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When Losing a Golf Tournament Really Makes You a Winner

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golf-college-heroes.jpgThere are times to be competitive. Moments when all you want to do is humiliate your opponent as you defeat him. It’s the nature of sports, and what our internal competition meters usually read.

That, we all know, is how athletes feel most of the time. But, at times, and these are few and far between, we see acts that defy wins and losses. A moment when a girl is brought in on crutches to score a layup to break a record or someone being carried around the field after she twisted her ankle rounding the bases. Opponents coming together to transcend the game.

That is what happened between two collegiate golfers, vying for a spot in the NAIA National Championship.

(READ the story at Yahoo! Sports)

Operation Iraqi Baseball Promotes Ties to American Pastime

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operation-iraqi-baseball.jpgA delegation of 10 young Iraqi athletes and five coaches from three Iraqi cities are  traveling in the United States May 3–13, on a Sports Visitors tour featuring baseball and softball programs. Organized by the U.S. Department of State’s SportsUnited initiative, the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs will bring Iraqi and American youth together to do team building as well as learn baseball skills.

During their tour, the Iraqis will work with American players and coaches to hone their skills and will attend a clinic taught by Major League Baseball All-Star Ken Griffey Jr., a famous player and home run hitter. They will also go to baseball and softball skills training with American students at local secondary schools and colleges.

Attending a Major League Baseball game will be the high point — the Baltimore Orioles against the Seattle Mariners on May 11.

Baseball in Iraq is still a fledgling sport and very few Iraqis have any idea about it. But recent cheery news reports about cross-ocean ties are opening more people to the existance of baseball in the Tigris Valley.

Good Goes Viral: Stanford Class Focuses on Social Media for Public Good

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changeforgoodenv.pngThrough an experimental class at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business that tries to use social media for the public good, a trio of students posted a video to YouTube this spring promoting an organization that hopes to save the lives of millions of prematurely born babies in India by creating an innovative low-cost baby incubator.

“The Power of Social Technology” is a new class that Stanford business professor Jennifer Aaker was inspired to teach after watching one of her students launch an effort on the Internet to find South Asian bone marrow donors for two friends who were critically ill with leukemia.

U.S. Manufacturing Grows by Most Since 2004

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gears-cogs-dr-bob-morguefile.jpgManufacturing in the U.S. expanded in April at the fastest pace since June 2004, indicating the world’s largest economy accelerated as it entered the second quarter.

“This speaks to the tremendous health of the manufacturing sector and should be consistent with further gains in hiring,” said Carl Riccadonna, a senior economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York.

(READ the story at Bloomberg)

Photo credit: Dr. Bob, morguefile.com

Adult Fears Are Encouraging Obesity in Kids

kids playing, photo by Sun Star

monkey-bars-smiles.jpgAre kids today becoming sedentary and obese because of a heightened desire for video games, or because their inborn desire to run free in the neighborhood has been squashed by overly fearful parents?

In a National Post opinion column, Marni Soupcoff comments on a Canadian national report card called, Active Healthy Kids Canada.

“Are kids moving enough. Maybe not (though, as a regular observer of nursery school playdates, I can tell you that the little ones I’m seeing would have to defy the laws of both physics and gravity to move any more).

But if inactivity really is a problem, the solution does not lie in “physical activity guidelines for children five and under,” as suggested by the chief scientific officer of Active Healthy Kids Canada.

Nor will more “national commitments to encouraging sport and activity” do the trick, though such commitments will successfully eat up untold quantities of taxpayer money, argues the organization’s CEO.

Motion is kids’ natural state of being.

To get them back there, we don’t need a major nanny-state intervention or experiment in motivational psychology; we just need to remove the impediments. Simply letting kids “off-leash” more often, freeing them up to (literally) run around on their own without constant direct adult supervision would be an excellent start.

“But the fear of crime and predators makes this a frightening proposition for parents. It feels like a dangerous world out there. But, if anything, life is far less risky for little ones today than it was a generation ago when kids were commonly left to their own devices,” posits Soupcuff, who points to safer playgrounds.

Matthew Yglesias writes that in the 1990s, public perception of whether crime was getting better or worse largely tracked reality. But in 2002-2008, Americans began perceiving an increase in crime that did not mirror the reality that crime rates were dropping fast.

In an article called Walking to school, a time-honored tradition, the Salt Lake Tribune tried to return parents’ fears in line with reality. It showcased an elementary school in Salt Lake City that built a network of kids who walk to school. 

According to STATS.org, a think tank at George Mason University that monitors the media’s use of statistics, the actual chance of a child being taken by a stranger is about 1 in 1 million. What’s more, David Finkelhor, head of the Crimes Against Children Research Center, which tracks and works to prevent violence against kids, suspects child abductions have actually declined, based on a 26 percent drop in child homicides and a 30 percent decrease in child sex assaults over the last decade.

Despite the fact that walking to school “keeps kids healthy, decreases air pollution and can build confidence in young children through greater self awareness and personal responsibility,” very few parents encourage the practice.

Soupcoff concludes: “Many of the activities that come easiest to kids — exploring, hiding and seeking, playing tag, riding bikes — involve a great deal of physical movement. But they also involve leaving the house and taking risks. The adults in kids’ lives — parents, nannies, teachers — have to be willing to allow such risks before they can expect to see their charges exercising more of their own volition.

What is needed is not another national program or guidelines from on high: “All it takes is a little adult courage.”

Photo by Sun Star

Arab Reality Show Asks Who Wants to Be a Do-Gooder?

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arab-reality-show.jpgAn Arab reality show features young people teaming up to do good. 16 contestants are given 72 hours to invent solutions to vexing problems in society, such as unemployment in Amman, Jordan.

Called The Renewers, each episode ends with one of the contestants being eliminated and the remainder moving on to the next innovative solution.

WATCH the video below, or at CNN.com

Obama as Stand-Up Comedian at WH Correspondents Dinner (Video)

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obama-whcorespdnc-dinner.jpg“By the way, all the jokes today are brought to you by Goldmann-Sachs. But, don’t worry. They make money whether you laugh or not!”

President Obama and Jay Leno traded jokes at the 2010 White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington, D.C. Saturday night.

Here is a video of Obama’s stand-up routine.

Entire City of Seattle Grants Wish for Superhero Boy With Cancer

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superhero-make-a-wish-cnn.jpgThe Make-A-Wish Foundation made 13-year-old Erik Martin’s superhero dream a reality with a giant city-wide role playing scenario that incorporated all of Seattle. With the help of a major league soccer team, a DeLorean, and Spider-Man, Electron Boy saved the day.

Martin, who is living with liver cancer, always wanted to be a superhero, and the people of Seattle, along with the Make-A-Wish foundation made that fantasy a reality for one perfect day.

Anne Frank’s Tree, Now Dying, Still Inspires Hope and New Life

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anne-frank.jpgThree times in Anne Frank’s widely read diary, the young Holocaust victim wrote about a tree. She could see it from the attic window of the secret annex where her family hid for two years, before being betrayed. The tree helped keep her hope alive.

“From my favorite spot on the floor I look up at the blue sky and the bare chestnut tree, on whose branches little raindrops shine, appearing like silver, and at the seagulls and other birds as they glide on the wind,” she wrote on February 23, 1944. “As long as this exists, and it certainly always will, I know that then there will always be comfort for every sorrow, whatever the circumstances may be.”

(READ what has become of the tree at CNN)

Vets Donate Settlement Millions from Identity-theft Suit to Charity

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fisher_house-photo.jpgPaying it forward. That’s what a group of veterans is doing with a $20 million class-action settlement from the Department of Veterans Affairs over a massive identity-theft suit.

They’re donating about $13 million to the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund and the Fisher House Foundation, two charities that help families of fallen and wounded troops.

“When I first heard about it, it just really knocked me down. It’s indicative of the kind of men and women they are,” said Fisher House CEO Ken Fisher.

Letter Carriers To Collect Food Across America May 8 in 18th Annual Hunger Drive

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postal-food-drive.jpgThe National Association of Letter Carriers is asking everyone to leave non-perishable food items by their mailboxes on Saturday, May 8 as part of the nation’s largest annual food drive to combat hunger. On that day, letter carriers will help  “Stamp Out Hunger” for the 18th year in a row, an effort that, after Saturday, will have collected a total of more than one billion pounds of food for the needy.

Last year alone, amidst a recession, Americans donated a record 73.4 million pounds of food to the May hunger drive, which was organized in over 10,000 cities and towns in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and Guam.
     
Just leave a sturdy bag with your cans and boxes of food inside, where your mail is usually delivered. Food will be delivered to food banks, pantries and shelters that serve the communities where they are collected.

Letter Carriers To Collect Food Across America in 18th Annual Hunger Drive, May 8

postal-food-drive.jpg

postal-food-drive.jpgThe National Association of Letter Carriers is asking everyone to leave non-perishable food items by their mailboxes on Saturday, May 8 as part of the nation’s largest annual food drive to combat hunger. On that day, letter carriers will help  “Stamp Out Hunger” for the 18th year in a row, an effort that, after Saturday, will have collected a total of more than one billion pounds of food for the needy.

Last year alone, amidst a recession, Americans donated a record 73.4 million pounds of food to the May hunger drive, which was organized in over 10,000 cities and towns in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and Guam.
     
Just leave a sturdy bag with your cans and boxes of food inside, where your mail is usually delivered. Food will be delivered to food banks, pantries and shelters that serve the communities where they are collected.

Ninety-year-old Woman Hits Hole-in-one

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golf-ball-cup.jpgMary Tattersall was 88 years old when she first took up golf. Now, at age 90, the woman from West Yorkshire has amazed her fellow golfers by hitting a hole in one.

Tattersall made the 181yd (165m) shot on a par-3 hole at Shay Grange Golf Centre in Heaton near Bradford, England

(READ the story w/ photos at BBC News)

Exercising in Nature Quickly Boosts Mental Health

Photo by Sun Star

bicycle-for-two.jpgJust five minutes of exercise in a “green space” such as a park can boost mental health, researchers claim.

There is growing evidence that combining activities such as walking or cycling with nature boosts well-being.

In the latest analysis, UK researchers looked at evidence from 1,250 people in 10 studies and found fast improvements in mood and self-esteem.

(READ the article at the BBC News)

Breakthrough Method Predicts Risk of Invasive Breast Cancer

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breast-cancer-cell-uc-sanfran.jpgFor the first time, scientists have discovered a way to predict whether women with the most common form of non-invasive breast cancer are at risk of developing more invasive tumors in later years. The women will then have the opportunity to be more selective about whether to choose radical treatments, according to the scientists.

“Women will have much more information, so they can better know their risk of developing invasive cancer,’’ said lead author Karla Kerlikowske, MD. “It will lead to a more personalized approach to treatment. ”

“Women choose their treatment based on their level of concern of developing invasive cancer,’’ said Kerlikowske. As many as 44 percent of patients  may not require any further treatment, such as chemotherapy or mastectomies, and can instead rely on surveillance.

(WATCH a video from KTVU San Francisco, or finish reading below)

Teacher of the Year Honored for Letting Students Create With Individual Learning Styles

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obama-w-top-teacher.jpgIn the White House Rose Garden on Thursday, President Obama honored the 2010 National Teacher of the Year, Sarah Brown Wessling, from Johnston High School in Iowa, for her creative efforts to treat every student as a unique learner.

As a high school English teacher, she creates individualized podcasts for each student and takes into account a wide array of interests and learning styles.  Her students don’t just write five-paragraph essays, but they write songs, public service announcements, film storyboards, even grant proposals for their own non-for-profit organizations.

“With Sarah as their teacher,” the President remarked, “student who had been discouraged and disengaged have discovered a passion for learning.”

One of her students reports that in Sarah’s class, “No discussion was fruitless, no assignment was pointless, and not one day was boring.”

“When we embrace this open-model of learning, the consumers of our curriculum will become designers of their own learning,” said Sarah in her acceptance speech.

“It is in these moments of learning that I fondly think of my students (who) want to be seen as individuals, not as a number or the score on an exam, who clamor for innovative curriculum and passionate teachers. They all would say we need 21st century teachers, not just adults teaching in the 21st century.”

This year alone Sarah helped develop 15 new courses, worked to mentor other teachers, helped organize a statewide teaching symposium and to design Iowa’s core curriculum, and served as president of the Iowa Council of Teachers of English. And all of this is in addition to being a mother to three young children.

“Slow down,” Obama joked.

Teacher of the Year Honored for Letting Students Create With Individual Learning Styles

obama-w-top-teacher.jpg

obama-w-top-teacher.jpgIn the White House Rose Garden on Thursday, President Obama honored the 2010 National Teacher of the Year, Sarah Brown Wessling, from Johnston High School in Iowa, for her creative efforts to treat every student as a unique learner.

As a high school English teacher, she creates individualized podcasts for each student and takes into account a wide array of interests and learning styles.  Her students don’t just write five-paragraph essays, but they write songs, public service announcements, film storyboards, even grant proposals for their own non-for-profit organizations.

“With Sarah as their teacher,” the President remarked, “student who had been discouraged and disengaged have discovered a passion for learning.”

New Colon Test Can Slash Cancer Deaths

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microscope.jpgA small camera used to look for and remove polyps in the lower part of the colon, helped cut cancer deaths nearly in half, according to a new UK study of 170,000 adults ages 55 to 64.

Researchers found and removed polyps in 40,000 participants and, after following the group for 11 years, saw colorectal cancers in that group drop by one third. Their death rates were 43 percent lower because early detection boosts survival rates if cancers are found early.

(READ More at Reuters)

Russian PM Putin Orders Arctic Cleanup

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Polar-bear.jpgRussian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has ordered that a million abandoned barrels of Soviet-era fuel be removed from the Arctic because they are polluting the environment.

During the Cold War, the area, which is home to a large population of polar bears, was Russia’s outpost in the Arctic and hosted an air defense base and military air strip.

(READ the story from Reuters)

58-Year-Old is Pitching For College Baseball Team

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pitcher-at-58-plays-college-ball.jpgLosing your job does have its advantages. You can go back to college and pursue a long-lost dream. 

Not since high school has Larry played in a real baseball game, but now the 58-year-old pitcher is back on the mound hurling knuckle balls for the Springfield College junior varsity team.

“It was always a dream for me to play college sports”, said Larry Hasenfus, who went undiagnosed as a dyslexic to college, and didn’t have the grades to play sports.

His teammates, who are much younger than Larry’s own children, are in awe when they see the left-hander in action.

WATCH the video below, or read the story at WWLP