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An Idea for Helping Local Elementary Schools

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library-painting.jpgSchools are being forced to slash budgets, lay off teachers, and yet are expected to do more to educate our children. What could we do about it? What can one family possibly do to change any of it?

Today we made a painting and donated it to a local public elementary school. We decided, as a family, to work on the project for the library. I helped draw the design , my wife Sandi and our 7-year old granddaughter CC then put their talents to work. The finished work took about 10 hours. It was done on the best watercolor paper we could find.

Good News is Step Forward for Iranian Women

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flag-of-iran.jpgIranian MPs have approved the first woman minister in the 30-year history of the Islamic republic.

She was one of 18 nominations for President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s new cabinet to be approved. Two other women were among three rejected nominees.

Also, US President Barack Obama has given Iran until later in September to agree to new talks on its nuclear programme, or face tougher sanctions.

Tehran has said it is ready to present a new package of proposals to the international community, although the details have not been published. 

(Continue reading at BBC)

Four-Year-Old Girl Helps Build Water Well for Needy

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lemonade-for-burma.jpgFour-year-old Heather Bailey saw an interview with a grandma and her grandchildren about their difficulties obtaining clean water and decided she wanted to help.

She told her mother she wanted to sponsor a well and her parents promised they would match any money Heather wanted to give.

Initially, the four-year-old thought $25 was enough to build a well. But when she learned it would cost more than $1,000, she said she wanted to build the whole well and began fundraised with a lemonade stand and selling cupcakes and her own artwork.

(Continue reading in the Christian Post)

Thanks to John Sauer, with Water Advocates, for submitting the link! 

Home Birth With Midwife As Safe As Hospital Birth: Study

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baby-sleeping.jpgHaving your baby at home with a registered midwife is just as safe as a conventional hospital birth, a new study says.

In fact, planned home births of this kind may have a lower rate of complications, according to the study published in the Sept. 15 issue of Canadian Medical Association Journal.

(Continue reading Health Day News article)

Thanks to Pam Guthrie for submitting the link! 

WWII Escapees Retrace Childhood Train Rescue

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70 years ago as troops from Nazi Germany marched into Czechoslovakia, the British diplomat Sir Nicholas Winton transported 669 Jewish children aboard eight trains to England rescuing them from almost certain death.

This week some of the people whose lives he saved are embarking on a journey of remembrance between Prague and London, retracing their original route to safety aboard a special steam train to celebrate Sir Nicholas’s 100th birthday.

Known as Winton’s children, “20 individuals aboard the train — along with children and grandchildren of their own —  owe their existence to the man who, at age 100, will once again stand on the platform at Liverpool Street to welcome them.”  (Read more w/ video and photos at BBC News)

One of the children Winton saved is the veteran CBC News Anchor Joe Schlesinger, with whom I worked in my own TV news career in Washington, DC. Joe tells his story (similar to so many of the other 669 who never saw their parents agina) as he travels with Winton back to Czechoslovakia for a special audience with Queen Elizabeth. Watch his report on YouTube.

North Korea Thaws Image with Series of Goodwill Gestures

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kim_jong_il_2009.jpgIn another sign of North Korea striving to thaw its cold war image, regular traffic over the border between North and South Korea will be restored this week to allow the flow of goods from a joint industrial park that had been isolated since December.

After its provocation earlier this year launching nuclear and missile tests, North Korea recently undertook a series of goodwill gestures toward its neighbor on the pennisula, and toward the West.

The AP summarizes: “In August, the Pyongyang government freed two American journalists and a South Korean worker held for months in detention and set a date for the reunion of families separated during the Korean War. They also sent an official delegation to Seoul to mourn the death of former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung,” a partner for North Korea’s Kim Jong Il during the 2000 Korean summit.

Also, AP reported yesterday, “The two sides agreed Friday to hold a new round of family reunions in late September. On Saturday, North Korea released four South Korean fishermen seized in late July after their boat strayed into northern waters.”

(Read more about the border crossing in SF Gate)

Prayers, Hymn Helped Man Survive on Ice Floe After Boat Sank

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yellow-sun-bright.jpgA 66-year-old fisherman who survived two nights in frigid temperatures on a pan of ice off northern Newfoundland said he repeatedly sang a church hymn, while hoping crews would find him.

“That gave me strength,” said Rex Saunders, who was found on Wednesday morning on an ice pan near where his small boat had sunk. “I wore [it] right out,” he said with a chuckle.

(Continue reading w/ photo at CBC)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star

 

Pending US Home Sales on Record Roll; Manufacturing Up 4%

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sold_sign.jpgLots of good news on the economy this week: Contracts on home sales have risen for the sixth straight month. NPR reports, “The pace is 12% above this time last year. If those sales generate additional spending on furniture, paint, appliances and other home-related goods, then the ripple effects could spread.”

Also this morning, an index of the manufacturing sector’s health rose to 52.9% in August from 48.9% in July. “The year-and-a-half decline in manufacturing output has come to an end, as 11 of 18 manufacturing industries are reporting growth when comparing August to July,” said the survey’s committee.

(Read more at NPR)

U.S. Sees a Profit as Banks Repay Bailout Money

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money.gifTaxpayers have begun seeing profits from roughly $240 billion in TARP aid that many critics thought might never be seen again.

The profits, collected from eight of the biggest banks that have fully repaid their obligations to the government, come to about $4 billion, or the equivalent of about 15 percent interest annually.

(Continue reading in the New York Times)

Good News for California Steelhead

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salmon-run-dam.jpgBeleaguered Southern California Steelhead may not know it, but their future just brightened – considerably. California Trout and the United Water Conservation District have reached an historic agreement that will protect the endangered salmonid by providing vital fish passage so that steelhead can access crucial spawning waters in the Santa Clara watersheds.

CalTrout governors and staff are hopeful that this agreement will lead to Southern California Steelhead recovery throughout its historic range.

(San Diego Fishing Examiner)

Photo from www.FreeOurRivers.com

Passenger Controls Runaway Bus

Photo by Sun Star

sunflower.jpgA passenger steered a bus to safety after the driver collapsed at the wheel in Manchester city center.

Fitness instructor Alex Jenkins managed to move Arriva’s 263 service from the path of pedestrians when he realized something was wrong.

(Continue reading w/ photo at BBC)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star 

Youngest to Sail Around the World Arrives Home (Video)

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youngest-sailor-round-world.jpg 17 year old Mike Perham was greeted to a hero’s welcome when he arrived in Portsmouth, England after a nine month trip around the world.

He very much missed getting a hug every now and then…

Watch the video below, or at Clip Syndicate

Alternative Energy Companies Want to Buy Closed Ford Plant

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solar-roof-orange-cty-conv-ctr.jpgAP reports: “Two alternative energy companies planning to buy a closed Ford Motor Company factory near Detroit want to convert it into the country’s largest renewable energy park, with at least 2,800 workers building storage batteries, solar panels, and possibly wind turbines.

Xtreme and Clairvoyant officials said they like the Wixom factory because it has a rail line, a big electricity grid, large buildings, and is close to a major interstate, making it easier to bring in supplies and ship out products.”

(Continue reading AP story)

Companies Finally Reporting Better Economic News

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business-graphic-up.gifFor many months, almost all of the positive signs about the economy were from high-level, macro indicators like unemployment claims and broad manufacturing indexes. Individual companies, which remained mum about any signs of recovery, until this week, began to talk about the good news, finally providing the real world data that had been conspicuously missing regarding an improved economy.

The tidbits of good news this week come from companies across a wide range of industries including Intel in technology, Tiffany’s in retailing, Emerson in the industrial world, and an auto insurance-related company.

(Continue reading in Morning Star)

FTC Bans Most Robo-Calls

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phone-keypad.jpgPesky pre-recorded “robo-calls” were banned by the Federal Trade Commission on Thursday.

Those unwanted prerecorded commercial calls soliciting services like car warranties will be a thing of the past unless telemarketers have written permission from consumers that they want to receive these calls. Beginning Tuesday, Sept. 1, violators will face penalties up to $16,000 per call.

A few exceptions will be allowed, such as for charities, political candidates, phone companies and surveys.

Consumers who receive an unauthorized call starting Tuesday can file complaints with the commission online at www.ftc.gov or by calling (877) FTC-HELP.

(Read more at L.A. Times)

Stuttering Kids Savor a Camp that Makes them Stars

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stuttering-camp.jpgCamp Our Time focuses on the performing arts. Campers aged 8 to 19, are boys and girls, racially and socially diverse, with two common bonds: an unshakable stuttering problem and the courage to go on stage anyway.

Most of the kids are the only stutterers at their schools and vulnerable to teasing. At the non-profit lakeside camp in the Catskill Mountains, where even the founder/director is a stutterer, acceptance is the watchword as the campers plunged daily into workshops and rehearsals for the self-written songs, rap routines and skits they’d perform at a gala week-ending show.

“I feel free here [at Camp Our Time]. At school it feels like a prison, But here I feel like I can achieve anything.”

(Continue reading in the Times Herald-Record)

Seniors and Toddlers Enjoy Shared Day Care Center

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onegeneration-daycare.jpgAn intergenerational daycare service in California provides child care and senior care in a shared environment.

ONEgeneration Daycare
helps seniors to continue living at home with their loved ones by providing a safe, supervised haven during the day. They, in turn, help care for and feed the young children, ranging in age from 6 weeks to 6 years.

The New York Times created a slide show featuring the elders and children in joyous and touching moments.

(Thanks to Elvin A., a new GNN subscriber, for submitting the link!)

Elephant Whisperer Saves the Baghdad Zoo in Wartime

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elephant-whisperer.jpgIn 2003 while the US armed forces were invading the Iraqi capital, a Zululand conservationist undertook a wartime rescue of the Baghdad Zoo and all its animals.

In his book, Babylon’s Ark: The Incredible Wartime Rescue of the Baghdad Zoo, Lawrence Anthony describes how he, “along with the zoo’s former deputy director and several brave workers, risked daily danger to save the bears, lions, tigers, monkeys and birds.” -Publisher’s Weekly

“It was crazy, but I think it was important. It’s not important that you go and save some lions and some tigers in the greater scheme of biodiversity, but what it showed is that these animals need to be treated properly and I hope it set some sort of example.”

The series of events resulted in a proposed resolution that has been presented to the United Nations. The “Wildlife in War Zones Resolution” dictates that an invading army becomes responsible for any enclosed wildlife; all zoos, nature reserves and veterinary facilities must be accorded the same status as hospitals and schools during war. Under the resolution, the wilful destruction of natural habitats and the non-abidance of these tenements can be considered war crimes.

(Read more in NY Times)

Besides the amazing story of the Baghdad Zoo, Anthony also authored the book, The Elephant Whisperer. about rescuing a herd of dangerous ‘rogue’ elephants from execution, and his determination to calm their demeanor on his wildlife reserve after their matriarch and her baby were shot.

For more on Lawrence Anthony, visit www.lawrenceanthony.co.za

A Girl’s Journey from Dollar-a-day Malawi to Elite US Prep School

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malawi-girl-scholarship-wh.jpgIn an unlikely journey that most girls in Malawi can only dream of, a 16-year-old from a rural village spent the summer attending Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire.

She’s one of 17 girls who go to secondary school in Malawi thanks to scholarships from Advancing Girls’ Education in Africa (AGE), a small nonprofit organization founded four years ago with donations from Christian Science Monitor readers.

She wants to use her time at Exeter in pursuit of her goal: helping to ease the shortage of doctors in Malawi by becoming one.

(Continue reading in the CS Monitor)