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Debt Activists Cancel $10 Million in Student Loan Debt After Buying it All for a Penny on the Dollar

From Atlanta comes an uplifting story of nearly 3,000 students getting a brighter future after a debtor organization bought $10 million in student loans for the purpose of canceling it.

The total cost of the purchase was one-and-a-quarter pennies for every dollar of debt—with the low value reflecting the likelihood of the university in question—Morehouse College—of recovering it.

The purchase from the Historically Black College wiped out the debt for 2,777 students, amounting to around $3,600 dollars of debt per student from the Fall 2022 school term.

Debt Collective and the Rolling Jubilee Fund were responsible for the purchase which amounted to the largest in the organizations’ histories.

“This nearly $10M of student debt cancellation will put thousands of black folks in a better position to be able to save for retirement, purchase a home, or start a small business,” Braxton Brewington, spokesperson for the Debt Collective, said in a statement.

These kinds of non-profit debt relief purchases have become less-than-rare in the US, where public and private debt levels are as high as they have ever been. With so much debt burdening students, consumers, and patients, it has become a valuable charitable service to seek to alleviate these by negotiating flat prices for the creditors’ claims.

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As GNN reported in 2022 in the case of medical debt, large hospital bills are often so costly, that hospitals know from the get-go that they will probably never see the full amount repaid. As such, a fast cash injection is often a lucrative prospect for hospital bookkeepers, who have been making such deals for pennies on the dollar to RIP Medical Debt—an organization similar to Debt Collective, but which has canceled $6.7 billion with a ‘b’ in American medical debt so far.

MORE DEBT-RELIEF: North Carolina Church Raises Thousands to Pay Off Cafeteria Lunch Debt For Every County School

Student debt, because most of it is guaranteed by the government and is by law unescapable even through bankruptcy, is often even less valuable to creditors, and so Debt Collective and the Rolling Jubilee have been able to make these extraordinary purchases often for less even than RIP Medical Debt can.

Last year, the two organizations bought $1.7 million in student loan debt from Bennett College, another Historically Black College in Greensboro, North Carolina, for just fifty grand, according to Truthout. 

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A Teenager Was Having a Stroke but His Dog Helped Save Him, Explains Doctor

Gabriel and his dog Axel - courtesy of Amanda Tanner.
Gabriel and his dog Axel – courtesy of Amanda Tanner.

From the Washington Post comes the story of a family border collie whose 5:30 a.m. wake-up call saved the future, and possibly the life, of a family member.

Daines and Amanda were woken up by their dog Axel early on a Saturday morning in their home in Spring, Texas, and they couldn’t remember a time when he so desperately wanted to go outside, or so they thought.

However, once taken downstairs by Daines, Axel began frantically clawing at the bedroom door of Amanda’s son Gabriel. Inside, Gabriel was already awake—because he was having a stroke on the left side of his brain.

The 17-year-old Gabriel had had a headache early in the day he remembered, but it went away shortly after posing for his senior year school pictures in a black suit and bowtie. Coming home, he played some video games and then went to sleep, but woke up around 5:00, walked into the living room, felt he couldn’t move his right arm, fell over, watched the objects in the room seem to magnify, and decided to go back to sleep.

Daines, upon hearing some of this from a visibly befuddled Gabriel with slurred speech, rushed him to a Memorial Hermann Health System hospital in Houston where at approximately 6:30 a.m., doctors informed the family Gabriel was having a stroke after a blood vessel broke in his brain and cut off oxygen to millions of neurons.

“It’s amazing how adamant a dog was knowing something’s going on,” said Sabih Effendi, a neurosurgeon who treated Gabriel, and who told the family that if Axel hadn’t intervened when he did, Gabriel might have been mute, wheelchair-bound, or worse.

As it has happened, Gabriel’s physical, speech, and behavioral therapy has restored much of his previous abilities. The goalkeeper for his high school soccer team regained his ability to walk, use his right arm to play his Nintendo Switch, talk clearly, and complete algebra problems on his laptop.

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He told The Washington Post he hopes to finish homeschooling this year and go to school for engineering next year, as well as enroll for next year’s squad and hopefully hold down the number 1 shirt between the posts.

Dogs have been known to detect strokes in people. Regarding certain chemicals, the special vomeronasal organ in their noses can detect changes in human physiology, which may include blood pressure. The American Heart Association has found that people living alone with a dog had a 27% better chance of surviving a stroke than those living alone.

MORE DOG NEWS LIKE THIS: Tiny Yorkshire Terrier Detects Breast Cancer in Woman, Jumping Up and Down on Her Chest in Alarm

As to the hero of the story, Amanda said that Axel has hardly left Gabriel’s side since the September 8th discharge from the hospital. She has commissioned a medal to hang around the front of Axel’s collar in honor of his life-saving support of her son.

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A Zoo Is Fighting to Bring Lioness and Her 3 Cubs Abandoned in War-Torn Ukraine to Britain

Aysa and her cubs - credit Yorkshire Wildlife Park, via SWNS
Aysa’s three cubs – credit Yorkshire Wildlife Park, via SWNS

Zoo animals are always in great danger during wartime, but the Yorkshire Wildlife Park has been working to get a lioness mother and her three cubs from Ukraine’s capital of Kyiv to the safety of their zoo’s sprawling enclosure for months.

Safe but not sound, they were transferred from Kyiv to a holding facility in Poznan, Western Poland, where they remain to this day.

Pregnant lioness Aysa was left in a deserted private zoo in the Eastern Donetsk region of Ukraine. She was eventually rescued and transferred to a temporary sanctuary near Kyiv, where she gave birth to her three adorable cubs Emi, Santa, and Teddi.

“The lions were so distressed when I first encountered them,” said Deputy Section Head of Carnivores for Yorkshire Wildlife Park, Colin Northcott. “The cubs… cowered on top of each other in the corner and often hissed and spat loudly at me.”

“Seeing them so terrified made me feel desperately sorry for them, but by the end of the week that I was there, they were starting to trust me more so I felt terrible leaving them behind.”

Far from anywhere a southern African lion would feel at home, the Yorkshire zoo nevertheless hosts rescued lions in a 260-acre enclosure called Lion Country, and had previously rescued 13 lions from a Romanian zoo in 2010 and brought them to Yorkshire.

OTHER ZOO RESCUES: ‘World’s Loneliest Lion’ Returns to Africa After Years Alone in Zoo–WATCH His First Steps

The story of these lions, which were kept in concrete holding pens, touched the hearts of people across Yorkshire and the surrounding areas, and a public appeal raised $175,000—a staggering amount by conservation standards—to build a new reserve to house these poor animals, which would become Lion Country.

There is currently no arrival date for Asya and her cubs to come to the zoo, but staff are working with Polish authorities to arrange the necessary paperwork, and Colin has continued his work with Asya and her cubs by playing them sounds from the park, which has more than 400 animals in it, to get them accustomed to their new surroundings.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: After Spending Life at Roadside Zoo, Chimps Share Emotional Hug in New Sanctuary Home

“When Lion Country was built for the rescue of the 13 lions from Romania in 2010, it was built with the help of donations from people who loved animals and wanted to help rescue the animals,” said John Minion, CEO of Yorkshire Wildlife Park.

“It was always meant to be a welfare facility and now we are in a position where we can offer a home to these poor lions and hope that we can make a difference to their lives, just as we did for the Romanian lions in 2010.”

WATCH the story from the park… 

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Elon Musk to Bring Back 1st Drive-in Movie Theater to LA at Tesla’s New Supercharging Station

Credit - Ed Howard of HowardModels - retrieved from X
Credit – Ed Howard of HowardModels – retrieved from X

Have you ever been sitting at an EV charging station and wished you could throw on a movie or something while you wait? Well, Tesla is providing such an opportunity to the denizens of Los Angeles.

Tesla Motors recently received permission to break ground on a 1950s-style drive-in movie theater and diner where the cinema parking comes with Tesla fast-charging stations.

The permits allow for 30-some charging stalls, two outdoor movie screens, and a restaurant with rooftop seating all to be built on 7001 W Santa Monica Blvd. in LA, and Tesla fanatics have combed through the company’s recent press material to extract as many teasers and hint-drops as possible.

In fact, Tesla owners have been expecting such a project for some time, as Elon Musk tweeted about it back in 2018.

Then in 2021, Elon tweeted that he had a “major new Supercharger station coming to Santa Monica soon! Hoping to have 50’s diner & 100 best movie clips playing too. Thanks Santa Monica city!”

Tesla’s supercharging network is the most extensive and advanced currently deployed in the country, but Musk has theorized that a way to alleviate consumer concerns about the time it takes to charge an electric vehicle during one’s busy hours would be to add leisure and hospitality features around the charging stations.

MORE GOOD EV IDEAS: Swedish Firm Will be Mailing Flat-Packed Car with Top Speed of 55 for Urban Commuting

Once a classic American weeknight spot, there are only 320 or so drive-in theaters left in the country where there were once 4,000.

Despite California having more than almost any other state still in operation, there are no drive-in theaters in LA, the city where most of the movies shown at such establishments are made.

WOULD You Or A Friend Take Your EV To A Drive-In Charger?

“He that dares not grasp the thorn should never crave the rose.” – Anne Bronte

By Daniel R. Blume, CC license

Quote of the Day: “He that dares not grasp the thorn should never crave the rose.” – Anne Bronte

Photo by: Daniel R. Blume

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

By Daniel R. Blume, CC license

Large Study of 80,000 Migraine Sufferers Uncovers Commonalities That May Lead to Potential Treatment

By Matteo Vistocco
By Matteo Vistocco

Migraine sufferers have been offered fresh hope after research discovered potential new ways of treating the debilitating headaches.

Around one in five women, one in 16 men, and one in 11 children have regular migraines – with attacks three times more prevalent in women.

Now, an international study of the genetics of migraine has provided new insights into the biology behind the attacks.

Scientists say it will enable detection of rare variants protecting against migraine, opening an avenue for the potential development of new drugs to treat the problem.

An international team of researchers, led by deCODE Genetics in Iceland, analyzed genetic data from more than 1.3 million participants of which 80,000 had migraine.

The scientists focused on detecting sequence variants associated with the two main subtypes of migraine: migraine with aura, often referred to as “classical migraine”, and migraine without aura.

The results highlight several genes that affect one of the migraine subtypes over the other—pointing to new biological pathways that could be targeted for therapeutic developments.

Although recent advances have been made in studies of the genetics and underlying biology of migraine and new treatments recently developed that are effective for many migraine sufferers, they do not work for all types of migraine.

The study, published today in the journal Nature Genetics, discovered associations with 44 variants, 12 of which are new.

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Importantly, a rare variant pointing to the KCNK5 gene, confers large protection against severe migraine and brain aneurysms—either identifying a common pathway between the two diseases or suggesting that some cases of early brain aneurysms may be misclassified as migraine.

“Four novel migraine-with-aura associations were revealed and 13 variants associated primarily with migraine without aura,” explained Professor Kari Stefansson. “Of particular interest were three rare variants with large effects pointing to distinct pathologies underlying different types of migraine.

“Thus, a rare frameshift variant in the PRRT2 gene confers a large risk of migraine with aura and with another brain disease, epilepsy, but not of migraine without aura.”

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In SCN11A, a gene known to play a key role in pain sensation, the scientists detected several rare loss-of-function variants associated with protection effects against migraine, while a common missense variant in the same gene is associated with modest risk of migraine.

“What makes our study unique is that it includes large datasets from sequenced individuals enabling detection of rare variants protecting against migraine, potentially opening an avenue for development of novel drug targets,” said the Professor, and CEO of deCODE genetics.

MORE: Some Myths About Sulfites, Wine, and Headaches

(Contributing writer: Stephen Beech/SWNS)

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Citizen Scientist Spots Eerie Face on Jupiter: ‘Just in Time for Halloween’

View of Jupiter – Vladimir Tarasov / NASA
Eerie view of Jupiter – Vladimir Tarasov / NASA

An astronomy fan has spotted a ghoulish face on Jupiter using images from NASA’s Juno spacecraft.

Vladimir Tarasov noticed an unusual pattern in storm clouds on the largest planet in the solar system.

The ‘citizen scientist’ processed data from the spacecraft to reveal what appears to be contorted eyes, nose and a mouth.

“Just in time for Halloween,” the space agency exclaimed on October 25th. “NASA’s Juno mission spots eerie “face” on Jupiter.”

“During its 54th close flyby of Jupiter, the NASA mission captured this view of an area in the giant planet’s far northern regions called Jet N7.

“The image shows turbulent clouds and storms along Jupiter’s terminator, the dividing line between the day and night sides of the planet.

Vladimir Tarasov made the image using raw data from the JunoCam instrument, which are available for the public to peruse or process into image products.

At the time the raw image was taken, the Juno spacecraft was about 4,800 miles (about 7,700 kilometers) above Jupiter’s cloud tops, at a latitude of about 69 degrees north.

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“The low angle of sunlight highlights the complex topography of features in this region, which scientists have studied to better understand the processes playing out in Jupiter’s atmosphere,” NASA wrote.

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Top 30 Most Delightful Things That Happen Unexpectedly–Like Finding Cash in Jeans or Compliments from Strangers

Simone Uriartt
Simone Uriartt

A new poll compiled the top 30 most unexpectedly delightful things to happen, including pulling cash from the pocket of an old pair of jeans, getting a surprise refund, and receiving a compliment from a stranger.

The survey of 2,000 adults, found 36 percent love it when someone lets them jump the line in a supermarket, and when you find a treasured item that had been lost.

Driving through a run of green lights, catching a whiff of a familiar smell from your childhood, and hearing your favorite song pop up on the radio, also feature in the top 30 list.

(Imagine feeling double the joy if you run into all green lights while your favorite track begins to play!)

Commissioned by Alpen Delight, a spokesperson for the snack brand said: “The nicest things are those which are totally unexpected, and they don’t have to be big things—sometimes little moments lead to big smiles.

Respondents guessed that unexpectedly delightful things happen to them an average of twice per week, and it automatically puts them in a good mood.

But it’s not just being on the receiving end of these unplanned surprises that brings the most joy. 77 percent of those polled find making others happy improves their mood, too—which is why 36 percent try to do this as often as they can.

Such acts include smiling as they walk past another person (52%), just being there to listen to a friend (50%), and telling someone they’re proud of them (38%).

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Nearly four in ten have cheered up others by making the effort to cook someone a meal, or by letting another driver into their lane while on the road.

And a generous 19% find joy in paying for the meal while out for dinner.

84 percent of those surveyed by market research firm OnePoll, said these moments in life restore a little hope in humanity. And half say they’re more inclined to pay such moments forward, if they’ve been on the receiving end themselves.

“It’s good to see how people enjoy delivering, and not just receiving, lovely surprises,” said the Alpen Delight spokesman.

TOP 30 UNEXPECTED MOMENTS OF DELIGHT:

1. Finding money in a coat or jeans pocket
2. Getting a surprise refund
3. A compliment from a stranger
4. Someone letting you go ahead of them in line at a store
5. When the radio plays your favorite song
6. Receiving a bonus at work
7. Constant green lights on the road
8. Hearing your baby’s first word
9. Your partner randomly showing affection
10. When someone actually understands what you’re talking about
11. A familiar smell from your childhood
12. A loved one randomly telling you they’re proud of you
13. Finding a treasured lost item
14. Waking up before your alarm, and getting to sleep for longer
15. Getting upgraded – on an airplane or at a hotel
16. Thinking it’s Thursday, but it’s actually Friday
17. When a child starts a conversation with you
18. Receiving a postcard
19. Hitting the exact number when getting gasoline
20. Getting home from work and finding someone else has cooked dinner
21. A work meeting getting cancelled last minute because the boss isn’t in
22. Seeing a funny car license plate
23. Getting asked for ID when you’re way over 21
24. When you’re brought breakfast in bed
25. When you and your friend say the same thing at the same moment
26. When your teenager wants to spend quality time with you
27. Your neighbor bringing over a baked good
28. Bumping into an old schoolteacher – and they recognize you
29. Catching the eye of your favorite artist during their performance
30. Witnessing a proposal in public

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One of the World’s Rarest Animals is Born – Zoo Conservationists Bolster Population of Only Hundreds Left in Wild

Philippine spotted deer –Chester Zoo/SWNS
Rare Philippine spotted deer born at Chester Zoo
– SWNS

A Philippine spotted deer, one of the world’s rarest animals, has been born to the delight of conservationists at Chester Zoo in England.

The adorable fawn was born in September weighing 4.4 pounds (2kg).
Now standing 12 inches tall (30cm), he has taken his first steps outdoors in their new enclosure alongside his doting parents—Nova and Cosmos.

As part of a special breeding program, the birth is said to provide a much-needed boost to an ultra-rare species classified as ‘highly endangered’ in the wild.

The tiny new arrival is part of conservation efforts between zoos in Europe, set up at the request of the Philippine government to ensure future survival of the species.

Zookeepers have decided to name him after the constellation of stars, Hercules.

“After eagerly waiting 240 days for his arrival, it was a huge relief when we saw a little bundle of fur curled up next to mum Nova one morning,” said Emma Evison, team manager at the zoo.

“She’s a great mum and has been doing everything perfectly so far – feeding him every few hours and keeping him right by her side.”

 

The new arrival is part of a vital conservation breeding program between zoos in Europe, set up at the request of the Philippine government to ensure the future survival of the Philippine spotted deer –Chester Zoo/SWNS

“We have a team tradition of naming newborn deer within the theme of ‘space’ and, given the importance of our new arrival to his species, we decided to name him Hercules, after the constellation of stars.

“Philippine spotted deer are incredibly rare and their decline has, for the most part, flown under the radar and only a few hundred now remain in the wild.

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“Every birth is therefore absolutely critical in boosting the safety-net population in conservation zoos across Europe.”

Stuart Young, regional field program manager for South East Asian Islands at the zoo, added “Philippine spotted deer have already disappeared across many parts of the Visayan islands, where they were once found roaming in large herds.

“Hunting and deforestation has led to the animals now only being found on two small islands, the islands of Panay and Negros.

LOOK AT THIS WILD BIRD: Prehistoric Bird Once Thought to Be Extinct Returns to New Zealand Wild

As a result of conservation efforts, however, 32 Philippine spotted deer were safely reintroduced into a protected nature reserve in 2020.

“Since then, a number of births in the wild has almost doubled the population and we’re very happy to report that they are thriving.”

Hercules still has lots of growing to do but his caretakers hope he will eventually live up to his moniker, and help carry the species on his spotted back.

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“When all else is lost, the future still remains.” – Christian Nestell Bovee

Quote of the Day: “When all else is lost, the future still remains.” – Christian Nestell Bovee

Photo by: Hadija

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Local Car Community Comes Together in Two Days to Form Parade of 83 Drivers for Stranger’s Birthday – WATCH

Video by crazycarchik on YouTube
Video by crazycarchik on YouTube

A devoted single mom was looking for a budget friendly way to give her son a special birthday—so she reached out on Facebook to the local car community and their response left her speechless.

Mikayla Freeman was hoping to urge a few motor enthusiasts to form ‘a car parade’ down their street near Nashville.

“My son’s 8th birthday is Sunday, he’s a MAJOR car guy,” she wrote.

The plea was shared 550 times and Mikayla’s wish was granted.

Within two days, it sparked the generosity of 83 drivers who showed up at noon on a recent Sunday.

With large mylar balloons in the front yard, Tristan was brought outside to witness an endless stream of gorgeous cars tooting their horns and passing birthday wishes and gifts through the open windows.

Over 100 strangers showed up in the LaVergne neighborhood to surprise the 8-year-old. Especially welcome were those driving Challenger Hellcats and McLarens, Tristan’s two favorite cars.

A car videographer Tia May wanted to shine a positive light on the car community, so she filmed the event (see the video below).

STRANGER KINDNESS: She Was About to End it All, Until a Stranger She’d Never Meet Told Her ‘Don’t Jump’

“I was a Veteran who struggled with mental and physical health issues for decades,” she told GNN. “The car community has changed my life in a very positive way.

“I reignited my passion for cars and started to connect heavily with the car community—that’s when everything changed. I met a ton of amazing people, many of which now feel like family.”

MATURE BEYOND YEARS: Boy Stops at Random House to Leave a Pep Talk on Stranger’s Doorbell Cam (Watch)

She started racing and shoots footage in “drift cars” for her new YouTube channel.

Watch the caring community make a little boy’s day…

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A Sculpture Gifted to Couple Who Gave Him Shelter During a Storm 68 Years Ago Sells for $100,000

Stacey's Auctioneers Valuers, via SWNS
Stacey’s Auctioneers Valuers, via SWNS

One rainy day in Bedfordshire, England, Peter Richards and his wife noticed a pair of lads shivering under the eaves of their country cottage after getting a soaking.

Inviting them inside to dry off and have some tea, one of the two young men would eventually give Richards a ceramic sculpture of a black and white cat, which looked similar to their pet “Moggy” at the time, as a way of repaying the kindness from that day.

Now, that child-life sculpture has sold for a small fortune, because its maker was none other than Sir David Hockney, the most celebrated English artist of the 20th century.

David Hockney and his friend Norman Stevens from Bradford College of Art were hitchhiking to London to visit exhibitions at the time of the fateful encounter.

Hockney went on to have a long-lasting friendship with the Richards.

Owner Peter Richards with the cat – credit Stacey’s Auctioneers & Valuers, via SWNS

The sculpture, which could be Hockney’s first ceramic creation, is one of six cats produced by the artist in 1955 while still at art school.

It measures about two dozen inches long and demonstrates his incredible skill with three-dimensional forms.

READ ALSO: Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour Auctions Off 126 Guitars and Raises $21 Million for Climate Change Battle

When the sculpture went up for auction recently, it didn’t quite reach the record for a Hockney work of £91 million, but it did eclipse the previous sale record of £100,000 ($121,000) set by a similar Hockney sculpture in June when it was sold for about $134,000

The piece also came with drawings and plans for the piece, along with letters and cards sent to the Richards by the artist over the years.

Hockney has long had a fascination with cats, and they have been a significant motif in some of his major works.

MORE INTERESTING AUCTION STORIES: The Painting Paid for Grilled Cheese Sandwiches 50 Years Ago – Now Earns the Restaurant Thousands

“This was a fantastic result for the vendor who was present in the room and was auctioning the Hockney items to benefit his grandchildren,” said Mark Stacey, from Stacey’s Auctioneers & Valuers who sold the item.

Peter Richards is in his 90s, said he’d decided now was the right time to sell the ornament to help the younger generations of his family.

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Explorers Become First Ever to Row 2,000 Miles of the Arctic’s Northwest Passage–Led by a Texan

The Arctic Cowboys at the end of their journey. credit - West Hansen
The Arctic Cowboys at the end of their journey. credit – West Hansen

Described as “one of the last great ‘firsts'” the passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific through the Canadian Arctic was, for the first time ever, rowed by an expedition of 3 men and 1 woman.

West Hansen, Eileen Visser, Mark Agnew, and Jeff Wueste, who together styled themselves the “Arctic Cowboys,” set off in July and also became the first to make the crossing with kayaks in a single season, with the team needing just 83 wet, frigid, and largely grueling days to complete the journey of 1,600 miles.

62-year-old Wast Hansen is a legendary endurance kayaker and adventurer. He once paddled the entire 4,000-mile path of the Amazon River from source to sea, a feat he replicated on the Volga years later. Both experiences informed his organizing of this expedition.

This was an altogether different feat, however, and one that has been several years in the making.

The Northwest Passage has been crossed in boats many times before. In 1990, it was traversed by Jonathan Waterman, an explorer who used almost every mode of non-motorized transport you can think of.

In 2018, Hansen was putting the Arctic Cowboys team together and hoped to raise $70,000 for the expedition from sponsors. With just $10,000 accumulated, COVID-19 and weather delayed the trip until 2022, when he made his first attempt along with Wueste and another paddler.

“Primarily, the wind is the biggest concern,” Hansen told Texas Monthly prior to his 2022 attempt. “We’re prepared for snow and ice and rain, but the wind will create choppy waves and difficult paddling conditions.”

Severe weather completely interrupted their trip, and it almost ruined this year’s expedition as well, pinning them down at the entrance of the Passage near Baffin Bay for 2 weeks mostly on account of moving sea ice.

(Left to right) West Hansen, Eileen Wisser, Mark Agnew, and Jeff Wueste. released by Barbara Edington

Throughout their voyage they suffered perpetually from the elements, with Mark Agnew, who became the first Scot and the first Brit to make the crossing with a paddle, saying his feet essentially never warmed up the whole trip.

“The biggest challenge was the sea ice,” Agnew told the BBC, saying their early July start meant that a lot of the ocean was still frozen. “We became trapped in the ice a lot. There was this one occasion in particular where we were trapped in the ice and two icebergs began to ram together with us in between. I thought we were going to be crushed to death.”

OTHER GREAT FEATS OF EXPLORING: 65-Year-old Paddles Into Record Books With Epic 6800-mi Solo Kayak Quest–From Tip of Canada to Florida and Back

According to a blog post shared by Barbara Edington, expedition manager and Hansen’s sister on Monday, the final sixteen miles as the team approached Cape Bathurst on the other side of the remote Northern Territory, were the most harrowing. They involved terrifying 15-foot waves, and a long dark slog through freezing mud and water in the falling snow to find a campsite at the end of the day.

But there was beauty too. They often found themselves looking at beluga whales, narwhals, polar bears, shaggy musk oxen, and caribou. Several times the green of the Aurora Borealis was the backdrop to their paddling.

MORE ROWING CHALLENGES: 23-Year-Old Rows Solo 3,000 Miles Across Atlantic Setting Race Record for Female

At one point a polar bear sat on their tent wall which caused Agnew and another paddler to run outside and begin to scream and throw stones at the beast until it “sauntered off” being previously neither interested in eating them, amazingly, nor in running away.

“It has yet to settle in. I’m still in the mindset of getting the team safely back to their homes,” Hansen, now thirty pounds lighter than when he started, wrote Monday in a text message he sent from a GPS device.

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After Fracking is Halted, the Site’s Drill Hole is Now A Source of Clean Geothermal Energy

Gateshead facility - Britain's Coal Authority
A similar heating station in Gateshead – Britain’s Coal Authority

In England’s North Yorkshire, locals opposed a fracking project vigorously enough to get the whole thing canceled, but the almost 2-mile deep borehole had already been made.

Rather than simply letting it lie as an ugly testament to the picket line, Third Energy converted it into a geothermal heating station prototype that could heat 300 homes in the village of Kirby Misperton if commercially developed.

Every 3,000 feet or so one drills down into the Earth, the rock warms by 54°F or thereabouts. At 2 miles, the rock is very hot, and Third Energy can pump water to those depths to heat it up naturally before drawing it back up to the surface and using it to power home radiators and water heaters.

In volcanically active regions, supercritical water or steam can power turbines to generate electricity. Britain has power stations like this, but in the case of Kirby Misperton, it’s just heating homes and water taps.

However, it’s doing so in a more environmentally friendly way than channeling gas or using electric ventilation and heating oil.

When water is used in homes and loses its heat, it’s pumped back down to the bowels of the Earth to reheat where that force then brings the already-heated water to the surface in a cycle that requires almost no electricity.

“When we were campaigning, we had to say what the solution was,” said Steve Mason, then-head of anti-fracking group Frack Free United, and now director of Third Energy. “You can’t just say ‘No, no, no’ all the time. We need to be telling people this can be done and this is a solution.”

Years of European governments hounding fossil fuel companies with regulations and promises that they will be replaced by renewable energy has driven the price of home heating on the continent and in Britain incredibly high. The War in Ukraine and the destruction of the Nord Stream II pipeline didn’t help either.

Yet despite this, Third Energy’s managing director Russell Howe doesn’t see his firm going back to natural gas or the prices they’re no commanding.

MORE GEOTHERMAL ADVANCEMENTS: The Perfect Energy Source Is Already Here – Endless Geothermal Is Poised for Release From Deep in the Earth

“I think once you’ve seen what the potential is and you see people in the community come and feel the radiator and see the excitement, there’s no interest in the company going back to fossil fuels,” Howe told Sky News.

Per Sky News, there are 680 wells drilled for fossil fuels in Britain that could be converted into these geothermal heating stations.

MORE GEOTHERMAL ADVANCEMENTS: Geothermal Power is Finally a Reality After the Next-Generation Breakthrough of Carbon-Free Energy in Nevada

It has recently been discovered that deep in Britain’s network of abandoned coal mines, water has been heated to useable temperatures by the Earth’s core, and it too can be utilized in home heat pumps.

One such project is already heating a host of commercial real estate and 350 apartments in the town of Gateshead.

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“To be free is to have achieved your life.” – Tennessee Williams

Quote of the Day: “To be free is to have achieved your life.” – Tennessee Williams

Photo by: Ken Brown, CC License

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

Tai Chi Can Curb Parkinson’s Disease Symptoms for Years and Lower Needed Drug Doses–Study

credit - Kristoffer Trolle, CC 2.0.
credit – Kristoffer Trolle, CC 2.0.

Tai Chi, a traditional Chinese martial art involving sequences of slow controlled movements meant to cultivate one of the three kinds of vital energy, called qi, was found to slow the progression of Parkinson’s disorder in 147 seniors.

Patients who already had the debilitating disorder and who took up Tai Chi also needed lower doses of the required drugs, according to the findings published by the BMJ Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry.

The disease, characterized by slowness of movement, resting tremors, plus stiff and inflexible muscles, is the fastest-growing neurological condition in the world, with the number of those affected projected to reach nearly five million by 2030 in China alone, and 1.2 million in the US.

There is no cure as yet for Parkinson’s, and while drugs can improve symptoms, they don’t treat all the manifestations of the disease.

Any visitor to China will have undoubtedly seen old folks doing Tai Chi in the park. The slow coordinated movements are a favorite of those trying to keep themselves limber in their silver years, especially in winter.

Previously published research suggests that Tai Chi eases Parkinson’s symptoms in the short term, but whether that improvement could be sustained over the long term wasn’t known.

To find out, Chinese researchers monitored two groups of patients with Parkinson’s for over five years from January 2016 to June 2021.

One group of 147 patients practiced Tai Chi twice a week for an hour, aided by the provision of classes to improve their technique.

The other group of 187 patients continued with their standard care but didn’t practice Tai Chi.

Disease severity was formally assessed in all the participants at the start of the monitoring period, and disease progression, including increases in the need for medication, was then monitored once a year until 2021.

MORE POSITIVE PARKINSON’S DEVELOPMENTS: New Blood Test Could Diagnose Parkinson’s Before it Begins Damaging the Nervous System

A variety of other symptoms were also monitored, such as sleep quality and autonomic nervous system activity.

“Disease progression was slower at all monitoring points in the Tai Chi group, as assessed by three validated scales to assess overall symptoms, movement, and balance,” said study author Dr. Gen Li from Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine.

“The number of patients who needed to increase their medication in the comparison group was also significantly higher than it was in the Tai Chi Group. Cognitive function deteriorated more slowly in the Tai Chi group as did other non-movement symptoms, while sleep and quality of life continuously improved,” he added.

The prevalence of complications was significantly lower in the Tai Chi group than in the comparison group.

Dr. Li said falls, dizziness, and back pain were the three side effects reported by study participants, but they were all “significantly lower” in the Tai Chi group.

MORE NEWS LIKE THIS: Get Your Body Moving to Put the Brakes on Early Parkinson’s, Study Says

“Our study has shown that Tai Chi retains the long-term beneficial effect on [Parkinson’s disease], indicating the potential disease-modifying effects on both motor and non-motor symptoms, especially gait, balance, autonomic symptoms, and cognition,” said Dr. Li.

“The long-term beneficial effect could prolong the time without disability, leading to a higher quality of life, a lower burden for caregivers, and less drug usage.”

Tai Chi isn’t as complicated as it might look like. There are fundamental movements that flow in and out of one another to make it seem that there are many different movements when the basics are just eight forms.

As much yoga as there is on the internet, there are also plenty of Tai Chi lessons and practices.

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When Builders in Maui Constructed Tiny Homes for Man’s Family, it Grew into Crowdfunded Rehousing Project

William Fincher (second from left) standing on part of his new home built and supplied by local builder Juan Ricci (center). credit - Andreas Alfaro, GoFundMe
William Fincher (second from left) standing on part of his new home built and supplied by local builder Juan Ricci (center). credit – Andreas Alfaro, GoFundMe

Buried under the 24-hour news cycles of the last few months, recovery in Lahaina is progressing, one tiny house at a time.

William Fincher, an owner of two restaurants in the historic Maui town which tragically burned down this August, is receiving help from neighbors and friends to build a pair of tiny homes for his family of a wife, two kids, and two dogs.

Fincher lost both restaurants and his home in the fires, but within three or four days, local builder Juan Ricci was ordering materials to help the Fincher family construct the tiny houses. He did it all from his own pocket until the build team, including Fincher, Ricci, and some more friends had to set up a GoFundMe to look for the money.

Javier Barberi, a close friend, told Good Morning America in no uncertain terms that Fincher was Lahaina through and through, and he simply had to stay in order to help rebuild and recover the spirit of the town. Barberi gave Fincher space on his land to build.

With Barberi’s help and Ricci’s instruction, the tiny homes started coming together. Fincher knew a bit about woodshop, but laying insulation, framing doors, and roofing, were all skills he didn’t have. Ricci and his workers provided free labor and instruction.

“He [Ricci] started building these homes out of the goodness of his own heart and paying everything out of pocket. He trusts that the money will come,” writes volunteer Andreas Alfaro on the GoFundMe page which has so far raised $13,000 of its goal of $100,000.

credit – Andreas Alfaro, GoFundMe

What started as a few guys coming together to support their neighbor in Fincher has turned into a bold grassroots effort to raise money to build small, long-term homes for displaced residents, and pay locals who lost their jobs in the fires to do it, with Ricci providing on-the-job training from 20 years experience building on Hawai’i.

MORE STORIES FROM LAHAINA: A 5-Year-Old’s Lemonade Stand in Seattle Raised Over $17,000 for Victims of Maui Wildfires

“That’s the idea, to raise some money and keep going and start paying the guys that have been working,” Ricci told GMA.

MORE STORIES FROM LAHAINA: Oprah And Dwayne Johnson Giving $1,200 Per Month To Maui Wildfire Survivors

“Lahaina is the best place in the world without a doubt, and now it’s still there,” said Fincher.

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Google Launches Tool to Predict Floods–That Already Aided in Early Evacuations in Chile

screenshot of the Flood Hub homepage
screenshot of the Flood Hub homepage

Google doesn’t just use satellite data and machine learning to help you find Vietnamese food in the city you’re visiting, it’s actively protecting developing countries from flooding.

This August, the Chilean areas of Constitucion and Maule witnessed devastating floods that left thousands homeless, but many were able to gather critical belongings and evacuate because Google sent out warnings 2 days in advance of the flooding through their Flood Hub modeling tool.

Riverine floods, when heavy rains cause rivers to overflow their banks, happen all over the world all the time, and are a little like the unsung villain of natural disasters.

It was long thought impossible to predict these foods because of the number of factors beyond simple weather reports and forecasts, such as soil composition, topography, potential infrastructure failings, and so on.

“This was really kind of a moonshot, in a way,” said Yossi Matias, vice president of engineering and research at Google. “Can we use machine learning and other technologies in order to try to predict floods at some level of accuracy that would be valuable?”

The answer is, since Flood Hub was launched in 2018 in India, yes, you can—very well in fact.

The baseline unit of analysis in the tool is thousands of detailed satellite images of waterways that can build a topographical understanding of the river’s course and gather scientific information on flooding rates, soil composition, history of erosion, and so on. This is then treated to a deep-learning program that creates flooding models based on the addition of weather forecasts and rainfall data.

The result is what they call their global hydrologic model, and has been in use across dozens of countries for the last five years, and was recently introduced in the US and Canada. This monsoon season in India and Bangladesh, Flood Hub sent out 45 million alerts.

“It allowed us to provide flood forecasting information even in places where the historical data is quite scarce,” Matias told Adele Peters of Fast Company Magazine, reporting on the tool.

OTHER SOPHISTICATED SYSTEMS LIKE THIS: NASA Technology to Map The Stars Could Now Help Save World’s Largest Fish

“For example, [we’re in] 23 countries in Africa, many of which actually don’t have enough data, but because we can learn the patterns of floods and then map them to places that have certain similarities, it allows them to get to the right level of quality that we needed.”

When Flood Hub predicts an oncoming flood, it has a variety of ways to send out alerts. Some countries receive alerts right on their phones similar to the Amber Alert system in the US, but in other cases it’s sent to government departments who may use their own lines of communication, even going so far as knocking door to door, or sending out WhatsApp messages.

MORE BIG TECH STORIES: Samsung Cuts Energy Usage of Their Computer Chips by 50% In Big Market Innovation

Google has also partnered with a disaster recovery NGO called Give Directly, which is pioneering a platform that allows them to send money directly to people who receive Flood Hub evacuation alerts, giving them funds to afford a relocation.

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Chicken Feathers Can Replace ‘Forever Chemicals’ in Renewable Hydrogen Fuel Cells, Lowering Cost

credit Ashlee Marie - Unsplash
credit Ashlee Marie – Unsplash

With a brilliant idea that could clear two hurdles in one leap for renewable energy sources, scientists at ETH Zurich have discovered a way to use chicken feathers to manufacture a critical component for hydrogen fuel cells.

Hydrogen fuel cells can generate both emissions-free energy and a portable fuel similar to diesel, but at the moment they are manufactured with so-called “forever chemicals” that are toxic in certain quantities and don’t biodegrade in any way.

On the other hand, chicken is an invaluable part of the food supply but comes with 40 million metric tons annually of feathers that are incinerated as a waste product that produces CO2 and other problematic gases as well.

This is where the team at ETH in collaboration with Nanyang Technological University in Singapore has come up with a brilliant solution of using the feathers instead of the chemicals, thereby sparing the environment on both ends in two different ways, and potentially lowering the cost of hydrogen adoption.

“I’ve devoted a number of years to researching different ways we can use food waste for renewable energy systems,” says Raffaele Mezzenga, Professor of Food and Soft Materials at ETH Zurich.

“Our latest development closes a cycle: we’re taking a substance that releases CO2 and toxic gases when burned and used it in a different setting: with our new technology it not only replaces toxic substances, but also prevents the release of CO2, decreasing the overall carbon footprint cycle,” he adds.

Fuel cells create hydrogen fuel by separating the hydrogen from the oxygen in water. At the heart of the fuel cell lies a semipermeable membrane that allows protons to pass through but leaves electrons behind to escape via an external circuit from the negatively charged anode to the positively charged cathode: thereby creating a current that can be harnessed for electricity.

CLOSING THE LOOP: Designer Works to Erect First Modern Village to Generate its Own Electricity–and Food–in 100% Sustainable Loop

Chicken feathers are made up of 90% keratin, a protein in our hair and fingernails that Mezzenga et al. converted to ultra-fine fibers called amyloid fibrils by breaking the feathers down in an environmentally friendly way. The fibrils can be used to make the membrane between the anode and cathode of the fuel cell three times cheaper than synthetic materials.

But better still, this fibril membrane can also be used to create pure hydrogen (as in H without the 2 and the O) which doesn’t exist on Earth naturally but which can be used like diesel fuel to power heavy machinery like planes and trains.

MORE HYDROGEN INNOVATION: Researchers Make ‘Giant Leap’ to Produce Affordable Renewable Hydrogen

In this case, a current is sent directly through water as part of a method called electrolysis. Under conditions inside the fuel cell, oxygen this time escapes at the positively charged anode and leaves hydrogen to exit at the negatively charged cathode. The membrane in this case allows protons to pass through even when it’s pure water, which typically isn’t conductive enough for electrolysis.

Per UTH Zurich press, the researchers’ next step will be to investigate how stable and durable their keratin membrane is and to improve it if necessary. The research team has already filed a joint patent for the membrane and is now looking for investors or companies to develop the technology further and bring it to market.

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“Where there is no vision, there is no hope.” – George Washington Carver

Quote of the Day: “Where there is no vision, there is no hope.” – George Washington Carver

Photo by: Alex Guillaume

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