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Simple Religion Care of the sick originated from religious teachings. The first hospitals were built and staffed by religious orders. Many hospitals even today are religiously affiliated. The first nurses and many early physicians were from religious orders. Not until the mid-20th century did a true separation develop.... posted on Jan 23, 1384 reads
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Taking Risks to Blossom In 1992, there were three schools with courses on spirituality and health, one of them at the George Washington University School of Medicine. Now, well over 65 percent of the medical schools have courses or topics related to spirituality and health.... posted on Dec 27, 1103 reads
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Only Good News Germany's top-selling newspaper published nothing but good news on Christmas, dropping its normal fare of crime, violence and scandal for stories about tax cuts, falling petrol prices and accelerating economic growth. "There's only good news today," Bild wrote in two-inch high letters at the top of page one, where the giant headlines are usually devoted to sex scandals, Germany's cannibal trial, k... posted on Dec 30, 1088 reads
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Pursuit of Happiness If this Harvard psychology professor is right, then you are wrong. That is to say, if Daniel Gilbert is right, then you are wrong to believe that a new car will make you as happy as you imagine. What Gilbert has found is that we overestimate the intensity and the duration of our emotional reactions -- our "affect" -- to future events. On average, bad events proved less intense and more transient... posted on Dec 31, 1271 reads
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Gratitude Recent psychological research that suggests that people who regularly practice gratitude, forgiveness, and an appreciation of material blessings are more optimistic and happier than others.... posted on Jan 17, 1733 reads
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A Trip In 1993, he graduated from college, hopped into a 1971 Volkswagen Bus with his golden retriever, and set off to follow the Grateful Dead. Challenged by his mentor to make his trip more meaningful, Eric Saperston decided to call up some of the most powerful people in the world and ask them out for a cup of coffee. What started out as a personal journey to find the answers to life's biggest questi... posted on Jan 8, 1388 reads
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Conversing With Kids On Ethics "A year or so ago, I visited an excellent independent school to do some work with its faculty and parents. Although the school has a beautiful campus, enviable resources, high test scores, and a dedicated faculty, it was experiencing some problems with bullying. While I was there, teachers asked me to talk to fourth graders about the problem. I said that I would do so provided faculty understood t... posted on Sep 28, 5185 reads
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Sharing Warmth For employees in the ski industry, SWAG is an acronym for (free) "Stuff We Always Get." As in, free stuff. But that was until they met Cheryl Jensen. Cheryl's idea was to use the retired uniforms from the ski resorts to bring warmth to the needy in other parts of the world. And so it was. Just this year, SWAG has distributed over 30,000 coats to over a dozen countries including Nepal, Mongolia... posted on Jan 10, 1178 reads
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Most Compelling Frontier In 1971, he was the sixth man to walk the surface of the moon. Traveling back to Earth, through the abyss between the two worlds, Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell had an experience for which nothing in his life had prepared him. As he approached the planet we know as home, he became engulfed by a profound sensation "a sense of universal connectedness." His life would never be the same again. H... posted on Jan 29, 2527 reads
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Mountains Beyond Mountains He doesn't accept any excuses to treat the poor. No doctors? He'll train them. High drug prices? He'll get pharmaceutical companies to lower them. Misguided policies? He'll change them. He will hike seven hours over mountainous terrain to visit a single patient, and then fly to Europe to consult with the World Health Organization on global health policy. When he once spent $19,000 to attem... posted on Feb 4, 1089 reads
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Why We Travel "Every day is a journey," wrote Basho, "and the journey itself is home." If the great Japanese poet hadn't penned that line more than 300 years ago, we might easily attribute it to Pico Iyer, a journalist who writes ostensibly about travel, but is more interested in the humanity it reveals. "Travel doesn't interest me," Iyer says, "except as a handy way to undertake explorations that are fundament... posted on Oct 15, 3674 reads
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Same Primitive Elements Modern humans vary by only 0.2 percent of their genetic material -- and none of those variations correspond with definitions of race. In the stratified world of high school, where cliques often form along racial lines, biotechnology students recently made a startling discovery: More than half of the class at San Jose's Piedmont Hills High School, students from numerous racial and ethnic background... posted on Feb 11, 1007 reads
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Keiretsu As a leading venture capital group, Kleiner Perkins has built over 350 companies including America Online, Amazon, Sun, and Genentech. But they've recently made news for a new investment model they are calling 'Keiretsu': investing in several companies in a similar sector and encouraging them to cooperate instead of compete!... posted on Feb 14, 811 reads
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Technology and Honesty Technology is bringing us closer to the truth, it seems. The first study to compare honesty across a range of communications media has found that people are twice as likely to tell lies in phone conversations as they are in emails. The fact that emails are automatically recorded - and can come back to haunt you - appears to be the key to the finding.... posted on Feb 21, 1116 reads
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92 Year Old Sikh A 92 year old Sikh man completed the New York City Marathon, enduring taunts of "Hey, Osama Bin Laden" and "Look at Saddam" along the 26 mile route. Fauja Singh's mission was to educate the public about Sikhism, a religion founded in India in 1500s, that requires its followers to wear a turban. "Sikhs are not a part of any other religion. It is its own religion," said Singh. For all the offens... posted on Jun 3, 894 reads
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Wheelchairs For The Third World Ralf Hotchkiss was paralysed in a motorcycle crash in 1966 when he was a freshman at Oberlin College, Ohio. Within minutes of leaving hospital he was sowing the seeds of his future career - developing and supplying wheelchairs for the Third World. And these countries, he says, have a lot to teach us about the needs of disabled people. ... posted on Mar 20, 886 reads
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Spare Some Change? Ever get in a plane and have non-exchangeable coins in a foreign currency? You need to get rid of them but it's too late. Well, British Airways got the idea of asking folks to donate them to charity; they called the program "Change For Good." Research showed that one out of two folks contributed; ten years later, this program was adopted by various major airlines and has raised over $45 million... posted on May 8, 1809 reads
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What Makes People Happy Psychologists now know what makes people happy. The happiest people surround themselves with family and friends, don't care about keeping up with the Joneses next door, lose themselves in daily activities and, most important, forgive easily. ... posted on Apr 3, 3339 reads
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Inexhaustible Source Reflecting on the wisdom of Saint-Exupery. The poet, philosopher and aviator's plane 'disappeared' 60 years ago and was just found April 7, 2004.... posted on Jan 19, 1359 reads
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Samaritan Six Meet Samaritan Six. All six were software engineers in India, who raised millions of rupees for the poor. Except that they had hacked into the ledgers of a large corporation and stolen all the money. Unlike Robinhood, the law caught up them and they all went to jail. But their story doesn't stop there. While in prison, they noticed that the inmates were not receiving minimum food rations, pre... posted on Sep 11, 1306 reads
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Subway Philosopher When one person is kind to many strangers, he's a do-gooder. But what happens when many strangers are kind to one person -- a homeless one who lugs his life in two bulging plastic bags on the subway? Lack of a Bodhi tree anywhere near the Broadway-Lafayette station in New York didn't stop passengers from reaching out to the "subway philosopher" named Tony Butler. Somehow, he always brought arou... posted on Apr 23, 1246 reads
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All My Life For Sale He had too much "stuff" in his life, so John Freyer decided to have a virtual yard sale on the Internet. As he wound up selling everything, he requested the buyers to send him an update on how those objects were used. Amazingly, he'd strike up various conversations with the new owners of his old life and he got over 100 invitations to visit the items he sold. So, he seized the opportunity to tr... posted on Apr 24, 1145 reads
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Do Good To Fly Free If you're flying Song Airline, it pays to be nice. The low-cost carrier is giving away free tickets to passengers who are nice to one another. Stash someone else's bag in the overhead compartment, help a flight assistant, or show some other random act of kindness and you could win one of 5000 roundtrip tickets to anywhere that Song flies. Each flight attendant gets four tickets to give away to an... posted on May 26, 2021 reads
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Life Worth Living Can you run a business with social and economic values? A record-breaking 129 teams from leading business schools across five continents participated in this year's Global Social Venture Competition. Run by Haas School of Business, Columbia Business School, and London Business School, four social venture plans with promise were recently awarded the top prize.... posted on Apr 28, 1580 reads
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Richest Man in Town A trip to McDonald's typically costs him a hundred bucks. He'll search out the janitors and hand over $20 bills. "The woman cleaning the toilet can't speak English, she has nothing, and no one gives her anything," he explains. That's because Tom White is on a mission, to give away his entire fortune before he dies. Instead of "He who dies with the most toys wins", his bumper sticker would read: ... posted on May 5, 1017 reads
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Technology Toppling Tyrants Technology is toppling tyrants. Shah of Iran was overthrown in the later 70s by an IT invention -- the audio cassette tape. In 1989, Chinese students organized one of the largest demonstrations in Beijing, largely using the fax machine. President Joseph Estrada was ousted in 2000, due to cellphone text messaging on the street of Manila. And now, it seems that the next killer app is the digital... posted on May 18, 1294 reads
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Mozart Effect Imagine a pile of sand transformed into life-life flowing patterns, mirroring symmetrical geometric forms found in nature, simply by audible vibration. In 1950s, Dr. Hans Jenny found exactly that in work that later came to be known as Cymatics. He noticed that sound vibrations actually shape matter, in predictable and repeatable patterns, and can indeed be used to change the cells of our bodies.... posted on May 20, 1133 reads
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1000 Journals Someguy. That's the handle he goes by. In August 2000, he started an experiment that you're a part of. 'Someguy' sent out 1000 blank journals into the world. One thousand journals traveling from hand to hand throughout the world. Those who find them will add their stories and drawings, and the pass the journal along in an ongoing collaborative art form. Anyone could write anything they want.... posted on May 22, 1206 reads
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Sixty Five and Over One in three people will be 65 or over by the year 2050, according to a report by the Census Bureau which foresees the world's population growing to more than 9.2 billion. In 1990 the world's women, on average, were giving birth to 3.3 children in their lifetime. By 2002 it had dropped to 2.6 children. AIDS and declining fertility were cited as factors for slower population growth.... posted on Jun 5, 1436 reads
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Tigers and Piglets At Siracha Zoo, in Thai capital Bangkok, they wanted to encourage more visitors. So they decided to teach domestic animals like pigs and wild animals like tigers to live together in harmony, from an early age. Today, they released a photograph of a piglet sleeping on a tiger!... posted on Jul 7, 2141 reads
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Transparency International Finland once again topped the list of transparent, non-corrupt countries, with New Zealand, Denmark and Iceland close behind. A total of 106 out of 146 countries scored less than 5 against a clean score of 10, according to the new index, published today by Transparency International. UK was 11th on the list, with US in 17th, China in 71st, and India at 90th. Every year, TI estimates, the world ... posted on Oct 22, 975 reads
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Twinkie Tax From a recent report by CSPI: Upgrading from a 3-ounce Minibon to a Classic Cinnabon costs only 24% more, yet delivers 123% more calories. Switching from 7-Eleven’s Gulp to a Double Gulp costs 42% more, but provides 300% more calories. It costs 8 cents more to purchase a McDonald’s Quarter Pounder with Cheese, small French fries, and small Coke (890 calories) than it costs to buy the Quarter... posted on Aug 3, 1347 reads
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Cycling For Water It was in 1998, struggling up a hill on a cycle-rickshaw in deepest Bangladesh, that he knew his next big journey would be on such a machine. He just didn't figure he would have six weeks to prepare for it. In 2001, Jon Denner ventured on 2,088 kilometer trip across India to raise awarness of water and sanitation issues. Along the way, Jon also promoted the use of cycle rickshaw, created his ow... posted on Aug 17, 950 reads
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Seven Day Weekend Richard Semler has built a company that breaks all the rules. He encourages his employees to play hooky. He tells them not to bother with growth plans. Employees choose their own salaries, set their own hours, and have no job titles. Ridiculous? Inefficient? A recipe for chaos? Perhaps. But Semler's company, Semco, has grown from $35 million in revenue to $212 million in the last six years, and e... posted on Aug 19, 2531 reads
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Wisdom of Crowds "How many jellybeans in this jar?" Repeated studies show that a collective guess is often more accurate than any individual. We hold crowds accountable for the stock market bubble, boorish behavior at baseball games and the rise of Britney Spears. But in his new book, 'Wisdom of Crowds', James Surowiecki argues that the combined intelligence and input of a group of people can create optimum con... posted on Aug 25, 1301 reads
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Art of Martial Arts Jet Li wants to touch your soul before he kicks your butt. The Hong Kong action star says too many martial-art movies ignore heart and emotion in favor of vengeance and gore. Li's latest movie, 'Hero', explores what kind of person can become a hero; he hopes it'll put "artist" back into "martial artist."... posted on Aug 31, 1831 reads
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PlasTax A tax on plastic shopping bags in the Republic of Ireland has cut their use by more than 90% and raised millions of euros in revenue, the government says. The environment ministry estimated that about 1.2 billion free plastic bags were being handed out every year in the republic, leaving windblown bags littering Irish streets and the countryside. In the three months after the tax was introduced, s... posted on Sep 1, 1410 reads
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Swimming the English Channel George Brunstad arrived on the French beach of Sangatte just after 0100 BST on Sunday, after 15 hours and 59 minutes in the water. The retired US airline pilot, uncle of Hollywood star Matt Damon, set off from Dover on Saturday morning for the gruelling 21-mile swim and raised $11,000 for children in Haiti. At age 70, he also set the world record for the oldest man to conquer the English Channel... posted on Sep 2, 2410 reads
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Season of Life Friends say Jeffrey Marx has always seemed oddly blessed. In 1985 Mr. Marx was 22 and in his first newspaper job, he heard about strange goings-on in the University of Kentucky basketball program; he wrote articles that exposed cash payoffs to players, and won the Pulitzer Prize for it. In 1997 he plunked down $1 for a chance to heave a basketball down toward a basket 69 feet away. Make the shot,... posted on Sep 14, 1053 reads
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If Everyone Cared This music video by Nickelback lauds several examples of individuals who have stood up to injustice, and won. The examples range from Bob Geldof's Live Aid concerts in 1984 to Nelson Mandela's triumphant release from prison in 1989 and election as South Africa's first democratically elected president.... posted on Oct 13, 3117 reads
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Spinach Powered Laptop "Eat your spinach," Mom used to say. "It will make your muscles grow, power your laptop and recharge your cell phone... " OK. So nobody's Mom said those last two things. But researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology say they have used spinach to harness a plant's ability to convert sunlight into energy for the first time, creating a device that may one day power laptops, mobile phon... posted on Oct 2, 1022 reads
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The Soup Peddler They call him the Soup Peddler. He's a riches-to-rags guy who quit his computer programming job to make homemade soup and deliver it by bicycle to his neighbors. Every week, David Ansel makes several hundred quarts of soup, by hand, from fresh ingredients every week. Then he loads the containers onto his custom bicycle trailer and pedals around his Texas neighborhood to deliver them!... posted on Sep 28, 1222 reads
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Brilliant 10 A way to repair the failing memories of Alzheimer's patients, a tool in the search for new medicines and special lasers to help fight the war on terrorism are among the quests of young scientists honored by the editors of Popular Science. For the third year, the magazine has compiled its list of the "Brilliant 10" young scientists, all 40 or younger and virtually unknown to the public.... posted on Sep 30, 1492 reads
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Four Year Old Artist She is the hottest abstract artist in New York. After a feature in the local paper, 2000 people showed up for her opening night, everyone from serious collectors to the artist's preschool teacher. Using brushes, spatulas, her fingers and even ketchup bottles, she is creating canvases of six by six foot and earning more money than she could comprehend! Meet Marla Olmstead, age 4.... posted on Oct 6, 1838 reads
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Smells Like A Nobel Prize Her mother used to grumble about her stubborn persistence and "one-track mind" when faced with a problem. In later years, she focused on her lab work with laser-beam intensity, reducing time away to the "one-minute dinner." Linda Buck asked how humans can detect odors for upto 100,000 different chemicals and process this information into perceptions. Not only did she ask the question, she also fo... posted on Oct 7, 1129 reads
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Land of Thousand Hills In 1949, when Rosamond Carr first arrived in Africa, she had no idea that she would spend the rest of her life there. Back then, she was just a young fashion illustrator from New York City, who packed four cotton dresses and a lifetime supply of cold cream to accompany her husband on a trip to Congo. As she journeyed to find herself, Rosamond experienced everything from near-bankruptcy to tribal... posted on Oct 8, 1214 reads
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Jack La Lanne, Fit for Life He's in the gym at 5am and works out for two hours, seven days a week, even if he only gets one or two hours of sleep. He hasn't had a sugary dessert or missed a daily workout since 1930. Jack La Lanne, a pioneer of modern fitness is turning 90 and still aspires to swim the 22 hour distance from Catalina Island to Los Angeles, underwater. ... posted on Dec 9, 1884 reads
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Album named 'Smile' Thirty-eight years ago, Brian Wilson wanted to make an album like no other with what was, at the time, a revolutionary recording technique. Bits and pieces were recorded at different times with different musicians, in different studios, then quilted together. Wilson combined this elaborate "modular music" with the evocative lyrics of Van Dyke Parks and described the project as "a teenage symphony ... posted on Oct 19, 1204 reads
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The Surfing Rabbi Just steps from the sand, Orthodox Rabbi Nachum Shifren parks his beat-up blue 1983 Volvo station wagon with the surf racks and bumper sticker that reads, "Forgive Me Rabbi, For I Have Surfed." Shifren, 53, wears the long, unshorn beard of Hasidic Jews and traditional Orthodox garb with those Ocean Pacific flip-flops on his feet! "You can't be too square. You've got to be a little hip," he remin... posted on Oct 12, 1297 reads
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Hot Wheels It's cute, tiny, and plastic. The kids love it (especially in Europe). It also gets 70 miles per gallon, and you can fit three side by side in a standard parking spot. Move over, Mini: The Smart microcar could be the next big thing on America's roads.... posted on Oct 26, 1513 reads
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