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People-Powered Grocery Store Lowers Food Prices for Volunteers

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A nonprofit grocery store offers healthy foods and a boost of self esteem for less fortunate customers.

Founder Kurt Vickman lets people volunteer to work in his Good Grocer store in Minneapolis, Minnesota for discounts on food. Every item in the shop is marked with two prices — one for regular customers, another, 25% lower price for people who volunteer to work in the store.

We love seeing that Membership card at work! Anyone can shop at Good Grocer, but working Members help keep our prices...

Posted by Good Grocer on Tuesday, August 4, 2015

 

Volunteers keep the prices in check by cutting labor costs – and some people donate their time without taking the discount, so the money goes back into the store.

Good Grocer has an emphasis on fresh produce to promote healthy diets. While it doesn’t fit the pattern of modern food co-ops, its volunteer business plan is similar to early model cooperative stores.

Pastor Turns Food Desert into Garden of Eden for the Poor

The store has about 375 members but Vickman says most customers are non-members who pay the higher prices to help keep costs low for other people in the community.

Vickman came up with the idea while running a food bank and noticing how difficult it was for people who came there to ask for help.

“Because people weren’t able to contribute something, whether it’s their time or money, I think it eroded people’s dignity and … sense of self-motivation,” Vickman told the Star Tribune.

Homeless Find New Life Working at 22-Acre Organic Farm and Restaurant

Allowing people to work gives people back their dignity and the self-motivation is easy to see. Volunteers provide 75% of Good Grocer’s labor and community leaders say they’ve seen neighbors take a “sense of ownership” in the store by donating their time.

Photos: Good Grocer, Facebook

College Student’s Device Can Turn Polluted Air into Printer Ink

kaala pollution printer demo video screenshot

This device doesn’t just suck soot out of the air—it repurposes the stuff as printer toner.

Anirudh Sharma, co-leader of a student-run science lab at MIT, has invented something called Kaala, a device that adds alcohol and oil to polluted air and creates printer ink.

The idea first came to him while channeling childhood memories.

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“(It was) a minor itch that led me to build something cool from observations arising from nostalgia of the days back in India,” he said on the device’s website. “There’s so much soot/pollution around us, in crowded cities. What if the same could be repurposed to generate ink for printers?”

Sharma, a Masters student and Research Assistant at the Fluid Interfaces Group, also wrote that he believes the model makes good business sense for existing ink providers.

“Companies like HP/Canon make 70 percent of their profits by selling these cartridges at 400% margin.”

For the First Time, Artificial Feet Can Feel the Ground

Sharma is basically an unstoppable force of human innovation.

He won the ‘Innovator of the Year’ award from the MIT Tech Review TR35 for his work designing footwear to provide the visually impaired better mobility, by connecting insoles to your smartphone via bluetooth that will guide you hands free.

(WATCH the video below to see how ink is made) Photo: Kaala video

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College Kid Is Running A Highly Rated NYC Restaurant in His Dorm Room

Jonah Reider Pith screenshot WNBC

While many college students subsist on ramen noodles, this culinary genius is running one of New York’s highest-Yelp-rated new eateries out of his dorm room.

Jonah Reider is the creator of “Pith,” an exclusive dining experience that only serves four people at a time. He whips up five to eight-course meals for just $10 to $20 a person – all prepared in his Columbia University dorm’s common kitchen.

New Organic Drive-Thru: Vegan Fries With Your Non-GMO Burger

The college senior began cooking for friends and classmates, but when word spread about his intricate menus, people outside the school decided they wanted to sample his fare.

He began taking reservations through Yelp!, where he’s racked up a nearly impossible to achieve five-star rating.

Pith already has a wait list of hundreds of people and is booked solid through January.

12-Yr-Old Uses ‘Make-A-Wish’ For Food Truck To Feed Others

Reider, an economics major, said that he’s not really sure he wants to make cooking a career, but for now, he’s happy to be the toast of the town.

(WATCH the video below from WNBC or READ more at Grub Street) — Photo: WNBC video

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Rescued Baby Possum’s Favorite Nurse? A Stuffed Kangaroo (Here’s Why)

This stuffed kangaroo may not be its real mama, but it’s a pretty great surrogate, providing comfort for a possum rescued by a wildlife group.

Little Bettina, now four months old, was recently found alone in the Sydney suburb of Mosman, Australia.

Wild Baby Kangaroo Still Comes Home to Hug His Teddy Bear After Release

These photos of the possum cozying up to the toy during sleep time and feeding time show the wee marsupial is recovering well.

possum bottle feeding stuffed kangaroo Taronga zoo Facebook

The brushtail possum of Australia is named because of its resemblance to the opossums of the Americas, the most common marsupial in the Western Hemisphere.

The soft animal gives the baby possum a chance to cling to something wooly using her claws and teeth, which is what it would do with a natural mother in the wild.

The Taronga Wildlife Hospital staff also carries Bettina around in a pouch. When she is strong enough, she will be released back into the wild.

Photos: Taronga Zoo Facebook

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Even Oil And Coal CEOs Want Climate Action This Year, and Sign Petition

By Scheherazade Al-Arab, CC license

Sad Earth cc John LeGear

As world leaders sit down in Paris to decide how to cut greenhouse gas emissions, 14 corporations with massive carbon footprints have officially joined the call to rein in these atmospheric contributors to global climate change.

The companies, which include oil producers Shell and BP and coal mining giants BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto, issued a joint statement calling the UN Climate Change conference a “critical opportunity” to address the threats of climate change.

43 CEOs: Climate Debate Is Over, Carbon Cuts Are Good for Business

“As businesses concerned about the well-being of our investors, our customers, our communities and our planet,” the statement reads, “We are committed to working on our own and in partnership with governments to mobilize the technology, investment and innovation needed to transition to a sustainable low-carbon economy.”

“These are companies with real skin in the game–either they’re large emitters or their products are,” said Bob Perciasepe, president of the Center for Climate & Energy Solutions, which organized the statement.

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Almost 200 countries are taking part in the Paris conference with the goal of having a global agreement by the end of this year on how to cut carbon emissions that lead directly to climate change.

Hewlett-Packard, Intel, and PG&E, also joined the call for action.

(Photo (top) John LeGear; (homepage) Scheherazade Al Arab, CC)

Person Sends $500 to Make Amends for Park Vandalism 25 Years Ago

Money letter FB City of Orem Utah

A desire to make things right has gotten this Parks Department one step closer to helping local kids with special needs join their friends on the playground.

Earlier this week, the Public Works Department in Orem, Utah received an anonymous letter from someone apologizing for taking part in the vandalism of a city park bathroom in 1990.

It read:

“Many years ago in my youth, I and a couple of friends vandalized the bathroom partitions at Bonneville Park on 800 West. I regret the actions of my youth but need to make right the financial burden I created. I am including money that would or should be able to cover that expense.”

The writer enclosed $500 to make things right again.

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None of the employees at the city’s Parks Department remember the vandalism from 25 years ago, but they do plan to put the money toward an “All Abilities Playground” the city is building.

When it opens in the spring, this new addition will let kids with mobility problems, even kids in wheelchairs, join their friends for play dates in the park.

These Photos Confirm the Goodness of Humanity

It’s one of those ‘feel good’ stories that makes you believe in humanity,” Reed Price, with Orem’s Public Works department told KSL News.

(WATCH the KSL News video below) — Photo: City of Orem, Facebook

Veteran Helps Comrades “Walk off the War” With Hikes on Appalachian Trail

Sean Gobin CNN Hero Warrior Hike screenshot CNN

Sean Gobin was a hero long before CNN nominated him for the title this year.

He completed three deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan before leaving the service in 2012. Still dealing with the memories and emotions of combat, he set out to “walk off the war,” hiking all of the nearly 2,200 miles of the Appalachian Trail.

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About two thirds of the way through, Gobin realized he’d been processing all the emotional turmoil built up from years in Iraq and Afghanistan. He realized other veterans must be going through the same things and thought if the months he’d spent on the trail had helped him cope, it could help others, too.

Gobin founded Warrior Hike, a non-profit that provides equipment and supplies for veterans to make long distance hikes.

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“It’s just like a deployment, except instead of going to fight a war, your mission is to be a civilian again,” Gobin told CNN.

Spending two to six months in the woods, communing with nature, meeting supportive people along the trails, and hiking with other vets helps combat veterans put the memories of war in perspective.

The costs of outfitting for such extreme hikes can be beyond most veteran’s budgets. Warrior Hike provides food, camping gear, and all the other hiking essentials for vets to spend months on the trail.

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His work has made Gobin one of CNN’s Top Ten 2015 Heroes.

You can vote for him as your choice for Hero of the Year at CNNHeroes.com. The network will announce the winner at their annual televised award show December 6, and present the 2015 winner with $100,000 for continuing his or her good work. See more of the Hero stories here.

(WATCH the CNN video below) – Photo: CNN video

Beluga Whale Stuns Navy Team With Amazingly Human Chatter (LISTEN)

CC Steve Snodgrass

beluga-whale-CC-Steve-Snodgrass

An underwater prankster that talks like a human is stirring up conversation off the Southern California coast.

The beluga whale that was tamed in the 1970s by the U.S. Navy to find and retrieve sunken torpedoes and mines has become, it seems, an enthusiastic member of a team of humans–and now, wants to communicate like his pals.

Apart from his goofy and curious nature, nothing was especially unusual about Noc’s life with the Navy Marine Mammal Program (NMMP) – until he started chatting up the divers over the intercom.

While two divers were fixing up the whale enclosures underwater, they thought they heard the radio buzz with an order to get out of the water. When they resurfaced, their supervisor insisted he had issued no such request.

The order had come from Noc.

After the marine trickster’s first verbal episode over the radio, the beluga couldn’t contain himself. Sam Ridgeway, co-founder of the NMMP, got to work recording Noc’s outbursts.

Strangely enough, the whale would gab away with his human friends all day long, but never with the other belugas in the program. Ridgeway assumes this is because of Noc’s connection to his trainers. Belugas normally travel with pods of about 25 other whales, but Noc’s trainers became his adopted family.

“[The whales] come to think of us as family,” Ridgway told Smithsonian magazine. “And that’s the reason they stay with us. We have no way of completely controlling them, and yet they do their job and always come back.”

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Using the nasal cavities, Noc builds up pressure until he’s fit to blow, then uses the organ responsible for echolocation to release the air in oral bursts though his lips in a process that sounds unnervingly like human conversation.

There have been rumors in the past of hearing whales imitate human sounds in the ocean before, but Noc is the first ever recorded beluga, and the most articulate warbler, by far.

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SHARE this Whale of a Tale–Click below… Photo Credit: Steve Snodgrass, CC

Would You Cross This Glass Walkway Suspended 1000-ft Over a Canyon?

over-canyon-Architect_Haim_Dotan_Zhangjiajie_Glass_Bridge

If you’ve ever wondered what it would be like to stand suspended over a 980-foot canyon, plan on taking a walk over this 1,410-foot-long glass-bottomed bridge in Wulingyuan National Park.

With towering sandstone-quartz pillars and dramatic scenery blanketed in lush vegetation, the park located in the Hunan province of China is a breathtaking area of natural beauty, and best known as the landscape that inspired James Cameron’s movie Avatar.

The Zhangjiajie Glass Bridge will be the highest glass-bottomed bridge in the world when it is completed at the end of this year.

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The designer responsible for the bridge, Israeli Architect Haim Dotan, strove to minimize its impact on the wider beauty of the park.

“I believe in nature, balance, and beauty. Nature is beautiful as it is,” he said. “One wants to make the least impact upon it. Therefore, the bridge was designed to be as invisible as possible–a white bridge disappearing into the clouds.”

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Two steel side beams will be used to frame a series of glass panels, and suspended cables will support the banisters. As a result, the bridge should achieve the impression of feather-like lightness.

Images courtesy Haim Dotan Architects

Yet, it balances ethereal lightness with super-strength. The structure is projected to be able to withstand high winds, earthquakes, and the weight of 800 visitors.

Declared China’s first national park in 1982 and named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1992, Wulingyuan has welcomed an increasing numbers of visitors, tourists who have been accommodated with a series of man-made interventions that provide maximum access to points of interest.

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The park already boasts structures like the Tianmen Mountain Cableway, which carries visitors over some of the most spectacular terrain of the park, and the 1070-foot high Bailong Elevator – the world’s tallest glass elevator – which debuted in 2002. In 2011, the park also opened the glass skywalk on Tianmen Mountain, allowing park-goers to skirt its sheer cliffs.

When it opens to the public in January of 2016, the Zhangjiajie Canyon Bridge promises to be the park’s most daring attraction to date.

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Smart Move: Two U.S. Colleges Are Lowering Tuition by 40%

Rosemont College graduation CC RaubDaub

As tuition costs continue to rise at colleges around the U.S., a pair of small, private, liberal arts colleges are slashing theirs by 40%.

Beginning next year, Utica College in New York will reduce tuition from $34,000 to $20,000 per year, and Rosemont College outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania plans to cut its annual cost from $33,000 to $18,500.

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Both schools call it a “tuition reset” — taking a step back from a national trend of skyrocketing education costs that have spiraled upward even more sharply since the 2008 recession. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities found that tuition costs have more than doubled since 2000, while the average family’s income level has remained relatively the same.

“We’ve had escalations and our families simply are hitting a ceiling that they can no longer afford,” Utica President Dr. Todd Hutton told CNBC.

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Leaders of both colleges say the “reset” promises to let families keep “significant amounts” of money while still gaining a quality education.

(WATCH the video below from CNBC) — Photo: RaubDaub, CC

 

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5-Hour Energy Inventor to Bring Free Energy to the Poor, Donate Billions

If this billionaire’s plan to power remote Indian villages through stationary bike pedaling catches on—well, they actually won’t need a whole lot of his 5-Hour Energy Drink.

Manoj Bhargava became a billionaire almost overnight thanks to those little energy-infused shots, and now, he’s eager to give away 99 percent of his fortune to help others.

He’s starting with a plan to bring a special kind of stationary bike to impoverished regions, one that converts human energy into electricity capable of lighting an entire household.

With just one hour of pedaling, the bikes will generate enough energy to power a home all day and night.

The bikes were developed by Bhargava’s Stage 2 Innovations lab in Farmington, Michigan. They cost about $100 apiece, and work by spinning a turbine to create electricity that’s stored in a built-in battery.

The lab will test 50 of the bikes in villages across northern India early next year.

The bikes aren’t the only philanthropic innovation being developed by Bhargava’s team. As seen in the new free documentary “Billions in Change,” Stage 2 Innovations is also figuring out how to make saltwater drinkable, find ways to develop cheap and clean geothermal power, and improve health outcomes for the poor.

This Lamp Light Burns All Night Powered Only by a Glass of Saltwater

“If you have wealth, it’s a duty to help those who don’t,” Bhargava says in the film.

Bhargava funded the lab after signing the Giving Pledge created by billionaires Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett, who have collected promises from nearly 140 wealthy families pledging to donate 99% of their millions to charity.

(WATCH the video below or READ more at National Geographic)

Backpacker Uses Life Savings to Fund Home For Orphans She Met in Nepal

Maggie Doyne screenshot CNN Hero Year

A woman who spent the money she saved babysitting in high school to save children half a world away is one of CNN’s Top Ten Heroes of the Year.

Maggie Doyne decided to take a year off before college in 2006 to backpack around the world. She only got as far as Nepal when she called home and asked her parents to send all $5,000 of her life savings.

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The New Jersey teen wasn’t in trouble. She just wanted to help the kids she met who were in desperate need–the refugees and orphans from the country’s decade-long civil war.

She used the money to start the Kopila Valley Children’s Home in Surkhet. In Nepali, “Kopila” means flower bud, and during the last 8 years the orphanage has blossomed like that, bringing new hope to 50 resident orphans.

Through her nonprofit, Doyne’s Blink Now Foundation, the side-tracked backpacker, now 28, continues to fund the home, along with a primary school she built shortly afterward which educates nearly 350 local kids.

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You can vote for Maggie Doyne as your choice for Hero of the Year at CNNHeroes.com. The network will announce the winner at their annual televised award show December 6, and present the 2015 winner with $100,000 for continuing his or her good work.

(WATCH the CNN video below)  Photo: CNN video

Torn Between Red and White? For Halloween, Try Orange Wines

 

Torn between white and red wines? Orange might be the perfect happy medium–especially with Halloween parties around the corner.

Orange wines are similar to white wine, but with the full-bodied, tannic taste of a red and a copper-color.

Though there are different methods, orange wines are typically made by allowing the grapes to macerate in their skins for two weeks – a technique that’s usually reserved for red wines. The process slowly breaks down skins and creates texture and color in the wine.

This is the same type of wine Julius Caesar drank, using virtually the same ancient techniques.

Skin-fermented whites were once the exclusive domain of Europeans. But recently, American vintners in California and Oregon have started experimenting with them, as well as many in Australia.

Virtually any white wine grape can be used: Pinot Gris, Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Roussanne, Malvasia, Trebbiano, and others, reports Hannah Wallace in Bon Appetit.

It is easier to purchase a bottle of orange wine in the store than to expect a restaurant to serve it tableside. Look for brands that are highly regarded, without the high acidity that can accompany orange wines gone awry. Vintage Cellars in Australia recommends the Yarra Valley “Breakfast Wine”. In their taste test, Oregon Live liked “The Prince in His Caves” from Farina Vineyards in California.

At L’Apicio in New York City, sommelier Joe Campanale always has an orange wine ready by-the-glass. It pairs well with “smoky” foods, like cured meats and cheeses.

Image credit: Housegirl photos, CC

“If you have a dish that you’d normally want to pair with a light red or a rich white, an orange wine would be a good in-between,” Campanale told Bon Apetite. “It does really well with pork.”

Completely different strains are those “orange wines” made from orange juice instead of grapes, or a sweet white wine macerated with orange peel.

Photo (top): The Crusher 2010 Wilson Vineyard Big Orange White Wine Blend

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Poetry in Motion: Power Plant Will Use Ocean Tides to Power 155K Homes

tidal powerplant release Tidal Lagoon Swansea Bay Plc

This planned power plant in Wales may look like the Guggenheim Museum but its benefits far outweigh the beauty: it will use the rise and fall of ocean tides to generate enough renewable electricity to power 155,000 homes for 120 years.

When completed, the structure will produce electricity enough to displace more than a quarter million barrels of oil each year— while leaving virtually no carbon footprint.

Power plants have been generating electricity using the tides since 1966, but the Swansea project is the first to employ a radically new method of harnessing the natural forces. The secret lies in its nearly six-mile-long barrier wall that will enclose a huge amount of water in an artificial “tidal lagoon”.

The lagoon captures and holds seawater at high tide. As the tide goes out, water in the 4.5 square mile lagoon will be as much as 27 feet higher than the water outside its walls. This tremendous pressure will be routed through 26 turbines, rushing out to sea until the water level equalizes on both sides of the lagoon. At high tide, the flow is reversed, keeping the sea out of the lagoon until it reaches maximum height, then letting the water rush through the turbines again until it fills up the lagoon.

The amount of water rushing through the turbines each day would fill 100,000 Olympic swimming pools.

Turbine 5 screenshot Preconstruct

Speaking of which, the Swansea Bay Tidal Lagoon will not only crank out clean energy, but could be used as a sports arena, aquaculture farm, and seaside sculpture garden.

The lagoon can also be used as a giant arena for sailing and cycling sports. Designers have plans for sculptures that appear to disappear into the water or rise out of it as the tides roll in and out.

The Swansea Bay Tidal Lagoon will also feature a community aquaculture farm growing oysters, kelp and other local sea crops.

The location in Swansea, Wales was chosen because it has some of the highest tide differences in the U.K., maximizing the amount of water that can be used to turn turbines and generate the 420 gigawatt hours per year.

The UK Energy Ministry approved planning in June and construction is expected to start as early as sometime in 2017. Its $1.5 billion price tag relies on government subsidies for 35 years, but the builders have suggested they could give up much of the subsidies in exchange for approval on two more tidal lagoon plants at Cardiff and Newport.

(WATCH the video below from Preconstruct)

First Super Hero Characters for Girls Take Off and Kick Butt

Seven new action heroes for little girls are officially leveling the playing field.

Well, they aren’t exactly new. These Super Hero Girls from DC Comics are the classic caped women, Super Woman, Wonder Woman, Bat Girl and others, placed back in their high school days.

After making their debut at New York City’s annual Comic Con exhibition last week, the girl-powered line of new toys, animation and graphic novels are due to start flying around the globe at the end of this month.

Mattel manufactured the group of action figures for the line focused on girls up to age 12.

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“There is a character to whom every girl can relate, no matter what stage of life in which she currently finds herself,” said Diane Nelson, President of both DC Entertainment and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment in a statement. “Girls want to experience the strength, action and optimism of Super Heroes, too.”

The animated series takes place at Super Hero High School, where, like Hogwarts for Wizards, kids with super powers attend the campus to hone their skills.

In the clip below from Comic Con, several of the women responsible for bringing the DC Super Hero Girls to life discuss what this new take on the characters means to the next generation of DC fans. See some animated shorts featuring the characters at DC Super Hero Girls.

(WATCH the video below from DC Comics)

Church Tips Pizza Driver $1,000 After Sermon on Kindness (WATCH)

thousand dollar pizza tip screenshot Sycamore Creek Church

Now that’s an inspiring Sunday Service: A pizza delivery driver was in shock after receiving a $1,000 tip from a church congregation practicing what it preaches.

Sycamore Creek Church in Pickerington, Ohio had just wrapped up a month of sermons and lessons on the value of random acts of kindness. The woman, identified only as Natasha, was the lucky delivery driver who dispatched a $5.99 pizza to the building. It was all a ruse to let church members put their teachings into practice.

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She was led up to Rev. Steve Markle who paid for the pizza and asked her to name the biggest tip she had ever received. When Natasha told him it was $10, he gave her $15, then showed her what the rest of the congregation had chipped in.

Natasha gasped at the stack of bills as the pastor explained it was a special collection the church members had taken as a random act of kindness, underscoring the lessons of generosity.

(WATCH the video below from Sycamore Creek Church)

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Malala is Inspiration for Her Mother To Go Back To School

640px-Malala-Yousafzai-CC-DFID-UK Department for International Development

Malala Yousafzai has inspired millions of women and girls to stand up for their right to an education.

Her mother turned out to be one of them.

Three years ago, Malala was shot by the Taliban in her own country of Pakistan for advocating girls’ education. She not only survived, she became more influential and determined in her crusade, becoming the youngest person ever to win a Nobel Peace Prize.

Now her mother, Toor Pekai, revealed publicly for the first time that she, herself, has returned to school after dropping out at a young age when she was the only girl in the room.

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She made the announcement in London, during the recent Women in the World Summit, which took place three years to the day of the anniversary of the attack on Malala.

“I love it very much. I enjoy reading and writing and learning, but when I come home and they have given me homework I put my bag in the corner — I say ‘I can’t be bothered,’” she said at the summit. “But then Malala comes home and says ‘where is your bag, have you done your homework,’ and I want to say ‘Oh it’s a bit hard!’”

A documentary about the family and their new life in the U.K., He Named Me Malala, is currently in theaters.

(WATCH a film trailer below) Photo: UK Department for International Development, CC

NFL Star Keeps Returning to Help Kids From His Hometown

Muhammad Wilkerson football camp Manish Gosalia submitted

Children of all ages can count on an assist from this NFL all-star.

New York Jets defensive end Muhammad Wilkerson backed by fellow teammates and his foundation, T.E.A.M. 96, are always lending a hand to young, aspiring athletes, hungry families, and breast cancer survivors.

T.E.A.M. 96, named for his jersey number, offers scholarship-based awards to students in Wilkerson’s hometown of Linden, New Jersey, giving $1,000 towards college expenses. This year, 13 students have received the financial aid—but the most fun part for Wilkerson is getting to play in the dirt with the kids.

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Students who attend Linden High School, Wilkerson’s alma mater, can take part in his youth football camp and receive personalized, one-on-one coaching from the all-star and some of his teammates.

“The night before, we always go bowling, and the next day, we play,” he told Good News Network. “Everyone is always really excited. They’re used to seeing me, though, because I’m always coming back to the community.”

Wilkerson during practice with kid football camp Manish Gosalia submitted
Photos by Manish Gosalia

Next month, they’ll see him around the old neighborhood handing out Thanksgiving turkeys at his old Head Start preschool.

Earlier today, he honored 96 breast cancer survivors at a three-course luncheon not far from where he grew up nurtured by a mother who survived the disease.

Throughout his childhood Wilkerson watched his mother, a social worker, help other families get back on their feet; now a father of two toddlers, ages 1 and 3, Wilkerson says he hopes to set an example for his own kids about the importance of giving back.

“I try to be there in person to put a face to the foundation as often as I can,” he said. “I want them to know how important it is to me.”

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If you are in New York City next Monday, there are still a few tickets left for the T.E.A.M. 96 fundraiser (which stands for Togetherness, Education, Achievement, Motivation). They are hosting a dinner at Morton’s Grille that will feature NFL celebrity servers, a reception, and gift bags from the Jets.

Pastor Turns Food Desert into Garden of Eden for the Poor

Richard Joyner Tractor Heroes screenshot CNN

A North Carolina preacher was nominated for a top hero prize after he created a nutritional oasis in what had been a food desert.

Pastor Richard Joyner had to preside over many funerals for members of his congregation due to diseases related to poor nutrition.

One day, he decided to do something about it: grow the healthy food himself.

He started a community garden at the Missionary Baptist Church where he preached in Conetoe. It multiplied to 20 plots of land around the community, including a 25-acre farm run by his nonprofit Conetoe Family Life Center.

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Joyner started teaching children in the congregation to plant and raise crops so they might grow up with an appreciation for better nutrition. Now, 80 kids work the gardens, and, every year, they harvest 50,000 pounds of fresh produce. Additionally, his congregation keeps its own beehives to pollinate crops.

Whatever isn’t eaten is given away to others in the neighborhood or sold to local restaurants to raise scholarship money for young people in the church. Since 2007, his project has helped families in the poverty-stricken town cut food bills in half.

One member of his church says she has stopped taking 27 medications a day and only needs to take six because of these healthy lifestyle changes.

RELATED: Homeless Find New Life Working at 22-Acre Organic Farm and Restaurant

Community health as a whole has improved, emergency room visits are down, and Pastor Joyner has a lot fewer funerals to preside over.

(WATCH the video below from CNN) — Photos: CNN video

Domino’s Driver Delivers More Than Pizza to Elderly Man Left in Cold

Pizza delivery new home screenshot KARE

Domino’s delivery promises pizza in “30 minutes or less,” but one driver took it upon herself to deliver a bit more–a new home for a customer in need, just in time for winter.

Pizza Delivery home GoFundMeAngela Nguyen had delivered pizza to the rundown trailer before. Lee Hasse, who lived there, occasionally splurged on such a luxury, but the 76-year-old man usually survived on a single meal each day from “Meals on Wheels.”

This time, Nguyen noticed the old man was shivering and deduced that he had no heat. With the cold Minnesota winter fast approaching, she decided to find a way to keep him warm.

“My initial intention was just to rent him a small, tiny apartment through the winter,” she told KARE News.

Fast Food Employee’s Compassionate Act Impresses Millions

Nguyen set up a GoFundMe page expecting to raise a few hundred dollars, but the response overwhelmed her — it collected almost $25,000 in nine days with contributions pledged from all over the world.

Domino’s corporate office even chipped in $2,000, saying they were proud of Nguyen’s efforts.

When media reports shared the news, businesses around the Ham Lake community quickly offered time and resources to help.

A construction company asking to remain anonymous has offered to build him a small house on his property. A surveyor, framers, and painters have volunteered their services to put a new roof over Hasse’s head.

Lucky Customer Gets $1300 Instead of Chicken Wings From Dominos

Hassee says the attention is both “awesome and overwhelming” – because he ordered a pizza and strangers delivered a brighter, warmer future.

(WATCH the video below from KARE-11) – Photos: KARE video; GoFundMe page

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