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Press Clips and Publicity

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CBS Evening News
Katie Couric’s Notebook (Video)
“The Good News Network is devoted to all the good news that’s fit to print… When the headlines seem bleak, it’s nice to know that some really GOOD news is just a mouse click away.”

The Washington Post, March 21, 2009
For Diversion, Many Download the Uplift
“There are other Web sites that aggregate good news from around the world, but few are as current, well kept and newsy as hers. She’s out to prove that good news sells.” 
— Dan Zak

NPR’s All Things Considered
GoodNewsNetwork: No Gloom, No Doom (4-min audio interview)
“Weis-Corbley thinks an alternative to the grim fare offered by major news outlets is essential. And traffic is up.”  — Michelle Norris

washpost screen shot-croppedWTOP Radio
Good News is Good For You

Toronto Globe and Mail
Recession Got You Down? C’mon Get Happy
“It has taken a financial crisis to spur an appetite for good news.”
— Omar El Akkad

Rolling Stone
Featured on the magazine’s 2009 Hot List – Hot Internet (p. 89)

Communicate GOOD 2013
Talking Good With Geri Weis-Corbley

The Examiner
Good News For a Change

Info Today
What We Need Is Some Good News

Daily Nebraskan
Internet site brings good news to a dismal world
“After reading headlines about the terrible condition of humanity, take some time to challenge those observations by reading about the unexpected at goodnewsnetwork.org. It could do wonders for your psyche.”
— Stacy Van Zuiden

American Journalism Review

It’s All Good
“One of her goals is to show that there is actually a hungry market for this. The monthly hits she gets on her site act as pretty heavy validation of a demand.” — Tricia C. Eller

Women’s World
Fed Up With Bad News?
“Imagine getting only good news all the time. Geri does more than imagine it – she finds it, prints it, and passes it on! … Geri found stories about heroic rescues and generous gifts, scientists making headway against disease and groups building homes for the poor. She even found a heartwarming story about lawyers — a band of whom are representing low income kids for free in juvenile court. And readers loved it!”

Washington Times
All the Good News that’s Fit to Print
“She’s a cross between Dr. Deepak Chopra and Ann Landers.”
— Christin Montgomery

Newsday
“Take Heart America… The Good News Network, is a place on the web where you can go every day to renew your faith in the human race. Since its webut a year ago, GNN has been steadily finding an audience.”

Fox TV Morning Show
Live Interview via satellite with KTVU Ross McGowan in San Francisco

Frederick News Post
“We think we can learn something from Weis-Corbley, not only about how we pay attention, but what we pay attention to. — The Fine Print Op-Ed

Fast Company
Bookmarks

The Well Being Journal
Good News — Bill Asenjo, P.H.D., CRC

Radio Interviews
WBIG- Chicago; CKLW- Windsor; KOTA- Rapids City; “The Daily Bear”; WVMT-Vermont; WTAM; WOCM- Maryland; “The Live Show”- Oklahoma; “Rhonda Bellamy Show”- NC; WRVC- Ohio; WILS-Lansing; “Carter and Company”, “Washington Post Radio” (in drive time), “Mirrors of the Soul”

300 Incredible Things to do on the Internet! (2002 edition)

“I have spent months surfing hundreds of thousands of sites, but only the incredible ones made it into this book. It’s incredible sites like yours that make this a fantastic book.” — Ken Leebow

The Washington Post, Sept. 1, 1999
And now, the news: The Glorifying not the Horrifying

Whole Life Times

Antidote to the Daily Headlines
“Geri’s enthusiasm, humor and selfless efforts personify a message for us all: the good news is there, if we seek it out.”
— Bill Asenjo, P.H.D., CRC

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PRESS RESOURCES

HISTORY of GNN and its publisher, Geri Weis-Corbley

CONTACT – 703.392.4118 

Send an E-MAIL

Past Press Releases and Publications

April 25, 2006 — New Design for Web site 

August 29, 2006 — 9th Anniversary: Daily News Helps Relieve Depression in Viewers

FREE Download of 9/11 Edition of Good News Newsletter (PDF)

Staying Healthy (Naturally) is Smart Science

sslogo

sslogoThousands of Americans wrote to a small, but forward-thinking company to say ‘thanks’ for inventing an arthritis treatment that works often when nothing else would: A treatment that is actually healthy for the body, unlike some pharmaceutical drugs with side effects like Vioxx (which was pulled from the market after studies found an increased risk for heart attack and stroke). And now, this same small company can be thanked for bringing what might be the best remedy for the miserable symptoms of the common cold to the U.S. market. In a clinical trial their cold lozenge was shown to significantly reduce major cold symptoms within 24 hours. Unlike the giant pharmaceutical companies, this company, SmartScience Laboratories, believes the prescription for staying healthy doesn’t necessarily come from a doctor. Studies show that if we add the right nutrients to our bodies, the end result is health. That’s just smart. SmartScience.

SmartScience Laboratories CEO and founder, Gene Weitz, began his career in Minnesota in the field of chemical engineering but evolved into the realm of nutrition and health; interesting because both fields deal with formulas and their reactions. In the 1980’s Weitz worked for small companies inventing products like lubricants and environmentally friendly solvents and cleaners. In the mid-90’s he was hired to develop nutritionally fortified creams for pain. At about the same time his wife began a grueling experience with fibromyalgia,a mysterious disabling disorder affecting 6 percent of the population. Thus began a personal journey for Weitz during which nutritional healing became deeply imprinted in his personal philosophy.

 
“She was 70-80 percent better within 6 months.”“She went through a battery of tests that you just wouldn’t believe. She saw specialist after specialist and finally they referred her to a psychologist. The only medication they could give her was an anti-depressant. She was getting close to being bed ridden. Every third day she would drop the kids off at the bus stop and just come home and lie in bed and cry, because it’s just that much pain.”

A nutritional consultant counseled the couple regarding the fibromyalgia. Her advice was to improve the diet (cut out sugars, white flour and white potatoes), add dietary supplements, and do some things that naturally detoxify the body of heavy metals and toxins. “As it turns out,” Gene reported, “She was right, because within six months his wife was 70–80 percent better and within a year, 100 percent better… She’s really never gone back.”

Weitz has had one goal since college, to run a successful company. By February 1998, acting out of an inspiration to improve the lives of others by creating helpful over-the-counter products for consumers, he’d acquired the rights from his old partner to use some of the formulas he’d developed. He now improved the topical cream, adding camphor and nutrients to provide additional benefit. SmartScience Laboratories was born.

 

“Some People Call it Their Miracle Cream.”
SmartScience began selling JointFlex Pain Relieving Cream in 1999 directly to consumers through full-page newspaper ads. Using an ‘800’ number and offering a money-back guarantee, they went from “essentially zero sales to $25,000 a day, just overnight.” Beyond brisk sales and returning customers, the most rewarding part of the whole business was the “stacks and stacks and stacks of testimonials.”

Weitz explains: “Most testimonials tell us how they have tried nearly everything to relieve their pain including prescription drugs, oral pain relievers, physical therapy, other topical pain relievers and even getting shots, yet they received little or no results. But when they tried JointFlex, they got unexpected, substantial pain relief and many became completely pain free!”

JointFlex has been shown in clinical studies to offer substantial immediate pain relief for chronic sufferers of osteoarthritis pain. Even more amazing, Weitz said, was that “Almost one third of the people in the study ELIMINATED their pain with continued daily use of the JointFlex cream. Their pain scores were down to zero. These were people who suffered from chronic arthritis pain for ten years or more. “They now have a safe, effective and inexpensive alternative to prescription and other non-prescription drugs.”

JointFlex uses a trade secret technology Weitz invented called FUSOME. Fusome technology uses little beads; creating little micro-spheres of ingredients that appear to penetrate deeply within the skin. And what happens from there? “We haven’t proven that yet… other than we know we’re getting excellent pain relief. That’s where the magic really starts to happen.”

A New Cold Remedy

SmartScience wants to provide more products, like JointFlex, that use the safest ingredients available and provide the user with exceptional benefit. That’s really what they’ve done with their newest offering, No Time For Colds.

“We’ve taken a (FDA-labeled) homeopathic active ingredient which is the zinc gluconate, that has been used quite prevalently and is very safe, and we’ve added a new active ingredient, a naturally occurring herb, which is the bioflavonoid. No Time for Colds has been shown to offer relief from major cold symptoms in 24 hours. So that’s one of the reasons I fell in love with this product… it matched my business model and my business philosophy.”

The product was developed in Denmark and has been marketed in Scandinavia for two years. “It’s just been phenomenally successful over there,” reports Weitz.

ntfcNo Time for Colds sets a new precedent with the addition of the bioflavonoids. The lead investigator of the clinical trial at the University of Virginia’s School of Medicine, Ronald B. Turner, says, “A clinically relevant and statistically significant reduction in clinical symptoms of the common cold occurred within 24 hours when using No Time for Colds.”

The remedy is also is safe for kids aged four and up. It tastes decent too, in cherry or lemon flavors, so parents won’t need to assume battle positions to get their kids to take it. Also beneficial is the fact that it is sugar-free, gluten-free, and lactose-free. SmartScience is so confident of the effectiveness of No Time for Colds they are extending their money-back no-questions-asked guarantee.

Big question: Aren’t cold symptoms simply our body’s necessary means of flushing out a virus? “No,” explains Mr. Weitz. “People think, ‘Wow, the body must need to flush this virus out. My nose is running like a faucet.’ But, runny nose, malaise and headache, are immune system OVER-responses to the common cold virus that DO NOT prevent the virus from running its normal course. These responses to the cold serve no purpose that is beneficial. The body is just wasting energy. Viruses multiply within the cells so flushing it out doesn’t work. We all assumed it was the body just doing what it needed to do. But most colds are from the Rhinovirus which is absorbed through the mucus area and nasal area. That’s how they attack the body. No wonder they go crazy first.”

SmartScience Laboratories manufactures No Time for Colds in the U.S. and with their distribution network of 30,000 major drug stores and chains they can offer it widely to consumers along with JointFlex. A store locator is available on the No Time for Colds Web site.

What is next for SmartScience? Weitz is not certain, but judging from their philosophy we can expect products based on a simple principle: Providing effective alternatives to prescription drugs and remedies that have negative side effects. Safe products that work. Smart!

Swim Team Gives Back Trophy After Discovering Error

Anne Marie swimming - from amward.com

swimmer-anne-marie-wardAugusta, Georgia swim coaches Kevin Skenes and Alex Trakowski were honored for returning their trophy after discovering and pointing out a scoring error that cost their team the Division 4 championship.

At a year-ending all-star game, amid a standing ovation, league officials awarded plaques to the two men calling them “champions of integrity, honesty and sportsmanship.”

(Source: Augusta Chronicle, “A True Lesson in Honesty,” July 12, 2005)

GE Is Going Green

The CEO of America’s biggest corporation did something astonishing this week: He staked his company’s future on its ability, in his words, “to define the cutting edge in cleaner power and environmental technology.”

The greening of General Electric was announced by its chief executive, Jeffrey Immelt. He said that by 2010, GE would double its research spending on cleaner technologies to $1.5 billion annually and double its sales of environment-friendly products to $20 billion annually. Meanwhile, GE will reduce its own emission of greenhouse gases by 1 percent by 2012; without this action, emissions would have increased 40 percent. The company is promoting this effort with the infelicitous slogan, “Ecomagination,” but that’s about the only thing wrong with it.

GE is a corporate bellwether. It has a market capitalization of $381 billion and is the most widely held stock in the world. Its former CEO, Jack Welch (who recently published a book with the very un-green title, “Winning”), was a symbol of the management style of the 1990s, which emphasized shareholder value above all else. Immelt made himself a symbol this week of a new CEO style that emphasizes a company’s obligation to a range of stakeholders, including the global environment.

Make no mistake: Immelt has the same basic goal Welch did — to earn money for shareholders. But he recognizes that the global marketplace is changing. The world wants to buy products that reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, and thereby slow the process of climate change. GE has the technology and products to dominate this evolving market. In that sense, it’s as simple a business concept as selling light bulbs to a world that wants light.

The GE announcement is the most dramatic example yet of a green revolution that is quietly transforming global business. We tend not to see it clearly in the United States, in part because the Bush administration opted out of the Kyoto protocol that took effect in more than 140 countries in February. But if you’re GE and you do billions of dollars of business in Europe (where all 25 members of the European Union ratified Kyoto) you already have to comply with global environmental policies, regardless of what the Bush administration says. What Immelt did, in essence, was to apply the rules that shape GE’s operations abroad to the company as a whole.

What’s happening is that policy on the environment and many other key social issues is being privatized. Informal networks are emerging that link influential nongovernment organizations, giant corporations and governments that want to solve social problems. These networks develop new rules that become industry standards. The United States may drag its heels or criticize these efforts, but its public naysaying is becoming irrelevant to the process of change.

A good example of these self-enforcing rules is an environmental benchmark for financial institutions, known as “The Equator Principles.” Participating companies agree not to lend money for a project unless the borrower completes a detailed environmental assessment that explains how it will meet criteria for sustainable development and other social goals. These principles have now been adopted by nearly all the major global financial institutions, including Citigroup, Bank of America, HSBC and JPMorgan Chase.

Nobody wants to be the next General Motors, the once-mighty automaker that was reduced last week to junk-bond status. GM bet its future on fuel-wasting SUVs and small trucks, even as Toyota was betting that the world would want cars with lower fuel consumption and reduced emissions. Today, Toyota can’t make enough of its fuel-saving hybrid car, the Prius.

The green revolution is partly defensive. In an era of corporate scandals symbolized by the Enron debacle, CEOs understand that their brands are precious equity. To maintain trust in a brand, it isn’t enough anymore to make good products. Consumers trust companies that are responsible citizens; they mistrust companies that appear selfish or wasteful.

The changes announced by GE and other companies are partly cosmetic — a bid for better PR — but maybe that’s the point. These days, you have to be seen as doing good to do well. As Immelt put it this week, “green is green.”

David Ignatius is a syndicated writer in Washington, D.C.  – (printed with kind permission)

www.davidignatius.com

Integrity in Professional Sports is Not Dead

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tennis-court-aerialThis is one of my favorite stories from last year. I want to make sure you know about the integrity of professional tennis player, Andy Roddick…

The top-ranked player in the Rome Masters tennis tournament, American Andy Roddick, disputed an umpire’s call IN FAVOR OF HIS OPPONENT! He lost the match because of his stroke of honesty. “On the Mark” over at the blog, Toner Mishap, Tipped his hat to Andy back in May:

Positive Earth Facts from 2003

rainbow over LA

rainbow over LANon-Toxic Products

Chemical Specialties Inc. is successfully launching its arsenic-free wood preservative into the commercial marketplace. A mixture of copper and quat — a commonly used disinfectant — ACQ-Preserve is predicted to spur an industry-wide phaseout of toxic, arsenic-laden preservatives typically found in lumber sold to home builders and hardware stores.

2003 Salmon Run Bountiful at Last

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salmon illustrationFor the first time in 38 years, American Indians on Oregon’s Columbia River have harvested a surplus of summer chinook salmon. 120,000 salmon are making the summer run upriver, compared to only 15,000 in the mid-1990’s, the second-highest rate since 1960. The return of unusually abundant chinook, each weighing 20-30 pounds and fetching $2 per pound, is due to several factors, including improved habitat, the nutrient level of the water, hatchery operations, and harvest management.

Coping With Disappointment Like Edison

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Edison-in-a-quiet-moment“If he listened more to the inner voice and less to the clamorous voice of the external world, he would find a strength and a courage that would insure him against discouragement.”

I love the story that Charles Edison, former Gov. of New Jersey, tells of his father, Thomas Edison, when in 1914 his Edison Industries of West Orange, New Jersey was practically destroyed by a great fire. Most of Edison’s life work was going up in flames. The young man, concerned, looked about for his father and he finally came upon him. The man’s face was ruddy in the glow of the flames. He wrote, “My heart ached for him, no longer a young man, everything being destroyed.”

Iraqi Man Rescues Artifacts in Looted Antiquities Museum

Qu'ran 11th century by LordHarris-CC license

Quran-11century-LordHarris-CClicenseA 33-year-old Iraqi pianist, Namir Ibrahim Jamil, watched looters in Baghdad ransacking the Museum of Antiquities and loaded up two full vans with precious artifacts.

He lovingly stored them for 11 days until the building was secured for their return.

More of the museum treasures are being recovered now, after Imams in local mosques broadcast appeals to looters for their return, “no questions asked.”

Senate Stops Arctic Drilling Plan

ice thaw NASA photo

ice-thaw-nasaIn the midst of a Persian Gulf war, Venezuelan oil strike, and record high prices at the pump, eight Republicans joined 44 Democrats in the U.S. Senate voting 52-48 to block oil development in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

The proposal to drill in the refuge was part of the fast-track budget reconciliation bill. The March 19 vote, on an amendment introduced by Barbara Boxer (D-CA), prevents the Senate from considering the drilling plan as part of the budget.

Lake Tahoe Still Blue, Clearest Since 1992

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blue-water-scene-natanh-morguefileLake Tahoe is the clearest it has been in 10 years, said U.C. Davis researchers last week.

The lake’s clarity is measured by lowering a white, frisbee-sized disk into the water and noting the depth at which the disk disappears from sight. In 2002, the disk could be seen to a depth of 78 feet for the first time since 1992.

Efforts to restore the lake’s clarity are thanks to a $900 million program and cooperation between developers and environmentalists.

(Story tip submitted by Lloyd Leanse)

Tribute of Thanks to Mr. Rogers

Fred McFeely Rogers, 74, host of TV’s Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, died February 27, 2003 of stomach cancer

Sometimes it takes a crisis or loss to uncover the natural bond we have with strangers. But for Mr. Rogers, the connection was natural and heartfelt. The world was his ‘neighborhood’.

For a 1998 Esquire cover story, Can You Say, HERO? Fred Rogers allowed the author to follow him around for a week. Mr. Rogers — described as being “in a perpetual state of astonishment ” — said to the writer, “The connections we make in the course of life – Maybe that’s what Heaven is! We make so many connections here on earth. Look at us: I’ve just met you, but I’m invested in who you are and who you will be and I can’t help it.”

Fred McFeely Rogers, 74, an ordained Presbyterian minister, died February 27. His message remained simple: he told his young viewers to love themselves and love others.

Photo: United States Postal Service

Chicken Manure, Fats, New Source of Energy

Photo by Kakisky, via Morguefile

chickens Kakisky MorguefileChicken Fat Heats Buildings – Alternative to Imported Oil

University of Georgia scientists say chicken fat, restaurant grease, and other ‘bio-fuels’ are a good alternative to fuel oil. In fact, a giant retrofitted steam boiler is already heating the Athens, GA campus buildings with fat and grease from chicken, pork and beef. It produces about 90% of the heat of fuel oil and is lower in air pollution emissions. Next, the animal fats will be tested as automotive fuel. 5.5 million tons of animal fat produced each year could become a fuel resource.

Beating the Odds: A Tale Of A Single Parent

Photo by Jon Stone, eyeclectic.net

mother and daughterWhat do you do when the odds are against you? When statistics predict failure in spite of your best intentions, how do you react? What follows is a story of how my children and I weathered the hardships and handicaps of single parenting to beat the odds.

Born and raised in a rural part of Africa, I arrived in North America from an entirely different culture and very naive. As customary in my home village I married quite young. That marriage didn’t work out however, so I was faced with raising three children on my own, with very little money.

My greatest challenge was meeting my children’s needs without sacrificing quality time with them. Spending time with them was crucial because we had been separated for eight years and, as a result, were more like strangers when we reunited. Preparing to have my children live with me, I worked two jobs and freelanced to raise the funds I needed to fly them from Nigeria.

Once they arrived, we needed all the time we could spend together. I quit the second job. But we also needed enough money for rent, food, and other living expenses. Credit was not an option, so I had to go back to working two jobs with frequent overtime.

I only saw my children for brief moments in the mornings as we hurried through breakfast. The cost of working so much meant that I only saw my children for brief moments in the mornings as we hurried through breakfast and out the door. They came home to an empty apartment and waited for hours for me to arrive home. They could not participate in extracurricular activities because they had no transportation. Some nights they were in bed by the time I reached home. I had no energy left to look at anything they brought home from school, much less to check their homework. To add insult to injury, the few minimum wage dollars I made were wasted on fast food, since I didn’t have time to cook. It wasn’t long before they began to struggle with their school work and it showed in their grades. I had to come up with other options.

I presented the situation to my children during our weekly family time and we unanimously voted for me to quit the second job so I could be home in the evenings. We brainstormed for ways to save money and for inexpensive activities for our time together. By trimming our budget and stocking up on things when they were on sale, we were able to save money while doing things together. We went to the farmer’s market together on Saturday mornings and trimmed coupons.

We all loved pizza but could not afford it. A bread-making course I took earlier came in handy. I brought out my recipes and notes. Before long we were making our own pizza and pastry.

Friday became “Pizza in front of the TV night”

My children started the dough and tomato sauce when they arrived home from school. By the time I reached home, the dough was ready. We had fun adding personal touches. With a few cans of soft drink, our very own garlic bread sticks and a bowl of tossed salad, we had an “all you can eat” feast in front of the TV. In those days Friday night was comedy night on local stations. We did not have cable, but didn’t miss it. Our TV time was limited to a few hours a week because of homework and chores.

I went to school two nights a week to finish my bachelor’s degree. That also became a family affair as we all went to my college campus together. My children did their homework in the library while I attended classes. Eventually, I found housecleaning jobs we did on weekends.

We didn’t have everything we wanted, but we did have most of what we needed. Today, as I look back on our struggles I can see that our sacrifices paid off. Two of my children are now engineers, the third is a computer specialist.

Muslim Saves Jewish Temple From Arson’s Torching

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heroesA Muslim gas station attendant in New York City saved a Jewish synagogue from arson with his phone call to 911.

Syed Ali, a Pakistani immigrant watched in disbelief after a man, a Bosnian Muslim who bought gasoline, marched across the street, and began dousing the front of the temple.

Police arrived before the match was struck. Ali declined the mantle of hero saying, “It was a sacred place he was going to destroy.”

Diet Linked to Hyper Kids

hot dog

hot-dog-by-geriA revolution has turned around Central Alternative High School in Appleton, Wisconsin, and its ‘problem kids’, sent there from twelve area schools. Respect, achievement, and discipline prevail where once kids packed weapons, took drugs, and exhibited “terrible rudeness.”

Before 1997 the teens ingested a slurry of behavior-altering chemicals that left them irritable, fidgety, and unable to concentrate. The culprit chemicals were not cocaine, speed, marijuana or heroin, but the industrial food additives found on grocers’ shelves.

Thanks to the simple elimination of commonly lurking food dyes, chemical flavorings, and preservatives, and the introduction of fresh nutritional foods for breakfast and lunch, the school boasts five years of zero drop-outs, zero expulsions, zero drugs, zero weapons possession, and zero fighting on campus.

The startling success at Central Alternative High (CAHS) led the state of Wisconsin to grant funds for the printing and distribution of packets of information about Appleton’s nutrition program to 500 of its alternative schools. Already, other area schools have dumped vending machines in favor of salad bars.

The Appleton Revolution

The Appleton experiment is part of a growing body of evidence that points to extensive chemical processing of children’s foods as a leading culprit in the 20 year surge of cases of hyperactivity (A.D.D./A.D.H.D.), depression and obesity in America’s children.

Consider the simple fact that synthetic food dyes which permeate kids’ food today — including even white marshmallows and toothpaste — are synthesized from petroleum. Scientists have found that many people are sensitive to these petrol-based chemicals, which can trigger a wide number of behavior, learning, and health problems by interfering with electrical functioning of neurotransmitters and synapses of the brain.

Since 1976, the nonprofit Feingold Association has achieved amazing results helping families whose children are diagnosed with hyperactive disorders. The Feingold program is a diet free of synthetic colors and flavors, and the preservatives BHA, BHT and TBHQ.

Barbara Stitt was inspired in the 1970’s seeing the effects of the Feingold program: “The kids would just change.” But earlier than that, in 1963, while working as a parole officer, Stitt discovered a book that dramatically improved her own deteriorating health. She decided to teach its nutritional principles to her 112 parolees and then followed them for 12 years. After they changed their diet, “They looked different, felt different, and sounded different.” 89% did not get back into trouble — a rate unheard of in prison recidivism.Mediterranean diet-veggies-dips-mealmakeovermoms

Diet May Cut Risk of Alzheimer’s by 50% (Long-term Study of 900 Seniors)

 

Stitt and her husband, a biochemist, own Natural Ovens, the Manitowoc, Wisconsin bakery that launched the Appleton revolution. They underwrote the $20,000 annual cost for the special breakfast and lunch program and provided 3 chefs to prepare whole foods like salads, old fashioned recipes, and whole grain breads that include Omega-3 oils (“brain food”) found in Flax seed. The Natural Ovens menu is served every day of the year but two, which are designated ‘Junk Food Days’.

Natural Ovens’ ‘Junk Food Days’

Salad platterThe students eat all junk for breakfast and lunch. At 2:00 PM they write down how they are feeling in their bodies. The next morning they record how they slept and how they felt at home. “It is exciting for the teachers,” says Stitt. After dosing themselves with junk, “The kids can’t spell, can’t finish a sentence. The pulse rate for second graders doubles. The experience opens the kids’ eyes. They see that what they put in their mouths effects their behavior.”

Stitt’s work in Wisconsin schools is a continuation of the late Dr. Feingold’s mission. “These are our children. This is our future. I don’t think there’s anything more important facing us today. It is taking a toll we cannot afford.”

“Kids this year are calmer, more rational. I had thought about retiring but I’ve decided I’m having too much fun. – Appleton science teacher, Dennis Abrahm

When people argue against the higher cost of a nutritious lunch, CAHS principle, LuAnne Coenen doesn’t buy it. She says the savings are high. “We don’t have the trash, the graffiti, the need for high security. One kid incarcerated costs the state $20,000 for one year. Our lunches cost the school 50 cents per student per day (above the cost of typical lunches).”

After years of excusing erratic behavior with, ‘Its just hormones,’ or ‘Middle-schoolers can’t sit still,’ the Appleton experiment uncovers a more insidious cause. Greg Bretthauer, Dean of Students at CAHS exclaims, “If they don’t come doped up on bad food, by God, they have the chance to learn something.” Grades, test scores, and achievement are all up at CAHS. Responding to such growing evidence, the Los Angeles school district — the nation’s largest — will eliminate soda vending machines from all of its buildings beginning January 1, 2003.

A Feingold Lunch Box:
peanut butter, tuna or egg salad, certain potato chips, Snack Pack chocolate pudding, fruits, Juicy Juice
______________________________

The Appleton revolution hails a new way to treat A.D.H.D. kids, and supports the theory that there may be no such disorder at all, but just an explosion of symptoms caused by ingesting a witch’s brew of chemicals in everyday products.

To learn more information, or to read chapter one of Why Can’t My Child Behave,
visit the Feingold Association Web site.

Building the Case For Nutrition Reform

cereal-fruit-loops-ppdigital-morguefileThe Center for Science in the Public Interest released a report in 1999 concluding that in 17 of 23 studies evidence strongly indicates that for some children behavioral disorders are caused or aggravated by certain food additives and artificial food colors. The Center joined a group of physicians and scientists urging the Department of Health and Human Services to advise parents and doctors to try changing the diets of children with ADHD before placing them on stimulant drugs like Ritalin, with their side effects. A NIH report suggested that the government “consider banning synthetic dyes in foods consumed widely by children.” (“Diet, A.D.H.D. and Behavior,” www.cspinet.org)

The New York City Board of Education, in 1979, instituted dietary changes in 803 schools that raised test scores a whopping 15 percentile points by gradually removing synthetic colors and flavors and some preservatives, and by reducing sugar in the foods served at breakfast and lunch. Before the change, test scores ranked in the 39th percentile. Four years later the students scored in the 55th percentile. (International Journal of Biosocial Research, Vol. 8, No. 2, 1986.)

A new double-blind University of Oxford study published in the British Journal of Psychiatry (2002) reported that over a nine month period half of a group of 231 adult male prisoners were given vitamins, minerals and Omega-3 fatty acids. They committed 26.3% fewer offenses than in previous months and 40% fewer violent offenses. The men who received the placebo pills continued to behave as they had all along. The Researchers hailed the improvements as ‘huge’.

The Feingold Association newsletter, Pure Facts, described 10 year-old Bradlea Fletcher’s school science fair project on the effect of food dyes. She took 8 mice and ran them through a maze for 6 days. Then she divided them in half and added 2 drops of yellow food dye to one cage’s water dish, then timed them for 6 days more. The mice with the dyes were 50% slower than in earlier runs, while the normal mice improved their time by 25%. Additionally, the tainted mice became harder to catch and aggressive — one even bit her, while the normal mice became tamer.

Photo credit: Colored cereal by ppdigital via morguefile.com

New Microbe Destroys Chemical Pollutant in Groundwater

Cancer blood test

CANCER BLOOD TEST VOAScientists have discovered a microbe that interacts with a hazardous industrial chemical in tainted groundwater rendering it biodegradable.

Trichloroethane (TCA) is an industrial solvent and a major polluter of groundwater in 696 of the priority sites listed by the Environmental Protection Agency. Up until now, no process was known for easily treating TCA contaminated aquifers and groundwater.

Last week, Michigan State University researchers reported in the journal Science that a bacteria, previously unknown and found in the mud of river bottoms, uses the process of respiration to completely neutralize any TCA it contacts within about two months.

Comeback News: Seals, Humpbacks, and Urchins Increasing

whale in shipping lane - Cascadia Research
  • whale in shipping lane-Cascadia ResearchSteller sea lions in Alaska are making a comeback. An aerial survey of the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands spotted more than 19,000 adults, a 5.5% increase over 2 years. The population plummeted by more than 80% over the last 25 years and was listed as endangered in 1997.
  • Whale experts believe the population of Humpback Whales is growing around 10% a year. Humpbacks once numbered between 15,000-20,000 in the South Pacific until harpooning reduced them to just 200-500 by the 1960’s. Now, they have recovered to one quarter of the number they once were.
  • In 1983, an outbreak of disease in the largest coral reef in the Atlantic Ocean reduced long-spine sea urchin populations by 97%. Now, scientists report a 38% recovery since 1997 for sea urchins, which are critical to the health of the Mesoamerican Caribbean reef.

A Special Group of Soldiers, Vietnamese Orphans and Their American Angel

Betty Tisdale, Seattle, WA, is Angel to the Orphans of Vietnam

Betty Tisdale, Seattle, WA, is Angel to the Orphans of VietnamBetty Tisdale has a special spot in her heart for veterans, especially Vietnam vets. She read a book that changed her life by renowned Navy doctor, Tom Dooley, entitled, Deliver Us From Evil. She was so moved by the doctor’s work for the children of Vietnam that she took charge of the An Lac Orphanage in Saigon after Dooley’s untimely death from cancer at age 34. “I decided that An Lac was not going to die.” She sustained it for 14 years until the fall of Saigon in 1975, when she rushed together an army airlift of 219 babies out of Vietnam and into adopted homes in the U.S.

Tisdale reveres soldiers. “I can’t begin to tell you what they did. They were so wonderful!” The 121st Signal Battalion, 1st Infantry Division was stationed at a large base a few miles from the annex housing the older orphans of An Lac. The men adopted the orphanage and took care of the kids, building indoor toilets, showers, and doing maintenance. They even cooked a real Thanksgiving meal for hundreds of children serving turkey, mashed potatoes, and peas — instead of rice, which they ate all the time.

But Betty will never forget Christmas 1966, when Santa truly came to town — a poor, rural village 20 miles from Saigon. The 121st decided to surprise the orphans with a Christmas party. The GI’s wrote their wives, sisters and girlfriends back home and asked them to mail gifts for the children. On Christmas Day the Battalion arrived in trucks piled high with hundreds of brightly wrapped gifts and melting ice cream. Betty and the group heard the whirl of a helicopter overhead and looked up. “This sound meant our guys were flying off into combat and the sound was not a happy one for us.”

But, this time the helicopter landed in a field across from the orphanage and, “Walking towards us, waving to the children in full regalia and beard in 110 degrees of stifling heat, was the first Santa any of the children ever saw.”

A three-piece orchestra played Silver Bells. The children soon joined in with Jingle Bells, as Betty had taught them. Later they sang Auld Lang Syne in Vietnamese. “There wasn’t a dry eye in the audience of soldiers.” Maj. Bill Hilsman (now a General), Sgt. Ken Deeble, and Lt. Bob Fisher put it all together.

Betty remembers rows and rows of children, almost 400, lined up to receive presents. They faced the soldiers, all ranks and ages, sitting on the steps with piles of gifts stacked up. “As each child came up to receive their gift they put their hands across their chests and said, ‘Cam on’ — Thank-you.”

That’s when Betty looked up and saw a sight she’ll never forget — soldiers standing around the circumference of the annex’s flat roof, guns ready, to protect the children and staff of volunteers from snipers. “We owed our lives to this wonderful group of solders.”

Twenty years later, in 1995 when Tisdale returned to find the children left behind, she had a reunion with 60 of them, now grown. The first thing they did was sing Jingle Bells to show they had not forgotten their Betty.

Orphanage Annex Built this Year with only $34,000 in Contributions to HALO

During a visit to Vietnam in March 2002, Tisdale, who had created a nonprofit organization called HALO, Helping And Loving Orphans, learned that nearly 50 homeless children in the area could be housed at the Quang Ngai orphanage if $34,000 could be raised to build an annex. She vowed to help and five months later she cut the ribbon on a beautiful new building.

“Each room is big and airy… and has a bathroom connected with sink, shower and toilet. To see what $34,000 can build is amazing!” A plaque in both English and Vietnamese reads, In Memory of Dr. Tom Dooley, who loved the children of Vietnam, 1927-1961.

(Thank you to AngelScribe for suggesting the story from the book, A Christmas Filled with Miracles.)

First International Positive Psychology Summit: Psychologists Herald ways to Live Happily Ever After

psycsummit

psycsummitA group of upstart scientists, scholars and researchers in the field of psychology have decided that it is more important to focus on what is right with people than what is wrong with people. 200 psychologists from 20 countries convened this weekend in Washington, D.C. for the first annual international summit to exchange research and ideas on such topics as love, flow, wisdom and well-being.

“The world has an appetite for this type of stuff,” declares Dr. Martin Seligman of the University of Pennsylvania, the self-described cheerleader of the new positive psychology movement. Seligman, a former president of the American Psychological Association, founded the Positive Psychology Network and authored the new book, Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology To Realize Your Potential For Lasting Fulfillment. He sees the most exciting prospects for this work in simple but dramatic terms. “We can change for the better the total amount of happiness in the world.”

But what about today’s new world, marked by fears of terrorism and a new anxiety about the future? Since September 11th, Seligman has determined that one of the best ways to help suffering people is to focus on positive things. A parade of studies presented this weekend confirmed the experience that positive emotions, when generated, cause negative emotion to dissipate rapidly. Thus, researchers are hoping to prevent depression before it occurs.

A recent Newsweek magazine cover story on teenage depression underscores the enormous room for improvement in mental health today. Almost 3 million teens struggle with depression, most without help. One of the most effective ways to utilize positive psychology to benefit society is to teach about it in schools. But how to muster the will in schools when SOL test scores have become the all-consuming goal?

Well, Seligman’s group was awarded a $2.8 million grant from the Department of Education to augment a 9th grade language arts curriculum with an emphasis on human strengths and positive emotions contained within the course literature. The grant will fund a long term study to trace the lives of students who took the course, and compare outcomes to those from students who took the same course but without the positive psychology enrichment.

Judging from the research presentations at the summit, adolescents who are taught the tools to well-being will live happier lives than those who are not. For instance, one study asked whether character predicts happiness in adolescence (U. of Penn). The results indicated that, yes, kids with self-described virtues were happier, and that “nice guys DON’T finish last.”

What would be the outcome if more psychologists, teachers, therapists, AND parents focused on what people were doing right? The foremost proponent of the movement, Dr. Seligman, believes that, “An era of good feeling literally is possible.” (OCT. 6, 2002)

 

Some Highlights of the 4-day First International Positive Psychology Summit sponsored byThe Gallup Organization:  “The heart really is an organ of emotion. It’s not just a metaphor.”- Jonathan Haidt, the University of Virgina

 

Haidt reported on his work with the phenomenon he terms, Elevation. When presented with a moving act of charity, the body experiences a warm feeling in the chest or throat, a response that is generated by the vagas nerve. Most importantly, a strong desire is felt in ourselves to do similar charitable acts also. Thus, “efforts to promote and publicize altruism may therefore have widespread and cost-effective results.” (The Positive Emotion of Elevation by Jonathan Haidt)

 

“You don’t have to think the world is a good place to be happy.”– Michael Poulin and collegues, University of California Irvin.

 

Poulin and others studied 933 people outside of New York City about the Assumption in Beliefs About the Self and the World Post 9/11. The surprising thing to most people would be the finding that these New Yorkers, within weeks of the attacks of September 11, still saw the world as a good place and still saw people as good. The determining factor was that they viewed themselves in a positive light.  “Individuals with a strong sense of meaning in life were able to leverage worries they felt about the terrorist events into positive life changes.”-Michael Steger, University of Minnesota

 

Three months after 9/11, a sample of 188 Midwestern college students revealed that possesion of a strong sense of meaning or purpose in your life protected you from detrimental effects of post-traumatic stress. Somehow this meaning was a resource that gave people a tool for growth, such as a greater appreciation of family and friends, changing their life for the better.

 

“Some research states that reliving the stress may not be helpful, and may even be hurtful.” – Jane Henry, Open University

 

In Strategies for Achieving Well Being, 300 people from 20 nationalities were studied to find out what provided them with the greatest subjective well being. The top three were:

  1. Quieting the Mind. This could be meditation, fishing, following intuitive urgings, or being in nature.
  2. Physical activity. Including exercise, painting watercolors, dancing, or anything that requires a focus of creativity or body.
  3. Social Support. “Most therapists don’t prescribe staying in touch with your friends,” lamented Henry. But, social groups, socializing activities, like getting out for the evening, or receiving reassurance from others such as a spouse, are top strategies for staying mentally healthy.