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Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler Donates $500K to Open Up Another Home for Abused and Traumatized Girls

Rock and roll musician Steven Tyler has already donated hundreds of thousands of dollars in order to ensure the health and happiness of abused girls – and now, his money is being used to run a new women’s shelter in Tennessee.

Earlier this week, the Aerosmith frontman attended a ribbon-cutting ceremony for Jamie’s House: a newly-renovated shelter for abused and neglected girls outside of Memphis.

The shelter was opened earlier this week on the Youth Villages Bartlett campus
thanks to a $500,000 donation from Tyler.

Its facilities are designed to offer treatment and accommodations for up to 14 girls who have experienced trauma in the past. The shelter was aptly named after Aerosmith’s hit 1989 song “Janie’s Got a Gun” about a girl who was abused by her family.

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This is the second Janie’s House shelter that Tyler has opened. The first facility was opened in Atlanta back in 2017 – and with the help of Tyler’s philanthropic organization, Janie’s Fund, he hopes to open many more shelters in the future.

Janie’s Fund was created in partnership with the Youth Villages nonprofit in 2015. In addition to opening two Janie’s Houses, Tyler also made a $532,000 donation in December to support American foster children after they have aged out of the foster care system.

In total, Tyler’s initiative has raised about $4 million in funding for abused women and children.

(WATCH the news coverage below) – Photo by Janie’s Fund

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Park Rangers Delighted to Find Elephant Seals Reclaimed Beach During Government Shutdown

The recent US government shutdown was certainly a source of frustration for many federal workers – especially park rangers.

But for the elephant seals of Drake Beach, California, the absence of human activity became a prime opportunity to claim a new home for their nesting season.

As the number of rangers monitoring the coastline just north of San Francisco dwindled during the shutdown, the once visitor-friendly shoreline was occupied by over 100 of the formerly endangered mammals.

In an effort to protect both seals and visitors, the park service of Point Reyes national seashore has closed the beaches until early April, when it is expected for the seals to vacate.

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“In January 2019, elephant seals occupied the section of Drakes Beach adjacent to the [visitor center], and, at times, the parking lot and wooden ramps leading up to the visitor center,” the park service announced. “As a result, the entire Drakes Beach area south of the [highway junction] was closed to the public to better protect the elephant seals from disturbance.”

In the weeks following the closure, the elephant seal population has continued to increase, with the arrival of a dozen newborn pups alongside their respective mothers. The isolation, as well as lack of disturbance from visitors, has helped to create a perfect safe haven where the female seals can nurse their young, the pups can explore, and the massive, 12-foot long males can duke it out over territorial disputes.

Since the elephant seal was almost hunted to extinction in the late 19th century, the seal’s resurgence is being celebrated by conservationists.

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“If you just get out of the way, wildlife will find their way in,” Chief Seashore Wildlife Ecologist Dave Press told The Guardian.

As the government shutdown nears its conclusion, limited access to the beach has been granted to visitors, allowing them the rare opportunity to observe Drake Beach’s newest residents.

“With the partial government shutdown ended, Point Reyes National Seashore has reopened,” said the NPS in a statement. “The [road and park rangers] will be on site to provide direction, education, and safe elephant seal viewing opportunities for the public. Access may change based upon elephant seal activity.”

Be Sure And Share The Good News With Your Friends On Social Media Photo by Point Reyes NPS

Father Thanks Stranger for Entertaining His Daughter in the Airport: ‘This is the world I want for her’

One man’s heartwarming new friendship with a 16-month-old girl is proving that friendship has no boundaries.

Former US Marine Kevin Armentrout had been waiting to catch a plane from Las Vegas to San Diego with his daughter Carter earlier this week when she started befriending their fellow passengers in the airport.

“[Carter] was being her usual inquisitive self, wanting to meet and say ‘hi’ to everyone she could, until she walked up on this man,” Armentrout wrote in a Facebook post about the encounter. “He reached out and asked if she wanted to sit with him.”

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For the next 45 minutes, the man – who was identified only as a Samsung sales manager from Oklahoma named Joseph – taught Carter how to draw pictures on his tablet; watched cartoons with her; and even accepted her generous offer to share her snacks.

“Watching them in that moment, I couldn’t help but think, different genders, different races, different generations, and the best of friends. This is the world I want for her,” wrote Armentrout.

“In a country that is continuously fed that it’s so deeply divided by beliefs, I want her life to be filled with moments like this… not liberal or conservative republican or democrat, socialist or capitalist, just HUMAN.”

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Armentrout, who now works as a writer, speaker, and nutritionalist, posted a photo of Carter and Joseph to social media where it has since racked up almost 100,000 shares.

Though Armentrout has reportedly spoken to Joseph since publishing the photo, he made sure to end his post with a heartfelt word of gratitude, saying: “Thank you for showing my daughter what kindness and compassion looks like. Continue to shine your light in the world.”

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Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters Uses Private Jet to Reunite Mom With Sons Who Were Abducted to Syria (GNN Podcast)

This rock idol didn’t hesitate to hop aboard his private jet and fly first to Trinidad, then 6000 miles to Syria, to reunite a two siblings with their mother. Hear our Good News Guru tell the inspiring story on the radio in Los Angeles—during the February 1, 2019 Ellen K. Morning Show on KOST-103.5.

READ more or WATCH the video on GNN.

(File photo by Alterna2, CC)

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“Happiness is not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, the thrill of creative effort.” – Franklin D. Roosevelt

Quote of the Day: “Happiness is not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, the thrill of creative effort.” – Franklin D. Roosevelt

Photo: by Statkraft CEOs, CC license, via Flickr

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‘For the First Time’, Researchers Use Healthy Stem Cells for Future Type 1 Diabetes Cure

For the first time ever, researchers have successfully transformed human stem cells into mature insulin-producing cells, a major breakthrough in the effort to develop a cure for type 1 (T1) diabetes.

Replacing these cells, which are lost in patients with T1 diabetes, has long been a dream of regenerative medicine, but until now, scientists had not been able to figure out how to produce cells in a lab dish that work as they do in healthy adults.

“We can now generate insulin-producing cells that look and act a lot like the pancreatic beta cells you and I have in our bodies. This is a critical step towards our goal of creating cells that could be transplanted into patients with diabetes,” said Matthias Hebrok, director of the UCSF Diabetes Center and senior author of the new study, which was published in Nature Cell Biology.

T1 diabetes is an autoimmune disorder that destroys the insulin-producing beta cells of the pancreas, typically in childhood. Without insulin’s ability to regulate glucose levels in the blood, spikes in blood sugar can cause serious organ damage and eventually death. The condition can be managed by taking regular shots of insulin with meals, but people with type 1 diabetes still often experience serious health consequences like kidney failure, heart disease and stroke.

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Patients facing life-threatening complications of their disease may be eligible for a pancreas transplant from a deceased donor, but these are rare and the wait time is long: Out of the approximately 1.5 million people living with type 1 diabetes in the US, only about 1,000 get pancreas transplants in any given year. The procedure is also risky: recipients must take immune-suppressing drugs for life and many of the transplants end up failing for one reason or another. Transplants of just the pancreatic “islets” – clusters of cells containing healthy beta cells – are currently in clinical trials, but still rely on pancreases from deceased donors.

That’s why Hebrok and other diabetes researchers have long hoped to use stem cells to grow healthy beta cells in a lab so they could be transplanted into patients without the need to wait for a pancreas or islet transplant – but for years, scientists have been unable to figure out how to program stem cells into fully mature beta cells.

“The cells we and others were producing were getting stuck at an immature stage where they weren’t able to respond adequately to blood glucose and secrete insulin properly. It has been a major bottleneck for the field,” Hebrok said.

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In the new study, Hebrok and colleagues, led by postdoctoral fellow Gopika Nair, realized that the key to growing lab-grown beta cells into full maturity lay in an overlooked facet of beta cell development – the physical process by which the cells separate from the rest of the pancreas and form the so-called islets of Langerhans.

“A key principle in biology is that form follows function, so we reasoned that the formation of islets might be an important process for beta cells to mature properly,” Nair said.

When the researchers replicated that process in lab dishes by artificially separating partially differentiated pancreatic stem cells and reforming them into islet-like clusters, the cells’ development suddenly leapt forward. Not only did the beta cells begin responding to blood sugar more like mature insulin-producing cells, but the entire islet “neighborhood” – including less well-understood alpha and delta cells – also seemed to develop in ways that had never been seen in a laboratory setting.

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The researchers then transplanted these lab-grown “islets” into healthy mice and found that they were functional in a matter of days – producing insulin in response to blood sugar much like the animals’ own islets.

In collaboration with bioengineers, geneticists, and other colleagues at UCSF, Hebrok’s team is already working to move regenerative therapies from dream to reality, for instance by using CRISPR gene editing to make these cells transplantable into patients without the need for immune-suppressing drugs, or by screening drugs that could restore proper islet function in patients with T1 diabetes by protecting and expanding their few remaining beta cells to reboot pancreatic insulin production.

“Current therapeutics like insulin injections only treat the symptoms of the disease,” Nair said. “Our work points to several exciting avenues to finally finding a cure.”

“We’re finally able to move forward on a number of different fronts that were previously closed to us,” Hebrok added. “The possibilities seem endless.”

(Source: University of California San Francisco)

Cure Your Friends Of Negativity By Sharing The Good News To Social MediaPhoto by Hebrok Lab / UCSF

Legally Blind Basketball Player Took One Shot in His Only Game – and He Sank It

Clay Warner has worn his basketball uniform to every single one of his high school games, waiting on the bench for his chance to play – but until last week, he had never been called onto the court.

The 18-year-old senior plays defense for the Comets team at North Polk High School in Iowa. Though he has been called the “heart and soul” of the team, his coaches have never brought him into play out of concern that he would get hurt.

This is because Clay is legally blind – even when he wears glasses. His mother says that he was born as a “micropreemie” with cerebral palsy at just 23 weeks old, although he manages to aim for the basketball hoop by focusing on the right corner of his glasses.

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So in lieu of the high school’s Senior Night last week, Clay’s coach finally called him onto the court during the final minute of the game. With the audience already giving him a standing ovation, Clay got into position as the crowd cheered him on.

“I wanted to get him in. It was Senior Night,” the head coach told WHO-TV in the interview below. “If there’s an opportunity that presented itself, I wanted to take it advantage of it. All the players were for it, too.”

Once the game was back in play, one of Clay’s teammates passed him the ball – and though he has been shooting hoops since he was in third grade, this was the first time he had ever taken a shot on his high school basketball team.

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As the crowd waited with baited breath, Clay took the shot and sank the ball clean through the net, barely touching the rim – and the spectators erupted in wild cheers.

“This whole gym was yelling my name,” Clay told the news outlet. “Everything, both benches were jumping. The whole crowd was going crazy. It was like I was a little kid again.”

(WATCH the footage below) – Photo by WHO-TV

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Seagull Has Been Visiting the Man Who Saved Him Almost Every Day for the Last 12 Years

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It has been 12 years since this elderly man saved the life of a seagull – and it still returns to visit him every day.

John Sumner and his feathered friend ‘Chirpy’ have developed a unique bond since they started spending a portion of each chilly seasonal day playing together on the beach.

Sumner first met Chirpy when the bird had a broken leg. Luckily for the seagull, Sumner helped to nurse him back to health.

“I saw him screaming and shouting above my head in agony and I did not know what to do,” recalled 80-year-old Sumner. “The next day he came around me again and tried to land, but was screaming in pain. I did not think he would live, his leg was completely broken.”

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To help the bird, Sumner fed it dog biscuits that he had originally brought along to the beach for his pet Jack; a tradition that he has repeated every time he has returned to the sandy shores.

With the help of his human counterpart, Chirpy’s leg healed, and although it was a bit crooked, the bird was back to his regular self – and it now shares a special friendship with Sumner.

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“He comes right up to me, he gets so close. He won’t go to anybody else but me, so he has got some sort of relationship with me,” says Sumner. “In March, he will go off and do his natural thing and then in September, he is back with me as normal after they have done their nesting.

Chirpy, who is believed to be around 20 years old, won’t approach anyone else on Instow Beach near Yelland, Devon – but the bird will fly straight over to Sumner as soon as he arrives.

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“There’s not that many black-headed gulls on Instow Beach. If there was more than 20, I’d be surprised,” he added. “He encourages the rest to come over, but he is the only one that comes close to me and he will just stay there and hover.

“People are aghast when I tell them, they can’t believe a seagull would come back like that. It makes you wonder what kind of world we actually are in – do they know more than we think they know?”

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State Recycling Rate Reaches All-Time High at Double the National Average Thanks to 10 Cent Payments

A statewide program which pays consumers for their beverage containers has resulted in a recycling rate that is more than double the national average.

The recycling rate of Oregon’s bottle exchange program reached an all-time high in 2018 when it reported that 90% of its deposits were recycled, resulting in over 2 billion beverage containers being saved from landfills.

This is a drastic improvement from 2016 when the state recycling rate was at just 64% – and it’s even more impressive considering how the national recycling average is only about 40%, according to the Oregon Beverage Recycling Cooperative.

“That’s a really interesting thing given how much change is happening in recycling markets right now,” the collective’s Joel Schoening told NPR. “Because we deal only in glass, plastic and aluminum with very few exceptions, we have a very clean recycling product, which makes it easier to sell and recycle domestically.”

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The program incentivizes state residents to recycle by offering them 10 cents for every glass, aluminum, and plastic container that is dropped off at their BottleDrop locations. Additionally, the cooperative has teamed up with Oregon breweries to create reusable bottles that are thicker and more durable than normal glass bottles. This way, the BottleDrop processing system can easily detect and separate the bottles so that they can be given back to the breweries for reuse.

The cooperative says that the program’s success is largely thanks to the Oregon Liquor Control Commission upping the bottle redemption rate from 5 cents to 10 cents when recycling rates failed to reach state goals in April 2017. As a result of that extra nickel, the recycling redemption rate skyrocketed from 59% to 82% for the remainder of the year.

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“Great is the art of beginning, but greater the art of ending.” – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Quote of the Day: “Great is the art of beginning, but greater is the art of ending.” – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Photo: by mcdarius, CC license, via Flickr

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Watch Police Officer’s Viral Video of Three Young Rappers Helping Elderly Woman Get into Her Car

Three young men are being praised for coming to the aid of a 100-year-old man who was having trouble helping his exhausted wife into their car’s passenger seat.

The good deed was caught on camera thanks to Officer Kanesha Carnegie of the Levy County Sheriff’s Office in Bronson, Florida.

The policewoman had been in a gas station parking lot in Williston when she saw 89-year-old Rose Griest struggling to get back into her car.

The elderly couple had reportedly stopped on their way to a medical appointment in order for Griest to use the gas station bathroom. Upon returning to the car, however, Griest was so exhausted from the trip she could barely stand.

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Carnegie was about to go over to offer her assistance to the Griests when she saw three young rappers from the neighborhood approach the couple and help them into their car.

Carnegie, who recognized the three friends as Joc Koe Stoe, Marty, and Freddy G, instead asked their permission to film the exchange so she could inspire other people with their act of compassion.

“It was a beautiful thing to see,” Carnegie told Yahoo! News. “I know these men from the neighborhood, and I wanted them to have that moment to show who they really are.”

Since uploading the video to Facebook last week, it has been viewed millions of times.

(WATCH the heartwarming clip below) – Photo by Kanesha Carnegie

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Metal Brought to Earth by Asteroid That Wiped Out Dinosaurs Could Be Harmless Cure for Cancer

This alien metal was found on the meteor that wiped out the dinosaurs – but now, it could be used to cure cancer, according to new research.

The metal, which is known as iridium, is one of the world’s rarest elements. Experiments show that it penetrates the nucleus of cancer cells by latching onto the blood protein albumin. After the metal is injected into the nucleus of cancer cells, the material can then be blasted with a laser beam to produce a poisonous form of oxygen that is deadly for tumor cells and harmless for healthy ones.

This treatment, which is known as photodynamic therapy, activates the metal to kill the cancer cells through oxidization, where the cells’ own oxygen is converted into a lethal form. More importantly, healthy tissue is unaffected.

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British scientists say that it could revolutionize treatment for the deadliest forms of the disease. Professor Peter Sadler, from the department of chemistry at Warwick University, said: “It’s amazing this large protein can penetrate into cancer cells and deliver iridium which can kill them selectively on activation with visible light.

“If this technology can be translated into the clinic, it might be effective against resistant cancers and reduce the side effects of chemotherapy.”

He said iridium can be applied locally and in smaller doses. His international team used a special organic coating to hook up iridium to albumin, causing it to glow very brightly. Under powerful microscopes, they tracked its passage into lung cancer tumors grown in the lab and found that the process had destroyed the growths. The next step for the treatment is pre-clinical animal trials.

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Photodynamic therapy is based on chemical compounds called photosensitizers that produce oxidizing species when switched on by lasers. It’s already being used to treat a range of common cancers including those of the skin, breast, and lung.

The study published in Angewandte Chemie International Edition found the iridium based compound is an excellent photosensitiser.

What is more, albumin was able to deliver it right into the nucleus of cancer cells, which contains all of the cancer’s genetic material.

The dormant iridium can then be turned on by red laser light irradiation, destroying them from their very center. The bright luminescence of the iridium allowed its accumulation in the nucleus of tumors – and its activation leading to the death of cells – to be followed in real-time.

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Co-author Dr, Cinzia Imberti, who is also from Warwick, said: “It’s fascinating how albumin can deliver our photosensitiser so specifically to the nucleus.

“We are at a very early stage, but we are looking forward to see where the pre-clinical development of this new compound can lead.”

With cancer becoming resistant to certain treatments, it’s crucial to find other methods such as this. Additionally, the precious platinum metal is already used in over half of cancer chemotherapies.

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Though iridium can be found deep within the Earth’s crust, it is more commonly found in meteorites and asteroids, such as the massive seven-mile wide space rock that landed 66 million years ago, killing off 70% of living species – including the dinosaurs.

The brittle silvery-white metal was found in the world-famous Chicxulub crater underneath the Yucatan Peninsula, which was created as a result of the asteroid strike believed to be responsible for the death of the dinosaurs.

Sadler believes other precious metals like iridium – which are safe with minimum side-effects – can potentially combat treatment resistance, saying that: “It’s certainly now time to try to make good medical use of the iridium delivered to us by an asteroid 66 million years ago.”

Cure Your Friends Of Negativity By Sharing The Good News To Social MediaFile photo by Hi-Res Images of Chemical Elements, CC

Scientists Invent Ingenious Emission-Free System to Bottle Solar Energy in the Summer to Save for Winter

This ground-breaking new solar-powered battery is giving the fossil fuel industry reason for concern.

After decades of research, prototypes, and trials, the first sustainable solar-powered storage system is underway and it is poised for commercial release within the next 10 years.

Only one year ago, a research group from Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden presented a special kind of molecule that was capable of retaining energy harnessed from solar panels. Today, this same team has developed the system so that it can use this molecule in liquid-form to heat homes, run appliances, and ultimately reduce – if not eliminate – our need for fossil fuels.

The Molecular Solar Thermal Energy Storage (MOST) uses existing technologies to turn thermal energy and water into steam, which can then be turned into electrical energy. By using their specially-designed liquid to store energy from the sun, the system is also entirely non-toxic and reusable for hundreds of cycles.

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“We’ve run it though 125 cycles without any significant degradation,” team researcher Kasper Moth-Poulsen told NBC News.

Taken together, the advances mean that the energy system MOST now works in a circular manner. First, the liquid captures energy from sunlight in a solar thermal collector on the roof of a building. Then it is stored at room temperature, leading to minimal energy losses. When the energy is needed, it can be drawn through the catalyst so that the liquid heats up. The warmth could then be utilized in, for example, domestic heating systems, after which the liquid can be sent back up to the roof to collect more energy – all completely free of emissions, and without damaging the molecule.

“We have made many crucial advances recently, and today we have an emissions-free energy system which works all year around,” Moth-Poulsen added in a university press release.

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Furthermore, the amount of energy stored by the fuel is nothing short of extraordinary. The most effective variant of the fuel can hold up to 250 watt hours of energy per kilogram – which is twice as much energy stored by Tesla’s Powerwall batteries.

While further development of the MOST system is still needed, the groundwork has been set for what appears to be a tremendous technological breakthrough within the next decade.

Power Up With Positivity By Sharing The Good News With Your Friends On Social Media – File photo by Maxim Bilovitskiy, CC

Watch Woman’s Reaction When She Becomes First Female Head Chef in US to Receive 3 Michelin Stars

It has been 13 years since the Michelin-star rating system came to the United States – but the prestigious three-star rating was only recently bestowed upon a female head chef in an American kitchen.

Back in late November, Dominique Crenn became the first woman to receive the Michelin three-star rating for leading an American kitchen.

Crenn is the head chef behind the Atelier Crenn restaurant in San Francisco, California. She received her two Michelin stars back in 2013, just two years after she opened the restaurant.

According to the Eater, there are roughly 120 restaurants around the world that have been given the 3-star rating – and only five of them are run by women.

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The French-born Crenn says that she often receives emails from aspiring young female chefs who express their appreciation for her work – and she says that her third Michelin star is just as much a milestone for her fans as it is for her.

“I’ve said in the past the star doesn’t define me – what defines me is what I do with it,” Crenn told NBC News a week after receiving the exciting news. “I really work hard to make sure that people look at me as being a cook — not look at me as being a woman.

“It doesn’t matter what gender we are, we can do it too,” she added with a smile. “Maybe better sometimes.”

(WATCH the interview below) – Photo by Dominique Crenn

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Cancer Patient Who Set Up Antiques Shop as Dying Wish is Still in Business 20 Years Later

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A cancer victim who started his business as a dying wish is still going strong – even after living 20 years longer than expected.

65-year-old David Rolfe believed he was living on borrowed time after he was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma in 1995. The diagnosis led him to try and fulfill his lifelong ambition of opening up Rolfey’s antiques shop in Bath, Somerset, which he assumed would at least see him through his last days.

But after undergoing over two decades of radiotherapy, chemotherapy and medication, his doctors recently gave him the all-clear – and his shop is still going strong though he is now being forced to relocate due to rising business rates and changing shopping habits.

“I have always been interested in antiques, collecting things and ‘junk’ and I wanted to end my days in an antique shop,” said Rolfe. “I did not think I had much time left after contracting cancer. I have lived for about 20 years longer than I thought I would.

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“It is a job that goes on for seven days a week. I would earn more washing dishes at a pub than from this, but I love what I do.”

Rolfe opened his bric-a-brac shop in 1997, two years after being diagnosed with the rare cancer of the lymphatic system.

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“My grandma used to have a stall at Birmingham market. From a young age I have been interested in this sort of thing. I remember getting started over two decades ago and I really got into it and thought, ‘this is for me’. I have never looked back.

“I could never have imagined that we would grow into being what we have become.”

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Over time, his hospital appointments changed from monthly to quarterly, to bi-annually and then to once a year.

He stopped going to the hospital altogether a year ago, but added: “You never know if it is completely gone, but leaving the hospital for my last bit of treatment around 20 years after I was diagnosed with it was a good and surreal feeling.”

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There was an outpouring on social media last month when he announced that Rolfey’s would be relocating due to overhead costs and utilities, but Rolfe says he has no plans to retire and is now looking for a new premises.

“The job is the best job in the world. I absolutely love it. I will not stop, I enjoy it too much,” says Rolfe. “This is not the end for me, I want to carry on.”

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“To say goodbye, is to die a little. To say good morning, is a hope for a new sunshine in a cloudy winter.” – Nabil Toussi

Quote of the Day: “To say goodbye, is to die a little. To say good morning, is a hope for a new sunshine in a cloudy winter.” – Nabil Toussi

Photo: Morning bike ride, by Maurice Koop, CC license, via Flickr

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Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters Uses Private Jet to Reunite Mom With Sons Who Were Abducted to Syria

Want to LISTEN to this story? Hear the segment from The Good News Guru (the GNN Founder) on our Friday radio broadcast with Ellen K on KOST-103.5 — Or, READ the story below…
(Subscribe to our podcast on iTunes – or for Androids, on Podbean)

Kindness is now “just another brick in the wall” of Roger Waters’ amazing career since he helped facilitate an emotional family reunion for a mother and sons separated for four years.

Felicia Perkins-Ferreira has not had a good night’s sleep on the Caribbean island of Trinidad since her two sons were abducted from home by their father.

The boys, now 7 and 11 years old, were brought to Syria in 2014 where their father was fighting for the Islamic State. After he was presumed killed in conflict in 2017, the boys were taken to the border by their stepmother—but then abandoned on the side of the road, only to end up in a Syrian refugee camp.

A human rights lawyer named Clive Stafford Smith heard about the family’s plight, and reached out to his friend for help—Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters.

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Waters was so moved by Felicia’s heartbreak, he hopped in his private jet to go pick her up in Trinidad and take her 6,000 miles to the Syrian border so they could attempt to fetch her children.

After Perkins-Ferreira, who had never left Trinidad in her life, crossed the border with Smith into the refugee camp, the musician Waters told Channel 4 News that he spent “hours and hours and hours” anxiously awaiting their return. At long last, the family finally arrived safely to the jet around midnight – and Waters says he could barely contain his relief.

The family was later flown from Syria to Switzerland, and then London so they could receive trauma counseling before being returned to their home in Trinidad, according to The Guardian. The boys cried with joy upon being reunited with their lost-lost mother —leaving a place that must have seemed like the ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ compared to The Caribbean.

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Smith, the founder of Reprieve a nonprofit for human rights, is the real hero, and reassured reporters that his organization would ensure the family could “get on with a really productive, decent life.”

The boys spent the entire return journey clinging to their mother, no longer feeling like ‘two lost souls swimming in a fish bowl’.

(WATCH the brief Roger Waters interview below) – File photo by Alterna2, CC

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Investors Worth $6.5 Trillion Are Using Funding to Demand Change From World’s Biggest Fast Food Chains

An investor group representing $6.5 trillion is telling the fast food industry to put its money into the fight against global warming.

The group, which calls itself the Farm Animal Investment Risk and Return (FAIRR) initiative, has sent letters to the world’s biggest fast food companies urging them to control their carbon footprint – or else expect a backlash from investors.

Their letter reads: “Livestock farming is responsible for 14.5% of global GHG emissions. On a commodity basis, beef and dairy cattle are responsible for a significant portion of total emissions, contributing 65% of the sector’s overall GHG outputs.”

According to FAIRR, these high emission levels are not only a threat to the environment, they also pose a threat to economic sustainability and subsequent company growth.

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“Without a clear sustainability strategy and a more forward-looking approach, we believe [your company] will endanger not only its own supply security and financial growth, but also global food security,” they concluded.

The letter was sent to McDonald’s, KFC, Domino’s, Chipotle, Pizza Hut, Burger King, and other major food chains under their management. In addition to reducing carbon emissions, the letter demands that these same fast food companies monitor their water use and cut its polluting of water sources caused by excessive fertilization on adjacent land.

The companies have until March 2019 to present a tangible plan of action for the coming years. So far, over 80 investors have signed the letter, making it clear to the fast food giants that they can either comply or face the financial consequences. Learn more about FAIRR’s analysis of the issues facing the industry.

Plant Some Positivity By Sharing The Good News To Social Media – File photo by Kadluba, CC

What if Your Homework Included Comic Books? NFL All-Pro Pushes to Make Education Fun

Ovie Mughelli had an impressive career in the NFL, playing as an All-Pro fullback for the Baltimore Ravens and the Atlanta Falcons. He is now blocking on a different kind of offense— fighting for a healthy planet.

“It’s not a Democrat, Republican, or even a policy issue,” Mughelli said about protecting the environment. “It’s all about people. It’s all about taking care of your fellow man and it’s all about saving the children.”

Both his daughter and son were born premature, weighing just 2 pounds. While they fought for their lives in the hospital, Ovie learned that they were held there even longer because of the unsafe air quality in Atlanta.

“I realized a sense of urgency had to be put towards the environment…and I can’t do that unless I get everyone excited about making practical lifestyle changes to help our planet.”

So, he makes green education fun, engaging, and accessible. In 2018 he launched Gridiron Green, a sustainability comic book developed in partnership with UNICEF that emphasizes STEM technology to solve problems.

The comic storyline was developed around the United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals, and focuses on Goal 15: Life on Land.

Ovie is harnessing the ‘universal power of sport’ in comic book form, to inspire generations of eco-conscious citizens. His graphic novel can guide and motivate diverse kids from underserved communities to grow into the green leaders of today and tomorrow.

In 2009 he founded his nonprofit Ovie Mughelli Foundation to use the latest technology to make ”environmental protection education available to everyone” while emphasizing STEM education.

His new crowdfunding project was just launched in partnership with Projects for Good, a community site that aggregates support for socially responsible projects. His goal is to expand the storyline of the comic series into a curriculum that meets state standards, as well as create a companion VR module that interactively educates anyone on day to day, practical lifestyle choices they can make to help the environment and to develop STEM skills for the workforce.

Help Ovie protect our planet: Check out the project; donate; or help it go viral by sharing with your network.

Projects For Good sat down with Ovie to hear about what inspires him and how the power of sport can create movements.

What inspired you to fight for the Planet?

Growing up, I witnessed many people who didn’t have basic human rights. I always wished I could do more. I think that was always the little superhero in me, even back then. Luckily the NFL and sports broadcasting has given me the platform to bring awareness to environmental issues. Safe water and clean air are basic human rights. When I was little I was into the comic Captain Planet. I saw myself in Kwame, the main character. He was young and African and fighting to protect the environment. And then I realized, ‘Hey a comic is a great way to educate diverse groups because it is an art form that appeals to both youth and adults, of all demographics.’ Captain Planet made me realize there is a way to educate people and get them excited to make lifestyle changes in their mindset and day-to-day behavior.

What is the biggest challenge you’ve faced?

The biggest challenge I’ve faced is that no one understands how big of a problem this is. Apathy is real. People think they’ll deal with this next week, next year, or leave it for the next generation. They think we can kick this down the road and it won’t get worse. But it’s going to get worse and we need to make it better now. Unfortunately there are so many issues that this one almost gets forgotten, especially in the sports world.

Is there a leader or historical figure that inspires you?

I’m fascinated and inspired by Nelson Mandela. When I talk about making sustainability education fun I often use the phrase “the power of sport.” Mandela said, “Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire, it has the power to unite people…it speaks to youth in a language they understand.” I believe the comic book will have the same power; it will speak to a diverse group of people in a format that unites people. Everyone loves a good superhero story, a story where justice prevails, and the comic will help people understand that they can be a hero in their time here on our planet. (Read the full interview at Projects for Good.)

You can make a difference! Take one minute to share the project and help protect our planet. It’s easy, once you get to the project page hit the SHARE button and share to the social network of your choice.

Appalachian Coal Miners Who Lost Their Jobs Are Being Retrained as Beekeepers – for Free

With the slow decline of the coal industry, West Virginia residents are enthusiastically taking to bee-keeping as an alternative new source of income

Over the course of the last 28 years, high-paying mining jobs have dwindled from 132,000 to 53,000, and former mineworkers have found themselves in need of a new occupation.

Now, a recently-formed nonprofit called the Appalachian Beekeeping Collective has offered a solution for the economic hardship in the region.

So far, the organization has trained 35 beekeepers, with plans to train another 50 during the upcoming weeks. Once the budding beekeepers complete the free training, they are also given all the equipment they will need for their new profession.

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“Most of the coal miners are hardworking people,” one local resident told NPR. “With what Appalachian Beekeeping Collective is doing, teaching us how to make a profit from beekeeping, I think we can all make a good go of it and get back to work.”

Cindy Bee (that’s her real name) is a master beekeeper from Georgia who works at Appalachian Headwaters, the nonprofit organization behind the Collective. She believes that beekeeping may be the answer for West Virginia’s financial struggles.

“It wasn’t just the miners that lost their livelihoods when mining jobs disappeared; other industries started to wilt, too, and entire communities were affected,” Bee told the news outlet. “We’re doing something that can boost the town up.”

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A strong beehive can produce between 60 to 100 pounds of honey per season – honey that the Appalachian Beekeeping Collective plans to buy back from its former trainees at roughly $7 per pound. Considering beekeepers maintain 10 to 15 beehives at a time, one can see how this has the potential to revitalize rural economies.

Jodi Helmer, the North Carolina journalist and beekeeper who wrote the article for NPR, didn’t mention the overall decade-long decline of bees or colonies in the U.S., but estimated that 20 hives could mean nearly $15,000 per season, with plenty of time for other work on the side. “There are also opportunities to produce candles, lip balm and other wax products with additional training offered through the organization.”

“Now that I know about all of the possibilities for making money from my hives, I’m all in,” one resident said enthusiastically. “I need this extra income, and I’m going to be big time with this.”

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