Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Positive News Update 4-26-06

China shows positive signs
of maintaining peace in Asia

During a recent speech, New Zealand's National
Party leader Don Brash discussed the importance
of China as a peacekeeper in the Asian Pacific.

He stated that signs are very encouraging that
China is fulfilling it role in a positive way.

Mr Brash made these statements while addressing
the US New Zealand Partnership Forum, in
Washington DC. According to him, the only two
potential security issues in the areas are the nuclear
ambitions of North Korea and the China-Taiwan relations.

In both cases, the speaker said, China's role in
maintaining the peace is of primary importance.
As reported by Radio New Zealand, Mr Brash said
signs are very encouraging that China is adopting a
very responsible stance on both matters.

Energy, environment top
World Bank economic meeting

World Bank economic policymakers are turning
their attention to how wealthy nations can help
developing countries meet their energy needs
while protecting the environment.

They (are) also assessing a report examining how
development agencies can reinforce good government
practices and fight corruption.
These matters topped the agenda of the World Bank's
steering committee, whose meeting on Sunday winds
up the spring session of the bank and its sister
institution, the International Monetary Fund.

Nepal reinstates lower
House of Parliament

Nepal's King Gyanendra defused weeks of protests
by reinstating the lower House of Parliament, which
he said would 'bear the responsibility of taking the
nation on the path of national unity and prosperity'.

US NEWS

First Lady announces
global literacy conference

United States First Lady Laura Bush announced
an initiative Monday to combat global illiteracy,
saying that more than 800 million people around
the world can't read.

The first lady said a conference on global literacy
will be held in New York in September during the
opening of the 61st session of the U.N. General
Assembly.

The conference will be held in conjunction with the
departments of Education and State, USAID
and UNESCO.

``Across the globe, more than 800 million people
are illiterate,'' said Mrs. Bush, honorary ambassador
for the United Nation's Decade of Literacy.

``Eighty-five percent of them live in just
34 countries, concentrated in regions affected
by poverty. And more than two-thirds of the
771 million adults who cannot read a simple book,
or write a basic sentence, are women.''

She spoke at luncheon attended by 35 ambassadors
from six continents.

Power plant waste eyed
for green building

Henry Liu, a retired civil engineering professor
at the University of Missouri-Columbia, USA,
wants to make eco-friendly construction material
out of fly-ash, a waste product of coal-burning
power plants.

He quickly found a willing partner in utility
companies such as Associated Electric
Cooperative Inc. in Clifton Hill, which
provided fly ash for his first phase of
research; and Ameren UE, which is
doing likewise for Liu's latest round
of tests.

``It's absolutely pure stewardship, the beneficial
use of what otherwise might be considered waste,''
said Mark Bryant, an Ameren official who oversees
its coal combustion byproducts.

Cement manufacturers and brick makers already
use fly ash—which has strong adhesive properties
—as an additive. But unlike those efforts, Liu's bricks
are made almost entirely of the powder.

Clay-fired bricks are heated in kilns to temperatures
of 2,000 degrees, burning fossil fuels that produce
air pollution and green house gases.

The limestone used to make Portland cement found
in concrete bricks also must be burned at high
temperatures, emitting similar pollutants into
the atmosphere.

No such emissions exist with fly ash bricks, said Liu,
who in 1965 moved from Taiwan to the United States,
where he earned graduate and doctorate degrees at
Colorado State University before joining the
Missouri faculty.

Liu, a native of China, added that fly ash bricks
are cheaper and more uniform in size than
conventional bricks, he said.

Pat Schaefer, sales manager for Midwest Block
and Brick in Jefferson City, calls Liu's research
intriguing—and savvy.

``The architectural world is pushing tremendously
toward sustainable, green-type buildings,'' he said.
``One hundred percent recycled would fit very
well in that industry.''

Every week the Positive News Network documents
the rise of a better quality of life dawning in the
world and highlights the positive stories that are
often overshadowed in the mainstream media.

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

A Note About Our Audio Post!

This is new to us so while we are learning
please be patient with us...Thanks for your
understanding!

We are working on improving the quality if you
would like to download these files to your Mp3
player or just like a higher quality sound please
click here and you will be taken to our website
where you will find the files posted for you.

http://www.positivenews.net/podcast.htm

Thanks, Dave

Positive News Update

this is an audio post - click to play

Positive News Update 4-12-06

US NEWS

Prominent US company to invest
in 'green technology'


As a prominent North American venture capitalist
and one of Silicon Valley's most respected investors,
John Doerr's decision to champion green technology
as the next big thing is generating attention in the
United States venture capital community.

MrP: This trend has been growing and renewable,
'green-energy' will be the hot business for the next
several years (that's what I feel!)

$30,000 in Cash Discovered by Volunteer

Some more positive news – One Hurricane
Katrina volunteer in New Orleans was helping
to gut a storm-damaged house and came
across the unexpected.

Trista Wright picked up something green from
the rubble and discovered it was a $100 bill.
After digging deeper, Wright gathered more
than $30-thousand dollars in cash which she
turned over to the authorities.

The homeowner was contacted and figured
her father had stashed the money as hard
times insurance.

Was it a miracle? Indeed the homeowner
and a local pastor agree that it was.

Prescription drug prices – are dropping
thanks to healthy competition.

The Food and Drug Administration says an
analysis shows that when just two generic
versions of a brand-name medicine arrive
in the marketplace, there is a dramatic
discount of about 52 percent of the price
of the generic drug compared to the
brand-name version’s cost per dose.

Smoking Ban Working?
YES, it appears so...

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
researchers say there’s a connection between
the decline of heart attack rates and the banning
of smoking in public places.

One example cited is the nearly 30 percent
drop in heart attacks in Pueblo, Colorado
after smoking was prohibited in places
such as restaurants and bars.

INTERNATIONAL NEWS

Kuwaiti women go to the polls
for the first time.

In a history-making election, Kuwaiti women
went to the polls for the first time. Not only
did they vote, but some ran as candidates to
fill a seat in Kuwait’s Municipal Council.

One 28-year-old woman says her gender is
now getting some attention and, in her words,
“we became equal.”

Still, Islamic tradition prevailed. Men and
women had to vote separately in different
locations at the polling station.

Israel boosts renewable energy incentives

The Public Utilities Authority of Israel has
moved to increase its support of businesses
using renewable energy.

Peace talks bring the Ivory Coast closer
to disarmament

After high-level peace talks, Ivorian and regional
officials have called for a single programme to
tackle disarmament and national identification.

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Even More Positive News

Ginger, pepper treat difficult cancers

Ginger can kill ovarian cancer cells while the
compound that makes peppers hot can shrink
pancreatic tumors, researchers told a conference
on Tuesday.

Their studies add to a growing body of evidence
that at least some popular spices might slow or
prevent the growth of cancer.

WALMART is now offering organic food!

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is throwing its weight behind
organic products, a move that experts say could
have the same lasting effect on environmental
practices that Wal-Mart has had on prices by
forcing suppliers and competitors to keep up.

Putting new items on the shelf this year, from
organic cotton baby clothes to ocean fish caught
in ways that don't harm the environment, is part
of a broader green policy launched last year to
meet consumer demand, cut costs for things like
energy and packaging.

Wal-Mart plans to double its organic grocery
offerings in the next month and continue looking
for more products to offer in areas such as grocery,
apparel, paper and electronics.

Stephen Quinn, vice president of marketing, told
an analysts' conference this month that Wal-Mart
would have 400 organic food items in stores this
summer "at the Wal-Mart price."

Now Walmart is often bashed in the media,
I thought this was a very positive for
everyone involved in organic foods.

Just think if the biggest retailer in the world
goes "green" ANYTHING can HAPPEN!

Positive News Update

A Family's Prayers Answered

For 10 years, Tanya Nicole Kach says she was
told that her parents didn't want her, that she
was stupid and no one cared about her but the
middle school security guard who was keeping
her in his home.

It took her a decade to build the confidence to
come forward, but on Wednesday she finally
learned the truth as she hugged her father,
Jerry Kach, in a tearful reunion.

Kach's father, Jerry, said, "I just say thank you,
there is a God and he brought my little girl
back home."

Hawaii Boasts Lowest Jobless Rate in U.S.

At 2.4 percent, Hawaii's unemployment rate for
January, the most recent figure available, is the
lowest in the country.

The national average, which was 4.7 percent in
January, rose to 4.8 percent in February,
according to the Labor Department.

In other words, it's a great environment for those
seeking work on the islands, said Beth Busch,
president of Success Advertising Hawaii, which
organizes several job fairs each year.

Afghan Christian Released
Given Asylum in Italy

ROME -- The Afghan man who faced the death
penalty for converting from Islam to Christianity
received asylum Wednesday in Italy, despite
requests by lawmakers in Afghanistan that he be
barred from fleeing the conservative Muslim country.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai defended the
release of a Christian convert on Tuesday, saying
the judiciary had acted properly and had not been
swayed by the international outcry over the case.