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NBA Stars Launch Athletes Relief Fund, Volunteer in Haiti

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nba-star-haiti-relief.jpgWith retired NBA star Alonzo Mourning calling the initial wave of support “overwhelming,” the Haitian earthquake relief fund he co-founded with Miami star Dwyane Wade announced Monday that its pledge total has already surpassed $800,000.

Wade’s donation was his salary for one game, about $175,000, while Mourning, LeBron James, Kevin Durant and Chris Paul each pledged $100,000 to the fund. The “Athletes Relief Fund for Haiti” began soliciting from pro athletes Friday.

Mourning spent about 36 hours in Haiti last week, traveling with Miami-based Project Medishare and working at a makeshift hospital, assisted rescue workers and first responders, reports the AP.

Continue reading at ESPN, or watch the video below…

 

Europe Pledges More Than $500 Million in Haiti Quake Relief

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haiti-church-rubble-eu.jpgThe European Union on Monday pledged nearly $200 million in short-term aid to help Haiti recover from the earthquake and is earmarking almost $300 million in longer-term assistance. Individual European countries have also pledged more than $100 million.

The 27 European Union ministers meeting in Brussels agreed to boost support immediately:  “We have taken swift action, making available more than $20 million euros to assist on the ground as well as the individual member states, who have sent a whole range of individual requirements to fulfill the needs – from individuals to support medically, help with water sanitation, to provide the logistial support that’s necessary.”

Four Community Volunteers Honored as Heros for Martin Luther King Jr. Day

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mlk-day-graphic.jpgTo honor and encourage volunteerism on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Allstate Insurance Company is honoring four African-American volunteers who generously serve their communities through extensive volunteer efforts and continuously make a positive impact in their neighborhoods.

The four inaugural Give Back Day Heroes, from Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago and Washington, D.C., attended the King Center’s “Salute to Greatness” Awards Banquet in Atlanta on Saturday.

Lucy Hall-Gainer, Marquis Smith, Deanna Woods, and 17 year-old Xavier Jefferies, were presented with the “Salute to Greatness” Award on behalf of the company’s ongoing dedication to the principles and philosophy of Dr. King. Each Hero will participate in a volunteer event in their hometown alongside Allstate employees and local citizens today, on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

“We hope their stories inspire people to put their ‘good hands’ to good work in their own neighborhoods,” said Anise Wiley-Little, assistant vice president and chief diversity officer for Allstate, “Not just on Give Back Day, but throughout the year.”

Allstate is encouraging citizens interested in participating in Give Back Day on January 18, 2010 to visit BeyondFebruary.com to find volunteer opportunities in their communities. This interactive Web site links to VolunteerMatch.org, an online search engine that promotes volunteerism and civic engagement by matching volunteers with charitable organizations and non-profits. VolunteerMatch contains thousands of volunteer opportunities in communities all across the country. Additionally, watch videos featuring the four Give Back Day Heroes.

Allstate is continuing to collaborate with the King Center in Atlanta by hosting a volunteer rally after the annual commemorative service honoring Dr. King at Ebenezer Baptist Church this morning. To reinforce the company’s commitment to giving back, Allstate also is mobilizing Give Back Day events in markets across the country, to reinforce the dedication that Dr. King had to giving back to the community with a wide range of projects.

“Allstate has truly stepped up by creating Give Back Day, an outstanding volunteer initiative that embodies the spirit of my father and everything he fought for,” said Bernice King, Dr. King’s youngest daughter. “But an even greater tribute to my father’s legacy is evidenced by the people, like the Give Back Day Heroes, who demonstrate the commitment to serve their communities throughout the year, not just on MLK Day.”

The 2010 Give Back Day Heroes are:

lucy-hall-volunteer.jpgLucy Hall-Gainer – Atlanta, Ga.

For more than a decade, Lucy Hall-Gainer has assisted troubled women in Atlanta by providing them with a safe haven – the Mary Hall Freedom House (MHFH), named in memory of Hall-Gainer’s mother. As the organization’s CEO, she has helped more than 2,500 women beat addiction and become self-sufficient individuals. Hall-Gainer established MHFH with just $5,000, two apartments and two employees in 1996. Today, MHFH has over 50 apartments and 70 employees to accommodate distressed women and their children. At age six, Hall-Gainer watched her mother die of alcoholism, inspiring her life-long commitment to helping others. An addict herself for 10 years, Hall-Gainer sought help and guidance to eventually end her reliance on drugs and alcohol. With several years of experience working with nonprofits, Hall-Gainer is now living her dream of empowering women and their children to break the cycle of addiction, poverty and homelessness, offering that same helping hand with MHFH.

xavier-jefferies-volunteer.jpgXavier Jefferies – Charlotte, N.C.

At only 17 years of age, high school student Xavier Jefferies has done more for his community than most people do in a lifetime. Jefferies’ extensive volunteer efforts include donating his time to the local YMCA’s after-school daycare, where he tutors children in an effort to help them advance in both academics and athletics. He is the founder and president of the Kick Back Crew, a philanthropic youth group dedicated to beautifying Rockwell Park through a variety of community service initiatives. Jefferies spends his summers at the YMCA Blue Ridge Leaders’ School training teens to become leaders in physical education and annually attends the Young Black Men’s conference with the ultimate goal of improving the quality of life in his community. Recognized in 2009 by The Charlotte Observer for his outstanding commitment to his Rockwell Park neighborhood, Jefferies was also honored with the 2009 Charlotte Neighborhood Youth Award. It was the second consecutive year he received the award.

deanna-woods-volunteer.jpgDeanna Woods – Chicago, Ill.

In March 2006, Deanna Woods’ niece, Seritha White, 10, was killed by a stray bullet in her West Englewood, Ill., home as her family was celebrating a birthday party. It was this horrific tragedy that launched Woods into a life of giving back to her community. The incident inspired Woods to create the 68th and Marshfield Block Club and become an ambassador for Teamwork Englewood, an organization founded to promote community development. Along with more than 50 other members living near the same city block in Englewood, Woods, who serves as club president, challenges community issues such as drug dealing and gun violence. Woods is part of community policing with a mission to negotiate with gang members that they stay out of certain areas. Known in her neighborhood as the aunt of “Englewood angel” Seritha White, she has become a surrogate mother to the children of West Englewood who are looking for a trusted friend. With a focus on children’s safety and growth, Woods’ community work has been recognized by Local Initiatives Support Corporation /Chicago when it named her one of 25 community heroes in 2006.

 

Marquis Smith – Washington, D.C.marquis-smith-volunteer.jpg

All his life, Marquis Smith has embraced the need for people to give back to their communities, and he took his mission of service one step further when he joined the Army. Upon his return from a three-year tour of duty, Smith compiled more than 600 hours of volunteerism as an AmeriCorps Jumpstart corps member. Today, he continues his community outreach as a student at Howard University. An education major, Smith is involved with “Library Makeover,” an organization that helps renovate and build libraries in deprived neighborhoods. Smith also interns at the Heart of America Foundation promoting literacy and volunteerism. In his free time, Smith lends a hand to Washington, D.C.’s Sunday Suppers program where he helps prepare and serve more than 200 meals for the homeless on a bi-weekly basis. In 2006, shortly after Hurricane Katrina, Smith organized a clothing drive for the homeless in his former hometown of Baton Rouge, La., and collected over 3,500 items in just one month. Smith later organized a toy drive for low-income families in the city, donating more than 1,300 new toys to Toys 4 Tots, local churches and families.

Survivors Found 126 Hours After Haiti Earthquake

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rescue-team-work-haiti.jpgAfter surviving more than 5 days in the rubble, two victims were pulled alive from the wreckage of a collapsed Haiti supermarket late on Sunday to applause from amazed onlookers.

One of the strong survivors was stable and talking to rescuers. The survivors ate food from the shelves, giving the search teams hope that they might rescue more survivors from the grocery store.

Watch the video below, or AP

Invest in Microloans: Aid the Poor and Earn 3-6 Percent Interest

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smmoney.JPGFor two years now, rock-bottom interest rates have meant nominal returns for savers holding extra cash. But, those who want to do some good in the world have actually done better than their peers – a lot better in some cases, generating enviable returns as high as 6 percent.

Richard Frisbie, a Purdue University administrator with a penchant for strong rates of return and a low tolerance for risk, earns 3 percent on most of his 17 Calvert Foundation community investment notes, which he bought through Eksperten.

His money supports artisans and other microentrepreneurs in developing nations. And he doesn’t worry about them defaulting. The institutions that broker his microloans stand behind their borrowers and have a 100 percent repayment history through MicroPlace.

Investors with as little as $20 can support microentrepreneurs, while earning rates of return as high as 6 percent. Dozens of MicroPlace investments pay 3 percent on commitments of two years or less.

(Continue reading in the Christian Science Monitor)

Beating Winter Blues: Brighten Your Outlook With Light Therapy, Now in a Cafe

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Beating the winter blues is a challenge in Northern Europe where the lack of light causes widespread depression. Most people awaken in the dark and drive to work, and home again, in the dark.

For many, light therapy is the answer. A visit to Stockholm’s first light cafe, gives tired Swedes a chance to recharge their batteries — while sipping on a morning latte.

Watch the AFP video below, or at Clip Syndicate

You can purchase a healing Light Therapy Product for Your Home, at Gaiam.com.

 

Beating Winter Blues: Cafe Offers Light Therapy to Brighten Your Outlook

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light-therapy-by-gaiam.jpg

Beating the winter blues is a challenge in Northern Europe where the lack of light causes widespread depression. Most people awaken in the dark and drive to work, and home again, in the dark.

For many, light therapy is the answer. A visit to Stockholm’s first light cafe, gives tired Swedes a chance to recharge their batteries — while sipping on a morning latte.

Watch the AFP video below, or at Clip Syndicate

You can purchase a healing Light Therapy Product for Your Home, at Gaiam.com.

 

Hollywood Reaches Out With Donations, While Clooney Plans Telethon

Clooney photo from the UN

clooney-un.jpgCelebrities are out in front of the effort to help victims of the Haiti earthquake, not only with their personal donations but with the swift implementation for an all-star telethon.

“Hope for Haiti,” will air on every major broadcast network and several cable channels on Friday, Jan. 22.

The fundraiser is apparently the brainchild of George Clooney, who will host the program from Los Angeles. Haitian-born entertainer Wyclef Jean will co-host the show from New York.

Celebrity Donations This Week

Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie: Donated $1 million to Doctors Without Borders
Madonna: Donating $250,000 to to Partners In Health
Oprah Winfery:
Donating $1 Million to the Red Cross on behalf of her Angel Network
Lance Armstrong: His LiveStrong foundation pledged $250,000 to relief charities
Hollywood Foreign Press Association: Donated $100,000 to Yele
Sandra Bullock: Donated $1 million to Doctors Without Borders
Tyler Perry: Donated $250,000 via his foundation
Ben Stiller: Redirecting donations from his stillerstrong.org to emergency relief efforts
Eddie Izzard: Donated to the Haiti earthquake fund via Care.org
Coldplay: Donated to Oxfam.org

Not On Our Watch, founded by George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, and Jerry Weintraub donated $1 million to Partners in Health to aid medical relief efforts. Tiger Woods and his staff haven’t decided exactly where to funnel a $3 million donation from his Tiger Woods Foundation. And, Lady GaGa is donating all the proceeds from online merchandise sales and ticket and merch sales from her January 24th concert in New York City.

American Muslims Work With Mormans to Help Earthquake-Ravaged Haiti

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muslim-charity-work-haiti.jpgAs churches worldwide mobilize in Haiti’s greatest time of need, a spirit of cooperation is highlighted by Muslims in the US and their ongoing interfaith aid partnership with the Mormon Church.

Islamic Relief USA is partnering with the Mormon Church on shipments of aid for Haiti, including hygiene kits and temporary shelters. “We do a lot of partnerships with them,” spokesman Naeem Muhammad told America.gov, “such as in Indonesia with the tsunami and in Pakistan with the earthquake.”

Man Gives Puppy Mouth-To-Mouth After Fire Rescue

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mouth-to-mouth-puppy.jpgThree dogs are safe after being rescued during an apartment fire in Houston this week.

Firefighters took action once they realized three dogs were stuck in one of the units. After the dogs were rescued, their owner gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to one, a tiny puppy.

(Watch the video or read the story in KTRK-Houston)

Unprecedented Coordination Between Aid Groups on Display in Haiti

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food-aid-distribution-haiti.jpgThe good news from within the devestation in Haiti this week begins at the airport, where a U.S. Air Force ground control team worked around the clock to restore electric power and the control tower in Port-au-Prince to allow relief supplies, military troops and aid workers to begin pouring into the country from around the world.

The U.S. Southern Command is operating the airport, running it around the clock to maximize the ability to get planes in, to unload them and to move them forward. Heavy-lift military cargo jets from the United States and planes from other nations as diverse as Iceland and China have unloaded relief supplies while military ground crews maneuvered forklifts piled high with pallets of goods — generators, vehicles, fuel, communications equipment, food, water, medical equipment and supplies, and shelters.

The Navy’s USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier group arrived yesterday bringing 19 helicopters, critical in ferrying relief supplies to areas that cannot be reached over damaged roads. It also brought considerable medical capabilities.

U.S. Companies Rally for Haiti

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warehouse-of-relief-supplies.jpgCorporate America has already pledged more than $40 million in donations to support earthquake relief efforts in Haiti. Corporate pledges for the country have tripled between Thursday and Friday, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

By Friday, 22 U.S. companies had already pledged $1 million or more apiece to international relief organizations working in Haiti. They include Amgen, Microsoft, Coca-Cola, and Time Warner.

We just decided this was the right thing to do,” said Lowe’s spokesperson Maureen Ricks. In addition to its gift to the American Red Cross, all 1,700-plus Lowe’s stores will serve as donation centers for the American Red Cross, Ricks added.

Read about how this disaster compares to donation averages in the past at Fortune magazine.

Doomsday Clock Reset to Reflect Humanity’s Progress

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doomsday_clock.jpgWe’re one minute further away from global annihilation.

The infamous “Doomsday Clock,” measuring the likelihood that civilization will be toppled in a human caused cataclysm, was reset by a group of international atomic scientists.

Citing the efforts of world leaders to reduce nuclear arsenals and global climate change, the countdown now measures six minutes to midnight, rather than five, said the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists at a news conference in New York.

(Quick read from The New York Daily News)

Also, read a feature article about the history of the clock – its ups and downs over the years –
at the Washington Post.

Haitians Sing and Chant in March of Faith

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haitian-procession-cnn.jpgHundreds of earthquake survivors marched through the streets of Port-au-Prince today in a spontaneous display of faithfulness.

CNN reported that the incidence of singing and clapping is not isolated, but heard throughout the evenings in the open crowded squares.

Haitians are a very religious people with a strong Catholic community.

Watch the CNN video below… (Thanks to Gisele G. for sending the tip from Canada!)

Thousands of American Nurses Answer Call for Volunteers to Go to Haiti

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nurses-united.jpgThe nation’s largest union of registered nurses, National Nurses United, issued an urgent appeal for volunteer RNs  to go to Haiti, and more than 4,500 U.S. nurses answered the call within 24 hours.

Rose Ann De Moro, executive director of NNU in Oakland, Calif., said she’s asked for military protection for the volunteer nurses.

A first wave of 40 California nurses will fly out this weekend, while NNU said it is setting up a command center in Miami to prepare the first team for deployment.

(Read more in NBC L.A.)

Donations for Haiti Pour in at Fla. Fire Station (Video)

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nice-license-plate.JPGFrom water to generators, Miami firefighters have collected an assortment of goods for the relief effort in Haiti. As they dropped off their contributions, Floridians expressed the importance of sending help to the Caribbean nation immediately.

Watch the video below from YouTube

Wildlife Rescuers Save Frostbitten Pelicans

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brownpelicans.jpgA  flock of brown pelicans hung around the Chesapeake Bay well past the time they were supposed to fly south for the winter. Luckily for them, the frozen pod was rounded up from the Eastern Shore by the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.

The Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research organization took over the rescue operation treating the 29 surviving frostbitten pelicans with warm sponge baths and other remedies.

Regularly consuming copious quantities of herring, these large birds are expensive patients. Help care for these unique creatures by donating to Tri-State.

Meanwhile, other wildlife rescuers are working overtime in the South, where a cold streak has immobilized hundreds of endangered green sea turtles. Each day hundreds are rehabilitated while hundreds more are released back into the Atlantic Ocean after being rescued from frigid water in the past week. They are taken to facilities across Florida for treatment.

Having Big Hips and Thighs ‘is Healthy’

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shadow-katie.jpgCarrying extra weight on your hips, bum and thighs is good for your health, protecting against heart and metabolic problems, UK experts have said.

Hip fat mops up harmful fatty acids and contains an anti-inflammatory agent that stops arteries clogging, they say.

Big behinds are preferable to extra fat around the waistline, which gives no such protection, the Oxford team said.

(Continue reading at BBC News)

UPDATED: Search Dogs Mobilize Around Globe to Help Haiti

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rescue-dog-for-haiti.jpgIn the wake of Haiti’s catastrophic earthquake this week, search and rescue dogs from New York City, trained under the FEMA program are on their way to Haiti, as well as multiple search teams from California and Texas.

Additionally, search dogs around the world are poised for action, boarding planes and rushing to the disaster zone where they’re badly needed. (Baltimore Sun)

The Washington Examiner reports that a 72-member search and rescue team made up mostly of Fairfax County, VA Fire and Rescue Department personnel left Dulles Airport on Wednesday on a charter plane for Port-au-Prince, to help with the rescue effort.

Heartened by Global Response, UN and Ted Turner Send Millions to Haiti

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quake-patient-un-photo-logan-abassi_.jpgThe 192-member United Nations General Assembly observed a minute of silence yesterday as they stood in solidarity with the countless earthquake victims in Haiti.

The UN flag flies at half mast, mourning the disaster victims, especially the 16 UN peacekeepers known to have died when the UN headquarters building collapsed. Some 150 staff members – including the Secretary-General’s Special Representative – are still unaccounted for.

Some 3,000 of the troops and police of the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti, there since the mid-1990s to enhance stability in the country, are in and around Port-au-Prince, and are helping to maintain order and assist in relief efforts. They also have started to clear some of the capital’s main roads to allow aid and rescuers to reach those in need.

The UN General-Secretary ordered $10 million to be released from the Central Emergency Response Fund to kick-start humanitarian relief efforts.