Inspired by a video showing a Lego man launched into the stratosphere by high school kids using a weather balloon, a California dad decided to launch his son’s toy 18 miles high using the same procedure. Last month they documented the liftoff of the boy’s favorite train “Stanley” into space in a highly entertaining video.
Dad added music to the video — and animated some facial expressions on the train bringing Stanley to life, like in the “Thomas the Tank Engine” series on PBS, from which the toy is derived.
They attached a small HD camera and an old cell phone to the balloon that could provide GPS tracking after the landing. Dad estimates that Stanley traveled 18 miles high before the balloon broke.
Lady Gaga, criticized in the press recently for gaining weight, launched a new “Body Revolution” project on her LittleMonsters website, hoping to help build confidence in her fans who might have body-image issues.
The pop star revealed she has suffered from bulimia and anorexia since she was 15 and released a photo of herself dressed in underwear with no make-up to show solidarity with her fans who have posted their own images.
“My weight/loss/gain since I was child has tormented me. No amount of help has ever healed my pain about it,” she wrote. “But YOU have.”
Consumer confidence jumped to its highest level in seven months in September as Americans were more optimistic about the job market and income prospects, a private sector report showed on Tuesday.
The Conference Board, an industry group, said its index of consumer attitudes rose to 70.3 from an upwardly revised 61.3 in August. It was the highest level since February and topped economists’ expectations for a much lower 63.
Marte Byrne’s mom sent him a guitar for his birthday when he was deployed to Iraq. Little did he know that this one gift would soon turn into a charitable organization, aptly named Operation Happy Note, that would deliver 4,500 free instruments to soldiers serving overseas in the next 6 years.
After he received his present, Marte sent requests for several more instruments to help relieve stress and raise morale in his unit. His parents, after all, owned a music store.
Eventually, they were sending out “fifty, sixty — at one point, ninety — guitars in one day,” said his mother, Barbara Baker, who began fundraising to pay for all the shipments.
A young man in dire need of a heart transplant shocked doctors and loved ones alike when his failing heart mended itself, the Omaha World-Herald reports.
Michael Crowe, 23, was admitted to a Nebraska hospital last month with a life-threatening heart problem. Crowe’s heart was functioning at only 10 percent efficiency, and his other organs were starting to fail.
At first, Crowe’s doctors ordered him to undergo a heart transplant.
His friends and church members prayed for a miracle.
Is there a gallery or museum you’ve wanted to visit, but never wanted to pay the double-digit admission price?
This Saturday you can get your culture fix for free.
Smithsonian magazine hosts this event each year to encourage people to revisit their favorite museum or learn about a new one in their area.
Here’s how it works: Go to the Museum Day website and register to download a free pass for two admission tickets to any museum on the list, good for one visit on September 29.
Is there a gallery or museum you’ve wanted to visit, but never wanted to pay the double-digit admission price?
This Saturday you can get your culture fix for free.
Smithsonian magazine hosts this event each year to encourage people to revisit their favorite museum or learn about a new one in their area.
Here’s how it works: Go to the Museum Day website and register to download a free pass for two admission tickets to any museum on the list, good for one visit on September 29.
There is a school at one Virginia county juvenile detention center where troubled youths work toward high school diplomas and credit their teachers with saving their lives from ruin.
The jail’s educational program is a little-known entity within Fairfax County Public Schools that offers the students hope for better days ahead.
A tiny farming town in Michigan is rallying around a 16-year-old girl who became humiliated when her high school voted to elevate her to the homecoming court as a joke and then laughed at her in the hallways for having so few friends.
In an inspiring turnaround, Whitney Kropp’s embarrassment gained her thousands of new friends.
A campaign was started by an alumni student of the school who is now a mom. She was sick about the bullying prank and started a Facebook page that quickly attracted thousands of compassionate fans donating their support.
Businesses have donated services for her hair, nails, and make up. They have donated her gown, shoes and tiara. Even dinner is “on the house” for her and her escort this Saturday.
Citizens swarmed the football stadium dressed in orange to cheer loudly when school officials announced her name.
A tiny farming town in Michigan is rallying around a 16-year-old girl who became humiliated when her high school voted to elevate her to the homecoming court as a joke and then laughed at her in the hallways for having so few friends.
In an inspiring turnaround, Whitney Kropp’s embarrassment gained her thousands of new friends.
A campaign was started by an alumni student of the school who is now a mom. She was sick about the bullying prank and started a Facebook page that quickly attracted thousands of compassionate fans donating their support.
An abused Filipino child who lived off a garbage dump has won a prestigious children’s award for the work of his ‘Championing Community Children’ charity, which benefits his fellow street kids.
Cris “Kesz” Valdez, aged 13, was handed this year’s International Children’s Peace Prize at a glittering ceremony in The Hague on Wednesday, where he received a $130,000 prize presented by Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
He was severely abused and forced to scavenge at the dumpsite to pay for his father’s drugs and alcohol. He ran away from home at age 4. Trying to survive in the only way he knew how, by scavenging at the landfill, he sustained major burns on his arm and back, falling into a tire fire. But, he found help from a local Christian group, that paid for his medical treatment and took him in. He then transformed his own experiences into a drive to help other street children, inspired on his seventh birthday to give gifts– flip-flops, small toys, and candy –rather than receive more for himself.
Now, with the help of dozens of volunteers, his annual birthday drives deliver clothing, gifts and supplies to the forgotten children living in landfills. He also educates the orphans about hygiene, reads them stories, and treats their wounds. Above all, he gives them hope.
He has already helped more than 10,000 filipino children, a fraction of those who are either living homeless or forced into labor.
“To everyone in the world, please remember that every day, 6,000 children die from diseases associated with poor sanitation, poor hygiene, and we can do something about it!” he says on his Facebook page. “Please join me in helping street children achieve better health and better lives.”
An abused Filipino child who lived off a garbage dump has won a prestigious children’s award for the work of his ‘Championing Community Children’ charity, which benefits his fellow street kids.
Cris “Kesz” Valdez, aged 13, was handed this year’s International Children’s Peace Prize at a glittering ceremony in The Hague on Wednesday, where he received a $130,000 prize presented by Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
At the Democratic convention in Charlotte recently, a delegate from Rhode Island walked up to Gina Raimondo and said, “You cost me $300,000.”
Raimondo, the state treasurer who had quarterbacked a major pension reform, steeled herself for abuse. Instead, the delegate, a retired schoolteacher and wife of another retired schoolteacher, thanked Raimondo and gave her a big hug.
During each monsoon season in Mumbai, 36,000 children who live on the streets brave the harsh rains. Many fall prey to diseases in the process.
But the lucky among them have rainwear thanks to a dentist and her two helpers who regularly fill their car full of colorful new rain gear to deliver to those in need.
She started her initiative called ‘RAIN – Reaching All In Need’ in June, 2012.
During each monsoon season in Mumbai, 36,000 children who live on the streets brave the harsh rains. Many fall prey to diseases in the process.
But the lucky among them have rainwear thanks to a dentist and her two helpers who regularly fill their car full of colorful new rain gear to deliver to those in need.
She started her initiative called ‘RAIN – Reaching All In Need’ in June, 2012.
Gary Currie was laid out on the ground, presumed dead, when fellow Liverpool supporter Dr. Glyn Phillips spotted him and spent 15 minutes performing CPR, determined that Gary, then just 18, deserved a chance to live.
Now in a moving interview with the Sunday Mirror, Gary reveals how he has struck up a lifetime bond with his saviour, since that day in Sheffield 23 years ago.
By the very nature of their business, every Los Angeles traffic cop can expect to get at least a few complaints every year — especially from people who are just angry about getting caught speeding.
Which is why the police chief was stunned when he discovered that during the last 20 years — through the last 25,000 traffic stops — Sheriff’s Deputy Elton Simmons has not had one complaint filed against him. Not one.
CBS tagged along on his rounds to figure out how he does it.
“Time after time, ticket after ticket, we saw Officer Simmons melt away a polar ice cap of preconceptions,” says Steve Hartman in his On The Road segment.
By the very nature of their business, every Los Angeles traffic cop can expect to get at least a few complaints every year — especially from people who are just angry about getting caught speeding.
Which is why the police chief was stunned when he discovered that during the last 20 years — through the last 25,000 traffic stops — Sheriff’s Deputy Elton Simmons has not had one complaint filed against him. Not one.
CBS tagged along on his rounds to figure out how he does it.
Canada and the United States are beefing up an international agreement on water quality in the Great Lakes.
Environment Minister Peter Kent and Lisa Jackson, administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, signed the updated deal in a brief ceremony in Washington, D.C. earlier this month.
Stephen Gustafson says he didn’t think twice about running to rescue his dog when she was dangling from the jaws of an alligator last Friday afternoon in Lake County. Fla.
Gustafson, 66, was trimming branches when he heard his 13-pound terrier let out a “high pitched yelp.”
“I looked up and the gator had her in his mouth and was taking her far out,” he told FoxNews.com. “I knew if I needed to react, it had to be quick.”