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Tim Robbins Has Prison Drama Class That Cuts Recidivism in Half

Tim Robbins Prison Drama Class screenshot California Arts Council

Actor Tim Robbins has dramatically cut repeat offender rates for prisoners who take his acting class behind bars.

Six out of every 10 inmates in California will commit another crime and return to prison within three years of their release. Robbins’ program has cut that rate in half.

The reason is because the drama workshops give prisoners a way to express their emotions.

It was created by The Actors’ Gang — a theater production and support group Robbins founded in 1981. In addition to promoting progressive theater around the world, its mission statement includes a promise “to bring the freedom of self-expression to the incarcerated.”

RELATED: Actors Help Veterans to Vent Emotions Using Shakespeare

For six years now, the star of the prison drama “Shawshank Redemption” has been taking The Actors’ Gang into six real-life California prisons to conduct drama classes as a form of emotional rehabilitation.

“It’s very difficult in prison to show fear, to show sadness, happiness,” said Robbins, who in 1981 stepped up as the group’s founding artist director. “It’s pretty much an environment of anger.”

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Robbins uses his class to break down that anger and let inmates “dig into” their other emotions, forcing prisoners to bring out repressed feelings in acting exercises.

He calls it a “public safety issue” when talking about the importance of rehabilitating inmates emotionally so they are less likely to return to old habits when they finish serving their time.

CHECK OUT:  Robin Williams’ Compassion Lives On Through Son’s Service in Prisons

Not only has it been credited with cutting the recidivism rate in half among inmates who’ve participated, a study in December shows The Actors’ Gang has reduced fights in prisons by 89% among inmates in the program.

Such success has convinced state officials to offer funding for the group’s transformative work on the inside.

(WATCH the video below from the California Arts Council)

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Hello Stranger! Running Club Lets Refugees Keep Pace With New Neighbors

People who were once literally running for their lives from conflicts across North Africa and the Middle East, are now running for fun with new friends in Sweden.

Locals in the winter sports resort of Östersund formed the unique running club, “Hej Främling!” (“Hello Stranger!”) to help refugees assimilate into the community.

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Skiers Emma Arnesson and Anne Lundberg started volunteering to help asylum seekers adjust to life in the ski-resort town back in 2013. They taught cross-country skiing to more than 300 refugees that first winter.

Runners Martin Machnow and Christine Hagglund heard about their work and offered to help with summer sports. Other athletic activities from yoga to football have been added to the roster since then.

The four created “Hello Stranger!” which is credited with building a bond between townspeople and more than 500 refugees so far.Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher CC Skssoft CC Georges BiardRELATED: Comedy Couple Commit $1M Act of Kindness for Refugee Children

Other cities across Sweden are adopting the model, creating running clubs to integrate refugees into their communities.

“The government and its institutions can only do so much,” Machnow told The Guardian. “Integration is about people meeting people – connecting into a wide network into the society where the refugees will build their future.”

Run This By Your Friends, Share It Photo: Johannes Poignant, CC 

H&M Unveils Sustainable and Affordable Wedding Dress Line

wedding dresses-HandM-2016The H&M design team has pulled inspiration from the last three centuries of haute couture in order to offer brides the chance to be as beautifully dressed as they are socially-conscious.

Ann-Sofie Johansson, Creative Advisor at H&M, worked with innovative sustainable materials and ornate embellishments, such as prints that add a dash of surprise, to develop a small line of wedding dresses she calls a “feast of lightness” with “dreamy, draped lines.”

The bridal gowns are part of the Conscious Exclusive Collection, which is made from materials like organic silk, hemp, recycled linen and Tencel® blends as well as new innovative materials such as beads and rhinestones made from recycled glass, as well as Denimite − a material made out of recycled worn-out denim, which H&M says is a fashion industry first.

CHECK OUT: How Big Chains From Like H&M Are Cleaning Up Chemicals in Products

ALSO: Our Favorite Yoga Pants From Socially Responsible Companies

“I love the mix of conscious, sustainable fabric,” says Julia Restoin Roitfeld, the face of the campaign. “It’s great to be able to have sustainable clothes that still look red carpet-ready.”

The wedding dresses are also affordable—a hallmark of H&M stores. Prices on the dresses pictured above are (left to right) $499, $299, $649 and $299).

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The Swedish company will carry the new line in 180 stores worldwide – which is only about seven percent of its retail stores – and also online, starting April 7.

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The Kentucky House Just Approved Free Community College Tuition Plan

By robtowne0, CC license

Happy Graduate CC robtowne0

Kentucky lawmakers overwhelmingly voted for a plan that would guarantee free community college or vocational training to high school graduates in the state.

More than 40 Republicans joined the chamber’s Democratic majority in passing the Work Ready Scholarship Bill.

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Anyone who graduates high school, home school, or receives their GED high school equivalency certificate would be able to have their tuition covered by the state while they attend up to six semesters, as long as they maintain a 2.0 grade point average.

The plan is expected to benefit 15,000 to 18,000 Kentucky students immediately at a cost of $20 million a year.

RELATED:  Oregon Students To Receive Two Years of Free College With Their Diplomas

The Work Ready bill moves on to the Kentucky senate for a vote there and, if passed, to the governor’s desk.

Under the plan, students would still have to apply for financial aid — such as grants and scholarships — but if that doesn’t cover all the costs, the bill will require the state to make up the difference.

Students would have to take at least 12 credit hours per semester and meet the minimum standard for grades to qualify for the program.

(LEARN more in the Louisville Courier-Journal) — Photo: robtowne0, CC

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People Are Hard-Wired To Be Kind And Generous, Says Study

muslim-man-giving-christmas-presents-takepart-screenshot

It’s an age-old quandary: Are we born naturally wired to help others or born selfish brutes who need civilization to rein in our basest impulses?

After exploring the areas of the brain that fuel our empathy – and temporarily disabling regions that oppose such impulses – two UCLA neuroscientists are coming down on the optimistic side of human nature.

“Our altruism may be more hard-wired than previously thought,” said Leonardo Christov-Moore, a postdoctoral fellow at UCLA’s Semel Institute of Neuroscience and Human Behavior.

The findings, reported in two recent studies, also point to a possible way to make people behave in less selfish and more altruistic ways, said senior author Marco Iacoboni, a UCLA psychiatry professor.

“This is potentially groundbreaking,” he said.

For the first study, which was published in February in Human Brain Mapping, 20 people were shown a video of a hand being poked with a pin and then asked to imitate photographs of faces displaying a range of emotions — happy, sad, angry and excited. Meanwhile, the researchers scanned participants’ brains with functional magnetic resonance imaging, paying close attention to activity in several areas of the brain.

One cluster they analyzed – the amygdala, somatosensory cortex and anterior insula –is associated with experiencing pain and emotion and with imitating others. Two other areas are in the prefrontal cortex, which is responsible for regulating behavior and controlling impulses.

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In a separate activity, participants played the dictator game, which economists and other social scientists often use to study decision-making. Participants are given a certain amount of money to either keep for themselves or share with a stranger. In the UCLA study, participants were given $10 per round for 24 rounds, and the recipients were actual Los Angeles residents whose names were changed for the game, but whose actual ages and income levels were used.

After each participant had completed the game, researchers compared their payouts with brain scans. Participants with the most activity in the prefrontal cortex proved to be the stingiest, giving away an average of only $1 to $3 per round.

RELATED: Nine Everyday Ways to Give Back Without Opening Your Wallet

But the one-third of the participants who had the strongest responses in the areas of the brain associated with perceiving pain and emotion and imitating others were the most generous: On average, subjects in that group gave away approximately 75 percent of their bounty. Researchers referred to this tendency as “prosocial resonance” or mirroring impulse, and they believe the impulse to be a primary driving force behind altruism.

“It’s almost like these areas of the brain behave according to a neural Golden Rule,” Christov-Moore said. “The more we tend to vicariously experience the states of others, the more we appear to be inclined to treat them as we would treat ourselves.”

MORE: 10 Questions You Can Ask Yourself To Become A Better Person

In the second study, published earlier this month in Social Neuroscience, the researchers set out to determine whether the same portions of the prefrontal cortex might be blocking the altruistic mirroring impulse.

In this study, 58 study participants were subjected to 40 seconds of a noninvasive procedure called theta-burst Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, which temporarily dampens activity in specific regions of the brain. In the 20 participants assigned to the control group, a portion of the brain that had to do with sight was weakened on the theory it would have no effect on generosity. But in the others, the researchers dampened either the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex or the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, which combine to block impulses of all varieties.

Christov-Moore said that if people really were inherently selfish, weakening those areas of the brain would free people to act more selfishly. In fact, though, study participants with disrupted activity in the brain’s impulse control center were 50 percent more generous than members of the control group.

“Knocking out these areas appears to free your ability to feel for others,” Christov-Moore said.

The researchers also found that who people chose to give their money to changed depending on which part of the prefrontal cortex was dampened. Participants whose dorsomedial prefrontal cortex was dampened, meanwhile, tended to be more generous overall. But those whose dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was dampened tended to be more generous to recipients with higher incomes — people who appeared to be less in need of a handout.

RELATED: The Health Benefits of Being Kind –and Ideas for Rocking It

“Normally, participants would have been expected to give according to need, but with that area of the brain dampened, they temporarily lost the ability for social judgments to affect their behavior,” Christov-Moore said in a UCLA release. “By dampening this area, we believe we laid bare how altruistic each study participant naturally was.”

The findings of both studies suggest potential avenues for increasing empathy, which is especially critical in treating people who have experienced desensitizing situations like prison or war.

“The study is important proof of principle that with a noninvasive procedure you can make people behave in a more prosocial way,” Iacoboni said.

How Tootsie Rolls Saved A Group Of US Troops in 1950 (WATCH)

 

These U.S. Marines weren’t trick or treating when they were asking for a round of Tootsie Rolls.

But when it came down to a matter of life and death, the candies actually ended up saving the American troops.

The YouTube channel Great Big Story released a video explaining how in 1950, a group of soldiers fighting the Korean War in the Chosin Reservoir called for an air drop of 60 mm mortar rounds – but they got chocolate instead.

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However while trapped and freezing in cold temperatures, the servicemen found that the Tootsie Rolls–being able to easily melt in the mouth–could patch their cracked fuel pipes like glue.

(WATCH the video above… and SHARE the cool story with your comrades) – Photo by BraveHeart, CC

Little Girl And Pet Duck Become Inseparable Mother and Child (WATCH)

duck and girl snuggle family photo

Dogs will have to move out of the spotlight as man’s best friend because Snowflake the duck breaks the record for most loyal companion.

5-year-old Kylie Brown became a mother last summer when the little duckling actually imprinted on the toddler, and ended up followed her everywhere and treating her like its real momma.

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The two have been inseparable ever since; Snowflake even wears a diaper so he can stay with Kylie around their house in Freeport, Maine.

(WATCH the Steve Hartman video below via CBS – *NOTE that CBS restricts viewing to North America. See a copy on Youtube)


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Bruce Springsteen Writes Sweet Note for Schoolboy to Be Late For Class

Bruce Springsteen Late Note - Facebook

Xabi Glovsky met Bruce Springsteen on a school night – and The Boss made sure he would be excused by his teacher if he came late to class the next day.

The nine-year-old schoolboy and his die-hard fan father wouldn’t miss seeing Springsteen in Los Angeles for the world – even if Xabi had class the next day – so they fashioned a sign reading “Bruce, I will be late to school tomorrow. Please sign my note :-)”.

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Once the three-and-a-half hour rock and roll set ended, a security guard located the father and son to bring them backstage by order of the Boss himself.

“Although there were many musicians and celebrities at the concert, we were the first people to see him after the show,” Scott Glovsky told the Claremont Courier. “Bruce said ‘There’s the big guy’ when he saw my son.”

RELATEDPearl Jam Sends $367K in Aid to Contaminated Flint, Michigan

With a flick of the wrist, the rock star scribbled out a note for Xabi’s teacher explaining his tardiness.

“Idols rarely live up to your expectations,” Mr. Glovsky added. ”Bruce lived up to every expectation a nine-year-old boy could have—or a 48-year-old boy could have.”

The youth did wake up late, at 10:45 on Wednesday morning, but with a big smile on his face.

CHECK OUT All the Inspiring Celebrity Stories on Good News Network

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Decorator Changes Widow’s Sad Room Reminders into Bright Refuge

Kitchen Makeover - Cup of Jo blog

There may be no place like home, but for Lucy Kalanithi, home was a hard place to be.

The young mother was married to a neurosurgeon until he passed away from stage four cancer in March of 2015. What was once the Californian apartment she shared with the love of her life became a painful reminder of loss.

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Lucy’s sister, Joanna Goddard, sympathized with her predicament.

“It still felt like the house she had shared with Paul,” Joanna wrote on her blog, “but she wanted it to feel like a home of her own where she could have a fresh start with her daughter.”

Without any ado, Joanna recruited the help of her interior decorating friend Jenny Komenda from Juniper Studios for a home makeover.

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While Lucy was away promoting her late husband’s book When Breath Becomes Air, Joanna and Jenny got to work, changing the darkly shadowed den into a brightly lit family space.

Living Room Makeover - Cup of Jo Blog

“Lucy’s windows get indirect sunlight, which is beautiful and soft, but doesn’t give a lot of fresh brightness. So we instantly knew the walls needed to go white,” explains Jenny regarding the decor. “Before, there was a giant black sectional. I love black, but it’s hard to have a dark piece in a room that’s a little dark itself. So we lightened up the furniture.”

MORELittle Girl With Leukemia Surprised With Princess Room Makeover

It was a tough deal, but Lucy’s tearful reaction of joy made it all worth it.

“She said what we had all been feeling all week, that this is what Paul would have wanted,” Jenny said. “It was one of the most rewarding moments I’ve ever had.”

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Dad Uses Cat-Like Reflexes To Save Son From Flying Baseball Bat (WATCH)

Dad Saves Son From Bat - Youtube

8-year-old Landon Cunningham was entirely impressed – and relieved – when his dad saved his scull using quick enough reflexes to rival the Flash.

Landon was enjoying his first baseball game with his father Shawn in a spring training matchup between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Atlanta Braves in Florida when a rogue baseball bat flew into the stands – and towards Landon’s face.

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Thankfully, Shawn used his lightning-fast parental instincts to save his son from certain brain trauma, throwing his arm between Landon’s nose and the bat.

(WATCH the video below…)

 

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Prince William Gets 40 Transport Companies To Help Him Defeat Poachers

Prince William with elephant-youtube
Ending the demand for products made from elephant ivory, rhino tusks, and shark fins is the first step to eradicating poaching–and recent efforts to do that on a government level in China and has made a huge difference.

Meanwhile, there is another line of defense against poaching and it is one Prince William has been working on for a year. As president of the United for Wildlife charity, he has produced a declaration that aims to shut down the transportation routes exploited by traffickers of illegal wildlife moving their products.

CHECK OUT: With Fins Off the Menu, A Glimmer of Hope for Sharks

This week at Buckingham Palace, leaders from the transport industry—airlines, ports, shipping firms and customs operators—agreed to 11 commitments that could collectively lead to curtailing wildlife trafficking.

Prince William spoke to leaders from 40 companies who signed on to the Wildlife Transport Taskforce, including  Emirates Airline, Qatar Airways, World Wildlife Fund, the World Customs Organisation and industry bodies such as the International Air Transport.

ROYAL RHINO HERO: Prince Harry Grows A Beard, Hunts Down Rhino Poachers in Africa

“We have faced up to the fact that if current trends continue, the last wild African elephants and rhinos will be killed before my daughter Charlotte reaches her 25th birthday,” he said.

“Everyone agrees that losing these animals from the wild would be a disaster for humanity. This means that halting this crisis is only a test of our will.”

“By signing this declaration, you, the leaders of some of the most important transportation companies and agencies on earth are answering with an emphatic, ‘yes’.”

RELATED: Rhino Horns Get Pink Dye Injection to Ward off Poachers

“This poaching crisis can be stopped. We know where the animals are that we need to protect. We know where the markets for wildlife products are and where awareness, education, and law enforcement need to be improved.”

“By implementing these commitments the signatories can secure a game changer in the race against extinction. I thank them for their commitment and I invite any other company in the industry to sign up to the Buckingham Palace declaration and play their part in the fight against the poaching crisis.”

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United for Wildlife is an alliance between seven of the world’s most influential conservation organizations and The Royal Foundation of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry. Share the Good News…

Rhino Horns Get Pink Dye Injection to Ward off Poachers

‘Lost’ Memories in Alzheimer Sufferers May Be Recoverable, Says Study

memory alzheimers-MIT-graphic-Jose-Luis Olivares
In the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease, patients are often unable to remember recent experiences. However, a new study from MIT suggests that those memories are still stored in the brain — they just can’t be easily accessed.

The MIT neuroscientists report in Nature that mice in the early stages of Alzheimer’s can form new memories just as well as normal mice but cannot recall them a few days later. However, the researchers were able to artificially stimulate those memories using a technique known as optogenetics, suggesting that those memories can still be retrieved with a little help. Although optogenetics cannot currently be used in humans, the findings raise the possibility of developing future treatments that might reverse some of the memory loss seen in early-stage Alzheimer’s, the researchers say.

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“As humans and mice tend to have a common principle in terms of memory, our findings suggest that Alzheimer’s disease patients, at least in their early stages, may also keep memories in their brains, which means there may be a possibility of a cure,” Susumu Tonegawa, the Picower Professor of Biology and Neuroscience and senior author of the study, told AFP.

“Even if a memory seems to be gone, it is still there. It’s a matter of how to retrieve it,” says Tonegawa.

Lost Memories

In recent years, Tonegawa’s lab has identified cells in the brain’s hippocampus that store specific memories. The researchers have also shown that they can manipulate these memory traces, or engrams, to plant false memories, activate existing memories, or alter a memory’s emotional associations.

RELATED: Blueberries May Fend Off Alzheimer’s: It’s All About The Anthocyanins

Last year, Tonegawa, who is director of the RIKEN-MIT Center for Neural Circuit Genetics, and Dheeraj Roy, an MIT graduate student who is the paper’s lead author, found that mice with retrograde amnesia, which follows traumatic injury or stress, had impaired memory recall but could still form new memories. That led the team to wonder whether this might also be true for the memory loss seen in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease, which occurs before characteristic amyloid plaques appear in patients’ brains.

To investigate that possibility, the researchers studied two different strains of mice genetically engineered to develop Alzheimer’s symptoms, plus a group of healthy mice.

MORE: Kirk Douglas Gives $15 Million on 99th Birthday to Build Alzheimer’s Center

All of these mice, when exposed to a chamber where they received a foot shock, showed fear when placed in the same chamber an hour later. However, when placed in the chamber again several days later, only the normal mice still showed fear. The Alzheimer’s mice did not appear to remember the foot shock.

“Short-term memory seems to be normal, on the order of hours. But for long-term memory, these early Alzheimer’s mice seem to be impaired,” Roy says.

“An Access Problem”

“Directly activating the cells that we believe are holding the memory gets them to retrieve it,” Roy says. “This suggests that it is indeed an access problem to the information, not that they’re unable to learn or store this memory.”

“This is a remarkable study providing the first proof that the earliest memory deficit in Alzheimer’s involves retrieval of consolidated information,” says Rudolph Tanzi, a professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School, who was not involved in the research. “As a result, the implications for treatment of memory deficits Alzheimer’s disease based on strengthening synapses are extremely exciting.”

Long-term Connection

The researchers were also able to induce a longer-term reactivation of the “lost” memories by stimulating new connections between the entorhinal cortex and the hippocampus.

Optogenetics, which stimulates entorhinal cortex cells, is very precise but too invasive to use in humans, and existing methods for deep brain stimulation — a form of electrical stimulation sometimes used to treat Parkinson’s and other diseases — affect too much of the brain.

CHECK OUT: You May Be Reducing Your Alzheimer’s Risk Already With Everyday Habits

“It’s possible that in the future some technology will be developed to activate or inactivate cells deep inside the brain, like the hippocampus or entorhinal cortex, with more precision,” Tonegawa says. “Basic research as conducted in this study provides information on cell populations to be targeted, which is critical for future treatments and technologies.”

(LEARN more from MIT News – Image credit–Jose Luis Olivares, MIT; results were published March 16)

Meghan Trainor Fights Body Image With Song (WATCH)

Meghan Trainor-youtube

In the last four years, Grammy winner Megan Trainor went from a shy body-conscious teen to a renowned pop star and body-positive activist.

Having low self-esteem and a belief that her looks and shape wouldn’t allow her to become a star, Trainor had no expectations in 2014 during the release of her single, “All About That Bass”.

So, it’s no surprise that her mega-success left her stunned.

WATCH: Adele Invites Fan With Autism on Stage to Sing ‘Someone Like You’

The Massachusetts native was raised in a music loving family. Her father, Gary was an organist for the United Methodist Church in Nantucket where the young Trainor regularly performed. The 22-year old’s father told CBS in a recent interview that he was aware of his daughter’s talents as early as age seven.

In her teenage years, Trainor’s insecurities left her immersed in fear she would never achieve her dream of becoming a pop star. Instead, the young artist opted to stay behind the scenes and landed a publishing deal writing songs for other artists, including Rascal Flats.

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Two years ago when record executive L.A. Reid heard her new song, “All About That Bass,” he got in contact with the young artist and immediately signed the soon-to-be star.

When asked if her empowering hit for full-figured females was a put-down of thin women, Trainor was matter of fact. “I didn’t bash skinny people. I was just, writing for myself.” By writing for herself the artist unintentionally wrote the words full of courage and self-esteem that many young women needed.

MORE: Lane Bryant Challenges Victoria’s Secret By Redefining Beauty for Bigger Women

The Nauset Regional High School graduate recently revisited her hometown high school to sing her hit and talk to young people who might be struggling with similar issues.

With it’s catchy tune and empowering lyrics, “All About That Bass” has left millions singing Trainor’s words of self love. She told CBS, “I get messages all the time. ‘I hated myself, I didn’t want to go to school. I was so uncomfortable, and now I love myself. I was in a really dark place until your song came out.’”

Trainor says that after that kind of response she intends to write more songs with powerful messages.

Her new album, Thank You, set to be released on May 13, will reveal the details of what Megan Trainor is all about next.

(WATCH the video below)

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College Mover Takes Break From Hauling to Serenade Elderly Widow (WATCH)

AJ Carter Johnson piano retirement home-submitted-College Hunks moving

AJ Carter-Johnson moves furniture for a living, but it seems he also has a talent for moving hearts.

AJ’s day was moving along as usual for the St Louis moving company College Hunks Hauling Junk, finishing a job at a local senior assisted living home, when he spotted a mini-grand piano in the lobby.

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“I sat down at the piano while my friend, Troy, got some documents signed,” Carter-Johnson told the Good News Network. “When he got back he saw the woman listening, so he pulled up a chair for her.”

”What caught her attention was, I was playing ‘Hallelujah,’ and she walked over and said, ‘That’s one of my favorite songs,’ and asked if I could sing it.”

CHECK OUT: This Moving Company Helps Women Leave Abusive Homes At No Cost

”She told me her late husband used to play it for her,” he recalled. ”I guess it took her back.”

AJ’s partner recorded a video of the wrestler from Missouri Baptist University crooning like an angel and posted it on Facebook. It has been flooded with thousands of views and compliments.

”I’m just extremely humbled that people think I’m talented–and I’m blessed to be a blessing to that lady,” he added.

College Hunks, the company that hires young athletes to move furniture, is known for its chivalrous employees, like the gentleman featured in 2014 who made himself a human bench for an elderly woman stuck in an elevator without a chair.

(WATCH the scene unfold below)

College H.U.N.K.S. Mover stuns everyone when he sings like Joh...

One of our St. Louis team members was on a moving job at a senior living community when he spotted a piano and decided to do this...

Posted by College Hunks Hauling Junk and Moving on Saturday, March 12, 2016

 

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Navy Rescues Dog 5 Weeks After It Fell Overboard in the Ocean (WATCH)

Luna Rescued public domain US Navy

A German shepherd missing at sea for five weeks is back home after the U.S. Navy rescued the dog on an island in the Pacific.

Eighteen-month-old Luna apparently fell overboard from a Nick Hayworth’s fishing boat February 10, eighty miles off the California coast.

He was two miles away from San Clemente Island when he noticed Luna was gone and reported her missing to the U.S. Navy.

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Sailors launched air, land, and sea searches over several days in February, but couldn’t find any trace of the dog. Then Tuesday, conservationists driving across the island, which is maintained by the Navy, spotted a dog by the side of the road. They opened their car door and Luna jumped in, ready for a ride home.

Luna, it turns out, is a survival expert. Not only did she have to swim two miles through the ocean to land, but there’s no natural fresh water on the island. She had to find rain puddles and live off whatever food she could scavenge for five weeks.

CHECK OUT:  Biker Saves Abused Dog on Side of Road, Gains a “Co-Pilot”–LOOK

The Navy flew her to San Diego Wednesday where Hayworth’s best friend was waiting to pick her up until the family returns to California.

We think this self-rescuing pup deserves a big treat and her own reality show.

(WATCH the video from ABC News below)

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Dogs Can Now Join NYC Diners at Outdoor Tables, Say New Rules

dog at cafe-cc-Thomas Hawk
With the warm weather upon us, some New Yorkers will be thrilled at the new ‘Dining With Dogs’ rule that allow canines into certain defined outdoor dining areas.

The New York City rules clarify that participating restaurants allowing dogs in outdoor areas must post a sign to alert customers that the pets must be licensed and vaccinated against rabies–though restaurants will not be required to verify any paperwork.

“I’m so pleased that the City Department of Health threw dog lovers a bone,” said the bill’s sponsor, Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal. “These proposed regulations are common sense measures designed to protect the public health while allowing New Yorkers to dine with their dogs.”

CHECK OUT: Guy Gives Shelter Dogs Free Haircuts to Help Them Get Adopted (LOOK)

Happy-dog-FB-Mark-the-Dog-Guy-cropped
Restaurants must also use barriers or other methods to limit contact between dogs in the outdoor dining area and dogs and people on an adjacent sidewalk. The rule will be effective 30 days from March 15.

Photo by Thomas Hawk, CC

After a 3-Year Wait For Adopted Congo Boys, Watch Incredible Airport Arrival

Adoption Meeting Airport FB Jennifer Murrow Grover

It was an emotional meeting the first time Jennifer and James Grover finally embraced their new sons — more than three years after they adopted the pair of Congolese boys.

Seven-year-old Bronson is a blur as he runs from the airport gate into his mother’s arms and 14-year-old Joseph isn’t far behind giving his new dad a big hug.

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Even though the boys officially had been adopted in 2012 after looking at photos, they weren’t allowed to come to the U.S. from the Democratic Republic of the Congo because of bureaucratic red tape on both sides of the ocean.

International adoptions are complicated, and getting U.S. visas can take a long time, but in 2013 the DRC suspended adoptions, preventing more than a thousand children adopted by foreigners from leaving.

WATCH: 82-Year-old Woman Finally Finds Long Lost 96-yo Birth Mother–See the Hugs

The couple has six other children, three of whom are adopted. They’ve come to expect painfully long processes for international adoptions, but the tearful hugs at the airport gate March 1, are a powerful reminder of why it was all worth the wait.

(WATCH the video below)

In 2012 (yes, you read that correctly...2012), we started the adoption process to bring home our two precious sons from the Democratic Republic of Congo. March 1, 2016 11:45pm...

Posted by Jennifer Murrow Grover on Thursday, March 3, 2016

 

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Watch Developmentally Shy Student Get Star Wars Promposal: Best Day Ever!

Im going to prom!!! The video didn't post on the first one... I'm so excited ???????????????? and we are wearing his favorite color blue????

Posted by Brianna Nicole Nave on Monday, March 14, 2016

 

A student named Dell, with developmental disabilities, was surprised by a custom prom invitation by a young lady who knew the way to his heart: Star Wars themed balloons and cake.

The Indiana teen, Brianna Nave, captured in the Facebook video above, presented the gifts to her prom date while he declared, ”Best. Day. Ever! I will go to prom with you!”

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The clip of the two Lawrence North High School students has been shared thousands of times with Brianna’s caption reading “I’m going to prom!!! and we are wearing his favorite color blue <3”

(Trouble viewing? Watch on YouTube)

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Futuristic Ship Design is Game Changer For Humanitarian Airlifts

Airlander - Youtube

A new titan in eco-friendly transportation is taking over the European skies.

The HAV (Hybrid Air Vehicle) Airlander 10 is the biggest airship in the world designed specifically for humanitarian uses.

With a cargo capacity of 10 tons and the ability to fly for weeks without landing, the ship can soar to any location carrying supplies and resources to communities in need.

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Bruce Dickinson, lead singer of Iron Maiden and key investor in the Airlander, told the New Yorker, “You want to put a hospital into Africa? You put the whole hospital in the inside of this – whoosh. Start the generator.”

“With these vehicles, you could drop off a 20-ton slab of water that is clean, drinkable, to an African village. It’s astonishing what you can do that you just can’t do with anything else.”

As well as being the largest philanthropic vehicle of its kind, the Airlander only uses a quarter of the fuel regular airplanes do because of its reservoir of helium that creates buoyancy.

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Even though it’s as long as a football field and the height of two double-decker buses, the ship can land vertically on any terrain – including water – making it especially capable for search and rescue missions.

“I’m not expecting to get my money back anytime soon, I just want to be part of it,” Bruce said regarding his $380,000 investment. ”Being a rock person, I could put it up my nose, or buy a million Rolls Royces and drive them into swimming pools, or I could do something useful. There are very few times in your life when you’re going to be part of something big.”

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The ship’s maiden test flights are scheduled for later this month over the hangar’s airfield in Bedfordshire, England so it can accrue the air time necessary to be validated by the Civil Aviation Authority and the European Aviation Safety Agency.

(WATCH the Airlander video below narrated by Bruce Dickinson…)

Palestinian Wins $1 Million Teacher Prize for Life-Changing Lessons on Non-Violence

Hanan al-Hroub released Varkey Foundation

A former refugee who decided to teach children about self-respect and non-violence has been named Global Teacher of the Year.

Hanan al-Hroub accepted the award — akin to a “Nobel Peace Prize for educators” — on behalf of “all teachers in general and Palestinian teachers in particular.” She plans to use the one million dollar prize money to create scholarships for outstanding students to become teachers.

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Al-Hroub grew up in a refugee camp and as an adult, saw her own children changed by the violence on the West Bank.

Playing games with her kids helped them to readjust and inspired her to invite all the neighborhood kids–and then go to college and get a degree in Elementary Education.

She opened her own primary school and uses playful academic lessons to teach kids to practice non-violence while building strong, trusting and respectful relationships. Her unique approach has led to a decline in violence among students and is being copied in the region.

WATCH:  This Teacher Gives Compliments to Every Student, Each Morning

More than 8,000 teachers from around the world were nominated for Global Teacher of the Year.

Al-Hroub was named the winner in a message by Pope Francis and after the nominees received video tributes from former U.S. President Bill Clinton, Prince William, actors Salma Hayek and Matthew McConaughey, and physicist Stephen Hawking.

The star-studded ceremony and million dollar prize was created by the Varkey Foundation to elevate the status of teachers in the world.

RELATED:  Billionaire Fed Up With Low Salaries Gives $15K Raises to Math Teachers

“Each day,”  Al-Hroub  said in her acceptance speech, “the role of the teacher is reinforced and its importance confirmed as the world questions what future we want for our children.”

Last year’s prize went to Nancie Atwell, a teacher in Maine for creating a school that gives students choices instead of tests.

(WATCH the video below from the Varkey Foundation and READ more at BBC News) — Photo: Varkey Foundation

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