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Sneaky Raccoon Steals Man’s Phone, Films The Whole Escapade (WATCH)

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Raccoons are known as nature’s notorious scavengers, but this is the first time we’ve heard of one stealing someone’s mobile phone.

Guy Williams, a 19-year-old student at Bellarmine University in Kentucky spotted one of the masked critters wandering around campus.

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Thinking it would be fun to get some close-up footage of the animal, which he named Stanley, Williams set up his phone for the money shots.

As the raccoon cautiously approaches, he can be seen giving the cellular a sniff before nabbing it and taking off – all while filming the entire escapade.

 

His friend also managed to catch a side-splitting clip of his buddy chasing after the furry thief.

Stanley eventually gave up on the charade and dropped Guy’s phone in the grass, allowing him to publish the video on social media.

Click To Share This Furry Film With Your Friends 

Brazil Opens Latin America’s First Sanctuary for Abused Circus Elephants

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This 2,800 acre plot of Brazilian land will be the first elephant sanctuary in all of Latin America.

Located in Chapada dos Guimarães, Mato Grosso, the Global Elephant Sanctuary purchased the land for $1 million so it could host up to 50 rescued circus animals.

Called Elephant Sanctuary Brazil, its first residents are Guida and Maia— both suspected to have been taken from their homeland in Thailand so they could be made to perform in carnival shows.

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Though the sanctuary won’t be open to visitors, you can keep up with their goings-on via Facebook or the Global Elephant Sanctuary website.

Rescue Your Friends From Negativity: Click To SharePhoto by Global Elephant Sanctuary 

Detecting Breast Cancer Might Now Be Easier With Underwater Imaging Tech

A breast cancer tumor, credit NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center.

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An international team comprising engineers, mathematicians and doctors has applied a technique used for detecting damage in underwater marine structures to identify cancerous cells in breast cancer histopathology images.

Their multidisciplinary breakthrough, which has the potential to automate the screening of images and improve the detection rate, has been published in leading journal, PLOS ONE.

Breast cancer is the most prevalent form of cancer for women worldwide. Current breast cancer clinical practice and treatment mainly relies on the evaluation of the disease’s prognosis using the Bloom-Richardson grading system. The necessary scoring is based on a pathologist’s visual examination of a tissue biopsy specimen under microscope, but different pathologists may assign different grades to the same specimens.

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However, the advent of digital pathology and fast digital slide scanners has opened the possibility of automating the prognosis by applying image-processing methods. While this undoubtedly represents progress, image-processing methods have struggled to analyse high-grade breast cancer cells as these cells are often clustered together and have vague boundaries, which makes successful detection extremely challenging.

But the new method has seemingly overcome that task, according to Assistant Professor in Civil Engineering at Trinity College Dublin, Bidisha Ghosh. She said: “This unique research group could draw on a broad and deep knowledge base. Experts in numerical methods and image-processing liaised with medical pathologists, who were able to offer expert insight and could tell us precisely what information was of value to them. It is an excellent example of how multidisciplinary research collaborations can address important societal issues.”

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Professor Joy John Mammen, Head of Department of Transfusion Medicine & Immunohaematology from the Christian Medical College, Vellore, India, said: “Detection of cancerous nuclei in high-grade breast cancer images is quite challenging and this work may be considered as a first step towards automating the prognosis.”

The proposed technique, previously used for detecting damaged surface areas on underwater marine structures such as bridge piers, off-shore wind turbine platforms and pipe-lines was applied to histopathology images of breast cells. The researchers considered the likelihood of every point in a histopathology image either being near a cell centre or a cell boundary. Using a belief propagation algorithm, the most suitable cell boundaries were then traced out.

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This technique was developed in conjunction with mathematicians in Madras Christian College, India. Lead author, Dr Maqlin Paramanandam, said: “The potential for this technology is very exciting and we are delighted that this international and inter-disciplinary team has worked so well at tackling a real bottle-neck in automating the diagnosis of breast cancer using histopathology images.”

Dr Michael O’Byrne, who also worked in University College Cork during this project, added: “Coming from a civil engineering background where most of our image-processing tools were designed to assess structural damage, it was nice to discover some cross-over applications and find areas where we could lend our expertise. We all found it particularly rewarding to contribute towards breast cancer research.”

(Source: Trinity College Dublin)

Multiply The Good: Click To Share Photo by NASA Goddard Photo and Video, CC license

Tiny Therapy Horses Have Big Impact on Hurting Humans

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These horses may be small, but they’re not afraid to take on their patient’s biggest problems.

They are part of the Mini Therapy Horses nonprofit that introduces adorable, tiny trained ponies to groups and individuals that have undergone trauma. Their partnerships with American law enforcement, and children’s and veteran agencies have facilitated equine meetings with all types of troubled souls in need of comfort.

“After having just one meeting with a miniature therapy horse,” said Victoria Nodiff-Netanel, founder of Mini Therapy Horses, “individuals have been known to speak for the first time in years, smile, and tell their stories of deepest pain and tragedy.”

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For the last 8 years, Netanel’s team of volunteers and their equine partners have soothed over 45,000 crisis victims each year. The ponies – Black Pearl, Willow Blue, Liberty Belle, American Valor, Blue Moon, Sweet Louise, and Bluebell – are all experienced, intelligent animals that seem to have an instinctual understanding of human suffering.

Many of their heartbroken human counterparts include burn victims, veterans with PTSD, orphans, rape survivors, or hospital patients.

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Photos by Mini Therapy Horses

When asked what inspired her to start the unusual therapy project, Netanel says she’s always had a passion for equestrian communication.

“I have always loved horses and prior to me becoming a competitive rider and horsewoman, I had stuffed animal horses as a small child,” Victoria told the Good News Network. ”Later in life, when my daughter left home for college, my ‘empty nest’ purchase was a miniature horse named Pearl. I taught Pearl every trick in the book and developed a passion to help others so I wanted us to do it as a team.”

Since this organization is run only on donations, you can go to their website to donate or find out more.

Quit Horsin’ Around: Click To Share This Sweet Story With Your FriendsPhotos by Mini Therapy Horses 

87-Year-old Rescued After 4 Days in Bathtub Thanks to Concerned Waitress

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Doreen Mann has been making regular visits into Tomassi’s café for the last ten years – so when she didn’t show up for her regular cup of tea and slice of cake, Sonia Congrave became worried.

As it turned out, Doreen had been taking a bath at her home in Southend when her knees gave out and she became unable to climb out.

For four days, the 87-year old drank cold tap water to stay hydrated and had only a towel to keep herself warm.

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Sonia eventually called the Essex Police and asked them to check on the elderly woman’s house to make sure she was okay. The law enforcement officers heard Doreen’s cries for help and were able to pull her out of the tub to safety.

Doreen and Sonia’s close friendship has resulted in the 39-year-old waitress buying her a phone in case she ever finds herself in trouble again.

“I’m just glad she’s okay, I’m glad nothing bad happened,” Sonia says in the video below. “I think it would be nice for us all to take a bit of a time-out to remember our neighbors or remember the lady down the road who you haven’t seen in a few days and just give a knock or a phone call. Just say ‘Hey, are you alright?’”

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share This Sweet Story With Your Friends

Internet Strangers Use Piano Fragments to Piece Together Song for Dad With Dementia

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Thanks to the internet community of Reddit, JD Chance will be honoring her father in a simple, but profound way that has the power to break through the fog of his dementia.

JD posted a plea for help on that website when she received a video of her 69-year-old father struggling to remember the notes of a song he had once known by heart.

“Every now and then growing up, Dad would sit down and play his song,” JD told the Good News Network. “I hadn’t heard him play it for a few years until the summer of 2015, which is the last time I’ve seen him (because I go to school 2,000 miles away from home and flights are ridiculous).”

Even though the 26-year-old healthcare student has been playing piano for 18 years, she was only able to piece together the first few bars with the rest of the tune remaining a mystery.

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She sought help on Reddit, where there are 542 million active users, asking if anyone knew the name of the song so she could learn the rest of it for her dad.

After a few failed attempts, a user named thepmyster labeled the elusive melody as “Little Spring Song” from the Thompson’s Piano Lesson series.

“I posted it to Reddit, HOPING for just a clue. I had two or three different people give me the correct song name within 2 hours,” she recalled in an email. “It was so touching to see all of the positive feedback.”

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Coincidentally, the user had only found the name of the song because they had recently discovered the books while cleaning out their attic.

JD says her father’s condition is too weak for a Skype call, but she hopes to record the song for him to watch on video while in a care facility.

(WATCH the video below for the completed song)

Click To Share This Sweet Story With Your Friends 

Hundreds of Whimsical Scarecrows Line the Streets of Amazing California Town


You may have seen scarecrows erected in farmers’ fields to ward off pests, but if you run into these lifelike sculptures on a dark night in October lurking along the sidewalks in this town, you might think you are in the middle of a horror movie. On the other hand, if you see them on a sunny day you will think this is the cutest village on the California Coast.

I, alas, drove into town on a rainy night last week after suffering a flat tire on a dark stretch of highway 1 by the sea, and was immediately freaked out by the haunting, life-size figures—some covered by protective plastic bags—until street lights in the town center revealed the truth: I had stumbled upon the Cambria Scarecrow Festival, “Where Whimsy Runs Rampant”.

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Half way between San Francisco and Los Angeles the eighth annual festival provides a delightful display of the imagination and community spirit hidden in two of the most charming towns along the Central Coast.

More than 540 “scarecrows” are on display this year lining the streets of these neighboring towns—nearby San Simeon joined in the fun a few years after Cambria had founded the month-long festival.

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Each year, local students, residents, and businesses construct and maintain these fanciful creatures to celebrate local creativity.

This year adds an historical flavor, since the hamlet of Cambria is also celebrating its 150th anniversary.

The 2016 blue ribbon for Best of Show went to Philip Hauser who created Betty Boop, flirting with shoppers outside an Antiques Mall.

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Does this creepy scarecrow remind anyone of a Tim Burton movie?

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The award for Most Lifelike by a Student artist went to Raely Barbosa, for “Beauty Briann” who is primping herself outside the Diva Day Spa, which funded the project.

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Other businesses, like this restaurant, use the festival to peek interest in potential customers…

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This flower goddess graces the sidewalk outside a plant nursery…

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My favorites, though, were the movie characters— like Edward Scissorhands…

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…And, Doc Brown, who made a reappearance this year, after winning previously for ‘Most Lifelike’—and honoring its film franchise by returning ‘Back to the Future’.

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This nurse looks a little like Shirley MacClaine…

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Famous paintings were also represented, like this brilliant American Gothic depiction.

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‘Cecilia’ celebrates in pajamas outside Linn’s Restaurant 2277 Main Street in Cambria.

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Ashton Hartley did a terrific job on this Scarecrow, Puff the dragon, sponsored by Ragged Point Inn.

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This teacher is more scolding than the actual teachers in this school where their scarecrow gets an A+.

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The first thing tourists see coming from Route 1 is a huge display sponsored by radio station KJUG that depicts a 20-foot-tall straw monster scaring various characters (see top photo), each one with its own story—just like the residents of this charming town.

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–Photos by Cambria Scarecrows on Facebook and Good News Network 

Party On, Garth! Woman and Her Dog Have Best Halloween Costume

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This hilariously adorable Halloween costume is better than any gun rack gift you could receive for the holidays this year.

Kate Banaszak, a former Miss Delaware contestant from Middleton, Delaware, posted a most excellent photo of her and her Irish Wolfhound posing as Garth and Wayne from cult movie hit Wayne’s World.

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This is not Banaszak’s first time going all out for trick-or-treating, but it’s definitely rock and roll.

The resemblance is also uncanny – we might just start calling him Garth Albark.

Party On! Click To Share With Your FriendsPhoto by Kate Banaszak

Anonymous Tip Saves Olympic Swimmer From Skin Cancer

 

Skin cancer is one of the most common and treatable forms of cancer in the world – but if gone unchecked, it can still be life-threatening.

That’s why Olympic swimmer Mackenzie “Mack” Horton is grateful that he has a guardian angel out there watching over him.

During the 2016 Rio de Janeiro games, someone emailed the swim team doctor and said that the 20-year-old Australian athlete should get a mole on his chest looked at.

The anonymous spectator turned out to be correct in identifying the spot as cancerous.

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“Shout out to the person that emailed the swim team doctor and told me to get my mole checked out. Good call. Very good call,” he wrote, while giving the camera a thumbs up.

Horton has since undergone surgery to have the melanoma removed and is doing swimmingly.

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6,000 Sex Trafficking Victims Rescued Thanks to Ashton Kutcher’s Organization

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Ashton Kutcher may be a talented movie and television actor, but he’s also taking worldwide action in a way that not many celebrities do – he’s saving lives.

In 2008, Kutcher started an organization with his ex-wife Demi Moore called Thorn. Thorn’s mission is to eliminate the sex-trafficking and child exploitation over the internet.

Since their debut, the company has identified and rescued over 6,000 trafficking victims and captured 2,000 traffickers.

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The Thorn Task Force is comprised of 20 tech companies that dedicate time and resources to searching the darker corners of the internet for potential danger and fraud. These brands include such big names as Facebook, Google, Twitter, Yahoo!, Snapchat, and Imgur.

“New innovations will always be adopted for both good and evil purposes,” says Jim Pitkow, Chairman of the Thorn Technical Task Force. “At Thorn, we tip the scales in favor of good by stopping exploitation and protecting our children.”

(WATCH the video below)

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Flexible Bioglass Bandages Will Heal Injuries Like Never Before

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Researchers of the Federal University of Sao Carlos have developed a type of flexible bioglass that is capable of regenerating tissues and speeding up healing processes like never before.

”It cures wounds in the skin, then the glass is absorbed by the body. The new glass reduces the rates of infection and eliminate bacterias” Professor Edgar Zanotto, one of the lead researchers of the project, told G1. “It’s a glass that heals – this material is an absolute breakthrough.”

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“This bioactive glass chemical compound are similar to the glass of a regular window, but in different concentration of chemicals and this is what changes the reaction in the body”, explained Marina Souza, another researcher.

The bioglass is applied directly onto the skin, covering the wound. The material is able to absorb blood while regenerating the injuries. Since the glass had good results during animal testing, human trials will begin in 2017.

“The results with burning wounds are really exciting. Plus, we can use in very complex angles of the body and the glass fits like a glove,” says Marina.

Click To Share With Your Friends Photo by Paul Chiari / EPTV

Manny Pacquiao Has Built 1,000 Homes for Poor Filipinos

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37-year-old eight-division world champion boxer and current Philippine Senator Manny Pacquiao paid out of pocket for 1,000 homes to be built for the poor in his hometown.

“I’m so happy giving these houses free to my constituents in the Sarangani Province from my own pocket – more than thousand families are the beneficiaries,” he posted on Facebook.

Many of the millions used to finance the housing came from his ‘Fight of the Century’ with Floyd Mayweather on May 2, 2015. Though he lost by two judges scoring it at 116–112 and the other 118–110, he still was handsomely compensated for the highly-anticipated match.

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He has been dubbed the greatest Asian boxer, the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, and the second highest-paid athlete in 2015. While he finishes his six-year term as Senator, he plans on financing still more houses in his childhood hometown.

“I will never forget where I came from. I thank God for allowing me to help other people,” the former Congressman wrote on Twitter.
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Man Walking 10 Hours For Work Every Day Given Sweet Surprise From Coworkers

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When the Ruby Tuesday’s where Kevan Finley worked at was shut down, he wasn’t able to find another job in the area – so he continued being a cook at another branch 9 miles away from his home.

Since Kevan didn’t have a car, however, he had to walk 10 hours a day for a round trip 18-mile journey, 6 days a week.

His new co-workers at the restaurant in Mentor, Ohio didn’t find out about his strenuous trek until about three months after he had started working there.

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Kevan supposedly has a sunny, cheerful attitude and never complains about his circumstances, so the staff decided to surprise him with the gift that he deserved.

The workers started driving him home while they were secretly raising money through a Go Fund Me campaign to buy the 30-year-old cook a car. In just 17 days, the restaurant raised over $8,000 for the dedicated man.

Though Kevan has already passed the state exam, he still needs to take the road test to get his license – when he does, however, the first thing he plans on doing is buying a truck with auto insurance and setting aside some money for repairs in the future.

(WATCH the video below)

 

Drive This Story Over To Your Friends: Click To SharePhoto by Kevan Finley

America Has More Trees Now Than It Had a Century Ago

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Thanks to conservation efforts and sustainable lumbering practices, America has more trees now than it has had since the 1920s.

In a report released by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, forestry has been on the up and up for some time now.

Areas consumed by wildfires have fallen by 90%. Federal, State and local governments now spend $6.4 billion annually on forest management, including $3.2 billion by the US Forest Service, which alone manages 77 million hectares of national forests and rangelands and employs 32,000 people. Recreational use on national forests and other public and private forest lands has skyrocketed along with new wildlife species since the 1900s.

America accounts for about 8% of the world’s forestry – exceeded only by Canada, Russia, and Brazil – amounting to 33% of its lands covered in 300 million hectares of forest. Most of these trees are centralized on the East Coast even though it was heavily logged in the 1600s.

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However, it’s not just the United States that has more greenery than ever before – it’s the whole world.

Sustainability efforts aimed towards fighting global warming have created eco-friendly initiatives around the world – our favorites include a village in India that plants 111 fruit trees whenever a baby girl is born, New York City planting 1 million trees ahead of schedule, and an ex-NASA engineer planting 1 billion trees a year by drone.

Though there is still more conservation work to be done, the rising rates of woodland wilderness definitely offers hope for a greener future.

Don’t Leaf This Story Alone: Click To SharePhoto by Stanley Zimny, CC

Mom is Brought to Tears Over Boy’s Moment of Peace with New Service Dog

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Shanna Niehaus has a 5-year-old son with high-functioning autism, and – to put it simply – he has a hard time making friends because of it.

Earlier this week, however, he finally found the buddy who he’s never had – and his mom was totally overwhelmed.

4 Paws For Ability is a nonprofit that pairs service dogs with kids with autism. After two years on the waiting list, Niehaus’s son was finally introduced to his new service canine named Tornado.

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“This picture captures the face of a mother who saw her child, who she can’t hug, wash, dress, snuggle and touch freely lay on his new service dog of his own free will, with a purposeful unspoken attachment,” Niehaus wrote on Facebook. “This is the face of a mom who has seen her son experience countless failed social interactions on the playground in an attempt to have a friend. Any friend.”

“This is truly magic. Words cannot explain it. Some how because of this – because of Tornado – I know everything will be okay.”

Click To Share This Emotional Story With Your FriendsPhoto by 4 Paws For Ability

First Detroit Tiny House Village Lets Tenants Rent, Then Own, These Fabulous Homes

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There are already tiny house neighborhoods popping up around the United States to house the homeless – but this Detroit initiative will be the first where its residents can rent to own.

The nonprofit organization Cass Community Social Services is building 25 homes for singles and couples, that measure between 250 to 400 square feet. Each $40,000 architectural design is unique to itself – no two finished products look the same.

Each building will be rented for seven years. The rent is based on square footage and no one pays more than a third of their income on rent.

After seven years of renewing leases and participating in a program that includes monthly homeowner classes, financial coaching and volunteering in the neighborhood, they are given the deed for the house and the property—essentially having earned themselves a home.

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Since Cass built the first house in September, they expect to have six more built by the end of the year. They have already raised $800,000 out of their $1.5 million goal for the project based solely from private donations.

Half of the tenants are expected to be homeless, with the other half comprised of low-income seniors and young adults who have aged out of foster care—and since all the homeowners will be able to decide who moves into the neighborhood in the future, the community’s atmosphere is one of cooperation and support.

Click To Share The Big News With Your FriendsPhoto by Cass Community Social Services

Domestic Violence Shelters Will Soon Be Renovated to Accommodate Pets

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Abused women fleeing their homes already have their own survival to worry about, let alone worrying about their cats and dogs. Yet even though there are over 1,500 domestic violence shelters in the United States, very few offer safety for pets as well.

But now thanks to a community-driven volunteer organization called Rescue Rebuild, shelters will begin to be retrofitted for animals.

Rescue Rebuild’s partnership with RedRover’s Safe Housing program will kick off in November with the renovation of the Emergency Support Shelter (ESS) in Longview, Washington.

The shelter will be fitted with pet doors connecting family rooms to kennels as well as more animal-friendly features within the shelter.

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“Making the decision to leave an abusive situation is incredibly difficult,” said Sherrie Tinoco, Executive Director of ESS. “By giving victims the opportunity to bring their pets with them when they do so, it eliminates just one of the many barriers they are facing.”

For the 70% of women reporting their abusers causing harm to their animals, it oftentimes leaves survivors with little choice of where to pursue safety. Since it only costs about $5,000 to provide pet accommodations per shelter, however, hope is on the horizon for the future of domestic violence survivors and their furry companions.

You can donate to the organization and check out their progress on the Rescue Rebuild website.

Click To Share This Inspiring Story With Your Friends

Mom Starts Packing 2 Lunches After Son Notices Student With Little Food Eating Alone

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Josette Duran assumed that when her son started asking for two lunches, it was because he wasn’t eating enough – but as it turns out, it was his heart that was bigger than his meal.

The boy had seen another student at his school in Albuquerque, New Mexico eating just a fruit cup every day by himself. The student’s mother had apparently lost her job and was unable to buy supplemental food for the family.

When her son told this to Josette, she didn’t hesitate to pack two drinks, two sandwiches, two snacks, two pieces of fruit, and a sweet little note wishing him and his new friend a good day at school.

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Josette was eventually called to the principal’s office at the request of the student’s mother – she thanked Duran for feeding her son and offered to pay her pack with her renewed income, but Josette refused.

The school volleyball team that Duran coaches even donated $400 to the cafeteria for kids who couldn’t afford lunch in the future.

(WATCH the video below)

 

Click To Share This Sweet Story With Your FriendsPhoto by Josette Duran

Check Out These Hilariously Candid Haunted House Reactions

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This Canadian haunted house has got plenty of tricks, making for some side-splitting photos that are a real treat.

 

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The Nightmares Fear Factory of Niagara Falls, Canada takes snapshots of their victims every time they fall prey to one of the scary surprises – and the results are pretty hilarious.

 

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The haunted house has double the fear factor thanks to its boasting urban legend about how their building used to be a coffin factory.

 

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Supposedly, the ghost of the factory owner, Abraham Mortimer, still wanders the building’s hallways at night.

 

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If you’re interested in seeing more spectacularly spooky photos, you can check out the Nightmares Fear Factory’s website and Facebook.

Click To Share… If You DarePhotos by Nightmares Fear Factory

Has This Doctor Found a Sure Way of Recognizing and Treating ALS?

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Now that you’ve heard of ALS through the viral phenomenon known as the Ice Bucket Challenge, this southern California physician may have just discovered a more sure way of diagnosing – and treating – ALS.

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis – or Lou Gehrig’s disease – is an insidious neurodegenerative disease that attacks motor neurons which control volunteer bodily functions – like muscle use and breathing. It strikes about 0.8 to 8.5 people per 100,000 across the world with about 5% of these cases being linked to genetics, and the rest having many conjectured causes or triggers.

Researchers and neurology experts have so far identified at least two major risk factors for ALS: age – with typical onset being between 40 and 60 years of age – and trauma, specifically to the brain and spinal cord.

However one physician, David A. Steenblock from San Clemente, California, has a slightly different take on what triggers ALS and believes he has figured out the intricate web of players and pathways that contribute to ALS onset and fuels its progression. If he is right, a specific pattern of vertebral column injury and reinjury (which does not involve trauma to the spinal cord), followed by degenerative bone changes in the affected bones, is both trigger, player and biomarker for sporadic ALS in many sufferers.

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In an interview published in the June 2016 issue of the Townsend Letter, Steenblock shared this:

“I believe that ALS is a complicated combination of unfortunate circumstances that occur sequentially. The first occurrence – for most cases – is a neck injury, perhaps caused by a fall, a collision on the sports field, whiplash, some kind of trauma that injures the cervical or neck vertebrae. This injury generally occurs many years before the onset of symptoms – perhaps in high school or shortly thereafter. The injury heals to a certain extent, but it also degenerates from wear and tear, so that, twenty or thirty years later, you see degenerative joint disease such as osteoarthritis and something called neuroforaminal stenosis (NFS), a narrowing of the spinal
nerve canal often with calcium deposits around that spinal nerve. It takes many years of chronic irritation for this constriction to occur. So, over time, you’re seeing an increase in the amount of extracellular calcium in and around the affected spinal nerve. At some point, years later, there’s a re-injury of the same area”

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Emboldened by decades of seeing cervical injuries and reinjuries in ALS patients, Dr.
Steenblock decided to carry out a retrospective study using data from 54 ALS patients he handled from 2011 to 2015 who had a CT scan of their cervical and/or lumbar spine. He found that 52 of the 54 had telltale signs of degenerative pathology and a history of spinal injury and (in many instances) reinjury to the original injury site. An independent radiologist read all the CT scans and reported seeing degenerative changes in the spinal columns of 52 of the 54 ALS patient CT scans “consistent with spinal nerve stenosis-induced injuries (but not spinal cord injuries)”.

Steenblock formalized his findings in the form of a paper titled “Hypothesis: Osseous Spinal Injury and Reinjury as a Risk Factor, Biomarker, and Etiological Factor in Sporadic ALS”, which was published in the October 2016 issue of the Townsend Letter and is available online.

In the paper, Dr. Steenblock is convinced these bony injuries and reinjuries create tiny breeches or tears in the blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barrier (whose purpose it is to keep various noxious substances and more from entering the spinal cord).

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Over time a number of proinflammatory compounds and other neural cell damaging players are able to penetrate into the spinal cord, along with extracellular calcium. Steenblock also contends that the gut microbiome, which is to say the bacterial and fungal microorganisms in the gastrointestinal tract, fuels the ALS disease process in sufferers. He is, in fact, confident that certain bacteria and fungi in many ALS patients form slimy biofilms which produce free radicals such as superoxide that attract white blood cells (monocytes). The monocytes secrete an enzyme call superoxide dismutase (SOD) which helps disarm superoxide and combat inflammation.

Unfortunately, large numbers of monocytes in people prone to develop ALS or who have developed it flock to biofilms in the gut (and possibly elsewhere) where their internal superoxide dismutase generating machinery gets messed up causing these vital immune cells to make and store misfolded SOD and other noxious molecules. Many of these monocytes then migrate through the tiny tears in the blood-CSF barrier to damaged spinal column areas, where they then dump their essentially neurotoxic cargo (which proceeds to damage motor neurons and initiate or fuel neuron killing pathways).

Hypotheses such as the one advanced by Dr. Steenblock offer an explanation for a observed phenomenon, typically based on limited evidence. They are not conclusive in the “scientifically proven” sense, but rather serve as a starting point for further investigation.

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Instead of waiting five or ten years for more research to be done and results to come in, however, Dr. Steenblock has a more practical approach in mind: promote healing of blood-CSF barrier breeches, identify and deal with chronic infections, bust up biofilms as much as possible, chelate out toxic heavy metals where their levels are of concern, and so forth.

He is, for instance, using stem cell-rich bone marrow aspirate concentrate, a wholly legal form of stem cell therapy, to help promote healing of blood-CSF barrier breeches. And while he is armed with insights on how best to combat chronic infections and microbiome issues gleamed from over four decades of in-office clinical work and experimentation, he uses specialized lab tests to reveal infections and possible biofilm involvement, and then introduces specific drug and non-pharmaceutical measures which targets these.

While some mainstream doctors and scientists might argue that Dr. Steenblock is jumping the gun by treating problems and issues yet to be definitely linked to ALS disease activity and progression, his ALS patients appear to be benefiting from his ministrations. He has noted that many of his ALS patients who were progressing at fairly quick clip began showing a substantial slowing of progression after beginning prescribed treatment regimens. In addition, many have shown impressive improvements such as less muscular weakness, increased strength, and gains in motor neuron functioning (indicating that diseased motor neurons enjoy an improved ability to conduct nerve signals).

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Given enough time, what Steenblock is testing in living ALS patients might make it easier to identify those at risk of developing ALS, as well as provide a clinical algorithm or systematic process for creating customized treatment regimens that delay disease onset and slow progression in those already struggling with this devilish neurodegenerative disease.

Based on material submitted by Dr. Anthony Payne: Copyright 2016, used with permission. – Featured photo by geralt, CC license

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