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Chemical Shield Stops DNA Damage from Triggering Disease–’A Paradigm Shift’

Infographic by Linlin Zhao, University of California Riverside
Infographic by Linlin Zhao, University of California Riverside

A new chemical probe protects healthy cells from DNA damage, preserving them from one of the 8 hallmarks of aging.

The story of this potentially paradigmatic development begins where so much of human health begins: the mitochondria. These organelles are disrespectfully monikered as “the powerhouses” of the cell, but they do so much more than just provide cellular energy.

It’s so important, it even has its own DNA. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is separate from the DNA housed in a cell’s nucleus. While nuclear DNA contains the vast majority of the genetic code, mitochondria carry their own smaller genomes that are essential for cellular functions.

MtDNA exists in multiple copies per cell, but when damage occurs these copies are often degraded rather than repaired. If left unchecked, this degradation can set off a cascade of failures linked to heart conditions, neurodegeneration, and chronic inflammation. 

Published in the German Chemical Society journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition, researchers at UC Riverside developed a chemical probe that binds to damaged sites in mitochondrial DNA and blocks the enzymatic processes that lead to its degradation.

“There are already pathways in cells that attempt repair,” said Linlin Zhao, UCR associate professor of chemistry, who led the project. “But degradation happens more frequently than repair due to the redundancy of mtDNA molecules in mitochondria. Our strategy is to stop the loss before it becomes a problem.”

The new molecule includes two key components: one that recognizes and attaches to damaged DNA, and another that ensures it is delivered specifically to mitochondria, leaving nuclear DNA unaffected.

In lab tests as well as studies using living cells, the probe significantly reduced mtDNA loss after lab-induced damage mimicking exposure to toxic chemicals such as nitrosamines, which are common environmental pollutants found in processed foods, water, and cigarette smoke.

In cells treated with the probe molecule, mtDNA levels remained higher, which could be critical for maintaining energy production in vulnerable tissues such as the heart and brain.

Mitochondrial DNA loss is increasingly linked to a range of diseases, from multi-organ mitochondrial depletion syndromes to chronic inflammatory conditions such as diabetes, Alzheimer’s, arthritis, and inflammatory bowel disease. When mtDNA fragments escape from mitochondria into the rest of the cell, they can act as distress signals that activate immune responses.

“If we can retain the DNA inside the mitochondria, we might be able to prevent those downstream signals that cause inflammation,” Zhao said.

MORE AGING SOLUTIONS: Man’s Biological Clock Set Back 10 Years After 93 Days Living Under the Ocean in a Research Station

Importantly, the researchers found that the protected DNA remained functional, despite being chemically tagged.

“We thought adding a bulky chemical might prevent the DNA from working properly,” Zhao said. “But to our surprise, it was still able to support transcription, the process cells use to turn DNA into RNA, and then into proteins. That opens the door for therapeutic applications.”

The Hallmarks of Aging – credit Rebelo-Marques et al, Frontiers, CC 4.0. BY-SA

The project builds on more than two years of research into the cellular mechanisms that govern mtDNA processing. While additional studies are needed to explore clinical potential, the new molecule represents a paradigm shift.

MORE AGING SOLUTION: Psychedelic Mushrooms Reduced Human Cellular Aging by 57%, Increased Lifespan in Mice 30%

Indeed, DNA damage makes up two of the 8 hallmarks of aging first outlined in a landmark paper in 2013, which also includes mitochondrial dysfunction as an antagonistic hallmark, i.e. a result of DNA damage.

“This is a chemical approach to prevention, not just repair,” Zhao said. “It’s a new way of thinking about how to defend the genome under stress.”

TELL Your Friends About This Potential Paradigm Shift In Anti-Aging Technology…

Wood Scraps Turned into Bulletproof, Fire-Resistant Superwood That’s ‘Stronger Than Steel’

credit - InventWood
credit – InventWood

New ways to molecularly tamper with wood has led to a bulletproof, fire resistant, lightweight material that could replace steel, concrete, and carbon fiber.

Appropriately dubbed “Superwood,” the applications seem to be limited only to imagination, and may hold up a high-rise just as sure as it might make better tennis rackets.

In 2018, the Wall Street Journal reports, a pioneering materials engineer found a way to take wood scraps that were no longer useable and treat them with heat and chemicals to alter their molecular makeup.

The boards could then be compressed to the point where the pressure collapses the channels between the lignan that serve as the tree’s circulatory system. This process could take a standard board and render it one-quarter the thickness whilst retaining the increased strength from the treatment process.

Sold now by InventWood, a firm that amassed $50 million in startup money from a mixture of Dept. of Energy grants and private financing, Chief Executive Alex Lau believes it could replace steel I-beams in houses or even the exterior of a laptop computer—all depending on what machines are available to work the Superwood.

During a fire, the wood doesn’t sag like steel does at comparable temperatures, nor does it truly burn; the outside carbonizes into an airtight layer before the interior layers of wood feel the heat.

credit – InventWood

Christopher Mims, reporting at WSJ, says that in his hands the Superwood felt like an “otherworldly object,” due to its combination of lightness and the incredible strength and resistance to lateral force.

GNN has reported before on alternative preparations of wood before, mostly of cross-laminated timber or CLT, also known as “mass timber.” CLT is made by gluing exceptionally thin boards of wood together before heat-pressing them, resulting in properties similar to Superwood.

CLT has been used to build the hilariously-named “plyscrapers,” of Scandinava, as well as a new $2 billion Portland Oregon airport terminal.

SUPERWOOD STRUCTURES: World’s First All-Timber Wind Turbine Blades are Cheaper, Recyclable, Fire-Resistant and Stronger than Carbon Fiber

The difference maker in Superwood is its light weight and flexibility in addition to tensile strength and fire-resistance similar to CLT.

Today, InventWood is bringing Superwood to market with a 90,000-square-foot manufacturing facility. Its initial offerings will be home sidings, which require minimal certifications, but will hopefully be available in many more products in the not-too-distant future.

It’s A Board, It’s Been Planed, No, It’s Superwood. Let Your Friends Know…

Beached Whale Faced 6 Hours of Lethal Sun and Dryness, Locals Form Bucket Brigade to Save it

- courtesy of Sadi Synn
– courtesy of Sadi Synn

A beached minke whale survived 6 hours on shore to make it back to the water thanks to a helping hand from the locals, according to a report from Alaska.

In the town of Seldovia, on Kachemak Bay, a 15-foot minke whale was beached on the rocks at low tide, believed to be an incidence of poisoning by an algal bloom that could have killed it in just 20 minutes.

Seldovia Village Tribe responded to an Alaska SeaLife Center advisory about the incident, the location of which the center asked to be kept secret. They dispatched their environmental coordinator.

Stephen Payton’s job description includes rescuing beached whales, but this was his first encounter in a 10-year career with a live one.

“I just went out as fast as I could, not really knowing what to expect, and it’s a long ways out there down MacDonald Spit,” he said. “So luckily, one of the locals that was responding was able to pick me up on a four wheeler and drive me.”

When he arrived, a group of about 15 locals had formed a bucket line, pouring seawater onto the whale’s soft underbelly, which along with being substantially scratched up by the rocks, could have become damaged in the Sun’s rays.

The locals had also wrapped wet beach towels around it while they waited to come up with a plan on how to rescue it. Minke whales are the world’s second smallest baleen wheel, meaning, like humpbacks and blue whales, they eat krill using a special filtering organ in their throat. Even still, at 15 feet long, it would have weighed at least 3 tons.

 

The beast was thrashing around from time to time, and no one felt comfortable trying to manhandle it. But luckily as the tide came back in, it freed the whale which was reported in the area for days afterwards swimming and spouting.

MORE STORIES LIKE THIS: Dozens of Whales Saved by Locals After Mass Stranding on Icelandic Beach

Typically, a minke whale can drown in between 10 and 20 minutes on shore. The way the animal was oriented on the beach, lying on its side with its blowhole facing the sea, was very dangerous. The selfless work from the locals allowed that 20 minutes to become 6 hours, when the tide’s eventual arrival allowed the whale to right itself.

“We are grateful for the calm presence and respect shown by those nearby during this time,” Seldovia Tribe wrote on Facebook. “Moments like these remind us of the powerful connection between our community and the natural world around us.”

SHARE This Human-To-Sealife Compassion With Your Friends On Social Media…

“Metaphors have a way of holding the most truth in the least space.” – Orson Scott Card

Basillica in San Paolo By Mark Chinnick (CC license)

Quote of the Day: “Metaphors have a way of holding the most truth in the least space.” – Orson Scott Card

Examples of a metaphor: The world is a stage, His words were daggers, Time is money, Life is a journey, Like a fish out of water.

Photo by: Mark Chinnick

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?

Basillica in San Paolo By Mark Chinnick (CC license)

Good News in History, July 28

Kenny Rogers in 2007 - Philpottm - CC BY-SA 3.0.

31 years ago today, Texas Rangers pitcher Kenny Rogers pitched the MLB’s 14th Perfect Game which also registered as the first and only one in the history of the Texas Rangers franchise, and the last No-Hitter pitched for the Rangers at the time of writing. While perhaps missing out on being remembered as one of the true great pitchers, Rogers had an exemplary career that extended long into his 30s, during which he started the 2008 season as the oldest player in the American League. READ some of his other accomplishments… (1994)

Woman Finds Abandoned Pup in Woods And Finds Perfect New Owners – Grieving a Dog Loss of Their Own

Lola
Lola

(Submitted by Florida woman who wished to remain anonymous.)

Just before last Christmas, I found an abandoned puppy, a pitbull-mix named Lola.

On my way home to turn off a crock pot at noon (the only time in 4 years that I went home at lunch), I saw Lola at the edge of the woods near our neighborhood.

I only had cat food in the house, so on my way back to work, I slowly approached and put some on the ground.

When I brought food, she started to leave when I approached, but decided she was more hungry than scared.

When the dog started eating, she could not stop wagging her tail.

It was difficult to leave her, but I had to trust in the goodness of the universe that she would still be there when I returned.

I went back to work. After work, I went to the grocery store and purchased dry dog food, a collar, a leash, and a rotisserie chicken, hot off the grill. I returned to the woods where I previously saw her. No Lola.

I went to the edge of the woods where I’d seen her and called out “Come here baby, come on.” From quite a distance away, I could hear her crashing through the woods to get to me.

It was easy to put a collar on her once she trusted me—the hot chicken helped. Next, I drove her straight to our vet.

We don’t know how long she was in the woods, but she had skin problems and worms.

She was chipped but not registered. (The lesson here, dog lovers, is the vet just implants the chip – the owner must register the chip).

The vet determined Lola was a female, about 7 months old. She was given medication that would kill fleas and ticks within an hour or so—and, on that condition, hubby allowed Lola to come home for the night.

I tried every avenue to try to find the owners. We posted pictures on a variety of social media venues along with the Gainesville, Florida, Pet Finder on FaceBook.

The really good news is that a couple who retired from working at an animal rescue organization spotted the picture of Lola. They had 2 dogs, and one had recently had transitioned, so they wanted a companion for Buster, the remaining pet.

Lola in her new home – Courtesy photo

We met a couple of weeks later, and Buster and her new parents took Lola to her new home—a 20-acre fenced farm with other farm animals.

Lola’s new mom updates me on her condition, which was very poor initially but she finally has gained weight, has no more worms, etc.

Hubby and I went to the country to visit Lola a couple of weeks ago and are planning our next get together.

Her new mom keeps telling me that I saved Lola’s life, but we had been grieving the loss of our mastiff and Lola helped heal our hearts.

FUR-EVER HEROES: Tiny Chihuahua Helps Rescue Owner Who Fell into Swiss Glacier

I keep reminding her that she is the one who wrote the ending of her story… “and she lived happily ever after.”

AMAZING PUP: Heroic Dog ‘Rocky’ Alerts Indian Village of Oncoming Landslide, Saving Dozens

Telescopes Pop-Up on City Sidewalks to Engage Passersby in Free Astronomy Viewing Worldwide

Courtesy of #Popscope
Courtesy of #Popscope

Imagine walking to the store for ice cream and running into a free opportunity to view Saturn’s rings. That’s what’s happened for thousands of lucky pedestrians, thanks to #PopScope, the urban astronomy movement.

Now in its 11th year, the volunteer-run group just hit a major milestone: Completing 500 pop-ups that have brought 26,000 people closer to the night sky.

Founded in Ottawa, Ontario in 2014, #popscope (short for pop-up telescope) has expanded to include volunteers in cities across Canada and the U.S. and has hosted pop-ups in Ireland, Malawi, and India.

From the beginning, their urban astronomy model has been simple and powerful: go to a public area, set up an entry-level telescope, point it at an object in the sky, and invite passersby to take a look.

What happens next is magical.

Jaws drop, eyes widen, and whispers are uttered when they encounter our awesome universe.

After initial disbelief that a stranger could be offering something for free, the passerby’s eyes light up when they peer through the eyepiece and see Jupiter’s moons through a light-filled city sky coming into focus.

Founding members and friends at start of the #Popscope journey in Ottawa, Ontario in 2014

“The project has been a labor of love—and deep friendships have formed among the group’s volunteers,” co-founder Michael O’Shea told GNN. “We’re motivated by the look of awe on a stranger’s face when they see Saturn’s rings for the first time, or hear cries of delight when someone views the Moon’s bumpy craters in vivid detail.”

What may start as a conversation about the object in the telescope often turns to other topics, like the phases of the Moon, or how the neighborhood is changing, or maybe just the name of their dog.

Often times guests and volunteers become new friends and offer to stay in touch.

“As we celebrate 500 pop-ups, we remember the many snippets of conversation from guests as we huddled around our telescopes. One person even said his uncle was on Apollo 12…

“Here are some of our favorites that made us smile—and think—as we gazed up into the night sky together.

  • “I am 55 years old and I’ve never seen anything like this before. Thank you for coming!
  • “Saturn rings! They look like an emoji! A Saturn emoji!
  • “You made my night…Best thing that happened to me all day.
  • “The Moon—It’s like cheese!
  • “I might be late for my train, but it was worth it to see the moon!”
Courtesy of #Popscope

CHECK OUTMan Finds Meteorite After Seeing Green Light in the Sky: It was Warm and Burnt and ‘May Be From Halley’s Comet’

Special donors have supplied funding and equipment over the years, including Celestron, the Awesome Foundation, and the Social Innovation Lab—helping to provide science to communities that are often underserved by academics and institutions.

Chapters have been set up in Montreal, Baltimore, New York City, Washington, D.C., Boston, Philadelphia and Jacksonville, Florida.

Who knows whether these encounters will inspire kids to start thinking about becoming astronauts. #Popscope just hopes the kids—and adults—keep looking up.

Visit the group’s website, popscope.org, for updates or to volunteer.

Check out the photos and videos from their 500 events on Flicker—and learn more about the goals and history of the club in this recent article.

SPREAD THE IDEA to Science-Lovers, By Posting on Social Media…

A Tiny Gecko Species Once Thought Extinct Just Made a Comeback in the Galápagos

Tiny Leaf-toed gecko (Phyllodactylus maresi) – Photo credit: Island Conservation
Tiny Leaf-toed gecko (Phyllodactylus maresi) – Photo credit: Island Conservation

In a thrilling twist of ecological fate, scientists have confirmed the rediscovery of a tiny gecko species once thought extinct on Rábida Island in the Galápagos.

Thanks to a successful restoration and rewilding project, the discovery marks a major conservation milestone that shines as a beacon of hope for biodiversity recovery efforts worldwide.

The elusive Leaf-toed gecko (Phyllodactylus maresi) was previously only known to have walked the island from 5,000-year-old fossil records.

Its existence has now been officially documented through live specimens collected during expeditions by the US nonprofit Island Conservation—evidence which has been peer-reviewed and published in the journal PLOS ONE this month.

This rediscovery was made possible by a successful, bold conservation intervention in 2011 led by Island Conservation in partnership with the Galapagos National Park, Charles Darwin Foundation, and The Raptor Center.

The partners removed damaging, non-native invasive rodents from Rábida Island, paving the way for native species to bounce back—and within a year of completing the eradication, they discovered the Leaf-toed Gecko long thought extinct.

“The return of this gecko highlights nature’s incredible power to heal itself when given the chance,” said Paula Castaño, Island Conservation’s Impact Program Manager. “It’s another example of the recovery we’ve seen on islands worldwide: when you rebalance an ecosystem, it can bounce back quickly and dramatically.”

MORE GALAPAGOS GOOD NEWS:
500 Giant Tortoises Reintroduced to Four Galapagos Islands in 2023
100-Year-Old Galápagos Giant Tortoise Found on Fernandina Island is Indeed Member of ‘Extinct’ Species

Rábida Island in Galápagos – Credit Island Conservation

Researchers from Island Conservation, the QCAZ Museum of Zoology at the Pontifical Catholic University of Ecuador, Re:wild, and the Galápagos National Park Directorate used DNA sequencing and detailed morphological analysis to trace the gecko’s evolutionary roots.

The Rábida population was found to be genetically distinct, yet closely related, to Phyllodactylus maresi from nearby islands. The team designated the Rábida geckos as a unique Evolutionarily Significant Unit—which is a distinct lineage crucial for conservation.

The rediscovery not only reignites hope for other “lost” species but also deepens our understanding of island evolution and biodiversity. Islands are resilient, and when given the chance, can host surprising recovery beyond what anyone thought possible.

OTHER ERADICATION SUCCESSES:
Island is Wonderland for Penguins Again After Dog Helps Eradicate 300,000 Invasive Rabbits
We Finally Rid An Island of 300,000 Rats – Now Everything is Blooming
To Save Sea Turtle Population Invasive Deer Successfully Eradicated from Island in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef

“This archipelago still holds hidden surprises, waiting to be discovered,” said Omar Torres-Carvajal, Curator of Reptiles at QCAZ Museum of Zoology.

HELP THIS STORY GET OFF THE ISLAND By Sharing The Good News on Social Media…

This Bracelet from Meta Translates Hand Movements into Computer Actions

Meta's Neuromotor Interface - credit, Reality Labs, via Springer Press
Meta’s Neuromotor Interface – credit, Reality Labs, via Springer Press

A very sci-fi invention has been introduced by engineers from Facebook’s parent company that translates hand gestures into computer actions.

This includes fine motor movements like dotting a lowercase i, and translating handwriting into computer text is something the interface is particularly good at.

Designed inside Meta’s Reality Labs, it’s one of the first major offerings from the in-house moonshot department since the collapse of the company’s “Metaverse” concept which was once expected to “define the future of social connection” according to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who renamed his company in its honor.

The Metaverse ended up being less of a future-defining technology and more like a damp squib, with the Reality Labs division of Meta losing $14 billion in 2022 and $15 billion in 2023.

Reality Labs was on the chopping block during Meta’s Year of Efficiency, with perhaps as many as 10,000 layoffs taking place in advance of a direction shift to what almost anyone would admit is a more exciting and marketable business direction: stuff that looks like it’s from Star Trek. 

The device can translate the electrical signals generated by muscle movements at the wrist into computer commands without the need for personalized calibration or invasive procedures. The bracelet slips on and off as easily as, well, a bracelet.

Technical engineers Patrick Kaifosh and Thomas Reardon who oversaw its development then used deep learning to create generic decoding models that accurately interpret the muscle movements across different people without needing individual calibration, and the more participants who used it, the more accurate the deep learning decoding model became.

MORE HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERFACES: 

However, accuracy and performance was then further increased with personalization, offering a recipe for building high performance biosignal decoders for many applications.

The bracelet works on a Bluetooth connection, and among the various tasks it proved capable of carrying out, its translation of human handwriting movements into text could be done at a speed of 20.9 words per minute, around 16 fewer than the average mobile phone user’s speed.

As to exactly who benefits most from the device, a variety of disabilities and paralysis situations immediately come to mind, as well as the obvious benefits for below-the-elbow amputees, or someone using multiple computers and/or monitors at the same time.

WATCH the bracelet in action below… 

SHARE Meta’s Cool New Gismo With Your Friends Who Love Future Tech…

“The hunger for love is much more difficult to remove than the hunger for bread.” – Mother Teresa

Fa Barboza

Quote of the Day: “The hunger for love is much more difficult to remove than the hunger for bread.” – Mother Teresa

Photo by: Ryan Hutton

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?

Fa Barboza

Good News in History, July 27

Warner Bros. Fair use

85 years ago today, Bugs Bunny, the wisecracking Warner Bros cartoon character, first debuted in an animated short entitled A Wild Hare. Supervised by Fred ‘Tex’ Avery, it featured a hunter named Elmer Fudd pursuing a wily rabbit voiced by Mel Blanc. The pair became beloved, and their debut received an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Short. WATCH the opening scene and learn more… (1940)

Walmart Heiress Opens Medical School with a Focus on Preventative Medicine

The Alice L. Walton School of Medicine building – credit, Timothy Hursley, Courtesy of Alice L. Walton School of Medicine

In Arkansas, a new medical school has just opened that aims to train a new generation of doctors on preventative medicine and whole-health principles.

It was dreamed of and financed by arguably the world’s wealthiest woman—a Walmart heiress whose personal struggles with illness and the incentive-based system of American ‘sick-care’ kindled a desire for change, especially in her own rural community.

The Alice L. Walton School of Medicine received 2,000 applications from hopeful young future doctors around the country, accepting only 48 to come and study at the Bentonville campus.

Anyone who raises an eyebrow at alternative approaches to medicine can close the article now, because the curriculum includes art and cooking classes, gardening and horticulture—all tailored to engender a perspective of cultivating health, not managing sickness.

And that is the great challenge faced by the American medical system. It has improved the survival and care of life-threatening diseases and pioneered dozens of mind-boggling surgical procedures, yet the system can be given nothing greater than a failing grade for the state of general human health.

For a nation that styles itself as the greatest to ever exist, its citizens suffer from more non-communicable chronic diseases borne of poor diet and lifestyle choices than any other in the developed world, and nearly half of all American adults are obese.

Profiled in TIME Magazine, Alice Walton would like to see what the American health service sector would look like if doctors spent time focusing on preventing sickness from occurring rather than treating it once it arrives.

It’s not a novel idea: the functional medicine movement is working on gestating a similar revolution among healthcare practitioners. It’s so un-novel that it was expounded by none other than Founding Father Benjamin Franklin, who said so famously that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

To lead her school in embodying that message, Walton picked Dr. Sharmila Makhija, a gynecologic cancer surgeon from Alabama, who like Walton, has seen the dire shortcomings of rural health in her home state.

“The foundation [of the curriculum] is traditional medicine but enhanced with the humanities and the arts to improve the delivery of care—so we improve on how we [act] with patients and how we partner with patients,” Dr. Makhija told TIME.

The average American medical school includes around 20 hours of coursework on nutrition: the backbone of health and the major spawning pool of so many chronic diseases. Along with being not very much, many of those hours of coursework are elective. At the Alice Walton School of Medicine, acronym “AWSOM,” there are 50 hours, at those include culinary classes.

A rooftop vegetable garden mounted on the dramatic glass facades of the main campus building serves as a different sort of classroom, while a nearby learning farm helps further educate on the nature and origin of the food eaten by the patients of these future doctors.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Anonymous $3.5 Million Gift to Milwaukee Art Museum Provides Free Admission for Children

If you hope to be able to keep a 40-year-old human healthy, you should be able to keep a tomato plant healthy—just one concept in a series that aims to cultivate empathy and the ability to predict where illness will spring from.

As part of their training, students will be able to design a section based on community service and research projects; yet another way that AWSOM methods hope to generate an empathetic eye through the belief that doctors should serve the needs of their community.

ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE STORIES: Priceless Preventative Healthcare Is Now Free in Poland Thanks to New Program

According to TIME, how a prospective student planned to address healthcare shortcomings in their area was a chief determinant of eligibility for attendance.

Both Dr. Makhija and Ms. Walton acknowledge that they can design whatever curriculum they want, but if their graduates just jump into the existing health system, it will be all for naught. For that reason, AWSOM is conducting extensive clinical outreach to build a network of potential establishments willing and eager to test the novel strategies brought forward by the school’s eventual graduates.

PHILANTHROPY IN HEALTH: New York Medical School Surprises Students with Free Tuition in Perpetuity After $1Billion Gift–WATCH

“It’s all about rethinking and re-envisioning what the education of the next generation of health care workers will be like,” says Makhija. “Alice and I are very keen on creating a sustainable model of education, both in how we deliver the curriculum that can be replicated, as well as fiscally, so that other schools can use a similar model.”

The first five years of enrollments will be bankrolled by Ms. Walton’s sizeable fortune.

SHARE This Revolutionary Approach To Medical School With Your Friends…

Your Weekly Horoscope – ‘Free Will Astrology’ by Rob Brezsny

Our partner Rob Brezsny, who has a new book out, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle, 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 July 26, 2025
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
I predict that your imminent future will be a ticklish and tricky but ultimately uplifting masterpiece. It will feature guest appearances by members of your private hall of fame, including one future luminary you have not yet fully appreciated. This epic series of adventures may begin when you are nudged to transform your bond with a key resource. Soon, you will be encouraged to explore frontier territory that offers unexpected help. Next, you will demonstrate your understanding that freedom is never permanent but must constantly be reinvented.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Sci-fi author Octavia Butler wrote, “All that you touch, you change. All that you change changes you.” The coming weeks will be prime time for you to honor and celebrate that prayer, Virgo. You won’t be a passive dreamer, gentle traveler, or contemplative wanderer. Rather, I predict you will be a tidal force of metamorphosis. Parts of your world are pliable and ready for reshaping, and you will undertake that reshaping. But it’s important to know that the shift will go both ways. As you sculpt, you will be sculpted. As you bless, you will be blessed. Don’t be shy about riding along on this feedback loop. Do it with reverence and glee. Let the art you make remake you. Let the magic you give become the magic you are.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
In certain Hindu traditions, the deity Ardhanarishvara is depicted as half-male, half-female—a divine fusion of opposites. They are not torn, but whole in their duality. I invite you to be inspired by their symbolism in the coming weeks, Libra. For you, balance will not be about making compromises or pushing to find middle ground. It will be about embracing the full range of possibilities. Energies that some people may imagine are contradictory may in fact be complementary and mutual. Benevolence will coordinate well with fierceness and vice versa. Your craving for beauty will not just coexist with but synergize an affinity for messy fertility. This is a time for sacred synthesis. Don’t dilute. Integrate.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
The medieval mystic Meister Eckhart wrote, “God is not found in the soul by adding anything, but by a process of subtraction.” Subtracting what? He wasn’t referring to losing something valuable, but rather to letting go of obstacles that obscure our direct experience of the divine. I invite you to make abundant use of this principle, Scorpio. Slough off layers of illusion, outmoded fantasies, and self-images soaked in others’ longings. As you let go, do so not in bitterness but in a joyous quest for freedom.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
I’m hoping that the Season of a Thousand Feelings hasn’t confused you. I’m praying that you have maintained a measure of composure and aplomb while navigating through the richest emotional flow you’ve experienced in many moons. It’s true that in some ways this barrage has been draining. But I’m certain you will ultimately regard it as being highly educational and entertaining. You will look back at this bustling interlude as a gift that will take a while to harvest completely.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Greek myth tells us that Persephone didn’t just return from the underworld each spring; she ruled there half the year. Yes, she was taken there against her will, but she adapted, transformed, and ultimately wielded great power in the depths. In the coming weeks, Capricorn, you will have the chance to navigate realms that other souls may not be brave enough to enter: taboos, unusual yearnings, ancestral memories. My advice is to go gently but with intense resolve. Don’t act like a tourist. Be a sovereign explorer, even a maestro of mystery. Claim your throne in the underworld. Use it to create healing maps for others. When your work is done and the right moment comes, you will rise again into the light.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
In my astrological opinion, you are ready to graduate from the University of Senseless Suffering. It’s time to get your diploma and treat yourself to a vacation. I’m not saying you will never again experience pain, of course. Rather, I’m telling you the good news that your dilemmas in the coming months will be more fully useful and redemptive. They will feel more like satisfying work than unpleasant ordeals. Congrats on the upgrade, Aquarius! You are forever finished with at least one of your arduous lessons.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Ancient Greek philosopher Heraclitus said you can’t step in the same river twice. Like everything else in nature, the river is in constant flux. It may appear to be the same, but the water is always flowing. What Heraclitus didn’t say is that *you* are never the same, either. Eternal change is your destiny. I invite you to ruminate eagerly on this truth, Pisces. Hopefully, it will help you let go of any hyper-perfectionist urges you might have. It will inspire you to see that the plan you made a while ago may need revision—not because you were wrong, but because you have grown. So yes: It’s time to reassess and recalculate. The goal isn’t to stick to the blueprint, but to build something that breathes with your becoming. Let the ever-new version of you draw a fresh map. It will be wiser than the last.

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
In Hindu cosmology, the Sanskrit term “Lila” refers to divine play. It’s the idea that all of creation is a sacred and artful amusement that’s performed by the gods with joy, sorrow, artfulness, and flair. I hereby proclaim Lila to be your theme of power, Aries. You have been so deep lately, so honest, so drenched in feeling. Now, life is giving you a big wink and saying, “It’s playtime!” You can start this fresh phase by making a list of all the experiences that bring you fun, recreation, and entertainment. I hope you emphasize these pursuits in the coming weeks.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
In the high desert of Chile, astronomers work at observatories on mountaintops where the air is dry, and the sky is clear. There, away from light pollution, the universe reveals itself with astonishing intimacy. But even the most powerful telescopes can’t function during the day. I suspect you will be like those observatories in the coming weeks, Taurus: capable of seeing vast truths, but only if you pause, quiet the ambient noise, and look during the dark. This approach should embolden you to use your intelligence in new ways. Stillness and silence will be conducive to your deep explorations. Night will be your ally.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Are you courageous enough to let go of sparkly clean but unfruitful fantasies so as to clear space for reality’s disorderly richness? Are you wild enough to relinquish naïve fears and hopes so you can see the raw truths blooming right in front of you? Are you cagey enough to discard the part of your innocence that’s rooted in delusion even as you bolster the part of your innocence that’s fueled by your love of life? Here’s my response to those questions, Gemini: Maybe you weren’t mature or bold or crafty enough to accomplish these heroic feats before, but you are now.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Coral polyps are tiny, soft-bodied creatures. Over centuries, they assemble massive reef systems, turning their fragile exoskeletons into monumental architecture. These creatures can be a symbolic reminder that your sensitivity is not a weakness; it’s your building material. Keep that in mind during the coming weeks, when tender care and your nurturing ability can be primal sources of power. I invite you to start creating an enduring sanctuary. Generate a quiet miracle. Construct an elegant masterpiece. For best results, allow your emotional intelligence to guide you. You have the precise blend of aptitudes necessary to coax beauty to grow from vulnerability.

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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‘Doing God’s Work’: This Korean Restaurant Hits 15,000 Free Meals

Pok-Cha Kim, co-owner of Korea House Restaurant - credit, Korea House, Austin, screengrab via Instagram
Pok-Cha Kim, co-owner of Korea House Restaurant – credit, Korea House, Austin, screengrab via Instagram

In the July heat, it may have seemed strange to see a line out of the door of Korea House Restaurant on a Wednesday afternoon.

The Austin Asian eatery was preparing to do “God’s work” feeding their community for free.

On the first Wednesday of every month, the first authentic Korean BBQ restaurant in Austin opens its doors to feed whoever walks in. The kitchen staff volunteer their time, as do the front of house who take orders from strangers crammed together at communal tables.

The charity feeding has recently surpassed its 15,000th meal, and the owners, who recently had to start dipping into their savings to continue the tradition, say they have no plans to stop.

“We’re not rich, but when we share with others, always God provide us better things somehow,” said Vivian Newton, who opened the restaurant in 1988 with her friend Pok-Cha Kim. “If we have to close down, we’ll close down. But until then, we’re just going to keep on going.”

Tips and donations are accepted but not expected, and often pooled for donation to the homeless, who often are among those who come in and eat for free.

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“That first taste brought [me] back to Korea,” Moses Yoo, an unhoused Korean American told KUT News after his meal. “The smells of the streets, of all the different foods and just hearing Korean at a Korean restaurant here in Austin… It was nice to have someone speak back Korean.”

It’s not just the needy who take advantage of the free meals, but students at local universities who can always use a bit of financial relief. In the case of two who also spoke with KUT, it was probably the first restaurant they ever remember going to as kids, and now as adults the attachment is even stronger.

MORE RESTAURANTS HELPING OTHERS: How a Gift from Pope Francis Inspired a Restaurant Owner to Feed the Hungry for Years

The charity is driven strongly by Newton and Kim’s Christian faith, and from the decor to the music, the word of God is central in their lives. They hope those who eat are not only filled up physically, but also spiritually.

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Engineer Revives the Pay Phone for Vermont Community to Make Free Calls in Their Cellular Dead Zone

credit - Pedram Farjam via Unsplash
credit – Pedram Farjam via Unsplash

Humanity is enjoying a bit of a devolution back to analog, and a perfect example of this comes from Vermont, where refurbished pay phones are connecting a community with poor cell signal.

When was the last time you used a pay phone? For many working Americans the answer may be never. But for one rural Vermonter, he saw them as a potential public service project.

“I realized, wow, there’s no cell service for 10 miles in either direction,” Patrick Schlott, an airplane engineer told AP’s Amanda Swinhart. “The community could really benefit from something like this.”

Taking an entrepreneurial idea and turning it into a charitable one, Schlott bought an old pay phone, which sell for between $100 and $500, and installed it outside the North Turnbridge General Store using a device that converts an internet connection to an analog telecom line the phones can use.

He then removed the coin-operation mechanism, and suddenly, a free phone service was available for all, though it did take some convincing on the part of the general store owners.

“Everyone’s pretty surprised, and they’re like, ‘Is that a real pay phone? Does that really work?’ And I’m like, ‘Yeah, but it doesn’t cost any money now,’” said store owner Mike Gross. “We’ve had people use it that broke down. It’s a great thing because service is so spotty in Vermont.”

A SIMILAR INITIATIVE FROM THE UK: Village Saves its Phone Booth with Campaign to Make More Calls – and Preserve a ‘Lifeline’

The phone proved pretty useful to the community, and suddenly he received requests for more: from the Latham Library in Thetford and inside an informational booth in Randolph off Interstate 89, Swinhart reports.

Schlott’s charitable participation doesn’t end there, since it costs $2 to $3 per phone for the phone line and another $5 for calls. Then, Schlott has to act as the operator, fielding or transferring calls and helping users when needed if they but dial 0. The operator calls arrive on his personal cell phone, which uses an app to keep his number private.

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370 calls were made from the Lantham phone last month, many of them students without cell phones who needed a pickup from a parent.

Schlott would like to expand the project if he can figure out financing possibilities.

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“We are never so defenseless against suffering as when we love.” – Sigmund Freud

Anastasia Skylar - Unsplash

Quote of the Day: “We are never so defenseless against suffering as when we love.” – Sigmund Freud

Photo by: Ryan Hutton

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?

Anastasia Skylar – Unsplash

Good News in History, July 26

Dadabhai Naoroji in the year he was elected to Parliament- public domain

133 years ago today, Dadabhai Naoroji was elected as the first Indian Member of Parliament in Britain. A merchant, scholar, writer, and political leader who served as a founding member of the Indian National Congress, Naoroji is particularly known for formulating the “drain theory,” which argued that economic exploitation under British rule led to the transfer of wealth from India to Britain. His work was influential among early nationalists and reformers, and he remained a key figure in shaping early Indian political thought. READ more about this pioneering freedom-fighter and some of his work as an MP… (1892)

Temporary Tattoo Could Prevent ‘Spiking’ by Detecting Roofie Drugs in Drinks Within Seconds

Illustration of GHB roofie sticker tattoo -released by The American Chemical Society
Illustration of GHB roofie sticker tattoo -released by The American Chemical Society

A temporary tattoo that detects drugs in drinks could prevent spiking with roofies.

The new sticker responds within one second to even low concentrations of the drug γ-hydroxybutyrate (GHB), according to scientists.

When drinking in a social setting, downing a drink spiked with drugs including GHB or Rohypnol (known as “roofies’) is an ever-present danger.

The drugs are colorless and tasteless, and induce a stupor in the victim that’s similar to severe alcohol intoxication, which leaves people vulnerable to being overpowered.
But people can protect themselves by testing their drinks with specialized strips or cards that change color if exposed to the drugs.

However, current tests are often conspicuous or take minutes to report their results.

Now researchers in South Korea have developed a rapid-acting test for GHB that’s worn on the skin using a tattoo-like sticker.

To create the stickers, the researchers placed a mould overtop a thin plastic film decorated with tattoo-like designs. The team poured a gel mixture Into the mould, containing a chemical receptor that turns red when it detects GHB. They then coated the back of the sticker with a diluted glue solution, so it could stick to skin.

The researchers tested the sticker’s ability to detect small amounts of GHB in a range of drinks, including whiskey, vodka, beer, and coffee.

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The findings, published in the journal ACS Sensors, showed that, within a single second, it detected the drug across a range of concentrations and below a level that would induce serious physiological symptoms: 0.01 micrograms of GHB in one milliliter of beverage.

“In practice, a wearer could dip a finger into a beverage, touch the drop to the sticker and see the result almost immediately,” said study co-author Dr. Kyong-Cheol Ko, of the Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology in a media release.

“And the sticker displays the positive result for up to 30 days after detection, which could be important if it’s needed as a form of evidence of tampering.”

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The researchers say that their sticker technology, funded in part by funding from the National Research Foundation of Korea and the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety, is cheap and easy to manufacture, and it could be commercially available soon.

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‘I Married the Hitchhiker we Picked Up on the Road’ – If Uber Would have Been Cheaper They’d Never Meet

Maddy Kacmarcik and Travis Becker – SWNS
Maddy Kacmarcik and Travis Becker – SWNS

A woman is counting her blessings that she was on the right road at the right time, after falling in love with a guy that she and her friend picked up hitchhiking.

27-year-old Maddy met Travis Becker while driving back from a night out with her friend in Byron Bay, Australia, a beach vacation destination. They spotted Travis and his pal walking on the side of the road, trying to hail a lift. The four ended up spending the rest of the evening hanging out—with Maddy and Travis hitting it off.

But the pair forgot to get each others’ phone number and they had to track each other down on Facebook.

Two weeks later, the American woman who was studying abroad in Byron Bay, joined Travis, a Sydney resident, on their first official date—and they got engaged 18 months later.

The couple said they couldn’t be more grateful for their decisions back then.

“If he’d have gotten one more drink or I’d have taken a different route we might not have met,” said Maddy, from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, who knew right away he was the one.

“I knew I was going to build a life with him. It makes you very grateful.”

Maddy said she didn’t tell her dad how she met Travis initially, but now her family couldn’t be happier for her. And people are always shocked when they hear their story for the first time.

“I feel like my life would be completely different if I blinked and looked the other way that night,” Travis Becker told SWNS news agency.

Maddy and Travis Becker got married in a courthouse in Wisconsin -SWNS

“One more beer or talking to someone for just enough time for me to be leaving and standing on the corner trying to get an Uber at 3x surcharge, so I thought ‘let’s try to hitchhike.’”

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“Within about one minute someone shouts out of a car and is pulling over. It was two girls. My mate and I were like, ‘let’s get in!’… Little did I know that it was my future wife driving.

“We hung out that night and it just felt like we had known each other for years, our souls were in sync and we just chatted all night.

“I think nothing in this world is a coincidence. I pinch myself every day.”

They realized their Airbnbs were in the same place, and the four ended up playing cards and hanging out.

“We were talking about all the things we had in common,” says Maddy. “We were so engaged in conversation I didn’t get his phone number or socials.

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“I couldn’t even remember his last name. All I could remember was he was an electrician from Sydney. I went on Facebook trying to find him.”

Maddy ended up finding Travis’ friend on Facebook and messaged him to pass on her number. They ended up meeting up the next day.

“We haven’t stopped talking after that.

“We’re so lucky.”

(EDITOR’S NOTE: Hitchhiking can be quite dangerous—especially when alone—so always be cautious, aware, and smart.)

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Family’s Escaped Parakeet Found More Than a Hundred Miles Away from Home: ‘That’s Unheard of!’

Yianoulla Evangelou reunited with Rambi the large green Alexandrine parakeet – SWNS photo
Yianoulla Evangelou reunited with Rambi the large green Alexandrine parakeet – SWNS photofoun

A much-loved parakeet has been found in Dorset, England after going missing from its London home more than 100 miles away.

After having never left home before, the large green 7-year-old Alexandrine parakeet named Rambi took off on a Sunday when his cage was left open during a family barbecue.

They launched an extensive search for him in their neighborhood, leading to half of Islington on the lookout for the parakeet.

“Because he’s never really flown before—other than around the house—we thought he’d be nearby,” said owner Yianoulla Evangelou. “We all went to bed that night devastated.

“We searched every street, knocked on every neighbor’s door, put posters up, contacted every vet and pet shop, everything you can think of,” the 50-year-old explained.

They had no luck until weeks later when they received a call from animal charity Wildlife in Need on the south coast of England, near Bournemouth, saying they’d found a parakeet that looked similar to theirs.

The charity was quite doubtful that it was the right bird—even after the number on Rambi’s ankle tag was matched—because they’d never heard anything like it happening before. They were so incredulous that Evangelou had to keep sending photos and videos of Rambi, in order to convince them it was hers.

“It’s a miracle,” Evangelou told SWNS news agency. “We’re so happy now that Rambi’s back. It’s just so amazing.

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“But we’re baffled as to how he got to Bournemouth and his journey. We just can’t wrap our brains around it. He’s a domestic bird.”

Yianoulla Evangelou with her Alexandrine parakeet named Rambi SWNS

It’s believed that the bird, which is native to Southeast Asia, may have hitched a ride in, or on, someone’s vehicle to get from the capital to the sunny south coast.

Ms. Evangelou explained that during a family backyard barbecue they brought out their birds to join them, and while giving Rambi some food, she must have inadvertently left his door ajar—and, possibly scared by loud construction going on next door, he fled his cage.

“It was hot so we thought he would be bound to come down into someone’s garden.”

The family later learned that the lost bird was brought into a charity, Wildlife in Need, in Dorset, after landing on a random woman’s shoulder in a Sainsbury’s car park.

“We don’t understand how he got to where he did. He travelled over a hundred miles in the space of six days. That’s unheard of.”

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“The only way we will find out exactly what happened is if he tells us at some point—because he does talk,” she joked.

“The woman who took him in said she would’ve loved to have kept Rambi, but she knew he had an owner.”

“We drove for more than two-and-a-half hours the day after we got the call to pick him up,” Ms Evangelou continued.

“It was the best feeling in the world. We thought he was gone forever.

“The community were amazing. There were people out in parks at night, walking their dogs and looking for Rambi.

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Ms. Evangelou says her sister, Sheniz, is now even thinking of writing a children’s book about his adventure, called #BringRambiHome.

“He’s such a loving bird, and he loves to dance,” said Sheniz.

“We were worried that a cat or a bird of prey would get to him, because he’s obviously not very streetwise.”

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