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Watch Dad of 5 Girls Yell With Joy When Baby Boy is Born

Kennedy Zarour is the proud father of five daughters – but when his wife Natalie finally gave birth to a baby boy, he couldn’t contain his excitement.

Natalie started filming her husband as she was delivering the child by C-section on March 8th.

The New Jersey-based couple didn’t yet know the gender of the baby until the doctors announced that it was a boy. Kennedy was so shocked, he let out a shout of happiness.

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“Oh my God I love it!” Zarour screams as he jumps right out of his seat. “Yeah baby! I got a boy!”

Kennedy was so exuberant, in fact, the doctors actually had to tell him to calm down so he wouldn’t scare anyone.

The beloved newborn has since been named Gerard.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Prairie Dogs Win Major Victory in Court

Prairie pups on the range are now more likely to live and see another day thanks to a recent court ruling.

The 10th Circuit of Court of Appeals overturned a Utah state judge’s ruling to eliminate the protection of prairie dogs under the Endangered Species Act.

The Utah Prairie Dog used to have a recorded population of over 100,000 one century ago, but their numbers have dwindled to mere thousands due to human conflict and hunting, which has since led to their “endangered” classification.

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In 2014, Utah voted to disregard federal regulation of the species by claiming that the Utah Prairie Dog was a pest that should be managed by the state landowners who are affected by them. The Denver-based 3-judge panel overruled the legislation and sided with environmentalists claiming that the species would be wiped out without federal protection.

The panel also argued that the Endangered Species Act should not simply apply to animals that roam across multiple states.

“Piecemeal excision of purely intrastate species would severely undercut the ESA’s conservation purposes,” Judge Holmes wrote in the panel’s ruling. The “regulation of take of endangered and threatened species is directly related to—indeed, arguably inversely correlated with—economic development and commercial activity.”

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12-Year-old Girl Outsmarts Carjacker and Saves Little Sister

A 12-year-old girl may not seem like much of a match for an adult carjacker – but that wasn’t the case for Maddie Weiler.

Maddie and her 7-year-old sister Molly were on the way to the Busch Gardens theme park in Virginia on Saturday when they witnessed a car accident happen right in front of their eyes.

Maddie’s mother Brandie Weiler pulled over and got out of the car in order to help the victims. After she dialed 911, however, she saw the man who caused the accident unlock the door to her car and climb into the driver’s seat.

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The perpetrator, 21-year-old Paul Salsman, wasn’t expecting the beatdown that followed.

Maddie sprung into action by putting the van into drive, knowing full well that it prevented the car from starting. She then started punching Salsman as hard as she could and screaming at the top of her lungs – all to give her sister Molly enough time to get out of the car and away from the danger.

Salsman reportedly tried to steal two more cars before being arrested by police. He is currently being charged with three counts of felony carjacking, felony hit and run, and driving under the influence of drugs.

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According to Fox News, Maddie is an talented horseback rider. After the incident, she told her mother: “Mama, if I can control a 1,500-pound animal, then I was sure going to try to take care of him.”

Maddie’s parents have always told the kids to resist kidnapping by lashing out and making as much noise and possible. Though she suffered a fractured growth plate in her wrist, the young hero believes that it’s a small price to pay for the safety of her family – and she encourages other girls to follow her example.

“I just went for it,” Maddie told WTKR. “Nothing passed my mind except, ‘He is a psycho and he needs to get out of the car’.”

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Fewer Women are Drinking Alcohol While Pregnant Than Ever Before

The signage varies but the message is working; drinking by pregnant women is down 11% in states requiring point-of-sale warning signs.

According to a health economist at the University of Oregon, the benefits to heeding the warnings show up in fewer extremely premature births (less than 32 weeks gestation) and very-low-birth-weight babies (less than 3.5 pounds). The biggest effects are seen among those with the most drinking behavior – women aged 30 and older.

Gulcan Cil’s complex breakdown of extensive data, she said, indicates reduced drinking by pregnant women associated with signage and suggests a likely causal relationship between drinking while pregnant and birth outcomes.

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“The signage is working,” said Cil, a visiting instructor in the Department of Economics. “Drinking alcohol while pregnant has been an issue that many policies have tried to address over the last few decades. An 11% change in the prevalence of drinking is not trivial. It is big enough to show up in the birth outcomes.”

The study involved regression analyses of data available in two national sources and information from the 23 states and Washington, D.C., which have adopted such signage, and a group of states that have not. The study’s control group included women who had lived in non-adopting states and women who lived in adopting states before signage requirements were implemented.

The primary data source was the National Vital Statistics Natality Detail Files, a collection system based on information obtained on birth certificates. The focus was on data from 1989, when information on alcohol consumption during pregnancy was required, to 2010.

Data also came from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 1985-2010. The system, Cil said, gathers information that women were likely to freely share about their drinking patterns during the previous 30 days before taking the telephone-based survey.

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Her analytic approach to compare data from sign-adopting states and states not using signage allowed Cil to identify the direct relationship between drinking while pregnant and birth outcomes, reducing the likelihood that other factors such as cigarette smoking, drug abuse, nutritional deficiencies and other risky life choices were at play in behavioral changes.

Point-of-sale signage, she said, appears to be an effective, low-cost approach to protect the health of pregnant women and the babies they carry.

“Some people never get exposed to these kinds of educational campaigns,” Cil said, adding that the signage that she saw at a Eugene grocery store, which sparked her study, reinforced what she already knew about drinking while pregnant. “I found that the issue has never been studied and evaluated as a public education program or public awareness program.”

Cil noted that the signage used in Oregon contain an eye-catching graphic depicting a pregnant woman, while signs used in other states do not. All contain similar language. A future study might explore whether variations in signage – graphics, fonts, colors and language – may best influence behavioral change.

(Source: University of Oregon)

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Rick Steves Sacrifices Nest Egg to House Dozens of Homeless Women and Kids

Travel guide guru Rick Steves just gave a $4 million apartment complex to homeless women and kids who need housing.

Steves realized the importance of affordable housing early on during his travel adventures (how else?) as a young man in Europe.

He described his personal backpacking trip as “Europe Through the Gutter,” a wandering teen embarking on the daily challenge of finding an affordable (i.e., free) place to sleep.

With his rail pass, he’d sleep on trains, ferries, the pews of Greek churches, the concrete floors of Dutch construction projects, and in barns at the edge of unaffordable Swiss alpine resorts.

“How else would a white, middle-class American kid gain a firsthand appreciation for the value of a safe and comfortable place to sleep?”

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Twenty years ago, he devised a scheme whereby he could put his retirement savings not into a bank to accrue interest, but into cheap apartments that could house struggling neighbors. He would be helping others while his own money would grow whenever the property values rose.

“I would retain my capital, my equity would grow as the apartment complex appreciated,” Steves explained on his travel blog. “Rather than collecting rent, my ‘income’ would be the joy of housing otherwise desperate people. I found this a creative, compassionate and more enlightened way to ‘invest’ while retaining my long-term security.”

The 24-unit apartment complex began housing single moms who were recovering from drug addiction and ready to get custody of their children back.

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“Imagine the joy of knowing that I could provide a simple two-bedroom apartment for a mom and her kids as she fought to get her life back on track.”

But, in early 2017, Steves’s generosity rose to a whole new level. He took his affordable housing project one step further and donated the entire 24-unit apartment complex to the YWCA. The nonprofit group will now be able to plan for the future, knowing that the facility is theirs to keep.

(WATCH the inspiring video at K5 News)

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Reebok’s Next Shoe Will Be Made From Corn

American apparel company Reebok has just announced their new shoes for environmentally-conscious souls.

In a statement released by the brainiacs of Reebok’s Future Team, the company plans on selling shoes made out of corn as a part of their fall collection.

Everything in the stylish kicks will be entirely compostable and plant-based; from the organic cotton tops, to the soles made of corn – even the glue holding the shoes together will be concocted from biologically friendly materials.

The Cotton + Corn initiative will be the first project in the world to create a plant-based athletic shoe.

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Once the corn shoes have reached the end of their life span, they will be used to fertilize the soil and create the next generation of recyclable footwear.

“Reebok is trying to clean up the entire life cycle of shoe making: from what shoes are made of to where they end up,” says Bill McInnis, vice president of Reebok’s Future Team.

“Typical shoes are made from oil-based plastics that can sit around in landfills for hundreds of years when you’re done with them. We’re focusing on creating shoes made from things that grow, made from things that bio-compost, made from things that can be replenished.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Your Dog’s Guilty Look May Come From Wolves

When your pooch bows his head low and looks at you with big sad eyes after he’s chewed on your shoes, he may be using a complex survival tactic evolved from wolves.

According to Nathan H. Lents, a molecular biologist with the City University of New York, young wolves use the “apology bow” as they begin social integration into a pack.

If the young wolf bites too hard, for example, he might be spurned by the pack. He will then use the apology bow to get back in the group’s good graces.

“Dogs have inherited this behavior and they will use it after any kind of infraction that results in being punished,” Lents wrote in Psychology Today. “As social animals, they crave harmonious integration in the group and neglect or isolation is painful for them.”

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“Dogs have inherited this behavior and they will use it after any kind of infraction that results in being punished. As social animals, they crave harmonious integration in the group and neglect or isolation is painful for them.”

Check out Nathan’s book, Not So Different: Finding Human Nature in Animals, that discusses how animals –like us –fall in love, get jealous, exchange valuable goods and services, hold ‘funerals’ for fallen comrades, develop irrational phobias, and communicate using rich vocabularies (prairie dogs even name the humans they encounter).

Share This With Your Pack of Dog Friends… Or,  – CC Photo by George Thomas

You May Spot ‘Forrest Gump’ Recreating the Iconic Cross Country Journey

His name may not be Forrest Gump, but this guy sure loves running.

38-year-old Robert Pope has been making international headlines thanks to his cross-country mission to recreate the historic running chapter of the Academy Award-winning film Forrest Gump.

Robert, a Liverpool, England native, has run over 5,000 miles in the last 7 months in order to retrace the route portrayed in the 1994 movie. The marathon runner started in Mobile, Alabama in September, and ran all the way to the Santa Monica Pier in Los Angeles, California. Then, true to the original ping-pong hero, he turned around and started running back.

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Robert has always loved running; and before he started his American journey, he wanted to raise money for charity in a way that stood out from the thousands of other charity runs already in existence. Eventually, he had the bright idea to impersonate his favorite movie hero: Forrest Gump.

The jogger grew out his beard and bought the classic white Nike sneakers, as well as the Bubba Gump Shrimp hat and shirt. Then he just started runnin’.

Running across America equals the distance of about 100 marathons – and Rob runs a little over two per day. The money he raises is either donated to the World Wildlife Fund or Peace Direct.

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Pope stopped in Massachusetts yesterday in order to run the Boston Marathon, but plans on returning to New Jersey and continuing his expedition towards Maine. Anyone is free to join him for a final running streak reminiscent of the movie, or just to “come along for a beer”.

Robert chuckles every time he is cheered on throughout his journey with the appropriate phrase: “Run, Rob, run!”

You can follow ‘Forrest’s’ journey by checking out his Instagram page or his Going The Distance website.

(WATCH the video below)

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Bomb Squad Creates Beeping Easter Egg Hunt for Blind Children

Bomb squads are typically employed to defuse explosive situations – not necessarily to ignite excitement.

But the local explosives experts of Albuquerque, New Mexico decided to use their skills for just that.

25 different military workers and specialists from the Albuquerque Police Department organized a beeping Easter egg hunt for the city’s blind children on Saturday.

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By using special circuitry within the eggs, visually-impaired children can hear the sounds emanating from the contraptions and find where the goodies are located.

After hundreds of people attended the event – which was held at USS Bullhead Memorial Park – the community plans on making the hunt an annual celebration.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Man Buys Ice Cream For So Many Strangers, Bill Stretches 7 Feet

 

A mysterious customer known only as Mr. Gary is being hailed as a dessert legend after spending over three hours buying other people’s ice cream.

Mr. Gary reportedly came into Sweet Sammie’s Ice Cream shop in Fort Worth, Texas last weekend to get his free street parking validated. Street parking usually costs $20 unless it is verified by a business.

When the employees agreed to sign off on the parking pass, the customer was so taken aback, he volunteered to pay for everyone’s ice cream.

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Mr. Gary then reportedly sat by the counter with a bottled water and started picking up the tabs of every customer. Sammie’s employees say that he kept upping his cutoff point as the night went on; first, he said he would stop paying at $100; then at $500; then at $1,000 – until finally he signed off on a $1,300 bill with a $100 tip for each of the employees.

The receipt was so expansive, it stretched to 7 feet long – which the Sammie’s employees reportedly plan on hanging from the wall.

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Brown University to Drop Fee for Low-income Applicants

Brown University has just announced that they will be waiving their application fee for low-income students.

The Rhode Island-based Ivy League school announced on Friday that any applicants who are eligible for free lunch, enrolled in a government program aiding low-income families, or belong to a college-access organization are not subject to the $75 application fee, effective as of the fall 2018 semester.

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The change comes as a result of a group of Ivy League students, led by Brown senior Viet Nguyen, penning a letter in February requesting the change.

According to the Associated Press, low-income students were already able to submit requests for fee waivers – the new policy change simply makes it so that applicants don’t have to ask.

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Senate Agrees to Give Everglades 78-Billion Gallon Drink of Cleaner Water

The Florida Senate has just passed a bill that would cleanse and refresh the Everglades with over 78 billion gallons of clean water.

The congregation voted 36-3 on Wednesday in favor of the proposal SB 10, which would approve the construction of a deep-water 240,000 acre foot reservoir to store and clean water of toxic discharges before being released back into the ecosystem once more. The proposal has now been passed onto the House of Representatives.

The reservoir solution was first proposed in 1994, however according to the Miami Herald, it received great opposition from sugar companies due to the bill requiring the removal of land from the Everglades Agricultural Area, which would lead to decreased sugar cane production in their mills.

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But after a recent poisonous algae super bloom, which created a public health crisis for the Everglade community, legislators agreed that it was time to act.

The $1.5 billion project would split state and federal funding to alter 14,000 acres of state land leases in the southern Everglade area. If approved, the reservoir would give a life-saving boost to the diseased ecosystem.

“Now is the time because we have the political will,” said Sen. Rob Bradley, R-Fleming Island, the Senate sponsor of the bill, according to the Miami Herald. “The science is there. The science demands it, and that science matches the heart and desire to get something done.”

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IKEA Donates Doll Beds to Shelter Cats Waiting to be Adopted

Can a dog and a cat be bunk bed mates? Seems so! They look pretty happy in the double decker DUKTIG toy bed.

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These sweet shelter felines have just been given the most stylish cat beds available on the market, thanks to IKEA.

Rebecca Gordon, the social media manager for the Etobicoke Humane Society in Ontario, Canada, was doing some online shopping when she stumbled upon a solution to their cat bedding problem at the shelter.

When she saw a photo of a cat sitting on an IKEA doll bed, Gordon asked the Swedish furniture company if they could donate Duktig doll beds for their rescue cats to use until they were adopted.

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IKEA readily agreed to a 10 bed donation.

“Our floors are easy to clean but not terribly comfortable to lay on,” wrote the organization’s Facebook. “Now cats like Catsby and Frankie have beds of their own to curl up in.”

Though IKEA does not technically make pet furniture, many pet owners have discovered the doll beds are the purr-fect size for their animal friends.

Coincidentally, on the day that Gordon made the phone call to IKEA, the store had already selected a charity for their donation program; which happened to be the Etobicoke Humane Society. When charity members arrived to pick up the beds, the company included $300 in donations along with the beds.

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Gordon explains that the Humane Society is based 100% on donations, which many volunteer staff members treat as a second full-time job. Since the organization published a video of the volunteers assembling the donated beds, it has garnered a lot of publicity.

“I’m really surprised about all the attention the video got,” said Gordon. “It’s good exposure especially because we always need resources for the animals.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Quick-Thinking Jeweler Stops Thief by Locking Her Inside Vault (WATCH)

It wasn’t the most elaborately-planned heist, and this 46-year-old woman never even got to the getaway phase after a jeweler caught her allegedly trying to rob his store.

Fatima Milanovic walked into ECJ Luxe Collection in Boca Raton, Florida, saying that she was representing a buyer and wished to see the store’s more valuable wares.

The owner of the store, Bobby Yampolsky, was suspicious because the woman did not bring any tools to examine the gems. Regardless of his worries, he escorted her into the store’s vault where they keep the most expensive jewels.

The woman said that she wanted to buy eleven different rings estimated at $7 million. She then requested to wrap up the jewels herself.

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After enclosing the wares with tissue paper and tape from her purse, Milanovic then puts the package in her purse and attempts to substitute it for a pre-made replica that she had stashed in the bag. When she keeps attempting to distract the jeweler, Yampolsky senses the scheme, and – after trying to take the reclaim the package – simply walks out of the vault, closes the door behind him, and calls the police.

Milanovic pleaded not guilty to charges of grand theft and organized fraud and was released from a Palm Beach County Jail on $50,000 bond.

“We believe that Ms. Milanovic was misguided by people she trusted and had no intent to ever commit a crime while visiting the U.S,” said a spokesperson. “Ms. Milanovic is a mother and wife missing her family back home in France and we look forward to having these charges dropped and reuniting her with her loved ones.”

(WATCH the surveillance video below)

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NYC Will Transform 30 Blocks into a Pedestrian Utopia For Earth Day

On April 22nd between the hours of 10AM and 4PM, New York City will be celebrating Earth Day by closing down over 30 blocks to cars, buses, and transportation.

Instead of the noise and pollution, people will be able to amble through the core of the Big Apple on any street between Union Square and Times Square on pedestrian walkways lined with activities.

According to the Department of Transportation, the Manhattan roads off Broadway will play host to fitness classes, sustainability workshops, and recreational options. Citi bikes normally for rent will also be free to use all day.

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City Council Member Ydanis Rodriguez said: “We’re showing New Yorkers the potential of a car-free Broadway and what open streets can look and feel like. Reducing car usage in our city can transform so much. It can help us to take advantage of space currently used for parking lots and gas stations; it can reduce traffic fatalities and injuries; it can make our city healthier and more breathable; and it can bring a newfound sense of calm to our bustling metropolis.”

“We’ve seen countries around the world take this initiative to great heights and New York should be no different. If we’re going to craft a sustainable future for our city and our planet, cars will not be the answer and Earth Day is the best opportunity to make this point clear.”

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Pokemon Go Players Are Happier and Friendlier, Study Says

This new study shows that Pokémon Go doesn’t just make players willing to go outside – it also makes them as peppy as a Pikachu.

Media researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have found that people who play Pokémon Go are happier, friendlier, and more positive than those who don’t.

Their research started after the game was released in July to mammoth commercial success. Nine months after its debut, the app currently plays host to 65 million regular users and more than 650 million app downloads.

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The team began by surveying 400 different people 3 weeks after the game’s release. After questioning the respondents on their emotional and social lives, as well as their levels of physical activity, the team then asked the participants whether they played Pokémon Go.

Over 40% of the participants who they spoke to played Pokémon – and they had all responded positively about their mood, social lives, and physical activity.

“People told us about a variety of experiences with differential relationships to well-being,” says James Alex Bonus, a UW-Madison graduate student studying educational media. “But, for the most part, the Pokemon Go players said more about positive things that were making them feel their life was more worthwhile, more satisfactory, and making them more resilient.”

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“The more people were playing, the more they were engaging in behaviors that reflected making new connections — making Facebook friends, introducing themselves to someone new, exchanging phone numbers with someone, or spending more time with old friends and learning new things about them.”

“There was plenty of negative press about distracted people trespassing and running into trees or walking into the street. But you also saw people really enjoying it, having a good time together outside,” adds Bonus. “We don’t look at media this way that often, but maybe we should. We often focus on media violence and aggression and hostility, but there are opportunities where media is contributing to good life experiences.”

MORE: New Sneakers Light Up When You’re Close To A Pokemon

The positive emotional reactions to Pokémon Go aren’t the only perks to the game – hospitals have found that the video game often motivates younger patients to get out of bed, thus improving their moods. Comparatively, an animal shelter in Indiana enlisted Pokémon Go players to walk shelters dogs while hunting for the virtual creatures.

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3D-Printed Patch Can Help Mend a ‘Broken’ Heart

According to the American Heart Association, heart disease is the #1 cause of death in the U.S., killing more than 360,000 people a year.

But now thanks to a team led by the University of Minnesota, biomedical engineering researchers have created a revolutionary 3D-bioprinted patch that can help heal scarred heart tissue after a heart attack. The discovery is a major step forward in treating patients with tissue damage after a heart attack.

During a heart attack, a person loses blood flow to the heart muscle and that causes cells to die. Our bodies can’t replace those heart muscle cells so the body forms scar tissue in that area of the heart, which puts the person at risk for compromised heart function and future heart failure.

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In this study, researchers from several universities used laser-based 3D-bioprinting techniques to incorporate stem cells derived from adult human heart cells on a matrix that began to grow and beat synchronously in a dish in the lab.

When the cell patch was placed on a mouse following a simulated heart attack, the researchers saw significant increase in functional capacity after just four weeks. Since the patch was made from cells and structural proteins native to the heart, it became part of the heart and absorbed into the body, requiring no further surgeries.

“This is a significant step forward in treating the No. 1 cause of death in the U.S.,” said Brenda Ogle, an associate professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Minnesota. “We feel that we could scale this up to repair hearts of larger animals and possibly even humans within the next several years.”

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Ogle said that this research is different from previous research in that the patch is modeled after a digital, three-dimensional scan of the structural proteins of native heart tissue. The digital model is made into a physical structure by 3D printing with proteins native to the heart and further integrating cardiac cell types derived from stem cells. Only with 3D printing of this type can we achieve one micron resolution needed to mimic structures of native heart tissue.

“We were quite surprised by how well it worked given the complexity of the heart,” Ogle said. “We were encouraged to see that the cells had aligned in the scaffold and showed a continuous wave of electrical signal that moved across the patch.”

The researchers are already beginning the next step to develop a larger patch that they would test on a pig heart, which is similar in size to a human heart. (Source: University of Minnesota Twin Cities)

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Trust in Community Leads to Better Long-term Decisions Among the Poor

No man is an island – no matter how much money you have.

This new study from Princeton University finds that low-income individuals who trust their communities make better long-term financial decisions. This is likely because citizens rely on friends and neighbors for financial support, rather than quick fixes, like payday loans, which further digs them into debt.

The findings show the importance of building strong communities, especially for low-income individuals. The researchers suggest moving away from a focus on the individuals themselves, and instead focusing on low-income communities through targeted policies.

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“Instead of cutting funding to community development programs, policymakers should implement changes that give individuals in low-income communities more opportunities to develop community trust,” said study co-author Elke Weber, professor of psychology and public affairs at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School.

To determine why low-income individuals tend to make more myopic (or short-term) financial decisions, the researchers conducted a series of studies, focusing on both the United States and Bangladesh.

In the first study, the researchers invited 647 participants from the United States to make several choices between “smaller, sooner” and “larger, later” options, taking into account participants’ incomes and how much they trusted their local communities. They found that richer participants were generally less likely to make harmful short-term decisions than those with lower incomes, but that this only applied to low-income individuals who did not trust their communities. In contrast, those low-income individuals who trust their communities more made financial decisions that were very similar to those made by richer participants.

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“Current financial dilemmas are stressful and leave people with no option but to choose immediate solutions. Our results indicate that lower-income people are less likely to invest in the long-term because of their immediate financial needs,” said Weber. “This is in line with work by Princeton’s Eldar Shafir and others: that scarcity leads to harmful long-term decision-making.”

In the second study, the researchers evaluated “payday loans” in the United States, which carry high interest rates and exacerbate cycles of poverty among the poor. After reviewing the Federal Reserve Board’s Survey of Household Economics and Decision-making, the researchers found that fewer payday loans were taken out in communities where levels of trust were higher. This is because individuals can rely on their communities to help with financial needs (taking out a loan from a friend, for example), instead of resorting to high-interest emergency loans, the researchers said.

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In the final part of the study, the researchers turned their attention to Bangladesh, where they conducted a two-year field study. Together with BRAC and The Hunger Project, a global nonprofit organization, the researchers worked with 121 of Bangladesh’s smallest local government units, known as council unions. They trained community volunteers to act as intermediaries between local government and community residents. Volunteers met with members of their community and helped provide them with access to public services. Volunteers also provided guidance to government units directly.

When comparing the unions with community volunteers to those without, the researchers found the two groups differed widely in their levels of community trust. Residents with community volunteers had higher levels of community trust, which also influenced their decision-making. These individuals were more likely to forgo smaller payoffs in exchange for more-profitable, delayed options.

(Source: Princeton University, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs)

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Brave UPS Driver Rushes Into Burning Home to Save Family

The UPS slogan, “What can brown do for you”, was never so relevant as when this driver promptly delivered a family from disaster.

Paul Pereira was on the last stop of his route in Haverhill, Massachusetts when he noticed smoke pouring from the door of a nearby household.

While neighbors stood by and stared, the man in brown leapt onto the porch and banged on the door to alert the residents to danger.

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Brian Lavender, his wife, and daughter were upstairs at the time of the blaze, but had reportedly thought the smell was coming from a neighbor’s barbecue.

Pereira then grabbed a garden hose and started attacking the fire. By the time the firefighters arrived, the worst was extinguished.

The cause of the fire is a mystery, but one thing is for sure: the damage could have been much worse if the man from “United Problem Solvers” hadn’t jumped into action,

(WATCH the video below)

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Girl in Isolation With Rare Blood Disorder Gets ‘Great Gatsby’ -Themed Prom

Corrine Bass has lived mostly in isolation since she was diagnosed with a rare blood disorder two years ago.

But, to make up for one celebration she missed, this 18-year-old took a special trip back to the roaring 20s with her own Great Gatsby-themed prom.

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Because of a bone marrow transplant that she received in February, the high school senior had been spending all of her days recovering in a hospital room.

Even after she was properly treated and returned to school in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, she suffered a remission and was hospitalized in December.

So, in lieu of her missed opportunities, she threw herself a beautiful bash complete with flapper dresses, headbands, beads, and jazz.

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