All News - Page 1483 of 1719 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 1483

Rather Than Lay-offs, Cabinet Factory is Making Dollhouses For Needy Kids This Holiday

dollhouse2.jpg

dollhouse2.jpgAlpine Cabinet Company of Timnath, Colorado doesn’t have enough work these days to keep employees busy, so they’ve come up with a creative way to get through the holidays without resorting to layoffs. They are building dollhouses for children in need.

It’s a team effort with some employees creating dollhouse furniture, others sewing curtains, and others making the actual structures. Completed dollhouses will be given away to Project Self-Sufficiency and the Windsor Optimist Club, who will distribute them to children in need.

“I thought it would be a great morale boost for our people and lots of kids who need help,” said Bill Chinn, vice president of production.

(READ the story in the Coloradoan.com)

Estimated TARP Cost Is Cut by $200 Billion, as US Banks Repay With Interest

creditcard.jpg

creditcard.jpgThe Treasury now estimates that over the next 10 years TARP will cost $141 billion at most, down from the $341 billion the White House projected in August. The reduction stems in large part from faster-than-expected repayments by some of the nation’s largest banks.

The government’s efforts appear to have helped stabilize the financial sector, and banks have already repaid the Treasury about $70 billion.

Bank of America Corp. has said it will return its $45 billion investment this week, and the government now expects total repayments to reach as much as $175 billion by the end of next year. Altogether, it invested $204 billion in 690 firms.

The Treasury has also collected more than $10 billion in interest and dividend payments from firms in which it has invested.

(Read more at the Wall Street Journal)

Signing Santa Brings Christmas Magic to Hearing Impaired Children

santa-signs-w-deaf.jpg

santa-signs-w-deaf.jpgThis holiday season not every child will get a chance to verbally tell Santa what they want for Christmas. That’s why he made a special trip to visit some hearing impaired children in Columbus, Georgia.

Santa Claus told the TV-9 News crew, “They’re excited that Santa knows how to sign and that makes them feel (especially) connected.”

(Read more or watch the video at WTVM.com)

 

 

Cancer Death Rates and New Cases Continue to Decline in US

cancer-society-logo.jpg

cancer-society-logo.jpgNumbers of new cancer cases continued declining and death rates from all cancers combined declined significantly for both men and women in the United States, according to a report from leading health and cancer organizations.

The drops are driven largely by declines in rates of new cases and rates of death for the three most common cancers in men (lung, prostate, and colorectal cancers) and for two of the three leading cancers in women (breast and colorectal cancer). New diagnoses for all types of cancer combined in the United States decreased, on average, almost 1 percent per year from 1999 to 2006. Cancer deaths decreased 1.6 percent per year from 2001 to 2006.

Doctors and Researchers attribute the success to better screening and early detection, better treatment for the disease and better lifestyle choices in Americans. (Watch the NBC video below for a neat summary of report.)

To Cure the Blind Sounds Impossible, But Not for the Mountain Climber Surgeon

eye-patients-w-tabin-by-ace-kvale.jpg

eye-patients-w-tabin-by-ace-kvale.jpgTo cure the blind. It sounds impossible. Biblical even. And that’s exactly why Geoff Tabin—adventure climber, medical pioneer, human dynamo—is just the guy to do it.

Geoff Tabin leads a medical team organized by his Himalayan Cataract Project with the goal of conducting the largest eye surgery camp in Africa’s history, restoring sight to as many as 800 people.

The writer of Three Cups of Tea provides a great read as he features Geoff’s exciting and inspiring quest — seen on the cover of National Geographic magazine — trying to restore sight to most of the 150 million people who are functionally blind, but don’t need to be.  (Read the story at Nat’l Geo)

Photo credit: Eye patients w/ Dr. Tabin, courtesy of Ace Kvale

Warren Buffett’s Sister Donates All Her Millions

buffet-sister.jpg

buffet-sister.jpg

Doris Buffett is 81 and has the kind of reputation money can buy.

She’s given away a fortune — over $80 million — and wants to keep giving until it’s all gone.

Her money comes from her mother’s investment funds managed by her little brother, Warren Buffet, the millionaire known as the Oracle of Omaha.

(READ the story at CBS News, or WATCH the video below)

10-18 Percent of US Firms Hiring in Dec; Fewer Laid Off in Nov.

1stwisconsinbldg

1stwisconsinbldg.jpgIt was hard not to feel a little yuletide cheer after seeing only a five-digit number representing national job losses for November. Yet, I almost shrugged off the latest national unemployment report as having no real influence on job growth, until I saw another report the same day from the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM).

Culling data from 500 manufacturing firms and 500 service firms, SHRM released its Leading Indicators of National Employment (LINE) report, which makes predictions on nationwide hiring trends each month. For this December, the report said, responding companies said they would hire more people than they planned to lay off. In the manufacturing sector, a net total of 10.7 percent of companies surveyed said they would increase hiring, while in the services sector a net total of 18.8 percent said they would add new jobs.

After nearly two disheartening years of monthly reports showing more than 100,000 jobs lost (peaking at 741,000 in January 2009), the 11,000 jobs that the Bureau of Labor Statistics said had vanished last month almost–almost -felt like good news.

Of course, no loss of employment could ever be considered good in this economy, with one out of every 10 American workers sitting idle. The best we can do with the information right now would be to call it “encouraging.”  – Randy Woods, NWjobs

(Read More from the Seattle Times)

Gold Coins Drop Anonymously into Red Kettles Across America

red-kettle-lrg.jpg

red-kettle-lrg.jpgWith gold prices more than $1,100 an ounce, it’s “like visions of sugar plums” when gold coins are discovered by the ringing bell Santas who count their donations after a long day of volunteering at shopping malls and on street corners. With the season only two weeks old, thousands of dollars in gold has already being dropped anonymously into the Salvation Army charity’s red kettles across the country.

In Florida, the annual “Miracle on Palm Beach Boulevard” appeared once again: The Salvation Army says that for the fourth year in a row a 1908 gold coin was dropped into one of the charity’s famous Red Kettles. And as in the previous instances, had a small label affixed to its case with the words “In memory of Mimi” written on it. The one ounce  St. Gaudens Double Eagle collectible coin could fetch at auction even more than the price of gold, which hovers today at $1,200 per ounce.

Sometimes called the Rolls Royce of gold coins, a South African Krugerrand worth $1,200 was anonymously dropped into a kettle in Aurora, Ill., wrapped in a pair of dollar bills.

For the second year in a row, the Salvation Army’s Red Kettle campaign in Iowa City has struck gold, counting a coin worth $120 in one of its collection kettles.

gold-coin-amer-eagle.jpgThe Salvation Army in Springfield, Ill. received two anonymous gifts last week. Gold coins were dropped in the kettle by Good Samaritans both Saturday and Thursday nights. Major Paul Logan says both pieces were a solid 1 oz gold coin with a Standing Liberty on one side.

In Grundy County,
Illinois, volunteers counting last Monday’s red kettle earnings found three half-ounce Liberty gold coins. “Words fail you when someone is that generous,” said Denise Gaska, Executive Director of We Care, a group that services the kettles.

The volunteers found gold coins wrapped in dollar bills for numerous years now, but the identity of the donor or donors still remains a mystery. They also saw a gold wedding ring donated last year. “I kept thinking who would donate gold with the value so high? I fully expected it to be smaller and was preparing myself,” Gaska said.

The Morris Coin Shop, which buys the gold each year, paid $1,800 for the latest donations.

In yet another part of Illinois, two more extraordinary coins — one gold and one silver — were dropped into Salvation Army buckets in Kankakee County last Friday. One gold coin, a $50 American Eagle 2009 series, worth about $1,100, was dropped into the bucket at the Jewel grocery store, while over at the Walgreens someone donated a $20 American Liberty coin 2004 series, valued at about $100.

In Ottumwa, Iowa, kettle volunteers found a folded $100 bill, which in fact, was the least surprising part of the donation. Inside were three 1889 sovereigns, British coins about the size of a nickel made of gold. Each is worth about $230.

Capt. Rick Ray of the Salvation Army in Galesburg, Ill. said last year two gold coins were quietly dropped into one kettle, earning the group $1,800. “I believe I’ve gotten them for four years now,” Ray said. He hopes the tradition continues this year.

Denise Gaska hopes people will follow in these anonymous donors’ footsteps and step up to help — this year more than ever.

Gold Coins Drop Anonymously into Red Kettles Across America

red-kettle-lrg.jpg

red-kettle-lrg.jpgWith gold prices more than $1,100 an ounce, it’s “like visions of sugar plums” when gold coins are discovered by the ringing bell Santas who count their donations after a long day of volunteering at shopping malls and on street corners. With the season only two weeks old, thousands of dollars in gold has already being dropped anonymously into the Salvation Army charity’s red kettles across the country.

In Florida, the annual “Miracle on Palm Beach Boulevard” appeared once again: The Salvation Army says that for the fourth year in a row a 1908 gold coin was dropped into one of the charity’s famous Red Kettles. And as in the previous instances, had a small label affixed to its case with the words “In memory of Mimi” written on it. The one ounce  St. Gaudens Double Eagle collectible coin could fetch at auction even more than the price of gold, which hovers today at $1,200 per ounce.

Civilian Experts on Farming and Governance Will Expand U.S. Commitments to Afghanistan, Pakistan

afghan_greehouse_usaid.jpg

afghan_greehouse_usaid.jpgEven after U.S. forces have left Afghanistan, an army of U.S. civilians will remain to help the country build its democratic institutions and restore its agricultural economy, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee this week. Civilian assistance programs are also part of the administration’s strategy in Pakistan.

In her testimony on December 2, Clinton said US contributions of “more civilians and more assistance to Afghanistan, and significantly expanding our civilian efforts in Pakistan,” will continue. Clinton termed it a “significant civilian commitment that will endure long after combat forces leave.”

Clinton said civilian efforts are already yielding results, with experts and advisers helping to craft policy inside government ministries, providing development assistance in the field, and working in scores of other roles. (Photo above: USAID supported greenhouses allow farmers in Afganistan like Mola Shah Goel to grow fruits and vegetables for sale year round.)

The civilian component includes State Department personnel with expertise in the rule of law and governance, and experts from the U.S. Department of Agriculture with 40 years of experience who are helping the country restore its agricultural sector, the traditional core of Afghanistan’s economy.

“This will create jobs, reduce the funding that the Taliban receives from poppy cultivation, and draw insurgents off of the battlefield,” she said.

Ten Tips to Get You Motivated for Exercise

Photo by Sun Star

runner-silouette-uphill.jpgIf you are one of the lucky ones, you genuinely enjoy exercising and you look forward to doing it each day. If you are like the rest of us, you don’t. Here are ten tips that make it easier for me to complete my exercise routine for the day…

(Read the tips from Diana Adams at BitRebels.com)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

It’s Official: California to Get Space-Based Solar Power

solar-panels-space-based-mafic-studios.jpg

solar-panels-space-based-mafic-studios.jpgTwo developments Thursday will help Pacific Gas and Electric Co. deliver energy from the atmosphere – with a new wind farm – and, possibly, near-Earth orbit using solar power.

State regulators approved PG&E’s request to buy electricity from an orbiting solar power plant.

Solaren Corp., a startup in Los Angeles County, plans to place a large array of solar panels in orbit, where they would bathe in near-constant sunshine undimmed by the earth’s atmosphere. The plant, which Solaren hopes to launch before 2016, would use electromagnetic waves to transmit power to a receiving station in Fresno County. (Read more at San Francisco Gate)

Medical Surplus Saves Lives Worlds Away

ethipian-girl-gets-treatment-nbcvid.jpg

ethipian-girl-gets-treatment-nbcvid.jpgProject C.U.R.E. will send out 125 huge shipping containers of medical supplies this year to hospitals around the world — about $50 million in supplies. The equipment, collected from US hospitals, help doctors to bring routine procedures from America to places like Ethiopia.

Watch the two Making a Difference videos below, or at MSNBC

Senate Passes Women’s Health Amendment Requiring Low Cost Exams

stethoscope

stethoscope.jpgThe Women’s Health Amendment was passed by the Senate on Thursday with a vote of 61-39, which will require all health care plans to cover women’s comprehensive preventative care and screenings (like gynecological exams, mammograms, STD testing and treatment) with no cost to women (or with limited co-pays).

According to the National Women’s Law Center, the most significant thing about the Women’s Health Amendment is that it could potentially save the lives of millions of low-income women who often skip basic health care exams and screenings because of added costs.

(Read more at Southern Maryland Online)

Google Will Mail Free Holiday Cards For You

holiday-card-image-google.jpg

holiday-card-image-google.jpgEvery year around this time people start thinking about the annual holiday email they send to friends and family members and co-workers. But there are still those — who really appreciate seasonal greetings, think, grandma — who have remained in the pre-digital age of snail-mail.

Normally you would go to a store, choose a card, wait in line to pay for it, go to the post office, pick up some stamps, and drop it in a mail box, but this year, you can just go online and fill out a form and ask Gmail to handle the rest.

This holiday season, as a token of appreciation to their customers, Google is offering to snail-mail a free holiday postcard on your behalf. Yes, through the mail and everything.

The only catch is the cards need to be mailed to U.S. addresses, and to a limited number of people (due to limited Gmail elf availability).

There are also limited quantities, so be sure to request one soon at: www.gmail.com/holidaycard
There are six designs, including a fold-it-yourself dreidel, snowflakes, mittens, a cartoon, and a very cute Rudolf.

TransCanada Raises Record $2.54 Million for United Way

transcanada.jpg

transcanada.jpgEnergy company TransCanada raised a record-breaking $2.54 million from its 2009 United Way campaign through the efforts of its employees, contractors and retirees in regions across North America, an increase of more than $70,000 from 2008.

“Today’s record donation demonstrates once again that by uniting as a company we can make a lasting difference in our community,” says Alex Pourbaix, TransCanada president, Energy and executive vice-president, Corporate Development.

More than two-thirds of employees, contractors and retirees participated in TransCanada’s 2009 campaign for United Way. TransCanada is among Western Canada’s largest contributors to United Way and since 2000, has donated over $17 million.  The campaign total will be distributed to approximately 100 United Way organizations located across North America.

For Your Health: Use Hand Sanitizers Without Triclosan

cleanwell-products.jpg

cleanwell-products.jpgThis is worth sharing with everyone you know as schools, hospitals and offices are distributing vast amounts of hand sanitizer gels to help prevent the spread of the flu virus or possibly the H1N1 virus.

Look at the ingredients and be conscious of what you are using.  If you are concerned about compromising your immune system – and you care about our environment  –  be wary of Triclosan.  Food and Water Watch has a public education campaign to alert consumers of the possible side effects.  There are enough products on the market that do not use Triclosan, to make it a simple choice. For example:

* Seventh Generation
* Mrs. Meyers
* CleanWell
* LUSH
* Nature’s Gate
* Purell Instant Hand Sanitizer
* Weleda
* Listerine Essential Care

I recently tried CleanWell and was pleasantly surprised by not only the product but also the story behind the product. It is all natural and alcohol free. Joy, a grandmother and aromacologist, created a formula for the benefit of her grandson Connor, who was born with an immune system disorder. Using a formula of essential oils especially thyme and oregano, a team of scientists led the way for the creation of CleanWell products, which help kill 99.9% of the germs. Their packaging (photo, above) is also good for the environment.

Regardless of the flu – this is a good reminder to know, at all times, the ingredients of the products you use. Triclosan is a known endocrine disruptor, which possibly affects male and female reproductive hormones and potentially increases the risk for breast cancer. After it flows into the water supply, frogs become deformed. (See GNN story about the latest scientific studies and learn which toothpastes and mouthwashes are made with the chemical.)

Research shows that soap and water are enough to rid the hands of germs, but sometimes, we are not near enough to a faucet. In that case, when possible, use products that support your health instead of compromising it. Make educated decisions in what you purchase and what you use.

By Keri Douglas, writer/photographer, Washington, DC: keridouglas.wordpress.com

IMF Wins Coveted Environmental Award for Headquarters Buildings

imf-hq-leedgold.jpg

imf-hq-leedgold.jpgThe International Monetary Fund (IMF) was awarded one of the highest environmental designations in the world for its headquarters in Washington DC yesterday. The IMF is the first international financial organization and the first United Nations affiliated organization to be awarded LEED Gold for Existing Buildings established by the U.S. Green Building Council.

The LEED rating system is a globally recognized rating for green buildings. With this award the Fund joins four other buildings in Washington D.C. and 126 buildings in the United States that have received this award.

The Silver Lining Study: People Prefer to Hear Good and Bad News Separately

white-bumper-stk.jpg

white-bumper-stk.jpgThis is interesting: Communicating “I have some good news and some bad news” is better than combining messages into a single, bleak result when small gains and large losses occur together, according to a study in the current issue of Management Science, the flagship journal of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS).

The study, called “The Silver Lining Effect: Formal Analysis and Experiments,” asked how people’s choices change when they are presented with information in either of two ways: as an integrated whole or as two segregated pieces. For example, they ask, does an investor prefer a statement showing only an aggregate loss of $95 – or one showing a loss of $100 and a gain of $5?

The authors follow upon work first done by RH Thaler in 1985.

“Thaler’s intuition was that decision makers would prefer to mentally separate a small gain from a big loss, thus providing a silver lining to the loss,” explains Prof. Olivier Toubia, one of the authors. This study provides new tests to the original assumptions.

Peace Sculpture Unveiled, Born of Egyptian Student’s Gratitude for US Town

peace-sculpture-wausau.jpg

peace-sculpture-wausau.jpgA 10-foot-tall peace sculpture was unveiled and dedicated to the people of Wausau, Wisconsin, recently, to build a bridge between them and their Arabs friends in Egypt. Doves were set free at the ceremony for the monument, which features a large dove carrying the word “peace” inscribed in English on one wing, and in Arabic on the other.
 
The landmark was envisioned by Mostafa Saleh, a Fulbright Scholar from Egypt who is studying at the the area’s Northcentral Technical College. When Mostafa first arrived in America he was concerned about how he would be received from the Wausau community. But worry gave way after the warm welcome and kindness he received. He wanted to donate a gift to thank the town. He first thought about a sculpture involving pyramids but then decided on something to encompass all the Mideast, and not just Egypt. The peace sculpture resulted, which shows the planet Earth resting between the wings of a dove. On its base the word peace is spelled out in 37 languages, including Braille.