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GM Unveils New, Green Assembly Plant

AP reports on the new GM auto plant in Michigan unveiled as the "most environmentally-friendly auto plant" in the world. It implements lots of green innovations like:

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 The GM plant has a reflective roof to reduce heat absorption, saving costs to cool the building. It also has 800 lights in the assembly area, half that in a typical plant. About 80 percent of the waste generated during construction, or nearly 4,000 tons, was diverted from landfills. Rainwater is collected from the roof and used instead of potable water to flush toilets.

‘Me Generation’ becomes ‘We Generation’

As baby boomers turn 60 they are transforming what we think of the process of aging. The period of retirement used to mean stagnation, degeneration of body, and waiting for the arrival of social security checks.

The emerging model embraces personal growth, giving back and continued employment. These hallmarks of the new retirement have the potential to reshape the economy and society to everyone’s benefit. (USA Today)

House Republicans Drop Their Snub of France

The cafeteria in the US House of Representatives has returned the once villified French moniker to the food items renamed "Freedom Toast" and "Freedom Fries". Sometime last week French Toast and French Fries returned to the menu without the same fanfare as their ouster in 2003, when Republican leaders paraded the change as a "symbolic gesture" against the country that strongly criticized the imminent US invasion of Iraq.

Florida Buys 74,000 Acres for Preservation

Seventy-four thousand acres of wilderness (115 sq miles, 297 sq KM) that is inhabited by bears and panthers was purchased Monday by representatives of Florida in the state’s biggest-ever purchase of land for environmental preservation. "This is just an awesome day," State Lands Director Eva Armstrong said through tears after the deed was handed over for the sum of $350 million. (AP via MSNBC)

Chocolate Could Contribute to New Source of Renewable Energy

UK scientists have found a way to extract hydrogen from confectionary waste — a process that could lead to food factories using their own product waste to generate energy for the manufacturing process. (Food Ingredients First )

Wal-Mart Boosts Organic Cotton

Though wearing cotton seems like a natural way to live, the growing of cotton is an environmentally destructive industry using more pesticides and fertilizers than any other crop harvested. Now, Wal-Mart’s entry into the organic cotton market gives green farmers a big lift…

Solar-Power Trash Compactors on Boston Streets Save Money, Cut Litter

The mayor of Boston is cutting down on city litter with new solar-powered trash compactors on the streets. They collect the maximum trash with minimum effort. Another "good government" idea that proves thinking green means more green in your pocketbook. The mayor has placed 50 of the trash bins around town.

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 The solar-powered trash compactors need emptying only once or twice a day, not the 15 or more sanitation worker visits required for traditional cans. They don’t spill. They smell less. And, they hold some 150 gallons of trash, 5 times more than standard receptacles. (Boston.com)

At-Risk Teens Care for Homeless Dogs

Kids caught in the juvenile detention system in Albany, Georgia, have a chance to change their outlook on life by caring for and training homeless dogs.

Project Hero coordinator Marty Harris says she’s seen a positive change in the young people’s lives: "A lot of them have not grown up with a nurturing aspect toward animals, so by helping them to understand how to work with animals and care for animals they learn to care for other human beings." (WALB News)

DR Congo Votes, First Time in 40 Years

Polls have closed in national elections in the Democratic Republic of Congo – the first multi-party vote in 40 years… Many people walked miles to get to the polling stations, and some queued overnight, waiting for them to open.

And, although many people are hungry and weary from a long civil war, voter Donatien Kalinga "said his heart was ‘full of joy’ at the prospect of voting for the first time."

MIT Students Invent Cars That Keep Going . . . and Going

50 college students from 21 Universities around the world have converged on MIT for an 8-week Vehicle Design Summit. The goal? To invent 5 different kinds of cars that can drive from Boston to Seattle without having to stop — even once — for fuel! The teams will not compete, but collaborate, and share their innovation with the world, for all our benefit…

Listening to Mozart Heals Elephant’s Depression

When zoo keepers realized that classical music seemed to help Suma, the elephant, cope with the grief brought on by a mate’s death, they installed a stereo and showered the pachyderm with the healing vibes of Bach, Vivaldi, and her favorite, Mozart. (Sapa-AFP)

New Trawling Ban Protects Deep-Sea Alaska Corals

reefs Newly discovered gardens of colorful corals blooming under water in the Gulf of Alaska, will get special protection… A new rule bars bottom trawling (the fishing technique that uses nets to drag the ocean floor) over an area the size of Texas and Colorado combined. (Fishermen agreed to the ban, which will hurt their income, but agreed it was needed. ENN)

Dog Raises Squirrel As Her Own

The animal kingdom knows how to get along with each other — even if individuals look different, or reside across the border. CBS news in Iowa featured a story and photos of a dog who has adopted an orphaned baby squirrel and who is contentedly nursing it through its infancy. (CBS )

McVictory! Fast Food Giant to Protect Amazon With Purchasing Power

photo by John Stone eyeclectic.net

goldenarches(GreenPeace News) In an historic deal that has impacts far beyond the golden arches, McDonald’s is now the leading company in the campaign to halt the deforestation of the Amazon for the benefit of soya farming. After feeling enormous consumer pressure from thousands of e-mails and letters sent to their European headquarters by environmental Activists, McDonald’s has agreed to stop selling chicken fed on soya grown in newly deforested areas of the Amazon rainforest…

Lebanese and Israeli Bloggers Empathize Online

Paris– Beyond ideology, snippets of a true dialogue are beginning to appear between Israeli and Lebanese bloggers on the Internet. Ignoring their political differences, they benefit from the human, not to say intimate, aspect of blogs to engage in a conversation that conventional media cannot enable…

Six-Year-Old Rescues Mom in Calm 911 Call

This is not so much a story about a hero, although the family is indebted to the six- year-old for hailing an ambulance when his mother collapsed from a heart attack; and all the emergency dispatchers are raving of the boy’s brilliance in time of crisis. This is an illustration that teaches the importance of calmly relating the procedure (of dialing 911) to your children, so they can perform it properly when the time comes. I loved reading about the competence of this boy, and imagining the same about his mother, who taught him well … story from the Chicago Sun Times

For Preemie Girl’s Tiny Heart, Life-Saving Miracle Surgery

A premature infant, Kaylin Baker’s heart, no larger than a quarter, would have failed or had to endure invasive open heart surgery and lengthy recovery, if not for a gentler life-saving procedure newly practiced at Texas Children’s Hospital. The Houston Chronicle shows — and tells — how the new approach can "fix even the smallest aortas."

Inspiration Point: Your Flaw May Be A Strength

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gnncups My dad, now 90, told this story to me many times. It illustrates how our greatest challenges or problems in life can become our best opportunities for unthinkable success. What looks like an obstacle may be the natural step toward greatness…

One day the owner of a building tells his caretaker that he must go out of town for a day, but that he expects a most important letter. He informs the caretaker that he must make sure he gets the registered letter himself because it is very important.

The owner leaves the next morning. That afternoon the letter is delivered, but requires a signature. The caretaker tells the postman that he doesn’t know how to write.The postman explains that he must obtain an actual signature, no marks or X’s. Since the caretaker can’t write, the postman refuses to leave the letter.

When the owner returns and learns what happened, he becomes furious and fires the caretaker on the spot. The caretaker finds himself without a job and without an income. To support his meager existence, he starts peddling whatever goods and services he can to survive.

His business begins to grow and improves to the point that he is able to open a little store. By the time his sons are old enough to help him, he has become well established. The sons inherit the business when the caretaker retires and decide to build a larger store. They ask their father to help them borrow the money to finance their ambitious undertaking.

The father asks the banker for the loan and the banker says, “No problem. You can have whatever you need. Just sign on the dotted line.” The caretaker looks at the banker and replies, “I can’t sign. I never learned how to write.”In astonishment, the banker asks, “How is it possible that a man who can’t write could amass the wealth that you have?” “Ah,” says the caretaker, “If I could write, I’d still be a caretaker.”

This story has been around the block and was passed to me from my father, now almost 90. This is his version and is included in his foreword of my book Pathfinding: Seven Principles for Positive Living. In my work as a radio talk show host of “Positive Living” I interview so many people who have found success and are helping countless others because of having to overcome and find solutions to the same challenges they address in their books and programs.

Greener Computers and Monitors Will Soon Hit the Market

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smkeybrdmouseMore environmentally friendly computer equipment will soon be available to large volume purchasers thanks to manufacturers like Dell, HP, and others that now have products containing reduced levels of cadmium, lead, and mercury to better protect human health, that are easier to upgrade and recycle, and meet the government’s Energy Star guidelines for energy efficiency…

All the new greener products meet the test of the Electronic Products Environmental Assessment Tool (EPEAT), a standard for computer products that measures environmental factors.

“These new standards can guide the manufacturing of green computers, laptops, and monitors,” said James Gulliford, assistant administrator for the Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances. “Now purchasers can factor environmental considerations into their decisions when choosing computer equipment.”

EPEAT, a project funded through a grant by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and managed by the Green Electronics Council (GEC), promotes continuous improvement in the environmental design of electronic products and informs purchasers of the environmental criteria of electronic products. EPEAT may eventually expand to include individual consumer purchasers.

EPA has estimated that over the next five years, purchases of EPEAT registered computers will result in reductions of:

  • More than 13 million pounds of hazardous waste
  • More than 3 million pounds of non-hazardous waste
  • More than 600,000 MWh of energy — enough to power 6 million homes

For more information about the EPEAT standard, the database of EPEAT registered products and the participating manufacturers, visit their Web site.

Overcoming the Matrix of War in the Middle East

bwroseIt strains my heart when I see the escalation of the war in the Middle East. Again.
For so long already. When will this madness come to an end? The Hezbollah is throwing bombs on Israel. The Israeli government is bombing Lebanon while talking about the “disarmament” of the Hezbollah as if this were a short, fair action by which the violence would finally be ended…