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Hero Dog Digs Snow Tunnel To Save Couple

Check out this link to a story about a German Shepherd-timberwolf pet that saved an elderly couple in New York from freezing by digging a 20-foot tunnel to shelter after a sudden snow storm trapped them outside — photos included. (WNBC.com)

Encouraging Voice Will Never Be Heard Again

The first time Doris Barton phoned me, I was having a bad day… I probably answered by barking my name like a perturbed Jack Russell terrier. Undeterred, she said, "I just want to tell you reading your column makes my day." … Doris had me at hello after that. This retired lady rang me, maybe, once a month over the past five years, and her message was almost always affirming: "You’re getting better and better" or "you’re really going great, girl."

500 Good Things for the Mind, Body, Soul, Home and Business

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500 Good Things bannerEditor’s Announcement

The Good News Network has just launched a new web page — a way for YOU to share your good news with the GNN community. It’s a directory of all the good sites, people, products and enlightened services, together in one place!

The best part is GNN readers can advertise — or pay tribute to their own good things — while supporting the Good News Network at the same time. It’s called 500goodthings.com.

Whether it benefits the mind, body, spirit, home, or business, your good is worth sharing and what better community of readers, than the network of GNN for a target… 

Zambian Tailor Wins AIDS Award for Providing Orphans with Free School Uniforms

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Receiving Red Ribbon awardSix years after a teenage Zambian tailor started using his only sewing machine to make free school uniforms for AIDS orphans, the organization he founded has won the Red Ribbon grand prize of $20,000, part of a new UN effort to honor grassroots generosity on World AIDS Day (Friday).  Jonsen Habachimba was 18 when he began sewing free uniforms…

Volunteering Reaches 30-Year High in U.S.

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The percentage of Americans volunteering has reached a 30-year high says a new study, due in part to a boom in teens’ dedication to community service. “We may be on the cusp of a new civic generation,” said the director of the Corporation for National and Community Service, which has tracked volunteer rates since 1974…

The report, Volunteer Growth in America: A Review of Trends Since 1974, finds that adult volunteering rose sharply between 1989 and 2005, increasing more than 32 percent over the last 16 years.

“Americans help their nation, their communities and themselves when they mentor at-risk youth, care for seniors, respond to disasters, and meet a wide range of other critical needs,” said David Eisner, CEO of the Corporation, which is spearheading a national effort to engage an additional 10 million volunteers by 2010.

The brief analyzes volunteering rates in 1974, 1989 and 2002-05, using information collected by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It finds that the growth in volunteering is driven primarily by three age groups: teenagers 16 to 19, Baby Boomers ages 45 to 65, and older adults 65 and over. Among their findings:

  • Older teenagers (ages 16-19) have more than doubled their time spent volunteering since 1989.
  • Far from being a “Me Generation,” Baby Boomers are volunteering at sharply higher rates than did the previous generation at mid-life.
  • The volunteer rate for Americans ages 65 years and over has increased 64 percent since 1974.
  • The proportion of Americans volunteering with an educational or youth service organization has seen a 63 percent increase just since just 1989.

“Boomers’ high engagement in service today (along with teen increases) has the potential to foster a volunteer explosion among older Americans in the years to come,” said Robert T. Grimm, Jr., Director of Research and Policy Development at the Corporation.

Educational and youth service organizations (such as schools, 4-H, and Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts) are benefiting from the growth because they have received the largest increase in volunteers between 1989 and 2006. Nearly 24.6 percent of all adult volunteers serve through such organizations, a 63 percent increase since 1989. The biggest percentage of volunteers — 35.5 percent — serve through religious organizations.Grimm cited several reasons for heightened civic engagement today:

  • Teenagers are volunteering in greater numbers, in part, because of an increase in service-learning programs in schools and colleges that combine classroom study with community activity. Another reason may be a response to traumatic national events such as the 9/11 terrorist attacks and recent natural disasters.
  • Mid-life adults are more likely to have children in the home because Americans are delaying marriage and childbearing. The result is increased exposure to volunteering opportunities connected to their children’s school and extracurricular activities.
  • Older Americans are living longer, are better educated, and more financially secure – creating an increased desire for them to remain active and seek ways to give back to communities.

“America needs more volunteers to mentor and tutor at-risk youth, care for seniors, respond to disasters, and meet a wide range of other critical needs,” said Eisner. “We are committed to working with volunteer and service-driven organizations everywhere to expand the number of Americans who volunteer by 15 percent over the next five years. I encourage any American who wants to make a difference to visit www.volunteer.gov to find the right volunteer opportunity for you.”

The Corporation’s 10 x 10 campaign aims to increase the number of volunteers in America from 65 million in 2005 to 75 million in 2010 while achieving the agency’s strategic goals, which include engaging more students and harnessing the experience of Baby Boomers.

(Video) Using Soccer to Fight AIDS in Africa

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25-year-old filmmaker Silas Hagerty spent this summer in Zambia documenting the rise of football (soccer) as a tool to fight HIV/AIDS in local African communities.

As Zambian Football announcer Denis Lewewe states in Hagerty’s new film, “Football is religion.” When a soccer ball hits the ground in Africa, people unite. Through this powerful platform, knowledge is spreading and stories are being told…

Recycle Old Cell Phones and Aid Domestic Abuse Survivors

Verizon Wireless was the first wireless carrier in the nation to collect and recycle old cell phones to protect the environment, and has done so since 1999, but even more inspiring, the proceeds from recycling and selling older wireless phones have been donated to assist survivors of domestic violence…

On Road to Clean Fuels, Automakers Debut 21 New Innovations

Electric vehicles, gasoline-electric hybrids, diesels, and flex-fuel and hydrogen-powered cars are inching up the consumer on-ramp at a faster pace, judging from world debuts of 21 alternative-fuel vehicles. (CM Monitor)

Change Your Life, No Matter the Circumstances

Part 3 in our series on Gratitude and how it can change your life features a man so down on his luck that calling him a victim would be the sensible story line. But, as Harry Tucker explains, his Attitude lifted him to a place where his own story became the impetus for a positive, inspiring life — much like the moth (right) emerges from a cocoon. The A in Gratitude stands for Attitude. If we assume that our world is filled with problems and impossible odds, then we are right. Conversely, if we believe that our world is filled with beauty, opportunity and infinite love, then we are also right…

Wal-Mart Goal: Selling 100 Million Energy Efficient Light Bulbs

In the face of global warming peril and consumers facing higher energy costs, the world’s leading retailer yesterday announced an ambitious campaign to sell 100 million compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) at its Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club locations by the end of 2007. If achieved, this goal has the potential to save customers as much as $3 billion in electrical costs over the life of the bulbs. In addition to saving money for consumers, 20 million metric tons of greenhouse gases can be prevented from entering our atmosphere…

Climbing the Seven Summits Lifts Lid on Depression

Expedition Hope is a program to raise awareness and funds while helping to erase the stigma of depression through recognition generated by the rare accomplishment of climbing the Seven Summits, the highest mountain on each continent. Its founder, Joe Lawson, is an Indianapolis native and accomplished mountain climber and adventurer who was 16 when his father, Virgil, 50, committed suicide after years of battling depression. Expedition Hope is dedicated to Virgil and others like him…

Sweet Tired Kitten (Video :30)

Watch this sweet kitty for 30 seconds and sprout a smile!

Photo Students Volunteer to Shoot Portraits for Homeless Families

For homeless people, posing for family portraits can seem like a luxury. But students from a Santa Clara University photography class traveled to shelters and volunteered to shoot portraits, delivering the power of images that tug on the heart. "The students give prints to the residents, who plan to send them off to relatives or tuck them away until they can hang the portraits on walls of their own." (Christian Science Monitor)

Development Averted by Purchase of Forest Near NYC

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Instead of a planned new golf course and 100 luxury homes, an expanse of rolling hills, wetlands and scenic waters have been preserved as public parkland through the purchase of one of the last large, privately held open spaces in the New York City metropolitan area. Governor George E. Pataki yesterday announced the purchase of 575 acres from developers and its reunification with the adjacent Sterling Forest State Park in Orange County…

Inspirational, Colorful Magnets – Only One Dollar!

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All is Well in My WorldBuy yourself a stocking stuffer, or a gift for an office mate who makes you happy. Hay House Publishing is featuring a holiday sale on inspiring magnets, two dozen colorful designs. US Shipping is $5.00 on orders under $15. I need to stop writing and order! No connection with GNN: Hay House

Town Rescues Dog from Icy Waters

North Dakota townspeople gathered around a frozen pond where Brutus, a seven-year-old Keeshound/ Samoyed dog struggled to pull himself from the numbing cold waters onto the ice. They cheered as two men grabbed a boat across the road and made their way toward the exhausted Brutus… Read the heart-warming story about a town that came together, donating all their winter coats, to help save a neighbor’s pet. (Minot Daily News)

Toy Rating System for Parents of Children with Disabilities

The Holiday Season is upon us and toy shopping can be daunting for family members searching for a perfect toy to give a child with a disability. Not only do they want a toy that will bring joy to their child, they need to find toys that will accommodate special needs. Enter Ableplay.org, a toy rating system and Web site that provides comprehensive information for parents, special educators, therapists and others looking for the best choices for the children in their lives with disabilities…

Developers Add Grass to Baltimore Playgrounds

Baltimore had a sensational new idea to provide green areas for local kids in exchange for developers adding more asphalt in other areas of the city. Thanks to the city’s new plan requiring developers to pitch in, ten schools in the area were transformed. Asphalt playgrounds, often containing glass, which were dangerous when kids fell, became grassy plains of green. (Baltimore Sun)

Israel Making Concessions for Peace

Israel’s leader is offering the Palestinians "reduced checkpoints, releasing of frozen funds and a prisoner exchange in return for a serious push for peace by the Palestinians." (AP reports)

500,000 Oysters Added to the Bay in Record Year

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Volunteers with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation planted hundreds of thousands of baby oysters into a specially prepared habitat made of recycled chunks of concrete last week. Thanks to the foundation, it was a record oyster planting season that added 9 million of the mollusks, compared to 4 million last year. The concrete was recycled from the Chesapeake Bay Bridge (right). (Baltimore Examiner)