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Teens Win 2025 Earth Prize for Refrigerator That Runs on Salt – 200 are Headed to Hospitals to Preserve Medicine

A digital mockup of a Thermavault - credit, Dhruv Chaudhary, Mithran Ladhania, and Mridul Jain, supplied
A digital mockup of a Thermavault – credit, Dhruv Chaudhary, Mithran Ladhania, and Mridul Jain, supplied

From India comes the story of three teen inventors who were looking to improve rural healthcare by creating a portable fridge that needed no electricity or coolant fluids.

The result of their inspiration is a small, salt-cooled fridge that needs neither a power outlet nor a battery, but rather cools down passively as the salts dissolve in water.

(left to right) Dhruv Chaudhary, Mithran Ladhania, and Mridul Jain, supplied

Calling it “a fridge to bridge the world,” the Thermavault can use different combinations of salts to keep the contents at temperatures just above freezing or below it. Some vaccines require regular kitchen fridge temps, while others, or even transplant organs, need to be kept below freezing, meaning this versatility is a big advantage for the product’s overall market demand.

Dhruv Chaudhary, Mithran Ladhania, and Mridul Jain are all children of physicians or medical field workers in the state of Indore. Seeing how difficult it was to keep COVID-19 vaccines viable en route to countryside villages hours outside city centers in tropical heat, they wanted to create a better, portable solution to keeping medical supplies cool.

Because salt molecules dissolve in water, the charged ions that make up the salt molecules break apart. However, this separation requires energy, which is taken in the form of heat from the water, cooling it down.

Though the teen team knew this, it remained a challenge to find which kind of salt would have the optimal set of characteristics. Though sodium chloride—our refined table salt—is what we think of when we hear the word “salt,” there are well over one-hundred different chemical compounds that classify as salt.

“While we did scour through the entire internet to find the best salt possible, we kind of just ended up back to our ninth-grade science textbook,” Chaudhary told Business Insider.

Indeed, the professors at the lab in the Indian Institutes of Technology where they were testing Thermavault’s prototype were experimenting with two different salts which ended up being the best available options, a discovery made after the three teens tested another 20, none of which proved viable.

SIMILAR YOUNG MINDS: Teens Developed App That Identifies Mouth Cancer–Making Early Diagnosis Easy and Winning $50k for Their School

These were barium hydroxide octahydrate and ammonium chloride. The ammonium chloride alone, when dissolved, cooled the water to between 2 and 6 degrees Celsius (about 35 to 43 degrees Fahrenheit) perfect for many vaccines, while a dash of barium hydroxide octahydrate dropped that temperature to below freezing.

“We have been able to keep the vaccines inside the Thermavault for almost 10 to 12 hours,” Dr. Pritesh Vyas, an orthopedic surgeon who tested the device at V One hospital in Indore, said in a video on the Thermavault website.

MORE BRILLIANT MEDICAL INVENTIONS: World’s Smallest Pacemaker is Made for Newborns, Activated by Light, and Requires No Surgery

Designing a prototype, the teens have already tested it in local hospitals, and are in the process of assembling another 200 for the purpose of testing them in 120 hospitals around Indore to produce the best possible scope of use and utility data for a product launch.

Their ingenuity and imagination won them the 2025 Earth Prize, which came with a $12,500 reward needed for this mass testing phase.

SHARE This Brilliant Invention And The Even More Brilliant Minds Behind It… 

“Preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we’ve ever known.” – Carl Sagan (Do it today on Earth Day)

Elena Mozhvilo (cropped)

Quote of the Day: “Preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we’ve ever known.” – Carl Sagan (Do it today on Earth Day)

Photo by: Elena Mozhvilo, cropped

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

Good News in History, April 22

Jack Nicholson and Warren Beaty (right) in 1975 - credit Larry Bessel, Los Angeles Times, CC BY-SA 4.0.

Happy Birthday to Jack Nicholson who turns 88 years old today. Born in New Jersey, the actor has excelled in genres from satirical comedy to romance to dark portrayals of antiheroes and psychopaths. Working in Hollywood for more than 60 years, he has played the “eternal outsider, the sardonic drifter,” the rebels against social structure – and his 12 Academy Award nominations make him the most nominated male actor in the Academy’s history. Only he and Michael Kaine have been Oscar-nominated in every decade since the 60s. READ the acclaim he has received over his long career… (1937)

World-First South Korean Natural Gas Project Paves a Route to More Power and Cheaper Carbon Capture

The CLC demonstration plant developed by the research team - credit, Korea Institute of Energy Research
The CLC demonstration plant developed by the research team – credit, Korea Institute of Energy Research

After 300 hours of continuous operations, a 3 megawatt demonstration power plant in South Korea has offered a glimpse into the future of natural gas burning.

Utilizing technology that offers the potential for natural gas plants to capture an additional 150,000 metric tons of CO2 every year, the demonstration has achieved never-before-seen results in controlling what comes out of the smokestack.

Hundreds of years ago, industrialized nations switched from burning wood or dung for power to coal. Coal was followed by oil, and oil by natural gas—all three of which are known as fossil fuels. Today, just below a quarter of all power generation is attributed to natural gas.

In terms of emissions, natural gas is by some distance the superior of the three, but it still releases billions of tons of CO2 into the atmosphere every year. Compared to coal and oil, the nature of natural gas combustion allows for better opportunities to “capture” CO2 released from the process.

However, along with being expensive, analysis has shown that often the captured carbon is used to squeeze more fossil fuels out of declining wells.

Now however, the Korea Institute of Energy Research (KIER) has successfully demonstrated the world’s largest gas power generation technology capable of inherently separating carbon dioxide from nitrogen, a method called chemical looping combustion (CLC).

In conventional gas power generation, fuel combustion releases CO2 alongside nitrogen and water vapor. Once emitted, CO2 mixes with nitrogen in the air, necessitating specialized facilities to selectively separate and capture pure CO2 for storage. This additional process increases power generation costs.

To tackle this challenge, CLC technology is emerging as an eco-friendly power generation solution. CLC technology delivers pure oxygen to the fuel using specialized oxygen-carrying particles. These particles release oxygen during combustion and later reabsorb it when exposed to air, continuously repeating the cycle to sustain the process continually and eliminating any reaction with nitrogen that would have to be undone later.

As a result, the combustion process generates carbon dioxide and water vapor, enabling direct capture of CO2 without the need for additional separation, an innovation that would shave 30% off the cost of running a gas power plant that captures the CO2 it generates.

Additionally, unlike conventional combustion, which produces nitrogen oxides, a major contributor to ultrafine particulate matter and the health impacts it brings in urban environments, this technology operates through flameless combustion, drastically reducing NOX emissions.

In 2023, KIER and its partners established a 3 MW-scale pilot plant, the largest of its kind globally, and conducted full-scale demonstration tests. Over 300 hours of continuous operation, the technology achieved a carbon dioxide separation and emissions efficiency exceeding 96%, surpassing the previous global benchmark.

Another benefit of CLC technology is that when done right, it generates steam from the water vapor that can directly contribute to power generation. Though tested in Europe, the United States, and China, no CLC demonstration has ever achieved steam production.

KIER, however, did.

If the demonstration scale of the CLC technology is small, efficiency is high, but heat loss is significant, making it impossible to generate steam. Similarly, if efficiency cannot be maintained while scaling up, steam production does not occur.

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KIER successfully scaled every aspect of the demonstration plant to a point at which steam production was achieved, a world first.

According to a statement from KIER, economic analysis of CLC technology predicts that, compared to a conventional 100MW natural gas power plant, it will generate an additional annual operating profit of $10.1 million and generate 4% more power.

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CO2 capture costs would be reduced by 30% compared to existing methods, enabling the capture of over 150,000 tons of CO2 per year. This advancement is expected to make a significant contribution to achieving national carbon neutrality goals.

“To achieve national carbon neutrality, it is essential to establish and operate gas power plants that incorporate innovative technologies such as chemical looping combustion (CLC),” said Dr. Ryu Ho-jung, the lead researcher of the CCS Research Department.

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“We will continue to advance and demonstrate our technology to accelerate the commercialization of next-generation power generation solutions.”

Though many climate activists will feel that money and minds should be bent on removing natural gas from use rather than improving its efficiency, many nations will simply not do this. Invented in the late 20th century, coal scrubbers significantly reduced the health effects of coal burning in built-up areas, and today, it’s only just being phased out of use in the West. If widely implemented, CLC technology could be reducing the impact of human power generation on the atmosphere for 40 or 50 years in advance of their hypothetically ultimate retirement.

SHARE This Groundbreaking Improvement In Natural Gas Use With Your Friends…

Tonight Is a Peak Lyrid Meteor Shower – And You Don’t Have to Wake Up Early to See it

Channone Arif, CC license
Channone Arif, CC license

Tonight (April 21st-22nd) is the Lyrid meteor shower that produces anywhere between 10 and 100 shooting stars per hour.

They’re also one of the best for Americans since the point in the sky they seem to originate from is located far in the north of the night sky in the constellation Lyra. Those in the Southern Hemisphere won’t have as much northern sky in their view, but citizens of the US and Europe will have excellent viewing of this meteor stream.

Though the Earth passed into the Lyrid meteor stream on the 16th of April, tonight is what’s called the peak, when the largest number of shooting stars can be seen.

Meteor showers occur when the Earth crosses the path of a comet, and the shooting stars are fragments of the comet burning up in the atmosphere. The comet that forms the Lyrids is known as Thatcher Comet, after the astronomer who discovered it.

It’s called the Lyrid meteor stream rather than the Thatcher meteor stream because the shooting stars appear to Earthlings as if they originate in the constellation Lyra. To find Lyra, look for the star Vega, one of the brightest in the sky this time of year.

Though Earth passes through these meteor streams around the same time every year, the Moon’s phases are less consistent. As it happens this year, a waning crescent will fall below the horizon at 01:35 UTC, or after dinnertime hours on US East Coast, meaning there will be no light pollution from the pale lady.

The longer you watch the meteors, the higher Lyra and its guide star Vega will rise in the sky, Earthsky reports. Long after midnight but before dawn in the Northern Hemisphere, they will be so high that any shooting stars will appear to streak across the whole of the sky, promising a much better show.

SHARE This Great Late Night Activity With Your Friends… 

Bobcats Gain Migratory Corridors in New Jersey – A Patchwork of Sanctuary Thanks to Nonprofit

A Bobcat - credit, Jeff Wendorf © provided by the Nature Conservancy
A Bobcat – credit, Jeff Wendorf © provided by the Nature Conservancy

A famous American conservation nonprofit is celebrating the acquisition of a very small piece of land with a very big role to play in protecting wildlife in New Jersey.

Though 454 acres is hardly anything in the grand scope of American conservation, The Nature Conservancy’s recent acquisition is located along a stretch of rural country known to them as “Bobcat Alley.”

Here, critical migratory corridors allow for the movement of animals north and south through a choke point in one of the most built-up regions of the Appalachian Mountains. Warren and Sussex counties in New Jersey are located along the state’s northern tip where it meets Pennsylvania and New York, and it was ten years ago that The Nature Conservancy (TNC) realized that this valuable section of East Coast woodland and mountains needed protection.

The Bobcat Alley Initiative started in 2014 with the aim of preserving 32,000 acres of land to ensure state-Endangered bobcats had a corridor through which to migrate in and out of state. New Jersey is one of the most developed states in the country, and fragmentation of habitat with roads and developments was increasing.

The original goal was for TNC to acquire 60%, or 19,200 of the 32,000 acres and lobby or partner for the protection of the other 40%. Bobcat Alley runs through Warren and Sussex counties, along the aptly-named Kittatinny Hills to the northwest, and the state’s Southern Highlands to the east.

About 13,000 of the 19,200 acres are already protected, while local partners in the Bobcat Alley Initiative protect another 1,529 acres.

Typical Bobcat Alley landscape – credit, Mike Shanahan © provided by the Nature Conservancy

TNC have recently tripled the size of the goal to 96,000 acres, to which it recently added 189 acres of field and forest in the Mount Pleasant section of Knowlton Township in Warren County, and 248 acres of rolling hills and forest in Hampton Township in Sussex County, the latter of which being the focus of TNC conservation attempts for two decades.

A map of land closings in Bobcat Alley as of spring 2025. © TNC

“We are building Bobcat Alley piece by piece in a state where the land parcel sizes are modest, but cost is at a premium,” said Barbara Brummer, TNC’s New Jersey State Director, in a statement announcing the new acquisition.

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“The project takes patience, commitment and teamwork, and we truly appreciate the partners that stepped up to help us protect these beautiful and critical natural areas for wildlife and people.”

The objective of the tripling in size is to connect the New Jersey section of Bobcat Alley to existing protected areas in New York’s Hudson River Valley and Pennsylvania’s Appalachian areas.

The Kittatinny Ridge contains large, mature, and undisturbed forests along this mountainous span in northwestern New Jersey and is prime habitat for roaming species like bobcats, black bears, and red foxes.

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The Southern Highlands contain important intact stands of oak, beech, maple, and hickory where gray foxes, barred owl and river otter thrive. The forests protect drinking water for most residents of northern New Jersey, and the Pequest and Musconetcong Rivers, which are stronghold habitats for brook trout, New Jersey’s state fish and only native trout.

The Southern Highlands are at much greater risk of development than Kittatinny. All of New Jersey’s land is predicted to be either developed or protected come the end of the century.

SHARE This Ambitious Project And TNC’s Plodding Success Year Over Year… 

The Lasting Power of Affectionate Mothering: Nurturing Now, Thriving Later

Photo by Jonatas Domingos / Unsplash.
Photo by Jonatas Domingos / Unsplash.

Affectionate mothering in childhood may have a lasting impact on important personality traits, potentially influencing life outcomes such as educational achievement, economic success, and health and well-being.

Found in the results of a new twin study, the data suggests that positive maternal parenting could foster important traits such as openness, conscientiousness and agreeableness.

“Personality traits are strong predictors of important life outcomes, from academic and career success to health and well-being,” said Jasmin Wertz, PhD, lead author of the study and a professor of psychology at the University of Edinburgh.

“Our findings suggest that fostering positive parenting environments in early childhood could have a small but significant and lasting impact on the development of these crucial personality traits.”

The study examined changes in the Big Five personality traits, which are viewed by personality psychologists as the five basic dimensions of human personality: extraversion, agreeableness, openness, conscientiousness, and neuroticism, or emotional stability.

Wertz and her colleagues examined how maternal affection during childhood—specifically between the ages of 5 and 10—predicted the Big Five personality traits at age 18. Their research was published by the American Psychological Association.

Researchers examined data from 2,232 British identical twins (51.1% female) who were followed from birth through age 18 as part of the Environmental Risk Longitudinal Twins Study.

Studying identical twins allows researchers to control for genetic and environmental factors by comparing identical twins who grew up in the same family. During the study, researchers conducted home visits with the twins’ mothers and recorded them talking about each of their children. Trained observers then rated the mothers’ responses for warmth and affection.

Twins whose mothers expressed more warmth toward them in childhood were rated as more open, conscientious and agreeable as young adults.

The results offer evidence that positive, affectionate mothering can affect key personality traits that are linked to success later in life, and these influences could have an impact across generations, said Wertz. The researchers note that even modest changes in personality could lead to significant population-wide benefits over time, particularly in promoting conscientiousness, which is strongly associated with success in education, work, and health, as well as the presence of discipline and orderliness.

Researchers found no lasting associations between maternal affection and extraversion or neuroticism. These findings suggest that other environmental or genetic factors—such as peer relationships, life experiences, and perhaps later interventions—may be more influential for these in adulthood.

The findings also underscore the importance of considering both genetic and environmental factors when designing programs aimed at promoting positive personality traits, according to Wertz.

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“This research provides valuable evidence for the potential of parenting programs to influence critical aspects of personality development,” she said. “However, it also highlights the need for a nuanced understanding of how different factors, including genetics, parenting and life experiences, interact to shape who we are.”

Wertz believes the research provides important practical considerations for policymakers and practitioners working in education, family welfare and mental health. Given that conscientiousness may predict success in school and the workplace, interventions designed to enhance affectionate parenting could contribute to improving educational outcomes, mental health and social well-being on a broader scale.

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“There are many proven ways to support parents, such as policies that improve a family’s financial situation; access to treatment for parents who struggle with mental health problems such as depression; and parenting programs that help parents build stronger relationships with their children,” she said.

The research also sheds light on the possibility of developing parental training models to address inequalities in personality development. “By targeting parenting practices that promote positive traits in childhood, it may be possible to reduce disparities in life outcomes associated with socioeconomic background, family dynamics and other environmental factors,” Wertz said.

SHARE This Important Research With The New Mothers In Your Life… 

“They always say time changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself.” – Andy Warhol

Quote of the Day: “They always say time changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself.” – Andy Warhol

Photo by: Martin Martz

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

Good News in History, April 21

Annibale Carracci, The Three Marias of the Holy Sepulcher, located in St. Petersburg.

Today is the Monday of Angels, also known as Pasquetta, or “Little Easter,” a celebration on the Italian calendar marked with a day off school. It commemorates the time that angels descended to the sepulcher of Jesus to explain his resurrection to the grieving women. Many countries that follow Western Christianity, including most of Christian Europe and Africa, have Little Easter as a holiday, though the US does not. READ what the Italians do… 

83-year-old Race Car Super-Fan Finally Gets Her Chance Behind the Wheel, Outliving Prejudice

Bobbi Oxford, 83, gets to drive a NASCAR – Wish of a Lifetime
Bobbi Oxford, 83, gets to drive a NASCAR – Wish of a Lifetime

Some of her best childhood memories were filled with revving engines, spinning tires, and cheering crowds while her brother drag-raced—but in those days there were no driving opportunities for women.

Yet, she vividly remembers the rush of adrenaline she felt while watching her brother racing cars.

The one day she did have a chance to race, in a ‘Powder Puff Derby’ especially for females, the event was rained-out—and she never got the opportunity again, until now.

At age 83, Bobbi Oxford’s wish has finally come true.

“I have the need for speed, baby!” she said from her senior living community in Littleton, Colorado, where she stays busy with sewing, quilting, and painting, leading a quiet life.

The devoted fan of NASCAR racing got to check off her bucket list item thanks to Wish of a Lifetime, a charity arm of AARP that grants life-changing wishes to inspire people to age with joy.

Her dream was fulfilled at the Pikes Peak International Raceway in Colorado in a retired race car belonging to Joe Garone, the track’s COO. Bobbi took to the track under a clear blue Colorado sky—not a drop of rain would cut her experience short this time.

When asked by CBS Sunday Morning how fast she wanted to go, she replied: “As fast as I can—maybe a hundred and thirty.”

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Courtesy photo: Wish of a Lifetime

After being fitted with a helmet and personalized racing suit, getting a tour of the garage, and completing an orientation, Bobbi got behind the wheel with an experienced driver in the passenger seat and she drove around the 1-mile oval track—over and over.

“Just the sound of this motor and being behind this wheel,” she exclaimed. “You step on the gas, and hear roarrrrr—I tell you!” (Watch the video below…)

Along the sidelines, female race car drivers of all ages cheered ‘Go, Bobbi, go!’ Friends from her senior community also attended, along with her son and daughter-in-law, waving handmade signs in support of Bobbi.

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After she’d had her fill, a professional driver took her on the ride of her life—spinning in circles and burning rubber to give Bobbi the full experience she’d missed all these years.

“I made it!” Bobbi called out, as she completed her drive. “Nothing can ever, ever top this.”

“Never in my wildest dreams did I ever think I would get in a race car, but I did!”

RACE THIS INSPIRATION to Friends And Family On Social Media…

After Son’s Death Woman Gives Part of Her Liver to His Best Friend’s Mom in Serendipitous Kindness Chain

Mary Ann Carroll (left) with donor friend Anjie Lynchard
Mary Ann Carroll (left) with donor friend Anjie Lynchard

In celebration of National Donate Life Month in April comes an inspiring story of two old friends who were reunited through grief and kindness—and ended up creating ‘the perfect plan’.

15 years ago, Anjie Lynchard moved across the street from Mary Ann Carroll in Columbia, Maryland. Their sons, Jared and Phillip, soon became best friends. “They were practically inseparable, spending all their time together biking, fishing, and catching frogs,” says Anjie.

But they moved just three years later and the families lost touch with only sparse social media contact between them. Jared and Phillip grew into adults and Jared joined the Marines. Then, a year ago, tragedy struck when 23-year-old Jared died suddenly.

“Mary Ann came by after Jared passed away to offer condolences and bring me a prayer shawl,” says Anjie. “I noticed right away that she looked different from when I saw her last (roughly a span of 11 years) and I asked her if everything was okay.”

It was then that Mary Ann recounted a three-year struggle with illness that resulted in end-stage liver disease, for which the only cure was a liver transplant.

In October 2023, Mary Ann was placed on the national waiting list for a suitable organ, which at the time held over 10,200 patient names.

After Mary Ann departed, Anjie prayed for a miracle to save her friend’s life. She had no clue at that moment that she would be that miracle.

“Several months after my visit from Mary Ann, I saw on Facebook that she had posted a search for a living donor to provide a portion of their liver (because) no one in her family was suitable as a donor.”

Anjie says that her strong faith gave her the courage and motivation to honor her late son by getting tested as a possible living donor for Mary Ann. When she told old friend about her potentially lifesaving offer, Mary Ann was hesitant, not wanting to burden her friend so soon after dealing with a family tragedy.

Jared and Phillip

But what really convinced Anjie to donate was something her husband Steve told her. “Steve recalled that during a missionary trip to Costa Rica, not long after Jared’s passing, a minister told him, ‘Out of Jared’s death, new life will be born,’” Anjie recalled. “Steve and I were astonished because my donation would be the literal fulfillment of those words.”

Mary Ann recalled, “It was as if Jared was telling her to save my life.”

It turns out, the results showed that Anjie was indeed a match. Mary Ann was going to get a second chance for life.

When the transplant surgery was scheduled for Dec. 3, 2024, Anjie felt it had been fated from above.

“Jared had been deeply inspired by a sermon he heard in church exactly one year earlier, Dec. 3, 2023, that was entitled ‘The Perfect Plan,’” says Anjie. “When I recalled the title, I knew this transplant was destined by God to be that ‘perfect plan’ and that Jared was telling me from heaven, ‘Good job, Mom.’”

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The successful transplant, performed at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, surgically removed a portion of Anjie’s liver and implanted it in Mary Ann to replace her failed organ.

And, Lynchard’s surgeon, Dr. Benjamin Philosophe, utilized a robotic surgery system, which is minimally invasive in a way that was much easier on Anjie.

“The robotic arms—which the surgeon controls from a console and are linked to a high-resolution camera—enable us to have magnified views of the surgical field, operate with extremely precise movements, and most importantly, make smaller incisions and perform more delicate tissue removal than open surgery,” explained Philosophe in a media release from Johns Hopkins. “For the donor, this means less pain, faster recovery, and better post-operative outcomes.”

“Best of all, I expected a big scar and was thrilled to only have a few small ones that healed quickly,” said the living donor.

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Three months after receiving her old friend’s liver donation, Mary Ann is doing well. A very spiritual person, she feels that there was divine intervention bringing her and Lynchard together, and eventually, leading to the healthy, renewed life that Anjie’s gracious act made possible.

“So many things had to happen to make this a reality: our sons being friends, taking Anjie the prayer shawl and her seeing me so sick, finding out that Anjie was a suitable donor… It’s like God and Jared had a hand in it all,” says Mary Ann.

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“I have a photo magnet on my refrigerator of Anjie and Jared, my angel on Earth and my angel in heaven.”

Additionally, Anjie points out that by donating a portion of her liver, someone was able to move up the waiting list for a deceased donor liver.

“As my nurse practitioner told me, ‘You not only saved Mary Ann’s life, but also a second life.’”

Mary Ann, the beneficiary of her friend’s special gift, fervently hopes that her story will inspire others to become living donors.

“If you can save a life, why wouldn’t you? What greater gift can anyone give.”

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Bonobos Communicate in Complex Phrases, a Language Process Once Thought Unique to Humans

Credit: Lukas Bierhoff / Kokolopori Bonobo Research Project
Credit: Lukas Bierhoff / Kokolopori Bonobo Research Project

Bonobos—the closest living relatives to humans—create complex and meaningful combinations of calls resembling the word combinations of humans, says a new study that challenges long-held assumptions about what makes human communication unique.

The study conducted by researchers at Harvard and the University of Zurich, has investigated the vocal behavior of wild bonobos on the Kokolopori Community Reserve in Democratic Republic of Congo.

The team used novel methods borrowed from linguistics to demonstrate for the first time that, similarly to human language, bonobo vocal communication relies extensively on ‘compositionality’.

Compositionality is the capacity to combine meaningful words into phrases whose meaning is related to the meaning of the words and the way they are combined.

In more trivial compositionality, the meaning of the combination is the addition of its parts: for example, “blond dancer” refers to a person who is both blond and a dancer. However, in more complex, nontrivial compositionality, one part of the combination modifies the other. For example, “bad dancer” does not refer to a bad person who is also a dancer: “bad” in this case does not have an independent meaning but complements “dancer”.

A bonobo dictionary

In a first step, the researchers applied a method developed by linguists to quantify the meaning of human words. “This allowed us to create a bonobo dictionary of sorts – a complete list of bonobo calls and their meaning,” said Mélissa Berthet, a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Evolutionary Anthropology of UZH and lead researcher of the study.

“This represents an important step towards understanding the communication of other species, as it is the first time that we have determined the meaning of calls across the whole vocal repertoire of an animal.”

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After determining the meaning of single bonobo vocalizations, the researchers then moved on to investigating call combinations, using the technique borrowed from linguistics.

Credit: Lukas Bierhoff / Kokolopori Bonobo Research Project

“With our approach, we were able to quantify how the meaning of bonobo single calls and call combinations relate to each other,” says Simon Townsend, UZH Professor and senior author of the study.

The researchers found numerous call combinations that bore a striking resemblance to the more complex nontrivial compositional structures in human language. “This suggests that the capacity to combine call types in complex ways is not as unique to humans as we once thought,” says Mélissa Berthet.

Key aspects of language are evolutionary ancient, older than previously thought

An important implication of this research is the potential light it sheds on the evolutionary roots of language’s compositional nature.

“Since humans and bonobos had a common ancestor approximately 7 to 13 million years ago, they share many traits by descent, and it appears that compositionality is likely one of them,” says Harvard Professor Martin Surbeck, co-author of the study published in the Journal Science.

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The findings indicate that the ability to construct complex meanings from smaller vocal units existed long before human language emerged, and that bonobo vocal communication shares more similarities with human language than previously thought.

“Our study suggests that our ancestors already extensively used compositionality at least 7 million years ago, if not more,” concluded Simon Townsend.

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94-Year-old Has No Health Issues–Thanks to Zumba Classes 3 Times a Week

Mary Marson at her Zumba class – SWNS
Mary Marson at her Zumba class – SWNS

A sporty great-grandmother attends Zumba classes at age 94 three times a week—and her health has never been better.

Mary Marson says her long, healthy life is down to eating organic food and joining weekly classes of Zumba—an aerobic workout featuring Latin American dancing and music.

The nanogenarian who grew up in Jamaica says eating organic food alongside her active lifestyle has left her with zero health complaints apart from the occasional cold.

Attending the dance workouts at Wavelengths leisure centre in Deptford, southeast London, Mary has become a local legend, inspiring others to keep fit.

“I can do everything in the routine. I can even bend down and touch the floor!” said the senior.

“I love the music. It really gets me motivated

“I’ve always been a very positive person, which also helps keep me healthy. I just cannot feel ‘old’!

“I also have good genes,” said Mary, who moved to England when she was 27-years-old. “My parents lived to be old.”

The staff at Wavelengths views Mary as part of the family and every year, make a big fuss on her birthday with balloons and a cake.

Mary Marson on 94th birthday with her Zumba instructors – SWNS

Mary advises other senior citizens to be brave and try out sports and activities.

MIDDLE AGE INSPIRATION: 59-year-old Breaks Women’s World Record for the Longest Time in an Abdominal Plank Position

“A lot of them may be motivated by fear,” she told SWNS news agency. “They might think, ‘I can’t mix with younger people’.

“People can make themselves ill by sitting in a chair all day, thinking they can’t do things.

“I would tell them to join in – they will probably become an inspiration to those younger people. They won’t regret it!”

Her four children, four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren are “very proud” of her.

DANCING QUEEN: 101-year-old Woman Reveals Her Secret to Longevity is Dancing Every Day

Fitness instructor Topaz White, who leads the Zumba classes, says Mary is everyone’s “She-ro”—an inspiration to all.

Using a hashtag, she quipped, “Everyone should #BeMoreMary”.

SHARE THE CAN-DO SPIRIT On Social Media to Inspire Friends…

Good News in History, April 20

39 years ago today, Vladimir Horowitz, one of the world’s greatest pianists, returned to his Russian homeland, after 61 years away, to perform for an emotional audience in his hometown of Moscow. At the age of 82, Horowitz gave one of the most emotionally astonishing and riveting performances of his life. READ about the events of the night…(1986)

“God loves each of us as if there were only one of us.” – Saint Augustine (Happy Easter!)

Anastasiia Tarasova

Quote of the Day: “God loves each of us as if there were only one of us.” – Saint Augustine (Happy Easter, to those who celebrate)

Photo by: Anastasiia Tarasova

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?

Anastasiia Tarasova

Group Celebrates 20 Years of Steering Surplus Office Furniture Away from Landfill and into Communities

ANEW warehouse inventory of chairs
ANEW warehouse inventory of chairs

Founded on Earth Day in 2005 with a vision to work with corporations to divert their surplus furniture into the hands of communities, instead of piling up in landfills, ANEW is celebrating 20 years of environmental stewardship.

Founder Rose Tourje had a bleak realization during her successful career in commercial interior design when one day she witnessed furniture actually being hurled out the windows of an office building, crashing to the pavement below, where fork lifts were filling dumpsters headed straight to the landfill.

She thought, if this is happening with a large public company in Los Angeles, this must be happening everywhere.

Rose found this unacceptable and irresponsible, and after 30 years of a design career, she decided to leave and set a new industry standard.

That’s how ANEW was born, with the goal of extending the life-cycle of office furniture through reuse, resale, repurposing, and recycling—all while benefiting nonprofits, public agencies, and the poor.

ANEW is now a leader in inspiring companies to see waste differently—and work together to grow circular economies that benefit communities, businesses, and the natural world.

Crew picking up items at ANEW warehouse

Through more than 435 projects, ANEW has partnered with companies like Toyota and Kaiser and organizations like Habitat for Humanity and Goodwill, helping them achieve their social and environmental sustainability goals.

REUSE SUCCESS: Concrete Made 30% Stronger by Adding Waste Coffee Grounds–Cutting Emissions and Mining in the Process

“We have enabled over 600 recipient organizations to allocate their financial resources toward sustaining and expanding their essential services, ultimately benefiting thousands of people in local communities,” they wrote in their 20-year milestone press release.

Since 2015, they’ve stopped more than 8,000 tons of waste from entering U.S. landfills and prevented 6,207 tons of greenhouse gas from harming the atmosphere.

ECO-FASHION: She Turns Old Leather Sofas into Chic $200 Handbags to Cut Down on Waste–And They’re Flying Out the Door

Based in Los Angeles, ANEW is making a lasting impact by “doing what’s right with what’s left”—and by raising awareness of the benefits of “Surplus Stewardship” through free workshops, presentations and case studies.

Office Surplus ready to be moved to warehouse – ANEW

Last year, ANEW launched the first of two accredited CEU courses to help architecture and design professionals learn how to apply circularity in order to strengthen local economies, manage resources, and reduce waste.

GOOD WASTE: Entrepreneur Is Tackling 120 Million Tons of Plastic Waste–One Deodorant Stick at a Time

And their independently audited projects show measurable results—with positive impacts on both the environmental and social fronts—changing the world, one desk and conference table at a time.

SHARE THE RESOURCE With L.A. Nonprofits and Charities On Social Media…

Extraordinary Reuse of Vacant Church: Transforming into a Public Swimming Pool in the Netherlands

Image: © MVRDV / Zecc Architecten
Image: © MVRDV / Zecc Architecten

Two architecture firms teamed up to win the competition to transform the St. Francis of Assisi Church in Heerlen into a public swimming pool.

Nicknamed “Holy Water”, the project gives the vacant church a new social function, while preserving the historic elements of this listed national monument.

The plans from MVRDV and Zecc Architecten incorporate an adjustable swimming pool floor that will bring flexibility to the space, allowing it to host a variety of activities in addition to swimming.

Originally built over 100 years ago in the south of the Netherlands, the church stopped hosting services in 2023, providing the municipality the opportunity to repurpose the building.

A new pool within this national monument offers a solution for the increasing number of visitors to Heerlen’s existing pools, while giving the vacant church in the city center a new lease of life.

The design that connects old and new, allows visitors to walk through the church’s aisles to reach the changing rooms or restaurant, both located at the rear of the church. Glass walls separate these passages from the climatized central pool space.

Side view © MVRDV and Zecc Architecten

To make room for the swimming pool, the existing floor will be carefully removed. The church’s pews will be reused by incorporating them into the separating glass walls surrounding the pool, providing seats for the swimmers on one side, while serving as bar tables for spectators on the other side.

The old pulpit is even given a new function—serving as the seat for a lifeguard.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Unused Train Stations Across US Are Being Revitalized into Hotels, Restaurants and Even Museums

The pool floor includes an adjustable bottom that can be raised and lowered, enabling different activities for swimmers of different ages and abilities. In its extreme position, the floor can be raised completely, hiding the pool beneath and reintroducing a completely flat floor so that the space can also be used for social and cultural activities.

The floor also makes it possible to fill the entire space with a thin layer of water, creating an impressive reflection of the church that gives visitors the feeling that they can walk on water.

“Walking on water” in Netherlands – © MVRDV / Zecc Architecten

“The vacancy rate of churches is increasing, so we need to come up with new, creative ideas for what we can do with these buildings”, says Winy Maas, founding partner of MVRDV.

“Why not give these churches a social function again, as they used to have? A public swimming pool is ideally suited for this. Imagine swimming the backstroke with a view of a church vault and stained-glass windows.”

A new mosaic floor will adorn both the pool surroundings and the adjustable pool floor. This will reference the existing colors, materials, and stained-glass windows of the church. The design for this floor will be made in collaboration with local artists as a reference to the many murals that Heerlen has to offer. The lighting above the pool is inspired by the original church lamps seen in historic photographs, with the four rows of lamps doubling as lane guides for the swimmers.

© MVRDV, Zecc Architecten

A particular challenge of the design was to be able to heat the pool space sufficiently and sustainably, while also protecting the historic materials from the humidity of the pool. To solve this, the glass walls surrounding the pool create a compartmentalizing effect to protect the stained glass and the works of art.

LOOK: Ohio Family Converts a 1903 Church Into Their Home – and it’s Pretty Amazing

Looking toward the front entrance – Image © MVRDV / Zecc Architecten

The roof of the church will be insulated from the outside, preventing excessive heat loss while maintaining the view of the original brickwork from the inside. The wooden roof will be retained and fitted with sound-absorbing panels for better acoustics. This approach ensures an energy-efficient and comfortable indoor climate, while preserving the historical elements of the church as much as possible.

SPECTACULAR: Man Transforms an Old Farmhouse into a Barbie Dreamhouse Fulfilling a Childhood Dream-LOOK

Swimmers will be invited to take their first plunge at the end of 2027.

BESTOW THIS HOLY WATER On Friends and Family By Sharing On Social Media…

Cancer-Fighting Implant Developed to Treat Tumors by Safely Triggering Potent Immune Responses

A new high-tech implant that safely triggers potent immune responses against hard-to-treat cancers has shown “promise” in fighting some of the deadliest forms of cancer—including metastatic melanoma, pancreatic and colorectal tumors.

The implantable cancer-fighting device, dubbed the “cytokine factory”, was developed by a team of researchers at Rice University’s Biotech Launch Pad in Houston, Texas.

Placed near the tumor microenvironment, the device can distribute cells engineered to release the protein interleukin-12 (IL-12) which successfully induces the recruitment of specialized immune cells called precursor exhausted T cells (Tpex cells).

The Tpex cell recruitment results in a large, durable population of tumor-targeting T cells, according to a study published in The Journal of ImmunoTherapy of Cancer.

“We designed the IL-12 cytokine factory to enhance immunotherapy approaches while minimizing toxicity, a critical need in the treatment of particularly aggressive cancers,” said the study’s senior author Professor Omid Veiseh, faculty director of the Rice Biotech Launch Pad.

RELATED: Scientists Discover Simple Supplement That Causes Prostate Cancer Cells To Self-Destruct

The IL-12 cytokine factories, combined with checkpoint inhibitors, successfully eliminated local and distal tumors in preclinical models of metastatic melanoma and colorectal and pancreatic cancers—and also demonstrated safety in both mice and non-human primates, according to the findings.

The team said the study will serve as the foundation for an investigational new drug application with the U.S. FDA early next year. They also plan to launch an emerging biotech company based on the ground-breaking IL-12 cytokine factory technology.

“IL-12 is particularly impactful compared to other cytokines, as our research demonstrates that other cytokines primarily recruit homogeneous T cell populations and show reduced efficacy over time, while IL-12 generates a more robust anti-tumor response by recruiting a more durable, broader repertoire of tumor-targeting T cells.

Dr. Nathan Reticker-Flynn, of Stanford University, explained that using immunotherapy to target solid tumors has become common, but it’s often a “fraught approach” due to the challenge of toxicity.

“Our study demonstrates not only the efficacy of this technology in preclinical models but also its safety profile, which is a critical aspect as we move toward clinical trials.”

GREAT CANCER NEWS: Hope for Patients with Aggressive Breast Cancer: Vaccine Trial Results in 88% Survival Rate After 3 Years

He calls this an “important step forward in the quest to provide more effective treatments” for patients battling metastatic cancers.

“We are hopeful that this technology will significantly impact the lives of cancer patients by enhancing the efficacy of immunotherapy approaches in the clinic,” said Prof. Veiseh.

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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 April 19, 2025
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
I am always surprised when there appears yet another authoritative article or book that implies there is one specific right approach to meditation. The truth is, however, that there are many ways. Here’s teacher Christopher Bamford: “Meditation is naturally individual, uniquely our own. There are no rules. Just as every potter will elaborate their own way of making pots, so everyone who meditates will shape their own meditation.” This is excellent counsel for you right now, Aries. The planetary alignments tell me you have extra power to define and develop your unique style of meditation. Key point: Have fun as you go deeper and deeper!

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
From 1501 to 1504, the artist Michelangelo worked to create a 17-feet-tall marble sculpture of the Biblical king known as David. Today it stands in Florence’s Galleria dell’Accademia and is one of the most famous statues in the world. But the block of marble from which it was carved had a troubled beginning. Two other artists worked on it but ultimately abandoned their efforts, regarding the raw material as flawed. Michelangelo saw potential where they didn’t. He coaxed a masterpiece from what they rejected. Be like him in the coming weeks, dear Taurus! Look for treasure in situations that others deem unremarkable. Find the beauty hidden from the rest of the world.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
The Judean date palm was considered extinct for over 800 years. Then scientists germinated a 2,000-year-old seed discovered in the ancient fortress of Masada. That was 20 years ago. Today, the tree, named Methuselah, is still thriving. Let’s regard this as your metaphor of power, Gemini. You, too, are now capable of reviving a long-dormant possibility. An old dream or relationship might show unexpected signs of life. Like that old seed, something you thought was lost could flourish if you give it your love and attention.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
In more than a few ancient cultures, dolphins were regarded as playful allies that would guide lost ships and assist sailors in stress. In ancient Greek myth, dolphins were sacred companions and agents of the sea god. In Maori culture, dolphins were thought to deliver important messages that were unavailable any other way. Many modern Westerners downplay stories like these. But according to my philosophy, spirit allies like dolphins are still very much available for those who are open to them. Are you, Cancerian? I’m pleased to tell you that magical helpers and divine intermediaries will offer you mysterious and useful counsel in the coming weeks—if you are receptive to the possibility.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Do you know about the Leo liberator Simón Bolívar (1783–1830)? This Venezuelan statesman and military officer accomplished a cornucopia of good works. Through his leadership, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Panama, Bolivia, and Ecuador gained independence from the Spanish Empire. He was one of history’s greatest crusaders for liberal democracy. I propose we make him one of your inspiring symbols for the next 12 months. May he inspire you, too, to be a courageous emancipator who helps create a better world.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Virgo conductor Leonard Bernstein was a global superstar because of his stellar musicianship, activism, philanthropy, and teaching. He transformed classical music by dissolving barriers between “high” and “low” culture, bringing elegant symphonies to popular audiences while promoting respect for jazz and pop. He wanted all kinds of music to be accessible to all kinds of listeners. I think you are currently capable of Bernstein-like synergies, Virgo. You can bridge different worlds not only for your own benefit, but also others’. You have extra power to accomplish unlikely combinations and enriching mergers. Be a unifier!

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
A rainbow is gorgeous, with its spectacular multi-hued arc sweeping across the sky. Here’s another element of its poetic appeal: It happens when sunlight and rain collaborate. In a sense, it’s a symbol of the sublimity that may emerge from a synergy of brightness and darkness. Let’s make the rainbow your symbol of power in the coming weeks, Libra. May it inspire you to find harmony by dealing with contrasts and paradoxes. May it encourage you to balance logic and emotion, work and rest, light and shadow, independence and partnership. I hope you will trust your ability to mediate and inspire cooperation.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
You now have more power than usual to transform ordinary things into extraordinary things. Your imagination will work at peak levels as you meditate on how to repurpose existing resources in creative ways. What other people might regard as irrelevant or inconsequential could be useful tools in your hands. I invite you to give special attention to overlooked assets. They may have hidden potentials waiting for you to unlock them.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
If you google the term “the religion of work,” many critical references come up. They condemn the ways humans place an inordinate importance on the jobs they do, thereby sacrificing their health and soulfulness. The derogatory English term “workaholic” is a descriptor for those who are manically devoted to “the religion of work.” But now let’s shift gears. The artist Maruja Mallo (1902–1995) conjured a different version of “the religion of work.” Her paintings celebrated, even expressed reverence for, the agricultural laborers of rural Spain. She felt their positive attitudes toward their tasks enhanced their health and soulfulness. In the coming weeks, Sagittarius, I invite you to explore Mallo’s version of the religion of work.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Astrologer Aliza Kelly likes Capricorns for their “fearless ambition, limitless resilience, and ability to keep pushing forward, even in the face of challenging adversity.” But she also praises their “secret wild side.” She writes, “Inside every earnest Capricorn is a mischievous troublemaker” that “loves to party.” I agree with her assessments and am happy to announce that the rowdier sides of your nature are due for full expression in the coming weeks. I don’t know if that will involve you “dancing on tables,” an activity Kelly ascribes to you. But I bet it will at least include interludes we can describe as “untamed.”

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Aquarian author James Joyce published Ulysses, a novel recognized as one of the masterworks of 20th-century world literature. Seventeen years later, he produced Finnegans Wake, an uproarious experimental novel that was universally reviled when it first emerged because of its wild wordplay, unusual plot, and frantic energy. In the ensuing years, though, it has also come to be regarded as a monument of brilliant creativity. It’s one of my favorite books, and I’m glad Joyce never wavered in his commitment to producing such an epic work of genius. Anyway, Aquarius, I’m guessing you have been toiling away at your own equivalent of Finnegans Wake. I beg you to maintain your faith! Keep going!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Years ago, in the early days of my infatuation with a new lover, she put a blindfold on me and ushered me around the city of Columbia, South Carolina. The goal was to enhance my non-visual senses. The experiment worked. I heard, smelled, and felt things I would never have noticed unless my dominating eyesight had been muffled. Ever since, my non-visual senses have operated with more alacrity. This fun project also improved the way I use my eyes. The coming days would be an excellent time for you to try a similar adventure, Pisces. If my idea isn’t exactly engaging to you, come up with your own. You will benefit profoundly from enhancing your perceptual apparatus.

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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Good News in History, April 19

The Battle of Lexington by William Barnes Wollen

250 years ago today, a shot rang out in Lexington, Massachusetts, that’s often called the one “heard round the world.” It marked the start of a skirmish leading to the American Revolution. It gave needed time to the militia at nearby Concord to organize around the North Bridge where they turned back British troops under heavy rifle fire. British Officer John Pitcairn had ordered his redcoats forward toward Lexington to raid the colonists’ stash of cannon and gunpowder. Halting them was a rookie band of militiamen led by Captain John Parker, a veteran of the French and Indian War. READ what happened next… (1775)