Good News Stories Thread: Updated often with links to new good news stories.

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1still_waters

Guest
#41
Re: Good News Stories Thread: DAILY NEW LINKS TO GOOD NEWS STORIES

VIDEO: Father and son use hovercraft to rescue deer on frozen lake

VIDEO: Father and son use hovercraft to rescue deer on frozen lake | WTKR.com

James saw a Facebook post about some deer stuck out on the ice in the middle of Albert Lea Lake, so he called up his dad and they broke out the hovercraft.
It’s a father son rescue mission unlike anything you’ve ever seen.

[video=youtube;cgnceHH_p_I]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgnceHH_p_I[/video]
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#42
Re: Good News Stories Thread: DAILY NEW LINKS TO GOOD NEWS STORIES

Going Viral: Manchester firefighter's act of kindness during snowstorm





A photo of a local firefighter's act of kindness during Thursday's storm is going viral.


Firefighter Tom Faucher, who was assigned to Manchester Fire Department's Engine 6 during the storm, saw an elderly woman having difficulty crossing Elm Street on Thursday afternoon. Heavy snow throughout the day made the trip difficult, so he got out of the apparatus to help her across the street.


Click here to see the photos https://ibpublish2.ibsys.com/studio/#


Faucher said it was a collaborative effort between everyone on the engine. His commanding officer was the first to notice she was having a problem crossing the street, and the engine's driver positioned the truck so Faucher could safely help her across the street.


"We're here to serve the people, so that's what we come to work every day for," Faucher said.


People watching nearby snapped a few pictures, which went viral online. There was no word on the woman's name.


Going Viral: Manchester firefighter's act of kindness during snowstorm | Weather - Home
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#43
Re: Good News Stories Thread: DAILY NEW LINKS TO GOOD NEWS STORIES

Wounded Warrior Looking to Reunite with His Beloved Dog



This is a love story between one man and his dog. This is Clarabelle and she's a blood hound whose very attached to her owner, a veteran, suffering from depression and addiction.


A year ago he checked himself into a rehabilitation center, but didn't want to give up his beloved Clarabelle. So the Marshall County Animal shelter stepped in, finding a foster family willing to take in his shy, loving companion.


Now her owner is clean and sober and looking forward to being reunited with his best friend. Cindy Ward of the Marshall County Animal Shelter says there's a strong bond between these two.


"He's got a deep commitment to her and I believe she has a just as deep of a commitment to him too," Ward said.


Clarabelle's owner is traveling all the way from Mississippi to pick her up. He'll be arriving the first week of March. Currently there is not a set foster program established at the Marshall County Animal Shelter,

Wounded Warrior Looking to Reunite with His Beloved Dog - WTRF 7 News Sports Weather - Wheeling Steubenville
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#44
Re: Good News Stories Thread: DAILY NEW LINKS TO GOOD NEWS STORIES

Teen uses 3-D printer to make hand for boy




The Johnson County Library is giving hope to a young boy who can't throw a ball, give a high five or turn the pages of a book with his right hand.

Prosthetics usually cost thousands of dollars, all it took in this case was a library card.


A birth defect left Matthew Shields' hand underdeveloped. He was born with only a thumb on his right hand, but a 3-D printer at the library is now giving Matthew a second chance.


The printer built the 9-year-old a new hand.


It was never an issue until this year when Matthew's mom noticed children at his school picking on him.
"He started coming home with his hand in his shirt," Matthew's mother, Jennifer Shields, said.


Social stigma was taking a toll, so Matthew's mom discovered "Robohand," a mechanical hand made with a 3-D printer.
A family friend stepped in to make one.


"When it is all done, to be able to say you gave a kid a hand, gave a kid the ability to grasp something and let him high five or hand shake, it is a pretty amazing feeling," Mason Wilde said.


Wilde, a 16-year-old Louisburg High School junior, loaded blueprints from "Robohand" onto computers at Johnson County Public Library and used their 3-D printer.


Layer by layer, the hand took shape.


It took about eight hours to build a hand with the 3-D printer and created a lifetime of change for Matthew.


"I actually have fingers. I didn't know what that felt like until now," Matthew said.


When his wrist curls, so do the fingers. He can use his right hand like never before.


"It has been a huge blessing. It has changed the conversation from, 'what happened to your hand?' to, 'oh my gosh! That is so cool.' That is huge when you are 9 and when you're a little bit different," Matthew's mom said.


Matthew is still getting used to his new hand, but with it, he feels more confident than ever.


This has inspired Mason to start a nonprofit to make prosthetics from 3-D printers for other children. He is also looking into a career in the biomedical field in prosthetics.


Teen uses 3-D printer to make hand for boy - WTOC-TV: Savannah, Beaufort, SC, News, Weather & Sports
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#45
Re: Good News Stories Thread: DAILY NEW LINKS TO GOOD NEWS STORIES

TWO BLIND AGING COWS FIND FOREVER FRIENDS..

[video=youtube;A5X7I7YLlXA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5X7I7YLlXA[/video]
Sweety and Tricia: Two Blind Cows Find Friendship at Farm Sanctuary - YouTube



Updated: Friday, February 14 2014, 10:30 AM EST Two blind, aging cows were 350 miles apart, distressed and facing a dark future. What happened next is a love story starring, not cows, but rescuers who worked across international borders for nearly a month to bring the bovines together.

Tricia, at the Farm Sanctuary in Watkins Glen, N.Y., needed a new partner since her last one Linda died of cancer a year ago.

In Lachute, Quebec, the Refuge RR horse rescue saved Sweety from slaughter and put out emails seeking a home. The Farm Sanctuary said yes. It took a month of red tape, medical tests and a 350-mile trip but the cows met each other on Feb. 5.

They have become bovine friends forever. Sweety is still bumping into things, but Tricia often guides her clear of obstacles.


Read More at: Two Blind, Aging Cows Find Forever Friendship at Sanctuary - WBFF FoxBaltimore - Top Stories
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#46
Leland couple celebrates 62nd Valentine's Day together






February 14 is a day to celebrate love. For one couple in Brunswick County, Friday will be the celebration of their 62[SUP]nd[/SUP] Valentine's Day together.

After more than 60 years of marriage, Elgie and Marie Jones only have eyes for each other.
"There's no other valentine for me," said Elgie.

Their journey began back in 1950 when they first met at a friends' house in Ocean Isle Beach.
"When I came out, his heart went bump bump bump," said Marie. "And then he asked me out."
From that moment on, it was love at first sight.

"I knew that I found somebody to spend my life with," said Elgie.
Elgie and Marie spent the day looking back at old pictures, remembering the good times and the not so good times.
"Sometimes you get aggravated you say I wish I never married him," said Marie. "I'm like Billy Graham's wife, she said she hadn't ever thought about leaving him she just thought about killing him."

After 62 years, three children, and nearly a dozen grandchildren later, Marie hasn't axed her husband yet. In fact, this couple still knows how to keep a happy marriage together.
"When you see a successful marriage, that couple is making compromises," said Elgie.
On this Valentine's Day, if you're in search of a long, happy marriage, look no further than Elgie and Marie.
"Pray a lot and with the Lord, you'll make it," said Marie.

For Valentine's Day, Elgie and Marie said they're going to Applebee's for dinner. On Saturday, they will attend a Sweetheart Banquet at their church in Wilmington.

Leland couple celebrates 62nd Valentine's Day together - WECT TV6-WECT.com:News, weather & sports Wilmington, NC
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#47
[h=1]Mom Calls News Help Desk In Ice Storm, Delivers Healthy Boy[/h]



His name is Luke.
We learned about Luke on Wednesday, hours before he was born. Luke's mother was in labor, and her husband, Luke's father, was trying to drive her to the hospital in that storm. And she made a crucial -- and, for us, memorable -- phone call. To us.
So, we take you back to Wednesday. That awful, icy day.
We take you behind the scenes at 11Alive --

Crash Clark was on the air around the clock with road and traffic information.
Julie Wolfe and the 11Alive Help Desk were fielding hundreds of calls, emails, and Facebook and Twitter posts, around the clock -- from people caught up in the storm. Julie was going on the air every few minutes, answering people's questions.
And one call Julie answered took everyone's breath away.

It was a call from a pregnant woman named Nikole, who was in labor.
"She needed to know a way to get from where she was to the hospital in downtown Atlanta," Julie said later.
And Nikole needed to know it, fast.
Julie was not on the air, just then.

She set the phone down and she ran -- sprinted -- from the Help Desk on the second floor of 11Alive, down the stairs, and into the first-floor studio, to find out, from Crash, what to tell Nikole.
"All of a sudden, Julie comes running down to me, 'We've got a woman in labor!,'" Crash recalled.

And just like that, Crash told Julie which roads and routing would be passable for Nikole, to get from home in Cobb County, to I-75, and then to the hospital in Midtown Atlanta.
Julie sprinted back upstairs to the Help Desk, not realizing, at first, that her turn to go back on the air was seconds away.
She was just beginning to tell Nikole the road information when she saw the TV camera switch to her, live.

"Hold on, one second, Nikole," Julie said. Then Julie addressed the viewers: "I've got to tell you guys what's going on, here. I have Nikole on the phone. She's in labor. And needs directions...."
Julie was out of breath from running so fast down and up the stairs. She is a veteran marathon runner. Yet she was still trying to catch her breath as she began to give Nicole the information.

"Nikole, Crash says I-75's open, stay in the right-hand lane...."
Julie relayed the rest of the road information, and Nikole and her husband were on their way.
Most reporters will tell you that, sometimes, they can't stop thinking about people they encounter in their work.
This was one of those times.

Julie hadn't been able, in those quick seconds, to ask Nikole for her contact info, in order to follow up with her.
"I feel like I really want to meet her and congratulate her," Julie said at the time.
Julie put out the word on social media -- who and where is Nikole....
The next day, Thursday, the shares and likes reached Nikole.

And Nikole called Julie a second time. This time it was to invite her to her room at Emory Midtown Hospital. To meet Luke.
On Friday, Valentine's Day, Julie walked into their room with flowers and balloons and good wishes.
"Oh thank you, thank you, thank you," Nikole said with Luke in her arms, motioning Julie to her bedside for an embrace. "Thank you for your help. This is Luke."

A grateful mom, and dad, with their newborn, chatted with Julie about that day of the ice storm, and how they had tried to prepare for it.
"Well, he had ordered chains for his pickup," Nikole said of her husband, Richard. The chains were on. She said she and Richard thought they were ready for every possibility, and they were confident they were ready for the storm.
Nikole had even talked, earlier, with someone from 911 emergency services about whether they should call an ambulance to get to the hospital if she needed to get there during the storm.

"They couldn't guarantee that they could get me to Emory" where her doctor would be delivering the baby.
So they decided they would drive themselves, armed with road information -- and the tire chains.
"I wasn't going to get stuck on that highway in a pickup truck having a baby," she said, laughing. "As soon as they found out I was in labor, they went straight to the traffic guy to get his help. You know, he gave us the most current update."

So Crash, on Friday, was like a relieved, and proud, uncle -- who also happens to be a traffic reporter.
"Now that we know [what happened to them], it's like, wow. We did more than just help somebody get somewhere." Crash began to smile. "We helped deliver a baby, maybe, I guess. Does that make me Uncle Crash?" he said, laughing.
"Well, it was a great day," a smiling Nikole said of that otherwise awful, icy Wednesday. "Something good, really good, came out of it."

Mom Calls News Help Desk In Ice Storm, Delivers Healthy Boy
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#48
Good Samaritan reunites with baby she rescued


video.jpg
Video on link.

A chance meeting on a California highway 25 years ago forever altered the lives of two families.

Pinned in her car after an accident, a young mother, near death, cried out for her 7-month-old daughter in the back seat. It was a Good Samaritan from Seattle who came to the rescue. How the events of the day altered the lives of all three women.

Good Samaritan reunites with baby she rescued | WCNC.com Charlotte
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#49
Bucks County Teen With Down Syndrome To Sign Contract With The 76ers




A Bucks County teen who became an internet sensation after his amazing performance on the basketball court will sign a ceremonial contract with the Philadelphia 76ers.


The 76ers announced that they will sign BensalemHigh School
senior Kevin Grow to a two-day contract Monday.


The contract will be offered in-person by Sixers President of Basketball Operations & General Manager Sam Hinkie at the team’s practice facility.


Grow, who has Down syndrome, had been a team manager for the Bensalem boys basketball team for four years. But it’s what he did on senior night on the court that’s garnering all of the attention.


Kevin got to play, and when he did, he made magic happen.


“They put him in for the last two minutes and he started hitting three point shots and couldn’t miss,” Kevin’s mom said.


Kevin hit four 3-pointers in the last two minutes of thegame
to help beat Neshaminy 64-40.


Overnight, Grow became an internet sensation.


After he signs his two-day contract with the 76ers, Grow will eat dinner in the players lounge, tour the practice facility and receive Sixers gear
.



He will join the team on the floor toward the end of practice, meet and shoot around with his new teammates and be greeted by his coaches



On Tuesday, February 18, before the Sixers host the Cleveland Cavaliers at 7:00 p.m., Grow will participate in pregame activities starting at 5:00 p.m. at the Wells Fargo Center, arriving early with his family to see his locker in the Sixers locker room and receive a custom jersey. Grow will then watch pregame warm-ups, take part in the high-five tunnel when players take the court for the game and stand with his team during the National Anthem. During a timeout, Grow and the Bensalem High School
basketball team will take the court for a special presentation.

Bucks County Teen With Down Syndrome To Sign Contract With The 76ers � CBS Philly

 
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1still_waters

Guest
#50
[h=1]Shocking Surprise for Woman Expecting Identical Triplets[/h]

Kimberly Fugate, exhausted after an intensive labor and grueling cesarean section delivery of identical triplets, was ready to breathe a sign of relief, but the Mississippi mother's doctor had a surprise for her.


"They had got the three out and they said, 'More feet,'" Fugate said. "'More feet' ... that's all I heard and I said, 'Nooo!'"
A fourth identical quadruplet had somehow been missed by numerous ultrasounds, managing to keep her existence hidden until she popped out behind three of her identical sisters last week at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.
"It's one surprise after another," Fugate said.


The Fugate four, named Kenleigh Rosa, Kristen Sue, Kayleigh Pearl a
nd Kelsey Roxanne after family members, arrived three months earlier than expected, and just a day before their mother's 42nd birthday.
University of Mississippi Medical Center

Kristen Fugate



All four are currently doing well in neonatal intensive care after being born nearly 13 weeks premature. The girls will need to remain in observation, but Kimberly says she hopes to have them out by early May, on their original due date."I haven't been able to hold them yet," Fugate said. "It will be very exciting to get to take them home and love them."
Dr. James Bofill, a professor of maternal fetal medicine at the hospital said the odds of conceiving identical quadruplets is astonishingly rare, especially in a case like Fugate's, where she became pregnant without the use of fertilization drugs or treatments.


"The odds of spontaneous quadruplets is one in every 729,000 live births," Bofill said. "The chances of having identical quadruplets [are] almost incalculable."


Kimberly Fugate and her husband Craig are also parents to another daughter Katelyn, 10. The pair have set up a Facebook page to keep relatives updated on the quadruplets' progress.


In January a California mother gave birth to identical triplet boys six weeks earlier than expected. They were also conceived naturally, although there were no surprises for the parents in that case.


Doctors told ABC News at the time that a shortened gestation time is common for multiples and many triplets are born earlier than expected, during the 32nd rather than recommended 40th week.


In 2007, ABC News also reported the birth of two sets of identical twins

to parents in Texas. Experts estimated the odds of this type of birth to be 1 in 70 million

Shocking Surprise for Woman Expecting Identical Triplets - ABC News.
 
Mar 1, 2012
1,353
7
0
#51
Would Obama's plummeting popularity, scandals and failures be considered a good news story?

:rolleyes:
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#53
5 siblings reconnect; 2 crossed paths at Wal-Mart

The lives of five brothers and sisters born in North Dakota who were separately adopted at infancy took the twists and turns that 50 years bring. Some moved to different states; some married; some had children. But none of them ever knew the others existed.

Then, the obituary of their biological mother presented a clue. And when they finally met, one brother realized he wasn't so unfamiliar with one of his siblings. John Maixner had been greeted a half a dozen times or so by his sister at their local Walmart in Dickinson, N.D., where she has worked for 23 years.

Buddine Bullinger, 56, knew her biological's mother name but never attempted to contact her. Last January, a Wal-Mart co-worker - the only person she had ever told the name -told Bullinger the local paper had printed the mother's obituary. It mentioned a surviving daughter, Deidre Handtmann.

Bullinger at first resisted contacting Handtmann. But weeks later, Bullinger asked the funeral home to help her reach her sister.
"February 19 was the first time I heard her voice," Handtmann told The Associated Press Wednesday. "I will never forget that day."
They arranged to meet at Handtmann's home in Bismarck, N.D.

"It was unbelievable," Bullinger said. "We are in our 50s. I was so nervous to meet her, and when I opened that door, I didn't know what to say. You don't know what to do. It was so special."

Handtmann had reconnected with her mother 19 years before her passing. She said her mother never mentioned having given other children up for adoption.

The sisters signed release agreements at the adoption agency that handled their cases and asked to find out if they had other siblings.

"Oh, my goodness, they kept calling. 'Oh, a boy. Oh, a girl. Oh, a boy,'" said Handtmann, 50.
One brother lived in Tennessee. One sister lived in California. And the other brother was Maixner, who lived in Dickinson, where he shopped at Bullinger's Wal-Mart.

Handtmann and Maixner met at a local restaurant in June. She showed him a picture of Bullinger, and the "aha moment" happened.

"I about fell over because I'd seen her at the Wal-Mart," said Maixner, 57. "My mouth just dropped open. I just couldn't believe it."

Bullinger, who now trains other employees and works in the back of the store, for years worked as a customer service manager and greeted shoppers. Maixner said she greeted him at least six times in the last nine years since he moved to the town of 18,000 people, located about 60 miles from the Montana border line.

All five siblings reunited for the first time at Handtmann's home in October. John Blankendall, 53, drove from Tennessee and Sandy Watkins, 54, flew in from California.

"It gives me goose bumps," Bullinger said. "So many emotions - you cried and you laughed. It's just wonderful. I haven't quit smiling," she said.
They agreed to take a DNA test. The results showed they are full siblings, meaning they share the same biological father as well.

Maixner's adoptive father passed away shortly before he got a call from the adoption agency. He spent Christmas with Bullinger, her husband and her adoptive parents.

His unlimited-calls cellphone plan came in handy after meeting his siblings.
"We talk every couple of days," he said.



5 siblings reconnect; 2 crossed paths at Wal-Mart - NBC12.com - Richmond, VA News
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#54
Cows Produce More Milk Listening To Slow Jams Playlist






Past research has shown that cows produce more milk when stress is reduced by soothing music, but a new report suggests a precise playlist for dairy farmers looking to boost production.


The “Milking to Music” report from global agriculture medium Modern Farmer suggests some slow-jam songs to test increased milk production. The playlist includes songs ranging from Lou Reed to Mozart.


The report connects a 2001 University of Leicester study in the U.K. found that “calming music can improve milk yield, probably because it reduces stress, researcher Dr. Adrian North told the BBC at the time. “A lot of farmers seem to think it works. In essence, we’re following their lead.”


The Leicester study was conducted with 1,000-member herds of Friesian cattle that were exposed to fast, slow and no music for 12-hours each day over the course of nine weeks. Data showed that each cow’s milk yield rose by 3 percent (1.54 pints) each day with slow – rather than fast – music.


“We found that slow music improved milk yields perhaps because it relaxes the cows in much the same way as it relaxes humans,” said the researchers.


“I am not sure why there is not more research on the cow-music-milk production relationship,” Dr. Leanne Alworth, assistant director of University Research Animal Resources at the University of Georgia’s School of Veterinary Medicine, told Modern Farmer. “Perhaps because most researchers interested in animal welfare are not looking at production parameters specifically?”


Modern Farmer included the following recommendations for testing music with cows: “Everybody Hurts” by REM, “What a Difference A Day Makes” by Aretha Franklin, “Bridge Over Troubled Water” by Simon & Garfunkel and “Perfect Day” by Lou Reed.


If classical music is the preferred “moo-sical” choice for the herd: Beethoven’s “Pastoral Symphony” and “Symphony No. 5” are listed with Mozart’s “Concerto for Flute and Harp in D Major” and “Symphony No. 7” by Haydn.


On the other hand, the Leicester study found that Y2K Euro club music and other faster songs failed to produce positive production results.


Some dairy farmers agree that calming the cows can relieve some of the stress necessary for more milk production, especially considering the loud, machine noise environments on dairy farms. Stress has been found to limit the release of oxytocin, which is a critical hormone for the milk-releasing process.


“From a sensory perspective, loud, distracting noise can be one of the greatest stressors to dairy cows and their well-being,” says Juan Velez, executive vice president of Aurora Organic Farms, a large dairy corporation centered in Boulder, Colorado, told Modern Farmer. “In terms of music, in my 30 years working with dairy cows, I have found that music can be beneficial to the well-being of the cows, but it must be consistent and calming.”


“If the music volume is kept constant and the style of music is consistent, and everything else in that parlor is well managed and maintained, music can have a positive effect on milk let down.”

Cows Produce More Milk Listening To Slow Jams Playlist � CBS Atlanta
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#55
It's like pulling teeth the last two days to find good news stories.
Here is the best I can find today.

See how strangers react to boy shivering outside without a coat


[video=youtube;L9O8j9QPZc8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9O8j9QPZc8[/video]
Hadde du gitt jakken din til Johannes? - YouTube


If you saw a small boy sitting on a bench in the bitter cold … without a coat… what would you do?
When an 11-year-old boy sat at a bus stop without a coat in Norway, hidden cameras captured how strangers reacted when they saw him.
Huffington Post said the Norwegian branch of the SOS Children’s Villages International charity conducted the experiment to see how people would truly react.
The experiment is part of a campaign to provide warm clothing for displaced children in Syria.

See how strangers react to boy shivering outside without a coat | WTKR.com
 

Rachel20

Senior Member
May 7, 2013
1,639
106
63
#56
Everyday Heroes.


Dramatic roadside images capture the moment first responders saved baby's life after he turned blue in car gridlocked on highway



  • Five-month-old Sebastian stopped breathing while in aunt's car
  • Police officer and fire crew stuck in traffic rushed to help perform CPR
  • Baby Sebastian is now recovering in hospital

When a five-month-old baby stopped breathing while being driven along a Florida highway on Thursday there was plenty of help at hand.

As Pamela Rauseo pulled over and screamed for someone to help her nephew, Sebastian, a police officer and two firefighters who were stuck in traffic rushed to her aid.

In a twist of fate, award-winning photojournalist Al Diaz was also in the traffic hold up, and captured a series of dramatic pictures showing the emergency crews saving the baby's life.








Everyday heroes: Photographer captures dramatic moment baby's life is saved by the roadside as cop and firefighters who were stuck in traffic rush to his aid | Mail Online
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#57
Valley Motors surprises Fort Kent man with his dream car



n December we told you the story of a Fort Kent man that lost one of his legs in a terrible accident, and a local business that started a fundraiser to get him his dream car to help lift his spirits. Well, that business has officially raised enough money to get him his dream car and surprised him with it today! News Source 8′s Angela Christoforos reports…

Valley Motors started fundraising a few months ago to get Kevin his car of choice after he lost one of his legs in a terrible accident, and Thursday morning they surprised him with his dream set of wheels!

Valley Motors Marketing Manager Steve Daigle said, ”When we first began the whole fundraising concept and stuff we expected to raise a couple thousand dollars whatever it is which turned into something huge we raised over 12 to 13 thousand dollars to help get Kevin into his dream car.”

Valley Motors Sales Rep Ken Marquis said, ”We’ve had several people donate over 150 people donate not including everybody that’s donated in containers that we’ve had around town. Some people not even knowing him, just hearing his story and sending in a letter.”

The 2014 Chevy Malibu has special touches all over it: Nascar stickers, the number 3 for Kevin’s favorite driver Dale Earnhardt, and all things that say Kevin Pelletier all over it.
“It means the world to me,” said Pelletier.

“Give you goose bumps, you know just to be able to see a man who has gone through so much but someone who has given so much to everybody in the community to be able to give back to him you know, for what he’s given to all of us,” said Daigle.

Kevin was also given an original Dale Earndhart jacket and hat, so he can drive around in his favorite car AND favorite Nascar gear.
Getting Kevin his dream car was all made possible by Valley Motors, the generosity of community members and several sponsors. A benefit dance will be held for Kevin on March 22nd at Lonesome Pine Trails to celebrate Kevin and his new car.




Valley Motors surprises Fort Kent man with his dream car : WAGM-TV | Northern Maine and Western New Brunswick's News Leader
 
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1still_waters

Guest
#58
Prison program training rescued dogs also helps prisoners





WARREN, Maine
(NEWS CENTER) -- Behind the walls of Maine's tougest prison, ther are men charged with murder and former drug dealers. But the inmates getting the most attention are likely the ones walking around on four paws.


For eight years, the humane society has been working with the Maine State Prison on a dog training program. High energy puppies, or rowdy dogs will spend 6-12 weeks in the jail with designated inmates.


The dogs and prisoners eat, sleep, and learn together with help from trainer, Marie Finnegan.


With their handlers, these dogs learn basic training, sit and stay, how to alert they need to go outside, plus a few bonus tricks.
But only the well-behaved prisoners have access to the dogs - inmate and dog handler, Brandon Brown, says that's incentive enough to stay out of trouble.


Finnegan says these are dogs that may just have too much energy and need a little guidance. After 6-12 weeks in the prison, these dogs are well-behaved, well-socialized and ready for a new home.


In the meantime, the prisoners are learning new skills through the positive-reinforcment of training the dogs. Finnegan said it's proof for the inmates that they don't have to get physical to get someone to do something for them.
"Positive reinforcement works on all species," says Finnegan.


K9 Corrections runs on donations. If you'd like more information on the program, or the dogs up for adoption,

Prison program training rescued dogs also helps prisoners | wcsh6.com
 

Rachel20

Senior Member
May 7, 2013
1,639
106
63
#59
Hope for people with prosthetic limbs -

Nerve implants make bionic hand feel almost real



A man who lost his hand a decade ago can now feel it again, thanks to complex surgery which implanted electrodes into nerves in his upper arms. The implants give feedback from pressure sensors in the prosthetic hand, which his brain processed naturally.
"I didn't realize it was possible," said Dennis Aabo Sørensen from Denmark, who underwent the implant surgery in Italy and spent a month in a lab describing his experiences with the novel prosthetic to an international team of scientists. "The feeling is very close to the sensation you get when you touch things with your normal hand."
To restore feeling, surgeons at Gemelli Hospital in Rome implanted four electrodes into the ulnar and median nerve bundles in Sørensen’s upper arm. The bundles normally transmit signals from four of the hand’s five fingers, with the exception of the thumb.
The implanted electrodes were connected to pressure sensors on the fingertips and palm of a robotic prosthetic hand. The connection ran through cables outside of the patient’s arm. Special software was developed to interpret the electric signals from the sensors into a form that the human nervous system can understand. The team detailed its work in the journal Science Translational Medicine.
The resulting feedback was good enough for Sørensen to tell the difference between sensations ranging from the slightest touch to that just below the pain threshold. He said it was very natural and close to how his real hand feels.
In the lab Sørensen could differentiate objects held in the prosthetic hand by touch alone. While wearing a blindfold, he could tell whether he was holding cotton wool, a plastic cup or a block of wood about 90 per cent of the time.




​Nerve implants make bionic hand feel almost real — RT News
 

Rachel20

Senior Member
May 7, 2013
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#60
Say it with a grin


A unique campaign currently on in Bangalore hopes to harness the power of a smile to help beggars earn an honest living and spread happiness


Top L to R: Shamanth KP, Shravan Shetty, Aman Shetty and Geetika Gahlot; Bottom L to R:Naquia Jiruwala, Ugesh Sarcar and Raghu Venkatesh






A unique campaign currently on in Bangalore hopes to harness the power of a smile to help beggars earn an honest living and spread happiness

It isn't just well-lit stores and traffic that you see on busy Brigade Road these days. People are also sporting a smile from ear to ear; courtesy "smile agents" from the Smile Campaign started a month and a half ago by the All India Magic Academy Trust (AIMAT). The Bangalore-based organisation was launched by magician and "Chief distracting officer" Ugesh Sarcar in 2013 to add value to society through acts of kindness. Along with Naquia Jiruwala, project head, AIMAT, he spearheads this campaign that has been launched only in Bangalore, and will go to Australia in the next two months.

For about two hours every evening, 20 smile agents, comprising college students and groups of beggars (accompanied by AIMAT volunteers), walk around the area holding boards that say "Smile, it's free", or "Help me stop begging. Please smile for my camera so that I can earn an honest living", respectively. They ask people to smile, click photos on cameras provided to them by AIMAT, and ask for a contribution of Rs 2. The idea is to spread joy, and consequently, empower beggars on the street to earn an honest living. Wait, what? "All people have to do is smile, which helps the beggar earn money," says Sarcar. "We are encouraging people not to give money to beggars."

Similarly, you can celebrate a loved one's birthday in a unique manner by "buying" smiles from AIMAT for Rs 4 each, of which Rs 2 goes to the Trust, and the other half to the beggar. Essentially, this means the agents go out onto the streets and "collect" these smiles in the same manner. The collected smiles are then made into a collage that is posted on Facebook, in which your loved one is tagged. "The sentiment is that smiles can be spread with not just near and dear ones, but the world too," he says.

Say it with a grin - Bangalore Mirror