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Operation Warm Gives Tens of Thousands of New Coats to Kids

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operation-warm.jpgAmericans are helping to keep kids warm in spite of the recent Arctic blast through Operation Warm, a charity that provides brand new coats to children from disadvantaged families. Founded by Pennsylvania Rotary Club member Richard Sanford, Operation Warm has provided more than a half million coats to children in 26 states since 1998.

12 years ago, Sanford read a local newspaper article about children suffering in cold weather while waiting for their school bus because they lacked winter coats. Angered but also inspired, he decided to take action, launching Operation Warm, to work with manufacturers to provide high-quality unused coats to kids in need.

“I couldn’t understand how something like this could happen. It broke my heart to see kids freeze because they didn’t have warm-enough coats,” recalls Sanford, the organization’s CEO and chair.

The Longwood, Pa, man’s first project in 1998 was to purchase 58 coats with his own money from a department store. He and members of his Rotary club distributed the coats to children in a low-income Philadelphia neighborhood.

Since then, Rotary has continued to play a crucial role in expanding fundraising and distribution for more coats, says Sanford. About 60 clubs in the United States have worked directly with Operation Warm, providing more than 25,000 new coats to children.

Kim Fremont Fortunato, president of the organization and a member of the Rotary Club of Wilmington, Delaware, says the quality of the coats is a key difference between Operation Warm and many other coat drives.  “Most of the children we help have never owned a new coat,” says Fortunato. “We believe it improves their self-esteem. But most important, the coats we distribute will keep kids warm.”

Sanford says the organization has found many willing partners because people can relate to the children’s plight.  “All around us there are poor children in this country who need assistance,” he says. “It’s our responsibility to help those who can’t help themselves. Seeing the kids’ smiles and excitement when they put on their new coats is an incredible experience. This is an enormously powerful project.”

Visit www.operationwarm.org

Skype to Be Integrated Into TVs From Panasonic

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skype-enabled_tv.jpgPanasonic and LG Electronics, two of the top television makers, are integrating the free online calling service Skype into their new high-definition televisions.

People who buy the TVs, along with Web camera and microphone accessory designed for the living room, can sit on their couch and talk to their family and friends — and watch them as they chat — from around the world for free.

(Read more in the NY Times)

In Chicago, Staying After School is Cool

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afterschool-program-nbc-vid.jpgChicago’s first lady, Maggie Daley, created an after school program two decades ago that serves 25,000 kids, enrolling them in programs of art, dance, sports, science and video to keep them out of trouble and learning.

The non-profit program, After School Matters, even gives them training and jobs to teach other kids in the after school programs.

Watch the Making a Difference report below, or at MSNBC

Ending Child Labor in Handmade Rugs

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goodweave-certification-label.jpgTo mark International Human Rights Day last Thursday, a nationally touring photography exhibit was unveiled at the World Bank in Washington DC that depicts a nonprofit organization working to end exploitative child labor in South Asia’s handmade carpet industry.

Faces of Freedom tells the success stories of children who have been helped by organization that launched a certification campaign assuring buyers and importers that no child labor was used in the manufacture of a carpet or rug.

The GoodWeave certification program is a market-based solution for factories that want the advantage of being certified child-labor-free in a marketplace where importers increasingly demand corporate responsibility. RugMark USA, the nonprofit that launched the GoodWeave program also provides rehabilitation and education for former child weavers.

In An Instant, These People Became Everyday Heroes

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police-sgt-kimberly-munley-fthood.jpgA man sees a 75-year-old man stuck on railroad tracks and pulls him to safety. An off-duty emergency worker pulls a woman from a van after it crashes into an icy pond. An NBA star saves a woman from drowning.

These are examples of everyday people who, when confronted with a life-or-death situation, jumped in to do what they could — and became rescuers and heroes.

Read the CNN collection of heroic acts from 2009.

Mayor Digs Out Senior, After Twitter Snow Appeal for Help

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snowy-car-indiana.jpgThe daughter of a 65-year-old Newark man used Twitter to directly ask Mayor Cory Booker to help shovel her dad’s driveway on New Years Eve.

Within five minutes Booker messaged her back, writing, “I will do it myself where does he live?”

With over 1 million followers, Booker is one of the most active and followed politicians on Twitter, the popular social networking micro blog.

“Please don’t worry bout ur dad,” Booker tweeted later. “Just talked 2 him & I’ll get 2 his Driveway by noon. I’ve got salt, shovels & great volunteers.”

(Read more at CNN Politics page)

Dog Saves Boy, 11, from Cougar Attack

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dog-fights-cougar.jpgA retriever protected 11-year-old  Austin from a charging cougar during a bloody, against-all-odds confrontation Saturday in Canada.

“The cougar came (from) about five feet away and made a big jump (at Austin),” Forman said Sunday in an interview.

“Angel jumped in between and took on the cougar.” The dog was injured, but is expected to recover.

(Read more in the Toronto Star)

Also, watch this morning’s Today Show report below, or at MSNBC

NOTE From Editor: On Holiday, Laptop Problems

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white-lights-tree-mlwk.jpgSince 2005, there has not been a single day that good news was not been hunted and published here — until last week.

Far away in the cold, on a holiday with family, during which I normally would be working and adding stories to the website daily, a server issue arose which prevented me from any access to the Good News Network.

I am traveling home today, and with the successful posting of this notice, believe the situation has been resolved… (Or, it will remain a mystery why, every time I tried to access my websites, they were unloadable in a browser.)

Since I’ll be driving a car, I can’t post today. I’ll be back online tomorrow, and please forgive the lapse in good news! (Appreciate it in its absence, all the more.

Out for a Smoke, Man Saved Neighbors From Fire

In Toronto, a young man had dinner and came out for a smoke at about 6:45 p.m. on Friday. He was about to light up his cigarette when he saw flames in an open garage across the street. As he raced over, he called 9-1-1 and then started banging on his neighbor’s door. He had spotted at least three propane tanks in the garage and was terrified they would explode — which they did…

Read the rest of the story at The Toronto Star.com

Manhattan Soup Kitchen Serves Caviar

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caviar.jpgThose eating lunch at a soup kitchen in Manhattan got a taste of the luxury life, thanks to a gift of caviar from an anonymous donor.

Though the $1,100 value of the caviar could have covered more meals for the needy, it was the experience that was priceless.

An eight-year-old living with her mom in a domestic violence shelter said, “I felt like a princess.”

(Continue reading AP story at CBS)

More People Are Going to College

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college-studies.jpgIn the last 20 years, the number of people aged 18 to 24 in college has increased fairly dramatically, especially the number attending two-year colleges.

Click to see an infographic on the rise of higher education in America.

On New Year’s Eve, A Celestial Treat: Look Up For A ‘Blue Moon’

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full_moon_luc_viatour.jpgIf the sky is clear where you are tonight may we suggest stepping outside and looking up? There will be a fairly rare “blue moon” above.

And, though the moon won’t be blue, the last time we saw an “extra” full moon appearing on New Year’s Eve was in 1990, and it won’t happen again until 2028.

(Continue reading in NPR and National Geographic)

Photo by Luc Viatour, www.lucnix.be

Ruth Lilly Gave Away About $800 Million Over a Lifetime: Tribute

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ruth-lilly-philanthropist.jpgHer generosity in life was legendary: Ruth Lilly, the last surviving great-grandchild of pharmaceutical magnate Eli Lilly, died Wednesday night at 94. … Over the course of her life, Ms. Lilly gave away the bulk of her inheritance, an estimated $800 million.

She gave to a wide variety of causes — colleges, hospitals, the National Easter Seals Society. But it was her unexpected donation of $100-million in 2002 to an obscure, Chicago-based poetry association that revealed something deeply personal: Ms. Lilly was a poet at heart. Not only did she read it, she wrote it, though to little acclaim.

The unusual gift sustains Garrison Keillor’s daily radio poetry readings on The Writer’s Almanac, sponsors a poetry professorship at Indiana University and honors top poets with prestigious annual awards.

(From the The Indianapolis Star via NPR )

Remarkable Journey Leads Blind Marching Band to Tournament of Roses Parade

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America’s only blind marching band is set to ring in 2010 as the first ensemble of its kind to march in the Tournament of Roses’ Parade on New Year’s Day in Pasadena, Calif.

Their journey to the 121st Rose Parade is a marvel even to the Ohio State School for the Blind’s marching band leader Dan Kelly. 

(Continue reading in Pasadena Star-News)

 

In Wake of Thwarted Bombing: What Makes Ordinary People do Heroic Things?

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jasper-schuringa.jpgJasper Schuringa, a Dutch passenger on Northwest Flight 253 on Christmas Day, helped prevent the Yemeni bomber from setting off an explosive device on the flight, leaping over seats to subdue the terrorist.

Would you have done the same?

Philip Zimbardo, a professor at Stanford University, thinks there’s a good chance you would have, and as one of the country’s sharpest observers of human behavior in extreme circumstances, he would know.

(Continue reading The Making of a Hero at Newsweek)

Also, watch or read an interview with Jasper on ABC Morning Show…

Thanks to Commerce, a Dying Island is Reborn

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poplar-island.jpgPoplar Island, once on the verge of disappearing into the Chesapeake Bay, is now a national model for habitat restoration.

Shipping channels in the Baltimore harbor that needed to be dredged provided the material to rebuild the island for wildlife and tourists — the largest such project ever undertaken by the US Corps of Engineers.

Watch the video below, or at MSNBC

Prostate Cancer Sufferers Offered Hope by Molecule Discovery

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microscope.jpgPeople with prostate cancer have been offered new hope after researchers at University of Pennsylvania discovered a molecule that appears to target the tumours. The researchers found that the “monoclonal” antibody seems to act against the disease in both its early and advanced stages.

Besides attacking the disease directly, it also helps the immune system to identify and destroy cancer cells.

(Continue reading in the Telegraph)

Business Pays His Bills But Charity Rocks His World: Richard Branson

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branson-cnn-vid.jpgCNN talks to Sir Richard Branson, who manages his philanthropy like one of his businesses. Whether in the realm of disease, global warming, or conflict, his philanthropic foundation Virgin Unites treats risk the same: “Screw it, Let’s Do It.”

Watch the CNN video below, or at the website

Top Social Entrepreneur Moments of Decade

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top-moments-2009.jpgThe Social Entrepreneurship blog published its list of the top moments in social entrepreneurship of the decade. Some of the highlights:

  1. US Launches Office of Social Innovation
  2. Cadbury’s Shift To All-Fair-Trade Chocolate
  3. Teach For America’s 2009 Recruitment Class Numbers (including applications from a full 11% of graduating Ivy League seniors)
  4. Kiva.org Founded Allowing the Public to Make Microloans to Third World Entrepreneurs
  5. Muhammad Yunus And Grameen Bank Win Nobel Peace Prize
  6. TED Talks Offered Free Online

Read the rest online

Boy Establishes Food Bank for Pets

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animal-pantry-founder.jpgWith the number of homeless pets nearly doubling compared to last year, a nine-year-old boy decided to take action. Thanks to his Central Florida Animal Pantry, the only one of its kind in the state, a lot of pets are no longer in need.

The response has been overwhelming, with pet stores, schools and people in the community all donating food. During a recent week in December Zach Wilson gave away 1,800 pounds of food in bags and cans.

In the future, he wants to open a sanctuary for disabled pets and abandoned animals.

Watch the Making a Difference video below, or at MSNBC