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50 ‘Dangerous’ Things You Should Let Your Children Do

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50-dangerous-things-cover.jpgWe live in a world that’s subjected to ever more stringent child safety regulations. No more dodgeball; suffocation warnings on every piece of plastic; warnings on coffee cups to tell us that the contents may be hot.

“We seem to think that any item sharper than a golf ball is too sharp for children under the age of 10,” says Gever Tulley.

So, Tulley, founder of something called the Tinkering School, a place where kids build things with power tools, wrote a book with his wife Julie Spiegler called, 50 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do.

Number 46 is “Super Glue Your Fingers Together – Experience life without a thumb!”

“When we round every corner and eliminate every sharp object, every pokey bit in the world, then the first time that kids come in contact with anything sharp or not made out of round plastic, they’ll hurt themselves with it,” he writes.

“So, as the boundaries of what we determine as the safety zone grow ever smaller, we cut off our children from valuable opportunities to learn how to interact with the world around them.”

Tulley, a computer scientist by trade, gave a Ted Talk to name the top six ‘hazards’—and explain why kids should be encouraged to dive in.

1. Play with fire
2. Own a pocket knife
3. Throw a spear
4. Deconstruct appliances
5. Break the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
6. Drive a car

READ the full article by Tulley here—or watch his TED Talk video below…

SHARE the Words if You Think They’re Wisdom…

50 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do

50-dangerous-things-cover.jpg

50-dangerous-things-cover.jpgWe live in a world that’s subjected to ever more stringent child safety regulations. No more dodgeball; suffocation warnings on every piece of plastic; warnings on coffee cups to tell us that the contents may be hot.

“We seem to think that any item sharper than a golf ball is too sharp for children under the age of 10,” says Gever Tulley,

So, Tulley, founder of something called the Tinkering School, a place where kids build things with power tools, has written a new book called, 50 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do. (Number 46 is “Super Glue Your Fingers Together – Experience life without a thumb!)

When we round every corner and eliminate every sharp object, every pokey bit in the world, then the first time that kids come in contact with anything sharp or not made out of round plastic, they’ll hurt themselves with it. So, as the boundaries of what we determine as the safety zone grow ever smaller, we cut off our children from valuable opportunities to learn how to interact with the world around them.

Tulley, a computer scientist by trade, wrote a blog post giving us the top five or six hazards, and why kids should be encouraged to dive in. They are:

   1. Play with fire
   2. Own a pocket knife
   3. Throw a spear
   4. Deconstruct appliances
   5. Break the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
   6. Drive a car

Read the full article by Tulley here, or watch his TED Talk video below… 

New York Robin Hood Group Gives to the Poor

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robin-hood-logo.jpgThe Robin Hood foundation, founded by a group of Wall Street investors to maximize every dollar given to the poor, has helped more than a half million New Yorkers in need to get food and education.

Because the group’s board members pay all administrative costs, every cent donated goes directly for food and programs — over a billion dollars since 1988.

Watch the Making a Difference video below, or at MSNBC

Musician and Handicapped Son Go From Homeless to Hopeful

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yellow-sun-bright.jpgA down-and-out musician who was living in a Rescue Mission shelter with his sickly 6-year-old son, has won a talent competition, after a fellow resident who heard radio ads promoting the contest urged him to enter.

The contest paid off in dollars, but it also had a ripple effect, helping connect Rob Paper and his son Taj, who has a form of cerebral palsy, to an ever-larger community of friends and allies.

Read the full story in the Idaho Statesman

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

Sick Kids in Hospital Now Connect with Friends Online

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laptop-on-bed.jpgHospitalized children in Canada who can’t go home for the holidays have a new online way of keeping in touch with their friends and family. 

“Upopolis” is a closed and secure social networking site designed for children in hospital that offers personal profiles, personal blogs, instant chats and child-friendly games. 

The site lets patients talk online to friends and family so they don’t have to fear being an outsider with friends back home, beyond the sometimes lonely walls of the hospital.  The site also links young patients with those in other hospitals across the country.

Toni Crowell of the Hospital for Sick Children said, “We know it takes more than medicine and treatments to help kids to get better. This gives us a great therapeutic tool to reach a population of our kids.”

(READ the full story at CBC)

Photo: JDurham, morguefile.com

 

Plastic Bags Recycled into Nanotubes

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plastic-bag-litter.jpgWaste plastic from “throwaway” carrier bags can be readily converted into carbon nanotubes, cylindrical carbon molecules that have novel properties to make them potentially useful in nanotechnology, electronics, optics and other fields.

The chemist who developed the technique says this is one of the cheapest and most environmentally friendly ways to grow nanotubes, and has even used the nanotubes to make lithium-ion batteries.

(READ more in NewScientist.com)

Celebrities Surpise Teen Heros With Halo Award

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halo-award-winner.jpgInstead of yet another awards show featuing celebrities, TeenNick Chairman Nick Cannon is hosting the Halo Awards, where stars like Justin Timberlake, LeBron James, and Alicia Keys pay tribute to amazing teens doing amazing things. Watch as teen award winners are surprised by famous stars who honor them for their service.

Watch the video below, or at ClipSyndicate

Lower-pitched Whale Wails May be Good News

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blue-whale-noaa.jpgThe great, echoing moans of blue whales have gradually grown lower in pitch over the last few decades, and scientists say that could be a good sign for this endangered species.

As blue whale populations boom, the frequency of their calls has decreased – probably because potential mates are a lot closer than they used to be.

(READ More in Mother Nature Network)

Goats Give Sickly Foal a Reason to Live

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goats-w-pony-friend.jpgTwo pet goats befriended a little orphan foal who previously was sickly and dying.  With the new friendship, the foal’s health immediately improved and now they’re one big happy family — with the goats jumping like horses, and the young horse head-butting.

Watch the wonderful video from WPTZ in New Hampshire.

PBS NewsHour Comes to YouTube

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newshour-correspondents.jpgAfter nearly 35 years on PBS, the NewsHour is hitting the web with expanded video access to provide viewers with NewsHour content however they want to access it, starting with a major new initiative on YouTube.

The NewsHour channel on YouTube (youtube.com/pbsnewshour) will host nightly reports from the NewsHour television broadcast, posted the same night the broadcast airs on PBS. The NewsHour will also post web-original videos featuring its new online correspondent Hari Sreenivasan. These news segments will be archived on the NewsHour YouTube channel, ensuring that those looking for video of past news events will easily be able to find it.

Wind Supergrid to Connect Europe in North Sea

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wind-offshore-ws-flickr.jpgProgress has already been made in Copenhagen at the UN Climate Change Conference in the realm of renewable energy. Nine European countries, it was announced on Monday, signed the North Seas’ Countries Offshore Grid Initiative, a plan to create an offshore wind power supergrid in the North and North West seas.

The plan, signed by Denmark, Germany, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Ireland, will link offshore wind parks in various countries –so wind power from Ireland could be used in Germany, for example. Ireland said the plan will allow Irish wind farms to “connect directly to Europe, not only securing Ireland’s energy supply but allowing us to sell the electricity produced here on a wider market.” The same holds for all countries involved in the deal.

(READ MORE from Ariel Schwartz at Fast Company)

Hundreds of Women Lead Protest for Good in Afghanistan

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protestor-woman-megaphone-by-xenia-morguefile.jpgSeveral hundred women in Kabul, Afghanistan, many holding pictures of relatives killed by drug lords or Taliban militants, held a loud but nonviolent street protest today, demanding that President Hamid Karzai purge from his government anyone connected to corruption, war crimes or the Taliban.

500 men trailed behind the unusual display of political activism by women.

(Continue reading in the LA Times)

Thanks to Paola for submitting the link!

Las Vegas School is Lifeline for Hungry Kids With Nothing

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vegas-chefs-serve-kids.jpgPrincipal Sherrie Gahn said she was shocked when she first came to Whitney Elementary School seven years ago. “The kids were eating ketchup packets,” trying to scrape a meal together.

About 75 percent of her 622 students are homeless, or nearly so. Under Gahn’s leadership, Whitney Elementary has become a lifeline for families — at once a food bank, clothing drive, Christmas charity, dental clinic and hair salon all in one.

After this moving story ran on CNN about the Las Vegas school over Thanksgiving — when famous Vegas chefs came to the school preparing lunch — donations have poured in, over $75,000 worth. “There are bread donations and shoe donations, and local physicians donate their time to give physicals and eye exams.”

See how Principal Gahn cares for school children, and their families going beyond the typical model of education.

Boy Collects One Thousand Socks for Needy Kids

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socks-knit-by-whitknits-wordpress-com.jpg11 year-old Tanner asks everyone he meets to consider what life would be like without socks.

Launching a holiday sock drive to benefit needy children in Orlando, so far, he’s collected more than 500 pairs — and he’s hoping for more by his Dec. 14 deadline.

In the wake of a recession, he decided to give people a small economical way they could help others. “Instead of spending $20 or $30 [on Toys for Tots], it would be $1 or $2 [for socks],” he said.

Tanner, who is in a lull between football and basketball seasons, has a history of helping kids through his own charitable giving.

READ MORE, w/ photo, at the Orlando Sentinel

Photo from whitknits.wordpress.com

Solar Plane Completes First Flight

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solar-impasse-plane.jpgTwo weeks shy of the 106th anniversary of Wright Brothers first flight, the Solar Impulse aircraft left the ground and completed its first flight in Switzerland last week. Solar Impulse founder and president Bertrand Piccard says it was an unforgettable moment.

“For over ten years now, I have dreamt of a solar aircraft capable of flying day and night without fuel” he said in a press release. “Today, our plane took off and was airborne for the very first time.”

Following a time schedule that would make some of the larger airplane makers jealous, the Solar Impulse team followed up recent taxi tests with a short ‘flea hop’ over the runway at the Dübendorf Airfield where the program is based.

(READ MORE: w/ photos, in Wired)

“Bionic Fingers” Restore Independence to Man who Lost Part of Hand

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bionic-hand.jpgEven though he is 60, one of Frank Hrabanek’s biggest thrills these days is being able to tie his shoelaces by himself. Until a short time ago, that two-handed task would have been impossible for Hrabanek, who lost all four fingers on his dominant hand following an industrial accident.

But two months ago, he was fitted with a prosthesis featuring what are being called the world’s first bionic fingers.

His wife, Zlata, calls the bionic fingers “a miracle.” (Read and see photos from the Canadan Press)

Lucky Dog Survives Iraq Bombing (Video)

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hero-dog-argtna.jpgA miracle of survival in Baghdad among horrific bomb blasts this week: A man who was presumed dead stunned neighbors when he returned to his toppled home to find his pet dog remarkably unharmed in the blast. The dog had been chained to the roof, which had collapsed into rubble, and was met with enthusiastic petting from the man.

Watch the video below, from Clip Syndicate…

Thanks to James Pavoldi for submitting the link!

Bad Boy Actor Nick Cage Steps into Real-Life Good Cop Role for UN Crime Office

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nick-cage-africa-unodc.jpgAcclaimed actor and filmmaker Nicolas Cage, whose action roles have included both a contract killer and a federal anti-terrorist agent, stepped into the real world of crime on Friday when he was named Goodwill Ambassador for Global Justice for the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

The UNODC Executive Director mused, “Until today, justice has been ‘A Cause Without a Rebel’… Now we have one!”

Mr. Cage, who has produced, directed and acted in films often dealing with issues of global justice, terrorism, drug and arms trafficking, has shown a long-standing commitment to global justice and philanthropy. As an Amnesty International advocate, he raised awareness about the horrors faced by child soldiers, arms trafficking, violence against women and other human rights tragedies.

He has already worked closely with UNODC, this year launching its ‘Welcome to Gulu’ benefit exhibition at UN Headquarters in New York featuring paintings by former child soldiers and abducted girls. He also recently returned from a week-long mission to Uganda and Kenya, focused on child soldiering and other forms of human trafficking, as well as piracy, prison conditions, HIV/AIDS and drug addiction.

He donated $2 million to establish a fund to help former child soldiers, providing support for rehabilitation shelters and medical, psychological and reintegration services. He led a campaign around Lord of War to raise awareness about international arms control.

De Niro, Springsteen Given Kennedy Center Honors (Video)

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deniro-kennedy-honors.jpgActor Robert De Niro and rocker Bruce Springsteen were both lauded at the Kennedy Center Honors Sunday at a black-tie gala in Washington D.C. by the President and Michelle Obama and a host of Hollywood’s biggest stars.

Other honorees included jazz musician Dave Brubeck, comedian Mel Brooks and opera singer Grace Bumbry.

Watch the first video from NBC, and the second, below, from AP…