleria at Erieview mall, a project called Gardens Under Glass is taking root, one of many Cleveland-based projects that are part of a grand plan to transform malls into greenhouse
s.

A new farmers market in the mall is growing in popularity, but “the grander plan calls for the entire mall to become a retail ecovillage: vegetarian restaurants, health food stores, garden supply outlets, more farmers’ stalls and shops selling recycled goods.

(READ the story at Grist.com)

Fiery La. Politician Leads Fight To Clean Up Oil

billy-nungesser-louisiana-parish-pres.jpg

billy-nungesser-louisiana-parish-pres.jpgOne of the areas hardest hit by the BP oil spill is Louisiana’s southernmost Parish located along the 70 miles of Mississippi river that empties into the Gulf of Mexico.

But the residents have something in their arsenal to help keep the oil out of their prized marshlands: Billy Nungesser. The parish president is a newcomer to politics who isn’t afraid to take on BP or the Coast Guard to save the livelihood of his home.

From an emergency management center, he recently ordered his staff to ignore BP and put parish equipment out in the water to suck up the oil: “I should have told them to get the hell out of the way two weeks ago, but we are putting [this] equipment and we’re putting the skimmers in the water. I don’t give a s – – – what anybody says.”

(READ the story from National Public Radio) …Thanks, also, to Roxana for submitting this New York Times article about the same story!

Job Openings Rise To Highest Level In 16 Months

job classified ads - Kevin P. via Morguefile

jobs-classifieds-kevin_p-morguefile.jpgJob openings jumped in April to the highest level in 16 months, a sign that hiring by private employers is healthy.

The number of jobs advertised rose to 3.1 million from 2.8 million in March, the Labor Department said Tuesday. That’s the most openings since December 2008.

Private employers, rather than the government, accounted for the entire net gain.

(READ more in the AP story via NPR)

Photo by Kevin_P via Morguefile.com

Saving Honey Bees, One Hive at a Time

bee-colony.jpg

bee-colony.jpgFor the fourth year in a row, about a third of honeybee hives in the United States died off during the past winter, succumbing to Colony Collapse Disorder.

So when beekeeper Keith Roberts comes across a thriving nest of feral bees, his company views it as an opportunity to replenish the dwindling populations of commercial honeybees.

The city of Santa Monica is currently re-evaluating its longstanding policy of exterminating swarms of bees and a law prohibiting the keeping of bees within city limits may be overturned.

Local advocates have urged the city to capture the swarms, re-house them in temporary hives on city land, and then transport them to agricultural areas in California where the bees are needed by farmers to pollinate crops.

“They’re extremely healthy bees, strong producers and obviously very resistant to the varroa mites and the pathogens that are wiping out our bees across the country,” says Mr Roberts. “These bees might very well hold the key to healthier bees in the general.”

(READ MORE of the story from the BBC)

DC Pitching Phenom is Stunning in Major League Debut Striking out 14

strasburg-steve-nats-minors.jpg

strasburg-steve-nats-minors.jpgBefore the 21 year-old even stepped on a major league pitcher’s mound, he was being called the greatest pitcher in the history of baseball. No one could have expected him to live up to the pre-game hype, but he did.

On the mound for the Washington Nationals last night, Steven Strasburg pitched 14 strikeouts with no walks — something no player in history has ever done in a major league debut.

His fastball was clocked at 100 mph and his crazy curve ball dropped in an avalanche that stumped the Pittsburgh Pirates and sealed his first win, 5-2.

The famed Washington sports columnist Tom Boswell wrote: “The return of baseball here five years ago was the most emotionally charged night the sport has provided us so far in the new ‘Nats’ era. But this town has never had one game, one packed-house party, one continuous night-long celebration of possibility, one obliterate-all-expectations career launch that could even remotely approach the electric future that Strasburg’s 5-2 victory instantly foretold.”

(READ his column in the Washington Post)

Gates Foundation Gives $1.5 Billion for Women’s Health

bill-gates-foundation-photo.jpgThe Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation pledged $1.5 billion on Monday in a joint push with the United Nations to improve the health of women and children.

“That is in addition to grants that we already make in vaccines, diarrhea, malaria,” Melinda Gates told reporters.

The UN is launching a lobbying effort to get governments and other non-profit groups on board.

The money will fund a comprehensive approach to help women deliver babies safely and plan healthy families with access to contraception, while incorporating current vaccination and nutrition programs.

(READ more from Reuters)

Bird Drawings by Young Girl Raise $60,000 for Gulf Wildlife Rescue

pelican-drawing-olivia-bouler-gulf-oilSaddened by what she imagined the oil spill was doing to wildlife near her family’s summer home on the Gulf coast, an 11-year-old began creating pictures of birds to raise money for rescue operations, and claims to have raised $60,000 so far.

After learning about Olivia Bouler’s campaign, America Online donated $25,000 to the Audubon Society in her name and also created a gallery of her artwork.

The fifth-grader decided to send a bird illustration to anyone who donates to The Audubon Society, The Sierra Club, The Weeks Bay Foundation, The Mobile Bay Estuary Program or The National Wildlife Fund, with a limit of 500 originals offered.

Her mother started a Facebook group called “Save the Gulf: Olivia’s Bird Illustrations,” which now has more than 5,000 fans.

(WATCH video below, or read more from the story at AL.com)

Bird Drawings by Young Girl Raises fortune for Gulf Wildlife Rescue

pelican-drawing-olivia-bouler-gulf-oil.jpgSaddened by what she imagined the oil spill was doing to wildlife near her family’s summer home on the Gulf coast, an 11-year-old began creating pictures of birds to raise money for rescue operations. Since then, totals have climbed into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

After learning about Olivia Bouler’s campaign, America Online donated $25,000 to the Audubon Society in her name and also created a gallery of her artwork.

The fifth-grader decided to send a bird illustration to anyone who donates to The Audubon Society, The Sierra Club, The Weeks Bay Foundation, The Mobile Bay Estuary Program or The National Wildlife Fund.

Her mother started a Facebook group called “Save the Gulf: Olivia’s Bird Illustrations,” which eventually collected more than 28,000 fans.

(WATCH video below, or read more from the story at AL.com)

Mozart Makes Microbes Eat Sewage Faster

mozart-plays-trio.jpg

mozart-plays-trio.jpgSewage-eating microbes are major appreciators of Mozart, according to one pioneering waste treatment plant in Germany which has taken to playing the Austrian composer’s music on an expensive stereo for the microorganisms that break down sewage — and it found that it greatly increased their speed and efficiency, and could save the plant thousands of dollars a year.

(READ the article at TreeHugger.com)

Wolf Dog Sings to a Baby, Stops His Cry (Video)

grey wolf howls
wolf-howling-grey.jpg

This video of a wolf-like cry soothing a baby evokes something mystical from deep within our collective history. Quite magical in its effect, too.

Posted on YouTube more than a year ago, a Good News reader from Alaska named, wwwoolf (not making that up), finally sent the link to me yesterday. Enjoy.

(Does anyone know to what exact species this animal belongs?)

 

 

Wolf Dog Sings to a Baby, Stops His Cry (Video)

grey wolf howls
wolf-howling-grey.jpg

This video of a wolf-like cry soothing a baby evokes something mystical from deep within our collective history. Quite magical in its effect, too.

Posted on YouTube more than a year ago, a Good News reader from Alaska named, wwwoolf (not making that up), finally sent the link to me yesterday. Enjoy.

(Does anyone know to what exact species this animal belongs?)

 

 

Defeating Terrorism: What Indonesia Can Teach The World

prison barbed-wire

prison-barbed-wire.jpgIndonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, is waging one of the world’s most determined campaigns against terrorism — and much of the credit goes to the country’s American-trained police unit, Detachment 88. The horror and audacity of the Bali bombings proved to be an epiphany for Indonesians, alerting them to the homegrown extremists in their midst and helping forge a national consensus against terrorism. The following year, Detachment 88 was set up with the backing of the U.S. and Australian governments. Today, it numbers 400 personnel drawn from the elite of the Indonesian police’s special-operations forces — and it has built up an extensive intelligence network to nab terrorists.

Since Feb. 22, 48 suspected terrorists were caught within a seven-week period and another eight killed. In May, a further 16 suspects were arrested and five killed as police foiled a plot to assassinate Indonesia’s President and visiting foreign dignitaries. Detachment 88 had done it again.

(READ the story from Time Magazine)

Mumbai Board Requires Hotels to Recycle Sewage

mumbai-pub-domain.jpg

mumbai-pub-domain.jpgA new pollution standard announced Saturday, on World Environment Day, ensures that cleaner water wll flow into the Arabian Sea from India’s second largest state.

Maharashtra, the richest state in India, boasting a 300 mile coastline and deep water ports like Mumbai, has ordered that all of its hotels, clubs and resorts install sewage plants on their premises to help recycle 80 percent of sewage water for non-potable use.

The decision from the Maharashtra Pollution Board Control is all the more important because 50 percent of the untreated sewage water of Mumbai, the second most populous city in the world, is flushed directly into the rivers and sea, affecting marine life.

Water shortages across India also bolstered the push for the new rule, which is controversial among smaller hotels.

According to a report in Midday, Vijay Shewakramani, Managing Committee Member, Hotel and Restaurant Association Western India said, “Making optimum use of recycled water is the need of the hour. Soon, not just commercial establishments but residential complexes too will have to implement this rule.”

(READ the report in Mid-day.com)

Mumbai Board Requires Hotels to Recycle Sewage

mumbai-pub-domain.jpg

mumbai-pub-domain.jpgA new pollution standard announced Saturday, on World Environment Day, ensures that cleaner water wll flow into the Arabian Sea from India’s second largest state.

Maharashtra, the richest state in India, boasting a 300 mile coastline and deep water ports like Mumbai, has ordered that all of its hotels, clubs and resorts install sewage plants on their premises to help recycle 80 percent of sewage water for non-potable use.

The decision from the Maharashtra Pollution Board Control is all the more important because 50 percent of the untreated sewage water of Mumbai, the second most populous city in the world, is flushed directly into the rivers and sea, affecting marine life.

Water shortages across India also bolstered the push for the new rule, which is controversial among smaller hotels.

According to a report in Midday, Vijay Shewakramani, Managing Committee Member, Hotel and Restaurant Association Western India said, “Making optimum use of recycled water is the need of the hour. Soon, not just commercial establishments but residential complexes too will have to implement this rule.”

(READ the report in Mid-day.com)

Homeless Cat Loaned to Hospice Patient Offers a Soothing End

hospice-cat.jpg

hospice-cat.jpgA person in their final months of life cannot adopt a pet, but, what if they are longing for the snuggling and affection of a lap cat? Tails High, a cat adoption agency in Virginia provided such a pet for a woman who made a special inquiry about her sister who was dying at home in hospice care.

After the suitable cat was chosen she was carried to meet the dying woman.

“The moment was breathtaking. My sister was so happy.”

And Sabrina the cat? She seemed to sense what was necessary. “She was instantly and completely a lap cat.” She snuggled up against the patient for hours on end and dealt calmly with everyone who arrived — hospice workers, family members, friends.

(READ the story at USA Today) … Thanks to Sally Scime for suggesting the link!

Legendary Coach Taught Lessons on Life (John Wooden 1910 – 2010)

john-wooden-coach.jpg

john-wooden-coach.jpgLegendary UCLA basketball Coach John Wooden, who led his team to 10 NCAA championships over 12 years, including an 88-game winning streak from 1971 to 1974, has died at the age of 99.

The humble man was sometimes more of a teacher, life guide or spiritual adviser than a coach. He never raised his voice during his 27 year career.

Wooden authored a lecture and book about the Pyramid of Success, a set of philosophical building blocks for winning at basketball and at life. The last book he authored was released in 2009, Coach Wooden’s Leadership Game Plan for Success: 12 Lessons for Extraordinary Performance and Personal Excellence.

Among his maxims:

    * Failing to prepare is preparing to fail.
    * Flexibility is the key to stability.
    * Be quick, but don’t hurry.

WATCH the video below, or at MSNBC... also, READ this article at Chicago Sun-Times.

San Diego Vaults into Solar Energy and Green Jobs Future

solar roof from heliodynamics

solar-roof-heliodynamics.jpgTwo of the world’s solar energy leaders have just announced major plans to bring new solar energy technology and green jobs to San Diego. The Sanyo Electric group has embarked on a three year, $3 million partnership with the University of California, San Diego on next-generation solar energy systems, and in a separate development, solar cell efficiency wizard Kyocera has started up a solar module manufacturing plant in the city, aiming to produce about 30 megawatts annually.

(READ the details in CleanTechnica)

Hero Couple Extinguish Remote Forest Fire While on Holiday

forest-fire-partial-jagberg-morguefile

forest-fire-partial-jagberg-morguefile.jpgWith forests at high risk for fire in northern Ontario last week, a couple who were out for a scenic flight in their small plane became environmental heroes when they spotted a flash fire and risked their lives to save the Boreal forest near their remote cottage west of Sudbury.

Traveling to their hideaway home on Lonely Lake, Steve and Giselle Holmik veered overhead to see if friends were at their camp on neighboring Onaping Lake. They noticed forest fires in the distance in every direction.

“We suddenly sighted a huge explosion seemingly coming out of the ground near Lonely. It was just like a volcano erupting. We had just heard an announcement on the radio that there was a fire North of Wahnapitae and a smaller one to the West,” said Giselle.

Piloting their small plane, Steve scouted for a safe place to land. Taxiing by the narrows and observing the smoke, it was clear that the fire had been burning for a few days.

“With all the other fires going on, we had no idea how long it would take for the Ministry of Natural Resources to take action and the fire being near the camp, it was too close for comfort to be wondering and waiting,” says Giselle.

Forest fire in Canada is a dangerous situation at the best of times, let alone in a remote location when forests were tinder dry. Seeing no option, Steve acted quickly and calmly to get their small fire pump going, though it had not been working for a couple of years.

By the time they got to the site, there were trees going up in flames like fire crackers and Steve had to situate himself on the burned out land, still smoldering, in order to reach the flames, reports Gisele.

They determined that the fire, set by recent lightning, had tunneled into the ground. Realizing this was going to take longer that they thought, Giselle headed back to get more fuel for the water pump and a second hose. They connected the hoses and Steve continued working his way to the flames. Giselle was able to go in and start digging where he had put flames out, as it was obvious the parched earth underneath was still on fire.

Three grueling hours later, the environmental heroes had the area under control.

A fire bomber plane buzzed overhead, but realized that the couple amazingly had things under control, and moved on to other fires in the distance.

Later that evening, the couple inspected the site and found smoke and ground still smoldering. By the next morning however, the area was smoke free. That same night, a helicopter flew over Lonely, hovered a bit over the site scanning with heat sensing equipment and then took off up North.

“It was a relief to see that!” the couple relates. They flew over the area again this week, spotted fine wisps of smoke and reported it to the MNR, who took over from there.

Photo by jagberg, via morguefile.com