China’s central government will subsidize purchases of clean-energy vehicles for public fleets in 13 cities to help the automobile industry develop green technology. The trial program will promote the use of electric, hybrid and fuel-cell vehicles by public transport operators, taxi firms and postal and sanitary services in cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, Xinhua quoted a finance ministry statement as saying late on Monday. (Full report at Reuters)
China to Subsidize Purchases of Clean-energy Cars for Cities
Colorado Breaks U.S. Milestone In Race with Obama-like Leadership
Perhaps no leader in American life feels the historical significance of Barack Obama’s inauguration and his political imperatives more than Terrance Carroll, who two weeks ago became the first African-American elected Speaker of the House in Colorado.
The historic vote of confidence by his colleagues for 39-year-old Carroll makes Colorado the first state in the union where both legislative leaders are African-American, following the election last year of Sen. Peter Groff as the first African-American to lead the senate. The Colorado legislature has only two black members. And now they are the two most powerful members of the 100-person body.
“I was awestruck,” Rep. Carroll told the Good News Network from his office last Tuesday, several hours after President Obama took the oath of office. “Not only by the speech, but to see people shoulder to shoulder so energized and enthused by Barack Obama and by his message of hope and renewal.”
Terrance Carroll grew up in a housing project in D.C.. He knows what a mother’s sacrifice can do to propel a minority kid all the way to the statehouse in Colorado, governing a population that is made up of only 4% African-Americans.
Saving Soles Through Foot Clinic for Homeless (Video)
Every Monday afternoon, Rev. Bob Book transforms his Atlanta church into a spa for the homeless. He and volunteers wash and scrub the feet of the city’s homeless, mirroring the service of Jesus Christ while encouraging good health and providing some relaxation time.
Millionaire Leaves Business to Create Sanctuary for Doomed Cats (Video)
One man has made it his mission to create a Shangri-La for unwanted and troubled cats. As Richard Schlesinger reports, sometimes animals with the worst of problems can bring out the best in people. And, following your passion can lead to 550 animal adoptions, 150 of those, for special needs cats.
Husband’s Kiss Woke ‘Sleeping Beauty Wife’ in Coma
After two weeks sitting by his wife’s bedside hoping she would wake from a coma, Andrew Ray was at his wits’ end. Doctors had told him Emma could become a real-life sleeping beauty when she failed to regain consciousness after a heart attack.
The distraught father of two played her tapes of their baby son crying and their daughter shouting ‘wake up Mummy!’.
Finally, in desperation, he leant over her hospital bed and pleaded: ‘Emma, if you can hear me, please just give me a kiss.’ (UK Daily Mail)
On Australia Day, Cities Celebrate Going Green
For some of Australia’s best-known cities, companies and organizations, this year’s Australia Day will be celebrated, not only with barbecues or beach parties, but also by going ‘green.’
The Australian cities of Sydney and Brisbane last week stepped up their efforts in lowering carbon emissions by joining the United Nations’ Climate Neutral Network (CN Net) , led by the UN Environment Program, which seeks to spur global action to achieve climate neutrality.
With its world-famous Opera House, the “Coathanger” Bridge and the Harbour as its backdrop, Sydney is one of the world’s most spectacular cities. In 2007, Sydney, the largest in the country, became Australia’s first carbon neutral local government, implementing such initiatives as energy-efficient street lighting and creating a network of bicycle paths.
Is Meditation a Superpower?
Discover the superpower that success coach John Assaraf, author of the recent best seller, The Answer, says every person desires: The Greatest Superpower in the World.
If you haven’t heard of John Assaraf, he is a famous personal development and business coach featured in the movie, “The Secret.”
This video is the first in a whole series of FREE videos that will help you to be ALL YOU CAN BE in 2009. Today is the first day of the group’s debut, called The Masters Gathering. Sign up with your name and email address to receive notices when the rest of the videos, called transformative conversations, are released. The Masters Gathering hopes to help everyone to reach their dreams through ongoing personal help and interactive discussion (begins on the page after you sign up)… This is an invitation to “take your place among the masters”.
WARNING: The opening titles of this video may be annoying or, even, cheesy, but don’t let that, or the brief introduction by someone named Jamie, turn you around. The actual content by Mr. Asarraf is worth checking out!
Teen Pulls Toddler from Burning Home
The Houston fire department said they plan to nominate the entire Preciado family for a neighborhood hero award after they charged into a burning building to save a toddler trapped by flames. For putting another’s safety ahead of their own, the family is being hailed as heroes, especially the 16 year-old boy who kicked in the window and found the 1 year-old. (KHOU.com has video, story and photos)
Satellite Launched to Provide Pictures of Greenhouse Gases
Efforts to tackle global warming received a boost today with the successful launch of a Japanese satellite, the first to monitor greenhouse gases from space.
The Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite “IBUKI” (or “GOSAT” in its English-language acronym) is the first satellite to observe greenhouse gases and monitor changes in the effects they cause. It was launched from the island of Tanegashima, in southern Japan, by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), a key partner in addressing disaster risk reduction and environmental issues for the United Nations’ Economic Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP).
Mexico City to Turn Green with New Recycling Plan
A newly formed Waste Commission in Mexico City is working to build four state-of-the-art processing centers in the next four years to recycle, compost or burn for energy 85 percent of Mexico City’s trash – compared with about six percent recycled today. If it works, it would put this sprawling, polluted metropolis in a league with San Francisco, The Netherlands and other top recyclers, and first among developing cities, where the recycling rates mostly hover around 10 percent. (Full story from Associated Press)
Self-Repairing Paint for Cars
Scratches in a car’s finish are inevitable, no matter how one tries to be careful. That’s why car lovers will clamor for this new innovation by Dutch scientists at TNO Research.
Hudson River Pilot Gets Hero’s Welcome in Hometown (Video)
The pilot who safely landed a US Airways jetliner in the Hudson River was given a hero’s homecoming in the San Francisco suburb he calls home. He made a short statement saying, “We were simply doing what we were trained to do.” (Video may take a moment to load)
DVD Teaches Autistic Children About Smiles
A new DVD teaches autistic children how to recognize emotions like happiness, anger and sadness through the exploits of vehicles including a train, a ferry, and a cable car. It is the brainchild of Simon Baron-Cohen, director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University.
About a decade ago, Baron-Cohen suggested that autism — which is much less likely to afflict girls — might be an extreme version of the typical male brain. Men tend to understand the world via patterns and structure, whereas women are more inclined to understand emotions and sympathize with others.
Autism, Baron-Cohen believes, is a condition where people perceive systems and patterns while remaining almost oblivious to other people and their feelings.
To help autistic children understand emotions, Baron-Cohen and his team use eight track-based vehicles in their DVD. The vehicles have human faces grafted onto them, making focusing on human features unavoidable.
79-Year-Old Finally Gets Diploma (Video)
If you have any doubt you can achieve anything you set your mind to, ask 79-year-old Randy Wilt about his latest achievement. Wilt passed the high school equivalency test after 6 years of studying and a multitude of failures. Steve Hartman has the inspiring story of a man who hates the word, “can’t”.
And, he didn’t stop there. He is studying for his first college course.
More than 300,000 Children’s Books Reach Children in Need
The eBay Foundation and First Book, a nonprofit providing new books to children in need, are holding reading parties in three cities to celebrate the distribution of more than 300,000 children’s books nationwide.
Beginning on Monday, employees in eBay offices in Austin, Omaha and Los Angeles, will join local children to read with them and surprise them with their brand new books. Each site will receive 500 new books for the first and second-graders they serve, made possible as part of a grant of more than $300,000 from eBay Foundation.
Placing books into the hands of children who have none has been proven to produce tangible, measurable results in the fight against illiteracy. Within months of receiving their first books, kid’s interest in reading nearly triples, according to Louis Harris Impact Assessments, from 1999 and 2003.
San Francisco Launches Green Rental Car Incentive Program
San Francisco International Airport (SFO) is launching the nation’s first Green Rental Car program that rewards customers for renting “green” alternative-fueled vehicles and rental car companies for increasing rentals of high mileage and alternative-fuel vehicles. The innovative incentive program is expected to eliminate more than 4,000 tons of CO2 emissions each year.
House Committee Approves $20B for Renewables
The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee on Thursday approved the $20 billion in energy tax credits and incentives proposed in the Obama administration’s economic stimulus package.
A party-line vote of 24 to 13 approved the tax cuts for alternative energy including a multiyear extension of the production tax credit for wind, geothermal, hydro power and bioenergy. (SustainableBusiness.com News)
Students Hitch Ride on Branson’s Jet to See Obama
Two poor college students in Amsterdam asked Virgin entrepreneur Richard Branson for a ride to Washington to see Obama’s innauguration. The billionaire immediately answered, “Yes,” and the pair were soon on their way, sitting in the private jet of Sir Richard Branson. (Reuters News via Yahoo)
Worldwide Hopes Soar After Obama Inauguration
The arrival of a new American president triggered joy and jubilation Tuesday in a world made weary by warfare, recession and fear.
From Kenya and Indonesia, where Barack Obama has family ties, to Asia, Europe, Africa and Latin America, Obama’s inauguration sparked a volcanic explosion of hope for better days ahead.
The ascendance of the first African-American to the presidency of the United States was heralded as marking a new era of tolerance and possibility.
From Guyana to Ireland to Brazil, read about – and see photos – of all the repercussions around the world at AP)
In other news, Antigua plans to give the new US President its ‘top’ honour on his birthday: renaming its tallest peak Mount Obama. Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer says the Caribbean nation will rename Boggy Peak, as it is currently known, on 4 August to mark President Barack Obama’s 48th birthday. (NPR has the story)
IBM Sparks Rally With Encouraging 2009 Forecast
Tech giant IBM gave Wall St. some much-needed good news on Wednesday, reporting profit gains for its fourth quarter and 2008 overall, and projecting a strong financial performance in 2009 as well. (eCommerceTimes.com)











