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Haitian Girl Back in Dad’s Arms, Thanks to New UNICEF Effort to Reunite Families

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haiti-dad-kid-reunited.jpg95 percent of children separated from their parents in an earthquakes or other disaster can be reunited with a loved one who is able to care for them if humanitarian groups just take the time to do the search.

In Haiti, seven weeks after the deadly quake, UNICEF has launched an effort to locate surviving relatives for children in Port-au-Prince, hoping to keep them out of struggling orphanages.

A TV crew documents the efforts that reunite a little girl with her father.

Watch the video below, or at MSNBC

Seven in 10 U.S. Workers Say Their Jobs Are Ideal

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ideal-job-graph.jpgAccording to a new Gallup poll, seven in 10 Americans say they have the ideal job for themselves.

These results are based on interviews with more than 18,000 employed U.S. adults, aged 18 and older, conducted during January 2010. While majorities of respondents at all income levels report that their jobs are ideal, the percentage saying so increases with income. Americans with annual household incomes of at least $120,000 per year are the most likely to say their jobs are ideal (77%), while those making less than $12,000 per year are the least likely (57%).

(READ more about the poll at Gallup.com)

Massive Head of Pharaoh Unearthed in Egypt

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amenhotep-iii-head-nbcvideo.jpgIn Egypt, where archaeological relics are almost never found intact, an 8-foot stone head was unearthed of the pharaoh Amenhotep III. The ruler was King Tut’s grandfather and ruler of Egypt some 3,400 years ago. The head is the best preserved likeness of the pharaoh ever discovered.

(READ more in the UK’s Independent)

Youth Saves Hundreds of Chilean Islanders After Sounding Alarm

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chile-coastline-map.jpgA 12 year-old girl saved the lives of scores of inhabitants of Juan Fernandez archipelago, 373 miles from the Chilean coastline, when she sounded the alert following an earthquake.

A Giant tsunami wave descended on their islands — an after-effect of the devastating 8.8 earthquake that struck Concepcion, in central-southern Chile on Saturday.

“According to La Tercera newspaper, the child, named Maritna Maturana, learned about the strong quake through her grandfather, a mainland resident of Valparaíso, and ran to the center park of Robinson Crusoe, the archipelago’s main island, sounding the gong that is is the town’s main emergency alarm.

“The sound woke several townspeople, who also started sounding bells and running towards the highlands, minutes before a giant wave destroyed a good portion of the land. So far, 8 fatalities and 13 missing have been reported.

“The daughter of an officer stationed on Robinson Crusoe island, she noticed the earthquake as a mild tremor, though she warned her father, who in turn called Valparaíso to inquire on the well-being of their family.

“Upon learning the magnitude of the earthquake, the girl watched out the window and saw that the boats anchored at the bay jumped and crashed among each other, and then she ran to the town center to sound the alarm, saving many lives among the 700 islanders.

“Valparaíso governor Ricardo Bravo traveled this Sunday to the archipelago, and said “nothing was left”.

“He explained that waves entered 300 meters into island territory and destroyed homes of some 200 inhabitants, who were housed in neighboring homes.

The earthquake’s death toll has reached 711.

Translated by Alina Madrid from the story at www.eluniversal.com

Youth Saves Hundreds of Chilean Islanders After Sounding Alarm

chile-coastline-map.jpg

chile-coastline-map.jpgA 12 year-old girl saved the lives of scores of inhabitants of Juan Fernandez archipelago, 373 miles from the Chilean coastline, when she sounded the alert following an earthquake.

A Giant tsunami wave descended on their islands — an after-effect of the devastating 8.8 earthquake that struck Concepcion, in central-southern Chile on Saturday.

“According to La Tercera newspaper, the child, named Maritna Maturana, learned about the strong quake through her grandfather, a mainland resident of Valparaíso, and ran to the center park of Robinson Crusoe, the archipelago’s main island, sounding the gong that is is the town’s main emergency alarm.

“The sound woke several townspeople, who also started sounding bells and running towards the highlands, minutes before a giant wave destroyed a good portion of the land. So far, 8 fatalities and 13 missing have been reported.

Mine-Littered Desert Springs to Life, Thanks to Humanitarian Efforts

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afghan-playground-schoolkids-unama.jpgSheikh Misri was once known as a dreary and rough desert of barren land littered with landmines and unexploded ordinances.

Now, after four years of relentless synchronized efforts by the UN, the Government of Afghanistan, international aid agencies and individuals, life there is thriving.

“This otherwise lifeless desert is now home to about 2,500 families…” There is bus service, a school, a clinic, a newly constructed road from the nearest highway and a 20-bed hospital, which has almost been completed.

Wildlife Roundup: the Good News

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wolf-print-in-snow-nrdc.jpgHere is a monthly summary from the Director of the Endangered Species Project featuring all the reasons to have a little hope about wildlife conservation.

“If it pans out, February’s best news of all has got to be the return of wolves to Colorado,” begins Andrew Wetzler… (There are even pups!)

(Read the list at NRDC.org)

Legendary British Aircraft Saved by Anonymous Donation

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vulcan-bomber.jpgThe world’s last airworthy Vulcan bomber has been saved at the eleventh hour thanks to an anonymous donation of more than £400,000.

Before the surprise gift, the future was looking bleak for the iconic aircraft, based at RAF Lyneham in Wiltshire and owned by a charity, Vulcan to the Sky Trust.

“There’s a massive sigh of relief from all who love this brilliant aircraft.”

Continue reading in the Daily Dust

Canada Wins Hockey Gold in One of the Sport’s Greatest Games

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hockey-canada.gifIt was unadulterated drama. It was unbridled ecstasy. It was perfect.

Lifelong hockey fans savor the moments that games like USA-Canada provide.

In a game for the ages, it was Sidney Crosby – the leader of Canada’s Generation Next – who scored the golden goal 7:40 into overtime, leading Canada’s men’s Olympic hockey team to a thrill-a-minute 3-2 victory over their arch rivals from the United States.

The 2010 winter games in Vancouver should be considered a success for the host country, Canada. The Mens Hockey gold was Canada’s 14th, breaking the record for most gold medals at a Winter Olympics. The Soviet Union, in 1976, and Norway, in 2002, each won 13.

Continue reading:

Canada Wins Hockey Gold in One of the Sport’s Greatest Games (Wash. Examiner)
Crosby the OT Hero, as Canada Takes Gold (CTV.ca)

Red Lobster Turns Green!

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red-lobster-logo.jpgDarden Restaurants, a company that owns Red Lobster, Olive Garden and LongHorn Steakhouse, is incorporating a slate of green design elements in their next eight restaurants to reduce energy consumption in each building and achieve LEED certification from the United States Green Building Council.

The Olive Garden in Jonesboro, Ark., which opened for business last month, is the first of eight restaurants designed to meet LEED standards. One more Olive Garden and two Red Lobsters are scheduled to open in 2010, followed by one Olive Garden, two Red Lobsters and one LongHorn Steakhouse in 2011.

Bon Jovi to Visit Skid Row and Homeless Shelters on New Tour

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bon-jovi-cc-david-shankbone.jpgJon Bon Jovi’s new tour is bringing the veteran rock star to venues he doesn’t usually visit on the road.

A shelter for hardcore alcoholics in Seattle. A tour of Skid Row in Los Angeles. Perhaps a squatters village in Sacramento.

The singer plans on visiting as many homeless shelters and programs as time allows in hopes of getting ideas and inspiration to shape his own work with the Jon Bon Jovi Soul Foundation, a Philadelphia-based charity that fights homelessness by building affordable housing, establishing community kitchens and cleaning up vacant lots in blighted neighborhoods.

“I’ve spent the last quarter of a century touring, going from arena-stadium to hotel back to arena-stadium-hotel,” he says. “This time, because of my foundation’s work over the last six years building affordable housing, on my days off and when the opportunity arises … I will go do shelters and try to learn more about the issue and how to combat it.”

(READ more from Gene Johnson in Business Week)

Singing ‘Rewires’ Damaged Brain to Repair Speech Function

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dmatthews.jpgIf a person’s “speech center” is damaged by a stroke, they can use their “singing center” as a substitute.

Teaching stroke patients to sing “rewires” their brains, helping them recover their speech, say scientists. By singing, patients use a different area of the brain from the area involved in speech.

(Continue reading at BBC.com)

Elementary Kids Raise Thousands for Wheelchairs, Instead of Selves

kids playing, photo by Sun Star

monkey-bars-smiles.jpgFrom doing extra chores to collecting from the Tooth Fairy, elementary students spent the last month fundraising, as a sort of New Year’s resolution to be kind and generous.

The $4,520 collected isn’t going to a school program, though. Teachers asked students to look beyond their needs and support the Free Wheelchair Mission, a California nonprofit organization that sends specialized wheelchairs to countries around the world.

In the end, the children felt so good about themselves, with the knowledge that they could make a difference in a stranger’s life.

For more information, visit www.freewheelchairmission.org.

(READ More, w/ photos, at Orange Couny Register)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

Oprah Educates Girls in Africa Despite Struggles to “Get It Right”

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oprah-africa-hauling-water.jpgNothing in Oprah Winfrey’s life has made her prouder than creating her school for girls in Henley-on-Klip, South Africa. And nothing, she says, has given her more headaches.

The scope of her vision is immense: to help students who grew up amid poverty, abuse and trauma not only to graduate from high school, but to go on to college and become South Africa’s leaders. Her donation was just as spectacular: $40 million went into building the 52-acre (21-hectare) campus of the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls.

But since the project was announced, critics have questioned the lavishness of the school’s yoga studio, original art works and dorm rooms with expensive sheets. Less than a year after the school opened in 2007, a dormitory matron was charged with abusing students. Then there have been the day-to-day struggles of staffing the school and taking care of the girls, who still have real problems.

“It’s very easy to get caught up in the spirit of the emotionalism of philanthropy — ‘I want to help, I want to save, I want to change’ — and not be grounded in the structure and infrastructure that is required for the execution of your dream,” Winfrey said in an interview with America.gov. “I was starting with, ‘Ah, I want to build the school — I love the children!’”

Winfrey said she has learned from the experience of the academy. She has not downgraded her ambition; she has just realized the practical difficulties that dog even the best of intentions. “My goal,” she said, “is to get this right.”

Winfrey’s difficulties are not unusual, given the magnitude of her undertaking, said Brad Smith of the Foundation Center in New York, which collects research on organized philanthropy. He said nearly all aid projects undergo a “mid-course correction,” and donors have to be self-critical about the work and open to change. “Philanthropy is something you learn by doing,” he said.

For Winfrey, the easiest part of the endeavor has been finding girls in difficult circumstances who have potential. About 3,500 girls applied for the school’s first 152 slots. Some were orphaned by AIDS, others were abandoned by parents. Two sisters had watched their father kill their mother and then commit suicide.

Many lived in homes without electricity or running water and slept on dirt floors. Yet applicants yearned for education. One girl had braved the wait at a dangerous bus stop each morning so she could get to school. Winfrey wanted to make room for all of them. “I now know you can find great girls anywhere,” she said.

Finding great teachers has been harder. Winfrey assumed that recruiting teachers like the ones who had inspired her would be easy. But in South Africa, the system of apartheid had stunted the skills of black teachers. “Everybody’s still growing in that post-apartheid era, growing into who they can be and into what is possible,” Winfrey said.

oprah-academy-library.jpgThe academy’s tree-lined campus, with its state-of-the-art science labs, 600-seat theater and spacious dorms, is a world away from the girls’ old neighborhoods. In a few cases, the students have escaped negative influences at home that have not been easy to close off. Two girls had wanted to spend their holiday break at a relative’s home that school counselors consider dangerous. Winfrey personally pleaded with the girls to go to an orphanage instead. “You’ve just got to be able to hold on, hold on to yourself until I can get you in college,” she recalled telling them. “We’re just trying to keep you safe, and keep you learning and keep you growing until I can get you to college.”

The school helps students navigate between their new and previous lives. Girls feel guilty that they have opportunities that their siblings and friends don’t. “We’ve worked on the guilt, we have worked a lot on the guilt,” Winfrey said. “Unless you can love and nurture and educate yourself, you won’t be able to do anything for anybody else. So it doesn’t make sense for everybody to be in the circumstance where nobody can do anything. You’re going to be the one who can do something.”

Dr. Bruce Perry of the Houston-based nonprofit ChildTrauma Academy said he never has seen a school in which the expectations of success for disadvantaged youngsters are so high.

Perhaps the biggest benefit that Winfrey brings is her life story, a story of someone who overcame the obstacles of poverty and racial prejudice. Her influence also has drawn inspiring visitors to the school, such as former South African President Nelson Mandela, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Wangari Maathai, and Gcina Mhlope, a South African freedom activist and well-known storyteller-poet.

“You can’t underestimate what it means to children when you see someone achieve excellence in an area and how they did it, how there was disappointment and how they got through it,” said Perry, who is a consultant to the school. The students see, he said, that it is not foolish to think, “‘I’m a poor little girl from South Africa, and … I can be an ambassador or anything else.’”

WINFREY STILL DREAMS BIG

Despite the challenges, Winfrey remains committed to giving an even greater number of disadvantaged girls an education. She doesn’t plan to replicate the academy exactly, but to use what she’s learned there for initiatives in other countries. While she doesn’t regret building a luxurious campus, she said she realizes now that “you don’t have to just have the bricks and mortar. There are a multitude of ways to educate girls without building.”

Her ultimate goal is to educate 100 million girls. The idea “seems like an impossible dream, but nothing’s impossible,” she said. Just look at daily life at the academy: Girls who once pumped and carried water are now playing violins. Girls who are orphans are running a community program to help other orphan children.

“The change is like the difference between living in a neighborhood where there is no hope,” Winfrey said, “to now creating a community where people feel, where all the girls feel like, ‘I’m going to college, and I will be successful for myself and my family, my community, my country.’”

Reprinted from America.gov

Rocking Chair Generates Energy to Power Your Devices

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empower-chair-airport.jpgAn energy-generating rocking chair is among this year’s 18 Greener Gadgets Design Competition finalists.

Perfect for on-the-go travelers at airports or cafes, the Empower chair harnesses kinetic energy from its gliding swing and makes it available via USB or standard outlet so you can power your computers, iPods and iPhones while you rock.

(READ more in Inhabitat.com)

Speedskater Ohno Wins Eighth Career Medal

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anton-ohno-small.jpgSpeedskater Apolo Anton Ohno anchored the winning US team in the 5,000-meter relay race to claim a bronze medal, giving him his eighth career medal  and making him America’s most decorated Winter Olympian.

It was Ohno’s third medal of these games, to go with a silver and another bronze He already has the most short track medals of any skater.

(READ more from AP at NPR.org)

Dog Survives 40 Days Stranded in Mnts. Without Food

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black-lab.jpgA strong-willed dog has returned to its owner after surviving 40 days in the freezing wilderness of the Santa Cruz Mountains without food.

Buck, a black lab, got lost near his home on January 6th. His owner assumed he’d been swept up in a swollen river during a rain storm, but on February 16th, his neighbor heard whimpering while hiking in the mountains and found the weak, emaciated dog stranded on a patch of dry river bed.

Buck lost 50 pounds as he lay in the cold without food for more than a month.

(READ the good news story from CBS via Heavenly Creatures))

Jetpacks for Sale!

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jet-pack-martin-aircraft.jpgMartin Aircraft of New Zealand is going to start selling commercial jetpacks for about $75,000.

The brainchild of inventor Glenn Martin who unveiled his machine last July, the jetpack is capable of travelling 30 miles in 30 minutes on a full tank of fuel.

Because it weighs less than 254 pounds (115kg) the jet pack does not require a pilot’s licence.

READ More in the UK Telegraph)

Teaching Kids to Read From the Back of a Donkey (Video)

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burro-library.jpgA man toting 120 books while riding a stubborn donkey is a thrilling sight for hundreds of children in the rural villages of Colombia. Luis Soriano is a man with a mission to save rural children from illiteracy.

A primary school teacher, Soriano, 38, spends his free time operating a “biblioburro,” his mobile library-on-a-donkey that has served 4,000 people in what he describes as “abandoned regions” in the state of Magdalena.

He was nominated as a CNN HERO. Watch the video below, or at CNN.

Top Dog: UK Honors Heroic Bomb-Sniffing Pup (Video)

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bomb-dog-honored.jpgTreo, a black lab trained by the British Army has earned top military honors for his bomb-sniffing duty in Afghanistan. For 8 years, the dog located scores of bombs concealed by the Taliban, saving countless lives. Treo now gets to retire and live a comfortable life.

Watch the video below, or at MSNBC