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Barber Shop Swoops in to Help Run Restaurant When Staff Gets COVID: ‘We couldn’t ask for better neighbors’

Instagram/@wurstbarjc

It was the best of times; it was the worst of times, but when it was the worst of times for Jersey City eatery Würstbar, their best of neighbors at Virile Barber Shop swooped in to help.

Like many restaurants struggling to stay afloat in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, Würstbar had adapted it’s business model to meet the current guidelines. Unfortunately a staff member was exposed to the virus. Rather ran risk spreading the disease, the management decided the best course of action was to shut down—at least temporarily.

“No, we are not randomly closed for ‘renovations!’” read their Instagram post. “We unfortunately, had an exposure to COVID-19 at Würstbar.

“Würstbar is a small team run by an extremely hardworking and loyal staff. Running the restaurant with only non-exposed employees isn’t an option for us at the moment.

RELATED‘Unbelievable Act of Kindness’: Customer Left $2,500 Tip for Restaurant Staffers Before They Closed Up Shop

“We decided as a team that we would close until every employee exposed or not has been tested and can return to work confident in their safety, and equally as important, our guests’ safety.

“Thank you to @hdsid_jc and Prestige Health Mobile for getting the entire staff tested so quickly. We look forward to serving you soon.”

Word of Würstbar’s crew quarantine quickly made the rounds of the tight-knit community. Luckily, Würstbar’s neighbors are pretty wünderbar.

In less than 24 hours, workers from Virile Barber Shop just up the street stepped up, offering to lend a hand by taking shifts to keep Würstbar open for business until the impacted staff members could all be tested and cleared.

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“The weather is too nice out to let our neighbors at Würstbar stay closed!” Virile Barber Shop owner Andre Fersa posted. “I’ve taken over the bar and am selling PRETZELS, beer, wine and cider for outdoor seating only. Come on by and support this great staff.”

As expected, the grateful Würstbar staff was soon singing the praises of the generous community volunteers who’d pitched in to keep their doors open. “A big thank you to the crew at @virile for taking over Würstbar yesterday, that was a blast! We love this community and couldn’t ask for better neighbors.

“Let’s not forget barbershops and salons were hit just as hard as restaurants during the shutdown. With so many people home from the office and big events not happening it’s easy to skip a cut here and there. If you have the means, please get that extra cut and look your best for your Zoom call or socially distanced gathering.”

MORE: Customers Jump Up to Help Run Restaurant When Chef is Left Alone After Staff Emergency: ‘Beautiful to witness’

Now granted, a sweet story like this about neighbors going the extra mile for each other when the chips are down may not be the best thing you hear all day, but it sure won’t be the würst.

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Athlete With Downs Syndrome Makes History as First to Finish an Iron Man Race–And Gifts the Medal to His Mom

Clocking in at 16 hours; 46 minutes; nine seconds (just 14 minutes shy of the 17-hour cutoff time), triathlete Chris Nikic didn’t finish with the fastest time when he recently completed his first Iron Man race—but he did set a new world record.

This past Saturday, after swimming 2.4 miles, the 21-year-old Floridian cycled 112 miles, and then ran a 26.2-mile marathon to become the first competitor with Down’s Syndrome to successfully cross the finish line in the 42-year history of the Iron Man Race.

“You have shattered barriers while proving without a doubt that anything is possible,” tweeted the official Ironman Triathlon Organization. “We are beyond inspired, and your accomplishment is a defining moment in Ironman history that can never be taken away from you.”

For his awe-inspiring efforts, Nikic also earned himself a place in the Guinness Book of World Records as the first person with Down’s Syndrome to become an official Iron Man.

RELATED: Personal Trainer With Autism Opened a New Gym That Caters Specifically to People With Special Needs

“Being the first person with Down’s Syndrome is a great feeling,” Nikic told TODAY, prior to the event. “I can prove to kids that if I can do it, they can do it, too.”

Nikic’s father, Nik, hopes that parents of other children with Down’s Syndrome who see what his son has achieved will be inspired. “We want them to realize earlier that their child is a blessing, and they can live an amazing life,” he told TODAY.

As important as taking on the physical and mental challenges of an Iron Man were to Nikic, he had other compelling reasons for entering the competition. He might not have been carrying a banner, but the message he took across the finish line with him was clear.

“To Chris, this race was more than just a finish line and celebration of victory,” his dad told the BBC. “Ironman has served as his platform to become one step closer to his goal of living a life of inclusion, normalcy, and leadership. It’s about being an example to other kids and families that face similar barriers, proving no dream or goal is too high… If Chris can do an Ironman, he can do anything.”

MORE: Cancer Survivor Becomes First Woman To Complete Grueling Triathlon Covering 330 Miles in 5 Days

Nikic trained between four to six hours a day to prepare for the grueling event, and that training paid off. Even after suffering a fall from his bike during the second leg of the race, he called on his inner reserve of strength to get back up, keep going, and get the job done.

“Goal set and achieved,” Nikic posted to the delight of social media posse, including 33,000 new Instagram followers. “Time to set a new and bigger goal for 2021.”

One of Nikic’s biggest fans, all-time tennis great Billie Jean King, tweeted the perfect response: “No limits. No boundaries. Keep dreaming big and going for it, Chris!”

CHECK OUT: World’s Largest Open-Air Gallery Was Painted By People With Learning Disabilities—And It’s Breathtaking

With hopes of competing in the 2022 Special Olympics scheduled on his home turf in Orlando, it looks as if Chris Nikic has plenty of big dreams yet to come true.

As for that medal he won for completing one of the world’s most grueling triathlons? He gifted it to his loving mom.

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First Test of Virgin’s Hyperloop With Passengers Aboard –Takes Us Closer to 30-Min Floating Commute From DC to NYC

Virgin Hyperloop

After more than 400 tests, Richard Branson’s Virgin Hyperloop, a levitating train of small passenger pods, just made transportation history as it completed its first run with people aboard.

Virgin Hyperloop

Chief of Technology Josh Giegel and Sara Luchian, the Director of Passenger Experience, reached speeds of 107 mph (172 kph) at the DevLoop testing center in Las Vegas, Nevada. While being only a sixth of the purported top speed of the Virgin Hyperloop, it still represents a major safety milestone.

This comes shortly after Reuters reported that West Virginia will play host to a certification center and test track where the next phase of testing will follow a timeline of achieving safety certification by 2025 and commercial-scale operations by 2030.

“I had the true pleasure of seeing history made before my very eyes,” said Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, the chairman of Virgin Hyperloop and chief executive of DP World, the firm which invested around $400 million in the Virgin Hyperloop’s development.

Hyperloops are springing up around the world as innovators seem to conclude that small pods that float over a magnetic track using electromagnetism in a vacuum tube to achieve lighting quick, silent, emission-free travel is the future of transportation.

RELATED: This New Hyperloop Pod is Set to Whisk Passengers Between Cities at 760mph

Such a system could carry commuters at 670 mph from Washington D.C. to New York City, arriving in just half an hour; or one the West Coast, from Los Angeles to San Francisco in 43 minutes—four times the speed of a regular train, and twice as fast as a jet airliner.

Virgin Hyperloop is a transportation system built to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in every way, not only because of the propulsion system, but the construction of the tunnels would be smaller and less reliant on heavy machinery.

Virgin Hyperloop

“It allows us to re-imagine urban areas and connectivity between urban areas,” Hyperloop Chief Executive Jay Walder told Reuters. “You’ll be able to move up to 50,000 people per hour, per direction. With zero source emissions.”

MORE: With EV Battery Prices Dropping 87%, Tesla is Making a Car That Costs $25,000

Construction would also be much more flexible, as there is far-less surface area, and the pods have a sharper turning angle than rail trains and can go up steeper inclines.

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Ancient Mayan City Built A Sophisticated Water Filtration System With Materials We Still Use Today

Anna Stampfil

Archaeologists working at the site of the ancient Maya city of Tikal in northern Guatemala have found a sophisticated water filtration system that would have proven to be millennia ahead of its time.

Anna Stampfil

Built at the end of a channel from the Corriental reservoir, a critical source of drinking water for the northern Maya, the mixture of zeolite and quartz sand at the mouth of the channel would have removed most contaminants like cyanobacteria and heavy metals and is still used in modern water filters even today.

“What’s interesting is this system would still be effective today and the Maya discovered it more than 2,000 years ago,” Kenneth Tankersley, associate professor of anthropology from the University of Cincinnati said in a statement.

And speaking of 2,000 years, it would be around 2,000 years from the estimated date of the completion of the filtration system at Tikal that the same materials would begin to be employed in Europe.

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“It was probably through very clever empirical observation that the ancient Maya saw this particular material was associated with clean water and made some effort to carry it back,” said UC geography professor Nicholas Dunning, who was involved with the research.

End of an era

Tankersley and Dunning published a research paper together on the discovery. According to the corresponding statement on the university website, water quality and availability would have been a major concern for the flourishing Maya civilization in the 3rd century BC.

Even though Tikal and the Maya who built it centered their cities in a rainforest, the porous limestone soil meant that water never stayed around for long, and in periods of extended drought, standing water like the Corriental reservoir would become contaminated with bacteria.

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During rainy seasons, the city, which has been listed as a UNESCO Heritage Site and might have been home to around 60,000 people, was fed by rainwater from four reservoirs, the Corriental being the furthest from the city at a distance of about 18 miles.

While the intuitive “molecular sieve” of quartz sand and zeolite filtered the water at Corriental, the other reservoirs closer to the city lacked this modern filtration system, and it was the resulting contamination combined with a period of climatic change characterized by reduced rainfall that saw the powerful commercial and ceremonial hub of the Northern Maya civilization abandoned during the 9th century.

“The main water sources for the site core of Tikal, especially the Temple and Palace Reservoirs, were seriously compromised as sources of drinking water by the end of the Late Classic period,” write Dunning and Tankersley in their paper.

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It wasn’t only heavy metals and bacteria that were being filtered out by Corriental but mercury, a toxic compound present in a pigment called cinnabar which the Maya used constantly as decoration. The Temple and Palace reservoirs lacked the filtration system necessary to remove the mercury runoff from cinnabar-painted buildings, and soil samples have shown that during the period before abandonment the mercury levels could have been ten times more than the lowest measure of toxicity.

“We don’t have absolute proof, but we have strong circumstantial evidence,” Dunning said in his statement. “Our explanation makes logical sense.”

READ: Egypt Just Discovered 27 Sealed Coffins in An Ancient Cemetery That Were Buried 2,500 Years Ago

“The ancient Maya lived in a tropical environment and had to be innovators. This is a remarkable innovation,” Tankersley said. “A lot of people look at Native Americans in the Western Hemisphere as not having the same engineering or technological muscle of places like Greece, Rome, India, or China. But when it comes to water management, the Maya were millennia ahead.”

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“Be not inhospitable to strangers lest they be angels in disguise.” – Paraphrase from the Bible

Quote of the Day: “Be not inhospitable to strangers lest they be angels in disguise.” – Paraphrase from the Bible

Photo by: Vignesh Moorthy

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?

 

11-Year-old Artist is Spreading Kindness Making Flags of Gratitude for Veterans and Health Workers – LOOK

Morris Township is your typical New Jersey town: There’s a fire department and a police department; there’s a medical center, and fun stores, and lively restaurants.

Thanks to the work of a super creative girl—since the pandemic hit in March, frontline staff in the area have been finding some very special items outside such places of work. 

These ‘Flags of Gratitude’ are all made by 11-year-old Callie Danysh.

She paints the image for every flag or tile herself, and adds inspirational messages of support and appreciation on each one—so essential workers can know just how grateful we all are for the work they’re doing.

Callie has been leaving no stone unturned in her bid to ‘honor a hero.’

Around Morristown, Morris Plains, and Morris Township, staff and volunteers at local businesses and organizations have all been finding Flags of Gratitude dedicated to them.

So far, Callie has made an incredible 2,000 flags to encourage and uplift others—all of which can be seen on the Flags of Gratitude Facebook page.

The list of heroes Callie is honoring with her art continues to expand.

RELATED: This 5th-Grader is Racing to Get 100k Meals to People in Need Before Thanksgiving

This November 11, with a little help from some Sharpie markers and paint pens, she’s been honoring former service personnel by making special flags to place outside the Veterans of Foreign Wars site in Morris Plains.

Last month, she also made flags for Morristown’s Army and Navy Recruiting Center.

As part of her project, Callie is raising money for others: In July, she made $1,000 for HelpMorrisNow, which helps get food and clothing to local people in need.

MORE: Girl Who Challenged Dave Grohl to Drum Battles Is Now Co-Writing a Song to Perform With Foo Fighters

Now she’s raising money for Good Grief, an organization that helps families going through loss, and Hubert’s Animal Welfare. Essentially, she’s doing whatever it takes to give back to the community. 

“It makes me feel really good because I enjoy spreading kindness to people,” says Callie.

Her designs are being printed on 9-inch photo tiles so people can donate to the charity and have a keepsake that will last forever. 

Head to the Facebook page to see how you can get involved—perhaps by buying one of Callie’s beautiful tiles?—and help this astonishing youngster in her bid to lift up others, one artwork at a time. 

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Tweet Your Thanks to a Veteran Today and $25 Goes to Paying Off Their Mortgage – And They’re Being Surprised LIVE

Together, we can pay off the debt of those we’re forever indebted to.

Today is Veterans Day, and on November 11, every time a person tweets “Thank you for your service,” Veterans United is contributing $25 to paying off the home loans of deserving former military personnel.

This amazing campaign is being marked by the hashtag #MakeItMeanMore, because, although they appreciate our gratitude, veterans deserve more than just a quick ‘thanks’.

Follow the progress throughout the day and watch as Veterans United Home Loans—the nation’s largest VA mortgage lender—posts videos of the life-changing surprises on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

A live ticker of the number of tweets (71,000 and counting) with the amount of contributions (nearly $2 million so far) can be followed on MakeItMeanMore.com.

Hank Bolden just received the news that his mortgage was being totally paid off. An Atomic Veteran who served in California, he was given just a few years to live after being exposed to radiation while serving. Now he’s a jazz saxophone student at the University of Hartford—and he’s on track to complete his degree at the amazing age of 83.

Watch the moment where the octogenarian finds out he no longer has to worry about his home loan.

In preparation for the campaign, the lender contacted Academy Award-nominated actor Gary Sinise to surprise Navy veteran Bill Day with the news that his entire mortgage had been paid off.

RELATED: Instead of Putting Him in Nursing Home, Grandson Brings 95-Year-old WWII Vet On Epic Bucket List RV Trip

“Me?” Exclaims Bill, a single father of four based in Albany, NY. He looks astonished as he says, “I don’t deserve this.”

“You’ve served your country, you’re taking good care of your family there and you’re working hard. We want to do a little something for you,” Sinise replies, smiling.

The shock on Bill’s face is obvious as he responds, “My son is at school right now, he’s severely autistic, we’re having so many issues, this is just going to… You guys have no idea what you’ve just done for me,” he tails off mid-sentence, in tears. “Thank you, that’s all I can say.”

MORE: Gold Star Families and Military Veterans Now Get Free Entrance to Any National Park This Veteran’s Day—and Beyond

Log onto Twitter now and send out your tweet. All it needs to say is five simple words: “Thank you for your service.” That’s it.

All done? You’ve just helped pay off a deserving person’s home loan.

Remember to check out the new videos of veterans being surprised on YouTube throughout the day—and bask in the collective power one simple, heartfelt tweet can have in changing people’s lives. 

SAY ‘Thank You For Your Service’ on Twitter today, and ask all your friends to do the same… 

98-Year-old D-Day Veteran Recreates Photo With Belgian Boy Who Befriended Him During WWII

A 98-year-old D-Day veteran has recreated a photo taken with a Belgian boy whose family took him in 76 years ago.

George ‘Bunny’ Avery was a sapper in the Royal Engineers and part of the second wave of troops to land on Normandy’s Sword Beach beaches on D-Day, 6 June 1944.

On that fateful day, he was dropped close to the shoreline by his landing craft, and as he made his way to the beach he said he “just kept running.” In his mind, he was telling himself, “Keep your head down boy!”

George advanced through Nazi-occupied Europe, building portable bridges which allowed troops and vehicles to travel at speed across rivers and canals.

During his wartime journey across the continent, George stayed at a bakery in the Belgian town of Peer with a family who gave him board and lodgings.

It was 1944 and George and some other soldiers were building bridges nearby.

While staying with the town bakers, George made good friends with the 6-year-old boy of the household.

That boy’s name was Urbain, and when the family had their photo taken to remember their time with George, he and Urban were were pictured hugging.

RELATED: Missing His Hugs, Quarantined Kids Honor the Veteran Who Spent Thousands of Hours Mentoring Them in School

George’s daughter Kathryn recently discovered photos of the bakery, with a Belgian address written on the back. She began doing some research. Before long she’d managed to contact Urbain. He said yes to meeting-up in his childhood town with Kathryn and her dad. 

SWNS

Kathryn and her father often return to France, Holland, and Belgium to take part in liberation commemorations, but this meeting was particularly special. 

MORE: Instead of Putting Him in Nursing Home, Grandson Brings 95-Year-old WWII Vet On Epic Bucket List RV Trip

When they met, Urban was holding a photo showing him being carried by George, who was just 23 at the time.

George now lives with dementia and can’t remember his meetings with Urbain, but his Belgian pal still remembers those special times with his soldier friend, and spoke to Kathryn of his joy at playing with George as a child.

SWNS

75 years after they first met, George and his Belgian had their photo taken in the very same spot where they were first photographed.  

We’re sure Kathryn will treasure such a special moment being captured forever.

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Renewable Energy Defies COVID-19 Downturn To Hit Record Growth in 2020

American Public Power Association

A new report from the International Energy Agency (IEA) published on Tuesday says almost 90% of new electricity generation in 2020 will be renewable, with just 10% powered by gas and coal—unbelievable growth figures from major countries like India, China, and the U.S, even as their economies struggle with COVID-19.

Spurred on by long-term contracts, a slight 5% dip in global energy demand, priority access to power grids, and continuous installation of new renewable power plants, worldwide growth in renewable energy will reach 7% by the end of 2020.

To say that the period from January to October of 2020 has been economically uncertain would be an understatement, but that hasn’t stopped an evidently unhaltable stream of investment going into of renewable energy installation the world over.

This period has seen a 15% increase in auctioned-off renewable energy when measured against the same period last year, and compared with 2019, the 2020 average share price of publicly traded solar power companies has more than doubled.

MORE: Electric Vehicle Sales in Europe Have Smashed Through Even the Most Optimistic Forecasts

Other measures of increase are a healthy 4% growth in new installations of renewable infrastructure and plants, amounting to around 200 gigawatts in the U.S. and China, with a 30% jump in the production from wind and PV solar power sources.

The forecasts for 2021 are even sunnier. India and the EU will lead a big drive that will, according to estimates from the IEA, result in a record setting 10% expansion in renewables by the end of 2021.

How is this possible

“Supply chain disruptions and construction delays slowed the progress of renewable energy projects in the first six months of 2020,” reads the IEA report. “However, construction of plants and manufacturing activity ramped up again quickly, and logistical challenges have been mostly resolved with the easing of cross-border restrictions since mid-May.”

“Despite the challenges emerging from the Covid crisis, the fundamentals of renewable energy expansion have not changed.”

RELATED: In The Wake Of Lockdowns Coal and Natural Gas May Look Like the Biggest Covid-19 Casualties

Already the cheapest forms of new energy installations around, PV solar panels and wind farms, generate the cheapest costs of electricity in history, something South Australia got to enjoy last month.

“Total installed wind and solar PV capacity is on course to surpass natural gas in 2023 and coal in 2024. Solar PV alone accounts for 60% of all renewable capacity additions through 2025,” the IEA predicts.

By 2025, coal could seem relatively pointless, as not only is renewable energy the cheapest in history, but it will be on track to supply the majority of the world.

CHECK OUT: The World’s Most Valuable Company Vows to Be 100% Carbon Neutral for its Supply Chain and Product Life-cycle by 2030

Furthermore, reductions in costs are projected to triple the market investment into renewables to over 15% during the same period. This is spearheaded by investment companies like BlackRock, whose CEO Larry Fink, responsible for managing trillions of dollars in private capital, guides investment decisions now principally on companies’ capacity for climate-conscious strategies.

There’s virtually nowhere a person can look and not see incredible prospects for renewable energy taking over the global energy market in the next decade. These fundamentals, if proven true, are staggering, and represent outcomes that climate change activists could only dream of eight or ten years ago.

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Instead of Putting Him in Nursing Home, Grandson Brings 95-Year-old WWII Vet on Epic Bucket List RV Trip

When 95-Year-old WWII veteran Johnnie Dimas lost his full-time caregiver and wife of 67 years, there didn’t seem to be many options, other than to move out of his house and into a nursing home.

But, he and his late wife had always vowed that they would never go into a home—so his grandson Roger Gilbert devised a plan.

He moved Grandpa Johnnie from Illinois to live with Roger and his wife Jo, in Sedona, Arizona two years ago.

And, last October they decided to embark on an epic journey around the USA in their motor home, visiting all of the places on their grandfather’s bucket list.

Knowing that time was limited, the unlikely trio explored and experienced as much as they could together—from Mardi Gras to Las Vegas, to an encounter with a camel named Roger at a dairy farm on the Mexican border, where he was completely enamored with the animal.

Most importantly, they got to visit several World War II museums where Johnnie was “treated like a rock star.” He was also fortunate enough to meet a fellow WWII vet there.

Photo by Jo Gilbert

“I think it was deeply cathartic for Grandpa to be able to process everything that had happened at such a young age,” Jo told GNN.

Johnnie enlisted in the U.S. Marines at the age of 17—and due to his young age, his father had to sign him up. He served in Guam where he was wounded and was sent back to the States to recover in a V.A. hospital. He had severe PTSD and was treated with electric shock therapy—until he “witnessed a friend and fellow soldier being carried out on a stretcher.” Afterward, he discharged himself from the hospital and went home.

Before loading his wheelchair into the motorhome for their trip, they dubbed their vehicle the ‘Sweet Mary Bus,’ for Johnnie’s late wife.

“Grandpa used to call her ‘Sweety’, so we named it after her and got a license plate with the name. It made him cry.”

Some of their favorites stops turned out to be Tombstone Arizona; White Sands, New Mexico; and the Texas cities of San Antonio, Austin, and Dallas.

They loved El Paso, Texas—particularly the Rosa Cantina, which is featured in the song ‘El Paso’.

One sentimental day, the Sweet Mary Bus rolled into Waco, Texas, where Grandpa Johnnie was born and raised.

Waco, Texas

“Grandpa loved food and so we had a blast in Louisiana—trying crawfish, alligator, as well as all the things New Orleans is known for.”

They toured the Louisiana swamps on an airboat, and enjoyed the Mardi Gras celebrations, before heading back to Arizona.

“I can honestly say that caring for Grandpa was the hardest and most rewarding thing we have ever done,” Jo says. “Caring for someone 24/7 is a very difficult job, but it also teaches you to be selfless.”

RELATED: Beloved Senior Who Hit the Road Instead of Fighting Cancer Passes Away at 91

“Grandpa taught us both so many things,” says Jo. “With the joy and contentment he felt in sitting by a campfire, or the sweet moments spent feeding popcorn to the ducks, he taught me that the simple times, the quiet moments in life are the ones to value.”

Standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona

“It was such an honor to see how people respected his service in WWII, and how fascinated they were by him and his stories. As we walked down the street people would stop Grandpa, shake his hand and thank him for his service. They didn’t often stop long enough to see how Johnnie would always well up with emotion and gratitude for their kind words, it touched him so deeply every time.”

At a WWII aircraft hangar-turned-museum in Texas, the young lady who helped run the place was so delighted to meet someone who’d lived through WWII that she gave Johnnie a personal tour and a tee shirt.

“She was thrilled to take photos with him, and before we left she said that meeting Grandpa had made her year! It was here that Grandpa also got his favorite mug: It simply said in big red letters “To hell with Hitler” and made him laugh every morning without fail when he drank his coffee.”

With Roger the camel

The 96 year-old passed away this year on August 16th. Their next planned trip was to visit Graceland, the home of his biggest idol—Elvis. He was so excited to go, but his deteriorating health wouldn’t allow for it. But in a final “sweet kiss from God”, Roger and Jo realized that Grandpa died the same day Elvis did, 43 years later—and he would have been tickled by that.

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“Honor to the soldier and sailor, who bravely bears his country’s cause. Honor, also, to the citizen who cares for his brother in the field and serves, as he best can, the same cause.” – Abraham Lincoln

Quote of the Day: “Honor to the soldier and sailor, who bravely bears his country’s cause. Honor, also, to the citizen who cares for his brother in the field and serves, as he best can, the same cause.” – Abraham Lincoln (for Veterans Day)

Photo by: Moira Dillon

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?

 

Girl Who Challenged Dave Grohl to Drum Battles Is Now Co-Writing a Song to Perform With Foo Fighters

New York Times/YouTube

Two people who’ve been having quite a bit of fun during lockdown are Dave Grohl and a 10-year-old girl named Nandi. Since August, they’ve been taking each other on in the most epic drum battle. Now? The pair are getting ready to jam on stage some day.

New York Times/YouTube

Nandi Bushell lives with her family in the pretty town of Ipswich in England. A superlative drummer, she’s been playing since she was five-years-old.

She kicked things off with Dave in summer when she posted a video where she drums to the Foo Fighters’ hit song Everlong.

Nandi wasn’t expecting one of the world’s biggest rock stars to respond to her fun tweet. But before long, Dave Grohl was posting from the Foo Fighters’ account and matching her rendition beat for beat.

He then one-upped his new pal, suggesting they battle to Them Crooked Vultures’ Dead End Friends. She matched the rock star’s beats, and then some. “You got me,” Dave had to concede.

From there, Grohl penned a song just for Bushell. The accompanying video is incredible, with his young daughters, hereby known as “the Grohlettes,” joining him as back-up singers.

RELATED: This Nigerian Boy Just Won A Scholarship After Dancing In The Rain Video Goes Viral (WATCH)

Nandi was overjoyed. She penned Dave a brilliant song right back: called Rock and Grohl. Because there’s no end to her talents, for her accompanying music video she sang and played the guitar, bass, and the keyboard.

Turns out, Grohl was more than a little impressed by his new friend’s ability to create an electric original tune.

He responded on Twitter, “I’m down, BUT I’M NOT OUT. Your epic song will definitely be hard to beat, but I think I know just what to do…”

Yesterday, in a video call hosted by the New York Times, the pair met for the first time.

“I get to meet a rock star, oh my god!” Dave said to Nandi. Of course, she couldn’t stop laughing.

The pair had a good chat about drumming, music, and making life fun. Then Dave started to look nervous. He said to Nandi, “I have a question… When the Foo Fighters finally come back to the UK, do you think you would get up on stage and jam with us?”

MORE: Gospel Singer’s Hilarious Song About Quarantine Snacking Goes Viral: ‘The Fridge Again!’

Nandi’s reply was immediate: “Yes! Definitely! A hundred percent!”

“Okay,” said Grohl, “but it has to be at end of the set, because you’re gonna steal the show…. Or we should make a song together?”

Cue furious head nods from Nandi and an emphatic, “yeah!”

The pair are now planning on creating a “fast” and “rocking” tune.

So how did Nandi feel about her chat with her new BFF? As ecstatic as you can imagine.

(WATCH the awesome pair meet up in the New York Times video below.)

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After Disease Forced Acclaimed Pianist to Stop Playing, a Designer Made Gloves That Brought His Hands Back to Life

Marcio De Assis

At age 80, having performed to great acclaim with celebrated orchestras in the United States and abroad, Brazilian piano maestro João Carlos Martins has had a stellar career.

Marcio De Assis

Unfortunately, until recently, a combination of degenerative disease and a series of injuries had all but stilled his talented hands.

No longer able master the piano, Martins turned to conducting. However, thanks to an ingenious invention of some “bionic gloves,” he’s back at the keyboard, making music again.

“To be able to use all 10 fingers again more than 20 years later is a miracle for me at the age of 80,” Martins told Reuters.

The black neoprene “extender” gloves, inspired by Formula One racing technology, were the brainchild of industrial designer Ubiratan Bizarro Costa. Costa made the original prototypes using a 3-D printer at a cost of about $125.

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Martins had lost almost the entire range of motion in his fingers. The gloves, fitted with a system of spring rods that draw the fingers back up as notes are depressed on the keyboard, restored his ability to play.

Marcio De Assis

“I did the first models based on images of his hands, but those were far from ideal,” Costa said in an AP interview reported by the Chicago Tribune.

Costa first showed his invention to Martins after a concert in the Sao Paulo countryside. While the prototypes weren’t fully functional, they were promising enough that Martins invited Costa to his home to continue development.

“I just created this as a gift to him,” Costa told CGTN America. “It’s not really part of my main line of work. It was something for him to have fun with… I wasn’t expecting all this interest.”

While the gloves have allowed Martins to resume playing, he doesn’t expect his full abilities to come back overnight, if ever. “I might not recover the speed of the past. I don’t know what result I will get. I’m starting over as though I were an 8-year-old learning,” Martins admitted.

Even so, Martins has the will and the discipline to keep working toward making the most of the second chance he’s been given. He’s even set himself a goal.

Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Martins was slated to celebrate the 60-year anniversary of his first appearance at New York’s famed Carnegie hall this coming October by conducting a commemorative performance there. For the encore, he’d planned to play one of his favorite keyboard selections.

While coronavirus protocol will likely determine whether or not the show goes on, Martins has already overcome his biggest obstacle. He believes the lesson he’s learned on his road to recovery—to never give up—can serve as inspiration to others.

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“It’s a kind of hope I can give to people who think maybe they can’t do anything more after 80 or so,” he said to CGTN. “At the age of 80, I think I can have a beginning again.”

And for that, he deserves a standing ovation.

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Hawking’s 50-Year Mystery About Falling into Black Holes Has Finally Been Solved

NASA

If you lurch into the event horizon of a black hole, will you ever come out? According to a series of new calculations which just solved a 50-year old problem even Stephen Hawking couldn’t figure out, the answer is yes.

NASA

It’s being described as a landmark calculation—the biggest thing to happen in the field since the work of the famous British physicist established the problem in the first place.

Since the 1970s, physicists have been grappling with a logical contradiction in calculations surrounding a black hole called the “black hole information paradox.”

Hawking would use his “semiclassical” quantum/general-relativity hybrid-explanation of the physics of a black hole to describe what happens to matter in and around it.

He discovered that quantum uncertainty causes small amounts of radiation to emanate from a black hole called “Hawking radiation.” This eventually causes it to lose mass and evaporate into nothingness. If the black hole loses mass and eventually disappears, then what falls in must appear again somewhere. The question is: where/how/why does the information escape?

The authors of the new calculations, including scientists from UC Santa Barbara, have uncovered additional effects permitted by general relativity but that Hawking didn’t include, which describe a strange situation in which information that falls into a black hole will eventually come out, and that this phenomenon happens at the same time, and is partially to blame for the evaporation of a black hole.

Quantum entanglement

The way in which it works is through quantum entanglement, a phenomenon which simply means that particles of matter can be linked on the quantum level, and display patterns and reactivity to each other even though they could be separated by thousands of miles.

Don Page, a physicist at the University of Alberta, was a graduate student whose studies of black holes were key in helping his advisor, Stephen Hawking, make his realization that black holes emit radiation. In 1980, Page broke with Hawking and argued that information must be released or preserved in black holes, causing a schism among physicists at the time.

RELATED: Biggest Bang Since ‘The Big Bang’ Creates a Black Hole Science Says Should Not Exist

Page would go on to establish a timeline of a black hole’s lifespan—shaped like an upside-down V known as “Page time” or the “Page curve”—it described how information which fell into the black hole would escape through emitted Hawking radiation until the black hole was no more. This was called “entanglement entropy,” and set up physicists for a 30-year lay up to make a slam dunk calculation.

The V-shaped decline

“Over the past two years, physicists have shown that the entanglement entropy of black holes really does follow the Page curve, indicating that information gets out,” explains George Musser writing for Quanta Magazine.

The slam dunk was started in October 2018 by Ahmed Almheiri at the Institute for Advanced Study when he used quantum computing to create a universe in which a simple black hole system located at the center of space began emitting radiation as per Hawking’s theory.

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The system begins to radiate as one entangled particle enters and another one leaves. This process continues, and the number of entangled particles increases, increasing the level of entanglement entropy.

If one imagines the black hole as the contents of a snow globe, and the glass of the globe as the event horizon (the edge of the black hole where the laws of physics begin to break down), Almheiri found that as the entangled entropy grew within the system, a “quantum extremal surface,” formed on the glass of the snow globe, just inside the event horizon.

Everything inside the quantum extremal surface is not part of the black hole, but rather like a collection of entangled particles which no longer contribute to the entropy in the system. Furthermore, the innermost particles in the simulated black hole became likewise detached from the black hole, forming something which Almheiri called “the island.”

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At this point, non-entangled radiation begins to be emitted, and the black hole breathes itself out of existence.

On to the next one

In demonstrating that entanglement entropy of black holes followed the Page curve, Almheiri and his friends confirmed that black holes do in fact release information, though it comes out in such disorder as to appear like an encrypted password.

By now if one’s brain is still working after all this, Almheiri’s research amazingly includes theoretical tools that would allow researchers to “decrypt” the scrambled entangled particles in the quantum extremal surface, and figure out what they are and where they came from.

Last year, having just solved a 50-year puzzle and proved Page’s life’s work, the team decided to focus on the mysterious “island” of particles that were in—but not “of” the black hole. The island is part of the radiation, but hasn’t flown out or been transferred to the extremal surface.

READ: Star-Gazer Reveals Stunning Pictures of Space He Takes From His Back Garden

This disconnect is theorized as being part of the reason why black holes go down the other side of the Page curve, and if solving the black hole information paradox seemed hard, Musser described the issue of the mysterious island as causing the team to “look off into the distance, momentarily lost for words.”

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Muslim Young Men Protect Catholic Church After Deadly Attacks in France: ‘We will protect churches ourselves’

Baldiri

A team of French Muslims recently spent the night standing outside their town’s cathedral to symbolically protect it and show solidarity with Christian churchgoers. 

Baldiri

When Elyazid Benferhat heard about a deadly attack on Notre-Dame Basilica in Nice at the end of October, he was sickened. Three people had died. He started thinking about what he could do to help. 

He talked to a Muslim friend, “and we had this idea,” Benferhat told the Associated Press. “We needed to do something beyond paying homage to the victims. We said, we will protect churches ourselves.”

He and his pal gathered together other young Muslims from among their friend group, as well as through the soccer club Benferhat coaches.

On All Saints’ holiday weekend—in coordination with local police—the group guarded their local church in Lodève on Saturday night and again for Sunday Mass. 

Elyazid Benferhat and the soccer team

The parish reverend, Luis Iniguez, said their symbolic gesture gave him hope in a difficult time. 

When a local paper published a photo of churchgoers having their picture taken with their new Muslim guards, Iniguez even hung the image up in 13th-century Saint-Fulcran Cathedral. 

As for Benferhat and his group? They say they’d like to make a symbolic act of protection for the cathedral again for Christmas. They think it’d be great if the movement caught on elsewhere, with other towns following in Lodeve’s footsteps.

RELATED: Church Opens Up Its Doors to Muslim Worshippers So They Can Have a Place to Pray During Quarantine

Whatever Benferhat gets up to next, he told the Associated Press, “it will come from the heart.”

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Broken Crockery Unearthed in North Carolina May Explain Fate of Famed Lost Colony of Roanoke

Clues as to the fate of the 115 men, women, and children of the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island, the first English settlement in the New World, have been unearthed by archaeologists digging in a North Carolina field.

Teams of local as well as British archaeologists are working in several areas around Roanoke Island on a mystery that is one of the oldest in North American history.

Sir Walter Raleigh led an expedition of middle-class Londoners across the ocean to arrive at Roanoke Island off the coast of North Carolina in 1587. Shortly after they arrived, governor John White returned to England for supplies and to recruit more colonists, but a naval war between England and Spain prevented his immediate return.

When he did get back he found the settlement in ruins and the people gone. All that he had to begin his own search was a single word, “Croatoan,” carved on a wooden post in the middle of town.

Croatoan were names given to the place and people of modern-day Hatteras Island, about 50 miles south of Roanoke Island off the Outer Banks.

Governor White also wrote that the settlers intended to move 50 miles inland, close to native tribes they had befriended. A map drawn by White had a cloth patch over an area around 50 miles towards the interior on the shore of Albemarle Sound, with the outline of a fort drawn in invisible ink.

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So we have settlers, mysterious names carved on posts, maps with hidden symbols, native tribes: no wonder it’s one of the great archaeological mysteries of the colonization of the Americas.

Modern day discoveries

In 2015, a team led by archaeologist Nick Luccketti excavated the site of the invisible ink-scrawled fort on White’s map, aptly-called “Site X,” and found two dozen shards of broken English pottery which he and his team maintain belonged to the Lost Colonists.

In January 2020, Luccketti returned to excavate about two miles north of Site X in a field which they called “Site Y,” and found English crockery in much greater amounts, suggesting that—as has been observed in many colonial scenarios—order broke down for some reason, and colonists went their separate ways—evidently some moving just outside their Indigenous neighbors’ village of Mettaquem.

Some archaeologists are skeptical that broken pottery shards are a good tool for dating the movements of the Lost Colony.

For example, Jacqui Pearce, a ceramic expert at the Museum of London, admits it’s possible the shards could come from pottery made from the late 16th century and could have belonged to the colonists, but this English pottery’s make and style carried on a long time, and it’s just as possible they belonged to traders from Jamestown, settled two decades after the collapse of Roanoke.

Meanwhile, on the Island of Hatteras, or Croatoan as it was called in the Lost Colonists’ day, European artifacts have been discovered in the remains of a Native American village, suggesting that between the three sites, it’s very likely that some colonists, as White said, went 50 miles inland towards Site Y and X, and others went to Croatoan as scarred into the wooden post, as White also discovered upon his return.

MORE: Rare Archeological Treasures Discovered Beneath Attic Floorboards of English Tudor Mansion

William Kelso, the archaeologist who led the effort to discover the colony at Jamestown, says the three sites together “solve one of the greatest mysteries in early American history—the odyssey of the Lost Colony.”

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“The words ‘I am’ are potent words; be careful what you hitch them to. The thing you’re claiming has a way of reaching back and claiming you.” – A.L. Kitselman

Quote of the Day: “The words ‘I am’ are potent words; be careful what you hitch them to. The thing you’re claiming has a way of reaching back and claiming you.” – A.L. Kitselman

Photo by: Hasan Almasi

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?

 

In a Landslide, Nebraska Voters Say ‘No More’ to 404% Interest Rates on Payday Loans

By 金-运

On Election Day, voters in Nebraska voted to put significant limits on the interest rates payday lenders can charge. 

A 400% interest rate on small-dollar loans is the average across the States. Now that 83% of Nebraska’s voters have approved Initiative 428, that won’t be the case in this Midwestern state: Payday lending interest rates will soon be capped at 36%. 

Nebraska, in addition to D.C, is the 17th state to implement such a cap. Other states to have pushed such a measure in recent Sweden Colorado, Ohio, Montana, and South Dakota. 

According to the Nebraskans for Responsible Lending coalition, which helped put the initiative on the ballot, the average interest rate for a payday loan in Nebraska has been 404%.

In Sweden, before 2016, payday lenders charged up to 574% interest. According to loans research by Sambla, the volume of payday alternative loans offered by credit unions grew considerably when the state voted to cap interest rates at 36% in the last major Swedish political event. 

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The Center for Responsible Lending (CRL), a consumer advocacy group that supports expanded regulation of the industry, said to Market Watch, “There is just something wrong with triple digit interest rates and trapping people in cycles of debt.” 

Federal Advocacy Director at the CRL, Ashley Harrington, stated, “This transcends political ideology.” She continued, “Everyone should be able to get behind safe, affordable consumer loans that don’t have triple-digit interest rates.”

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Man Sits With Typewriter on NYC Sidewalk to Help Strangers Send Letters to ‘Friends Feeling Blue’

Photo courtesy of Diego Gurner-Stewart

Before the invention of text messaging—which makes it super-easy to send a note to a friend—and before there were telephones in every home that could connect you instantly with a loved one, there were letters. Sure, you might need to wait a few days or weeks for the postman to deliver it, but the special feeling it contained made it worth the wait.

Photo courtesy of Diego Gurner-Stewart

Although a letter offers no instant gratification, handwritten correspondence were always highly anticipated and savored. Their stationery, envelope, and stamp were saved as mementos to be read and re-read—and treasured.

In the face of worry over the coronavirus pandemic and all the stress it has placed on New Yorkers, a Brooklyn-based performance artist and English professor Brandon Woolf came up with the idea of reviving the letter-writing tradition as a means to reach out and comfort one another.

Knowing that people have lost loved ones, jobs and businesses, and given up simple pleasures like hugs from a friend, Woolf began to ponder how to help people make meaningful connections.

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His answer was to take a page from history.

“When interpersonal connection is risky, what are other ways where we can be together?” Woolf pondered in an interview with The Park Slope Scribe. “What is a better experience than getting a piece of mail in your mailbox from somebody you didn’t expect to hear from?”

Using a vintage portable typewriter and seated on a folding chair alongside a mailbox, his sign says, “Free Letters for Friends Feeling Blue.” Woolf spent several hours, a few days a week for four weeks, typing letters for his Park Slope, Brooklyn neighbors.

The 37-year-old New York University teacher dubbed his “post-dramatic” street performance “The Console”—short for consolation.

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“Let’s not mourn our mailboxes
Maligned
As vessels of civic futility,” he wrote on Facebook in a poem, as a project manifesto.

“But make renewed use of them.
To sit together (at a distance)
And console one another. And those we love.
Posting letters from the edge
I’ll be at the mailbox all month—with paper and stamps and hand-sanitizer—ready to serve as you’re your medium, your console.
Together, if you’d like, we can take a moment to type a note of consolation, a blue-edged missive to a friend you think could use it.”

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By the project’s end, Woolf had typed more than 50 missives. While some letters were dictated, his favorites were the collaborative efforts between himself and the letter-writer, tweaking the intentional prose while forming a unique emotional bond between sender and scribe.

That definitely gets our stamp of approval.

(WATCH one of Brandon’s letter performance in the video below – or visit his website)

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‘Watershed’ Coronavirus Vaccine Looks to Be 90% Effective in Phase 3 Trial of 43,500 People, Reports Pfizer

File photo by Pan American Health Organization, CC

Early results were announced today for clinical trials involving 43,538 volunteers that showed a robust 90% success rate for protecting people against coronavirus. 

As part of the Phase–3 trials launched in July by developers Pfizer and BioNTech, the participants from diverse backgrounds in six countries—in the US, Germany, Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, and Turkey—received two injections spaced 21 days apart.

The analysis compared the number of cases of COVID-19 among volunteers receiving the vaccine with an approximately equal-sized group of volunteers who got a placebo jab, instead. The researchers reported no contraction of the disease in over 90% of the vaccinated group, so far, with immune protection achieved 28 days after the first dose of the 2-dose schedule.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) set a minimum effectiveness bar for COVID-19 vaccines at 50% for drugs seeking approval. This is the first COVID-19 candidate vaccine to produce data exceeding that mark. 

What next?

The data presented is only an early look into how the new vaccine seems to be performing. Further safety and efficacy data continue to be collected. 

Relying on an independent Data Monitoring Committee to analyze the results, Pfizer and BioNTech say they are continuing to accumulate safety data and estimate that a median of two months of such data following the final dose—the amount of safety data specified by the FDA in its guidance for potential Emergency Use Authorization—will be available by the third week of November.

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Based on their current projections, Pfizer would be ready to manufacture globally up to 50 million vaccine doses at the end by the year and “up to 1.3 billion doses in 2021.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the USA’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, described the trial results as “extraordinary” in an interview with the Washington Post, and said—given the US firm Moderna uses similar technology in its candidate vaccine—it, “gives you hope we might even have two vaccines.”

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