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These Silly Signs Are One Man’s Campaign Against His ‘Anti-Fun’ City

- credit CARP, supplied
– credit CARP, supplied

In a provincial English city, a man has taken it upon himself to address what he referred to as a “fun deficit” in town.

By placing humorous signs in the style of public notices and road signs around town, he hopes they will disarm people into seeing issues in a new perspective, whether that’s the fun he focuses on, or poorly managed roads.

Chichester is located in West Sussex, and was actually found in one study to be ranked as the best place to live in the historic county. However, the “Chichester Anti-Recreation Partnership” or CARP, as he refers to himself, says there are significant shortfalls in the amount of things that could be construed by any reasonable person as “fun.”

“I absolutely adore Chichester,” CARP told the BBC, explaining his modus operandai. “But it does have some notable gaps—particularly when it comes to fun and things for younger people to do.”

Attempting to brighten up the place, he has for some months been placing trick signs, noting for example that one was entering a “formal attire only zone” or a “coffee control area” monitored between 5:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.

“Humor has this unique ability to disarm people—it lowers their defenses and allows them to consider issues from a fresh perspective,” he said. “It reframes problems in a way that’s more approachable and less confrontational, which makes it easier to get your message across and spark discussions.”

– credit CARP, supplied
– credit CARP, supplied

BBC spoke with the Chichester City Council, which “doth protest too much,” one might say.

Working hard, they noted, to put on more exciting events for all ages including light shows and concerts after dark, the council said they had been met with appreciation from the citizenry.

SIMILAR ENGLISH PRANKSTERS: Pothole Prank: Man Erects Fake Legs in the Road and the Neglected Hole Was Promptly Filled Within 4 Days

They currently run an “after dark” working group to collect views on what young people would like to see in the future. Young people are a very important part of the community, they state, again noting a sum of $1.3 million currently earmarked for play area refurbishment.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Vessel Rescued in English Channel After Emergency Call to Dover, Delaware, Instead of Dover, England

CARP, however, isn’t waiting around. His handiwork gains traction on social media, and even though the council takes his signs down very quickly, they can’t stop him from sharing images of them online.

He says he isn’t concerned about what becomes of the signs, so long as they spark a smile, a laugh, a conversation, or, in the best case scenario, action to make Chichester a more fun-focused borough.

SEND Your Friends A Laugh On Social Media With This Funny Story… 

New Delivery System for Chemo Treatment Eliminates Bladder Cancer in 82% of Patients

The TAR-200 bladder cancer treatment - credit, Johnson & Johnson
The TAR-200 bladder cancer treatment – credit, Johnson & Johnson

Staggering results have been reported from a clinical trial of a new delivery method for chemotherapy drugs used to treat bladder cancer.

Keck Medicine of USC reports that in the majority of cases the cancer disappeared after only three months of treatment, and almost half the patients were cancer-free a year later.

The system is called TAR-200, and is composed of a pretzel-shaped delivery device that’s inserted into the bladder. Its slow release of the drug gemcitabine allows this chemotherapy medicine to stay in the organ for days, compared to mere hours as is the case with the current standard-of-care.

TAR-200 is designed for treating high-risk and treatment-resistant non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer, the most common form.

“Traditionally, these patients have had very limited treatment options. This new therapy is the most effective one reported to date for the most common form of bladder cancer,” said Sia Daneshmand, MD, director of urologic oncology with Keck Medicine of USC and lead author of a study detailing the clinical trial results published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

“The findings of the clinical trial are a breakthrough in how certain types of bladder cancer might be treated, leading to improved outcomes and saved lives.”

The trial was a major undertaking—involving 144 locations worldwide and 85 patients who had this kind of bladder cancer, were treated with another immunotherapy drug called Bacillus Calmette-Guérin, and whose cancer returned.

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Keck Medicine reports that the TAR-200 was administered every 3 weeks for 6 months, and then 4 times a year for the next 2 years.

In 70 out of 85 patients, the cancer disappeared and for almost half the patients, was still gone a year later. The treatment was well-tolerated, with minimal side effects, the institute concluded.

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Daneshmand, who has been researching this method of drug delivery since 2016, said that the trials mark “an exciting moment in history.”

“Our mission is to deliver cancer-fighting medications into the bladder that will offer lasting remission from cancer, and it looks like we are well on our way toward that goal.”

SHARE This Revolution In Bladder Cancer Treatment With Your Friends… 

4-Year-Old Calls 911 to Talk About Swimming. Police Respond With Birthday Surprise

- credit, Farmington Hills Police Department
– credit, Farmington Hills Police Department

When a precocious 4-year-old called 911 to talk about his favorite sports, the officers ensured he learned a valuable lesson.

From Farmington Hills, Michigan, comes the story of Micah, who dialed emergency services and began chatting about how much he loves soccer and swimming.

The call developed into a friendly chat, but that didn’t stop the station’s dispatchers from sending out Officer Michael El-Hage, to be certain all was well.

It’s actually standard issue to deploy officers in the case of accidental child 911 calls, just in case the child became too shy—or too pressured—to speak about what they had originally called for.

Arriving though, El-Hage found all was well, and was soon chatting away yet again with Micah and his brother Mitch about sports. El-Hage showed the pair the inside of his police cruiser.

“During the visit, we learned Mitch was celebrating his birthday on Sunday—so our day shift team came together to make his special day even more memorable,” the Farmington Hills Police Department wrote in an Instagram post.

Speaking with WDIV, Officer El-Hage explained that he told the boys that he hoped he’d be able to come back Sunday, but truly didn’t know whether it would be possible.

As it happened, he was free, and returned with birthday presents—a new soccer goal and a police cap and badge.

OTHER CUTE 911 PRANKSTERS: Little Boy Calls 911 After Mom Ate His Ice Cream: ‘Mommy Is Being Bad’–But Cops Solve the Case

“I just did it for the kids, honestly,” El-Hage said, noting he had a son himself. ”I just see my son there, so being a dad I think every day I can understand that that’s what it’s about for me.”

“While accidental 911 calls do happen, we always want kids to feel safe and comfortable reaching out to us,” the post concluded. “Turning a small mistake into a moment of connection is what community policing is all about.”

SHARE This Cute Encounter With The Police On Social Media… 

Local Communities Protecting Millions of Acres of Orangutan Habitat Beyond Nat. Park Boundaries

Orangutans by Getty Images for Unsplash+
Orangutans by Getty Images for Unsplash+

On the island of Borneo, forest-dwelling communities have become key to ensuring that orangutans have enough intact forest to survive and thrive down the centuries.

Documented by the Nature Conservancy, which is assisting in establishing and equipping these forest communities for conservation, these communities maintain millions of acres of forests for sustainable economic use and conservation.

This includes logging, but research has shown that when legitimate, transparent logging operations cease, their former land concessions become akin to a no man’s land, and are taken over by illegal logging circuits, poaching, and agriculture.

Instead, by logging small numbers of mature trees one small area at a time over a 30-year time horizon, the forest doesn’t shrink, and the communities can use profits from the hardwoods to sustain their families, and ensure that areas of intact forest remain poacher free.

Areas like the vast Kutai National Park suffer from similar problems as the logging concessions, the Nature Conservancy writes. Their remoteness acts as a curtain to hide illegal activities.

But 80% of orangutans live beyond the borders of protected areas, often very near forest villages. Because of this, an estimated 1.3 million acres of forest habitat is now protected by local forest guardians for the benefit of ecotourism, honey production, scientific research and of course, conservation.

Support from the Indonesian government, which controls the majority of Borneo, the world’s third-largest island, helps the guardians manage their land concessions, while interest from the international community has also led to large-scale donations from companies like Arhaus, a furniture maker.

MORE STORIES ABOUT THESE AMAZING ANIMALS: 

Matt Miller, the Nature Conservancy’s director of science communications, visited these community concessions, and saw first hand how they view their future as guardians of the forests.

“The communities are the leaders here. They are the key to the conservation of Borneo’s forests and biodiversity,” a local program director told Miller. “We are here to support them. We can provide science and help them shape what they want their future to be. But this is the reflection of their dream.”

SHARE This Encouraging Trend Towards Sustainable Land Management…

“The old cathedrals are good, but the great blue dome that hangs over everything is better.” – Thomas Carlyle

By Gabriel Lamza

Quote of the Day: “The old cathedrals are good, but the great blue dome that hangs over everything is better.” – Thomas Carlyle

Photo by: Gabriel Lamza

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

By Gabriel Lamza

Good News in History, August 20

Ron Paul in Las Vegas - CC 3.0. Gage Skidmore

Happy 90th birthday to the former Congressman from Texas, Dr. Ron Paul. Before serving three terms as representative of the 22nd and 14th Congressional districts, the country doctor delivered an average of 1 baby per day, amounting to over 4,000 little ones because he was the only OB/GYN in Brazoria County. READ more about America’s most famous Libertarian… (1935)

Florida Coral Nursery Spawns for the First Time Since 2023, Contributing to Reef Resilience

Screengrab via Shayle Matsuda, a scientist aboard Shedd Aquarium’s research vessel - supplied to Miami Herald
Screengrab via Shayle Matsuda, a scientist aboard Shedd Aquarium’s research vessel – supplied to Miami Herald

Beneath the waves of Key Largo, staghorn coral have spawned in mass since a 2023 bleaching event that left marine biologists worried over the reefs’ future.

The once-a-year phenomenon can happen only on a select few days, and lasts only a few minutes. It’s difficult to predict, and relies on a delicate, aphrodisiacal mixture of temperature, tide, and Lunar phase.

But to the relief of the members of the Coral Restoration Foundation working on their staghorn coral nursery, the coral came through, with female members filling the water with eggs, and males with sperm, until the whole of the nursery appeared like a snow globe.

“If we see viable eggs, then it means that all of the other basic life needs of the coral must be being met, Alex Neufeld, Science Program Manager at the Coral Restoration Foundation, told the Miami Herald. “It means our colonies are healthy and that we’re doing something right.”

However, much like the most endangered animal species, the foundation considers the spawning too precious a moment to leave to the mercy of the waves. Recent coral bleaching events have created spaces between reefs, reducing potential for genetic diversity, while a strong gust of wind could send a large cloud of the eggs or sperm veering off course, and the opportunity to reproduce would be lost.

So descending into the water at night, the Miami Herald team watched as marine biologists carefully examined the coral until they were ready to spawn. Kept under nets, they captured the sperm and eggs for cultivation onboard a research vessel operated by Chicago’s Shedd Aquarium, which was involved in the project.

“We have to keep it really even, to give everybody a chance. We’re really just trying to increase our chance of settlers that will be able to actually contribute to this new genetic diversity, which builds more resilience,” said Shayle Matsuda, an ecologist on Shedd’s boat.

By last Tuesday, when the Herald joined the project, the spawning had increased in fecundity. Wednesday was even more prosperous, with dozens of samples taken, and the scientists were even more hopeful about Thursday.

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Reef researchers across the world are now experimenting with cross breeding of corals in captivity to try and create more heat-tolerant genotypes. Some reefs, for example one in Honduras, demonstrate remarkable resilience to warming seas.

Some of the staghorn samples collected over Key Largo will be sent to these breeding initiatives, while others will be used to expand the reefs where they were collected.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: 10,000 Young Corals Grown in Just Weeks by New Portable Spawning Lab in the Maldives

In even better news, the Coral Restoration Foundation’s staghorn nursery wasn’t the only one that spawned. Another, managed just 200 meters north, also spawned and was also collected by another marine nonprofit, called Renewal USA.

America has long been the global standard for protecting its most beautiful wild places, and while Sequoia and Yosemite National Parks are indeed the envy of the world, the nation and its scientists don’t skimp on our reefs either.

SHARE This Positive Work Going On To Save Florida Corals… 

Staggering Finds Show Early Humans Lived Alongside the Very Apes They Evolved from

Skull of a female A africanus - credit, Didier Descouens, CC BY-SA 4.0,
Skull of a female A africanus – credit, Didier Descouens, CC BY-SA 4.0,

From Ethiopia comes an incredible discovery—early humans seem to have potentially lived alongside the very apes they evolved from.

The discovery centers around teeth: that of a member of the genus Homo, of which we are a part, found next to the tooth of Australopithecus, the last in a line of apes that became humans.

Teeth from ancient human ancestors in Ethiopia’s Afar Region – credit, Amy Rector / Virginia Commonwealth University

The team of paleontologists who found the teeth are following protocol and not inferring anything about how the two species interacted, but the fact is that the Homo tooth was the older of the two, showing that human evolution wasn’t linear.

“This new research shows that the image many of us have in our minds of an ape to a Neanderthal to a modern human is not correct—evolution doesn’t work like that,” Kaye Reed, a research scientist and president’s professor emerita from Arizona State University, told CNN via email. “Here we have two hominin species that are together. And human evolution is not linear, it’s a bushy tree…”

Reed has been working in the Afar region of Ethiopia since 2002. 10 of the teeth were found between 2018 and 2020 and belonged to Australopithecus, while 3 previously found in 2015 belonged to an early Homo species.

Afar is where the famous remains of “Lucy” were found. Belonging to Australopithecus afarensis, she was about 3.3 feet tall, had an ape-like face, but walked upright 3.2 million years ago.

The teeth found by Reed and colleagues came from a later period, and do not correspond to A. afarensis or that of another related species A. aghai. Either there’s something scientists don’t know about these two species, or it’s a third, entirely different species, but the team isn’t claiming either for certain.

PALEO NEWS: 2 Different Species of Human Ancestors Left Footprints at Same Spot on Same Day 1.5Mil Years Ago – ‘Really Huge’ First

In either case, the oldest Homo teeth were hundreds of thousands of years older than the Australopithecus teeth, showing how as many as four Hominid lineages may have coexisted in East Africa at the same time.

“Once we found Homo, I thought that was all we would find, and then one day on survey, we found the Australopithecus teeth,” Reed said, again to CNN. “What is most important, is that it shows again, that human evolution is not linear. There were species that went extinct; some were better adapted than others, and others interbred with us — we know this for Neanderthals for sure.”

MORE HOMO SAPIENS HISTORY: Early Man Was Building Lincoln Log-like Structures 500,000 Years Ago, New Preserved Wood Shows

How would our ancestors have treated our even earlier ancestors? Did they compete for food? Paleoecology studies show that the Afar region was a relatively wetter area than it is today, suggesting at least intuitively a greater abundance of food. Would we have interbred with our ape cousins, or treated them as hostile competition? How did they treat us?

Reed has been researching our earliest histories in the Afar region since 2002, and hopefully another 20 years may resolve these fascinating questions.

SHARE This Incredible Discovery From Our Early Past With Your Friends… 

4 National Guardsmen Save a Man’s Life After Stopping for Lunch in Poland

The Alabama National Guard seal
The Alabama National Guard seal

Their motto reads “Always ready, always there,” and when four national guardsmen from Alabama walked into a Burger King, that’s exactly what they were.

The story comes from Skwierzyna, a town about 80 miles west of the headquarters of the US Army in Poland.

Sgt. 1st Class Alicia Haggins, Staff Sgt. Jacob Roberts, 2nd Lt. Indiana Rhodes, and Sgt. Justin Fagan stopped for lunch on their way to a Polish army training center when they saw that a man outside the restaurant had collapsed.

It was Haggins that first saw the emergency, and alerted her colleagues to come and help. Arriving, they found the man’s breathing was sparse and his pulse faint.

The four soldiers from the 214th Military Police Company initiated lifesaving measures, including CPR. First responders from the Polish ambulance service arrived within minutes, but asked Haggins and her company to continue to perform rotational chest compressions.

“When we started, I would say his pulse was very weak and very shortened,” Sgt. Fagan said told Stars and Stripes. “Once the (first responders) got there, it still continued to be a team-oriented event.”

Before the first responders arrived, Haggins used a translation app to talk with the victim’s wife, gathering medical history in which she confirmed the man had a history of heart problems.

US SOLDIERS IN EUROPE: The US Army Replaced a Cake it Stole From Italian Girl in 1945

30 minutes of compressions passed before his pulse was somewhat stabilized, at which point a medical helicopter arrived to transport the man to a hospital. Afterwards, hugs were widely shared, especially from the man’s wife who thanked the Alabama guardsmen profusely for their help.

“Because they were there and at that time, (the victim) and his family have hope,” Army spokesman Lt. Col. Cain Claxton said Friday. “It is an example for all of us to emulate in helping people out, especially here being representatives for our country in Poland.”

All four will receive a non-combat commendation for their actions in service of an allied country and its citizens.

CELEBRATE These American Heroes Being Heroes In Poland…

People Globally Are Living Better Lives, More Hopeful About the Future: We Know Because They Said So

Pete Alexopoulos, via Unsplash
Pete Alexopoulos, via Unsplash

With civil wars in Myanmar and Sudan, climate change manifestations the world over, instability across the Middle East, and geopolitical tensions abounding in East Asia, Europe, and North America, one would imagine the global population to have a pessimistic outlook on things.

But the annual Gallup Life Evaluation Index found that “men and women, young and old,” consider themselves to be thriving in larger numbers than any other time in the past.

Asked to rank their lives on a scale of 0 to 10, with 4 and below classified as suffering, 5 to 6 as struggling, and 7-10 as thriving, a third of the surveyed population spread across 142 nations described themselves as currently thriving.

Additionally, the outlook on the next 5 years is as high as it’s ever been, with an average score of 7.9.

Unlike metrics of GPD, which predominantly measure economic output and, as a result, capture somewhat the standard of living in a country, self-reported metrics of thriving or suffering can give greater clarity as to exactly whether that wealth is leading to a more prosperous society or not.

“Rates of thriving have risen consistently across demographics. Men and women, young and old, all now rate their lives better than they did in the past,” Gallup wrote in their executive summary.

“As thriving has increased, rates of suffering have inched downward. In 2024, a median of 7% globally were classed as suffering in life, matching the lowest point on record going back to 2007, and significantly lower than a decade ago (12% in 2014).”

MORE ENCOURAGEMENT FOR THE FUTURE: Countries Are Breathing the Cleanest Air in Centuries and Offer Lessons to the Rest of Us

A population-weighted average showed 28% of respondents thriving, down from 33%, affected by more respondents in countries with larger populations.

Declines in thriving seen in some wealthy countries were offset and overrun by increases in Latin America and the Caribbean (45%), East and South Europe (37%), East (34%) and Southeast Asia (32%) and Post-Soviet Eurasia (33%)—all of which have seen steady increases in thriving over time.

12 countries experienced particularly enormous rises in self-reported thriving of 20% or more over the last decade, including 3 in Asia (Mongolia, Vietnam, and Kazakhstan,) 8 in Europe (Lithuania, Estonia, Kosovo, Armenia, Bosnia Herzegovina, Serbia, Hungary, and Slovenia), and Paraguay.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Incredible 60% of Europe’s Electricity Was Powered by Clean Energy in the First Two Months of 2024

Many of the increases in self-reported thriving correlate with the increases in Human Development Index metrics such as average years of child schooling and perceived freedoms. The HDI also happened to rise on average around the world since 2008.

“The world is not short of significant challenges, from climate change to conflicts and technological upheaval,” the Gallup authors wrote. “Yet even against this backdrop, more people across more countries say they are living better lives today and are hopeful for tomorrow, and fewer are suffering.”

BRIGHTEN UP Social Media With These Encouraging Global Trends… 

“Religion and art spring from the same root and are close kin.” – Nathaniel Hawthorne

Quote of the Day: “Religion and art spring from the same root and are close kin.” – Nathaniel Hawthorne

Photo: The Theotokos of Tikhvin, a Russian icon, ca. 1300 – Public Domain / Wikipedia

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

Good News in History, August 19

The Syncom 2 satellite - public domain.

61 years ago today, Syncom 3, the first geostationary communication satellite, was launched. Two months later, it would enable live coverage of the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. It was the third satellite in the Syncom project, which also included the world’s first geosynchronous satellite, Syncom 2. All three are still in orbit. READ more from on this day… (1964)

France Sees a Doubling of Eagle Mating Pairs After Decades of Successful Work

A Bonelli's eagle feeding its chick - credit, Leonardo Fernández Lázaro CC 4.0. BY-SA
A Bonelli’s eagle feeding its chick – credit, Leonardo Fernández Lázaro CC 4.0. BY-SA

51 breeding pairs of Bonelli’s eagles have been recorded in France’s Mediterranean regions, more than double the number recorded in the early 21st century.

Though considered a species of least concern in the world, Bonelli’s eagle is vulnerable in Europe, and threatened in France, where it nests on cliffs and hunts small mammals.

The survey of mating pairs was published on July 28th by the Roussillon Ornithological Group.

In 1999, around 20 breeding pairs returned from their winter migration, representing a population collapse of over 75% from previous highs. The resulting years saw three successive National Action Plans (NAPs) which employed traditional raptor conservation strategies like habitat protection, outreach to hunters, chick tagging, and satellite tracking to boost those numbers back above 50.

The NAPs were organized by the Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development, and Energy and led by a collective of naturalist associations and representatives of the hunting world, along with local authorities.

Bonelli’s eagle is one of the smallest of the ‘true’ eagles, or Aquila genus. Despite this, it’s known as a bold and rapacious predator, yet like many birds of prey, mates for life. Named for the Italian naturalist who would catch the type specimen, they inhabit many countries of the world, including those in North Africa and the Indian subcontinent.

YOU CAN’T TAKE THE SKY FROM ME:

The European population is estimated to be between 1,100 and 1,200 pairs according to a BirdLife International survey in 2015, with Spain hosting more than 700 alone. In France, the recovery of their population has seen them reclaim previously abandoned haunts, like the Alpes-du-Haute.

38 of the bonded pairs laid eggs which hatched into 34 chicks, giving hope that the country may reach its original goal of 60.

SHARE This Encouraging Return To France’s Skies For This Small Eagle…

Major Grocery Chain Now Alerting Public When Products Are Marked Down, Reducing Food Waste

An Iceland storefront in the UK - credit, Iceland released
An Iceland storefront in the UK – credit, Iceland released

Starting this month, frozen foods chain Iceland will be partnering with grocery apps to alert UK shoppers across the country every time an item gets a yellow sticker price.

As part of a national food waste reduction program, 900 of Iceland’s stores will participate, with shoppers able to receive notifications on the apps Olio and Gander.

The initiative was successfully trialed in both London and Bristol, and will now span the whole United Kingdom.

“Iceland has always been dedicated to tackling food waste head-on, and extending this partnership with Olio and Gander is another step towards making a real difference,” said Iceland’s director of product, process, and sustainability.

“Not only does this help our customers make their money go further, but it makes a positive change for the planet too.”

Since its launch in 2019, the Gander app has reportedly saved over 39 million items from expiration and being sent to landfills. It too alerts users to discounted items soon to expire.

MORE APPS LIKE THIS: 

Olio, by contrast, works through a network of volunteers to deliver food and supplies close to the sell-by date to communities in need, and will now expand its services to include these yellow sticker notifications.

“Food waste is one of the biggest sustainability challenges of our time,” said Stacey Williams, Gander’s Business Development Director. “By working together, Gander, Iceland and Olio are showing how technology can help retailers reduce waste and support local shoppers in finding great value at the same time.”

SHARE This Really Cool Chance To Save Money On Frozen Foods And Reduce Waste…

Joy and Relief as Lotus Flowers Bloom Again in Kashmiri Lake After Three Decades

The lotus flowers on Wular lake - courtesy of Umar Dar
The lotus flowers on Wular lake – courtesy of Umar Dar

Lotus flowers are blooming again in Kashmir’s historically largest lake, having been freed from the grasp of underwater silt that strangled them for 3 decades.

The lake had already been shrunk dramatically by the conversion of shoreline and connected marshlands to agricultural areas by 1990. But in 1992, catastrophic flooding dumped thousands of tons of sediment into the lake, burying the lotus plant stems.

These stems formed a major part of the local diet, and at the height of its productivity, the cottage industry of harvesting them sustained 5,000 local workers. The stems were cooked and served in several dishes, but the silt ended all of that.

At the turn of the 20th century, Wural Lake spanned 84 square miles, but by 2007 it had diminished to just one-third of that. Willow cultivation along the banks ensured that over-sedimentation of the lake bottom continued. Parts of it become dumping grounds, and more and more of the lake’s fauna vanished.

By 2020, the local communities had had enough. With the taste of the lotus stems having been reduced to a fragment of a memory for the old, and a solemn children’s story to the young, the Wular Conservation and Management Authority (WUCMA) began a de-silting program.

Fed by the Jhelum River and its tributaries, WUCMA focused on controlling and preventing pollution from entering the lake through its flow, before beginning the long, slow, slimy process of dredging the lake.

5 years on, a mindboggling 8 million cubic meters of silt have been removed. The lotus roots that remained dormant all this time emerged, and for the first time in 33 years, the plants are flowering again.

CLEANING UP IN INDIA: City in India Ranks the Cleanest 8 Years in a Row: ‘It Feels as Though You Aren’t in India’

“This is not just the revival of a plant, it’s the resurrection of a cultural ecosystem,” Meera Sharma, a Delhi-based environmentalist, told the Guardian. “When nature heals, it revives everything it once nurtured—livelihoods, traditions, biodiversity. Seeing these flowers bloom again after decades is like watching history breathe.”

KASHMIRI STORIES: Man Revives Iconic Indian Lake by Converting Lake Weed Infestation into Organic Fertilizer Business

While the lake was an important local tourist destination and cultural connection to the land as Sharma says, many are looking forward again to eating their favorite dish: nadru.

“Lotus stem connects our food to the land … now that it’s back, we’re preparing dishes the way our grandmothers did: slow, simple, and full of memory,” Tavir Ahmad, a chef at a local Kashmiri market, told the Guardian’s Tauseef Ahmad and Sajid Raina.

SHARE This Heartwarming Return Of The Most Beautiful Flower To The People…

Outer Space Is the Place for Manufacturing Cancer Drugs, Says Startup Using Crystal Technology

Crystals formed in microgravity - credit, JAXA
Crystals formed in microgravity – credit, JAXA

A UK startup is designing new versions of established cancer drugs to be used routinely at home, saving the patient time and money, as well as floor space in the hospital’s cancer ward.

The only thing is the startup’s manufacturing plant requires rather unique and limited real estate: the International Space Station.

BioOrbit believes that space is the final frontier of drug manufacturing, because of the unique properties that can be achieved while synthesizing drugs in microgravity.

A key factor of at-home cancer drugs would be turning their compounds into more shelf-stable crystal structures. This would allow the drugs to go from being delivered intravenously with a syringe (IV) to an easier, at-home injection method like an subcutaneous epi-pen or Ozempic.

Put in extreme simplicity, the Earth’s gravity interferes with crystal growth by creating defects in their delicate and complex structures, while in microgravity, those defects don’t occur; the whole crystal structure can form and become rigid.

It takes time to form a crystalize structure though, so much time that no comparative microgravity environment on Earth can be used, for example, those utilized to train astronauts. Space is the only option.

There’s been decades of research into the process of “super crystallization,” however, so the technology is ready to ride up to the ISS next month as a demonstration effort.

THE SPACE ECONOMY: World’s First Diamond Battery Could Power Spacecraft and Pacemakers for Thousands of Years

The company’s long-term vision (because you have to have one when working in space) is to have its own space station, where these slow crystallization processes would continually be producing drugs for the at-home delivery market.

The BBC spoke with the founders of BioOrbit last week, available as a video on their website here. 

Let Your Friends Know About The Future Of Drugs Manufacturing: Space… 

“That’s why people listen to music or look at paintings. To get in touch with that wholeness.” – Corita Kent

By Sung Jin Cho - mbuff

Quote of the Day: “That’s why people listen to music or look at paintings. To get in touch with that wholeness.” – Corita Kent

Photo by: Sung Jin Cho (mbuff)

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

By Sung Jin Cho – mbuff

Good News in History, August 18

The Thousand Islands Bridge - CC 4.0. King of Hearts

87 years ago today, the Thousand Islands Bridge connecting the US with Canada over the Saint Lawrence Seaway was dedicated by F.D. Roosevelt. The complex contains 5 bridges spanning 8.5 miles, with each bridge section anchored on a separate island in the middle of the waterway. This remarkable feat of engineering took just 16 months to build. One span is a suspension bridge, while another section is a truss bridge, and the two are divided by a stretch supported solely by arches. READ more from this day in history… (1938)

Wallet Lost by a Ford Employee 10 Years Ago Just Turned Up 150K Miles Later Under a Car Hood

- credit, Chad Volk supplied to CBS
– credit, Chad Volk supplied to CBS

A Ford Motor Company employee was reunited with a wallet he lost 10 years ago after a mechanic found it while servicing a car he built.

This charming story comes via Minnesota, where mechanic Chad Volk was replacing the cooling fan on a 2015 Ford Edge, when something that needed to snap in place, simply wouldn’t snap.

“I messed around a little bit and then pulled it back out and the wallet was sitting on a little ledge where it needed to snap down,” Volk told CBS News. “I pulled the wallet out and that’s what it was.”

Inside the brown trifold was a Michigan driver’s license, $15,00, a faded lottery ticket, $275 in Cabella’s gift cards, and a Ford employee ID, going to show that no matter how long you work under hoods and under chassis, you’ve never seen everything, Volk says.

Rewind the clock to Yuletide, 2014, and Richard Guilford was in a bind: he had to wear sweatpants to the Wayne County Ford plant. Lacking trouser pockets he had the wallet in his breast pocket, and while presumably stooping over a new red Edge, the wallet tumbled out.

Guilford wasn’t aware of it until later, when he got his buddies to go look in some of the cars. He guessed it was in, rather than inside, a Flex, not an Edge, an error that doomed the wallet to a long, dark slumber.

Shipped to and sold in Arizona, then resold in Minnesota, 151,000 miles later it arrived in Volk’s auto bay in Lake Crystal where the mechanic of several decades found it and immediately looked Guilford up on Facebook.

“‘Is this your wallet?’ First thing I said was ‘Did you find it in a car?!'” Guilford shared with a laugh.

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The now-retired “Big Red” as he was affectionately known, was overjoyed to have his wallet returned: for the story if not for the cash.

“It restores your faith in humanity that people will say, ‘Hey, you lost this, I found this, I’m going to get it back to you,'” Guilford said Thursday, adding in wonder how it survived the snow and rain in the Land of 1,000 Lakes, or the heat of a car’s transmission under the Arizona sun.

LOST WALLETS AND THE CRAZY PLACES THEY’RE FOUND: Minnesota Teens Hook Wallet Full of Cash on a Lake Then Return it to Iowa Farmer–WATCH

Ford Motor Company spokesman Said Deep simply asked CBS “can you imagine the odds?”

Cabella’s even said they would honor the gift cards, which for part-time auctioneer Guilford means he can leave the relic of his past totally intact “in his china cabinet,” where he hopes his kids will pull it out and tell their grandkids about their ancestor’s wild, wandering wallet.

WATCH the story below from CBS News… 

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MIT Develops Iron-Iodine Particles, Could Be Used to Fortify Food and Beverages to Help Fight Malnutrition

Chemists at MIT have discovered a way to fortify iodine salt with iron, resulting in a product that, if made widely available, could combat one of the world’s most prevalent nutrient deficiencies.

A bout 2 billion people suffer from iron deficiency, which can lead to anemia, impaired brain development in children, and increased infant mortality. The richest sources are all animal foods, which tend to be more expensive and less available.

Plant sources are more difficult to absorb, and many plants contain phytates that block iron absorption altogether. Challenges with fortifying food staples have long existed with iron, not least because what might be a stable in Papua New Guinea is not a stable in the southern United States.

Attempting to grapple with the problem, MIT researchers have come up with a new way to fortify foods and beverages with iron using small crystalline particles. These particles, known as metal-organic frameworks, could be sprinkled on food, added to staple foods such as bread, or incorporated into drinks like coffee and tea.

“We’re creating a solution that can be seamlessly added to staple foods across different regions,” says Ana Jaklenec, a principal investigator at MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, in a release from MIT Press.

“Our goal was to develop something that doesn’t react with the food itself. That way, we don’t have to reformulate for every context—it can be incorporated into a wide range of foods and beverages without compromise.”

Food fortification can be a successful way to combat nutrient deficiencies, but this approach is often challenging because many nutrients are fragile and break down during storage or cooking. When iron is added to foods, it can react with other molecules in the food, giving the food a metallic taste.

In previous work, Jaklenec’s lab has shown that encapsulating nutrients in polymers can protect them from breaking down or reacting with other molecules. In a small clinical trial, the researchers found that women who ate bread fortified with encapsulated iron were able to absorb the iron from the food.

The particles could also be adapted to carry other important minerals such as zinc, calcium, or magnesium. However, one drawback to this approach is that the polymer adds a lot of bulk to the material, limiting the amount of iron or other nutrients that end up in the food.

“Encapsulating iron in polymers significantly improves its stability and reactivity, making it easier to add to food,” Jaklenec said. “But to be effective, it requires a substantial amount of polymer. That limits how much iron you can deliver in a typical serving, making it difficult to meet daily nutritional targets through fortified foods alone.”

To overcome that challenge, study co-author and MIT postdoc Xin Yang came up with a new idea, Instead of encapsulating iron in a polymer, they could use iron itself as a building block for a crystalline particle known as a metal-organic framework, or MOF.

MOFs consist of metal atoms joined by organic molecules called ligands to create a rigid, cage-like structure. Depending on the combination of metals and ligands chosen, they can be used for a wide variety of applications.

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“We thought maybe we could synthesize a metal-organic framework with food-grade ligands and food-grade micronutrients,” Yang says. “Metal-organic frameworks have very high porosity, so they can load a lot of cargo. That’s why we thought we could leverage this platform to make a new metal-organic framework that could be used in the food industry.”

Iodized salt has been very successful at preventing iodine deficiency, and as a result is sold around the world. Many efforts are now underway to create “double-fortified salts” that would also contain iron.

Delivering these nutrients together has proven difficult because iron and iodine can react with each other, making each one less likely to be absorbed by the body. In this study, the MIT team showed that once they formed their iron-containing MOF particles, they could load them with iodine, in a way that the iron and iodine do not react with each other.

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In tests of the particles’ stability, the researchers found that the iron-iodine MOFs could withstand long-term storage, high heat and humidity, and boiling water.

Throughout these tests, the particles maintained their structure. When the researchers then fed the particles to mice, they found that both iron and iodine became available in the bloodstream within several hours of consumption.

The researchers are now working on launching a company that is developing coffee and other beverages fortified with iron and iodine. They also hope to continue working toward a double-fortified salt that could be consumed on its own or incorporated into staple food products.

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“We are very excited about this new approach and what we believe is a novel application of metal-organic frameworks to potentially advance nutrition, particularly in the developing world,” says Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor at MIT who co-lead the research.

The paper on their discovery has been published in the journal Matter.

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