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Cyclists Get Fortified Bike Lane in Downtown DC

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bike-lane-dc.jpgFor a cyclist, getting “doored” by a parked car is a usually painful and sometimes expensive collision, occuring when someone in a parked car opens the door in the path of a bike.

In an attempt to minimize such accidents, the District of Columbia has fortified the invisible line that separates drivers and cyclists on its busy 15th Street in Northwest, with more than a half-mile of yellow posts, in the city’s first attempt at walling off a bike lane from cars.

(Continue reading in the Wash Post)

Photo courtesy of ReadySetDC.com, a blog of creating awareness of everything creative and amazing in DC. 

Inspired by Opening a Page in a Book, Man Drills for Water in Maasai Village

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massai-warrior-don-ryder.jpgA Harley-riding Wisconsin senior has been given the National Franciscan Peace Award for 2009, an honor previously given to Martin Luther King, Jr., Mother Teresa and Pope John Paul II. Don Ryder works as the Wausau city safety director, but it is his work on a life-saving water project in drought-ridden Africa that earned him the prestigious prize.

Women no longer need to trek 15 miles to collect dirty water from a stream, thanks to Mr. Ryder, the Secular Franciscan church-goer who raised money and coordinated the digging of new wells to provide clean, fresh water for their tribes in Kenya.

The Maasai village of Saikeri accepted Don’s first gift of water and watched as the workers drilled down 400 feet to strike water for the first time.

“The people were jubilant,” said Ryder, who the proud Maasai warriors named “Lemayian,” the Blessed One.
It has made a tremendous difference in their lives. Now the tribes can plant seeds rather than rely on livestock as their main source of food. To ensure future success, two young men from the village were sent to school to learn how to maintain the diesel engines and pumps, and to learn drip-irrigation farming.

Several wells have already been drilled, at a cost of between $45,000 and $65,000 each — the first one delivers water to 5,000 Maasai and their 100,000 cattle. The second well is providing running water for a school, and soon for a clinic, but more wells are needed.

The long journey that women walked, 15 miles one way through dangerous wilderness, is now relegated to storytelling elders for sharing in song and dance the tales of earlier hardship. The stories will someday include the birth of a hospital, if Ryder’s mission continues.

don-ryder-franciscan-award-winner.jpg Ryder and his wife, Yvonne, have a long history of working with the poor and marginalized. Volunteering with the Catholic diocese, the couple helped build a church and repair homes in Kenya. After returning home, they heard about the worsening drought that was hitting hard the Maasai people.

“The lack of rain over several years was devastating herds of cattle and the people whose livelihood depended on the livestock,” said Ken Beattie, a minister from Wisconsin’s La Verna Secular Franciscan Region who nominated Ryder for the award.

The problem worried Ryder for a time until he finally decided to do something, after opening the Bible to get an answer about his discontent regarding the drought. His finger fell to a passage in the Gospel of John, where Jesus says, “I was thirsty and you gave me drink.” His church parish offered to help make his vision a reality so he and his friend Romey Wagner set about raising the money to build a well.

He told more Secular Franciscans, who jumped on board, and soon they were booking speaking engagements to talk to schools, churches, and Rotary Clubs. A young couple donated $2,000 while school children collected coins. Donations started pouring in from coast to coast, he said.

Anyone interested in donating to the Kenyan water project may do so through the Community Foundation of North Central Wisconsin.

As for the future, Don says, “We’ll always be digging a new well.”

The award from the U.S. Secular Franciscan Order comes with a St. Francis trophy and a $2,000 prize.

Thanks to Bobbi and Mike S. for sending the story! Watch their interview with Don below… 

Inspired by Opening a Page in a Book, Man Drills for Water in Maasai Village

massai-warrior-don-ryder.jpg

massai-warrior-don-ryder.jpgA Harley-riding Wisconsin senior has been given the National Franciscan Peace Award for 2009, an honor previously given to Martin Luther King, Jr., Mother Teresa and Pope John Paul II. Don Ryder works as the Wausau city safety director, but it is his work on a life-saving water project in drought-ridden Africa that earned him the prestigious prize.

Women no longer need to trek 15 miles to collect dirty water from a stream, thanks to Mr. Ryder, the Secular Franciscan church-goer who raised money and coordinated the digging of new wells to provide clean, fresh water for their tribes in Kenya.

The Maasai village of Saikeri accepted Don’s first gift of water and watched as the workers drilled down 400 feet to strike water for the first time.

“The people were jubilant,” said Ryder, who the proud Maasai warriors named “Lemayian,” the Blessed One. 

Singapore Kindness Movement a Cultural Success

flower-handout-singapore-kindness-group.jpg

flower-handout-singapore-kindness-group.jpg For over three decades, Singapore has quietly and tirelessly campaigned to upgrade their self-described third-world “spitting, gum-chewing” citizens to first-class citizens who “smile, speak good English…and perform spontaneous acts of kindness.”

This weekend, Singaporeans were handing out yellow daisies for free to symbolize their government’s latest campaign to improve the national character.

(Continue reading in the New York Times)

Sesame Street’s HIV-Positive Muppet Raises Awareness

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muppet-kami.jpgAs the children’s show Sesame Street celebrates its 40th anniversary this month, one cute and cuddly Muppet on its South African edition helps combat and raise awareness about HIV/AIDS.

Bright yellow and shy, Kami, the first HIV-positive Muppet, helps educate kids in South Africa about the disease and, having lost her own mother to AIDS, helps many children to cope with the health crisis.

South Africa is believed to have the highest number of people infected with HIV in the world — an estimated 5.7 million people. Approximately 280,000 of those infected are children 14 and younger and there are 1.4 million orphans in the country due to AIDS.

(Read more in Global Voices about this successful educational effort)

In the following video, Kami joins former U.S. president Bill Clinton to deliver a message from UNICEF about HIV/AIDS.

‘Superglue’ Puts Heart Surgery Patients Back Together

glue stitches for hearts

glue-stitches-hearts.jpg Canadian researchers have pioneered a new way to mend a patient’s breastbone after open-heart surgery, using a Superman-strength glue that cuts healing time and reduces pain.

The technique uses a state-of-the-art adhesive called Kryptonite that rapidly bonds to bone and accelerates the recovery process. 

“We can now heal the breastbone in hours instead of weeks after open-heart surgery, with patients making a full recovery and getting back to full physical activity within days instead of months.”

(Continue reading story by Canadian Press)

Rachel Ray Saves Ohio Soup Kitchen

rachael-ray.jpgWith over 15 percent of the population unemployed, the 2,000 residents in Wilmington, Ohio have faced tough economic times, many relying heavily on a local soup kitchen daily for their only hot meal.

When celebrity chef, Rachel Ray, heard that the soup kitchen was about to close its doors, she decided to help out in a big way.

She and her crew provided a Thanksgiving dinner along with an inspirational entertainment tribute for the whole town, serving 900 pounds of turkey, 700 pounds each of mashed potatoes and sweet potatoes, and 400 pounds of green beans. The Sunday dinner also included stuffing, brussels sprouts, gravy and pumpkin pie.

Not only did Rachel’s crew decorate the hall with hay wagon, harvest vegetables and candle centerpieces in the colors of the season, they bought new appliances for the kitchen, redesigning the entire work space with a productivity make-over.

Rachel Ray Saves Ohio Soup Kitchen

rachael-ray.jpgWith over 15 percent of the population unemployed, the 2,000 residents in Wilmington, Ohio have faced tough economic times, many relying heavily on a local soup kitchen daily for their only hot meal.

When celebrity chef, Rachel Ray, heard that the soup kitchen was about to close its doors, she decided to help out in a big way.

She and her crew provided a Thanksgiving dinner along with an inspirational entertainment tribute for the whole town, serving 900 pounds of turkey, 700 pounds each of mashed potatoes and sweet potatoes, and 400 pounds of green beans. The Sunday dinner also included stuffing, brussels sprouts, gravy and pumpkin pie.

Not only did Rachel’s crew decorate the hall with hay wagon, harvest vegetables and candle centerpieces in the colors of the season, they bought new appliances for the kitchen, redesigning the entire work space with a productivity make-over.

Russia Launches Program to Save Tigers Worldwide

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amur-tger-cub.jpgVladimir Putin has made headlines by championing the endangered Siberian tiger — posing with a cuddly cub and placing a tracking collar on a full-grown female in the wilds of his country’s Far East. Now Russia is helping plan an ambitious program it hopes can double the global tiger population by 2022. – AP

(Continue reading AP story on MSNBC)

Scientists Poised to Begin Surgery to Help Cancer Victims Regrow Breasts

breast cancer pink ribbon

breast_cancer_pink_ribbon.pngAustralian scientists are poised to begin a three-year trial on a revolutionary surgery to help cancer victims regrow their breasts.

The experimental stem cell breast-growing technique – called Neopec – could replace breast reconstructions and implants for cancer victims within years.

Scientists from the Bernard O’Brien Institute of Microsurgery in Melbourne will implant fat cells, which will multiple rapidly within a biodegradable shell and be shaped into the breast she lost during cancer surgery.

The new technique has already been proved in pigs, which grew new breasts in just six weeks.

(Continue reading in the Herald Sun)

 

 

Surgery Lets Mum See Baby Again

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girl.jpgThere can be few experiences more exciting than regaining one’s sight after being blind. Kiriana Thackeray knows the feeling.

A young mother who went blind suddenly when her baby was just seven months old has had her sight restored by a Wellington surgeon in an operation believed to be a New Zealand first.

She had not seen stars in the sky since she was 17. And being reunited with her daughter, Te Amorangi, was “like seeing her for the first time.”

(Continue reading Dominion Post story in Stuff.co.nz)

 

Scientists Develop Super-Bee to Fight the Mite

honey bee photo by John Stone, eyeclectic.net

honey-bee-eye.jpgIn an effort to stem a massive bee die-off, government scientists have developed honey bees with a genetic ability to fight back aggressively against Varroa mites which have decimated bee hives since 2004, killing one million colonies in North America in 2007 alone.

U.S. Department of Agriculture researchers have uncovered the genetic trait that allows honey bees to more easily find the parasitic mites and literally toss them out of the hive. Normally, the colony would eventually be killed off if the mite infestation were left alone.

Scientists Develop Super-Bee to Fight the Mite

honey bee photo by John Stone, eyeclectic.net

honey-bee-eye.jpgIn an effort to stem a massive bee die-off, government scientists have developed honey bees with a genetic ability to fight back aggressively against Varroa mites which have decimated bee hives since 2004, killing one million colonies in North America in 2007 alone.

U.S. Department of Agriculture researchers have uncovered the genetic trait that allows honey bees to more easily find the parasitic mites and literally toss them out of the hive. Normally, the colony would eventually be killed off if the mite infestation were left alone.

Japan Pledges $5 Billion to Rebuild Afghanistan

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obama-japan-mtng.jpgJapan pledged this week to provide $5 billion in aid to Afghanistan over the next five years to and to speed the delivery of $1 billion for economic assistance to Pakistan pledged in April.

The $5 billion will cover reconstruction programs such as support to Afghan police forces, vocational training for former Taliban soldiers, and agriculture and rural development.

Google Offering Free WiFi at 47 Airports This Holiday Season

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hawaiian-airlines-plane.jpgWhen you’re traveling this holiday season, you can enjoy free WiFi at 47 participating airports and on every Virgin America flight now through January 15, 2010.

Thanks to Google and its wireless partners, loggin-in during holiday travel will be free at airports around the country including Las Vegas, Houston, Boston, Baltimore, Burbank, Houston, Indianapolis, Seattle, Miami, Ft. Lauderdale, Orlando, St. Louis and Charlotte. Additionally, as a result of this project, Burbank and Seattle airports will begin offering airport-wide free WiFi indefinitely.

Over 100 million people will pass through the participating airports between now and January 15, 2010. See the full list of airports at FreeHolidayWifi.com.

Mom Organizes to Save Trail from Development

struble trail

struble_trail.jpgA trail alongside Marsh Creek State Park enjoyed by Chester County neighbors for 30 years was closed off when a developer bought the ecologically-sensitive property, until a local mom organized 1,800 people to encourage a patchwork of state and local officials from both parties to unite and save it.

By the time the project was finished, $3.125 million had been raised, and politicians from both parties all the way up to the Pennsylvania governor had gotten involved to make it possible to purchase the land and preserve the 2.6 mile paved path. As Sharon O’Shaughnessy, founder of Friends of the Struble Trail, says, “Now wildlife and people will be able to enjoy this area for generations to come, because citizens organized and persuaded officials to work together.”

Mom Organizes to Save Trail from Development

struble trail

struble_trail.jpgA trail alongside Marsh Creek State Park enjoyed by Chester County neighbors for 30 years was closed off when a developer bought the ecologically-sensitive property, until a local mom organized 1,800 people to encourage a patchwork of state and local officials from both parties to unite and save it.

By the time the project was finished, $3.125 million had been raised, and politicians from both parties all the way up to the Pennsylvania governor had gotten involved to make it possible to purchase the land and preserve the 2.6 mile paved path. As Sharon O’Shaughnessy, founder of Friends of the Struble Trail, says, “Now wildlife and people will be able to enjoy this area for generations to come, because citizens organized and persuaded officials to work together.”

Stopping the Holiday Drama In Your Family

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christmas-home-milw.jpgThe holidays often elicit so many mixed emotions. Along with the joy, comes dread, anxiety and drama bubbling to the surface.

Why do relationship issues always surface during the holidays?

There’s the ex-spouses and blended families. There’s learning to manage the overbearing mother-in-law. There’s conflict going on between parents and their kids. There’s the relative who drinks too much.



And what should you do if you decide you aren’t going to buy presents this year? Will your announcement cause a big disappointment? What if you want to let someone else cook, or you decide you can’t make the long trip that has become a tradition? Is that going to make someone blow up? What should you do? Be true to yourself or just keep the peace?

If you need help with any of these challenges, pull up a seat, grab a cup of cocoa, and join my friend Marlene Chism for a free tele-seminar next week that will help you cope.

Facebook Alibi Gets Teen Out of Jail

facebook profile page

facebook-profile-page.jpgAt the time the armed robbery in Brooklyn happened, Rodney Bradford was 13 miles away at his father’s apartment in Harlem. Lucky for Rodney, he was also on Facebook. Little did he know that updating his status would help get him out of jail.

If he hadn’t, Bradford, 19, might probably still be locked in a cell at Rikers Island.

That critical piece of evidence, time and date-stamped on Rodney’s page, proved crucial to establishing his alibi and getting the charges dropped.

(Read more at ABC News)

Thanks to Bobbi in Wisc. for the link!

Brown Pelican Soars off US Endangered List

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brown-pelican_gnu-dori.jpgAfter 40 years on the brink of extinction, the brown pelican has fully recovered and is being removed from the list of threatened and endangered species, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service yesterday announced.

“At a time when so many species of wildlife are threatened, we have an opportunity to celebrate an amazing success story,” said Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. “Today is such a day. The brown pelican is back!”
 
Their population decimated by the pesticide DDT, the pelican species was first declared endangered in 1970. Since then, thanks to a ban on chemical and efforts by states, conservation organizations, private citizens and many other partners, the bird is no longer in free fall. There are now more than 650,000 brown pelicans found across Florida and the Gulf and Pacific Coasts, as well as in the Caribbean and Latin America.