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370 Union Plumbers Volunteered to Install Water Filters in Flint For Free

Flint Micigan Union Plumbers

An army of 300 union plumbers from across the state and country joined local workers to fan out across Flint, Michigan to update faucets for residents in the wake of the city’s lead contamination problem.

They installed water filters and new faucets in 1,100 homes in a single day. An international union and a trade group representing plumbing manufacturers donated the money, faucets and supplies to make it happen.

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The state has been providing free water filters to the citizens of Genesee County, but when the homes have old or odd shaped faucets, the filters can’t be connected.

Dozens of union plumbers with United Association Local 370 inside the county have been going door-to-door since October volunteering to install filter and give free faucets and services.

Plumbing Manufacturers International, representing the companies that manufacture plumbing fixtures, donated thousands of faucets for Saturday’s citywide project. The local’s parent union called in members from across the U.S. to help in a one day show of solidarity, giving away free cases of water, too.

RELATED:  R E S P E C T–Aretha Franklin to Pay For Hotel Rooms For Flint Families

The filters are necessary since lead levels in Flint’s water supply skyrocketed after the city switched water sources about two years ago. Corrosive water from the Flint River damaged pipes, letting lead leech into drinking water.

(WATCH the video below or READ more at Michigan Radio)

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Help Wanted: Professional Panda Cuddler (We’re Not Joking)

Baby Panda Cuddler screenshot

You may end up re-thinking your choice of career once you find out that “Baby Panda Cuddler” is an actual job.

The Giant Panda Protection and Research Center is hiring someone for an annual salary of $32,000 to spend every waking hour hugging and playing with these adorable fur babies.

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You have to be at least 22-years-old, like taking pictures of baby pandas, have a working knowledge of the breed, and be willing to hug, hold, and otherwise stimulate them while “sharing in their joys and sorrows.”

The person who lands the full-time gig in China will be working year-round alongside volunteers from the U.S., Europe, and Japan who only get to be panda nannies for a week or two at a time.

It sounds like it demands sweatshop hours, but with the panda perks, it may be worth looking into.

(READ more at China Daily and WATCH the video below)

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Teen Turns Body Brace into Steampunk Fashion Statement

Maddie Cable FB Linda Cable

When a teenager was forced to wear a body brace, she transformed the sterile medical device into stylish steampunk armor.

Maddie Cable was in a car crash in November that fractured one of her vertebrae. After surgery, she found out she’d have to wear the bulky brace for two months.

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While most teens would have balked at appearing in public in the brace, Cable saw potential. The rivets, straps, and full body shell of the brace gave it all the basic fashion elements of the retro-tech design trend called steampunk.

The Charlotte, North Carolina teen has “steampunked” items before and created a theater set for the steampunk version of “A Christmas Carol” performed at her school.

Maddie called up friend and fellow steampunk enthusiast Sarah Chacko and the two went to work.

Some copper-colored paint, stenciled gears, appliqués, buckles and five hours of work transformed the bland, plastic brace into retro-futuristic armor for a ‘Victorian-era warrior princess’.

WATCH: Soft Pillows That Change With Every Touch Like an Etch-a-Sketch

Maddie sees it as symbolic of her own battle to heal from her injuries — and it gives people a reason to smile instead of stare.

(SEE More Photos at Epbot) — Photos: Linda Cable, Facebook

Changing The Expensive Funeral Game, She’s ‘The Green Reaper’

Death is a natural part of life that everyone must deal with, but when the financial burdens of funeral costs and burial services mount, families are often heaped with an unnatural amount of stress after losing a loved one.

That’s why one mortician in Boring, Oregon decided to make a difference—bringing her big heart and lower-cost biodegradable options to the funeral business in her small town.

Since she opened Cornerstone Funeral Services eleven years ago, Elizabeth Fournier has given hundreds of mourners affordable services, and sometimes foregone fees altogether.GNN App display Facebook-640px

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“As long as the mortuary board is happy with me, and I am being ethical I tend to march to my own drum,” Elizabeth told Good News Network. “If a family is truly having a hardship, I have no issue giving services away.”

Elizabeth guesses she has excused over forty parents from paying any money for child burials or cremation services, and has financially assisted over 20 families with regular services. Typical funeral costs in America average around $7,500 or more, but Elizabeth charges only $2,000.

RELATEDBiodegradable Urns Will Turn You Into A Tree After You Die

As well as offering steadfast affordability, Ms. Fournier cares about the environment and has earned the nickname “The Green Reaper”.

She creates her own biodegradable urns out of dryer lint, flour, and water which she has donated to poorer families. The urns are just one of the many ways the Green Reaper cares for Mother Earth, such as using biodegradable shrouds and wooden coffins rather than concrete, embalming fluids, or expensive caskets.

“Being an undertaker has helped me with many daily things,” says Elizabeth, “from wearing my seatbelt and always telling my family that I love them, to bigger things such as knowing that I am on this earth for a greater purpose outside myself. I truly view my job as my ministry.”

CHECK OutNew “Small Miracles” Book Offers Hope for Life After Death

Elizabeth has always had a close relationship with death and has followed an unwavering interest in funeral science since her childhood at age 8 when her mother and grandparents passed away. She was a mass communications student in college before studying to be an undertaker while working odd jobs.

“The funeral industry seemed like a natural life path for me. I started to read about different culture€™s death rituals in National Geographic Magazine. When a friend’s pets died, I’d perform the funeral. Black quickly became my favorite color. I watched the burial scenes on TV with great interest.”

Fournier discovered 20 years into her career that several of her family members on her father’s side had been morticians.

RELATEDGrowing Number of Therapy Dogs Bring Comfort in Funeral Homes

“One day he started telling me about his life on the South Side of Chicago: his church and his school, and oh yeah, his aunt and uncle had a funeral parlor in the Polish neighborhood. What? What were you telling me? I was completely blown away. I asked him why he had never told me about them– and other relatives in the past– and he told me simply, it just never came up.”

Most of the students at her Catholic school in Portland, Oregon had living parents, so Ms. Fournier became a resource for peers who suffered loss: from pets to family members, Elizabeth became renowned as always knowing just what to say.

WATCH: Seinfeld Cast Makes Dying Man’s 67th Birthday One To Remember (WATCH)

“Everybody looked at me as their go-to girl for death.”

Green eco-friendly urn - Cornerstone Funeral Services
Photos submitted by Elizabeth Fournier

Now a 47-year-old mom with a husband who coincidentally met her at a crematorium, Fournier continues to serve the families of Oregon with her motto “Cornerstone Funeral Services: Where Compassion Guides.”

“Dealing with loss is hard. I advocate for people to dialogue and have conversations and go to support groups and read on the Internet and get whatever nourishment or guidance they need to work through the loss. When someone dies, the rug really is pulled out from underneath you. You are cracked wide open. It’s important to fill that crack with positivity and love.”

Nearly Extinct, Polecats Are Back in Britain After 100 Years

Polecat released The Vincent Wildlife Trust

European polecats, once pushed to the brink of extinction in the UK, are making a surprising comeback across Great Britain.

The furry little carnivores, part of the weasel family, once thrived throughout the UK, but by 1915, were found only in parts of Wales and a small corner of Scotland. Polecats have a taste for fowl and would steal chickens and kill small game birds leading farmers to hunt them until they were eradicated.

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UK Conservationists put up a fight to save the bandit-masked critters and succeeded in passing laws forbidding the killing of polecats.

A recent survey by the Vincent Wildlife Trust found the species can now be spotted in places where they hadn’t been seen in a century — an expansion from two small pockets into an area covering nearly a third of England, Scotland, and Wales combined.

CHECKOUT:  Baby Otter Learns How to be an Otter From Expert Humans

“This is something we really need to celebrate, the recovery of a native carnivore that we once almost lost completely,” Lizzie Croose of the Vincent Wildlife Trust told BBC News.

SEE More Species That Have Recovered From Near-Extinction

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New York City Steps Up Mental Health Care and Security for Homeless

New York City is making it easier for the city’s homeless to receive mental health care.

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced plans to increase the number of mental health workers at homeless centers. The idea is to let health care workers place someone who needs care into the city’s mental health system as soon as that homeless person enters a shelter for the first time.

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Those needing care will be included in the city’s mental health tracking system called “The Hub.” It lets agencies determine the best mental health options for homeless people. Without it, many in the past were simply placed into the criminal justice system instead of getting the health care they needed.

The additional mental health workers, along with additional security officers, will be sent to 27 homeless shelters across the city.

WATCH:  Kind Homeless Man Gives His Own Coat to Cold Teen In Snow

The added security is on top of the 108 “peace officers” the mayor added to 12 homeless shelters last year. Their presence is not only to protect the people in the shelters, but also to combat a perception among the homeless that shelters can be violent.

That fear keeps many on the street rather than checking into shelters.

The Coalition for the Homeless estimates there are close to 60,000 homeless people in New York City.

Photo: Homeless Healthcare Los Angeles

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Diver Puts Shark In Trance to Remove Hook From its Mouth (WATCH)

Diver removes hook screenshot Barcroft TV

A brave diver effectively hypnotized a shark in distress, long enough to give it some life-saving first aid.

Michael Dornellas was freediving without an air tank off the Florida coast when the shark approached him. With a large hook caught in its mouth, the 10-foot dusky shark was face to face with a person who just happened to have the right amount of skill, expertise, and courage to help.

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The marine conservationist works around sharks and has seen the damage hooks can do. Some will rust away and let the shark recover from the cut, but this was a stainless steel hook. Since it was rust resistant, it might remain in the fish’s mouth for its whole life causing damage or even killing the animal.

Dornellas knew he had to help, but he also needed to use extreme caution around the shark’s mouth–and he had to do it all while holding his breath.

WATCH:  Australian Divers Save Choking Shark in Bold Rescue

The diver carefully approached the shark, distracting it by rubbing its snout as he expertly rolled the predator onto its back.

The maneuver causes something called “tonic immobility,” a kind of temporary paralysis in sharks. It’s similar to a hypnotic trance.

With the shark subdued, Dornellas had only a brief window of time to extract the hook.

WATCH:  Teen Drags Hammerhead Shark on Beach to Pull Hooks From its Mouth

Once the hook was removed, the shark came out of its trance-like state and swam away, and Dornellas could bolt back above the water to puff out his chest — with some pride, and much-needed deep breaths.

(WATCH the video from Barcroft TV below) — Photo: Jose Debassa, Video

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4 College Kids Changed History By Sitting Down, 56 Years Ago Today

Greensboro_sit-in_lunch_counter-CC-RadioFan-640px

Today is the first day of Black History Month in the U.S., a day when some pretty savvy college kids made history 56 years ago. Today’s youth would say these guys had game.

On February 1, 1960, four black students from North Carolina A&T State University sat down at the “whites only” lunch counter inside a Greensboro Woolworth store. Although they were refused service, they stayed until closing. More joined them over the next few days and sit-ins spread to other North Carolina cities. On July 25, 1960, after losing $200,000 in sales to boycotts, the Greensboro store abandon its segregation policies.

Four years after the Greensboro Four (Joseph McNeil, Franklin McCain, Ezell Blair, Jr., and David Richmond) staged their sit-in, The Civil Rights Act of 1964 mandated desegregation in all public accommodations, including beaches, libraries, parks and museums.

A section of the lunch counter from the Greensboro Woolworth (pictured, above) is preserved in the Smithsonian Museum of American History, and the original building at 132 South Elm Street now houses the International Civil Rights Center and Museum.

(Photo by RadioFan, via CC license)

This Baby Can’t Stop Laughing At What Her Mouth Can Do (WATCH)

 

Making others laugh is fun, but cracking yourself up with kooky sounds is priceless.

Once this baby figured out how to make “raspberries” with her lips, it was continuous laughter ever after on this family’s road trip.

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With nine-month-old Savannah in the back seat, who needs a radio for entertainment?

This was posted over a year ago on YouTube, but we hadn’t seen it until this week.

New Therapy Halts Progression of Lou Gehrig’s Disease in Mice

Damaged copper and zinc superoxide dismutase -Oregon State University ReleaseResearchers announced that they have essentially stopped the progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, for nearly two years, allowing the mice to approach their normal lifespan.

Scientists at Oregon State University say the findings are some of the most compelling ever produced in the search for a therapy to help sufferers of ALS, a debilitating and fatal disease.

“We are shocked at how well this treatment can stop the progression of ALS,” said Joseph Beckman, lead author on this study and professor of biochemistry and biophysics in the College of Science at Oregon State University, and principal investigator at OSU’s Linus Pauling Institute.

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In decades of work, no treatment has been discovered for ALS that can do anything but prolong human survival less than a month. The mouse model used in this study is one that scientists believe may closely resemble the human reaction to this treatment.

It’s not yet known if humans will have the same response, but researchers are moving as quickly as possible toward human clinical trials, testing first for safety and then efficacy of the new approach, which consists of a compound called copper-ATSM.

RELATEDIce Bucket Challenge Leads to ALS Breakthrough, Researchers Announce

ALS is known to be caused by the death and deterioration of motor neurons in the spinal cord, which in turn has been linked to mutations in copper, zinc superoxide dismutase.

Copper-ATSM is a known compound that helps deliver copper specifically to cells with damaged mitochondria, and reaches the spinal cord where it’s needed to treat ALS. This compound has low toxicity, easily penetrates the blood-brain barrier, is already used in human medicine at much lower doses for some purposes, and is well tolerated in laboratory animals at far higher levels. Any copper not needed after use of copper-ATSM is quickly flushed out of the body.

Experts caution, however, that this approach is not as simple as taking a nutritional supplement of copper, which can be toxic at even moderate doses. Such supplements would be of no value to people with ALS, they said.

CHECK Out: Scientists Find a Way to Edit DNA to Cure Genetic Disorders

Using the new treatment, researchers were able to stop the progression of ALS in one type of transgenic mouse model, which ordinarily would die within two weeks without treatment. Some of these mice have survived for more than 650 days, 500 days longer than any previous research has been able to achieve.

In some experiments, the treatment was begun, and then withheld. In this circumstance the mice began to show ALS symptoms within two months after treatment was stopped, and would die within another month. But if treatment was resumed, the mice gained weight, progression of the disease once again was stopped, and the mice lived another 6-12 months.

CHECK Out: Asthma Could Be Cured Within 5 Years With This New Breakthrough

“We have a solid understanding of why the treatment works in the mice, and we predict it should work in both familial and possibly sporadic human patients,” Beckman said. “But we won’t know until we try.”

Familial ALS patients are those with more of a family history of the disease, while sporadic patients reflect the larger general population. In humans who develop ALS, the average time from onset to death is only three to four years.

The treatment is based on bringing copper into specific cells in the spinal cord and the mitochondria weakened by copper deficiency. Copper is a metal that helps to stabilize SOD, an antioxidant protein whose proper function is essential to life. But when it lacks its metal co-factors, SOD can “unfold” and become toxic, leading to the death of motor neurons. (See photo courtesy of Oregon State University.)

MORE: Harnessing a Virus Like Herpes Has ‘Cured’ Skin Cancer

There’s some evidence that this approach, which works in part by improving mitochondrial function, may also have value in Parkinson’s disease and other conditions, researchers said. Research is progressing on those topics as well.

The treatment is unlikely to allow significant recovery from neuronal loss already caused by ALS, the scientists said, but could slow further disease progression when started after diagnosis. It could also potentially treat carriers of SOD mutant genes that cause ALS.

The new findings were reported in Neurobiology of Disease. This work has been supported by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Association, which received a huge bump in funding throughout the Ice Bucket Challenge last year, the Australian National Health and Medical Research Association, the Department of Defense Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program, and gifts by Michael Camillo and Burgess and Elizabeth Jamieson to the Linus Pauling Institute.

(Photo released by Oregon State University)

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Dad Of Four Girls Overjoyed to Learn Gender Of Unborn Son (WATCH)

Dad of four daughters faints when he learns he's having a son

"I've been waiting for this a long time, a long time." A Long Island father of four girls became overwhelmed with joy when he learned he is going to have a son. http://7ny.tv/1QDPI4d (Video: THEREBBEL84/YouTube)

Posted by ABC7NY on Thursday, January 28, 2016

 

Girls just want to have fun, but boys are a whole lot of fun, too.

Julio Pena is already surrounded by women in his life – so when wife Kari learned the gender of their fifth child, after having four daughters, she decided to throw a little party to reveal the news.

WATCHNurse Squeals With Surprise to Find Her Paralyzed Patient Walks

In a Facebook video published on Thursday, Julio prepare to cut open a cake that will tell him if he will be a parent to a long-awaited son.

If the interior of the cake was pink, then they would be preparing for another girl, but since the cake was blue… well, let’s just say Pena was pretty excited.

(WATCH the video above, via Facebook)

Stephen Hawking, Paul Rudd Play Quantum Chess (Hilarious Video)

Steven Hawking Paul Rud screenshot IQIM Caltech

The fate of the world hangs in the balance as Ant Man actor and comedian Paul Rudd plays quantum chess against physicist Stephen Hawking in this hilarious educational video.

Humanity is doomed unless the bumbling actor can learn the ins-and-outs of quantum physics — and chess — to defeat the scientist who is arguably the world’s greatest living physicist.

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To make it even more surreal, actor Keanu Reeves narrates the historic, scientific clash of minds in the video below.

NASA, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Pope Francis, and President Obama are among those who weigh in, as each supposedly live Tweets the historic match. And Alex Winter, who played Bill to Reeves’ Ted in “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure,” makes a cameo.

Quantum chess is a real game invented by Canadian physicist Selim Akl to put humans and computers on a level playing field when it comes to chess. Both people and machines have the same difficulty of dealing with the scientific weirdness of quantum mechanics.

WATCH:  Teen Wins $400K Using Humor to Explain Theory of Relativity

The video aims to show that “Anyone Can Quantum” — an effort by the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter at Caltech to blend science and entertainment in a way to make physics more accessible to everyone.

(WATCH the video from IQIM Caltech below) — Photo: IQIM Caltech

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Toy Breakthroughs: Barbie Finally Gets Realistic Body; Lego Figure Gets Wheelchair

Two staples of the make-believe world of children’s toys will soon reflect real life diversity.

LEGO will add its first mini-figure in a wheelchair and Barbie will add some curves, as well as seven different skin tones.

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LEGO unveiled its “Fun in the Park” play set, which features 14 elements including a boy in a wheelchair. The addition shows that children with mobility issues are just like everyone else who wants to play in the park.

Toymaker Mattel is also addressing children’s body images by unveiling a variety of body sizes and skin color for Barbie. The message to children is that there is no one image of beauty.

CHECK OUT:  IKEA Lovingly Turns Kids’ Drawings Into Actual Plush Toys Sold for Charity

Company spokesperson Michelle Chidoni says changes are “a better reflection of what girls see in the world around them.”

Photos: LEGO; Mattel

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Sorority Shuts Down Stereotypes in Poignant Photo Series

Dumb Blonde FB Delta Zeta Beta Gamma Chapter

A Southern sorority is breaking down stereotypes with a series of photos that describe their real-life personalities, goals, and abilities.

“We are more than a stereotype,” the sisters of the Delta Zeta chapter at the University of Louisville, Kentucky posted on their Facebook page. “We are strong, independent women with many accomplishments and goals.”

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Thirty-nine sorority sisters posed with stereotypes written on one hand, and a fact breaking it on their other.

They attacked entrenched views about sorority members such as…

Sorority girls are dumb…

doctor FB Delta Zeta Beta Gamma Chapter

…they drink too much…

Half Marathon FB Delta Zeta Beta Gamma Chapter

…they’re all rich, party girls…

double masters FB Delta Zeta Beta Gamma Chapter

The sisters say the truth is a lot more complex.

“We are bilingual, doctors, engineers, hunters, lawyers, and so much more,” they wrote in their post.

(SEE more photos at the Delta Zeta (Beta Gamma Chapter) Facebook page)

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Affluent Parents Use Their Know-How to Get Needy Kids Into College

graduates CC sentraldigital

Applying to colleges can be complicated and confusing– especially when no one in your family has ever attended college. Where can you get help with writing admission essays or figuring out financial aid forms?

Well, one high-school is matching parents who have gone through the process with their own college students to kids hoping to be the first in their families to continue with higher education.

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Newton North High School in Massachusetts created a program called Transitioning Together that taps the city’s affluent parents to help their neighbors’ children.

Since 2012, these experienced parents are paired with students who are first generation college applicants — many whose parents speak English as a second language.

Then-principal Jen Price noticed a huge gap between college enrollments based on race and income and helped create Transitioning Together. She’s moved on to another school, but the mentoring program she helped start has continued to grow.

RELATED: Grandma Drives Away Trouble On Her City’s Toughest Streets

The program featured 29 students last year. All 29 went to college. This year, 40 students are taking advantage of the program — and, best of all, there’s no shortage of mentors.

“As people had amazing experiences, they started talking at cocktail parties and to their friends and to their neighbors and so the mentor pool has really grown,” Price told WGBH News.

Photo by sentraldigital, CC 

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Woman Searches for Stranger Whose Comment Saved Her Life

cancer cc PDPics

This woman thought a stranger was flirting with her, but he was actually saving her life.

Christine Burnie was in an Aukland, New Zealand hardware store when a man approached her.

“Excuse me love, you know you have a black mole on your back you should really be concerned about,” the man said.

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Burnie thought it was a clever pick-up line, but the man was serious — and so was the mole.

A doctor determined it was an invasive malignant melanoma and removed it.

She told the New Zealand Herald she’s “excited to be alive,” but that she never got the name of the man who warned her about the mole. She’s gone on social media trying to track him down to thank him in person.

CHECK OUT:  Boss Suggests His Employee Take a Sick-Day–and It Saved His Life

“Whoever you are that approached me — I am a mum with a young teenage boy. THANK YOU for saving my life,” she posted to the Neighborly network. “I am truly appreciative of your advice. THANK YOU THANK YOU SIR whoever you are.”

Her tests since the surgery show she’s free of the cancer.

Photo by PDPics, CC

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Christians Protect Mosques on Fri., Muslims Guard Churches on Sunday

Islam Christianity CC wilhei

Faced with the threat of terrorist attacks in West Africa, Muslims and Christians have each other’s back.

The worshipers are protecting every place of prayer, no matter religion. On Fridays in Cameroon, Christians guard the mosques as Muslims pray. Muslims return the favor by protecting churches during Sunday services.

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The Nigerian militant group Boko Haram is an equal-opportunity destroyer, attacking both churches and mosques while services are in session. The prayerful people inside can’t see it coming, but in some small villages, the terrorists are now running into armed patrols.

Cameroon has set up volunteer “vigilance committees” to patrol villages and the capital of Yaounde, to watch for possible terrorists. They are armed for self defense but report any suspicious activity so the police handle it.

RELATED:  Norway Muslims Form Human Shield Around Jewish Synagogue

The idea of Christians and Muslims protecting each other’s worship services is not new to places like Egypt or in Western cultures like France recently or Norway, as these two stories detail, but it is new to the remote, northern tip of Cameroon where the model is being testing to see if it might be effective elsewhere.

Photo by wilhei, CC

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Teen Risks Jail to Climb One of The Seven Wonders of the World (WATCH)

Photo atop the Pyramids 2 FB Andrej Ciesielski

A young German tourist gazed at a view fit for a king — or, more properly, a pharaoh.

He also was given a brief view of an Egyptian jail after authorities nabbed him climbing down the Great Pyramid of Giza, but he says it was worth it.

Note: We don’t condone the defacing of monuments or otherwise breaking the law, but since this is the Photo Of The Day section of our website, we had to share the stunning the picture.

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Andrej Ciesielski was on top of the world–the ancient world–after slipping past security and filming his climb to the top of the 4,500-year-old landmark (see video below). An experienced urban climber, he scaled the 455-feet to the top in eight minutes, listening to music all the way up.

Top of the Cheops Pyramid!

Posted by Andrej Ciesielski on Monday, January 18, 2016
 

After he captured some spectacular photos, and climbed back down, police took him to the station, questioned him briefly, and checked his camera to see what he’d been up to. They released him without punishment — but with a stern warning not to repeat the climb.

WATCH:  101-Year-Old Woman Rappels Down Skyscrapers for Charity

“I was told, [before the climb] that I did risk prison, although on balance I thought the photos would be worth it,” Ciesielski told The Telegraph.

The young tourist is already planning a trip to China.

(WATCH the video below from The Telegraph) — Photo: Andrej Ciesielski, Facebook

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12-Year-old’s Time Capsule From 1949 Returned to Him as a Man in His 70s

Time Capsule returned screenshot KING

A contractor who was renovating an historic home, stumbled onto a piece of personal history — a little boy’s time capsule from 1949 — so he spent his own time to return it to the now-old man.

Bill Gilbert was 12-years-old when he fashioned his time capsule in a Mason jar and hid it in new cabinets at the family home in Pueblo, Colorado.

He included a neatly typed note describing his family history and their pets — an Irish setter, two kittens and a bird — along with some stamps from his collection, an old coin, and a family photo.

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Sixty-six years later, contractor Mark Knecht was renovating the basement of the house and discovered the time capsule. Realizing it might have a great sentimental value, he decided to track down the owner.

A quick Internet search led him to a relative of Gilbert’s who passed along the contractor’s phone number to the now 79-year-old man living in Seattle, Washington.

Gilbert was excited about the discovery and offered to pay the postage to have the time capsule shipped to him, but Knecht said he’d bring it in person.

It turns out, Knecht had grown up just a few miles from where Gilbert now lives and brought the artifacts with him on a trip to visit family.

RELATED: Frozen In Time: Chalkboard Drawings From 1917 Discovered During School Remodeling

Gilbert smiled as he held the contents of his time capsule again, for the first time since he was a 12-year-old boy.

“It’s all beginning to come back together,” he told KING News.

(WATCH the video below from KING-5) — Photo: KING News

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Knit Two Mittens and Call Us in the Morning: Knitting Has Health Benefits

knitting cc derya

The cure for what ails you may come in the form of a needle — not a hypodermic, but the knitting kind.

Multiple studies have found evidence knitting or crocheting can lower blood pressure, reduce stress, and even improve memory and brain function as you age.

Medical researchers believe the relaxed, repetitive motions of the crafts are akin to meditation. At the same time, the creative process keeps fine motor skills honed and your mind sharp as it does “real world math” as you work on a project.

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A University of British Columbia study showed 74% of women with anorexia nervosa saw improvements in their eating disorder after learning to knit.

A 2012 study published in the Journal of Neuropsychiatry & Clinical Neurosciences, found people who took up knitting and crocheting late in life reduced their chances of suffering memory loss or other mild, mental impairments.

Doctors at the Mayo Clinic argued in that study that the crafts helped keep the neural pathways functioning properly.

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The UK website Stitchlinks, which focuses on “therapeutic knitting” asks knitters to submit their stories of how knitting has helped improve their health. The non-scientific survey shows that 54% of people with depression say knitting helps them feel better while 60% of people with chronic pain reported the craft lets them focus attention away from it.

Regardless of their effectiveness on a person’s health, knitting and crocheting gives the patient the comfort of something soft and warm to wrap around themselves and others — something other medicines can’t offer.

(WATCH the video below from the Craft Yarn Council) — Photo: derya, CC

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