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Simple Injection Could Be the Cure for Wrestlers and Athletes Suffering From ‘Cauliflower Ear’

Former Leicester Tigers and England forward and now coach at Munster Graham Rowntree. SWNS.
Noninvasive in vivo 3D bioprinting auricle in situ. SWNS.

Rugby players, boxers and wrestlers may soon be able to heal their deformed cauliflower ears with the help of a simple injection.

Chinese researchers have developed a new 3D-bioprinting machine capable of making new tissue without the need for traumatic surgery.

It means sports stars like Richie McCaw, Graham Rowntree, and Dan Cole won’t have their retirement blighted with snide comments about their disfigured ears.

The international team used a non-invasive technique to 3D-bioprint new ears for mice, a procedure which creates layers of tissue similarly to how spare parts are built by conventional 3D printers in industry. Instead of ink, the researchers created a mix of cartilage cells and chemicals that were administered beneath the skin at the back of the ear. The new tissue began forming immediately, correcting genetically malformed “auricles” in the lab rodents—the visible part of the ear outside the head.

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One month later, the cartilage had maintained its shape and been colonized by blood vessels and muscles to begin growing and renewing themselves normally.

The “bio-ink”, which was described in the study published in Science Advances, is controlled using rays of near-infrared digital light, rather than UV light that is harmful to the cells.

Former Leicester Tigers and England forward and now coach at Munster Graham Rowntree. SWNS.

A microchip called a DMB (digital micromirror device) with a customized pattern was painlessly inserted beneath the mouse’s skin in order to trigger the “bio-ink” solution to make the new tissue, layer by layer.

After correcting the deformity, the extremity looked perfectly normal—and the team believe the procedure will also work for humans.

“Three-dimensional printing technology has great potential in advancing clinical medicine,” said study co-author Professor Maling Gou of Sichuan University, China.

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It could be used to develop other body part replacements without the need for risky operations in the future. Replacement skin is already expected to become a reality within the next few years.

“A non-invasive 3D-bioprinting system successfully generated ear-shaped supportive tissue in mice to correct outer ear defects,” continued Professor Gou. “It may provide a surgery-free option for humans with this condition who often undergo surgical implantations at the risk of injury.

Bioprinting as an emerging science

Last year, Israeli scientists unveiled the first 3D-printed heart made from human tissue. At the University of Edinburgh, researchers have been working to develop a bioprinted liver since 2014.

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“Bio-printing—that is, use of bioink containing cells to 3D print living obstacles such as tissue or organ—has great potential, especially in regeneration medicine,” said Professor Gou. “Without surgery implantation, customized living tissue constructs were successfully generated in the body.

“This work demonstrates a DNP-based bioprinting system, where the complex constructs can be fabricated layer by layer.”

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Texas Residents Defend Their Local Mall After Looting is Threatened

They had just finished a peaceful protest in town when residents of Killeen, Texas  decided they needed to tap that community spirit to defend the local mall after local police suggested it may be the target of looters.

Police identified a threat of rioting on social media, and Killeen mall management in Central Texas announced the building would be closed to residents until further notice.

However, Reshard Hicks and Jonathan Hildner who organized peaceful protests over the weekend were not going to sit idly by. Together they stepped up to organize a defense of the mall, to prevent any rioting and looting, which would otherwise besmirch the peaceableness their town had experienced.

“We showed everybody that Killeen can do something positive and not be destructive,” Hicks told KWTX, adding: “To have somebody come in and ruin all that for us would have been very counterintuitive to what we are trying to accomplish” Hicks said.

75 residents joined Hicks and Hildner to stand and watch all the entrances to the mall for a few hours—just to discourage any trouble.

RELATED: New Legislation Proposed in US House Would End Police Doctrine of ‘Qualified Immunity’

“We were there to hopefully embrace whoever may have been coming to do harm,” Hildman told KWTX. “And help them understand why doing things our way was better for everyone.”

Their efforts may have achieved something, as the town has stayed peaceful ever since.

WATCH the local news coverage…

Grads Receive Diplomas Aboard Jet Skis After High School Refuses to Cancel Commencement Ceremony

Photo by Somerset Island Prep
Photo by Somerset Island Prep

Despite how the novel coronavirus shutdowns have canceled thousands of commencement ceremonies around the world, this Florida school found a creative way of celebrating their senior students while still respecting social distancing.

Back in May, the Somerset Island Prep charter high school in Key West handed out diplomas to all their graduating students—but rather than having the teens walk across a stage, the ceremony was held on the open sea.

In addition to donning caps and gowns, the grads were asked to wear life jackets and face masks so they could receive their diplomas aboard jet skis.

LOOK: ‘Wear the Cap, Donate the Gown’—Student Helps Donate Thousands of Graduation Gowns to Hospitals in Need

As the students cruised by on their jet skis, Somerset Island Principal Tom Rompella handed out each of their diplomas using an extendable grabber tool from the deck of a small boat.

“This final ceremony for our seniors represents the same theme that has played out throughout the entirety of their time at Island Prep; that no barrier is too large to overcome and that through creativity and hard work, we can overcome any challenge,” Rompella said in a press release.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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“We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better.” – J.K. Rowling

Quote of the Day: “We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better.” – J.K. Rowling

Photo: by Roadcrusher, Creative Commons license

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Anonymous Donor Gives $40k to Florida Cafe to Help it Stay Open During Pandemic – And Feed Hospital Workers

An anonymous donor has saved a Florida restaurant that might otherwise have closed for good, due to the coronavirus lockdown. Not only has his generosity kept the restaurant open, it also enabled the owners to offer a big “Thank you” to some local healthcare workers.

On the day that Bill’s Cafe in Naples was forced to close due to the governor’s stay-at-home order, one of its regular breakfast customers took owner Bill Salley aside and expressed his intention to help.

“He says listen I have two envelopes for you, ‘one for you, one for your help,’” Bill told WINK News. “It was so nice and kind of him.”

RELATED: School’s Food Drive to Help Those Affected By Looting in Minneapolis Turns Into Tsunami of Grocery Bags Deliveries

But that amount of money probably wouldn’t have saved Bill’s from ruin…

The donor then asked Bill if he would be willing to send 100 sandwiches per day to Naples Community Hospital across the street. Bill jumped at the chance, and all of the food was given to the hospital’s employees for free.

The donations, were purchased and distributed over the course of a few weeks—and they totaled $40,000.

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Bill is supremely grateful—and so are his employees. Server Andrea Gianello told WINK News, “It felt good that someone genuinely cared about the community to come out and help… and help the nurses and the doctors.”

Now, Bill hopes the story of how his restaurant was saved will bring attention to the many other small eateries in need of help across the country. In the meantime, he and his staff plan to keep on serving the “best BLT in town.”

WATCH the local news coverage…

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Need more positive stories and updates coming out of the COVID-19 challenge? For more uplifting coverage, click here.

Colorado Senate to Vote on Sweeping Police Accountability Act

In the wake of George Floyd’s death in Minnesota and the protests that followed, Colorado lawmakers are pushing for immediate police reform on issues which they say they’ve been debating “for a long time”.

“The Attorney General’s Office has been engaged with the sponsors of the criminal justice reform bill to ensure it improves peace officer training, provides greater accountability and restores trust in law enforcement,” CO Att. General Phil Weiser’s spokesman said in a written statement according to the Colorado Sun.

The legislation attempts to make police more accountable for violence and other violations of private citizens’ constitutional rights. The law would expand the use of body cameras, repeal the right to use deadly force on fleeing felons, mandate a yearly report on use of violence force, and prevent officers with complaints registered against them transferring departments.

It would also allow for private citizens to file lawsuits within their own means against officers for breach of constitutional rights for up to $100,000.

Other measures include a banning of chokeholds, collection of racial profiling data in enforcement procedures, and objective justification for making stops.

RELATED: New Proposed Legislation in US House Would End Police Doctrine of ‘Qualified Immunity’

The bill introduced in the state senate of Colorado last Wednesday has made it out of committee and will soon arrive on the floor of the state chamber for a vote, with about a week left in the current session.

Finding a Middle Ground

According to the Denver Post, representatives from the Colorado District Attorneys Council, The Fraternal Order of Police and some sheriffs expressed both support for the legislation and concern that it was moving “too fast” and that it was “too broad”.

The fear according to the Post is that kind law-abiding officers will be dissuaded from signing up for fear of having to pay such large legal fees.

WATCH: In Dozens of American Cities, Officers and Protestors Embrace During Rallies Against Bad Policing

Sponsors of the bill, which is supported by every Democratic representative believe time has run out for trying to iron out how much these measures are a gutting of the police and how much is lawful, necessary reform. They believe the time is now to pass this legislation.

“This is not a new conversation. Many of my colleagues have been talking about various aspects of police reform for years,” said Senate President Leroy Garcia, a Pueblo Democrat and co-sponsor of the bill.  “And, quite frankly, it’s a travesty that it takes such a catastrophe that’s happening across the United States, and in many of our own backyards,” [for the legislation to happen].

“Why would you not want greater accountability or transparency in your police department?” he said. “We haven’t done enough soon enough.”

The Democratic bill sponsors agreed to make some amendments to the bill after it entered committee, and Rep. Leslie Herod from Denver said after the vote that she was pleased that the changes agreed on don’t water down the bill or alter its intent.

US Unemployment Rate Declines as 2.5 Million Workers Return to Work

After the US employment rate has been skyrocketing amidst the novel coronavirus lockdowns, economists were pleased that their more dire forecasts were wrong, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) issued an encouraging report for the month of May.

The latest BLS report on US job loss showed the grim unemployment numbers actually fell after 2.5 million employees were able to return to work in the leisure and hospitality, construction, education and health services, and retail industries.

Economists originally anticipated jobless numbers to top 20% in May, but the total now estimated by the bipartisan career officials in the BLM fell to an estimated 16.3%.

RELATED: Optimistic COVID-19 Statistics For Vast Numbers of US States Reported For May

Regardless of the percentage of unemployed population being worse than the Great Depression, the report is a welcomed decline—and it is largely credited to social restrictions being steadily rolled back across the US.

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“An unthankful heart discovers no mercies; but let the thankful heart sweep though the day and, as the magnet finds the iron, so it will find, in every hour, some heavenly blessings!” – Henry Ward Beecher

Quote of the Day: “An unthankful heart discovers no mercies; but let the thankful heart sweep though the day and, as the magnet finds the iron, so it will find, in every hour, some heavenly blessings!” – Henry Ward Beecher 

Photo: by Illiya Vjestica, public domain

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

School’s Food Drive to Help Those Affected By Looting in Minneapolis Turns Into Tsunami of Grocery Bags Deliveries

In an effort to help out a looted community, a Minneapolis middle school decided to hold a food drive. They expected a modest turnout, but what happened next was more than they could have imagined.

The thousands of donations were far beyond the 100 grocery bags the school had hoped to collect when they first published their appeal on social media—it was shared so widely that some of the donors even came from out of state.

“Donations covered every inch of ground of our parking lot, the grass, everywhere,” Sanford Middle School Principal Amy Nelson told CNN. “We had to also use a neighboring park because we didn’t have enough space here at the school to stack it up.”

The school community initially wanted to help its own families because they lived in neighborhoods where grocery stores have been closed due to damage from the protests.

“The line of cars bringing donations went for blocks and blocks in every direction from the school. And they just kept coming,” Nelson told CNN. “We still don’t know how much we received.”

When word spread of the amazing haul of food the school had taken in, hundreds of families visited the school seeking support.

MPR photojournalist Evan Frost posted an incredible video on Twitter showing the scene:

Thanks to the generosity of so many, volunteers from the school are working with the food support nonprofit The Sheridan Story to get the donations out to those in need within the greater Minneapolis community.

RELATED: New Mexico School Buys $2,800 of Supplies For Navajo Nation After Year-end Class Trip is Canceled

Parents, students, and staff who hadn’t seen each other in months were among the many volunteers, and when asked what it all meant to her, Principal Nelson could barely contain her pride.

“First with the pandemic, just to see some of my students and parents, and then to see them come together to do such good, it was just so heartwarming in such a way.”

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New Proposed Legislation in US House Would End Police Doctrine of ‘Qualified Immunity’

Charlotte, NC – Clay Banks

In response to recent public demand for greater accountability of police officers, a former-Libertarian presidential candidate, Michigan Congressman Justin Amash (L-MI), along with Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) introduced a bill in the House to end the doctrine of ‘qualified immunity’ which makes it so difficult for private citizens to pursue legal recourse against police officers that have violated their rights or those of a loved one.

“As part of the Civil Rights Act of 1871, Congress allowed individuals to sue state and local officials, including police officers, who violate their rights,” a joint letter released by Amash and Pressley late Wednesday noted. “Starting in 1967, the Supreme Court began gutting that law by inventing the doctrine of qualified immunity.”

In the letter that was sent to their colleagues to try and conjure up bipartisan support, the pair of lawmakers explained how qualified immunity provides a screen for lawbreaking police officers.

“Under qualified immunity, police are immune from liability unless the person whose rights they violated can show that there is a previous case in the same jurisdiction, involving the exact same facts, in which a court deemed the actions to be a constitutional violation,” Amash and Pressley wrote.

In other words, officers would need to commit the same crime twice in order to be prosecuted.

“This rule has sharply narrowed the situations in which police can be held liable–even for truly heinous rights violations–and it creates a disincentive to bringing cases in the first place.”

WATCH: Remarkable Teen Leads Peaceful Detroit Protest, Gets Call From Mayor: ‘I saw your leadership; I’m in tears.’

“If a plaintiff knows there is no prior case that is identical to theirs, they may decline to even file a lawsuit because they are very unlikely to win,” they continued. “Even if a plaintiff does file a case, a judge may dismiss it on qualified immunity grounds and decline to decide whether the plaintiff’s rights were violated, meaning the constitutional precedent still isn’t established and so the next plaintiff still can’t recover.”

Charlotte, NC – Clay Banks

Will it Come to Pass?

Currently controlled by the Democrats, there is a good chance in the House that with just a little bipartisan support the bill, H.R. 7085, would pass.

The Republican-controlled Senate, however, may offer significant opposition, as its party platform is normally very pro-police. But, if the public response to George Floyd’s killing continues with the current level of intensity, Amash and Pressly’s legislation may present a smart way to defuse tensions—and stem the number of such incidences by reversing the policy that says police are legally insulated from consequences after violating the rights of the people whom they have sworn to serve.

WATCH: In Dozens of American Cities Officers and Protestors Embrace During Rallies Against Bad Policing

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Ghanaian Shoemaker Invents Solar-Powered Hand-washing Basin During Lockdown to Encourage Sanitary Habits

Ghana, a country the size of Utah but with 31 million inhabitants, is benefitting from good old-fashion ingenuity in its fight against COVID-19.

In Kumasi, the cultural capital of the country located in the Ashanti region, a 2-week lockdown to control the spread inspired a man to a wonderful invention.

In less than 48 hours, 32-year old shoemaker Richard Kwarteng and his brother Jude Osei managed to gather all the necessary supplies to turn an old recycled metal barrel into a solar-powered hand-washing basin to encourage sanitation habits among the neighborhood.

Set to run on a 25-second timer, in correspondence with the CDC guidelines for handwashing duration, it would need not only elements of plumbing, but also electrical engineering like sensors, alarms, and a motherboard, yet be able to work like a normal hands-free sink.

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Fortunately the street markets of Ghanaian cities carry every component under the sun, and with the help of a friend who worked as an electrician and was able to handle the computer element, Kwarteng finished his invention in just five days.

Osei recorded a video of Kwarteng demonstrating how to use the device and posted it on social media. It immediately went viral. “It was amazing to see the shares and likes,” Kwarteng told CNN. “We started getting calls left and right. We were so proud of ourselves,” he added.

Just two days after the video went viral, Ghanaian government workers contacted the brothers to see if more machines could be constructed for placement around cities throughout the country.

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“I pray this pandemic will go away and there are better days ahead,” he said. “We hope this will help people to practice normal hand-washing etiquette and we are very grateful for everyone’s support.”

WATCH the video below…

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Need more positive stories and updates coming out of the COVID-19 challenge? For more uplifting coverage, click here.

“Raise your words not your voice; It is rain that grows flowers, not thunder.” – Rumi

Quote of the Day: “Raise your words not your voice. It is rain that grows flowers, not thunder.” – Rumi

Photo: by Rajiv Bajaj, public domain

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Nurse Finally Locates NYC Firefighter Who Pulled Her From Burning Building 37 Years Ago, Thanks to Coronavirus

FDNY photo of Eugene; and Deirdre Taylor's photo of her newspaper clipping
FDNY photo of Eugene; and Deirdre Taylor’s photo of her newspaper clipping

It may have been “just another day at the office” for a New York City firefighter who rescued a 4-year-old girl from a burning apartment building, but 37 years later, he’s learning just how big a difference he made.

After the fire in 1983, Deirdre Taylor’s family moved away from New York. As the decades passed, any hope she had for meeting and thanking her rescuer grew more remote—even as her longing to meet him endured.

She had tried to find him online over the years, but without success.

“I didn’t know if he was still alive, particularly after Sept. 11,” Deirdre told the New York Daily News. “Part of me thought I waited too long to track him down.”

Dierdre is a nurse today, living with her husband and children in Virginia. Recently, she decided to ‘pay it forward’ in New York City, returning to save lives on the frontlines of the pandemic.

Because she did that, Dierdre finally found the man who saved her life—Eugene Pugliese, Jr.

She brought along a newspaper clipping about the fire in 1983, with a picture of  Eugene, from Ladder Company 20, holding a little girl in his arms. The headline reads: ‘Fireman braves flames, rescues SoHo 4-yr.-old’.

Deirdre Taylor saved the newspaper clipping for over a decade – via her Facebook page

Two weeks ago, Deirdre was working the evening shift at the hospital when a group of firefighters paid a visit to thank all the healthcare workers. She decided to ask them if they knew the man in the photo.

One of them answered, “Oh, Gene. I know Gene. I’ve got his number in my phone.” An hour later, she received a call from Eugene, and learned that he had never forgotten her.

WATCH: Heartwarming Reunion When “Hero” Nurse Sees Daughters For the First Time in 9 Weeks

“You’ve been on my wall for 25 years,” he told her.

Now 75, Gene remembers the day vividly. “I didn’t even have gear on. I had a helmet and an axe,” he told the Daily News. First, he found Deidre’s mother. She pleaded with him to save her baby too. His crew brought the mother to safety, and sure enough, he found Deirdre a few minutes later.

Because Deirdre saves lives from a contagious virus, she can’t see Eugene in person. But they have promised to meet as soon it is safe. In the meantime, Deirdre is counting her blessings.

RELATED: Heartwarming Photo Captures Man’s Gesture of Gratitude Towards the Nurses Who Saved His Wife’s Life

“I always knew I came close to losing my life that day,” Deirdre told CNN. “Without him, I wouldn’t be here. I had a second chance at life, thanks to him.”

Need more positive stories and updates coming out of the COVID-19 challenge? For more uplifting coverage, click here.

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Former NFL Player’s Tweet Mobilizes Residents to Clean Up Phoenix After Protests

Cameron Cox - 12 News

An American football player is being praised for helping to heal a wounded community, after his tweet brought a group of volunteers to downtown Phoenix to clean up the city.

After being dismayed to see how peaceful protests turned destructive in his city last weekend, Marquette King put out a call to action on the social media platform.

“I’m gonna be in Downtown Phoenix at 10ish with gloves and trash bags cleaning up the city. All races are welcome to come clean the city with me. Officers should come too. Let’s get to know each other.”

Marquette played for six years in the NFL for the Oakland Raiders and Denver Broncos, and last played for the St. Louis Battlehawks in the XFL. Some of the volunteers who joined him knew him from his football career, including former Arizona State University quarterback Robert Nelson. But others were simply inspired by his positive message.

“I just went on Twitter and searched ‘Phoenix cleanup’ and I saw Marquette’s post. I didn’t know who he was,” one volunteer told Cameron Cox, a sports broadcaster for KPNX-12 News.

Cameron Cox – 12 News

“I’m all about peace and love. That’s what I want my message to be,” Marquette told 12 News. He hopes that his little group will inspire those who want to make a positive difference in their communities. On Twitter later that day, he thanked all those who came out to help out, saying “It’s ok to be different! I choose to make an impact in showing love n peace. Make a difference but be smart and calculated.”

WATCH the video from KPNX sports…

Phoenix isn’t the only city where volunteers have come out to clean up. In Seattle, a group of dedicated citizens of all ages got together to do the same.

Mayor Jenny Durkan praised those who showed up to help, telling King 5, “What I love to see here is so many people coming downtown to help. To help clean up, to remove graffiti, to reclaim the city that they love. That’s the spirit we have to be about going forward, is people coming together and find a way to really acknowledge the challenges that we have, make them better, but still love our city.”

Police Chief Carmen Best echoed the mayor’s praise: “I’m totally inspired. It’s totally gratifying and so wonderful and heartening to see all of these people out here. Volunteers helping to clean up the destruction, and the graffiti, and all of the damage from last night. I’m really hopeful that calmer heads will prevail today and they won’t come into our beautiful city and make it look like this.”

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River Running Through Zion National Park Will Be Protected Forever Thanks to the Nature Conservancy

The Nature Conservancy, one of the oldest nonprofit organizations dedicated to the preservation of lands, animals, and rivers, has just purchased a large tract adjacent to the majestic Zion National Park for $4.3 million to preserve the ecosystem enshrined within the famous canyon.

The picturesque 419-acre Utah property called Sheep Bridge includes a 2-mile stretch of the Virgin River, which is relied upon as a water source for Washington County residents.

The river itself eroded one of Zion’s many canyons, and it was snapped up by the Virginia-based Nature Conservancy as part of a greater effort by advocacy groups to protect the area around Zion from development.

“It is actually one of the most pristine desert streams remaining in the Southwest,” Utah Division of Wildlife Resources Aquatic Manager Rick Fridell told the Spectrum. “Water in the desert is a pretty critical resource for wildlife as well as people.”

The challenge that often faces those involved in conservation is getting governments to preserve complete ecosystems as protected areas. In the United States this difficulty was encountered throughout the history of the National Parks Service, as areas of particular natural beauty were singled out for protection while the adjacent ecosystems—the high country behind Yosemite, the pine forest around Sequoia, or the sage-brush plains before the Grand Tetons for examples, which are necessary to support all the plants and animals that make these places beautiful—are often neglected.

Apart from its harmonious role in the existence and creation of Zion, the Virgin River is home to 40 species which Utah recognizes as “sensitive”—12 of which are federally-listed as endangered.

Sheep Bridge / Virgin River Photos by Stuart Ruckman for the Nature Conservancy

The third property acquired by the Nature Conservancy along this river, it represents a major philanthropic endeavor involving contributions from many private organizations, trusts, and charities, and with financial support from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service through its endangered species program.

RELATED: Historic Deal to Protect Millions of Monarch Butterfly Habitat Acres is Unprecedented

The river is important to the southwestern willow flycatcher, as well as migratory birds, and acts as a home to fish species first native to the river itself like the virgin spinedace, flannelmouth sucker, desert sucker, and speckled dace.

“[The river]… maintains connectivity of important and rare riparian habitat which is so vital in the arid lands of Utah’s red rock country,” said Laura Romin, acting Utah Field Supervisor with the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.

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“I think about the internal compasses that birds have to help them get where they need to be, and I think there’s a compass inside that’s been guiding me in the same way.” – J. Drew Lanham

Wynand Uys

Quote of the Day: “I think about the internal compasses that birds have to help them get where they need to be, and I think there’s a compass inside that’s been guiding me in the same way.” – J. Drew Lanham

Photo: by Wynand Uys, public domain

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In Dozens of American Cities, Officers and Protestors Embrace During Rallies Against Bad Policing

Across the United States, communities have rallied against the shameful police brutality on display in Minnesota, after George Floyd was killed. But also on display are dozens of cities were beautiful scenes of brotherhood and unity between law enforcement and protesters who all agreed on one thing—every cop should be held accountable.

Check out the videos and images below showing the heartwarming stories from Las Vegas to New York, and in between.

Protestors swarmed around police in Fort Worth, Texas after officers dropped to their knees and held back tears as they were embraced in front of grateful citizens (as seen in the video below).

Elsewhere in the state, Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo has drawn national praise for his willingness to march with activists and his call to hold officers responsible whenever they kill without justification.

After three nights of marches in Kentucky, protesters walked, chanted, and kneeled to pray, with Lexington police. One protester walked down the line of police officers, shaking their hands one by one.

In New York City, protesters in Queens were kneeling in protest, and suddenly you can hear the crowd shrieking with surprise and support when some of the officers from the 103rd precinct take a knee, as well.

In Flint Michigan, Genesee County Sheriff Chris Swanson walked with protesters after they chanted ‘Walk with us!’ His response to a cheering crowd was, “Let’s go, Where do you want to walk? We’ll walk all night.”

Black protesters in Louisville, Kentucky locked arms to protect a lone police officer who had been separated from his squad, reported AP:

“This simple act of kindness made me cry. We’re supposed to be taking care of each other,” said Ruth Sokey on Twitter. Alex Garner replied, “Lord, thank you for this glimpse of hope in the dark.”

Rondell Trevino tweeted  photos of the scene, saying “This is Pro Life.

In Merced, California, a woman asked Army National Guard Captain Nicholas Koeni, “Can you do me a favor and take a kneel?” He replied, “Absolutely,” as many of the protesters cheered, clapped, and thanked the soldiers.

The Nashville, Tennessee Police Department tweeted out a touching photo from Saturday’s protest showing Officer Garren Hoskins and a protester sharing an embrace and a moment of prayer in the middle of the protest.

Protestors in Sarasota, Florida, heard a conciliatory message from the North Port Police Department: “Anybody who feels disenfranchised… we want to work with them. We’ll kneel with you.” Local law enforcement agencies all had one common message—they denounced the actions of that former Minneapolis police officer, and promised to continue being transparent and compassionate in every neighborhood.

Also in Florida, CNN reported that officers from various agencies knelt with protesters in prayer in front of Coral Gables City Hall.

The fourth night of protests in downtown Indianapolis ended with police officers and protesters coming together for a beautiful, peaceful moment: “I feel like our message was heard… and I never in a million years thought I would embrace a cop like that,” said organizer Malik Muhammad.

Officers and protesters hugged, shook hands, thanked each other and walked with arms around each other. “We need y’all,” one black woman said as she hugged a white officer, in the emotional video below.

Columbus, Ohio demonstrators walked side-by-side with the mayor and police Tuesday on the second consecutive day that law enforcement marched with people gathered downtown to protest.

RELATED: Doctor Left Crying After Officer Pulls Her Over For Speeding But Gives Her Face Masks Instead of a Ticket

In Oklahoma, photos captured the powerful moment when sheriff’s deputies at the Oklahoma County Jail took a knee in solidarity—while in Des Moines, Iowa, Polk County Authorities also knelt with protesters for two minutes.

On the seventh day of protests in Atlanta, Georgia, two of the city’s top officials made an appearance among the demonstrators. The mayor and police Chief Erika Shields walked with protesters to show solidarity against racism and injustice. Other officials have joined #BlackLivesMatter marches across the U.S., including Pennsylvania governor Tom Wolf, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, and mayors in Little Rock, Ann Arbor, and Sacramento—as well as the police chief in Green Bay, Wisconsin, who had been a cop in L.A. for 22 years.

And finally, taking things to the next level, in Kansas City, Missouri the police department and protestors organized a march together—and they called it The Unity March.

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First ‘Bios Park’ That Lets Us Bury Cremated Remains of Our Loved Ones So They Grow into Trees

Photo by Bios
Photo by Bios

Since the world’s cemeteries are quickly running out of grave space, Canada has just opened up the world’s first “Bios Park”: a patch of land devoted exclusively to fostering forests of trees grown from the remains of loved ones.

For the last 23 years, green funerary company Bios has been coming up with new ways to help people mourn their loved ones without using traditional burial methods that are notoriously expensive and harmful for the environment.

More specifically, the organization is responsible for creating the “Bios Urn”, a biodegradable urn containing a tree-planting mixture that can be combined with the cremated remains of a beloved family member or pet. Once planted in the ground, the urn blossoms into a tree that can support the planet while also serving as a living memorial for the deceased.

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“The tree grows from the ashes, the urn biodegrades leaving absolutely no trace, and death becomes a transformation and return to life through nature,” reads the Bios website. “On an individual level, it’s very therapeutic in a time of immense grief. On a global level, we are taking collective responsibility for much-needed planetary restoration. We are talking thousands, if not millions, of trees planted every year.”

Since developing the Bios Urn two decades ago, the company has shipped their urns and planters to more than 50 countries around the world for about $140 a pop.

Last month, Bios announced the launch of their first “Bios Park” green space for grieving individuals and families to plant the urns.

Photo by Bios

The newly-opened “Boisé de Vie” Bios Park—which translates to “Wood of Life” in English—is being opened as an extension of the Granby Catholic Cemetery in Granby, Québec, although the cemetery is open to people of all religions.

The Bios Urns are currently available with eight different native tree species, including oak, gingko, lilac, hydrangea, sugar maple, crabapple, serviceberry, and amur maple. The Bios Park can also accommodate family plots for up to 9 people.

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“We decided what choice of trees to offer families after checking with the city about the regulations on accepted native tree species and with the help of a gardener from our local garden center,” reads the Bios website. “We have chosen hardy species which do not require much care and maintenance and which also grow well in our area.”

Bios says they now hope that the trailblazing burial space will be just the first of many new Bios Parks to launch during the coming months.

Photo by Bios

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Hotel Stays Open During Lockdowns to House Homeless Locals; And They’re Repaying the Favor With Odd Jobs

Eddie Boult built a wall for the Fownes Hotel, Worcester. SWNS.
Peter Swinbourne at the Fownes Hotel, Worcester. SWNS.

Hotel staffers have been hailed as unsung heroes after they refused to close during the novel coronavirus lockdowns so they could offer up their rooms to homeless people for free.

In a heartwarming show of gratitude, the guests have since begun doing odd-jobs around the hotel, including gardening, cleaning the rooms, and building new brick walls and patios.

More than 45 rough sleepers have been staying at upmarket Fownes Hotel in Worcester, England since the COVID-19 restrictions were put in place in March.

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The 60-room hotel, which normally charges guests up to £155 per night, opted to stay open to provide shelter to people living on the streets.

Homeless guest Eddie Boult, a former bricklayer who built a wall and patio at the hotel, said: “I did it because I was bored but also as a thank you to the staff. They’ve really looked after me.”

Fellow guest 48-year-old Peter Swinbourne, who has been homeless for 25 years, said that the staff’s kindness “saved” him.

Eddie Boult built a wall for the Fownes Hotel, Worcester. SWNS.

“I have never slept in a double bed before,” he said. “I’m happy here—this is a five-star hotel putting up homeless people.”

55-year-old Terence Marriott has been staying at the hotel for six weeks. He said: “I have been well looked after. It has been excellent.

“The food is also excellent,” he added. “I feel a lot healthier than when I came in.”

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The hotel has also joined forces with a homeless charity which has been hosting workshops on how to manage the guests’ addictions, seek benefits, and secure future accommodation.

The three hotel bars have all been cleared of alcohol as a precaution and no alcohol is permitted on the hotel grounds.

“Our new guests have been lovely and grateful for the support they had been given and treat their rooms with respect,” said assistant manager Julie Merrick. “We stayed open simply because we wanted to help.”

CCP line manager Oleg Mitchell at the Fownes Hotel, Worcester. SWNS.

Management of the hotel has been maintained by a skeleton crew of 11 people while
15 staff have been furloughed.

Ms. Merrick, a mother-of-two, estimates she has worked double her usual hours during the course of the pandemic.

“We’re the only hotel in Worcester doing this. Everybody else closed their doors,” she said. “My staff are very brave. They have gone above their job role, absolutely. It has brought us all closer together as a team.

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It is not the first time the hotel has helped people—it also homed 30 people who were forced to leave their homes during the regional flooding back in February.

Staff has been offered PPE including gloves, face masks and aprons, but management says that no cases of COVID-19 have been reported thus far.

However, restaurant employees have been working seven days a week in order to provide three course meals to their guests, delivered directly to their hotel rooms in disposable containers to reduce the risk of virus transmission.

The Fownes Hotel, Worcester. SWNS.

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Friday Funnies: Bored Man Builds ‘Hillbilly Hot Tub’ Using an Old Fish Pond And a Boat Motor

A bored man has built this 'hillbilly' hot tub in his back garden - using an old fish pond and a boat motor. See SWNS story SWSYtub; Salesman and grandfather Paul Vaughan, 65, lost his job during lockdown and wanted to find a new way to relax in his garden. He decided to build his very own budget hot tub from an old preformed pond base he'd dug out of his garden.

A 65-year-old salesman had no work during lockdown and wanted to find a new way to relax and reduce stress while sitting in his garden.

Paul Vaughan then proceeded to build his very own budget hot tub using an old, pre-formed pond base that he dug out from his garden.

The water is cleaned using the old fish pond filtration system, which he runs through 20m of hose pipe sitting on his concrete path, to heat the water.

And just for a laugh, Paul added an outboard motor—to create swirling jacuzzi bubbles—and he’s been relaxing in the homemade tub in Bridgend, Wales, every day since.

(He took a picture of the outboard motor just once for a joke, but, of course “for safety reasons” he never sits in the tub at the same time as the prop is spinning.)

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Photos courtesy of SWNS

“I originally used the material as a fish pond years ago, and kept it with the intention of once again having a fish pond. But with the fabulous weather, and not much to do at the moment as a result of COVID, I decided to make a hot tub.”

“It took me a couple of days to get it sorted, but that was because originally the water was too cold to get into!”

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Paul’s creation took just half-a-day to build and he said he is pretty pleased with his efforts, especially because the empty pond was being used as a log stand before he got to work on the hot tub.

Paul heats the water by running it through about 21 yards of hose pipe (20 m) sitting on top of a concrete path, while the sunshine heats the water.

“It is not very efficient, but slowly, very slowly, it does the job.”

And, all at a cost that can’t be beat!

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