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Alpha Achievers Celebrate Decade of Success for Young Black Men

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Alpha Achievers are celebrating 10 years of encouraging academic excellence among ethnic minority male high school students in Howard County, Maryland. The program was started by the historically black fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, whose efforts have led to reductions in school drop out rates and teenage pregnancy among black youth…

The Baltimore Sun reports:
“It took some time to change the mindset that it wasn’t cool to do well in school,” said an assistant principal at Oakland Mills High School. “Now we have men of color striving to get into the Alpha Achievers.”

The school’s 100 Alpha Achievers are bonded by community service, a code of conduct, a consistent grade point average of 3.0 and above, taking honors, Advanced Placement and gifted-and-talented courses, and social events:

The group’s annual calendar — in which members pose in tuxedos — has become a tradition, with proceeds paying for college scholarships, field trips and operating costs. (Baltimore Sun)

US Congress Tackles Earmark Spending

Within hours of being sworn in, the new leadership in the US House of Representatives tackled one of the biggest ethics concerns in Congress, earmarks. The pet projects and tax breaks for favored corporations can no longer be snuck into spending bills without a congressman’s name attached. A good way to set higher standards in government. (MCT News Service)

NYC Subway Hero Pulls Youth Under the Train to Save Their Lives

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A NYC man’s quick-thinking saved a teen and himself as he dove onto the tracks of an oncoming subway train to rescue the boy who’d fallen ill from the platform. Wesley Autrey became America’s most famous hero of 2007, a few days after the year began, by pulling himself and the boy into the center trough which gave them just enough clearance to avoid the train.

(WATCH the Video below…)

SHARE the inspiring hero story…

Dwindling White Congregation Gives Church to Blacks

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A "dying" Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala, which had dwindled to about 40 elderly white people, decided to give their church and everything in it — including the cemetery and the 9-foot-Steinway concert grand piano — to a thriving predominantly black Baptist congregation started in 2003 that had no building to call its own. (Religion News Service) Thanks to SG for the suggestion! (John Malcomson sent another link with a photo of the two pastors! Alabama Baptist)

Firefighters Save Exhausted Horse From Mud Pit

"A frightened horse was comforted by firefighters in Oregon who administered oxygen and used portable lamps to warm the shivering animal as they fashioned a sling and used manpower to pull her from a mudhole." (story includes multiple photos and video: KOMO)

Zoo Animals Enjoy Feast of Christmas Trees

Leftover Christmas trees are fed to elephants, camels, deer, and sheep in a traditional New Year feast at Germany’s Dresden Zoo. This AP photo of a baby elephant eating its Christmas tree is sweet…

Worldwide Air Crashes in 2006 Lowest in 53 Years

Air travel is getting safer as the number of plane crashes worldwide fell to its lowest level in 53 years during 2006. Even while air travel increased by 4 percent over the previous year, 22 fewer commercial flights ended in disaster.

Octogenarian Chorus Rocks the House With Remakes of Classic Rock Tunes

Imagine an elderly choral group of singers aged 73-100.

Now imagine that group belting out songs by the Rolling Stones, The Clash or Talking Heads. Meet The American Young @ Heart Chorus.

It was started in 1982 by seniors in a home for the aged in Northampton, Massachusetts, and included elders who’d lived through both World Wars.

Performing live on stage, their version of Cold Play’s Fix You is extremely touching.

See all their videos at YouTube, and visit their website: The American Young @ Heart Chorus.

 

10 Tons of Fishing Gear Cleaned From Channel Islands Waters

Lost and abandoned underwater fishing gear can be dangerous to wildlife as well as people. Derelict nets in particular can entrap fish, sharks and marine mammals, but also divers. That’s why locals are cheering the new University of California at Davis program that scooped up nearly 10 tons of lost and abandoned fishing gear from the waters around the Channel Islands in their first year of operating. Scuba divers removed hundreds of commercial lobster traps, fishing rods, sport traps, and a huge tangle of fishing net covering 5,000 square feet of sea floor…

14-Year-Old Becomes Youngest to Sail Solo Across the Atlantic

A British 14-year-old has arrived in Antigua to become the youngest person to sail the Atlantic single-handed” after departing Gibralter six weeks ago. (BBC) He’s raising money for charity with his voyage and so far has raised £1,000 for BBC Children In Need and £600 for Royal Yachting Association Sailability. Read entries from his journal at the Daily Mail (thanks to William Robertson for this link) and check out Mike’s Web site here. Congrats!

Scientists Find Way to Slash Cost of Drugs

Calling for ‘ethical pharmaceuticals,’ two professors have "devised a way to invent new medicines and get them to market at a fraction of the cost charged by big drug companies," enabling use in poor countries to cure infectious diseases and potentially slashing government expenditures on medicine. By altering the molecular structure of an existing, expensive drug they turn it technically into a new medicine, not under patent control, that can be made and sold cheaply. (Guardian)

Hero Saves Teen who Fell on NYC Subway Tracks with Oncoming Train

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nyc subway trainWow! Read this story about a NYC man whose quick-thinking saved them both as he dove down onto subway tracks to rescue a teen who’d fallen ill and landed on the tracks in the line of an oncoming train. (AP via MSNBC)

States Take the Lead on Health Care Reform

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Massachusetts has accomplished the improbable: It got Democrats and Republicans to agree on how to provide nearly every resident with health insurance. And it did so without boosting taxes or pushing aside private health plans. Other states are trying to close the gap too. Vermont’s Republican Gov. Jim Douglas and the Democratic majority in the Legislature took similar action.

Farm Helps Homeless Horses

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In the rolling hills of California lies a horse sanctuary where "lucky animals are given a second chance at life." Jennifer Johns has rescued more than 1,200 horses from Canada ranches since 1999 and placed them into loving homes, including many foals that otherwise might have been sold for horse meat. (Santa Maria Times) …The farm still has horses from Alberta for adoption and welcomes volunteers. Here is their Web site with photos.

Teen Drug Use Declines by 23 Percent in Five Years

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Reality must be improving for young people across the U.S. Teen drug use has declined by 23 percent since 2001, with reductions in the use of nearly every drug, including alcohol and cigarettes, according to the University of Michigan’s 2006 Monitoring the Future study, released in December. This translates into approximately 840,000 fewer youth using illicit drugs in 2006 than in 2001.

The anonymous surveys were obtained from almost 50,000 public and private school students in eighth, 10th and 12th grades. In addition to fewer kids using illicit drugs comes the good news that tobacco usage is down 50 percent over the previous 10 years. Such declines are related, according to the NIH director of drug abuse, because smoking is the real “gateway drug.”

The study also shows that while marijuana continues to be the most commonly used illicit drug among teens, current use of marijuana has dropped by 25 percent over the past five years. And for the single year from 2005 to 2006, current marijuana use dropped by 7 percent among all three grades combined.

Teen use of amphetamines, particularly methamphetamine, dropped significantly. The rates for meth use, for all three grades, is either the lowest or among the lowest recorded since the question was first included in the MTF survey. Past-month use of methamphetamine among youth plummeted by 50 percent since 2001, with less than 1 percent (.7 percent) of students using meth at least once in the last 30 days before the interview.

“There has been a sea change among American teens,” said John P. Walters, director of National Drug Control Policy. “They are getting the message that dangerous drugs damage their lives and limit their futures. We know that if people don’t start using drugs during their teen years, they are very unlikely to go on to develop drug problems later in life. That’s why this sharp decline in teen drug use is such important news: It means that there will be less addiction, less suffering, less crime, lower health costs, and higher achievement for this upcoming generation of Americans.”

Monitoring the Future also noted reductions in the following drug categories between 2001 and 2006, including:

  • Marijuana use is down in all categories for all grades combined. Lifetime, past year, and past 30 day use decreased 18 percent, 20 percent, and 25 percent (from 35% to 29%; 26% to 22%; and 17% to 13%, respectively)
  • Use of cigarettes is down since 2001 in all four use categories (lifetime, past month, daily, and more than one-half pack per day) in all three grades
  • Youth use of alcohol was also down across the board — in all five use categories (lifetime, past year, past month, daily, and more than five drinks in a row in the last two weeks) and in all three grades over five years
  • The use of steroids was down 40.2 percent, 36.8 percent, and 20.6 percent for lifetime, past year, and past month use, respectively for all three grades combined
  • Declines in the hallucinogens LSD and Ecstasy since 2001 have been dramatic, declining by as much as 50 percent to two-thirds.

The MTF study is the largest and most significant survey of youth drug use and measures drug, alcohol, and cigarette use and related attitudes among eighth-, 10th-, and 12th-grade students nationwide. Study participants report their drug use behaviors across three time periods: lifetime, past year, and past month. This year, 48,460 students from 410 public and private schools participated in the survey. The survey is funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), a component of HHS’s National Institutes of Health, and conducted since its inception by the University of Michigan. Information from this study helps the nation to identify potential drug problem areas and ensure that resources are targeted to areas of greatest need.

The complete MTF study results can be viewed at monitoringthefuture.org.

Happy New Year! Top 10 Good News of 2006

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If you missed our Top Ten Good News of the Year, posted last week, you might want to take a look back at some of the highlights of 2006…
1) Bold Steps Reduce Global Warming
2) Billionaire Warren Buffett Leads New Wave of Generosity
3) Environmentalists Heartened by Recovery of Many Endangered
… Click below to read (4–10)….
Editor’s Note: I’ll be back from holiday January 2 to announce the winners of our registration contest and send out their books, and of course to bring you the latest good news here at GNN-i — the best and oldest positive news site on the Internet (now in its 10th year). Happy New Year and may Good bless you!

First US Cities to Require Green Building Codes

Boston and Washington DC are trying to become the first major US city with requirements that all new large buildings adhere to "green" building standards that make structures environmentally friendly and healthier to occupants. Green standards require use of recycled materials and energy-efficient heating, cooling and water systems… (Washington DC moved in early December, Boston, this week)

McDonald’s Forced Out for Lack of Business in Healthy Town

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While Britain may be often maligned for its cuisine, or lack thereof, we portly Americans could learn a lesson from the good folks in Tavistock, Devon. Apparently the fresh, locally grown, healthy food available in other restaurants and in school cafeterias was so good that people stopped going to the local McDonald’s, forcing the restaurant to close up shop…

New 2007 Laws Protect Consumers from ID Theft and Citizens’ Rights

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gavelState Lawmakers have been busy and their new laws for 2007 are mostly good news for consumers, common citizens and people struggling to make ends meet. Stateline.org reports:
After the ball drops in Times Square, California public colleges no longer will be able to censor their student journalists, California will cut smokestack emissions blamed for global warming and Ohio pet owners will be able to set up trust funds for their furry and feathered friends…

Flowers – A Cure for Winter Blues?

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rosessquaredFor those who may experience the winter blues in the cold dark months ahead, a new study reveals fresh flowers can be a natural remedy to enhance moods and increase energy. The behavioral research study, conducted by Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, revealed that people feel more compassionate toward others, less depressed and anxious, and have more energy when fresh-cut flowers are present in the home…