Puppies Save 3-Yr-Old Boy Lost In Woods
December 9, 2008 by happytopics.com
Filed under International News
A toddler lost in the Virginia woods was back home safe Sunday thanks to two puppies who kept him warm through a harrowing night of freezing temperatures.
Jaylynn Thorpe, 3, wandered away from his baby-sitter at 4 p.m. Friday and was missing for 21 hours as hundreds of friends, family and law enforcement officials searched for him in the thick woods of Halifax County, fearing the worst.
“The only thing we wanted to do was just keep searching until we found him,” Halifax County Sheriff Stanley Noblin told reporters.
Jaylynn’s frantic family knew time was not on its side.
“We didn’t forget the issue that 17 degrees was almost unbearable,” said his father, James Thorpe.
“People all over the State of Virginia was down there looking for that child. For a while there, one time, I didn’t know whether they would find him or not,” said the child’s grandmother and guardian, Katherine Elliot.
Officials said the lost little boy and the two family puppies wandered up to a mile in the dark, even across a highway, but it wasn’t until Saturday afternoon that members of the search team found him sitting by a tree, the two puppies nestled against him.
The little boy didn’t say anything, according to rescue team member Jerry Gentry, but instead “just opened his arms up like, ‘I’m ready to go.’”
“When I first saw him, he was like, ‘Momma, I got cold. I slept in the woods last night. The puppies kept me warm.’ He told me that … the dogs slept up against him. And I’m sure the body heat kept him warm,” said his mother, Sarah Ingram.
Billie Jo Roach, another member of the search party that found the boy, said the puppies refused to leave his side.
As the child was placed in an ambulance to be taken to a local hospital for examination, “The puppies were watching where he went.
“Where he went, they went,” Roach said.
As word went out that the child was alive and well, family members cheered and cried for joy.
“Praise the Lord! Welcome home, Jaylynn!” yelled his aunt, Amy Zimmerman.
Close to 300 people from North Carolina and Virginia joined in the search to find Jaylynn.
“I love you! God bless you,” Ingram told the rescue teams.
“I think I just said, ‘Thank you Lord’ … for us to have another chance!” said the child’s father.
The boy spent Saturday night under observation at Halifax Regional Hospital and chowed down on a double cheeseburger, a hot dog, strawberry ice cream and French fries.
Meanwhile, the furry heroes, their tails wagging, were rewarded with food.
“I definitely call this a miracle,” said Noblin.
The 28th Great Christmas Pudding Race
December 9, 2008 by happytopics.com
Filed under International News
People dressed as reindeer, pigs, and penguins were among 18 teams who navigated their way around an obstacle course in London’s Covent Garden for the 28th annual Great Christmas Pudding Race to raise money for Cancer Research UK. Great Christmas Pudding Race: www.xmaspuddingrace.org.uk
"Hero Dog" Pulls Injured Friend From Oncoming Traffic
December 9, 2008 by happytopics.com
Filed under International News
Footage from a traffic camera overlooking a busy freeway in Santiago, Chile captured a dog performing a heroic act β pulling an injured friend from oncoming traffic.
The video, from Azteca America Colorado, shows an injured dog lying in the middle of a freeway after being hit by a car, while a rescue dog dodges traffic to run to its side. The rescue dog then drags the severely injured canine across lanes of traffic as cars swerve around it.
No motorists stopped to help either dog, but a highway crew arrives at the end of the video.
The translation of the announcer is as follows:
“These images seen from the surveillance cameras show a very common situation with our overpopulated highways. It is normal for us to see dogs run over. In the video, we can see this dog fighting for his life because he was run over by the vehicle.
“What is very touching is to see the very heroic actions of this other dog who is trying to pull him to the side of the highway. We are going to keep seeing things like this until we find a solution to the dogs living on the streets.”
Somali doctors first to graduate in two decades
December 9, 2008 by happytopics.com
Filed under International News
In spite of firefights and violence and anarchy, 20 men and women did something that no one has done in nearly two decades: they graduated from medical school.
The graduation ceremony for the 12 men and 8 women is especially encouraging since the people of Somali desperately need medical care, yet find it hard to obtain because of a powerful Islamic insurgency which has taken over much of the country.
βThe graduation of these students shows something that nobody outside Somalia can believe β that students can still learn despite violence and anarchy,β said Mohamed Malim Muse, the president of Benadir University, Mogadishu.

