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Artist Draws Manhattan From Memory

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wiltshire-drawing-city.jpgStephen Wiltshire is an autistic artist with an amazing ability to create a detailed architectural drawing of an entire city after a single helicopter ride. Now, for the first time, the Londoner will sketch a 20-foot panorama of the Manhattan skyline, all from memory.

He is also working on his New York accent.
Watch the Reuters video below…

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Yanks Make Difference by Going Green for World Series

photo by "the silent wind of doom"

yankee_stadium_ii-photo-by-the-silent-wind_of-doom.jpgDuring the 2009 World Series, which kicks off on Wednesday night in New York, a Green Team will be out amongst the fans in attendance, carrying bags to encourage recycling. In-stadium announcements and Ribbon Board messages will also encourage fans to minimize waste.

Eco-friendly practice is hardly a new concept to the Yankees, however.

The Yankees have prioritized the environmental impact of their new stadium by ensuring the efficiency of equipment and focusing on energy reduction. Instead of petroleum-based plastics, beverage cups are made of biodegradable material. Waste generation is tackled through composting and recycling, resulting in fewer trash pickups and trash trucks on the road.

(Continue reading at MLB.com)

Photo by: the silent wind of doom, on Wikipedia 

Transforming Abandoned Concrete Bunkers Into Eco Hostels

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concrete-mushrooms-hostel.jpgThere are reportedly thousands of abandoned concrete bunkers scattered throughout Albania, remnants of a Communist dictator’s paranoia. Now graduate students have developed a plan called Concrete Mushrooms that would ‘invert the meaning’ of these structures by turning them into an economic asset — a network of habitable eco-hostels, cafés, gift shops and more.

(More photos and continue reading at Inhabitat.com)

Stars Walk the Green Carpet for Eco Awards

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green-carpet-08-ema-awards.jpg Stars like Harrison Ford, Calista Flockhart and Daryl Hannah, along with business moguls like Richard Branson, walk a green carpet before being honored at the 2009 Environmental Media Association Awards for their environmental awareness and conservation efforts.

Watch the Reuters Video below, or read another recent news story about the group, founded by Norman Lear … 

Clean Smells Promote Moral Behavior, Study Suggests

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cleaning-window-byu-study.jpgPeople are unconsciously fairer and more generous when they are in clean-smelling environments, according to a soon-to-be published study led by a Brigham Young University professor.

The research found a dramatic improvement in ethical behavior with just a few spritzes of citrus-scented Windex.

Katie Liljenquist (right), assistant professor of organizational leadership at BYU’s Marriott School of Management, is the lead author on the forthcoming article in Psychological Science.

Liljenquist and her co-authors see implications for workplaces, retail stores and other organizations that have relied on traditional surveillance and security measures to enforce rules.

“Companies often employ heavy-handed interventions to regulate conduct, but they can be costly or oppressive,” said Liljenquist, whose office smells quite average. “This is a very simple, unobtrusive way to promote ethical behavior.”

Perhaps the findings could be applied at home, too, Liljenquist said with a smile. “Could be that getting our kids to clean up their rooms might help them clean up their acts, too.”

The study titled “The Smell of Virtue” was unusually simple and conclusive. Participants engaged in several tasks, the only difference being that some worked in unscented rooms, while others worked in rooms freshly spritzed with Windex.

The first experiment evaluated fairness. As a test of whether clean scents would enhance reciprocity, participants played a classic “trust game.” Subjects received $12 of real money (allegedly sent by an anonymous partner in another room). They had to decide how much of it to either keep or return to their partners who had trusted them to divide it fairly. Subjects in clean-scented rooms were less likely to exploit the trust of their partners, returning a significantly higher share of the money.

  • The average amount of cash given back by the people in the “normal” room was $2.81. But the people in the clean-scented room gave back an average of $5.33.

The second experiment evaluated whether clean scents would encourage charitable behavior. Subjects indicated their interest in volunteering with a campus organization for a Habitat for Humanity service project and their interest in donating funds to the cause.

  • Participants surveyed in a Windex-ed room were significantly more interested in volunteering (4.21 on a 7-point scale) than those in a normal room (3.29).
  • 22 percent of Windex-ed room participants said they’d like to donate money, compared to only 6 percent of those in a normal room.

Follow-up questions confirmed that participants didn’t notice the scent in the room and that their mood at the time of the experiment didn’t affect the outcomes.

The study’s co-authors are Chen-Bo Zhong of the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management and Adam Galinsky of the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.

“Basically, our study shows that morality and cleanliness can go hand-in-hand,” said Galinsky. “Researchers have known for years that scents play an active role in reviving positive or negative experiences. Now, our research can offer more insight into the links between people’s charitable actions and their surroundings.”

While this study examined the influence of the physical environment on morality, Zhong and Liljenquist previously published work that demonstrated an intimate link between morality and physical cleanliness. Their 2006 paper in Science reported that transgressions activated a desire to be physically cleansed.

Liljenquist is now researching how perceptions of cleanliness shape our impressions of people and organizations. “The data tell a compelling story about how much we rely upon cleanliness cues to make a wide range of judgments about others,” she said. (BYU News Story, via Science Daily )

Plug-in Automaker Fisker to Buy Idled GM Plant

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karma-car.jpg Upstart carmaker Fisker Automotive on Tuesday said it will purchase a used General Motors auto plant in Wilmington, Del., to begin producing a plug-in hybrid sedan.

Starting in late 2012, the facility will be used to manufacture a plug-in hybrid that the company expects will cost almost $40,000 after federal tax credits. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and Delaware Gov. Jack Markell were scheduled to speak at an announcement ceremony this morning.

(Continue reading the Green Tech blog at CNet)

Image, right,  shows Fisker sports car, the Karma 

Cosby Receives Comedy Award at Star-Studded Kennedy Center

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cosby-twain-prize-w-wife.jpg Bill Cosby received the 12th Mark Twain Prize for American Humor last night at the Kennedy Center. On hand to honor him were comedians like Jerry Seinfeld, Chris Rock, and Carl Reiner, along with musicians like Willie Nelson and Wyton Marsalis, playing jazz in a tribute to Cosby’s love of the music. Dick Gregory described him as the Jackie Robinson of television and comedy. Cosby premiered in the mid-60’s as a tennis playing agent “wearing white sneakers” on “I Spy”.

The crowd roared with laughter during old Cosby clips — from his appearances on old talk shows like the Jack Parr Show and Tonight Show talking about what it’s like to go to the dentist, to his TV role as Cliff Huxtable on the Cosby Show. 

Seinfeld said there was no one else who influenced him like Cosby, calling him the greatest American comedian of all time. He said he owned every Cosby record and still listens to them.

The program, taped by WETA in Washington, D.C. as Bill Cosby: The Mark Twain Prize, will air on PBS stations nationwide November 4, 2009 (check local listings).

Watch some red carpet moments below… and read/watch more at the Washington Post. ..

 

 

20 Years of Greening Hollywood, Thanks to Lear

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norman_lear-center.jpg20 years ago, television producer Norman Lear helped to launch the Environmental Media Association to spread the word in Hollywood among writers, directors and actors about going green.

Honored by the White House, and featured in an AP story yesterday, the group has “met with hundreds of Hollywood writers, directors and producers, helping them incorporate green themes into their films and TV shows and encouraging them to make those productions more environmentally friendly.

(Read more from AP at WTOP)

Environment-Friendly Universal Phone Charger Approved

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phone-charger.jpgThe International Telecommunication Union has given its stamp of approval to a new energy-efficient universal phone charger that will be compatible with all future phones made by every mobile phone manufacturer, regardless of make and model.

The new Universal Charging Solution (UCS) uses a Micro-USB plug that will fit all future phones regardless of the make and model (some phones already use this standard). The standardization, announced last week, will dramatically cut the number of chargers produced each year — 51,000 tons annually are mostly discarded into landfills. Chargers will become an option when buying a phone rather than a necessity, cutting down on packaging size and shipping weights, and carbon emmisions in the process.

Cancer Survivor, 9, Funds Support Dog for 2-Year-old

guide dog file photo

dog-on-white-bkgrd.jpgAfter two years of surgery and chemotherapy for a brain tumor, a nine-year-old girl wanted other kids with cancer to have a gentle companion like her dog, Coco. So she embarked on a fundraising campaign of her own invention to pay for feeding and training companion dogs for kids like her.

Recently she watched as a 2-year-old cancer survivor met for the first time with the gentle black Labrador named Lucky Bug.

A women’s prison within Colorado’s Department of Corrections trained both these animals, once abandoned shelter dogs, to become companion or service dogs for elderly, disabled or seriously ill owners.

(Continue reading the story w/ photo at the Denver Post)

UN Hires Tinker Bell to Raise Environmental Awareness in Children

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tinkerbell.jpgThe United Nations yesterday named the Disney animated character Tinker Bell as an “Honorary Ambassador of Green” to help promote environmental awareness among children.

The announcement came just prior to a screening at UN Headquarters in New York of the world premiere of the Walt Disney animated film, “Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure.”

Protecting the environment is an underlying theme of the Tinker Bell movies.

“We’re delighted Tinker Bell has agreed to be our Honorary Ambassador of Green,” said Kiyo Akasaka, Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information. “This beloved animated character can help us inspire kids and their parents to nurture nature and do what they can to take care of the environment.”

Peacekeepers Help Celebrate UN Day on Organization’s 64th Birthday

UN peacekeepers

un_peacekeepers.jpgPeacekeepers deployed in operations around the world joined in celebrations Saturday marking United Nations Day on the world body’s 64th birthday.

On October 24, 1945, the UN Charter entered into force, an achievement that is commemorated annually to remind the Organization of its commitment to preserving peace, providing security and helping those in need.

Teenage Girl Hailed for Helping Fallen Runner

Photo by Sun Star

runner-silouette-uphill.jpg Dominique Lincoln was running up a hill during a cross-country race when the ground beneath her seemed to vanish.

Dominique didn’t know it then, but that runner, Helena Page, was disqualified because she stayed with her until help arrived.

“I’m happy that somebody stopped running for me … I don’t know what would have happened if she wasn’t there.”

(Continue reading in Philadelphia Inquirer)

Rich Germans Demand Higher Taxes

Photo by Sun Star

sunflower.jpgA group of rich Germans has launched a petition calling for the government to make wealthy people pay higher taxes.

The group say they have more money than they need, and the extra revenue could fund economic and social programmes to aid Germany’s economic recovery.

Germany could raise 100 billion euros if the richest people paid a 5% wealth tax for two years, they say.

(Continue reading in the BBC)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

Congress Approves Bill Helping Overseas Voters

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vote-button-lrg.jpgFor decades, Election Day has been just out of reach for many American troops and civilians abroad. After struggling to get the paperwork needed to register, they often receive their ballots too late to return them by the deadline.

On Thursday, however, federal lawmakers made it easier for American citizens to cast ballots overseas. By a 68-to-29 vote in the Senate, Congress gave final approval to legislation requiring all states to provide overseas voters with the new option of getting ballots electronically and no later than 45 days before the election. This is so voters have adequate time to complete and mail them back to the United States.

(Continue reading in the New York Times, subscription needed)

Four Ways to Get Happy Now

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

smile-woman.jpgA 20/20 news special recently confirmed that we have a large measure of control over our own levels of happiness — at least 40 percent within our own control, according to researchers interviewed. Only 10 percent is circumstantial and about 40 to 50 percent is genetic. Most interesting is the notion that you can change your brain — and your circumstances — if you are committed to being happy. Here are four ways to get started.

  1. Meditate to change brain patterns
  2. Focus on the positive
  3. Build Rewarding Relationships
  4. Find your flow

Four Ways to Get Happy Now

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

smile-woman.jpgA 20/20 news special recently confirmed that we have a large measure of control over our own levels of happiness — at least 40 percent within our own control, according to researchers interviewed. Only 10 percent is circumstantial and about 40 to 50 percent is genetic. Most interesting is the notion that you can change your brain — and your circumstances — if you are committed to being happy. Here are four ways to get started.

  1. Meditate to change brain patterns
  2. Focus on the positive
  3. Build Rewarding Relationships
  4. Find your flow

Stimulus Package Added Thousands of Teaching, Construction Jobs Says New Data

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obama-w-schoolkids.jpgTeachers, construction workers and public safety officials appear to be the initial winners from the states’ share of the $787 billion federal economic stimulus package, according to the first quarterly reports filed by states to show how many jobs the rescue plan saved or created.

States were required to file the reports to the federal government by Oct. 10, but federal officials won’t release the complete state-by-state information until Oct. 30. Many governors made public their states’ reports this week after forwarding them to Washington, D.C., offering a preliminary glimpse of whether the stimulus has been effective.

“The fact is, it’s working,” asserted Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski (D), who stressed at a news conference that Oregon would be worse off without the $4 billion the state will receive from the package. So far the spending has created more than 8,200 jobs, mostly in education and highway construction, the governor said.

US Proposes Giving Polar Bears Historic Protection

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Polar-bear.jpgThe Interior Department on Thursday proposed designating more than 200,000 square miles of land, sea and ice along the northern coast of Alaska as critical habitat for the shrinking polar bear population.

“The area, the largest single designation of protected habitat for any species, encompasses the entire range of the two polar bear populations that exist on American land and territorial waters,” reports the New York Times today.

Record-Breaking 173 Million People Take Stand With UN Against Poverty

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ban-ki-moon-w-_students.jpgSmashing a Guinness World Record, more than 173 million people around the world joined forces with the United Nations to call on global leaders to stamp out poverty and take action to achieve the Millennium Development Goals by their deadline of 2015.

Over 3,000 events were held in more than 120 countries in the fourth year of the “Stand Up, Take Action, End Poverty Now!” campaign over the weekend. Nearly 60 million more people took part in the festivities this year compared to 2008.

Despite the deadly typhoons which recently slammed into the Philippines, over 35 million people took a stand in that country, while the Irish rock band U2 brought 50,000 concertgoers to their feet during a show in the United States.