Dabbawalla from The Perennial Plate on Vimeo. How do we get food from the hands of those who have it, into the hands of those who don't? There are clues to be found in the successful system of the dabbawallas, who manage to deliver food from mothers and wives at home into the hands of their sons and husbands who are off at work.
OAKLAND -- A 51-year-old who spent almost seven years in prison for attempted murder was released from custody Friday after Santa Clara University law students and a powerful law firm proved his innocence.
Ronald Ross bowed his head and broke down in tears as Alameda County Superior Court Judge Jon Rolefson ordered him released in a hearing that ended an almost decadelong saga sparked by a sloppy Oakland Police Department investigation.
Moments after the order was made, Ross' mother, Thelma, was allowed to embrace her son for the first time since he was arrested in 2006.
"Oh, Lord. Oh, Lord," Thelma Ross, 77, cried as she hugged her son. "Thank you, Jesus. Thank you, Jesus."
"Today is a great day for justice," said Cookie Ridolfi, executive director of the Northern California Innocence Project at Santa Clara University.
Ross was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison on June 29, 2007, in the shooting of Renardo Williams, a onetime neighbor of Ross' mother.
Ross became the primary suspect in the case after former Oakland police Sgt. Steven Lovell placed his photo in a lineup, and Williams wrongly identified Ross as the man who shot him.
Ross' photo was included in the lineup because his mother was Williams' neighbor 10 years before the shooting. Court documents indicate Lovell placed Ross' photo in the lineup to fill a spot and because he had a past criminal record for minor drug offenses.
But when Williams
selected Ross' photo three days after the shooting, while lying in a hospital bed with an intravenous morphine drip, Lovell disregarded other evidence and focused his investigation on the innocent man, court documents say.Police focused on Ross despite other evidence that showed Williams might have been shot by the father of a teen who had gotten into a fight with Williams a day before the shooting.
Williams told police that the teen's mother had threatened him after the fight, saying "her man" was going to settle the score. In addition, Williams initially told police that he believed the teen's father was the shooter.
Had Lovell investigated that man, Steven Embrey Sr., he would have found a man with several serious and violent criminal convictions. In fact, court papers show that since 2006, Embrey committed numerous violent felonies and is now awaiting trial in an unrelated attempted murder case.
But with Lovell's focus on Ross, prosecutors built a case against him fueled by lying witnesses and the ignoring of discrepancies that also were not fully investigated by Ross' court-appointed defense attorney.
At least three witnesses lied to the jury during the trial, including the teen, Steven Embrey Jr., Williams and the teen's mother, Nikki Stuart. The younger Embrey and Williams both testified they were confident Ross was the shooter, and Stuart testified she hadn't seen the elder Embrey for months even though she had.
Also, Ross, who has below-average intelligence, testified during the trial that he was at home watching a basketball playoff game at the time of the shooting. However, there was no playoff game on at the time.
The Alameda County District Attorney's Office used that misstatement to argue to the jury that Ross was lying about where he was. Ross' defense attorney never presented evidence showing that Ross was most likely watching a Golden State Warriors regular season game, which was airing the night of the shooting.
After the verdict, Ross' defense attorney, Michael Berger, contacted the Innocence Project in hopes of finding help for his client. The project began investigating the case with help from the San Francisco law firm Keker & Van Nest.
The investigation, which began soon after Ross was sentenced, produced new evidence including sworn statements from the younger Embrey that he had lied during the trial and that his father was the shooter. The elder Embrey also gave a sworn statement blaming the shooting on another man and saying Ross was not involved.
Initially, the District Attorney's Office fought against Ross' release, but as more evidence began to trickle in, the office reversed course and agreed last week to seek Ross' release and drop charges against him.
Linda Starr, legal director for the Innocence Project, said the case shows the judicial system is imperfect and that defense attorneys and prosecutors need to remain diligent in ensuring all facts of a case are thoroughly investigated.
"The system let him down," Starr said. "It's a demonstration that we should act diligently at all times."
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To support Kelvin and young innovators like him, please visit http://www.crowdrise.com/InnovateSalone 15-Year-Old Kelvin Doe is an engineering whiz living in Sierra Leone who scours the trash bins for spare parts, which he uses to build batteries, generators and transmitters. Completely self-taught, Kelvin has created his own radio station where he broadcasts news and plays music under the moniker, DJ Focus.
An army drill sergeant whose estranged wife put his daughter up for adoption without his knowledge or permission while he was stationed in another state, has been reunited with the little girl, following a nearly two-year battle to get her back.
"I'm just happy right now. I'm with my daughter," Sgt. Terry Achane said. "It's about time."
The Utah Supreme Court earlier this month overturned a request by the toddler's adoptive parents to stay a lower court's December order that the child be returned to Achane, her father.
On Friday the original trial judge, Darold McDade who ruled in Achane's favor, held a transfer hearing that resulted in the little girl and her father being united this weekend for the first time since she was born 22 months ago.
"This is the first known case where the Utah State Supreme Court has removed a child from an [adoptive parent's] home and returned the child to the ... legal father," said Achane's lawyer Mark Wiser.
Wiser called the Supreme Court's ruling a "huge victory" for "equal parental rights," meaning one parent can't put a child up for adoption without the other's permission, and decried the adoption practice in Utah.
"Terry Achane believes that justice is finally taking place," Wiser said, adding that his client remains "heartbroken that he has missed 22 months of his daughter's life because of what happened. This is time that he and his daughter can never replace."
Achane, 31, was stationed in South Carolina on March 21, 2011, when his estranged wife, Tira Bland, gave birth in Utah and turned the baby over for adoption just two days later.
He initially believed that his pregnant wife had followed through on a threat to have an abortion. It was several weeks after the baby, whom he calls Teleah, was born that he learned the child had been adopted and was in Utah.
When Achane contacted the adoption agency that had facilitated the baby's placement with the couple, Jared and Kristi Frei, he was stonewalled, denied information and ignored when he told them he had not consented to the adoption, according to his lawyer.
In his ruling to restore Achane's custody, Judge McDade said he was "astonished and deeply troubled" by the actions of the agency, the Adoption Center of Choice, calling its treatment of Achane "utterly indefensible."
According to Achane, Bland gave the agency Achane's old address in Texas where he lived prior to being stationed in South Carolina, and suggested he would not consent to the adoption. The agency attempted to contact him once in Texas, but seems not to have made any other efforts to receive his consent, Wiser said.
The agency would not comment.
Achane knew Bland was pregnant and had taken her to prenatal doctor appointments in Texas, but Bland cut off all contact with him following his deployment to South Carolina and made arrangements for the adoption in secret, he lawyer claims in court documents.
Calls to the Freis were not returned. In an emails to ABCNews.com, their lawyer Larry Jenkins wrote: "The Freis have asked us not to comment publicly about the case."
The Freis, however, have maintained a blog about the case where they claim that Achane "left [Bland] without any money, a car, or details of his whereabouts. Needing to act quickly for the best interest of her unborn child, and with incredible faith, fortitude, and courage, she put her child up for adoption."
In 2008, Kristi Frei was diagnosed with endometriosis and told she would not be able to conceive, according to the blog.
The Freis insist that it was they who tracked down Achane "several months" after adopting the baby, whom they call Leah, but to "our great shock and dismay" he refused to consent to the adoption.
The judge said in his ruling, however, that the couple knew that Achane had never been consulted and "acknowledged this risk but decided they wanted to proceed forward with the adoptive placement anyway."
Also Read
SFPD officers rescued an abandoned newborn baby. (CBS)
SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) – Two police officers are being called heroes for saving the life of a newborn baby found unresponsive in San Francisco’s Bayview District early this morning, police said.
The officers, who work out of the department’s Bayview Station, responded around 2 a.m. to a request for a welfare check at Third Street and McKinnon Avenue. The caller said there was a woman bleeding there, police said.
As the officers were arriving, they were flagged down by a man holding a newborn boy. Because the baby was unresponsive, the officers requested an ambulance and one officer, a former paramedic, began performing CPR, police said.
KCBS’ Holly Quan Reports:
San Francisco Police Rush Newborn To Hospital, Mom Could Face Charges
It’s still not clear where the baby boy was delivered but around 2:00 a.m., his mother banged on the gate of Providence Shelter at 3rd and McKinnon in the Bayview District looking for help.
Shelter worker Ace Dorsey answered the door.
“She was in front. The gate wasn’t open,” he said. “She said let me in. She was covered in blood. She said I had a baby.”
Dorsey said she had something in her hands but he never saw what it was or heard crying. He told her to wait so he could call 911.
As he left, she handed the baby to another person although it’s still unclear who that was, someone she knew or a stranger.
That person flagged down a patrol car with two officers inside – one drove to SF General Hospital while the other performed CPR on the newborn.
Meanwhile, the woman who was reportedly bleeding had left the area prior to the officers’ arrival but was found by police nearby and was determined to be the baby’s mother, police spokesman Officer Gordon Shyy said.
Both the mother and baby remain at San Francisco General Hospital Wednesday morning and were expected to survive, Shyy said.
The case remained under investigation. Anyone with information was asked to call police Sgt. John Keane of the Police Department’s special victims unit at (415) 553-9363.
(Copyright 2012 by CBS San Francisco and Bay City News Service. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
A baby was born at a Pittsburg Bay Point BART station early Monday morning to an Antioch couple just as commuters were arriving.
The mother, Jasmine Osborne of Antioch, was on her way to Alta Bates Hospital with the baby's father, Donyell McCullough, after she started having contractions. The baby then started to emerge, so he pulled the van over to the BART station and the baby was born in the van.
The couple's baby girl, named De'Aurie, weighed in at 7 pounds, and 9 ounces. The baby could be released as early as today from Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Antioch.
Check back later for more details.
Contact Eve Mitchell at 925-779-7189. Follow her on Twitter.com/EastCounty_Girl.
Exercise Lengthens Life Regardless of Weight
Just a couple of hours of physical activity each week adds years to average life expectancy. Katherine Harmon reports.
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A little exercise each week can lead to big gains in life expectancy. And that’s true regardless of your current weight, according to a new review study that included more than 650,000 people.
The World Health Organization recommends two-and-a-half to five hours of brisk walking per week, or less time spent at a more vigorous activity. People who got the full recommended amount of exercise saw an average 3.4 year gain in life expectancy. People who got half as much exercise still lived an average 1.8 years longer. The findings are in the journal PLoS Medicine. [Steven C. Moore et al, Leisure Time Physical Activity of Moderate to Vigorous Intensity and Mortality: A large pooled cohort analysis]
In fact, exercise was a bigger factor than body weight in many cases. People who were normal weight but were inactive actually lived an average of 3.1 fewer years than obese people who kept up high levels of activity.
Finding time to exercise can be tough. Maybe look at it this way. There are almost 9,000 hours in a year. Five hours a week is 260 hours a year—to get an extra 30,000 hours of life. Do the math. While you take a walk.
—Katherine Harmon
[The above text is a transcript of this podcast]
Hedge fund manager John Paulson is donating $100 million to the fundraising arm of New York's famous Central Park.
Hedge fund manager John Paulson likes to bet big -- whether it's on an impending real estate crisis or in philanthropy.
On Tuesday morning, Paulson and his family foundation announced a $100 million donation to the Central Park Conservancy, the private fundraising arm of Manhattan's famous public park. Paulson called the donation -- the largest ever for any public park -- a "great privilege," and noted that Central Park is one of the most important cultural institutions in New York.
The $100 million will be used by the Central Park Conservancy to support the park's infrastructure and management.
Doug Blonsky, the conservancy's president, hailed Paulson and even compared him to Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, the park's designers.
"John joins these visionaries to sustain Central Park well into the future. Thanks to him Central Park's purpose will endure," Blonsky said in a release. Before Paulson's donation, the Central Park Conservancy had raised roughly $550 million in donations since 1980.
Related: John Paulson: Behind the backlash
Paulson manages roughly $20 billion for clients in his eponymous hedge fund Paulson & Co., according to his spokesperson. He made bold and successful bets during the recession but more recently has come under attack for his investing misses.
Paulson's bets on an impending blowup of the housing industry helped him earn $3.7 billion in 2007. In 2010, Paulson was the highest earning hedge fund manager and had nearly $40 billion under management.
In the past two years, Paulson & Co's investments haven't panned out very well though. Last year, Paulson & Co bet big on banks, and shares of most large financial institutions ended the year with double digit losses. He didn't earn a spot on the list of the top 25 highest earning hedge fund managers for 2011.
This year, as bank stocks rallied, Paulson missed out after having cut his stake in most banks.
But even with his Midas touch failing him in recent years, Paulson clearly has some money saved up that he's not afraid to spread around.
If you live in Iran, that is, where the rapidly deteriorating rial is now trading at around 35,000 per one US dollar. (That’s the exchange rate on the “street”; officially, the rate is about one-third of that. But presumably “millionaire” would still not carry quite the same prestige even if it cost you, say, $90 to achieve it.
That’s a pretty rotten rate, but not historically unprecedented. Here are some other currencies that have devalued to a shocking extent:
Currency – Country – Exchange rate
Riel – Cambodia – 4035.55 per dollar
Guarani – Paraguay – 4659.27 per dollar
Guinean – French Guinea – 6884.50 per dollar
Kip – Lao – 7948.92 per dollar
Rupia – Indonesia – 8826.13 per dollar
Manat – Turkmenistan – 14,250 per dollar
Dobra – Sao Tome and Principe – 17,783.13 per dollar
Dong – Vietnam - 19,327.13 per dollarOn the illegal Zimbabwe market, one US dollar apparently can be traded for 250,000 Zimbabwe dollars – so, technically, you could be a millionaire for only $4. The country has issued a ten million dollar note – which, on the street, would be worth about $40.
And the future of robotics education in Africa is ... Chupa Chups?When the African Robotics Network announced their $10 robot design challenge this summer, co-founder Ken Goldberg was careful not to share too many expectations, lest he influence contestants' designs. But he never imagined one of the winning entries would prominently feature a pair of Spanish lollipops.
The challenge, hosted by AFRON co-founders Goldberg and Ayorkor Korsah, emphasized inexpensive designs to help bring robotics education to African classrooms. Goldberg announced AFRON's 10 winners in three categories today at Maker Faire, including the lollipop-laden Suckerbot and traditional (roaming) category first prize winner Kilobot, a Harvard-spawned three-legged, vibrating, swarming robot.
"The ingenuity that has come from all over the world to address this problem is just astounding," Goldberg said in an interview with Wired Design. "And we're very excited about the next step, which is that once they're awarded, some of them will become available products."
The contest had a few simple restrictions, including the loose $10 target; entrants from around the world had to build a prototype, offer instructions on a website, and make the whole plan open-source, software included. The winners were little, an inch or two in size and up, never more than a foot long. They were sourced from cardboard, old cell phones, and circuit boards. They performed simple tasks: navigating, following lines, even communicating with each other.
"It's a mix of people who really ... want to make this happen," said Goldberg. "No one here did this just to say 'here's something, a thought experiment'."
Designs were judged by a 6-member jury of robotics industry professionals, and compiled by Goldberg and Korsah, who are professors at the University of California in Berkeley and Ashesi University College in Ghana, respectively.
Suckerbot, designed by Thomas Tilley, a computer scientist living in Thailand, started with a hacked PlayStation controller, and wound up winning first prize in the tethered robot category. In this case, the tether is the controller's USB cable, and Tilley attached the rumble motors to a pair of wheels. Suckerbot's list of parts comes to $8.96, but the real genius is the Chupa Chups. Tilley needed a way for the robot to sense if it ran into something, so he stuck a lollipop in each joystick. Whenever the Suckerbot bumps something, the weight of the sucker tips the joystick forward, and a signal is sent to the processor.
Many of the robots were created specifically for the challenge. Kilobot, however, was years in the making. Created by a Harvard robotics team, including Michael Rubenstein, Radhika Nagpal, and Christian Ahler, it was meant to be a multi-unit swarming robot. Having to build 1024 pieces made the project well suited for the event.
"If you're going to build a lot of robots, you need to have them be cheap and easy to make and easy to use," said Rubenstein. "So all of those things also aided in the AFRON challenge."
"I think there is a great need for — not only in Africa, but even in the U.S. — low-cost robots that you could use for education," Rubenstein went on. "There are people who try to make that now, but they're only in the hundreds of dollars for an educational robot."
Photo: Courtesy of AFRON. Video: Courtesy of Kilobot
NEW ORLEANS — A 38-year-old man wrongly convicted of raping and killing his 14-year-old step-cousin in 1997 has been released from Louisiana's death row.
Authorities say experts determined Damon A. Thibodeaux's confession was false and DNA tests found him to be innocent.
A corrections spokeswoman says he was released Friday after spending 15 years on death row.
Thibodeaux was sentenced to death in the rape and murder of Crystal Champagne. Prosecutors say the investigation into her slaying continues.
In a statement, Thibodeaux said he was grateful to the district attorney and is "looking forward to life as a free man again."
Thibodeaux confessed to the murder after a nine-hour interrogation. The Innocence Project says that was virtually the sole basis for his conviction.
The Innocence Project says since 2000, six people have been exonerated from Louisiana's death row.
GOALLINE.ca - The number one name in Sports Administration Software. GOALLINE specializes in building web based tools for enhancing sports organizations.
Peter Biddle sez,
Some friends of mine are up and running on a web startup called PokitDok. I'm on their tech board and the Facebook, blog and Twitter posts I did while I was dealing with my father's illness and death over the past year became part of their VC pitch materials.
Ted and Lisa and I have been talking for years about how we can use social media and math to link concentrations of organically acquired expertise in specific areas of health (eg cancer survivors or supporters, or people like me with ankylosing spondylitis, or who have had to get a loved one out of involuntary commitment...) with people who have suddenly found themselves immersed in similar situations.
Along the way to solving those problems (and I think they will!) they discovered that there are also some very immediate problems to solve - on Pokitdok they help people find out the actual cash cost for treatments with specific doctors, which in the US is extremely hard for normal people to discover because of regulations and insurance. They also let people look at alt medicine (like acupuncture) and modern medicine in the same place and context, which really is an "it's about time" social integration.
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Having a clear vision and knowing exactly what your ideal life looks like will get you moving towards your dream life faster.
I’m not talking about cars, houses and lots of money. I’m talking about what you REALLY want, think experiences, friends and so on.
We tend to think in vague terms and not really know what we want. We just know we want something better than what we have.I know I’m guilty of this. I’ve always found it hard to write things down, but once I’ve done it, I feel clearer and much more motivated.
The Definition of a Perfect Average Day
When I say perfect average day, I want you to think about a day that you'd want to live right now. There's no need to go into what ifs, because we can't predict the future.
Just have fun when you're doing this exercise. Your focus should be on getting this done. Even if it is half-assed, you will get a lot of benefit out of it.
What to Do Before You Start
Set aside some quiet time and make sure you don’t get interrupted, because the last thing you want is someone disrupting your flow.
This may take you anywhere from 30 minutes to a few hours depending on how detailed you get. The more details you can dive into, the better!
And remember, there are no limitations whatsoever. It doesn't matter if you don't have the money to do something or don't live where you want to live. Write down exactly what you want. Let your heart speak!
What Does an Average Awesome Day Look Like?
Go through absolutely every single detail you can think of. Write down what you want your thoughts to be as you go through your perfect average day.
What do you think about when you wake up? What do you think about when you’re having lunch? What are you having for lunch? What are your last thoughts as you fall asleep?
Absolutely everything has to come out. This really gets your mind going, because you have to think about what you truly and deeply want.
Do you want to have kids? Do you want a spouse? If so, what is your spouse like? Why does your spouse like you? Why do your kids like you?
Something that helped me is to look at this like writing a story. You are the puppet master and you get to come up with your dream life.
Questions to Get You Going
It’s easy to get stuck and sit there staring at a blank piece of paper. If this is you, try interviewing yourself. Start asking yourself questions on what you do at different points of your day.
Here are a few questions to get you going:
The list goes on and on. The point I want to get across is this: get as detailed as possible. Go through every minute of your average perfect day in your mind. But don't try to get it perfect. Just get it done.
- What do you think about when you wake up?
- How do you think?
- What's your mindset?
- How do you deal with obstacles?
- Who do you wake up with?
- Do you have kids?
- Where do you live?
- What do you think about?
- Where do you eat lunch?
- What do you eat?
- Who do you eat with?
- What are your friends like?
- What do you work with?
- Who do you work with?
- What do you do for fun?
- What do you do for fulfillment?
This is why I said to allot some alone time when you’re doing this. The more details you can go through, the more you will be telling your brain what you want.
When you do this, be ready for surprises, because you probably don't know what you want. You may think you do, but you don't. At least not in great detail.
You May Not Always Know What You Want
The scary part about this exercise is that you may realize that you’re heading in the opposite direction of what you truly want.
It’s so easy to get caught up in the money, the cars and all those THINGS. We’re human and we like bright, shiny objects and gadgets.
This is normal, and it happens to me all the time. That’s why it helps to re-focus and do an exercise like this from time to time.
But whatever you do, stop making excuses and take action.
Now it’s your turn. Start writing right now and get this on paper, because if you don’t start now, when will you?
The Harlem School of the Arts, a community arts school that has faced major financial hurdles in the last few years, has received a grant of more than $5 million from the Herb Alpert Foundation that will allow the school to retire its debt, restore its endowment and create a scholarship program for needy students.
The gift, to be officially announced by school officials on Monday, is the largest in the history of the school, which was founded in 1964 by the concert soprano Dorothy Maynor. The $5,050,000 grant from Mr. Alpert, the renowned musician, composer and recording industry executive, brings to $6 million the total amount he has given the school since a fiscal crisis forced its doors to close for three weeks in 2010.
The school, at 645 St. Nicholas Avenue (at 141st Street), provides training in dance, music, theater and the visual arts. In recognition of Mr. Alpert’s gift, the facility’s name will become the Herb Alpert Center. Mr. Alpert will also be honored at the school’s fall benefit on Oct. 10 at Lincoln Center’s Stanley H. Kaplan Penthouse. Ticket information is available at www.hsanyc.org.
“They kind of needed a little more assistance,” Mr. Alpert said Thursday in a telephone interview about his gift. He became aware of the school and its problems from reading a newspaper article in 2010 about its closing, he said.
“When my wife and I visited the school a year, a year and a half ago, the kids looked happy; it just felt like a great place,” he said. “I believe that the best chance we have of creating happier and more responsible kids is through the arts. They get in touch with their humanity.”
The Herb Alpert Foundation was founded in 1988 by Mr. Alpert and his wife, Lani Hall, and is based in Santa Monica, Calif. It supports the arts and arts education, among other initiatives. The foundation has distributed $120 million in grants since 1990.
Yvette L. Campbell, who became the school’s executive director in January, 2011, called the gift “transformative” during an interview on Thursday. She noted that the school’s entire operating budget is $3.4 million.
“It’ll restore our spent endowment and establishes a scholarship fund for families that need tuition aid,” Ms. Campbell said. She said about $100,000 in need-based scholarships would be awarded annually.
The Harlem School of the Arts started at a time when black children lacked easy access to arts training. It provides community and summer programs, programs in public schools, and tuition-based group and private lessons for children ages 2 to 18. The school also offers a selective pre-professional scholarship course of study for students age 12 to 18. Students from that program (including the actor Giancarlo Esposito) have gone on to conservatories like Juilliard, as well as to Broadway and feature films.
Amanda Palmer, the rock musician known for using social media to build financial and fan support, has reversed course in the face of fierce criticism and decided to pay volunteer musicians who were invited to join her band city by city on a tour.
“Even though they volunteered their time for beer, hugs, merch, free tickets, and love,” she wrote in a blog posting on Wednesday, “We’ll now also hand them cash.”
On her Web site, Ms. Palmer had previously advertised for string, brass and saxophone players to join her performances for the joy of it. That drew protests from many professional musicians, who said she should pay players for working.
In an interview last week, Ms. Palmer said the volunteer musicians were happy to take part and that nobody was forcing them to come up on stage. She also said that while she paid her core band a salary, she could not afford the extra players. The interview stirred up more strong feelings.
In Wednesday’s blog posting, she said: “For better or for worse, this whole kerfuffle has meant I’ve spent the past week thinking hard about this, listening to what everyone was saying and discussing.
“I hear you. I see your points. Me and my band have discussed it at length,” she said. “We have decided we should pay all of our guest musicians. We have the power to do it, and we’re going to do it.”
Ms. Palmer, who raised $1.2 million on Kickstarter for her new album, “Theater is Evil,” said her managers “tweaked and reconfigured financials, pulling money from this and that other budget (mostly video)” to pay the invited musicians — including those who have already performed.
By Susana Vera
Rafael Guerrero and his wife Luisa Diaz have been playing the lottery every Saturday ever since they got together. Three euros each week, same numbers every time, but no wins in more than fifteen years. This summer, however, Lady Luck finally smiled on them in the most unexpected way, and most importantly, for free.
While watching TV one day this past August, the Guerreros came across news of a contest from the Merchants Association of los Alcazares, a coastal town by the Mar Menor sea in southeastern Spain. The association promised a free week-long vacation at four-star hotels to three Spanish families with under-aged children who could prove that both parents had been unemployed for more than a year. Sadly, or luckily this time, the Guerrero-Diaz family met those requirements.
Rafael, 37, has been unemployed since June 2011, when the pipe coating factory where he had been working for five years closed down. His wife Luisa, 38, a former housekeeper, has been jobless since November 2010. The couple live with their two sons, Adrian, 4, and Rafael, 2, in a two-story home they purchased right before the start of the Spanish housing bubble in Hellin, in the Spanish region of Castilla la Mancha. “Had we waited another year to buy the house we would be far worse these days trying to make the monthly mortgage payments,” says Guerrero as he further explains that as of this month the family will have to get by with only the 800 euros he gets in unemployment benefits because his wife’s ran out in August.
Under those circumstances the thought of a family vacation had not even crossed their minds. The contest from the Los Alcazares Merchants Association sounded too good to be true, but they trusted that it wouldn’t be a hoax. Thus, they decided to try their luck. They gathered the paperwork that proved they had been out of work for over a year and sent it with a letter describing their current situation as well as a photo of the four of them. It was Luisa who got the call saying that they were one of the three chosen families. Rafael was about to enter the supermarket to buy some groceries when his wife phoned with the news. He turned around and went back home to celebrate.
The family was given the chance to go on vacation together for the first time ever, all expenses paid. From September 3rd until September 9th they enjoyed first-class treatment, staying at a four-star hotel suite, dining at some of the best restaurants in town, going for boat rides, getting golf lessons…
As Guerrero says; “It was more than what we could have ever expected. Even if we both were currently employed we would have never been able to afford something like this”.
With Spanish unemployment hitting its highest level this year since the Franco dictatorship ended in the mid-1970s, many Spaniards this summer have not been able to have a vacation, especially from the 1.7 million Spanish households where all members are out of work.
Rafael Guerrero and his family were some of the lucky ones this time. “Who knows. Maybe our luck has finally turned,” Guerrero says as he hopes for better news in the job seeking department.
In the meantime, he and his wife plan to continue playing the lottery every Saturday. Same numbers, same three euros.
FILE - This Feb. 26, 2012 file photo shows Anna Paquin and Steven Moyer arriving at the Elton John AIDS Foundation Academy Awards viewing party in West Hollywood, Calif. Reps for the actor-couple confirm Paquin gave birth to the babies “a few weeks early” but say they're “in good health” and their parents “are overjoyed.” The statement issued Tuesday didn't specify when or where the babies were born or the sex of the children. - (AP Photo/Dan Steinberg, file)
NEW YORK (AP) — Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer are the proud parents of newborn twins.
Reps for the acting couple confirm Paquin gave birth to the babies a few weeks early but say they're in good health and their parents "are overjoyed." The statement issued Tuesday didn't specify when or where the babies were born or the sex of the children.
News of the births was first reported by People.com.
The babies are 30-year-old Paquin's first children. Moyer, 42, has two children from previous relationships.
The "True Blood" stars were married in 2010. The show is in its fifth season on HBO.
Christopher J. Boyd has taken to handing out his resume at freeway entrances. (credit: Reddit.com)
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA.com) — Christopher Boyd, a homeless Los Angeles man who handed out his resume along local freeways, has been hired.
The 44-year-old is working for Jack The Roofer in Simi Valley for a week before taking on a full time position with JB Wholesale, a Los Angeles roofing and building supply company that works with Jack The Roofer.
Boyd has been spotted along several freeways handing out flyers listing his skills, which range from marketing to property management, construction and professional driving.
“I’ve been all over LA,” Boyd said last month. “I got tired of going to interviews, going places and not getting hired.”
Boyd’s story went viral after a picture of his flyer was posted on Reddit.
RELATED STORY: Homeless LA Man Handing Out Resumes At Freeway Entrances
As your average Fast Company subscribing, TED Talks-watching, New York Times reading, SXSW obsessed pop culture junkie, I know a few things about social innovation. Having followed the game-changing efforts of TOMs Shoes, Kiva, Kickstarter and Warby Parker, it's easy to think of social innovation and entrepreneurship as a secular thing. A recent Southern California Faith-Based Social Innovation Forum showed though that when it comes to collaboration with faith-based social entrepreneurs, there's plenty of room for growth.The forum, held in Los Angeles and co-hosted by Jewish Jumpstart, and Community Partners, was organized on the heels of this summer's White House Faith-Based Social Innovators Conference. Jumpstart co-founder and CEO Shawn Landres attended the White House summit and saw an opportunity to inspire local change. He and fellow White House guest Paul Vandeventer, head of Community Partners, began working on the idea of a regional follow-up.
The L.A. forum sought to answer several big questions. Why the distinction between regular, or secular social innovation and its faith-based cousin if both are focused on doing good works? Are faith-based social innovators at a disadvantage? Who are the major players in the world of faith-based social innovation? Can social innovators work across faith and learn to share best practices?
"Faith-based innovators are creating new products and services, forging strategic and creative partnerships, and leveraging media and technology to extend their reach," says Jonathan Greenblatt, the director of the White House office of social innovation and civic participation. "Their models vary, but these individuals all use innovation to improve their communities."
Social entrepreneurs—both secular and religious—have more in common than they may realize, says Vandeventer. "The values that inform secular civic innovators—loving justice, caring for the disadvantaged, bridging differences—come from same concerns about the condition of the world as those that inform faith-based innovators," he says.
We hear so much about religious discord, but, this forum provided a space for meaningful dialogue among a group of attendees from Buddhist, Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and other faith backgrounds. Los Angeles County Board Supervisor Mark Ridley Thomas encouraged them to practice "intentional civility" in interreligious engagement and to band together as an interfaith community to ensure that their collective voices are heard.
Najeeba Syeed-Miller, an attorney, former nonprofit executive, and professor of interreligious education at Claremont Lincoln University, led a frank discussion of the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and challenges facing faith-based social innovators. The rich cultural, ethnic, and religious diversity of Los Angeles, and a history of successful partnerships between faith communities and local governments have long helped bridge economic and social gaps. The list of challenges is long though.
There’s the usual nonprofit litany—lack of resources, leadership gaps, and inattention to race, ethnicity, and gender. Faith-related obstacles like ignorance about and civic invisibility among minority faith communities, difficulty building cultural mobility for newcomers, and, perhaps most pervasive, the uneven playing field that awaits social innovators who say their ventures are motivated by faith commitments, are also concerns.
"If you have a philosophy of doing good and feel a commitment to give back and leave the world a better place than you found it, if you say all those things in generic terms—that’s fine," said Landres. "But if you say, 'I am part of a covenant or I have a faith or I have a relationship with God, Jesus, Muhammad, or Guru Nanak,' then the exact same words—because they are being attributed to a religious tradition –for some reason that’s not okay." As it turns out, many attendees felt disrespected by the world of secular social enterprise.
Given Syeed-Miller’s definition of social entrepreneurship as large-scale social transformations targeting those who are economically and politically disadvantaged, it's easily rgued that the church—or synagogue or mosque or congregation—is the original catalyst for social entrepreneurship. After all, congregations and other organizations with religious roots have been tasked with finding creative solutions to society’s social needs for millennia.
Therein lies the paradox: If it's universally understood that social innovation and entrepreneurship are driven by intent to do good works—and it’s universally understood that faith drives intent to do good works—then why is the playing field for faith-based social innovators versus secular social innovators so uneven?
Forum attendees said they welcome the opportunity to learn about successful collaborations and explore new relationships. "Language, ideology and high thresholds…can divide us as long as we want them to," said Vandeventer. "But this gathering represented a whole lot of people lowering barriers rather than raising them."
Photo of Najeeba Syeed-Miller courtesy of Sherry Etheredge
The Game
Rapper to the Rescue
After Bloody Bike Crashexclusive
The Game snapped into hero mode earlier this week ... possibly saving the life of a man who badly injured himself in a bicycle crash on an L.A. street.
TMZ has learned ... Game was driving home from his studio early Wednesday morning when he noticed a man who was lying face down in the street ... with his bike on top of his body.
Game tells us ... he pulled over to see if he could help ... and when he noticed the man was unresponsive, he immediately called 911.
"I couldn’t just keep driving seeing a man in pain with his head on the ground."
Game waited with the man until paramedics arrived to the scene ... and says the man was transported to a nearby hospital.
Cops tell us the man is alive and is currently recovering from his injuries. Police also confirm that Game was the person who made the first 911 call.
Game tells us, "If that was me in that situation, I'd want someone to do the same thing."
Wowie kazowie! The Marginal Revolution blog, whose excellence is routinely noted on this blog, is launching a free, online Marginal Revolution University (MRU). From the announcement:
We think education should be better, cheaper, and easier to access. So we decided to take matters into our own hands and create a new online education platform toward those ends. We have decided to do more to communicate our personal vision of economics to you and to the broader world. …
Here are a few of the principles behind MR University:
1. The product is free (like this blog), and we offer more material in less time.
2. Most of our videos are short, so you can view and listen between tasks, rather than needing to schedule time for them. The average video is five minutes, twenty-eight seconds long. When needed, more videos are used to explain complex topics.
3. No talking heads and no long, boring lectures. We have tried to reconceptualize every aspect of the educational experience to be friendly to the on-line world.
4. It is low bandwidth and mobile-friendly. No ads.
5. We offer tests and quizzes.
Now scientists have discovered a vital clue to unraveling these riddles. The human genome is packed with at least four million gene switches that reside in bits of DNA that once were dismissed as "junk" but that turn out to play critical roles in controlling how cells, organs and other tissues behave.
(AllHipHop News) Port Arthur bred and renowned Houston, Texas rapper/professor Bun B is celebrating the anniversary of “Bun B Day” in Houston this weekend.
Heralded by Mayor Annise Parker for his commitment to community service, Bun B will be celebrating the honor bestowed upon him, with a special food drive for the Houston Food Bank on Thursday (August 30) from 4-7 p.m. at the Food Bank’s headquarters.
During the food drive, Bun B will meet and greet fans and thank them for making donations of non-perishable food items and money to help feed fellow Houston residents.
“To be honored with my own day by Mayor Parker and the Council is something I don’t take lightly,” Bun B told AllHipHop.com in a statement. “It is my hope that the day becomes synonymous with honor, good will, and helping one’s fellow-man. Partnering with the Houston Food Bank is the first step. Join us in our effort to begin a new tradition of unity in the human community on August 30!”
Bun B’s event is set to kick off just a few days before the start of Hunger Action Month, a push by food banks and hunger relief agencies across the country, with the aim of getting celebrities, school children and other members of society to help fight hunger in their community.
In Houston, the theme for the month is “Hunger Bites, Bites Back,” which has a double meaning.
The meaning behind the slogan stems from the fact that one, hunger is a bad thing; two, that it has a painful, biting effect on those who suffer from it; and that we as citizens can all “bite back,” by taking action to help those in need.
The Houston Food Bank is the nation’s largest sized Feeding America food bank and source of food for hunger relief charities in 18 southeast Texas counties.
They have been named one of 10 Top-Notch Charities across the nation by Charity Navigator for maintaining a network of nearly 500 food pantries, soup kitchens, senior centers and other agencies, feeding a total of 137,000 people each week.
The Houston Food Bank also provides more than 50 million nutritious meals annually.
For those attending as volunteers, the Houston Food Bank has asked that all photos be Tweeted and information about the event hashtagged using #BunBHFB.
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Researchers are close to achieving an addiction-proof painkiller. In the lab, scientists have successfully administered a pain-relieving drug to rodents. The test subjects have not shown the typical addictive behavior to a drug called (+)-naloxone. In a recent study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, researchers explain their approach - blocking "drug reward" with pain-relieving pills.
Most of us are aware of what happens to the body when we exercise. We build more muscle or more stamina. We feel how daily activities like climbing stairs becomes easier if we exercise regularly. When it comes to our brain and mood though, the connection isn't so clear. Leo Widrich, co-founder of social media sharing app Buffer, set out to uncover the connection between feeling happy and exercising regularly.
What triggers happiness in our brain when we exercise?
"Yes, yes, I know all about it, that's the thing with the endorphins, that makes you feel good and why we should exercise and stuff, right?" is what I can hear myself say to someone bringing this up. I would pick up things here and there, yet really digging into the connection of exercise and how it effects us has never been something I've done. The line around our "endorphins are released" is more something I throw around to sound smart, without really knowing what it means.
Here is what actually happens:
If you start exercising, your brain recognizes this as a moment of stress. As your heart pressure increases, the brain thinks you are either fighting the enemy or fleeing from it. To protect yourself and your brain from stress, you release a protein called BDNF (Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor). This BDNF has a protective and also reparative element to your memory neurons and acts as a reset switch. That's why we often feel so at ease and like things are clear after exercising.
At the same time, endorphins, another chemical to fight stress, are released in your brain. Your endorphins main purpose are this, writes researcher MK McGovern:
"These endorphins tend to minimize the discomfort of exercise, block the feeling of pain, and are even associated with a feeling of euphoria."
There is a lot going on inside our brain and it is oftentimes a lot more active than when we are just sitting down or actually concentrating mentally:
So, BDNF and endorphins are the reasons exercise makes us feel so good. The somewhat scary part is that they have a very similar and addictive behavior like morphine, heroin, or nicotine. The only difference? Well, it's actually good for us.
Don't do more, but focus on when
Now here is where it all gets interesting. We know the basic foundations of why exercising makes us happy and what happens inside our brain cells. The most important part to uncover now is, of how we can trigger this in an optimal and longer lasting way?
A recent study from Penn State shed some light on the matter and the results are more than surprising. They found that to be more productive and happier on a given work day, it doesn't matter so much, if you work-out regularly, that you haven't worked out on that particular day:
"Those who had exercised during the preceding month but not on the day of testing generally did better on the memory test than those who had been sedentary, but did not perform nearly as well as those who had worked out that morning."
New York Times bestselling author Gretchen Reynolds wrote a whole book about the subject matter called The First 20 Minutes. To get the highest level of happiness and benefits for health, the key is not to become a professional athlete. On the contrary, a much smaller amount is needed to reach the level where happiness and productivity in every day life peaks:
"The first 20 minutes of moving around, if someone has been really sedentary, provide most of the health benefits. You get prolonged life, reduced disease risk - all of those things come in in the first 20 minutes of being active."
So really, you can relax and don't have to be on the lookout for the next killer work out. All you have to do is get a focused 20 minutes in to get the full happiness boost every day:
"On exercise days, people's mood significantly improved after exercising. Mood stayed about the same on days they didn't, with the exception of people's sense of calm which deteriorated."(University of Bristol)
Make it a habit
Starting to exercise regularly or even daily is still easier said than done. At end of the day, there is quite a lot of focus required to get into the habit of exercising daily. The most important part to note is that exercise is a keystone habit. This means that daily exercise can pave the way not only for happiness, but also growth in all other areas of your life.
In a recent post from my colleague Joel, he wrote about the power of daily exercise for his every day life. Coincidentally, he follows the above rules very accurately and exercises daily before doing anything else. He writes:
"By 9:30am, I've done an hour of coding on the most important task I have right now on Buffer, I've been to the gym and had a great session, and I've done 30 minutes of emails. It's only 9:30am and I've already succeeded, and I feel fantastic."
I've spoken lots to Joel about his habit of exercising and here are some of the most important things to do in order to set yourself up for success and make your daily exercise fun:
- Put your gym clothes right over your alarm clock or phone when you go to bed: This technique sounds rather simple, but has been one of the most powerful ones. If you put everything the way you want it for the gym before you go to sleep and put your alarm under your gym clothes, you will have a much easier time to convince yourself to put your gym clothes on.
- Track your exercises and log them at the same time after every exercise: When you try to exercise regularly, the key is to make it a habit. One way to achieve this is to create a so called "reward", that will remind you of the good feelings you get from exercising. In our big list of top web apps, we have a full section on fitness apps that might be handy. Try out Fitocracy or RunKeeper to log your work outs. Try to have a very clear logging process in place. Log your work out just before you go into the shower or exactly when you walk out of the gym.
- Think about starting small and then start even smaller: Here is a little secret. When I first started exercising, I did it with 5 minutes per day, 3 times a week. Can you imagine that? 5 minutes of timed exercise, 3 times a week? That's nothing you might be thinking. And you are right, because the task is so easy and anyone can succeed with it, you can really start to make a habit out of it. Try no more than 5 or 10 minutes if you are getting started.
The highest level of happiness happens at the beginning
As a quick last fact, exercise, the increase of the BDNF proteins in your brain acts as a mood enhancer. The effects are similar to drug addiction one study found. So when you start exercising, the feeling of euphoria is the highest:
"The release of endorphins has an addictive effect, and more exercise is needed to achieve the same level of euphoria over time." (McGovern)
So, if you have never exercised before (or not for a long time), your happiness gains will be the highest if you start now.
What happens to our brains when we exercise (and how it makes us happier) | Buffer
Leo Widrich is the co-founder of Buffer, a smarter way to share on Twitter and Facebook. Leo writes more posts on efficiency and customer happiness over on the Buffer blog. Hit him up on Twitter @LeoWid anytime; he is a super nice guy.
Image remixed from Julien Tromeur (Shutterstock).
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The Redemption of Michael K. Williams T he first clear thought that creeps into Michael K. Williams' foggy brain is, "Where the hell am I?" Somewhere in Newark, he believes, but he has no idea where, and he can't remember how he got here. He doesn't drive, so did he walk?
He was born in Ireland, studied in America and worked in Britain. But when Ghanaian Herman Chinery-Hesse decided to build a software company, he was determined that it would be in Africa."I didn't have an option in America," he says. "I was a black African there; until Obama, we didn't have a track record of leadership. It would be an uphill battle, whereas in Ghana the sky was the limit. Also I'm African: we need development here and it's Africans who are going to develop Africa. I felt a sense of responsibility, apart from the fact that I thought I'd have a brighter future here."
Moving to Ghana in 1990, Chinery-Hesse had no money but did own a computer. With a friend, he began writing programs and selling them, eventually moving from a bedroom to a garage to an office. Today, he is dubbed the "Bill Gates of Ghana". SOFTtribe is the country's leading software developer, providing management systems to dozens of companies, including Guinness and Unilever, and products to thousands of consumers. One of its most popular programs allows a user whose house is being attacked to text their GPS co-ordinates to police, neighbours and local radio.
Landlines and PCs remain scarce in Africa, but the mobile phone is changing lives in countless ways; there are reportedly 695 billion subscribers among the continent's 1bn population. "Our rural populations were in a black hole," he says. "You couldn't speak to them. You had to go on a screwed-up road and cross a river and so on but today they all have mobile phones. Suddenly they're part of a mobile community and that's 50% of our population. It's boom time, you can sell them all kinds of things from shoes to cement to building materials… it's made things efficient. Even if you have to drive to the village, you don't go there blind; you make sure Kofi is home first.
"I'm optimistic about the future," he adds. "We haven't turned the corner yet but we're rapidly approaching it. In terms of the poverty and being disconnected, it's not because people are stupid or not creative, they just didn't have a chance, they weren't at the table. Now they have mobiles, some have internet and suddenly people are getting educated online, trading online, and this is the future."
The west's misconceptions about Africa matter less too, he says. "The perception of Africa is wrong. But the Chinese are busy investing here, the Nigerians are busy investing in Ghana. Some populations are misinformed; at this stage it's their loss rather than ours. We need to be concerned about it as Africans less and less.
"No matter how much money comes to us from outside aid and so on, our real investments are coming from within Africa, Brazil, China, India. They don't think there's anything wrong with Africa."
Africans he admires
Divine Ndhlukula She has built her security company Securico into one of Zimbabwe's largest.
Jason Chukwuma Njoku As the founder of Iroko Partners, a media distribution company, he challenged online piracy by licensing 1,600 Nollywood movies directly from production houses.
Herbert Mensah Founder of Ghanaian radio station Xfm which focuses on social media and youth.
This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk
Now scientists studying the intricacies of DNA and other molecular bio-dynamics may be poised to offer even more dramatic boosts to longevity. This comes not from setting out explicitly to conquer aging, which remains controversial in mainstream science, but from researchers developing new drugs and therapies for such maladies of growing old as heart disease and diabetes.