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7 Leading US Airlines to Use BioMass Fuel Made From Waste in California

jet fueling - photo by CAAFI

jet fueling - photo by CAAFISeven of the leading U.S. airlines announced this week they’ve signed up to purchase jet fuel made from recycled urban and agricultural waste to be produced in northern California. Providing the fuel will be Solena Fuels and its biomass-to-liquids facility in Santa Clara County.

American Airlines led the way with its embrace of the groundbreaking alternative aviation fuels project. United Continental, Southwest Airlines, Alaska Airlines, FedEx, JetBlue, and US Airways also signed the letter of intent. Air Canada, Frontier Airlines and Lufthansa German Airlines also joined the big seven.

Cat Sanctuary Takes in Tabby Number 1,000

Tabby's Place trio

Tabby's Place trioTabby’s Place is celebrating the rescue of its 1,000th cat.

Since opening its doors to hard-luck cats in 2003, the sanctuary has made the same promise to each feline it saves: if she isn’t adopted, she can live out all her days in cage-free, love-filled comfort, regardless of age, personality or medical needs.

Indeed, about 30% of Tabby’s Place cats are “Special Needs cats,” with conditions requiring costly ongoing medical care.

New Bill in Congress Today Allows States to Legalize Pot

photo of pot smoker by Chmee2 - CC

marijuana joint by Chmee2 -CC licenseCongressmen Barney Frank (D-MA) and Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul (R-TX) will introduce a bill in the US Congress today that would allow each state to decide for itself whether to legalize marijuana — good news for patients suffering from pain and disease who look to medical marijuana for help.

The historic bill would limit the U.S. government role in marijuana enforcement to cross-border or inter-state smuggling. Citizens would be able to legally grow, use or sell cannabis in states which have legalized the forbidden weed.

Remarkable Meeting for Michelle Obama With Nelson Mandela

Mandela Foundation photo with Michelle Obama

Mandela Foundation photo with Michelle Obama The First Lady began her tour of South Africa meeting a parade of leaders from government, industry, non-profit and education, but it was her encounters with the very young and the very old that likely resonated most deeply with Michelle Obama and her family.

Her voice cracked and halted as she made an emotional speech in front of young women leaders in Soweto. She likened their nation’s journey to the American story, that began more than 200 years ago. At the close of her talk, in a crowded church, she reminded the group of a well known battle cry: “If anyone tells you, ‘you shouldn’t’ or ‘you can’t’, I want you to say with one voice — the voice of a generation, ‘Yes, we can’.”

Remarkable Meeting for Michelle Obama With Nelson Mandela

Mandela Foundation photo with Michelle Obama

Mandela Foundation photo with Michelle Obama The First Lady began her tour of South Africa meeting a parade of leaders from government, industry, non-profit and education, but it was her encounters with the very young and the very old that likely resonated most deeply with Michelle Obama and her family.

Her voice cracked and halted as she made an emotional speech in front of young women leaders in Soweto. She likened their nation’s journey to the American story, that began more than 200 years ago. At the close of her talk, in a crowded church, she reminded the group of a well known battle cry: “If anyone tells you, ‘you shouldn’t’ or ‘you can’t’, I want you to say with one voice — the voice of a generation, ‘Yes, we can’.”

$16 Million Violin Sold For Charity

violin-strad-japanese-ladyblunt

Lady Blunt Stradivarius - Nippon Foundation photoA Japanese music foundation has sold a renowned Stradivarius violin for $16 million at auction to raise money for tsunami disaster relief.

The nonprofit Nippon Foundation owned the 1721 violin, which was rarely played, and decided it could be put to better use.

“While this violin was very important to our collection, the needs of our fellow Japanese people after the March 11 tragedy have proven that we all need to help, in any way we can.

La Familia Drug Cartel Defeated, Leader is Arrested, says Mexico

scales of justice

scales of justiceLa Familia leader, Jose de Jesus Mendez Vargas, has been arrested and Mexican authorities said on Tuesday, that the group’s reign in the state of Michoacán has come to an end.

Federal police escorted nearly 50 suspects of two major drug cartels to a news media presentation in Mexico City on Saturday, May 28. The suspects presented include 36 members of the La Familia cartel and 10 members of the Zetas drug gang.

Good News Network Story Inspires Million Dollar Donation to Duplicate Kids Health Program

WV hospital donation, Mike Ross, center

WV hospital donation, Mike Ross, centerGood news travels fast – and apparently, pretty far.

After a Good News Network story about the first rural diabetes center in the US, which educates and cares for children free of charge in Kansas, a West Virginia children’s hospital received a gift of one million dollars to replicate the project there.

Oil and gas businessman and former West Virginia legislator Mike Ross read about the Rector Diabetes Education and Resource Center in Kansas, and having been a keen supporter of diabetes research for many years, decided that he wanted to  help start a similar program in his state.

What touched him about the original story is the similarity between himself (with a grandson who battles Type 1 diabetes) and the benefactor of the Kansas clinic, Kelly Rector, also a grandfather, who was motivated to fund the diabetes initiative because his grandson was born with the same disease, yet the family had difficulty in finding services in the rural part of that state.

 

rector-diabetes-benefactorsThe Rector Diabetes Center received a call from the WVU Children’s Hospital after development officers at West Virginia University, who are regular subscribers to the Good News Network, noticed some striking similarities between Mr. Ross and the Rector Family in Parsons, Kansas (photo, left). They secured the name and e-mail address of Rector, and administrators talked on the phone exchanging much information about how to repeat what they had done in the Midwest.

Mr. Ross agreed that this diabetes care model provided the perfect vehicle for him to give back his community in a substantial way. Thanks to the Ross family, WVU Children’s Hospital will be able to expand its services to provide more patient education and care for those who can’t afford it.

“His magnificent gift will mean more children will get diabetes treatment, more diabetes outreach and education programs will be provided in rural communities – and more research will be conducted,” said Mimi Wilson, development officer for the WVU School of Medicine.

It is interesting to note that Mike Ross, while a member of the WV State Legislature, helped establish The West Virginia Research Trust Fund, which is today resulting in a dollar-for-dollar match for the research portion (40 percent) of his gift, literally doubling its impact and the chance that one day – maybe in West Virginia – someone will find a cure for Type 1 diabetes.

Mr. Ross exclaimed, “Wouldn’t it be great if West Virginia were known, not as a place with a lot of problems, but, as a place where problems are solved?“

“Because you took the time to publish the article on our diabetes project, we were able to have an impact in a state far away” said Rod Landrum, Executive Director of the Labette Health Foundation, which runs the Kansas project. “In doing so, you may well have helped to save the life of a child, because care for diabetes, which is reaching epidemic proportions, is being expanded in West Virginia.”

Good News Network Story Inspires Million Dollar Donation to Duplicate Kids Health Program

WV hospital donation, Mike Ross, center

WV hospital donation, Mike Ross, centerGood news travels fast – and apparently, pretty far.

After a Good News Network story about the first rural diabetes center in the US, which educates and cares for children free of charge in Kansas, a West Virginia children’s hospital received a gift of one million dollars to replicate the project there.

Oil and gas businessman and former West Virginia legislator Mike Ross read about the Rector Diabetes Education and Resource Center in Kansas, and having been a keen supporter of diabetes research for many years, decided that he wanted to  help start a similar program in his state.

What touched him about the original story is the similarity between himself (with a grandson who battles Type 1 diabetes) and the benefactor of the Kansas clinic, Kelly Rector, also a grandfather, who was motivated to fund the diabetes initiative because his grandson was born with the same disease, yet the family had difficulty in finding services in the rural part of that state.

Thousands of “Hackers for Good” Build Applications for Humanity

random-acts-hackers-meeting

random-acts-hackers-meetingTwo years ago representatives from Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!, Hewlett-Packard, NASA and the World Bank came together to form the Random Hacks of Kindness (RHoK) program, which steers technology developers toward doing good. RHoK brings together subject matter experts, volunteer software developers and designers to create free software solutions that address challenges facing humanity and assist in crisis response.

Earlier this month, thousands of “hackers for good” gathered in more than 19 different global locations—from Berlin to Nairobi, and Sydney to Sao Paulo—to participate in Random Hacks of Kindness #3. These teams are now off and running, working with NGO and government advisors to finish their applications for humanity.

RHoK #3 expanded the mandate to include climate change, and also announced they are broadening the scope in the future to tackle any development challenges.

Of the more than 75 solutions submitted for judging at this year’s global events, many are already on their way to making a difference around the world.

At the RHoK event on the Google campus, these two winners were picked:

• Hey Cycle makes it easier for people to reuse and recycle items by setting up email alerts when free items that they’re looking for are entered on freecycle.org

• FoodMovr connects people with excess food to others who need it through a simple live application

Visit www.rhokaustralia.org for more information, and to put your hacking skills to good use.

(READ more at Google BlogWATCH the video from Philly session below)

 

Thousands of “Hackers for Good” Build Applications for Humanity

random-acts-hackers-meeting

random-acts-hackers-meetingTwo years ago representatives from Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!, Hewlett-Packard, NASA and the World Bank came together to form the Random Hacks of Kindness (RHoK) program, which steers technology developers toward doing good. RHoK brings together subject matter experts, volunteer software developers and designers to create free software solutions that address challenges facing humanity and assist in crisis response.

Earlier this month, thousands of “hackers for good” gathered in more than 19 different global locations—from Berlin to Nairobi, and Sydney to Sao Paulo—to participate in Random Hacks of Kindness #3. These teams are now off and running, working with NGO and government advisors to finish their applications for humanity.

22 Year-old Plays His Way into Golf Stardom: Rory’s a Celtic Tiger, With Class

Rory McIlroy, photo by Pvt pauline -CC

Rory McIlroy, photo by Pvt pauline -CCFor 15 years golf needed Tiger. He made the game more popular, more accessible, more interesting, by virtue of his virtuosic play and dominance over the rest of the golfers on tour.

Not anymore. Thankfully, blessedly, a change has come.

In a performance for the ages, 22-year old Rory McIlroy from Northern Ireland made his name this weekend, one that won’t soon be forgotten, and news and sports outlets are giddy about the next Tiger being a Celtic Tiger.

On Fathers’ Day, Rory McIlroy, the only child of a small-town Northern Ireland bartender who worked two jobs to finance his son’s sporting career, hugged his dad tightly after winning golf’s toughest challenge, the US Open, before a wildly cheering throng of newfound fans at the historic Congressional Country Club outside Washington, DC.

But it wasn’t just that the humble, affable, even adorable young man had won his first major. It is how he did it – obliterating the field, beating the top ranked golfers in the world by anywhere from six to twenty strokes.

22 Year-old Plays His Way into Golf Stardom: Rory’s a Celtic Tiger, With Class

Rory McIlroy, photo by Pvt pauline -CC

Rory McIlroy, photo by Pvt pauline -CCFor 15 years golf needed Tiger. He made the game more popular, more accessible, more interesting, by virtue of his virtuosic play and dominance over the rest of the golfers on tour.

Not anymore. Thankfully, blessedly, a change has come.

In a performance for the ages, 22-year old Rory McIlroy from Northern Ireland made his name this weekend, one that won’t soon be forgotten, and news and sports outlets are giddy about the next Tiger being a Celtic Tiger. 

On Fathers’ Day, Rory McIlroy, the only child of a small-town Northern Ireland bartender who worked two jobs to finance his son’s sporting career, hugged his dad tightly after winning golf’s toughest challenge, the US Open, before a wildly cheering throng of newfound fans at the historic Congressional Country Club outside Washington, DC.

But it wasn’t just that the humble, affable, even adorable young man had won his first major. It is how he did it – obliterating the field, beating the top ranked golfers in the world by anywhere from six to twenty strokes. 

First Lady Michelle Obama Aims to Inspire African Youth

Michelle Obama with child in Haiti - WH Photo

Michelle Obama with child in Haiti - WH PhotoMrs. Obama arrives in Johannesburg, South Africa today on a weeklong trip with her two daughters and mother to inspire young people to stay in school and work hard to reach for the stars.

As a descendant of slaves, the First Lady today is a stunning example of what can be achieved through youth engagement, education, and a healthy lifestyle. She hopes to motivate women and youth during stops in Johannesburg and, later this week in Botswana.

‘Magic Mushrooms’ Can Improve Psychological and Spiritual Health Long Term

Psilocybe mexican, species of psilocybin mushroom -Cactu-CC

Psilocybe mexican, species of psilocybin mushroom -Cactu-CCThe psychedelic drug in magic mushrooms may have lasting medical and spiritual benefits, according to new research from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

The mushroom-derived hallucinogen, called psilocybin, is known to trigger transformative spiritual states, if taken in the right doses.

In their study, the Hopkins scientists were able to reliably induce transcendental experiences in volunteers, which offered long-lasting psychological growth and helped people find peace in their lives — without negative effects.

You can grow magic mushrooms at home using the detailed and free public resources at Tripitter.com. Learn more: https://tripsitter.com/magic-mushrooms/cultivation/

Marine’s Paris Island Gets First Female Commander

Gen. Lori Reynolds becomes first female commander

Gen. Lori Reynolds becomes first female commanderParris Island, the South Carolina military installation that has trained thousands of young Marines, has its first female commander, Brig. Gen. Lori Reynolds, who took over at a change-of-command ceremony Friday.

“It’s not about male or female, it’s about highly qualified officers,” Capt. Bernadette Newman told CNN Savannah affiliate WSAV. “The Marine Corps gets it right. It’s a performance-based society, and if you look at General Reynolds’ bio, she has more than enough experience to add value to this, so it is exciting.”

88 Street Pianos Pop-up in Parks, Plazas Around New York City

Street piano at Astor Place - by Tracy Edwards

Street piano at Astor Place - by Tracy EdwardsYesterday marked the opening of the summer season of free concerts in NYC, and the arrival of 88 pianos — hand painted by local artists— on street corners and parks that allow anyone to play music, bringing the arts to all.

The fifth annual Make Music New York festival includes more than 1,000 free and public concerts in all five boroughs of The Big Apple.

The pianos will be available for playing through July 2, when the project organizer, Sing for Hope, will donate the 28 grand pianos and 60 uprights to local schools, hospitals, and community centers.

88 Street Pianos Pop-up in Parks, Plazas Around New York City

Street piano at Astor Place - by Tracy Edwards

Street piano at Astor Place - by Tracy EdwardsYesterday marked the opening of the summer season of free concerts in NYC, and the arrival of 88 pianos — hand painted by local artists— on street corners and parks that allow anyone to play music, bringing the arts to all.

The fifth annual Make Music New York festival includes more than 1,000 free and public concerts in all five boroughs of The Big Apple.

The pianos will be available for playing through July 2, when the project organizer, Sing for Hope, will donate the 28 grand pianos and 60 uprights to local schools, hospitals, and community centers.

Corporate Guy Turned Single Parent is Named World’s Greatest Dad

Columnist Bobblehead Dad and his family

Columnist Bobblehead Dad and his familyOn Father’s Day today, we feature Jim Higley who was named the World’s Greatest Dad. Readers across the world follow this funny and wise single father of three and cancer survivor in his weekly parenting column in the Chicago Tribune.

Known as the “Bobblehead Dad,” Higley is a former corporate guy who chucked-it-all after a cancer diagnosis so he could be a better dad. A passionate cancer warrior and spokesperson, Higley recently won the title of “World’s Greatest Dad” in a national contest sponsored by Man of the House magazine. Higley’s stories on fatherhood—including his own transition from the boardroom to the carpool—reveal the best and worst of parenting, but all wrapped in a life lesson.

Corporate Guy Turned Single Parent is Named World’s Greatest Dad

Columnist Bobblehead Dad and his family

Columnist Bobblehead Dad and his familyOn Father’s Day today, we feature Jim Higley who was named the World’s Greatest Dad. Readers across the world follow this funny and wise single father of three and cancer survivor in his weekly parenting column in the Chicago Tribune.

Known as the “Bobblehead Dad,” Higley is a former corporate guy who chucked-it-all after a cancer diagnosis so he could be a better dad. A passionate cancer warrior and spokesperson, Higley recently won the title of “World’s Greatest Dad” in a national contest sponsored by Man of the House magazine. Higley’s stories on fatherhood—including his own transition from the boardroom to the carpool—reveal the best and worst of parenting, but all wrapped in a life lesson.