All News - Page 590 of 1733 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 590

Americans in Stable Financial Positions Answer the Call to Donate Their $1,200 Stimulus Checks

Since the United States government began issuing stimulus checks to Americans this week, a group of volunteers from North Carolina has rallied thousands of people in stable financial positions to donate part of their stimulus checks to help people affected by COVID-19.

Within the first week of the Pledge My Check website being launched, over $18,000 was pledged from 37 people across 11 states.

This number is now up to $70,000 pledged from 129 people across 15 states. Individuals are encouraged to donate directly to the people, causes, or organizations they support because Pledge My Check is not accepting donations directly—so 100% of everyone’s pledges reach their intended recipient.

Similar efforts have launched across the United States supporting a variety of causes. Currently, Pledge My Check reports that the largest sum of their pledges is being directed to local causes, primarily addressing food insecurity through Feeding America’s network of food banks and their affiliated food pantries across the country. However, many people are simply donating directly to waiters, neighbors, and community members.

RELATED: Publix Supermarkets Are Buying Food From Struggling Farmers So They Can Use it to Feed Families in Need

“The idea is to encourage folks to pledge in a way that is life-giving to them and others,” said Jordan Bowman, who leads a local nonprofit organization. “There is complete freedom in how people pledge, but we are encouraging them to consider local causes and to be creative in how they can use this money to support their neighbors, nonprofits, and small businesses.”

One woman named Kirsten who donated $1,200 said: “My husband and I decided to donate 50% of our total checks. We’ve made monthly gifts to several organizations. These are: Heifer International, UNICEF, The Arts and Science Center of South East Arkansas, Doctors Without Borders.”

Other highlighted organizations include: Meals on Wheels, DonorsChoose.org, and GiveDirectly. Organizations can create their own custom pledge pages to encourage their volunteers and donors to pledge their stimulus checks to their organizations for free.

WATCH: Customer Leaves Entire $1,200 Stimulus Check as Generous Tip for Family-Owned Restaurant

This initiative is the work of a growing volunteer team based out of Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina. “This project is all about bringing out the best in our communities,” commented project co-creator, Ryan O’Donnell. “When the stimulus checks were announced, I felt this was a simple way for people to help their neighbors.”

Lead project designer, Bethany Faulkner, added: “I’m fortunate to be in a stable financial situation. I wanted to help, and this stimulus check is an opportunity to redirect that vital financial support to those who need it most in our community.

“We built this tool to enable that and make it a community effort, even as we’re separated in our own homes,” she concluded.

This is just one of many positive stories and updates that are coming out of the COVID-19 news coverage this week. For more uplifting coverage on the outbreaks, click here.

(WATCH the news coverage below OR our international viewers can check it out on the CBS News website)

Multiply The Good By Sharing The Inspiring News With Your Friends On Social Media…

Scuba Diving Group Swamped With Orders for Its Face Masks Made From Recycled Ocean Plastic

Photo by the Professional Association of Diving Instructors

With face masks being in such high demand amongst the novel coronavirus outbreaks, one company has taken a more eco-friendly approach to supplying the public with protective masks.

The Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI) has partnered with sustainable sportswear company Rash’r to make face masks out of plastic pollution that has been salvaged from the ocean.

Each mask is sold with five replacement filters at the cost of $20.40—which is just enough to cover the costs of manufacturing.

LOOK: Jewish Brothers Collect Yarmulkes to Make Face Masks For Houston’s Homeless

“We are not profiting from this product,” Lisa Nicklin, vice president of consumer marketing at PADI Worldwide told CNN. “We’re very much a heart-and-soul organization. We care about the ocean and our diver community, so we wanted to be able to put our hands on our hearts and say that we’re not profiting off this difficult time.”

Since the CDC now recommends that people wear cloth face masks to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in public places, PADI’s masks offer a sustainable alternative to the limited supplies of N95 respirator masks that are being reserved for healthcare workers on the front lines of the pandemic.

In addition to the masks featuring a number of ocean-themed designs, PADI has even developed a children’s mask for kids aged 4 to 10. All the masks are machine-washable and produced with dual-polyester layers to support the replaceable filters.

RELATED: 3D-Printing Teen Makes Hundreds of Ingenious Devices to Alleviate Ear Pain for Healthcare Workers

Since the company has been inundated with more than 15,000 mask pre-orders in a matter of weeks—which has helped recycle more than 1,300 pounds of ocean pollution—Nicklin told CNN that they are now ramping up their manufacturing to accommodate additional orders.

This is just one of many positive stories and updates that are coming out of the COVID-19 news coverage this week. For more uplifting coverage on the outbreaks, click here.

Protect Your Friends From Negativity By Sharing This Brilliant Initiative To Social Media…

Comedian Jay Leno is Producing Face Shields 24/7 in His Garage to Give to Health Care Workers

Jay Leno devoted his birthday month of April to producing personal protection equipment for first responders and health care workers.

The comedian and former Tonight Show host turns 70 today, and confirmed in a Bill Maher interview last week that he has a couple 3D printers in his garage and has set them to manufacture clear plastic shields around-the-clock.

“We make them and we give them to the fire department and they hand them out to first responders and hospital workers,” he says.

“They run 24 hours a day and keep churning them out,” he told Maher. “At the end of the week we give them away.”

RELATED: Tyler Perry Picks Up the Tab for All Groceries Purchased During Senior Shopping Hour at 73 Supermarkets

“And it’s fun. It’s great to feel like you’re part of something and sort of helping out—not just having food delivered every five minutes.”

Leno also stopped on the side of the road in LA this month to help a stranded motorist named Dwayne Henry (see photo below), who was having brake problems in his 1953 Mercedes Benz.

Leno was driving an electric Tesla when he pulled over to help diagnose the car trouble.

– Dwayne Henry

He appeared in many auto trade publications last week after he unearthed a video for his YouTube channel featuring a youthful Elon Musk persuading him to become a fan of the Tesla EV.

It was a never-before seen video recorded in Leno’s garage, where, since 2014, the Emmy Award-winner has produced and hosted Jay Leno’s Garage, which features his exquisite classic car collection.

CHECK OUT: Twitter Founder Jack Dorsey Just Pledged $1 Billion—28% of His Net Worth—to COVID-19 Relief Efforts

The CEO stopping by the shop with the actual black Tesla Roadster that was the very first customer model ever made, which had a VIN number of 001. Leno and Musk discussed the unique properties of the electric sports car, with a tour and a test drive. (Watch the video on GNN here, of young Musk and Leno.)

Until the COVID-19 pandemic, Leno regularly entertained over 200 audiences every year with his standup routines touring the country. He also has volunteered to perform in USO shows for soldiers and has been known to give away gorgeous cars to veterans.

Watch the fun interview from the TV show Real Time With Bill Maher…

SHARE the Celebrity Good News With Your Friends on Social Media…

“Conquer your mind and conquer the world.” – Guru Nanak

Quote of the Day: “Conquer your mind and conquer the world.” – Guru Nanak

Photo: by Chetan Menaria, public domain, cropped

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

Instead of Selling Lemonade, Boy Sets Up ‘Drive-By Joke Stand’ to Spread Laughter During Quarantine

 

6-year-old Callaghan McLaughlin had been looking forward to starting his own lemonade stand once the weather warmed up—but since the novel coronavirus outbreaks has forced the world into quarantine, he had to improvise.

Rather than spend his times indoors, Callaghan decided to spread joy in his community by setting up a “drive-by joke stand” so he could make his neighbors laugh while respecting social distancing guidelines.

Callaghan’s mother Kelsea says that the youngster has been using one-liners from a kid’s joke book that she bought for him six months ago.

LOOK: 3D-Printing Teen Makes Hundreds of Ingenious Devices to Alleviate Ear Pain for Healthcare Workers

Since she and her husband have already been privileged to hear the bulk of Callaghan’s jokes, she felt it was time he share his jokes with a new audience.

The youngster has been setting up shop every morning at the end of his driveway in Saanich, British Columbia for at least one hour before taking a lengthy lunch break and returning in the afternoon for another shift.

Callaghan also told CBC that he has been offering the jokes for free since he wants people to save their money for more important things—like groceries.

 

Although many passerby have reportedly been happy to humor Callaghan with a smile and a wave, the youngster was delighted to receive praise from Hollywood A-lister Ryan Reynolds after his labor of love was shared across national news outlets.

Despite his popularity, Callaghan says is simply happy to spread some joy during such turbulent times.

“There’s a lot of stress in the world,” he told CBC, “and I kind of want to get some smiles on people’s faces.”

This is just one of many positive stories and updates that are coming out of the COVID-19 news coverage this week. For more uplifting coverage on the outbreaks, click here.

(WATCH the sweet interview below)

Be Sure And Share This Endearing Tale With Your Friends On Social Media…

Lebanon Becomes First Arab Country to Legalize Medical Marijuana

Representative photo by Visible Hands, CC

Following a parliamentary vote last Tuesday, Lebanon has become the first Arab nation to legalize cannabis for medicinal and industrial purposes—and it could bring a much-needed financial windfall to the country’s economy.

The legislation was approved nearly two years after it was recommended by New York-based firm Mckinsey and Co. through a consultation with the Lebanese government about alleviating the country’s economic crisis in 2018.

Since cannabis has long been grown illegally in the nation’s Bekaa Valley—and since Lebanon has been ranked among the top three biggest Middle Eastern cannabis cultivators by the United Nations—economists have estimated that a medical marijuana industry could bring in as much as $1 billion in annual revenue.

RELATED: Bees Are Benefiting From Hemp Pollen as More Legal Cannabis is Grown Since 2018 Farm Bill

Reports say that the legislation will also encourage the crop to be used for new legal industries such as producing textile fibers, developing pharmaceutical goods, and manufacturing consumer products from CBD oil.

“We have moral and social reservations, but today there is the need to help the economy by any means,” said Alain Aoun, a senior MP in the Free Patriotic Movement, as reported by Daily CBD.

Lebanon had already been suffering from dramatic rates of inflation, rising unemployment, and the diminishing value of local currency prior to the novel coronavirus outbreaks. Now, financial and political experts are hoping that the new birth of a booming medical marijuana industry could help resuscitate the nation’s struggling economy in the near future.

Representative photo by Visible Hands, CC

Plant Some Positivity Amongst Your Friends By Sharing The Good News To Social Media…

Exciting New Scavenger Technology Can Generate Energy From the Surface of Metal

When electronics need their own power sources, there are two basic options: batteries and harvesters.

Batteries store energy internally, but are therefore heavy and have a limited supply. Harvesters, such as solar panels, collect energy from their environments. This gets around some of the downsides of batteries but introduces new ones, in that they can only operate in certain conditions and can’t turn that energy into useful power very quickly.

New research from the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Engineering and Applied Science is bridging the gap between these two fundamental technologies for the first time in the form of a “metal-air scavenger” that gets the best of both worlds.

LOOK: These New Solar-Pavement Driveways Made of Plastic Bottles Can Power the Average Household

This metal-air scavenger works like a battery, in that it provides power by repeatedly breaking and forming a series of chemical bonds. But it also works like a harvester, in that power is supplied by energy in its environment: specifically, the chemical bonds in metal and air surrounding the metal-air scavenger.

The result is a power source that has 10 times more power density than the best energy harvesters and 13 times more energy density than lithium-ion batteries.

In the long term, this type of energy source could be the basis for a new paradigm in robotics, where machines keep themselves powered by seeking out and “eating” metal, breaking down its chemical bonds for energy like humans do with food.

In the near term, this technology is already powering a pair of spin-off companies. The winners of Penn’s annual Y-Prize Competition are planning to use metal-air scavengers to power low-cost lights for off-grid homes in the developing world and long-lasting sensors for shipping containers that could alert to theft, damage, or even human trafficking.

The researchers, James Pikul, assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics, along with Min Wang and Unnati Joshi, members of his lab, published a study demonstrating their scavenger’s capabilities in the journal ACS Energy Letters.

The motivation for developing their metal-air scavenger, or MAS, stemmed from the fact that the technologies that make up robots’ brains and the technologies that power them are fundamentally mismatched when it comes to miniaturization.

RELATED: Irish Researchers Have Developed Hospital Robot That Uses UV Light to Kill Viruses, Bacteria, and Germs

As the size of individual transistors shrink, chips provide more computing power in smaller and lighter packages. But batteries don’t benefit the same way when getting smaller; the density of chemical bonds in a material are fixed, so smaller batteries necessarily mean fewer bonds to break.

“This inverted relationship between computing performance and energy storage makes it very difficult for small-scale devices and robots to operate for long periods of time,” Pikul says. “There are robots the size of insects, but they can only operate for a minute before their battery runs out of energy.”

Worse still, adding a bigger battery won’t allow a robot to last longer; the added mass takes more energy to move, negating the extra energy provided by the bigger battery. The only way to break this frustrating inverted relationship is to forage for chemical bonds, rather than to pack them along.

WATCH: This Hacker Built a Vending Machine for Crows as an Ingenious Response to a Cocktail Party Argument

“Harvesters, like those that collect solar, thermal or vibrational energy, are getting better,” Pikul says. “They’re often used to power sensors and electronics that are off the grid and where you might not have anyone around to swap out batteries. The problem is that they have low power density, meaning they can’t take energy out of the environment as fast as a battery can deliver it.

“Our MAS has a power density that’s ten times better than the best harvesters, to the point that we can compete against batteries,” he says, “It’s using battery chemistry, but doesn’t have the associated weight, because it’s taking those chemicals from the environment.”

Like a traditional battery, the researchers’ MAS starts with a cathode that’s wired to the device it’s powering. Underneath the cathode is a slab of hydrogel, a spongy network of polymer chains that conducts electrons between the metal surface and the cathode via the water molecules it carries. With the hydrogel acting as an electrolyte, any metal surface it touches functions as the anode of a battery, allowing electrons to flow to the cathode and power the connected device.

LOOK: Engineer Makes a DIY Cell Phone With Rotary Dial So She Doesn’t Have to Use a Smartphone

For the purposes of their study, the researchers connected a small motorized vehicle to the MAS. Dragging the hydrogel behind it, the MAS vehicle oxidized metallic surfaces it traveled over, leaving a microscopic layer of rust in its wake.

To demonstrate the efficiency of this approach, the researchers had their MAS vehicle drive in circles on an aluminum surface. The vehicle was outfitted with a small reservoir that continuously wicked water into the hydrogel to prevent it from drying out.

“Energy density is the ratio of available energy to the weight that has to be carried,” Pikul says. “Even factoring in the weight of the extra water, the MAS had 13 times the energy density of a lithium ion battery because the vehicle only has to carry the hydrogel and cathode, and not the metal or oxygen which provide the energy.”

WATCH: Dad Builds Adapted Nintendo Controller for Disabled Daughter—And Her Reaction is Adorable

The researchers also tested the MAS vehicles on zinc and stainless steel. Different metals give the MAS different energy densities, depending on their potential for oxidation.

This oxidation reaction takes place only within 100 microns of the surface, so while the MAS may use up all the readily available bonds with repeated trips, there’s little risk of it doing significant structural damage to the metal it’s scavenging.

With so many possible uses, the researchers’ MAS system was a natural fit for Penn’s annual Y-Prize, a business plan competition that challenges teams to build companies around nascent technologies developed at Penn Engineering. This year’s first-place team, Metal Light, earned $10,000 for their proposal to use MAS technology in low-cost lighting for off-grid homes in the developing world. M-Squared, which earned $4,000 in second place, intends to use MAS-powered sensors in shipping containers.

LOOK: This New LED Lamp Has Helped 90% of Its Dyslexic Users to Read ‘Effortlessly’

“In the near term, we see our MAS powering internet-of-things technologies, like what Metal Light and M-Squared propose,” Pikul says. “But what was really compelling to us, and the motivation behind this work, is how it changes the way we think about designing robots.”

Much of Pikul’s other research involves improving technology by taking cues from the natural world. For example, his lab’s high-strength, low-density “metallic wood” was inspired by the cellular structure of trees, and his work on a robotic lionfish involved giving it a liquid battery circulatory system that also pneumatically actuated its fins.

The researchers see their MAS as drawing on an even more fundamental biological concept: food.

“As we get robots that are more intelligent and more capable, we no longer have to restrict ourselves to plugging them into a wall. They can now find energy sources for themselves, just like humans do,” Pikul says. “One day, a robot that needs to recharge its batteries will just need to find some aluminum to ‘eat’ with a MAS, which would give it enough power to for it work until its next meal.”

Reprinted from University of Pennsylvania

Power Up With Positivity By Sharing The Cool News With Your Friends On Social Media…

One Million People Find Laughter During Isolation By Posting Pictures of Costume-Themed Garbage Bin Outings

Photo by Zoe-Marie Masters
Photo by Merilyn Hinton

Although taking out the trash every week is usually considered a tedious chore, social media users around the world have found an unexpected new source of laughter, community, and entertainment in their garbage bins.

 

Photo by Thitidet Yos

Danielle Askew and her friends from Queensland, Australia are the masterminds behind the aptly-named Bin Isolation Outing Facebook group—a page dedicated to people posting pictures of themselves getting dressed up to take out their trash.

 

Photo by Katrina Atley

Askew was inspired to create the page after sharing a conversation with her friend about how she was now excited to take her trash can to the curb every day because it has been her only chance to go outside amidst the COVID-19 shutdowns.

 

Photo by Zoe-Marie Masters

Since her friend shared the sentiment, they made a pact to dress up for the occasion and post pictures of themselves to social media. They then created the Facebook page to share their outfits with their other friends in Hervey Bay—but within weeks of starting the group, it grew to include more than a million members from around the world.

 

“Missed out on her 80’s-themed party so my daughter took the bin out for her 21st birthday instead!” — Photo by Belinda Watson

Some people use the group’s costume prompt to dress up for their birthdays in self-isolation; others use it as an excuse to dig their favorite Halloween costumes out of the attic—but regardless of the motivation, the page has become a community hotspot for creativity and support during the pandemic.

 

Photo by Pete Layton

“I have had a lot of people private message me, and also on the page, to say thank you so much,” Askew told ABC News about the influx of members. “They were quite down and this has made them smile and laugh. So [they say] ‘thank you for bringing a little bit of light into the chaotic world we are in at the moment’.”

 

Photo by Alix Holston

This is just one of many positive stories and updates that are coming out of the COVID-19 news coverage this week. For more uplifting coverage on the outbreaks, click here.

Multiply The Laughter By Sharing This Fun Story With Your Friends On Social Media…

Washable N95 Scarf and Mask Filter 99% of Particles With Sustainable Solution for Personal Protection –Ships Free

When we first partnered with our friends at Bioscarf in 2017, the Southern California wildfires making breathing hazardous in Los Angeles, Ventura, and Santa Barbara counties. This scarf was the ideal solution to protect the wearer from dangerous particulate matter hanging in the air—and I got myself one (above), which I also used during the coronavirus pandemic. They now make comfortable masks, gaiters, and hoodies, too, all with incredible properties that allow for 50 washings, while still filtering the air at the N95 level or higher.

It was invented by an American couple after a business trip to China, when Carlton Solle became ill, most likely due to complications related to air pollution. As an alternative to wearing ugly, unsustainable disposable masks to protect themselves, they turned to fashion.

Back in Atlanta, his wife Hazel came up with the idea to design a product that would work both as a scarf and also a filter—and, in 2017, the company began sending free shipments to journalists who were out breathing the hazardous air while covering the fires—and to firefighters, too.

The Bioscarf might be considered a genius example of wearable technology because it filters dangerous levels of toxic particulates, but it uses no gadgets, processors, or batteries. And, the best part is their filtration technology can be washed up to 100 times without losing its N95 rating. (Free shipping and get a GNN code below…)

3 layers of protection in their debut model guarded against hazardous contaminants that pose a health risk—including, according to the company, many of the bacteria and germs that cause colds and viruses (frequent flyers, take note). With its U.S. rating of N95, the generously sized scarf (as well as their newer gator and face mask) is capable of blocking 99.75% of all particles 0.1 microns in size or larger—and 95% of all non-oil based airborne particles measuring 0.3 microns.

A “first of its kind”, these personal protective apparel items became available only online in olive, black, and white—made from sustainably constructed recycled materials. The plush polyester blend uses 100% post-consumer recycled PET water bottles, and customer satisfaction is guaranteed.

By November of 2017, at the time of the Thomas Fire, the new company has already donated more than a thousand scarves in the U.S. to people in fire zones and elsewhere, and to friends in China where approximately 1.6 million people die prematurely every year due to poor air quality.

Fast forward to 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic began. I got in touch with Carlton and learned that they had added a variety of new products. Most notably, a line of cold weather gaiters, as well as summer scarves and gaiters made of hemp. They also added a pullover with built-in face mask, a hoodie which protects the entire upper body except the eyes, and a reusable, washable face mask, perfect for healthcare workers, which is less costly than the scarves or gaiters, retailing for just $29.

With the recent addition of a nano-fiber layer, these new products can be washed 50 times before they even begin to degrade in the slightest. They can be washed 100 times and still be rated the equivalent of an N95, because their filtration technology is, as Carlton told me, “like N95 on steroids”.

Similar masks are made for frontline workers, which you can buy on their website for $39. They include 1″ elastic bands in a specially designed strap system for secure fit and comfort all day—and they are reusable and washable up to 100 times, effectively replacing one million single-use disposable face masks. They feature a rugged exterior fabric that is water-resistant and anti-bacterial, too.

The company, G95, is currently shipping their products within 1-2 days for FREE—using USPS Priority Mail in the US—and they now ship international orders over $100 FREE via UPS.

Code for you: GNN20

If you enter the code GNN20 at checkout you will get a 20% discount any order over $100.

“Anyone who is seeking a fashionable and functional scarf or other clothing item to protect themselves–or loved ones, and is interested in helping to turn the tide on sicknesses around the world, should give the G95 Bioscarf a try,” Hazel Solle told GNN.

So now, besides being a perfect apparel piece for anyone who bicycles in the city, works around vehicles, regularly travels in airplanes or buses, or simply lives in a smoggy region, people can protect themselves from the COVID-19 virus.

One customer wrote a review in October 2020 saying, “This is one of the BEST investments I ever made! I have the Basic Mask. I never, ever thought I would need it for anything except the virus. However, there was a fire nearby in the mountains surrounding Mt. St. Helens and the air quality was the worst in the world! It rated a Hazard for almost a week. I wore this Amazing mask 24/7 inside my home for almost five days. (I am 71 and guided to stay inside). Every time I took it off to eat or drink water, I could smell smoke inside my home, even with the great air purifier running 24/7—I easily slept with it on!”

Another wrote, “These people rock with great customer service, too. Thanks so much for a Wonderful Product! It certainly worked for me.”

For more information, visit their FAQ page here. See more photos of the products on GNN’s Good Gifts page.

SHARE the Innovation with Friends Looking for Personal Protection… 

“The most wasted of all days is one without laughter.” – E.E. Cummings (watch our new Good News show for laughs)

Quote of the Day: “The most wasted of all days is one without laughter.” – E.E. Cummings (watch our new Good News show for laughs)

Photo: by Ivana Cajina, public domain, cropped

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

Jewish Brothers Collect Yarmulkes to Make Face Masks For Houston’s Homeless

A pair of teens in Texas came up with a clever way to reverse the shortage of face masks—and help protect the homeless population in their hometown, at the same time.

Matthew and Jeremy Jason had already been volunteering every Friday with an organization that feeds the hungry in downtown Houston. After the COVID-19 pandemic started, they came up with the idea of using the traditional skull caps worn during religious events and turning them into face masks.

The brothers have collected a lot of these caps on various special occasions over the years, like their coming-of-age Bar Mitzvahs.

“We decided to put them to good use,” Matthew told GNN.

The youngest of three brothers who belong to the Brith Shalom congregation, he and his siblings asked their synagogue to help collect the kippahs (the Hebrew word for yarmulke), calling their campaign ‘Kippahs to the Rescue’.

“In less than a week we were able to collect enough of them to make 160 face masks,” said Matthew. “My parents, brothers and I worked very hard to sew elastic bands on them, and they were ready to be delivered by Friday.”

RELATED: Sikhs Around the World Are Sending Thousands of Donated Meals to Elderly and People in Self-Isolation

“It was so great to see how I was able to help out, and people were so appreciative.”

The Jewish congregation continues to donate the caps and, to date, the family has collected 693—and sewn 316 of them.

Homeless man walks away in Houston with food and a face mask–Kippahs To The Rescue

Matthew hopes that if people like the idea, they can do the same in their own communities. Just sew both ends of a six-inch elastic strips on each side to anchor the cap around the ears.

A high school sophomore at the Awty International School, Matthew has been ‘mensch’ for years. To honor his Bar Mitzvah, he launched Street Birthdays, which celebrates birthdays for homeless people—and it is still going strong. Once every month, he brings cakes and candles and sings Happy Birthday to all who were born in that month.

WATCH Jeremy’s fun video below…

SHARE This Great Idea With Your Community on Social Media…

In One Week, Both Sweden and Austria Celebrated the Closing of Their Last Coal Plants

Credit: TVA Cumberland Power Plant, CC license

Conservationists are celebrating yet another environmental milestone as the last polluting coal-fired power plants in Austria and Sweden closed their doors.

Sweden’s original commitment to stop using coal was a target the country wanted to achieve by 2022, but the recent closure of Stockholm Exergi AB’s Värtaverket power plant means the nation will see their goal realized two years early.

According to a statement released earlier this month by Swedish Energy company Exergi, the plant was shut down following a mild winter in which neither boiler was required to operate in order to supplement the heating for 800,000 customers in the nation’s capital.

“This plant has provided the Stockholmers with heat and electricity since 1989, (but) today we know that we must stop using all fossil fuels, therefore the coal needs to be phased out and we do so several years before the original plan,” said Stockholm Exergi CEO Anders Egelrud in the statement.

LOOK: New Solar-Pavement Driveways Made of Plastic Bottles Can Power a Small Household

Just one day later, on the other side of the Baltic Sea, Austria saw the last coal-fired facility in its country shuttered, as the Mellach district heating plant in the city of Verbund closed.

The two countries became the second and third in Europe to have zero coal-powered electric plants, joining Belgium, which remarkably achieved its coal-free goal in 2016.

“With Sweden going coal-free in the same week as Austria, the downward trajectory of coal in Europe is clear,” said Kathrin Gutmann, campaign director for Europe Beyond Coal. “Against the backdrop of the serious health challenges we are currently facing, leaving coal behind in exchange for renewables is the right decision and will repay us in kind with improved health, climate protection and more resilient economies.”

RELATED: Impelled by Reactor Meltdown, Fukushima Japan Vows to Achieve 100% Renewable Energy Use

Seven more countries have made preparations to move on from coal by 2025, including France (2022), Slovakia (2023), Portugal (2023), the UK (2024), Ireland (2025) and Italy (2025), according to Europe Beyond Coal.

Natural market forces are driving coal prices up, as sellers of coal power and shares in coal plants must sell high to cover costs associated with the fall in demand.

According to statistics from Carbon Tracker, a UK-based think tank, 46% of coal plants in the EU ran at a financial loss in 2017, while in 2019, the price of operating a coal plant was almost 100% higher than equivalent renewable operations.

Power Up Their Positivity By Sharing Some Green News With Friends On Social Media — File photo by TVA Cumberland Power Plant, CC

New Alzheimer’s Nasal Spray Shown to Reduce Proteins Which Cause the Disease in Mice

A team of Japanese researchers have taken a small step towards creating a treatment method for the currently incurable and largely untreatable Alzheimer’s disease by successfully trialing a nasal spray option in mice.

The nasal spray was found to reduce dementia-like symptoms in mice while also reducing atrophied brain matter by blocking a special kind of protein that causes the disease.

Known as a “tau protein,” amalyoid-beta forms plaque around neurons in the part of the brain called the hippocampus, which serves many functions including short-term experiential memory storage.

RELATED: For First Time in History, AI Learns to Translate Silent Human Brain Activity into Text for Locked-In Syndrome Patients

Deep sleep is currently the only known onboard biological defense against these tau proteins. However, this is a process that occurs only during the first half of the solar night, and can be disrupted in some people, especially men.

The vaccine being studied stimulated the immune systems of the mice to produce antibodies that fought away the tau proteins—something that, so far, has been rare or impossible in trialed pharmaceuticals for humans.

When examined, the mice that had received the vaccine demonstrated more than double the amount of antibodies than those who had not. No side effects of any negative sort were recorded in the mice during or after the trial—a total of 8 months following vaccine administration.

CHECK OUT: First-of-its-Kind Blood Test Can Detect Over 50 Kinds of Cancer—Often Before Symptoms Even Show

“Much more research is necessary for the vaccine to be used in humans, but it is an accomplishment that can contribute to the development of a dementia cure,” wrote research team member Haruhisa Inoue, a professor at Kyoto University, in the corresponding paper published in Nature.

According to Inoue, Japan has about 3 million Alzheimer’s patients, while another report from the American Alzheimer’s Association suggests that more than 5 million Americans live with the disease.

As Inoue said, much more research is needed before anything like an effective treatment can be developed for humans, but the Kyoto paper is a good start towards that end.

Be Sure And Share The Breakthrough With Friends On Social Media…

Beaches See Huge Increase in Leatherback Sea Turtle Nests After Travel Restrictions in Florida and Thailand

File photo by Elisa Peterson, CC license

From fish returning to the Venice canals to deer in the streets of London, many of the shelter-in-place orders and lockdowns resulting from the coronavirus spread have allowed for nature to come back in some of the least-likely places.

Thailand is the latest nation to make headlines from the phenomenon, after the Thai government placed a ban on international flights and a strong encouragement to stay at home.

Though the coronavirus has shut down Thailand’s tourism economy, a season of peace and salvation for rare leatherback sea turtles has emerged. Endangered in this area of Southeast Asia, they are nesting here for the first time in five years.

The largest of all living turtles, the leatherbacks have made 11 nests on Thai beaches this spring—more than at any time during the last two decades.

WATCH: ‘Fantastic Grandmas’ Spend Retirement Photographing Venomous Sea Snakes for Science

“This is a very good sign for us because turtles have a high risk of getting killed by fishing gear and humans disturbing the beach,” the director of the Phuket Marine Biological Centre told The Guardian.

Similar Good News in the Sunshine State

In Florida, too, the number of leatherback sea turtle nests have skyrocketed compared to last year.

File photo by Elisa Peterson, CC

Juno Beach is the most densely nested sea turtle beach in the entire world, with an estimated 21,000 nests last year from various species.

Only 2 weeks into the summer nesting season of 2020, staff at the Loggerhead Marine Life Center have found and marked 76 nesting sites for the leatherback—a “significant increase” over last year’s count along the 9 and ½ mile beach.

With no dogs or people walking over nests and exposing eggs, there’s a good chance the eggs will survive the 60 days until hatch day.

CHECK OUT: After 13 Years of Social Distancing, Giant Pandas Finally Mate During Peaceful COVID-19 Zoo Closures

“Our leatherbacks are coming in strong this year. We’re excited to see our turtles thrive in this environment,” Sarah Hirsch told West Palm Beach’s WPEC-TV news.

“Our world has changed, but these turtles have been doing this for millions of years and it’s just reassuring and gives us hope that the world is still going on.”

By the end of the nesting season, if the increased numbers continue, it could provide a valuable boost for the vulnerable species.

Multiply The Good News By Sharing It With Your Friends On Social Media…

“When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world.” – John Muir

Quote of the Day: “When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world.” – John Muir

Photo: by Matthew Smith, public domain, cropped

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

Student Who Grew Her Own Canoe Out of Mushroom Thinks Fungus is Our Best Ally in Climate Change

Katy Ayers and her Myconoe — Photo by Katie Ayers

An enterprising young Nebraska woman who recently ‘grew’ her own canoe out of mushroom has proven that the fungus is much more than just a dinner ingredient.

While this might sound like the beginning of a fairytale, it’s actually just Katy Ayers’s unique way of informing the public about the utility of fungi and mycelium. She used this fascinating organism—which is neither plant nor bacteria nor animal—to create a hardened, water-tight vessel which she has fondly dubbed her “Myconoe”.

“Mushrooms are here to help us—they’re a gift,” Ayers told NBC. “There’s so much we can do with them beyond just food; it’s so limitless. They’re our biggest ally for helping the environment.”

The canoe is made of mycelium—the dense, fibrous, underground material that links together the various fruiting parts (the toadstools we see on the ground or our dinner plates).

RELATED: Student Treks to Yellowstone and Finds Bacteria That Eats Pollution and ‘Breathes’ Electricity

Since mycelium can bind and form around a given skeleton, Ayers managed to grow the canoe simply by letting the mycelium sculpt itself around the wire frame of a canoe.

Sitting in a special room with temperatures of 90 degrees Fahrenheit and 100% humidity, it took only 90 days for the mushrooms to cover the entire skeleton of the canoe. The Myconoe now weighs just 100 pounds after it was dried in the hot Nebraska summer sun. It also still fruits after it is taken out on the water, meaning it continually grows mushrooms and releases spores.

Katy Ayers and her Myconoe — Photo by Katie Ayers

Ayers started her project by reaching out to Nebraska Mushroom’s Ash Gordon, who offered her a summer internship after she received a small grant from her university in Columbus, Nebraska, to pursue a mushroom-oriented climate change solution.

“I always have very big ideas,” she said. “So I see something and it’s small and I just want to make it bigger and better. Since I’m from Nebraska, I love to fish. I’ve always wanted a boat. Why not just grow it?”

CHECK OUT: Newly-Developed Enzyme That Breaks Down Plastic Bottles in Hours Can Change the Recycling Game

“It really helps bridge that gap between people who didn’t have an interest in mushrooms—maybe they don’t like to eat mushrooms and really haven’t thought about other potential uses for them,” Gordon told NBC. “The boat gave them something to look at and think about.”

The project cost $500 for spawn, tools, and other equipment, but the success has spurred Katy and Gordon to experiment with creating other hard objects like chairs and landscape architecture materials out of mycelium.

Already, mushrooms are being used to create compostable car parts for Ford and Ikea has committed to transition much of its plastic packaging to a mushroom-based renewable alternative.

And Katy is set to become a sweet helper for bees: inspired by research that showed how honeybees which consumed mycelium had lower levels of a harmful virus, she is beginning to work with low-income students to create bee hotels.

Plant Some Positivity By Sharing The Good News With Friends On Social Media…

Record-Breaking Amounts of Solar Electricity Generated in Germany After String of Sunny Days

File photo by Nathan Dumlao, CC

Good News Network recently explained how traditional consumer-driven supply and demand market forces are pushing coal further and further to the edge of the bed (and economic ruin), like a sprawling spouse kicking the blankets toward the cold tile floor.

A recent string of cloudless days in Germany saw the country’s solar energy production climb above 32,000 megawatts in a single day last week—smashing the previous record set on March 23rd, according to a report from Bloomberg News.

The sunny days are slated to continue, according to the German weather service DWD.

These sunny days mean that solar power is generating around 40% of the total baseline in Germany, with all their renewables together accounted for 78%, while coal and nuclear power trailed behind with only 22%.

RELATED: Newly-Developed Solar Cell Earns Two World Records for Its ‘Extraordinary’ Efficiency

By 2038, renewables are predicted by the German government to make up 80% of total grid production. And owners of coal plants understand that it could become completely unsustainable to continue financing operations many years before that milestone is achieved.

A Death Rattle for Coal

In Europe, it’s already 100% more expensive to finance, supply, staff, and operate a coal-fired power plant compared to a renewable facility, while in historically coal-glutted nations like the U.S., India, and China, it’s already 50-60% more costly.

The recent lockdown orders for COVID-19 in Germany could have had a measurable effect on the sunny days as well, as the reduction in air pollution from things like car exhaust has already been recorded as significant in countries like India, where residents have been able able to see the Himalayas on the horizon for the first time in 30 years.

File photo by Nathan Dumlao, CC

LOOK: These New Solar-Pavement Driveways Made of Plastic Bottles Can Power the Average Household

Not only are the shutdowns rewarding the solar market with clearer skies, but the already lagging coal market is taking further body blows as demand plummets from the shutdown of stores and office buildings. In Germany, renewable sources are the first to enter grid circulation, and since the decrease in energy demand, consumers are actually using less power than is available, meaning the electricity generated from a coal plant might be not only unutilized—but unpaid for.

The services desired by consumers are simply being fulfilled by those most readily capable of fulfilling them.

This not only applies to Jane and John Smith turning on the lights in their house, but buyers and sellers in the energy sector. The simple explanation is as follows. Johan runs an energy investment firm, and when looking to buy shares of a power producer, his maximum price for carbon-based power is 5,000 euro per share, and for renewable power, 8,000 euro per share. He can afford to pay more for renewables because he stands to make more money from those shares.

CHECK OUT: Impelled by Reactor Meltdown, Fukushima Japan Vows to Achieve 100% Renewable Energy Use in 20 Years

Jurgen, who runs a carbon-based power source, can only afford to sell at 10,000 euro per share, because of current market demands for renewables. This difference of valuation of 5,000 euro between Jurgen and Johan prevent a sale from being made, and so Jurgen must either find a willing buyer, a way to reduce operating costs, or another energy project.

Whether catalyzed from climate activism, science, or whichever technology costs the least to operate, these simple supply and demand forces are causing people to put their money in renewables—and money-talks.

Power Up With Positivity By Sharing The Sunny News On Social Media…

These Birds Have Been Found to Warn Rhinos of Poaching—And It Could Help Protect the Species

Photo by Derek Keats, CC

Symbiotic relationships in nature are fascinating—and even common. The flower produces nectar so that insects which drink it will be coated in its pollen and carry it to other flowers—both species perform a service for the other in exchange for something they value more.

However, one iconic symbiotic relationship—between the rhino and the oxpecker—may be providing rhinos with a lifesaving early warning system to alert them to the presence of nearby poachers.

Poaching is famously hard on rhinos, but the red-billed oxpecker, a bird which you may have seen riding on large mammals like buffalo and rhino while feeding on the parasites that cling to them, may actually be providing alarm calls to help rhinos escape such dangers.

Whether the oxpecker is alerting the rhino or other oxpeckers of the danger is unclear, but interpreting and relying on other animal signals is a behavior that’s well-documented in nature.

WATCH: ‘Fantastic Grandmas’ Have Been Spending Retirement Photographing Venomous Sea Snakes for Science

While the rhino has good senses of smell and hearing, they have poor eyesight, and if you stay downwind of the great beasts, you can actually get quite close without being detected—unless there is an oxpecker on its back.

The bird’s Swahili name Askari wa kifaru, which translates to the ‘rhino’s guard,’ gives us a clue to the timelessness of Plotz’s theory, which he proved correct in a research paper.

While writing his doctoral thesis on the black rhinoceros, Roan Plotz contemplated how the endangered species might avoid humans. According to a feature in National Geographic, Plotz noted that most rhinos he was observing didn’t have oxpeckers on their backs, which make hissing alarm calls whenever danger approaches.

Photo by Derek Keats, CC

Rhinos accompanied by oxpeckers successfully detected humans and demonstrated more physical signs of wariness at the approach of a human than those that were not accompanied by their feathered friends.

CHECK OUT: For the First Time in 240 Years, White-Tailed Eagles Spotted Flying Over England

A mathematical analysis of all the research conducted showed a 40-50% reduction in sightings of rhinos when they were accompanied by oxpeckers.

Plotz suggests that reintroducing more oxpeckers into places with high-levels of poaching could potentially help reduce the number of rhinos poached. Another idea is to curb the use of pesticides, which are sometimes used directly on the fur of livestock to prevent the buildup of parasites. These chemicals have in some places extirpated the red billed-oxpecker who depend on the parasites of these livestock for food.

Be Sure And Share This Intriguing Wildlife Tale With Your Friends On Social Media…

Video Gamers Join the Race to Produce COVID-19 Drugs With Innovative Citizen-Science Project

If your parents (or spouse) ever told you that playing video games would amount to nothing in your life, you can tell them to think again. In our desperate hour, the drugs needed to reduce the spread of COVID-19 could come from playing a puzzle game specially designed by scientists as a citizen-science project.

How could playing something like Tetris or Minecraft help scientists create new pharmaceuticals? The idea seems mad—until you look at the structure of COVID-19 and the cellular receptor it binds to in their molecular form.

The game, called “Foldit” challenges players to help scientists create new proteins by solving complex puzzles in 3D, or creating their own new shapes. The data are viewed by scientists to see if any of the players have created anything like a viable design for a protein.

LOOK: 3D-Printing Teen Makes Hundreds of Ingenious Devices to Alleviate Ear Pain for Healthcare Workers

But wait, aren’t scientists infinitely more qualified to design new proteins than video gamers? Not necessarily, because the simple act of more people providing more variations means there’s a higher chance one of the gamers will get it right – and it’s worked before.

Foldit has already been used to help scientists build another version of an enzyme, one that had than 18 times more activity as it interacted more and more with different compounds in the body.

Foldit players also unraveled the crystalline structure of “Mason-Pfizer monkey virus retroviral protease.” This substantial mouthful of a designation is a chemical compound that plays a large role in viral maturation, and belongs to a family of compounds that are absolutely critical for creating new and more effective retroviral drugs to treat viral diseases like HIV.

Amazingly, this retroviral protease puzzle was solved in only 10 days—light speed compared to other forms of experimentation.

RELATED: Dogs Join the Fight Against COVID By Learning to Sniff Out the Virus

Gum in the Keyhole

The COVID-19 virus has a long projection or spike that fits perfectly onto one of the receptors which surround our cells, allowing it to slide into our cells like a key into a keyhole before beginning its sinister work.

The men behind Foldit are putting the game to use once again to try and discover another protein that fits this same lock, which would effectively gum up the keyhole, preventing the virus from accessing the cell.

CHECK OUT: For First Time in History, AI Learns to Translate Silent Human Brain Activity into Text for Locked-In Syndrome Patients

“It just has to stick to the virus—it does not have to do much else,” Dr. Brian Koepnick, one of the scientists working on the project told the Sydney Morning Herald.

“The lab behind it, led by Professor David Baker, is possibly the best equipped in the world to design a protein,” Associate Professor Ashley Buckle, a protein engineer who also spoke to the Herald.

While this wouldn’t represent a vaccine or cure for this coronavirus, it might give patients, even those with co-morbidity factors like a history of smoking, a much greater fighting chance—and it would give gamers an effective retort whenever they’re told that playing video games wouldn’t amount to anything.

Be Sure And Share The Scientific Story With Your Fellow Video Games On Social Media…

“You’re only as good as the chances you take.” – Al Pacino (turns 80 years old today)

Quote of the Day: “You’re only as good as the chances you take.” – Al Pacino (turns 80 years old today)

Photo: by Steven Lelham, public domain

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?