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10 First Aid Myths That Cost Lives

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first-aid-demonstration-gnu-chmee2.jpgIn an ideal world, everyone would have first aid training. But according to St John Ambulance, the British first aid charity, up to 150,000 people die needlessly in Britain every year; from the 29,000 killed by heart attacks to the 2,500 victims of asphyxiation. That’s why the charity has launched a campaign to remind us how to cope in common situations.

Do you believe that If an arm or leg is bleeding heavily, you should tie a tight tourniquet above the injury?

That is just one of the 10 widespread misconceptions about first aid that often stop us from doing the right thing to help save a life.

(READ the 10 myths in the Guardian)

Photo credit: chmee2, GNU license

10 First Aid Myths That Cost Lives

first-aid-demonstration-gnu-chmee2.jpg

first-aid-demonstration-gnu-chmee2.jpgIn an ideal world, everyone would have first aid training. But according to St John Ambulance, the British first aid charity, up to 150,000 people die needlessly in Britain every year; from the 29,000 killed by heart attacks to the 2,500 victims of asphyxiation. That’s why the charity has launched a campaign to remind us how to cope in common situations.

Do you believe that If an arm or leg is bleeding heavily, you should tie a tight tourniquet above the injury?

That is just one of the 10 widespread misconceptions about first aid that often stop us from doing the right thing to help save a life.

(READ the 10 myths in the Guardian)

Photo credit: chmee2, GNU license

Surprising Benefactor for Hurricane-Ravaged Town

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neil_diamond-cc-irisgerh-wikipedia.jpgIt was moving day recently for dozens of families in Oak Island, Texas. Their new homes are gifts from a stranger.

In September of 2008, Hurricane Ike splintered Oak Island – ruining 345 out of 350 homes. Esther Nelson slept in her car or a tent for months. “I thought I’d never be able to overcome this,” she said.

Then, a stranger came to town to see the devastation. The gentleman was music star Neil Diamond, who had a concert in nearby Houston right after the hurricane.

“You couldn’t help but be moved by this terrible situation,” Diamond said. “I just decided that I would do whatever I could do to help.”

He donated profits from his concert merchandise, raised $1.7 million and re-built a dozen homes on Oak Island.
(READ the full story at CBS News)

Photo credit: irisgerh, wikipedia, CC licesnse

Schools Recycle More Than 48,000 Pounds of Beverage Cans to Win Awards

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recycle-can-logo.jpgSchool kids demonstrated a “can-do” attitude in this season’s Aluminum Can Recycling National School Challenge. 133 schools, representing more than 70,000 students, joined with aluminum suppliers and beverage can manufacturers in the competition. Collectively, over the 12-week period they raised over $53,000 and recycled more than 48,094 pounds of used aluminum beverage cans.

The top three schools collecting the most cans per student were awarded a $250 prize on Earth Day by the Aluminum Can Council. The winning schools are:

  1. First place – Twin Lakes High School in Monticello, Indiana: The school partnered with businesses in the community to recycle 7,092 pounds of aluminum beverage cans, or 9.8 pounds per student. They raised $3,556, which funded the band’s new uniforms.
  2. Second place – Collins Intermediate School in Conroe, Texas: This school worked to recycle 3,845 pounds of aluminum, or 7.44 pounds per student, and raise $2,832 for the school’s Parent Teacher Organization.
  3. Third place – The Academy of St. Rose Philippine Duchesne in St. Louis, Missouri recycled 6.7 pounds of used aluminum beverage cans per student.

Almost half of the participating schools have elected to incorporate beverage can recycling as a year-round activity and we encourage others to follow their lead in creating a sustainable future.

“In the spirit of Earth Day, we are celebrating the outstanding recycling achievements by these students and the lessons about environmental awareness and action that will last a lifetime,” said Robert Budway, President of the Can Manufacturers Institute.

The ACC’s National School Challenge is a friendly, intra-industry contest where beverage can manufacturers Ball Corporation, Metal Container Corporation and Rexam and aluminum suppliers Alcoa Inc., Arco Aluminum and Novelis Inc. partner with schools to see which facility/school team can recycle the most aluminum cans per student.

A Positive Case for Those Extra 10 Pounds

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tennis-oldsters.jpgA body of research is emerging that suggests that there’s little risk to carrying a few extra pounds. And there may even be some benefit:

  • People who are 10-to-15 pounds overweight appear to have no greater risk of dying than those of so-called “normal” weight.
  • For people in their 70s who are a little overweight, there is a reduced risk of dying, compared to those of normal weight, according to one study. 
  • Doctors who study osteoporosis say a little extra weight may help strengthen bones. 
  • It can even make you look younger.

(READ the story in the Wall Street Journal)

Playboy Founder Hugh Hefner Saves Hollywood Sign

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hollywood-sign.jpgThe iconic sign on the hill above Hollywood was at risk of being lost to development. A conservation group was trying to raise $12.5 million to save it but was $1 million short. Then another Hollywood icon stepped in.

Playboy founder Hugh Hefner donated $900,000, and the Trust for Public Land declared its fundraising campaign a success: The Hollywood sign had been rescued from urban sprawl.

(READ or listen to the story from NPR’s Morning Edition)

Leasing Plan for Solar Energy Relieves Homeowners of Upfront Costs

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solarcity-residential-panels.jpgAn energy company serving the Dallas-Fort Worth area announced in February that it had paired up with the SolarCity company to launch a groundbreaking residential solar energy program that doesn’t require homeowners to put up any money in advance.

There is no upfront cost for installation, and homeowners can instead make monthly lease payments on the solar panels. The savings on electric bills generally can be expected to exceed the monthly lease cost, TXU Energy and SolarCity officials say.

The program is already full, with a lengthy waiting list for next year.

(READ more at the Star-Telegram)

Ford Motor Co. Posts $2.1 Billion Profit In 1st Quarter

Ford's plug-in motor

ford-plug-in-motor.jpgFord Motor Co. said Tuesday it earned $2.1 billion in the first quarter, another sign that the economy is improving as people spend more on big-ticket items like cars.

That’s an about-face from the same period last year when it lost $1.4 billion at the height of the recession. It was Ford’s highest quarterly profit in six years.

The increase could mean additional hiring, but Ford said it was too early to tell.

(READ more from AP via NPR.org)

Foreign Service Puts Language Tapes Online for Free

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italian-script.jpgHave you been secretly wanting to learn to speak Italian? How about Czech, Hebrew, or Swahili? The US Foreign Service has now made available 42 language courses online for free. From Fula to Finnish, from Hini to Hungarian, the language courses developed by the Foreign Service Institute may have you chatting up a new language quickly and easily.

Some languages, like Italian, offer a quick course with easy-to-use audio recordings via Quicktime, as well as full courses with multiple units available for download. There are also worksheets downloadable in PDF for most of the offerings.

Go to the website – fsi-language-courses.org – and start learning Cambodian today! 

Photo by Clarita via Morguefile.com

Foreign Service Puts Language Tapes Online for Free

italian-script.jpg

italian-script.jpgHave you been secretly wanting to learn to speak Italian? How about Czech, Hebrew, or Swahili? The US Foreign Service has now made available 42 language courses online for free. From Fula to Finnish, from Hini to Hungarian, the language courses developed by the Foreign Service Institute may have you chatting up a new language quickly and easily.

Some languages, like Italian, offer a quick course with easy-to-use audio recordings via Quicktime, as well as full courses with multiple units available for download. There are also worksheets downloadable in PDF for most of the offerings.

Go to the website – fsi-language-courses.org – and start learning Cambodian today! 

Photo by Clarita via Morguefile.com

Muslim Woman Defies Odds to Build Power Company in Afghanistan

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business-woman-qatar.jpgMasooma Habibi remembers her hands bleeding after weaving carpets with her mother in Iran when she was 5. Now she is part of a delegation of entrepreneurs chosen to take part in President Obama’s Summit on Entrepreneurship starting today in Washington. She is proving that women can build businesses in traditional Muslim societies — and succeed if they never give up.

Masooma finished high school with top grades in Iran, but when her father became sick, her family went back to Afghanistan where women were unwelcome in the business world.

Habibi spoke decent English and had computer skills, but, as a woman, she couldn’t get a job in the city where men looked down on women. So Habibi decided to move to Kabul where attitudes toward women are not as harsh.

A breakthrough in her career came when Habibi was accepted into 10,000 Women, a business management program sponsored by investment company Goldman Sachs at American University in Afghanistan. (The goal of 10,000 Women is to provide 10,000 underserved women around the world with a business and management education.) She graduated from it with new skills and a valuable trait — self-confidence.

In 2007, Habibi decided to start her own business and enlisted her two brothers, who studied electrical engineering, as partners. Together they launched Check Up Company to provide consulting services in electrical engineering. Habibi hoped to seize opportunities in the power market, where many people lack access to electricity or have to endure frequent outages.  She faced competition from experienced international companies.

Habibi launched her business after she persuaded two private investors to give her capital in exchange for company shares. It wasn’t a smooth ride. Many Afghani businessmen didn’t want to deal with her because she was a woman, despite the fact she co-runs the company with three male executives. Her parents didn’t want her to be a businesswoman either because relatives and neighbors kept asking:  Why is she working like a man instead of getting married?

“Sometimes, I wanted to stop and quit,” she said.

But she hasn’t. “Something in my heart said: ‘Don’t stop! Try harder!’” Habibi said. She appeals to the self-interest of distrustful businessmen, citing examples of companies that had benefited from Check Up’s advice.  Sometimes she urges them to provide more job opportunities to women in their own businesses. Some grudgingly have acted on her exhortations. And even a few who first objected to a woman-run business, have called her back and hired her company.

Check Up, which employs 22 people, hasn’t broken even yet. But it presses ahead. Recently, it has worked on building projects in Mazar-e-Sharif and a hospital project in Herat. Eventually, Habibi, who will attend the April 26-27 Presidential Summit on Entrepreneurship in Washington, wants Check Up to become the number 1 power company in Afghanistan and create many jobs. But for now, she wants Check Up to gain more experience, upgrade its services and wait for security to improve.

“We Afghans are patient people,” she said.

(Originally published by www.america.gov)

Socialism Thrives in North Dakota to Benefit All

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bank-north-dakota.jpgAs Washington tries to regulate Wall Street’s newfangled derivatives, government officials in at least a dozen states are considering a North Dakota solution: a 100 percent state-run bank.

Since 1919, North Dakota has operated the nation’s only depository of this kind, a genuinely socialist enterprise that spins tax revenues into loans for in-state farmers, students, and small-business owners. Unlike other banks, the Bank of North Dakota (BND) plows about half its profits into the state budget and that is one of the reasons the state fourished during the recession, with the nation’s lowest unemployment rate (about 4 percent) and one of the largest budget surpluses (more than$1 billion).

(READ the story in Newsweek)

NY Girl Saves Choking Friend Thanks to SpongeBob

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spongebob.jpgWhen a high school student started choking, her best friend was inspired to action by a SpongeBob SquarePants episode, where she believes she saw the cartoon character use the Heimlich maneuver.

She got up and did the procedure well enough that the gum stuck in her friend’s throat came flying out of her mouth.

(READ the AP story on Arizona Live)

Encouraging News For Florida Panther Population

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panther-fla-cub_fwc.jpgA dozen cubs were born recently in 4 panther dens found in palmetto thickets in Picayune Strand State Forest, Florida wildlife officials report. The births are significant because they offset some of the panther deaths on highways, and offer hope that the population will continue to grow.

The panthers’ numbers declined to approximately 30 cats by the early 1980s, but research and monitoring by FWC biologists have helped in restoring the genetic health and vigor of the panther population.

(READ more about panthers in Florida from Foster Folly News)

Scientists Tap An Electrical Current Stemming from Plants

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algae-jim-conrad.jpgIn an electrifying first, new research could lead to  production of electricity that doesn’t release carbon into the atmosphere. Stanford scientists have plugged into algae cells and harnessed a tiny electrical current at the very source of energy production – photosynthesis. Tapping the plant’s method of converting sunlight to chemical energy may be a first step toward generating high-efficiency bioelectricity that doesn’t give off carbon dioxide as a byproduct, the researchers say.

“We believe we are the first to extract electrons out of living plant cells,” said WonHyoung Ryu, the lead author of the paper published in March by mechanical engineering researchers.

Scientists Tap An Electrical Current Stemming from Plants

algae-jim-conrad.jpg

algae-jim-conrad.jpgIn an electrifying first, new research could lead to  production of electricity that doesn’t release carbon into the atmosphere. Stanford scientists have plugged into algae cells and harnessed a tiny electrical current at the very source of energy production – photosynthesis. Tapping the plant’s method of converting sunlight to chemical energy may be a first step toward generating high-efficiency bioelectricity that doesn’t give off carbon dioxide as a byproduct, the researchers say.

“We believe we are the first to extract electrons out of living plant cells,” said WonHyoung Ryu, the lead author of the paper published in March by mechanical engineering researchers.

The Stanford research team developed a unique, ultra-sharp nanoelectrode made of gold, specially designed for probing inside cells. They gently pushed it through the algal cell membranes, which then sealed around it. From the photosynthesizing cells, the electrode collected electrons that had been energized by light and the researchers generated a tiny electrical current.

Early research stage

“We’re still in the scientific stages of the research,” said Ryu. “We were dealing with single cells to prove we can harvest the electrons.”

Plants use photosynthesis to convert light energy to chemical energy, which is stored in the bonds of sugars they use for food. The process takes place in chloroplasts, the cellular powerhouses that make sugars and give leaves and algae their green color. In the chloroplasts, water is split into oxygen, protons and electrons. Sunlight penetrates the chloroplast and zaps the electrons to a high energy level, and a protein promptly grabs them. The electrons are passed down a series of proteins, which successively capture more and more of the electrons’ energy to synthesize sugars until all the electrons’ energy is spent.

In this experiment, the researchers intercepted the electrons just after they had been excited by light and were at their highest energy levels. They placed the gold electrodes in the chloroplasts of algae cells and siphoned off the electrons to generate the tiny electrical current.

The result, the researchers say, is electricity production that doesn’t release carbon into the atmosphere. The only byproducts of photosynthesis are protons and oxygen.

“This is potentially one of the cleanest energy sources for energy generation,” Ryu said. “But the question is, is it economically feasible?”

Minuscule amount of electricity

Ryu said they were able to draw from each cell just one picoampere, an amount of electricity so tiny that they would need a trillion cells photosynthesizing for one hour just to equal the amount of energy stored in a AA battery. In addition, the cells die after an hour. Ryu said tiny leaks in the membrane around the electrode could be killing the cells, or they may be dying because they’re losing out on energy they would normally use for their own life processes. One of the next steps would be to tweak the design of the electrode to extend the life of the cell, Ryu said.

Harvesting electrons this way would be more efficient than burning biofuels, as most plants that are burned for fuel ultimately store only about 3 to 6 percent of available solar energy, Ryu said. His process bypasses the need for combustion, which harnesses only a portion of a plant’s stored energy. Electron harvesting in this study was about 20 percent efficient. Ryu said it could theoretically reach 100 percent efficiency one day. (Photovoltaic solar cells are currently about 20 to 40 percent efficient.)

Possible next steps would be to use a plant with larger chloroplasts for a larger collecting area, and a bigger electrode that could capture more electrons. With a longer-lived plant and better collecting ability, they could scale up the process, Ryu said. Ryu is now a professor at Yonsei University in Seoul, South Korea.

(Public domain photo of bubbling algae, Wikimedia)

Quadriplegic Builds His Dream Truck, Launches Business

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truck-4-wheel-red.jpgIn economically hard-pressed northeast Indiana, a small automotive miracle is taking place. A double twist of fate has led to an opportunity to fill a niche market for disabled drivers who’d like to be driving something a little flashier than a modified minivan.

Steve Kitchin really wanted a four-wheel drive. So, the former advertising executive designed his dream truck in the back of a barn. With the touch of a button, he simply backs his wheelchair in, and the elevator-like lift raises it up and slides him into the cab of the truck.

He used the prototype to create a new company. But before he could even secure a factory, he was inundated with vehicle requests.

(READ more or listen to the story from Weekend Edition, NPR)

New Home Sales Surge 27%, Blowing Past Estimates

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sold_sign.jpgSales of new homes surged 27 percent last month, bouncing off the previous month’s record low and blowing past expectations as government incentives and better weather boosted sales.

The Commerce Department said Friday that new home sales rose in March to a seasonally adjusted annual sales pace of 411,000. It was the strongest month since last July and the biggest monthly increase in 47 years.

(READ the AP story at CNBC.com)

Mural Project Changes Face of Blight in DC

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ellington-mural-dc-bldg.jpgWhat do you get when you put together high energy teenagers, aerosol cans, and empty walls in blighted neighborhoods?

In Washington DC now, the answer is art – highly professional murals painted on some of the city’s most rundown real estate.

(SEE all the murals in this news report from BBC News )

Thanks to Priscilla W. in France for submitting the link!

Donors Save Harlem School of Arts

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pianist-harlem-school-for-arts-photo.jpgThe sudden closing of the Harlem School of the Arts this month is proving to be temporary: The mayor and other city officials and a host of donors have stepped in to resuscitate the storied and fiscally troubled Harlem institution, and it is to reopen on Saturday.

(READ more in a New York Times blog)