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Solar Power Rescues Lebanon Schools from Frequent Black-outs

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classroom-lebanon-irin.jpgWith Lebanon’s chronic power shortages, classes at the Rajam Issa public school are often plunged into darkness during the winter.

In the remote northeastern district of Akkar, teachers and students are hoping this winter will be the first of many years when the lights stay on. “Electricity is the lifeline of the school,” said head teacher Ibrahim Salame of the Rajam Issa public school, complaining of frequent and prolonged power cuts. (Photo: Hugh Macleod/IRIN)

“During the winter if the power goes out and it’s dark we just teach in the dark,” said Salame. “What usually takes one session to explain using a projector takes two hours on the blackboard.”

It is hoped that by the end of November their classroom lights, projectors and photocopying machines will stay on during power cuts thanks to a set of rooftop photovoltaic panels producing renewable electricity from one of Lebanon’s most abundant natural resources, the sun.

Wayward Manatee is Flown Back to Florida

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manatee-aboard-plane-uscoastgrd.jpgIn a journey familiar to retirees but not sea mammals, Ilya the wayward manatee flew south for the winter Thursday after being rescued from a chilly New Jersey creek.

Now he’s back in Miami, with all the lettuce he can eat and even some female companionship.

Ilya was flown south aboard a Coast Guard C-130 cargo plane after being rescued Monday from a small waterway between northern New Jersey and Staten Island, N.Y.

It took more than 30 rescuers and 7 1/2 hours to corral Ilya in a 300-foot fishing net, drag him onto a muddy creek bed and lift him by a crane onto a stretcher.

(Continue reading AP story at MSNBC)

WATCH the video from the Coast Guard below…

Citizens Arrive by the Hundreds to Help the Hungry

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clay-bowls-on-table.jpgA Wisconsin “empty bowls” event featured local pottery artists and bowls fashioned by area schools as a fundraiser for the local food pantry. Hundreds of Wausau residents chose their favorites from among rows of clay bowls donated.

Some of the best chefs in town ladled soups into the new bowls for a fee of just $10. Proceeds when to “The Neighbors Place”, while residents took home their bowls.

The program, in its second year, couldn’t have come at a better time. Tom Rau, director of Neighbors Place, told us his food pantry has seen a 25% increase in people seeking assistance over this time last year, with 60 families per week coming through the doors.

When asked if he thought the recession was over he said, “Not in this part of the country.”

But shelves that had been bare will soon be looking better because of the kind work of more than 131 businesses and sponsors of Wausau Area Empty Bowls.

Watch our Wausau Family short video below…

Lutherans Ask Forgiveness for 16th-century Persecutions

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lutheran-pastor-bowing.jpgLeaders of the Lutheran World Federation have approved a statement apologising for the 16th-century persecution by Lutherans of Anabaptists, religious reformers whose successors are found in groups such as the Mennonites.

“We ask for forgiveness – from God and from our Mennonite sisters and brothers – for the harm that our forebears in the sixteenth century committed to Anabaptists,” says the statement adopted unanimously on 26 October by the LWF’s main governing body, its council.

The apology is now recommended for formal adoption by the highest LWF governing body, its assembly, meeting in Stuttgart, Germany, in July 2010.

(Ecumenical News International-ENI)

India Withdraws Some Kashmir Troops in Peace Gesture

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kashmir-border.jpgIndia is withdrawing about 15,000 soldiers from Jammu and Kashmir, a military official said on Thursday, in a move aimed at boosting prospects of peace talks with the disputed region’s separatist groups. Ashok Mehta, a retired army general and New Delhi-based strategic analyst, said the removal of troops was a goodwill gesture aimed at Kashmiri groups.

(Continue reading Reuters article)

Gray Hair Cure Available in 10 Years, Says L’Oreal

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hair-dye-box.jpgFor any woman who has sighed with exasperation over her grey hairs, it is a thought that really makes the mind boggle. What if you could ditch the dye and regain the hair color that you grew up with?

Surely, you might think, this is the stuff of science fiction. But according to the experts at Centre Charles Zviak, L’Oreal’s research and development HQ, it is science — but by no means fiction. If the company’s plans come good, going grey will be a thing of the past in ten years.

“When hair goes gray, there is a progressive disappearance of the melanocytes from the hair. While there are still melanocytes in the hair, there is still hope that it could be re-pigmented,” Patricia Pineau, L’Oreal Research Communications Director told the paper.

A top focus of the beauty company’s since it was founded over 100 years ago, L’Oreal spends over £581 million pounds last year on research — about twice as much as its competitors.

(The Daily Mail has the story)

Good News from the UN: Prolonging the Life of Medicines

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medicine-pills-jar-dani-simmonds.jpgOn October 24, 1972, the UN General Assembly instituted World Development Information Day, to draw people’s attention to development problems and the continuous need to strengthen international cooperation to solve them. One problem, medicine delivery and storage, is being addressed by leaders at the United Nations, thanks to a new initiative.

A program was launched this week to help improve the ability to safely deliver and procure medicines during humanitarian crises around the world. Humanitarians treating people affected by war and natural disasters are often faced with such challenges as searing heat, long distances and damaged infrastructure. Unfortunately in many cases tons of medicines are wasted due to improper handling.

Economic Reversal: U.S. GDP Grows At 3.5 Percent Pace

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business-graphic-up.gifThe economy grew at a 3.5 percent pace in the third quarter, the best showing in two years, fueled by government-supported spending on cars and homes.

The Commerce Department’s report Thursday delivered the strongest signal yet that the economy entered a new, though fragile, phase of recovery and that the worst recession since the 1930s has ended.

(Good news, with nice graph, at NPR

New Obama Family Portrait Unveiled; Michelle Hula Hoops

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obama-familyportrait.jpgI liked these photos that came out of the White House last week.

First, the official Obama family portrait; second, from a health fair presided over by the First Lady, Michelle ‘hula hoops’ with children to promote health and fitness.

 

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Below, watch the video from the health fair featuring pictures of the First Lady running the obstacle course among the 100 elementary students in attendence. (She also jumped rope, double dutch.)

 

Artist Draws Manhattan From Memory

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wiltshire-drawing-city.jpgStephen Wiltshire is an autistic artist with an amazing ability to create a detailed architectural drawing of an entire city after a single helicopter ride. Now, for the first time, the Londoner will sketch a 20-foot panorama of the Manhattan skyline, all from memory.

He is also working on his New York accent.
Watch the Reuters video below…

RELATED VIDEOS ON GNN:
Autistic Savant Draws Amazing Detailed Buildings After Viewing Them Once
Autistic Savant Draws Rome After Viewing it Once

Yanks Make Difference by Going Green for World Series

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yankee_stadium_ii-photo-by-the-silent-wind_of-doom.jpgDuring the 2009 World Series, which kicks off on Wednesday night in New York, a Green Team will be out amongst the fans in attendance, carrying bags to encourage recycling. In-stadium announcements and Ribbon Board messages will also encourage fans to minimize waste.

Eco-friendly practice is hardly a new concept to the Yankees, however.

The Yankees have prioritized the environmental impact of their new stadium by ensuring the efficiency of equipment and focusing on energy reduction. Instead of petroleum-based plastics, beverage cups are made of biodegradable material. Waste generation is tackled through composting and recycling, resulting in fewer trash pickups and trash trucks on the road.

(Continue reading at MLB.com)

Photo by: the silent wind of doom, on Wikipedia 

Transforming Abandoned Concrete Bunkers Into Eco Hostels

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concrete-mushrooms-hostel.jpgThere are reportedly thousands of abandoned concrete bunkers scattered throughout Albania, remnants of a Communist dictator’s paranoia. Now graduate students have developed a plan called Concrete Mushrooms that would ‘invert the meaning’ of these structures by turning them into an economic asset — a network of habitable eco-hostels, cafés, gift shops and more.

(More photos and continue reading at Inhabitat.com)

Stars Walk the Green Carpet for Eco Awards

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green-carpet-08-ema-awards.jpg Stars like Harrison Ford, Calista Flockhart and Daryl Hannah, along with business moguls like Richard Branson, walk a green carpet before being honored at the 2009 Environmental Media Association Awards for their environmental awareness and conservation efforts.

Watch the Reuters Video below, or read another recent news story about the group, founded by Norman Lear … 

Clean Smells Promote Moral Behavior, Study Suggests

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cleaning-window-byu-study.jpgPeople are unconsciously fairer and more generous when they are in clean-smelling environments, according to a soon-to-be published study led by a Brigham Young University professor.

The research found a dramatic improvement in ethical behavior with just a few spritzes of citrus-scented Windex.

Katie Liljenquist (right), assistant professor of organizational leadership at BYU’s Marriott School of Management, is the lead author on the forthcoming article in Psychological Science.

Liljenquist and her co-authors see implications for workplaces, retail stores and other organizations that have relied on traditional surveillance and security measures to enforce rules.

“Companies often employ heavy-handed interventions to regulate conduct, but they can be costly or oppressive,” said Liljenquist, whose office smells quite average. “This is a very simple, unobtrusive way to promote ethical behavior.”

Perhaps the findings could be applied at home, too, Liljenquist said with a smile. “Could be that getting our kids to clean up their rooms might help them clean up their acts, too.”

The study titled “The Smell of Virtue” was unusually simple and conclusive. Participants engaged in several tasks, the only difference being that some worked in unscented rooms, while others worked in rooms freshly spritzed with Windex.

The first experiment evaluated fairness. As a test of whether clean scents would enhance reciprocity, participants played a classic “trust game.” Subjects received $12 of real money (allegedly sent by an anonymous partner in another room). They had to decide how much of it to either keep or return to their partners who had trusted them to divide it fairly. Subjects in clean-scented rooms were less likely to exploit the trust of their partners, returning a significantly higher share of the money.

  • The average amount of cash given back by the people in the “normal” room was $2.81. But the people in the clean-scented room gave back an average of $5.33.

The second experiment evaluated whether clean scents would encourage charitable behavior. Subjects indicated their interest in volunteering with a campus organization for a Habitat for Humanity service project and their interest in donating funds to the cause.

  • Participants surveyed in a Windex-ed room were significantly more interested in volunteering (4.21 on a 7-point scale) than those in a normal room (3.29).
  • 22 percent of Windex-ed room participants said they’d like to donate money, compared to only 6 percent of those in a normal room.

Follow-up questions confirmed that participants didn’t notice the scent in the room and that their mood at the time of the experiment didn’t affect the outcomes.

The study’s co-authors are Chen-Bo Zhong of the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management and Adam Galinsky of the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.

“Basically, our study shows that morality and cleanliness can go hand-in-hand,” said Galinsky. “Researchers have known for years that scents play an active role in reviving positive or negative experiences. Now, our research can offer more insight into the links between people’s charitable actions and their surroundings.”

While this study examined the influence of the physical environment on morality, Zhong and Liljenquist previously published work that demonstrated an intimate link between morality and physical cleanliness. Their 2006 paper in Science reported that transgressions activated a desire to be physically cleansed.

Liljenquist is now researching how perceptions of cleanliness shape our impressions of people and organizations. “The data tell a compelling story about how much we rely upon cleanliness cues to make a wide range of judgments about others,” she said. (BYU News Story, via Science Daily )

Plug-in Automaker Fisker to Buy Idled GM Plant

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karma-car.jpg Upstart carmaker Fisker Automotive on Tuesday said it will purchase a used General Motors auto plant in Wilmington, Del., to begin producing a plug-in hybrid sedan.

Starting in late 2012, the facility will be used to manufacture a plug-in hybrid that the company expects will cost almost $40,000 after federal tax credits. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and Delaware Gov. Jack Markell were scheduled to speak at an announcement ceremony this morning.

(Continue reading the Green Tech blog at CNet)

Image, right,  shows Fisker sports car, the Karma 

Cosby Receives Comedy Award at Star-Studded Kennedy Center

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cosby-twain-prize-w-wife.jpg Bill Cosby received the 12th Mark Twain Prize for American Humor last night at the Kennedy Center. On hand to honor him were comedians like Jerry Seinfeld, Chris Rock, and Carl Reiner, along with musicians like Willie Nelson and Wyton Marsalis, playing jazz in a tribute to Cosby’s love of the music. Dick Gregory described him as the Jackie Robinson of television and comedy. Cosby premiered in the mid-60’s as a tennis playing agent “wearing white sneakers” on “I Spy”.

The crowd roared with laughter during old Cosby clips — from his appearances on old talk shows like the Jack Parr Show and Tonight Show talking about what it’s like to go to the dentist, to his TV role as Cliff Huxtable on the Cosby Show. 

Seinfeld said there was no one else who influenced him like Cosby, calling him the greatest American comedian of all time. He said he owned every Cosby record and still listens to them.

The program, taped by WETA in Washington, D.C. as Bill Cosby: The Mark Twain Prize, will air on PBS stations nationwide November 4, 2009 (check local listings).

Watch some red carpet moments below… and read/watch more at the Washington Post. ..

 

 

20 Years of Greening Hollywood, Thanks to Lear

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norman_lear-center.jpg20 years ago, television producer Norman Lear helped to launch the Environmental Media Association to spread the word in Hollywood among writers, directors and actors about going green.

Honored by the White House, and featured in an AP story yesterday, the group has “met with hundreds of Hollywood writers, directors and producers, helping them incorporate green themes into their films and TV shows and encouraging them to make those productions more environmentally friendly.

(Read more from AP at WTOP)

Environment-Friendly Universal Phone Charger Approved

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phone-charger.jpgThe International Telecommunication Union has given its stamp of approval to a new energy-efficient universal phone charger that will be compatible with all future phones made by every mobile phone manufacturer, regardless of make and model.

The new Universal Charging Solution (UCS) uses a Micro-USB plug that will fit all future phones regardless of the make and model (some phones already use this standard). The standardization, announced last week, will dramatically cut the number of chargers produced each year — 51,000 tons annually are mostly discarded into landfills. Chargers will become an option when buying a phone rather than a necessity, cutting down on packaging size and shipping weights, and carbon emmisions in the process.

Cancer Survivor, 9, Funds Support Dog for 2-Year-old

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dog-on-white-bkgrd.jpgAfter two years of surgery and chemotherapy for a brain tumor, a nine-year-old girl wanted other kids with cancer to have a gentle companion like her dog, Coco. So she embarked on a fundraising campaign of her own invention to pay for feeding and training companion dogs for kids like her.

Recently she watched as a 2-year-old cancer survivor met for the first time with the gentle black Labrador named Lucky Bug.

A women’s prison within Colorado’s Department of Corrections trained both these animals, once abandoned shelter dogs, to become companion or service dogs for elderly, disabled or seriously ill owners.

(Continue reading the story w/ photo at the Denver Post)

UN Hires Tinker Bell to Raise Environmental Awareness in Children

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tinkerbell.jpgThe United Nations yesterday named the Disney animated character Tinker Bell as an “Honorary Ambassador of Green” to help promote environmental awareness among children.

The announcement came just prior to a screening at UN Headquarters in New York of the world premiere of the Walt Disney animated film, “Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure.”

Protecting the environment is an underlying theme of the Tinker Bell movies.

“We’re delighted Tinker Bell has agreed to be our Honorary Ambassador of Green,” said Kiyo Akasaka, Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information. “This beloved animated character can help us inspire kids and their parents to nurture nature and do what they can to take care of the environment.”