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”You will never win if you never begin.” – Helen Rowland

Serghei Trofimov

Quote of the Day: ”You will never win if you never begin.” – Helen Rowland

Photo by: Serghei Trofimov

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?

Serghei Trofimov

 

GNN Readers Donate 20,000 Meals to Hungry Kids in Partnership With Nutrition Company

I wanted to update our loyal GNN readers about a wonderful milestone reached in our partnership with nutrition company LIVEDEN.

They make yummy green powder for your daily shakes (containing 12-14 servings of fruit and veggies in each scoop), but they also give back to the world, donating—for every package purchased—10 free meals to children in need.

So far, our GNN customers have provided over 20,000 meals for kids!

“LIVEDEN currently has a giving outreach in over 20 countries, and with the tremendous support of our wonderful GNN customers, over 20,000 meals have already been provided from the orders they placed,” said Heather Holker, CEO and Co-Founder of LIVEDEN.

“We’re just excited to be partnered with Good News Network to help these precious children in need. One child at a time, no one gets left behind.”

Since their inception in 2018, LIVEDEN has focused on giving back, using their strong ties in the health and nutrition industry, and a passion for helping everyone achieve their best health.

They provide GNN viewers with a discount of 15% OFF any one-time purchase on their website. Just use the promo code: GNN

GNN founder Geri Weis-Corbley says, “I mix it every morning with blueberries in a blender and feel so good knowing I’m maintaining my health—especially since I’m pretty bad about eating enough vegetables.”

How Do You Start Your Day?

“For energy, balanced blood sugar, gut health, vitamin and mineral levels, and hormones, we wanted to create an unparalleled nutritional product that would balance and stabilize the body in all these areas, while also making it affordable and convenient,” says Heather.

Working alongside top formulators in the nutrition industry they created a unique and powerful blend of superfoods. Over 60 precisely curated ingredients.

“When you balance the body it doesn’t crave,” she continued. “It loses inflammation, stored toxins and weight. You have lasting sustained energy, better mental clarity, and a body that simply functions optimally in all areas.”

LIVEDEN BALANCE contains powerful green superfoods like Organic Spirulina and Chlorella, all essential Vitamins and Minerals, pre and probiotics, 10 grams of vegetable and plant based protein, digestive enzymes, immune support, neural support, detoxification and liver support, powerful antioxidants to combat oxidative stress, adaptogen and hormone support (healthy body, health mind), all essentials for healthy hair, skin and nails.

It’s allergen-free, with no gluten, soy, dairy or nuts—and no artificial colors, flavors, preservatives or sweeteners.

Spinach smoothie

The company says it only sources the purest raw ingredients from inspected and approved suppliers, and tests all raw ingredients to ensure their purity. The finished product is “third-party” tested to ensure the highest quality that exceeds cGMP standards and FDA guidelines.

They offer a 60-DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE: “Love it, or it’s on us.” If you’re not satisfied with your LIVEDEN BALANCE Superfood simply contact them at [email protected] within 60 days of your first order for a full refund.

Not only do you receive a 15% discount when you use the Promo Code: GNN, a small commission will be paid to us at Good News Network to aid in our positive mission.

Hungry children will get 10 meals, too, which turns your nutritional dollars into a win-win-win.

One bag of LIVEDEN BALANCE costs $79 on Subscribe & Save (less than a daily cup of coffee, at $2.63 per day). But with the 15% discount for GNN customers using the Promo Code: GNN, your first bag would cost $67.15 ($2.24 per day). Your health is certainly worth it!

Hero Post Office Worker Saves Senior From Sending Thousands of Dollars to a Scammer

Joe Han

A postal worker in Scotland saved a vulnerable senior by foiling an attempted scam at the last minute—just before she mailed the swindler over $3000.

The scammers contacted her and claimed to be from her bank, saying there was “unusual activity on her account”. They told her she should withdraw all her savings and send it to an address so they could “deposit it into a new account”.

When the elderly woman came into the Paisley Post Office four days ago, manager Najma Mohammad noticed she was “visibly shook”.

They detailed the incident on their Facebook page, saying: “As the customer was known to us, we thought that it was out of character and asked what was in the package.”

The customer hesitated but told her it was money, worth three thousand, that she’d withdrawn from her bank.

Ms. Mohammad immediately told her it was likely to be a scam—and she should contact her bank to verify the information.

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All the while, the scammers kept calling her back. This time however, “Najma answered and they hung up.”

The bank confirmed that no such call of this type had or ever would be made regarding withdrawal of money.

The post office stressed that it’s important to let our elderly loved ones know about the variety of scams that are being perpetrated, so they don’t fall prey.

CHECK OUT THIS HERO: Taxi Driver Goes Out of His Way to Save Elderly Woman From Being Scammed Out of $25,000

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Molecule in Breast Milk Could Reduce Cerebral Palsy in Infants–By Boosting Brain Matter

Duke Health
Duke Health

About ten percent of babies born 8-weeks prematurely will develop cerebral palsy resulting from infections that damage nerve fibers deep in the brain.

While there is currently no treatment to help these infants avoid the outcome, new experiments using neonatal mice provide a possible roadmap.

Researchers at Duke Health in North Carolina identified a fatty molecule in breast milk that triggers a process in which stem cells in the brain produced new white matter, “reversing the injury”.

Assistant professor Eric Benner, M.D., Ph.D., in the Department of Pediatrics at Duke University School of Medicine, is the study’s corresponding author and called the finding promising.

“The fact that this molecule is already found in something that is safe for premature babies–breast milk–is extremely encouraging,” said Benner.

It’s already been proven that fats in breast milk benefit a child’s brain development, but there are many types of fats. This work has identified a lipid molecule in breast milk that promotes white matter development in the brain.

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“Now, we can begin to develop a therapy that isolates and delivers this lipid in a way that is safe for the unique challenges of these infants,” said Benner, who is one of the co-founders of Tellus Therapeutics, a Duke spinout company developed to bring this therapy from the bench into the neonatal intensive care unit.

An upcoming clinical trial will administer the identified fatty molecule intravenously to patients. This is because many of the infants who are part of this vulnerable population also have gastrointestinal issues and cannot safely be given milk or medication by mouth.

According to the study published this week in the journal Cell Stem Cell, the lipid molecule enters the brain and binds with stem cells there, encouraging them to become or produce a type of cell called oligodendrocytes.

The oligodendrocytes are like a hub that allow for the production of white matter in the central nervous system. This newly produced white matter in pre-term infants prevents the neurological damage that would otherwise impact the child’s ability to move—the hallmarks of cerebral palsy.

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“The timing of brain injury is extremely difficult to predict, thus a treatment that could be safely given to all preterm babies at risk would be revolutionary,” said Agnes Chao, M.D., a former fellow in the Division of Neonatology and first author of the paper.

“As a neonatologist, I’m so excited that I may be able to offer a treatment to families with babies that are affected by preterm brain injury who would otherwise have no other options,” Chao said.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, among others.

HAIL The Benefits of Breast Milk By Sharing The Discovery on Social Media…

Car Fanatic’s Roadtrip Reunites 90-year-old Vintage Austin With Every Previous Owner

Rupert Bevan's 97 year-old mother - SWNS
Rupert Bevan’s 97-year-old mother – SWNS

A car fanatic has taken an extraordinary road trip to reunite his vintage motorcar with every owner who had cared for it during its 90-year history.

Carl Slater bought the 1933 Austin 10 Saloon last February and became interested in its history.

Using its log book, he managed to track down the previous owners of the car on Facebook and started organizing a road trip to visit them all.

After a year of planning, Carl left his home in Manchester, England, traveling to Shropshire, where Elizabeth Morris became the car’s first owner, buying the Austin in 1933.

While he was there, the 53-year-old and wife also met Brian Denny, who had worked at E.J.Gittins garage when the car was brought in for repairs after 20 years on the road and two owners.

He visited the cottage near the garage where Elizabeth lived before her death in 1943.

“I managed to find out so much information—like that Elizabeth was an only child. It just kind of spiraled with people telling me information like where they lived before or where they were buried or what occupation they had.”

The dad-of-five then headed off to Ty-Draw Farm, a 45-minute drive into the hills, where two brothers used the car to travel to their local market to sell eggs. Carl drove the same route the brothers would have taken.

He said he nearly didn’t get up the hill, and at one point thought the old Austin must have had a muscle memory of the journey last traveled 80 years ago.

“We wondered if the car was getting deja vu as we slogged our way up. We tackled the hills at a slow and steady pace and only needed first gear once. I did think, if the car had thoughts, she would be saying ‘oh no, not again’.”

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Carl Slater (center) with his wife and Rupert Bevan – SWNS

Carl then visited Rupert Bevan, who came into possession of the car in 1968 after first passing his driver’s test.

By that time, the car was 35 years old, and was needing regular repairs. Rupert recalled driving south to London when the car broke down on the A5. That was the last time he saw the car after he left it on the side of the road—but he regaled Carl with many more tales.

“He told us stories of mechanical mishaps and his tangle with a cattle truck while running an errand for his mother,” a 97-year-old senior who is even older than the car. She became the next stop on their road trip—and it was a touching reunion for her and the classic car collector.

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“I’ll will never forget the look of surprise and joy on her face at seeing the old car again.”

This particular Austin Saloon was also featured “in quite a few scenes” of the 2016 film Dad’s Army, a WWII-era comedy that starred Catherine Zeta-Jones and Bill Nighty.

One can only imagine how many other fantastic stories we could learn from cars, if only they could talk.

SHARE THE IDEA With Other Vintage Car-Lovers on Social Media… 

“Forgiveness is the key to action and freedom.” – Hannah Arendt

Jay Antol

Quote of the Day: “Forgiveness is the key to action and freedom.” – Hannah Arendt

Photo by: Jay Antol

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?

2,000-year-old Roman House Uncovered in Malta Reveals Ancient History of Wealthy Society

IDEX IN Malta - Melite Civitas Romana Project / University of South Florida
IDEX IN Malta – Melite Civitas Romana Project / University of South Florida

A research team from the University of South Florida has discovered a 2,000 year-old house that once belonged to a wealthy family—still in exceptional condition—during an excavation in Malta.

They collaborated with scientists from around the world on the Melite Civitas Romana Project, uncovering what life was like 2,000 years ago when Romans ruled Malta, the island in the Mediterranean Sea that was a center for both military staging and maritime trade.

Nestled in the heart of the ancient city of Melite, the once lavishly decorated mansion, traditionally known as Roman Domus, had been covered by centuries of soil.

“In use between the 1st century BCE and 2nd century CE, the Domus was elegantly decorated with mosaic floors, wall frescoes and marble decorations,” said Davide Tanasi, the professor and director of the University’s Institute for Digital Exploration (IDEx), who lead the team of six students.

“During the Roman Empire, it was certainly used as a residence by a representative of the emperor or some very wealthy individual very close to the imperial court.”

After a summer of digging, processing and cleaning artifacts of the Roman Domus, the team discovered a portion of a previously unknown house adjacent to the domus with nearly 10-foot-tall walls, a height Tanasi says is unheard of for the Roman residential units usually found in the Mediterranean area.

Juliana Whittingslow and Sarah Hassam holding a piece of frescoed plaster they found – Sarah Hassam / University of South Florida News

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On a hunt to learn more about the owner of the house and what it was like living a block away from the domus, the team is searching for clues among the findings they have so far: an exquisite interior likely decorated with terracotta floor tiles, frescoed plasters and an ancient waste disposal system full of fragmented pottery, glass vessels, animal bones and charcoal.

“It was literally the garbage disposed by whomever lived in the house,” Tanasi said. “By studying this deposit, we will learn a lot about the life of who lived in the house. It is surprising how much you can learn about people from their garbage.”

Angela Costello, a USF doctoral student who has been uncovering “amazing Roman structures” in the Melite Civitas Romana said, “Malta is critically understudied despite being a wealth of fantastic archaeology and history from antiquity.”

Another person’s trash has indeed proven to be a treasure for Sarah Hassam, a USF ancient history graduate student. “The most exciting moment for me was during our third week, while cleaning pottery, a small fragment I had been scrubbing revealed the engraved letters D-A-O-I, a possible hint for somebody’s name. Everyone was pumped and shared theories.”

MORE ANCIENT RUINS: Rome Finally Opens to Public the Spot Where Julius Caesar Met His End at Senators’ Hands

Roman house with 10ft walls discovered at Melite Civitas Romana Project – by Davide Tanasi / University of South Florida News

The permit to continue the excavations in the Roman Domus district was extended to 2025 and IDEx will continue the exploration of the newly discovered house next summer to learn more about the identity of its owner.

Students interested in archaeology and history can learn more about interning and volunteering with IDEx to pursue similar projects and learn the digital aspects of these fields, such as 3D capture and modeling.

(Source: University of South Florida / Cassidy Delamarter)

SHARE The Opportunity With Other Students By Sharing on Social Media…

Cosmic Question Mark Spotted in Deep Space By the Webb Space Telescope

Question mark shape spotted in the James Webb Space Telescope – JWST / ESA (SWNS)
Question mark shape spotted in the James Webb Space Telescope – JWST / ESA (SWNS)

A question mark in deep space has been spotted inside pictures captured by the James Webb Space Telescope.

NASA astronomers had trained their sights on a tightly bound pair of actively-forming stars, known as Herbig-Haro 46/47.

But, some observers focused instead on a tiny, but intriguing, detail in the high-resolution near-infrared light image produced.

Visible in the scene from 1,470 light-years away is a small but distinct question mark shape.

“Is the universe asking us something?” posits an article at Space.com.

The publication reported that representatives of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) suggested it could be a distant galaxy, or interacting galaxies that formed the question mark-shape.

“Herbig-Haro 46/47 is an important object to study because it is relatively young – only a few thousand years old,” explained STScI. “Stars take millions of years to fully form.”

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“Targets like this also give researchers insight into how stars gather mass over time, potentially allowing them to model how our own Sun, a low-mass star, formed.”

LOOK: ‘Unusual’ Circles Spotted on Mars by the Reconnaissance Orbiter

WANNA ASK SOMETHING TO SPACE? Share it With This Article on Social Media…

Americans Vote For Their Top 10 Favorite On-Screen TV Families

They’re creepy and they’re kooky, mysterious and spooky: In a new poll, the Addams family was crowned America’s favorite on-screen family.

Morticia and her family of oddballs is followed in popularity by the Simpsons, the Brady family, and Married With Children’s the Bundys.

The poll of 2,000 U.S. adults with streaming subscriptions also voted on their favorite on-screen best friends: Olivia and Elliot from “Law & Order SVU” Wednesday and Enid from “Wednesday” and Walter and Jesse of “Breaking Bad”.

Commissioned by the streaming media platform Plex and conducted by OnePoll, the survey found 82% of people enjoy bonding with their family and friends over their love of the same TV shows and movies.

96% of respondents said they regularly discuss recent TV episodes with their friends and family—and, 76% reported some of their closest friendships developed as a result of sharing an interest in the same content.

Over the past year, the most talked-about TV and movie offerings were “Avatar: The Way of Water”, “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever”, “Stranger Things”, and “House of the Dragon”.

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67% said they often watch content remotely if they aren’t physically next to each other—and over half (55%) have a specific chat group dedicated to discussing shows. Over half of those polled say they’ve gotten mad at someone for watching a new episode without them.

But, most would rather not admit it: 59% have lied about watching one before they were supposed to, and ended up re-watching the episode, pretending it was the first time they viewed it.

“In the same way people in book clubs get together to discuss what they’re reading, there’s an unmatched sense of community among film and TV buffs who connect through sharing opinions, reviews and suggestions on content,” said Jason Williams, Product Director at Plex.

The random double-opt-in survey also revealed that 71% would stop using subscription services that ban them from sharing passwords, opting to seek out free, shareable alternatives.

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“The evolution of the streaming industry is moving away from simply providing content,” said Williams. “Our goal is to shift streaming services to destinations that bring people and content together in one place, making it easy to enjoy, rate and share your favorite movies and shows.”

BEST ON-SCREEN FAMILIES

1 The Addams family from Wednesday
2 The Simpsons
3 The Brady Bunch
4 The Bundy family – Married With Children
5 The original Addams Family
6 The Barone family – Everybody Loves Raymond
7 The Taylors – Home Improvement
8 The Tanners – Full House”    
9 The Bravermans in Parenthood
10 The Banks family – Fresh Prince of Bel-Air

BEST ON-SCREEN FRIENDS

1 Olivia Benson and Elliot Stabler “Law & Order SVU”
2 Wednesday and Enid “Wednesday”
3 Walter White and Jesse Pinkman “Breaking Bad”
4 Rachel and Monica “Friends”
5 Robin and Steve “Stranger Things”
6 Chandler and Joey “Friends”
7 Cory and Shawn “Boy Meets World”
8 Jerry and George “Seinfeld”
9 Laverne & Shirley “Laverne & Shirley”
10 Kevin and Paul “The Wonder Years”

COMPARE Your Choices With Your Friends By Sharing on Social Media…

Your Weekly Horoscope From Rob Brezsny: A ‘Free Will Astrology’

Our partner Rob Brezsny provides his weekly wisdom to enlighten our thinking and motivate our mood. Rob’s Free Will Astrology, is a syndicated weekly column appearing in over a hundred publications. He is also the author of Pronoia Is the Antidote for Paranoia: How All of Creation Is Conspiring To Shower You with Blessings. (A free preview of the book is available here.)

Here is your weekly horoscope…

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY – Week of August 5, 2023
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
In 1811, Leo scientist Amedeo Avogadro (1776–1856) formulated a previously unknown principle about the properties of molecules. Unfortunately, his revolutionary idea wasn’t acknowledged and implemented until 1911—100 years later. Today his well-proven theory is called Avogadro’s law. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, Leo, you will experience your equivalent of his 1911 event in the coming months. You will receive your proper due. Your potential contributions will no longer be mere potential. Congratulations in advance!

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Israeli poet Yona Wallach mourned the fact that her soul felt far too big for her, as if she were always wearing the clothes of a giant on her small body. I suspect you may be experiencing a comparable feeling right now, Virgo. If so, what can you do about it? The solution is NOT to shrink your soul. Instead, I hope you will expand your sense of who you are so your soul fits better. How might you do that? Here’s a suggestion to get you started: Spend time summoning memories from throughout your past. Watch the story of your life unfurl like a movie.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
Nineteenth-century Libran physician James Salisbury had strong ideas about the proper ingredients of a healthy diet. Vegetables were toxic, he believed. He created Salisbury steak, a dish made of ground beef and onions, and advised everyone to eat it three times a day. Best to wash it down with copious amounts of hot water and coffee, he said. I bring his kooky ideas to your attention in hopes of inspiring you to purge all bunkum and nonsense from your life—not just in relation to health issues, but everything. It’s a favorable time to find out what’s genuinely good and true for you. Do the necessary research and investigation.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
“I’m amazed that anyone gets along!” marvels self-help author and artists Sark. She says it’s astonishing that love ever works at all, given our “idiosyncrasies, unconscious projections, re-stimulations from the past, and the relationship history of our partners.” I share her wonderment. On the other hand, I am optimistic about your chances to cultivate interesting intimacy during the coming months. From an astrological perspective, you are primed to be extra wise and lucky about togetherness. If you send out a big welcome for the lessons of affection, collaboration, and synergy, those lessons will come in abundance.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Please don’t make any of the following statements in the next three weeks: 1. “I took a shower with my clothes on.” 2. “I prefer to work on solving a trivial little problem rather than an interesting dilemma that means a lot to me.” 3. “I regard melancholy as a noble emotion that inspires my best work.” On the other hand, Sagittarius, I invite you to make declarations like the following: 1. “I will not run away from the prospect of greater intimacy—even if it’s scary to get closer to a person I care for.” 2. “I will have fun exploring the possibilities of achieving more liberty and justice for myself.” 3. “I will seek to learn interesting new truths about life from people who are unlike me.”

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Champions of the capitalist faith celebrate the fact that we consumers have over 100,000 brand names we can purchase. They say it’s proof of our marvelous freedom of choice. Here’s how I respond: Yes, I guess we should be glad we have the privilege of deciding which of 50 kinds of shampoo is best for us. But I also want to suggest that the profusion of these relatively inconsequential options may distract us from the fact that certain of our other choices are more limited. In the coming weeks, Capricorn, I invite you to ruminate about how you can expand your array of more important choices.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
My best friend in college was an Aquarius, as is my favorite cousin. Two ex-girlfriends are Aquarians, and so was my dad. The talented singer with whom I sang duets for years was an Aquarius. So I have intimate knowledge of the Aquarian nature. And in honor of your unbirthday—the time halfway between your last birthday and your next—I will tell you what I love most about you. No human is totally comfortable with change, but you are more so than others. To my delight, you are inclined to ignore the rule books and think differently. Is anyone better than you at coordinating your energies with a group’s? I don’t think so. And you’re eager to see the big picture, which means you’re less likely to get distracted by minor imperfections and transitory frustrations. Finally, you have a knack for seeing patterns that others find hard to discern. I adore you!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Is the first sip always the best? Do you inevitably draw the most vivid enjoyment from the initial swig of coffee or beer? Similarly, are the first few bites of food the most delectable, and after that your taste buds get diminishing returns? Maybe these descriptions are often accurate, but I believe they will be less so for you in the coming weeks. There’s a good chance that flavors will be best later in the drink or the meal. And that is a good metaphor for other activities, as well. The further you go into every experience, the greater the pleasure and satisfaction will be—and the more interesting the learning.

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Emotions are not inconvenient distractions from reason and logic. They are key to the rigorous functioning of our rational minds. Neurologist Antonio Damasio proved this conclusively in his book Descartes’ Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain. The French philosopher’s famous formula—”I think, therefore I am”—offers an inadequate suggestion about how our intelligence works best. This is always true, but it will be especially crucial for you to keep in mind during the coming weeks. Here’s your mantra, courtesy of another French philosopher, Blaise Pascal: “The heart has its reasons, which reason does not know.”

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
The famous Taurus TV star Jay Leno once did a good deed for me. I was driving my Honda Accord on a freeway in Los Angeles when he drove up beside me in his classic Lamborghini. Using hand signals, he conveyed to me the fact that my trunk was open, and stuff was flying out. I waved in a gesture of thanks and pulled over onto the shoulder. I found that two books and a sweater were missing, but my laptop and briefcase remained. Hooray for Jay! In that spirit, Taurus, and in accordance with current astrological omens, I invite you to go out of your way to help and support strangers and friends alike. I believe it will lead to unexpected benefits.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
“Did you learn how to think or how to believe?” When my friend Amelie was nine years old, her father teased her with this query upon her return home from a day at school. It was a pivotal moment in her life. She began to develop an eagerness to question all she was told and taught. She cultivated a rebellious curiosity that kept her in a chronic state of delighted fascination. Being bored became virtually impossible. The whole world was her classroom. Can you guess her sign? Gemini! I invite you to make her your role model in the coming weeks.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
In the coming weeks, I advise you not to wear garments like a transparent Gianfranco Ferre black mesh shirt with a faux-tiger fur vest and a coral-snake jacket that shimmers with bright harlequin hues. Why? Because you will have most success by being down-to-earth, straightforward, and in service to the fundamentals. I’m not implying you should be demure and reserved, however. On the contrary: I hope you will be bold and vivid as you present yourself with simple grace and lucid authenticity.

WANT MORE? Listen to Rob’s EXPANDED AUDIO HOROSCOPES, 4-5 minute meditations on the current state of your destiny — or subscribe to his unique daily text message service at: RealAstrology.com

(Zodiac images by Numerologysign.com, CC license)

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“A single sunbeam is enough to drive away many shadows.” – Francis of Assisi

Quote of the Day: “A single sunbeam is enough to drive away many shadows.” – Francis of Assisi

Photo by: Davide Cantelli

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?

Cuteness Overload as Seal Walks into New Zealand Hardware Store

credit - Bunnings, released
credit – Bunnings, released

As another weekend drew to a close and the Monday workday loomed, the manager of a New Zealand hardware store was opening for business when her staff came and told her the strangest thing.

Seals found in Bunnings tend to be for windows or pipes, and don’t typically come with whiskers or flippers.

At 6:30 am, a New Zealand fur seal wandered into the Bunnings location in Whangārei, on New Zealand’s north island, and was walking around the isles.

Coming in through the delivery yard, the Bunnings team quickly corralled the seal with heavy boxes of ovens, dishwashers, and other heavy appliances to create a makeshift pen.

credit – Bunnings, released

“I’m so proud of my team as they troubleshot this very random Monday morning situation,” Sara Yates told Yahoo News Australia.

They then called the Department of Conservation to haul the intruder back to Reotahi marine reserve, where it could go back to eating fish, lounging on the beach, and steadily growing up to 278 pounds (126 kg).

Seals are often found in unexpected places in New Zealand said DoC science advisor, Laura Boren.

“Despite it happening every winter, it takes people by surprise,” she said.

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Rebuilding Notre Dame Cathedral Takes Leap Forward as the Majestic Spire Is Pieced Together

- CC 3.0. Vincent Callebaut
Vincent Callebaut, CC 3.0. license

Out in the French countryside of Briey, massive planks of oak wood are being fitted together for a very, very special purpose.

They are forming the new spire for the resurrection of the Notre Dame, and by using a marriage of master woodworkers and expert computing, all the pieces of the spire’s central and chief component—the shaft—fit together perfectly.

The spire, which collapsed through the lead roof of the famous cathedral in the fire, was built in the 19th century by architect Eugene Viollet-le-Duc, and the drafts for its construction were kept. With them, the team has been able to remake all 60 feet of structure exactly as before.

For the 286 specifically carved pieces of wood needed to create the shaft, which really is the wooden heart of the spire, only the tallest and straightest oak trees were used, donated for posterity in use for the Notre Dame by private landowners and public forests, some of which were owned by past kings of France, or the Catholic church.

In late July, a crane lowered the final piece of the shaft into place where it stuck fast.

French Army Gen. Jean-Louis Georgelin, the man in charge of the project, said it was a very emotional time.

“The symbol of the fire was a crash of the spire, and people will be confident in the reopening of the cathedral when will we see again the spire of a cathedral in the sky of Paris,” he told NPR News.

LAST UPDATE ON THE NOTRE DAME: Notre Dame Cathedral Rises From the Ashes: Look at All They’ve Rebuilt Since the 2019 Blaze

“It will be exactly the same as it was by Viollet-le-Duc,” Georgelin told CBS News. “But we do that with the means of our time: We use computers… We have probably less genius, but more calculation, more certainty by using computers.”

Notre Dame fire CBS News-YouTube-only use once

Also speaking with CBS was Axelle Ponsonnet, an architect who said the project was unlike anything she had ever worked on before, not only because of its historic nature.

MORE PARIS NEWS: Paris District Declared the ‘Republic of Good-Neighbors’ Reviving Conviviality and Cutting Loneliness

“It’s not only the famous part of it,” she told CBS News. “Of course, I’m extremely proud to be part of this team and to rebuild Notre Dame. But it’s also a very interesting project, because it’s a very complex structure and today we are never building such structures, and what’s amazing is that we are really trying to be very specific in the way we rebuild it.”

At the moment, the cathedral of Notre Damn is on schedule for a 2024 reopening.

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With Only 2500 Silvery Gibbons Left, Group Rescues Dozens to Return to Island Forests of Java

PICTURED ABOVE: A silvery gibbon in the Sukabumi Regency of West Java. PC: CC 4.0. Int. Jefri Tarigan
PICTURED ABOVE: A silvery gibbon in the Sukabumi Regency of West Java. PC: CC 4.0. Int. Jefri Tarigan

Reprinted with permission from World at Large, an independent news outlet covering conflict, travel, science, conservation, and health and fitness.

With so many of the world’s charismatic tropical animals fighting for conservation dollars, it’s easy for a small primate to slip through the cracks of international attention.

The silvery gibbon (Hylobates moloch) has relatively few backers compared with other jungle primates, but it has attracted interest from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, who along with a generous donor in the Aspinall Foundation, are beginning to successfully rehabilitate silvery gibbons for release back into the wilds of Indonesia.

Classified as Endangered on the IUCN Red List, the gibbon can be found in protected areas and a group of slowly vanishing and isolated forests on the western side of the Indonesian capital island of Java.

Opening its doors in 2011, the Javan Primate Rehabilitation Centre (JPRC) located within Mount Tilu Nature Reserve has taken in 71 gibbons and managed to reintroduce 55 of them back into the wild.

Threatened by poaching for the illegal wildlife trade and deforestation, the population of silvery gibbons may be as low as 2,500, and with such levels of scarcity, every individual counts.

Animals taken in at the JPRC might have been repatriated from zoos in other countries, rescued from poachers, or found by humans after having wandered into civilization. Once on site, a gibbon will receive a medical check to ensure they are free from disease before being placed in large enclosures where they can practice all the gibbon skills they’ll need to survive in the wild.

The JPRC has a site within Mount Tilu where they release the gibbons, and it’s also the site of the beginning of a daily quest to locate the newly-released gibbons and monitor them. The monitoring team is responsible for observing and recording the general behavior of the gibbons, which includes mapping their daily movements, what they eat, how they interact with other gibbons, sounds and gibbon calling.

“I am happy to see that the rehabilitated gibbons have adapted well to the forest after being released into the wild and some of them have already given birth to new baby gibbons,” Yana, a monitoring and community forest ranger at the Mount Tilu NR, told the IUCN press.

The JPRC, the IUCN, and Aspinall Foundation see the program continuing on to better and better outcomes over the next few years.

Not all gibbons are so lucky, and other, even more local efforts to support these beautiful primates rely on borrowed time and the caring nature of certain individuals.

Not a ‘sexy species’

Tini Kasmawati, in the 141-square-kilometer Lengkong district, volunteers her time to deliver bananas to an isolated gibbon population that doesn’t have enough forest left to find sufficient food. The Wanicare Foundation, a Dutch, non-governmental and not-for-profit organization working in the area, is aware of Tini’s work, and while they told Reuters that her 8 years of self-funded efforts haven’t changed the gibbon populations, she may have helped them survive in certain fragmented areas.

Wanicare is one of the few organizations that support silvery gibbons, and the Cikananga Wildlife Center in Lengkong began its gibbon program in 2012 when the conservationists there received five of the animals that had been seized from poachers.

“We did a lot of research to see if we could find a solution in this area, for example with corridors and everything, to connect different forest patches so at least they could go around,” Willemijn Eggen, founder and board member of the Wanicare Foundation, told WaL. “In our opinion we should catch these gibbons and translocate them to another area”.

Establishments like the JPCR are exactly the sort of places that could help gibbons in isolated forest fragments like Lengkong find a more permanent home.

“In all Java, there are at least two good organizations that are working for the survival of the species,” says Eggen, but adds that Wanicare has to spread their budget over several different species, and that it’s difficult to isolate funding for the animal.

“For example with the Javan leopard, we call it a ‘sexy species’. It’s easy for a species like that to find funding then for example a slow lorry is [sic] not really sexy for most people, or a small bird, a lot of people are not interested in those species. An orangutan is interesting for people”.

In these cases, the best outcomes can often take place when the territory of one animal overlaps that of another which can drum up more international interest. WaL

Webb Telescope Detects Water Vapor Just Hanging Out in Space Inside Fascinating Goldilocks Zone

Artist’s concept portrays the star PDS 70 and its inner protoplanetary disk - credit NASA, ESA, CSA, J. Olmsted (STScI)
Artist’s concept portrays the star PDS 70 and its inner protoplanetary disk – credit NASA, ESA, CSA, J. Olmsted (STScI)

Reprinted with permission from World at Largean independent news outlet covering war, travel, science, conservation, and health and fitness.

In a fascinating star system 370 light-years from Earth, scientists studying with the James Webb Space Telescope have found water vapor hanging about at exactly the same distance from the system star as Earth sits from the Sun.

The discovery is being heralded as an important milestone in the understanding of how rocket planets come to contain water; perhaps the water is there in space while the planet is being formed, such as in the case of this star, PDS 70.

A K7-type star in the constellation Centaurus, PDS 70 boasts two large, dusty ‘accretion disks,’ a term that refers to the rings of gas and dust around young stars that will either be slowly expelled into space or will coalesce into planets. The space between these two disks is 5 billion miles, or very near the distance between Earth and Pluto.

This vast in-between contains two still-forming, Jupiter-like planets: PDS 70 b and PDS 70 c, but the major discovery was the presence of water vapor at 94 million miles from the star, almost exactly the distance from which Earth sits from the sun. Sometimes called the “Goldilocks Zone” for being not too hot and not too cold, it’s also the area that has the greatest chance known to scientists thus far of having a rocky, terrestrial world capable of supporting liquid water.

This is the first detection of water in the terrestrial region of a disk already known to host two or more protoplanets.

Earth is riddled with H2O, and it’s also dispersed throughout other rocky and icy worlds in the solar system, such as Mars. How it got there is still up for debate. Common considerations are that frozen water arrived on Earth and other bodies onboard comets or much larger objects called planetesimals which we know collided as often as perhaps once every day in the earliest period of Earth’s history as an already-formed rocky planet.

Saving it for later

This new discovery, made possible thanks to the MIRI, or Mid-Infrared Instrument, onboard the James Webb Space Telescope, unveils a third theory—that water was available as a floating reservoir in space that formed concurrently with Earth and other planets.

“We’ve seen water in other disks, but not so close in and in a system where planets are currently assembling. We couldn’t make this type of measurement before Webb,” said lead author Giulia Perotti of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy (MPIA) in Heidelberg, Germany.

Two riddles remain unsolved however. The first is how the water got there in the first place, and the second is how has it survived so long.

The water could literally be forming spontaneously, as hydrogen and oxygen atoms combine in situ, or frozen dust found its way on a course towards the inner disk where gradually it separated from the dust particles.

PDS 70 is a K-type star that’s about 5.4 million years old—very young for a star, but long in the tooth for one which maintains its accretion disks. At just less than 100 million miles from the star, ultraviolet radiation and radiated heat would create temperatures and conditions hostile to the water vapor—potentially 300°C at any time, while the UV would normally be breaking the bonds of the water molecules. The team, which included astronomers at Radboud University, The Netherlands, offered up a hypothesis that the dust in the inner accretion disk could be thick enough to shield the water from the worst of the star’s rays.

Several components, most notably silicates, were detected in the inter-disk media, suggesting that a rocky planet could form there, and if it did, it would have a ready supply of water floating around to benefit from.

The team will continue to use the JWST to survey PDS 70 and hope to learn more about the strange star system. WaL

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“Trees are the earth’s endless effort to speak to the listening heaven.” – Rabindranath Tagore

Credit: Robert Murray

Quote of the Day: “Trees are the earth’s endless effort to speak to the listening heaven.” – Rabindranath Tagore

Photo by: Robert Murray

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?

CNN Hero: Man Helps Barbers Fill Their Shops with Books to Help Kids Find Excitement in Reading

released - Barbershop Books
released – Barbershop Books

One day in the Bronx, a first-grade teacher sat down in a barbershop for a trim and one of his students walked in, sat down, and started looking antsy.

He thought to himself that it was a perfect opportunity to practice reading, a thought that changed Alvin Irby’s life, and in five years’ time, he’s filling dozens of barbershops around the country with free books to trim back childhood illiteracy.

His non-profit, Barbershop Books, has delivered 50,000 free books to more than 200 barbershops in predominantly black neighborhoods in 24 states, leveraging the fact that in Black American communities, barbershops are like community centers where people congregate naturally.

“Barbershop Books inspires Black boys and other vulnerable children to read for fun,” Irby told CNN, which recently honored the man as a CNN Hero. “We install a child-friendly reading space in the barbershop.”

Key to the reading spaces are bookshelves that display the covers of the books rather than the spines, helping kids who may be interested in reading seize the opportunity for themselves, whether they’re in the barber’s chair or they’re waiting on their dad or friend.

Irby teaches the barbers in all the shops how to help encourage kids to read, such as by asking if they like to read, or what they think about one of the books in the shop. The barbers are key for another reason as well.

“We are putting books in a male-centered space,” Irby told CNN. “Less than 2% of teachers are Black males and many Black boys are raised by single moms. Black boys don’t see Black men reading.”

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At heart, the idea is not just about enriching a child’s mind but improving their proficiency in school, where Irby who teaches kindergarten and first grade says is pretty much the only place kids see reading happening. He says that if the only time a kid practices piano is at the piano lesson, his progress is going to be really, really slow.

At the moment, he’s developing a school curriculum addition to help students identify their own reading preferences. Keeping the theme within Black culture, the program is called “Reading So Lit.”

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Helping pre-K to 5 students explore, understand, and articulate their reading preferences increases self-awareness and social awareness, and Reading So Lit uses self-assessments and AI to generate actionable, strengths-based data about the reading content and conditions that students find personally meaningful and engaging. It’s already been successfully trialed in schools.

As sophisticated as the program is, Irby’s passion is still derived from interactions like the one which started it all—the kind that take place in the barbershop.

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Groundbreaking Trial of Cannabinol Product Shows Better Than Melatonin For Sleep

Slumber Sleep Aid, a CBN sleep aid not featured in the trial - public domain
Slumber Sleep Aid, a CBN sleep aid not featured in the trial – public domain

Reprinted with permission from World at Large, an independent news outlet covering conflict, travel, science, conservation, and health and fitness.

Conducted by two private companies beyond the scope of universities, hospitals, or government agencies, the world’s first trial of pure cannabinol (CBN) revealed a wealth of information on the benefits and limitations of this cannabis-derived sleep aid.

Testing CBN versus both melatonin and a placebo, the study revealed that not only does CBN work better than melatonin for reducing sleep disturbances, but that CBN is dose-dependent along a U-shaped curve.

The findings are vital to the understanding of how to use CBN, just one of many cannabinoids believed to have therapeutic effects.

Over 1,000 participants from across the US formed the study group. They received doses of melatonin, placebo, or a CBN product called TruCBN.

The trial was carried out by a for-profit clinical research company called Radicle Science which uses crowdsourcing and machine learning to carry out placebo-controlled trials that bypass some of the worst aspects of scientific research. More on that later.

With 50 milligrams of TruCBN, participants experienced significant sleep improvements, many of which were described as “critical”. The melatonin group also reported substantive sleep improvements, but not to the level of the CBN group.

Only marginal improvements were seen in people taking either 25 or 100 milligrams, hence the U-shaped curve.

Radicle Science’s co-founder and CEO, Jeff Chen, MD/MBA, lauded the discovery, especially of the dose-response curve. Dr. Chen has spoken to WaL before, when his Radicle Science carried out the world’s largest real-life evidence study on the effects of commercial CBD products, about the artificial nature of most medical research that is nevertheless considered the “gold standard.”

Jeff Chen MD, co-founder of Radicle Science

Bringing back the gold standard

“If you’re a pharma company, and you’re doing your pivotal trials, that’s an expensive process—tens sometimes hundreds of millions of dollars and 3-5 years; that’s one shot-able,” Dr. Chen told WaL back in 2021. “You need to make damn sure that the people in your study are going to have the best odds of having effectiveness with your drug, and the least amount of odds of having a bad side effect”.

If, Chen explains, the trial is one of the one-shot opportunities, and the drug in question is one for insomnia, the exclusion criteria might be as high as 1,000 to 1. People with low income, who drink coffee, who have depression or chronic pain, or maybe who haven’t had success with Ambien, a common insomnia drug, all would be excluded to better the odds of the trial’s success despite the fact that they are the people who would need a sleep aid the most.

“Study groups are really artificial,” says Chen. “They’re selecting an artificial population that doesn’t look like anybody in America. You conduct the study in a very artificial setting; hospitals, doctors, you very strictly dose people, you dose them to a very regimented schedule”.

“At the end maybe you see a benefit, but this data doesn’t actually represent how the drug will work in the real world. In the real world, people look very different than those in the clinical trial, doctors’ behavior in prescribing the drug can look very different, and consumers using the drug have a very different relationship to it—they might skip doses, they might double up on doses,” he said.

FloraWorks, the company that produces and sells TruCBN, claims that 60% of Americans report having disrupted sleep. Dr. Matthew Walker, the famous sleep-science communicator and author of Why We Sleep, claimed on the Joe Rogan Experience Podcast that it took just a few weeks for the sleep aid drug Ambien to make as much money from sales in America as the Star Wars franchise made in 40 years of movies and licensed products.

Dr. Susan Hewlings, PhD, RD, vice president of research affairs at Radicle Science, highlighted the importance of the study’s discovery by noting the recent FDA scrutiny towards melatonin dosage, which does come with side effects as it is a signaling hormone for many biological processes, not just sleep.

Cannabinol is just one of several active compounds from the Cannabis sativa plant, alongside cannabidiol (CBD), and cannabigerol (CBG) that are being studied for medicinal qualities.

Hospitals Could Use Honey and Vinegar as Antibiotic for ‘Low-Cost’ Wound Care

Flickr CC Flood_G
Flickr CC Flood_G

In a win for holistic medicine, the nation that discovered penicillin is now opting to use food ingredients as a wound cleaner in hospitals.

The UK is trialing, and seeing major success, with using a combination of medicinal-grade honey and food-grade vinegar to clean wounds rather than antibiotics or antiseptics.

Known as oxymel, the mixture has been written about in the medical literature of at least Classical Rome, and likely older civilizations as well.

“In our survey of pre-modern recipes we noticed a pattern of combining honey and vinegar to wash or dress wounds and swellings, and this inspired us to focus on that combination in our analysis,” said Dr. Erin Connelly, a researcher on the study.

Today at Warwick University, Connelly and her team of researchers at the British National Health Service were looking to see if bacterial concentrations could be reduced when ensconced within the protections of a biofilm.

A complex, slimy agglomeration of microbes, biofilms can cover wounds thanks to a property that allows them to bind very close to flesh. Inside, bacteria can escape traditional topical antibiotics.

Applying a variety of doses and mixtures, they found that a combination low dose acetic acid (the active ingredient in vinegar) and medicinal honey dramatically reduced microbial count.

“These doses are lower than those that wound care nurses currently use on patients. But when we put these low doses together, we saw a large number of bacteria dying which is really exciting,” Dr. Freya Harrison of Warwick University told the London Times.

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Following up, the team found that whole vinegars like pomegranate vinegar worked even better than the acetic acid alone.

Medicinal honey can be effective for more than just wound cleaning. Manuka honey for example, can clear bacterial infections that plague those with cystic fibrosis, a deadly disease.

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New 18-Wheel Electric All-Terrain Vehicle is a Versatile World First

courtesy of 18-Wheels via SWNS
courtesy of 18-Wheels via SWNS

Why stop at a 4×4 when you can spring for an 8×8?

Finnish company 18 Wheels say they have developed and produced a unique patented suspension for the so-called “eco ATV” that utilizes 18 wheels so as not to overly disturb the soil underneath it.

“Our ATV does not destroy the soil, is safe for nature, and has a significantly better dynamic performance and cross-country ability than any ATV,” said the company, ensuring any doubters that this machine is not a party piece.

The first prototype device was built last year to test the hypothesis and suspension on different soils.

18 Wheels say that prototype featured a suspension system that provides a special trajectory of movement and is equipped with an independent electric motor inside, the same as some electric or hybrid performance cars which can calculate how much power to send to each wheel in order to improve cornering speed and stability.

“After six months of testing, we designed the second prototype already in the public design and are now building it,” 18 Wheels report.

courtesy of 18-Wheels via SWNS

The company says a “tentative presentation date” is October 2023, with a plan to start sales next spring.

A preliminary estimated price of around $20,000 has been announced.

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“We plan to organize a test drive and invite everyone who wants to test drive it,” they add.

18 Wheels’ website lists the benefits of the system as including the ability to overcome obstacles higher than 8 inches without loss of speed, the ability to apply to different equipment and adapt to different tasks, and the versatility to tackle all soils, temperatures, and seasons.

WATCH the video below if you’re not convinced…

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