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Good News in History, April 12

Statue photo by Dickbauch, CC license; and YouTube

45 years ago today, a young man named Terry Fox began his heroic Marathon of Hope across Canada. In St. John’s, Newfoundland, standing on an artificial leg, he touched his foot into the Atlantic Ocean and began his run hoping to complete a marathon every day until he reached the Pacific coast. WATCH an inspiring video and learn what happened next… (1980)

Statue photo by Dickbauch, CC license; and YouTube

An active teenager, Terry was involved in many sports, but at 18 years old he was diagnosed with osteogenic sarcoma (bone cancer) in his knee and was forced to have his right leg amputated. While in the hospital, Terry was so overcome by the suffering of young child cancer patients that he decided to run across the vast country to raise money for fighting the disease—and it would revolutionize cancer research in Canada.

After 18 months of vigorous training, Terry’s run began with little fanfare and he spent days alone in the sleet and cold rain. Enthusiasm grew though, and money collected along his route began to mount, especially when he reached Ontario. He ran 26 miles (42 km) a day through six provinces until, on September 1st, after 143 days and more than 3300 miles (5,373 km), Terry was forced to stop and enter a hospital, because the cancer had spread to his lungs. An entire nation was stunned when Terry passed away ten months later. The monumental Canadian was gone, but his legacy was just beginning.

In the years since his famous run, The Terry Fox Foundation continues working toward his goal of a world without cancer. Thousands of volunteers organize annual Terry Fox runs across the country every year—and to date, over $750 million has been raised for cancer research in Terry’s name. Before his death, at 22 years old, Fox became the youngest person ever to be awarded The Order of Canada.

 

MORE Good News on this Date:

  • 79 years ago today, the UN’s International Court of Justice opened its doors to hear disputes between nations, when, and if, both parties agree to be bound by its decision (1946)
  • The polio vaccine, developed by Dr. Jonas Salk, was declared safe and effective (1955)
  • Bob Dylan performed his first major concert at the Town Hall in New York City, a 1500-seat theater known for its outstanding acoustics (1963)
  • 44 years ago today, the first Space Shuttle blasted off in a successful test flight of the ship called Columbia (1981)
  • East Germany‘s democratically elected parliament met for the first time, acknowledged responsibility for the Nazi holocaust, and asked for forgiveness (1990)
  • The US Navy rescued American cargo ship captain Richard Phillips from Somali pirates at sea when snipers shot and killed three of the hostage-takers (2009)

468 years ago, Cuenca was founded in Ecuador, a city of such beauty that it has become known as the “Athens” of South America. Founded on the ruins of the Inca city of Tomebamba (a major administrative center) and the Cañari city of Guapondelig, in 1999 its historic center was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

View of central Cuenca – Flickr, CC 3.0. Christian Cattani

The first urban civilization that inhabited the plateau where Cuenca now lies were the Cañari, and though the Incas replaced the Cañari architecture with their own, they did not suppress the Cañari or their impressive achievements in astronomy and agriculture. As was customary for the Incas, they absorbed useful achievements into their culture. They renamed the city Tomebamba.

Tomebamba is considered a candidate for the mythical city of gold which the Spanish called El Dorado. The Spanish thought El Dorado was burned by the inhabitants after they heard of the Spanish conquests. Tomebamba’s destruction by its inhabitants prior to the arrival of the Spanish suggests it may have been what the Spanish called El Dorado. (1557)

118 years ago today, the Burmese poet and writer known by the pen name Zawgyi was born. One of the most famous literary figures of that country, Zawgyi, or Thein Han as he was really named, studied at the universities of London, Dublin, and Rangoon, picking up several awards in his early years. He also worked as a diplomat in the post-war period.

The poet Zawgyi, year unknown.

He took the name Zawgyi from a magician figure in Burmese folklore, and his poetry reflects this interest in philosophy. His most famous poem, Beda Lann, is one of the only ones that has been accurately translated into English. It compares the struggles of like to ‘Beda’—a hyacinth flower. (1907)

Riding the waves and tossed around,
Beda floats, moving up and down

After being smitten wasn’t left alone in pain
But a tidal wave drowned her again
Sinking down under, doesn’t re-appear
Till a wave surges up a couple of yards afar
Together with it, surfaces the beauteous Ma Beda

While Beda just clenched her teeth,
The unsubdued and unyielding Beda fair,
Still keeps on wearing the flower in her hair

Happy 78th birthday to David Letterman, who on February 1st, 1982, took the reins of NBC’s Late Night and kept them for 33 years before stepping down in 2015. In total he went on the air for 6,080 episodes, surpassing his friend and mentor Johnny Carson as the longest-serving late-night talk show host in American television history. Perhaps unsurprisingly, he now hosts what is essentially a late-night talk show on Netflix, called My Next Guest Needs No Introduction with David Letterman. The first season of which contained a cross-interview with Jerry Seinfeld entitled “You’re David Letterman, you idiot,”

Like so many funny Americans, the start of his career began at the world-famous Comedy Store in Los Angeles. After finishing Light Night he appeared here and there, helping produce the Foo Fighter’s documentary Sonic Highways, and giving the introductory speech of Pearl Jam when they made it into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

My Next Guest premiered in 2018 with Barack Obama as its first guest. Season 3 premiered in 2020, and includes Kim Kardashian, Kanye West, Robert Downey Jr., Dave Chappelle, and Lizzo as guests. It’s been praised, and even nominated for an Emmy, for its insight, set direction, and Letterman’s ability to draw unique moments out of its guests. Now sporting a huge beard, he practices transcendental meditation. (1947)

64 years ago today, Yuri Gagarin became the first human to travel into outer space, orbiting the Earth aboard Vostok 1.

Out of 20 trained cosmonauts, the short Russian pilot—at 5 ft 2—was the best candidate to fit into the tiny capsule. He became an international celebrity and was awarded many medals and titles, including Hero of the Soviet Union, the nation’s highest honor.

Photos by Mil.ru (left) and Vostok capsule by SiefkinDR, CC licenses

Modest and intellectual, Yuri was said to have quick reactions and an ability to handle celestial mechanics and mathematical formulae with ease. Touring widely abroad at the invitation of about 30 countries, he gained a reputation as an adept public figure, able to answer any question at press conferences, and was noted for his charismatic smile. Because of his popularity, US President John F. Kennedy barred Gagarin from visiting the US during the Cold War.

Gagarin died seven years after his historic orbit when his MiG-15 training jet crashed. He was honored with a 12-mile parade attended by millions of people and his ashes are interred in the walls of the Kremlin.

Born in the village of Klushino (a town later renamed after him), in his youth Gagarin was a foundryman at a steel plant. He later joined the Soviet Air Force as a pilot before his selection for the Soviet space program. Following his spaceflight, Gagarin became deputy director of the Cosmonaut Training Centre, which also was later named after him. He was also elected as a deputy in 1962 and then to the Soviet of Nationalities, respectively the lower and upper chambers of the Supreme Soviet.

Yuri Gagarin in Finland, 1961

The 1964 Soyuz 1 launch, which was rushed due to political pressures, despite Gagarin’s protests that additional safety precautions were necessary, resulted in multiple system failures aboard the spacecraft, which caused it to crash killing his friend, Vladimir Komarov. After the tragedy, the Soviets permanently banned Gagarin from training for and participating in further spaceflights. (1961)

And, 156 years ago today, the North Carolina legislature passed an anti-Ku Klux Klan Law, which prohibited night riding and wearing masks, to combat the racist group’s excessive violence.

Two months later, empowered by the law, Governor Holden declared martial law in two counties and deployed troops after several murders. Although the troops fire no shots, more than 100 men were arrested in the effort to restore order and protect blacks and white Republicans. Two years later, the US Congress held hearings on the Klan and passed a harsh anti-Klan law modeled after this North Carolina statute. (1869)

And on this day 1089 years ago, Beverly Cleary, the beloved children’s book author was born.

It was Cleary’s own school librarian who took a special interest in her and said that someday she should write for children, the kind of books she longed to read but could not find on library shelves—funny stories about neighborhood kids growing up. And so Ramona Quimby, Henry Huggins, Ellen Tebbits, and The Mouse and the Motorcycle were born.

The neighborhood streets of Klickitat and Tillamook, where her characters play, actually exist in the Portland neighborhood where Cleary went to school.

She became a librarian herself, after having earned a B.A. in English at UC Berkeley. Little boys were bored in her library because there were no books about “kids like us.” Her first book, Henry Huggins was published in 1950 –her last came out in 1999– and she has sold 90 million books. She has also won numerous literary awards, written two autobiographies, and now lives in a retirement community in Carmel, California. (1916)

Her birth date is also “Drop Everything and Read” day, a school program –D.E.A.R. – that allows kids to lie around in classrooms with books of their choosing. April is also National Library Month. She died on March 25, 2021…  WATCH a 2016 interview with Cleary about her 100th birthday…

 

SHARE the Milestones, Memories, and Music…

“Never forget the three powerful resources you always have available to you: love, hope, and forgiveness.” – H. Jackson Brown, Jr.

By Gabriel Lamza

Quote of the Day: “Never forget the three powerful resources you always have available to you: love, hope, and forgiveness.” – H. Jackson Brown, Jr.

Photo by: Gabriel Lamza

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

Thousands of Stone Tools Made by Early Humans Around 20,000 Years Ago Found in Cave

Prehistoric stone tool cores on display from the cave - credit, Sara Watson SWNS
Prehistoric stone tool cores on display from the cave – credit, Sara Watson SWNS

In a cave overlooking the ocean on the southern coast of Africa, thousands of stone tools made by early humans are revealing connections between prehistoric peoples of the continent.

Archaeologists that made the discovery called it an “important” find that hints at the ways in which prehistoric people traveled, interacted, and shared their craft.

The caves, part of what archaeologists call the Robberg technocomplex in South Africa, no longer overlook a plain, but are instead in a towering cliff face over a rocky beach, a result of sea level rise following the end of the last Ice Age.

Study lead author Dr. Sara Watson of the Field Museum in Chicago explained that during the period when the blades were made, between 24,000 and 12,000 years ago, the area would have been filled with antelope much like other inland regions of South Africa today.

“Instead of being right on the water like they are today, these caves would have been near vast, open plains with large game animals like antelope,” said Dr. Watson. “People hunted those animals, and to do that, they developed new tools and weapons.”

Dr. Watson and her team published their findings in the Journal of Palaeolithic Archaeology, and show they were able to tell how the tools were made by examining tiny details in the chipped edges of the blades and stones.

The team made the daily climb with all their excavation and photography equipment, weighing up to 50 pounds per person, up a very steep escarpment aided by ropes.

Inside, beneath ancient dust and dirt, they found thousands of stone tools—mostly small, sharp blades, as well as the larger pieces of rock from which the blades were broken off—called a “core.”

Archaeologists inside the cave in South Africa – credit, Sara Watson SWNS

“When your average person thinks about stone tools, they probably focus on the detached pieces, the blades and flakes,” Watson explained. “But the thing that is the most interesting to me is the core, because it shows us the particular methods and order of operations that people went through in order to make their tools.”

MORE NEOLITHIC NOVELTIES: Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherers Heard the Elks Painted on a Cliff ‘Talking’ – (LISTEN)

“Since these are extremely, extremely old sites, from before the end of the last Ice Age, we had to be very careful with our excavation. We used little tiny dental tools and mini trowels so that we could remove each little individual layer of sediment.”

She and her colleagues observed several “distinct” patterns in how the smaller blades had been separated from the cores, and that these patterns had been found throughout southern Africa.

“If we see specific methods of core reduction at multiple sites across the landscape, as an archaeologist, it tells me that these people were sharing ideas with one another.”

ALSO CHECK OUT: Prehistoric ‘Axe Factory’ Found in Britain Triggers Search for More Artifacts

For example, one particular method of breaking tiny bladelets off of a core that Dr. Watson found in the Robberg caves is a style also found hundreds of miles away in locations including Namibia and Lesotho.

“The pattern is repeated over and over and over again, which indicates that it is intentional and shared, rather than just a chance similarity,” she said. “We have a very long and rich history as a species… People living around the last Ice Age were very similar to people today.”

SHARE This Wonderful Work On Prehistoric Africans With Your Friends…

‘Urban Miners’ Are Unearthing the Treasures That Can Be Reused as Buildings Are Demolished

Photo by Milivoj Kuhar
Photo by Milivoj Kuhar

In the Belgian town of Leuven, squads of “urban miners” pick through condemned buildings to ensure that any loads of lumber, bricks, tiles, or stones that may have a second life elsewhere are given that chance.

Trucked off to the “Materialenbank,” they await a buyer willing to give these salvaged materials a new home.

Leuven isn’t the frontier though, and a combination of strict building codes and energy efficiency standards mean the materials have to be up to the standards of a modern European economy that wants to be carbon-neutral by 2050.

In some cases, that’s fine—and little more than a coat of paint or lacquer is needed to prepare the material for resale. In other cases though, the urban miners at the Materialenbank will downgrade a material’s importance. A steel girder will lose its role holding up second floors to merely holding up the roof, while tiles that may have lined the roof will make their way to the basement flooring.

It’s all part of Materialenbank’s commitment to recycling. At the moment the firm is picking through a pair of homes that make up a group of 30 prewar houses and garages near the city’s train station it believes it will be “mining” in the next few years.

These 30 buildings were condemned for demolition in order to open up an additional traffic route to ease congestion and find room for a green space. Materialenbank will arrive with their tools, an expert will give the house a once-over, and then workers will commence picking out the best of what can be reused before carting it off to an airplane hanger-like space it owns on the outskirts of town.

There, all the materials are sorted, restored to whatever state is needed, and sold. A workshop also welcomes entrepreneurs and artisans who want to use the materials to make new products.

The Guardian reports that a group of housing flats close to the city’s De Bruul Park come with beds, kitchen cupboards, and flooring all made from recycled wood; just one example of how businesses and builders in the city are taking up the challenge set down by the local government of keeping whatever comes into the city, in the city.

GREAT RECYCLING STORIES: The UK’s Royal Mint is Now Extracting Gold From Electronic Waste

GNN reported on the work of a Georgia nonprofit doing a very similar thing, and how their sales of salvaged wood thrived during the pandemic when government-enforced business closures meant that new lumber from Canada couldn’t be imported into the US for builders.

Re:purpose Savannah is a 501(c)3 that takes old, condemned buildings apart for their bricks, timber, door frames, metalwork, and other components and sells them to construction firms building new homes for discerning clients. They’ve taken apart beach houses, dairies, bungalows, cottages, and traditional homes in town.

MORE SALVAGE EFFORTS: Veterinarian’s Simple Question Inspires Wave of Donations of IV Fluids That Would Normally Be Thrown Away

Furthermore, much of the wood that Re:purpose pulls down comes from trees no longer used for lumber because they are endangered, or because there are better options for mass timber planting.

These include white and red oak, longleaf pine, sweetgum, walnut, and hickory. Longleaf pine in particular is a very high-quality wood with a tensile strength that’s higher than steel.

SHARE This Great Story Of Urban Recycling With Your Friends On Social Media… 

Priestess Statue Found Preserved in Walls of Pompeii, Set to Star in New Exhibit on Roman Women

credit - Pompeii Archaeological Park
credit – Pompeii Archaeological Park

Later this month, an exhibition will open at the Archaeological Museum of Pompeii where a brand-new discovery will play a starring role in communicating the lives of women in the Roman world’s famous buried city.

Found mounted against a wall inside a necropolis near Porta Sarno, one of Pompeii’s city gates, the statues of a man and a priestly woman have emerged from the ash in remarkable condition.

The laurels in the figure’s hand suggests she might have been a priestess – credit, Pompeii Archaeological Park

Flanking a carved niche where a funerary urn once sat, the male statue is wearing a toga and is rather simple, while the woman is bedecked in accessories around her cloak and tunic.

The area they were found in had been excavated for the archaeological park railway in 1998, when the presence of 50 cremation burials in the necropolis was recorded. However, these statues remained hidden until July of last year.

The man and woman could be a married couple, but without an inscription it’s impossible to know for sure. They were carved during the 1st or 2nd century BCE, known as the Late Republican period.

The woman sports amphorae-shaped earings, a wedding ring, a bracelet, and an amulet carved in the shape of a crescent moon, a Roman maiden’s traditional decoration before marriage, called a lunula.

In her right hand, the female figure holds laurel leaves, which Roman priestesses and priests once used to purify spaces, and has led the researchers to believe the figure was in fact a priestess—of Ceres, perhaps, since this goddess of fertility, harvests, and motherhood was connected with the Moon.

Being that a lunula was typically worn before marriage, but the figure also wears a wedding band, the Moon-shaped amulet very well could be connected to Ceres’ role in guiding farmers through planting and harvests.

“There is also this idea that she could have been a priestess of Ceres, holding these plants and what appears to be a papyrus roll,” Gabriel Zuchtriegel, the park’s director, told the Guardian referring to a cylinder-shaped object in the statue’s left hand.

MORE POMPEII DISCOVERIES: 

Smithsonian’s Sonja Anderson writes that the funerary reliefs’ age and quality alone make them rare finds. However, the fact that the female figure may represent a priestess holding religious objects makes the discovery exceptional.

She is set to star alongside other discoveries in an April 16th exhibit “Being a Woman in Ancient Pompeii” which explores the social fabric of maidenhood, motherhood, and the priestess class in the famous city.

SHARE Yet Another Fantastic Discovery From The Famous Ancient City… 

Simple $10 Blood Test Could Help Prevent Thousands of Heart Attacks, Study Says

credit - Getty Images for Unsplash+
credit – Getty Images for Unsplash+

A simple blood test costing less than $10 could prevent hundreds of heart attacks and other adverse cardiac events per year.

Troponin is a protein found in heart muscle cells that if detected in the blood stream means the heart has been damaged in some way: a key indicator of cardiovascular disease risk with greater predictive power than cholesterol levels.

A troponin detection test that can be administered along with other simple blood tests could alert hundreds of patients to their higher risk of heart attack and stroke, allowing them to alter their lifestyle or even start taking statins, in advance of an adverse cardiac event.

The concept was demonstrated in a paper published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The authors showed that adding cardiac troponin levels to existing risk factors such as smoking status, cholesterol, diabetes presence, and blood pressure increased the predictive powers of these screenings—done after CVD events or in advance of a statin prescription.

In fact, in their study of 62,000 Britons with a 15-year follow-up, one additional CVD event would be prevented for every 408 and 473 individuals screened when troponin was added, a result of troponin being a good indicator of so-called “silent” heart damage that could lead to a CVD event in the future.

A BREAKTHROUGH: Study Finds First Evidence That Heart Muscles Can Regenerate

The study also found adding troponin tests meant that up to 8% of people classified as intermediate risk were changed to high-risk.

“Troponin, even in the normal range, is a powerful indicator of silent heart muscle damage,” said Anoop Shah, a professor of cardiovascular medicine at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and lead author on the study.

MORE HEART-HEALTH NEWS: Moderate Coffee and Caffeine Consumption Is Associated with Preventing Onset of #1 Killer

“As such, the test provides an extra layer of information that we can use to boost our accuracy when predicting people’s risk. We want to identify as many high-risk people as possible, so that no one misses out on the opportunity to get preventative treatment.”

SHARE This Evolution In Detection Strategies For The NO.1 Killer in Western Society…

“Assumptions are made and most assumptions are wrong.” – Albert Einstein 

Quote of the Day: “Assumptions are made and most assumptions are wrong.” – Albert Einstein 

Photo by: Daniel Intodawoj

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 11

Thiago Alcantara playing for Bayern Munich - credit, Steffen Prößdorf Released by DFL on CC 4.0. BY-SA

Happy 34th Birthday to the midfield maestro, Thiago Alcântara, one of the finest and cultured passers of the ball seen in recent memory. Enjoying a star-studded, honor-laden career with the mega clubs Barcelona, Bayern Munich, and Liverpool, as well as with the Spanish National Team, Thiago lifted not less than 27 major trophies and is remembered as with extraordinary fondness for his charming smile and artistic passing and vision. WATCH him perform wizardry below… (1991)

88 Ambulances Gifted by India Have Helped Sri Lanka Save 1.5 Million Lives

An Indian ambulance in UP - Photo by Aman Chaturvedi on Unsplash
An Indian ambulance in UP – Photo by Aman Chaturvedi on Unsplash

In a gesture of goodwill and neighborliness, Indian officials transferred 88 ambulances to Sri Lanka counterparts back in 2016.

Now, ten years on, this gift has turned out to be a lifesaving one for 1.5 million Sri Lankans who have ridden and received urgent care in the back of those ambulances and the ones added to the fleet in the following years.

At the time, Prime Minister Narendra Modi handed over the ambulances and Sri Lanka was able to launch the nation’s first national emergency service—equivalent to our 911 or Britain’s 999.

“Today, the fleet size of ambulances has grown to 322. It is used to provide free emergency transportation services to the whole country day and night,” Sri Lankan Minister of Health and Media Nalinda Jayatissa told Modi in a communication last Saturday.

Jayatissa said that national statistics report that 2.44 million people have received care in these ambulances for things like cardiac arrest, stroke, and road accidents. 65% of these were in the “golden hour” where medical care within a few minutes can make the difference between life and death immediately.

“That is nearly 1.5 million lives saved up to now due to your generosity, and continues to save lives in Sri Lanka,” Jayatissa said.

OTHER STORIES LIKE THIS: City in India Ranks the Cleanest 8 Years in a Row: ‘It Feels as Though You Aren’t in India’

Sri Lanka ranks well above other South Asian countries in the Human Development Index with an index score of 0.750, and out of 142 countries surveyed by the World Economic Forum, Sri Lanka cracked the top-third in terms of health industry. That was in 2011, before the ambulance donations arrived.

SOUTH ASIAN DEVELOPMENT: Over the Last 3 Decades, Nearly Everyone in Bangladesh Gained Access to Basic Electricity

More modern estimates keep Sri Lanka ahead of other South Asian economies for health industry development, and the island has eradicated several infectious diseases ahead of established targets. Its life expectancy of 75.5 years at birth is 10% higher than the world average, and the country is ranked number 5 on the World Giving Index which ranks charitable behavior and gestures among the population.

SHARE This Great Story Of Kindness, Development, Health In South Asia… 

Metal Detectives Unearth Ancient Dagger Decorated with Tiny Stars, Crescent Moons, and Geometric Patterns

- credit, Museum of the History of Kamień Land
– credit, Museum of the History of Kamień Land

On a beach in Northern Poland, buried treasure has been found.

A beautiful intricately inlaid dagger from the Bronze Age, perhaps once used in a ceremony by a “solar cult”, was dug up by a pair of metal detectorists from the area.

Jacek Ulkowski and Katarzyna Herdzik immediately notified authorities at the Museum of the History of Kamien Land, whose director, archaeologist Grzegorz Kurka, met the duo at the beach to examine the artifact.

Jacek Ukowski and Katarzyna Herdzik, the metal detectives who discovered the dagger – credit, Museum of the History of Kamień Land

“A true work of art,” Kurka tells the Polish Press Agency. “I have not seen such a dagger in my experience with findings in Polish territories.”

In a statement released by the museum, the find was called “a true masterpiece of metallurgy,” with a blade approximately 10 inches long covered in “linear crescent moons and crosses resembling stars.”

Ulkowski and Herdzik went to the beach following a storm, knowing that artifacts can be disturbed from their sandy tombs under the rough seas. As it happened, they actually found it embedded in a layer of clay that had become dislodged from a nearby cliff face.

Perhaps dating to around 500 BCE, the dagger is likely connected to the Hallstatt Culture, arguably the most significant central European society during the Bronze Age. The Hallstatt heartland spanned an area between Switzerland, France, Austria, Germany, and the Czech Republic, but Hallstatt “type” settlements have also been identified as far east as Serbia and Bulgaria, and as far north as Poland.

A catalogue of Hallstatt Culture discoveries – credit Bibliographic Institute of Leipzig

Surface decorations may indicate connections to a solar cult and suggest that the dagger had a ritual significance, a statement from the museum read.

“It could also have equipped a rich warrior. This dagger is undoubtedly a true work of art and an example of a high level of metallurgy.”

SIMILAR FINDS IN TIME AND PLACE: Hoard of Bronze Jewelry Found in Polish Lake Reveals Ancient Celtic Water Burial Ritual

The museum also hypothesized that the dagger could have been cast in the way daggers were made in Greece for example, and imported from southern Europe.

SHARE This Dazzling Dagger And The Mystery Of Its Ornamentation With Your Friends…

Tony Robbins’ 100 Billion Meals Challenge Secures First 30 Billion, Redefining Global Hunger Relief

The 100 Billion Meals Challenge
The 100 Billion Meals Challenge

While many Americans have received valuable inspiration and information from motivational speaker Tony Robbins, millions more have received something more valuable—their next meal.

Admittedly always interested in solving food scarcity and hunger in America, Robbins recently celebrated providing his one-billionth meal to America through his Feeding America initiative by deciding to do it 100 times more.

The 100 Billion Meals Challenge aims to stem the global hunger pangs around the world, rather than just in America, and is working to unite nonprofits, philanthropists, and influential businesses to provide 100 billion meals to people in countries around the world suffering from hunger.

Incredibly, Robbins and the team behind the initiative have already secured commitments that will see the first 30 billion meals out to those that need them, according to a release from the organization.

For Robbins, hunger is a deeply personal cause. Having experienced food insecurity as a child, he understands the profound impact of a simple act of kindness—like the Thanksgiving meal his family received when he was 11. This pivotal moment inspired his lifelong dedication to combating hunger and expanding global access to food.

Having succeeded in providing 1 billion meals to Americans, Robbins has secured the assistance and expertise of David Beasley, the former Governor of the WFP, who helped win the organization the Nobel Peace Prize.

The technical goals of the challenge, beyond the romanticism of putting a plate of food in front of every hungry child, is to engage new partnerships with public and private sector entities by coordinating large-scale food donations, supporting innovative and sustainable agricultural efforts, and responding to emergencies in areas experiencing severe food shortages.

ALSO CHECK OUT: Over the Last 3 Decades, Nearly Everyone in Bangladesh Gained Access to Basic Electricity

The current state of hunger is worse than ever before. In 2017, when Beasley was appointed executive director of the United Nations World Food Program, 80 million people were experiencing acute hunger. That number has now risen to more than 350 million.

In response, Robbins and Beasley have already secured commitments by a wide and diverse cohort of difference makers, from the American National Pasta Association to His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktou, the Ruler of Dubai, who has set up a state-funded endowment for feeding 2 billion people in this year alone.

COMBATTING HUNGER: A Canadian Farmer Had Millions of Surplus Potatoes and Worked Overtime to Give Them All Away

Without zeroing in on charity, Robbins is also enlisting the help of agricultural industries that can ensure banner crops inside countries where calories are in short supply. For example, Uralchem, a Russian fertilizer company, has committed to work with Robbins in shipping out 55,000 metric tons of fertilizer to Sri Lanka ahead of the upcoming growing season.

SHARE This Heroic And Sorely Needed Assistance From Our Own Tony Robbins…

The Immense Complexity of a Brain is Mapped in 3D for the First Time: ‘Like an Exquisite Forest’ (WATCH)

100k brain cells mapped by MICrONS Project – Allen Institute
100k brain cells mapped by MICrONS Project – Allen Institute

During the last seven years, a global team of more than 150 scientists collaborated on the most complicated neuroscience experiment ever attempted—and they’ve released their findings this week.

From a tiny sample of tissue no larger than a grain of sand, the MICrONS Project completed the first step toward the goal once thought unattainable: building a functional wiring diagram of a portion of the brain.

Now, they’ve published their findings in Nature with a collection of ten studies. The 3D wiring diagram and its data are massive—1.6 petabytes in size (equivalent to 22 years of non-stop HD video). They offer a never-before-seen insight into brain function and organization of the visual system.

The research started at Baylor College of Medicine where scientists used specialized microscopes to record the brain activity from a one cubic millimeter portion of a mouse’s visual cortex while the animal watched various movies and YouTube clips.

Afterwards, Allen Institute researchers took that same cubic millimeter of the brain and shaved it into more than 25,000 layers, each 1/400th the width of a human hair, and used an array of electron microscopes to take high-resolution pictures of each slice.

By the end, the MICrONS Project—Machine Intelligence from Cortical Networks—built the most detailed wiring diagram of a mammalian brain to date—and it’s freely available online.

“A watershed moment for neuroscience, comparable to the Human Genome Project” is the description from David Markowitz, Ph.D., who coordinated this work after leaving the IARPA, the US Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity, which partially funded it.

Another team at Princeton University used artificial intelligence and machine learning to reconstruct the cells and connections into a 3D volume. Combined with the recordings of brain activity, it contains 523 million synapses (the connection points between 200,000 cells) and a length of four kilometers of axons (the branches that reach out to other cells).

Subset of more than 1000 of the 120,000 brain cells reconstructed in the MICRONS project – Allen Institute

“Inside that tiny speck is an entire architecture like an exquisite forest,” said Clay Reid, Ph.D., senior investigator and one of the early founders of electron microscopy connectomics who brought this area of science to the Allen Institute 13 years ago.

“It has all sorts of rules of connections that we knew from various parts of neuroscience—and within the reconstruction itself, we can test the old theories and hope to find new things that no one has ever seen before.”

(WATCH the incredible 6 minute video below, by Tyler Sloan of Quorumetrix Studio…)

 

The findings from the studies reveal new cell types, characteristics, organizational and functional principles, and a new way to classify cells. Among the most surprising findings was the discovery of a new principle of inhibition within the brain.

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Scientists previously thought of inhibitory cells—those that suppress neural activity—as a simple force that dampens the action of other cells. However, researchers discovered a far more sophisticated level of communication: Inhibitory cells are not random in their actions; instead, they are highly selective about which excitatory cells they target, creating a network-wide system of coordination and cooperation. Some inhibitory cells work together, suppressing multiple excitatory cells, while others are more precise, targeting only specific types.

“MICrONS will stand as a landmark where we build brain foundation models that span many levels of analysis, beginning from the behavioral level to the representational level of neural activity and even to the molecular level,” explained Andreas Tolias, Ph.D., one of the lead scientists who worked on this project at both Baylor College of Medicine and Stanford University.

Implications for brain diseases like dementia

Understanding the brain’s form and function and the ability to analyze the detailed connections between neurons at an unprecedented scale opens new possibilities for studying the brain and intelligence. It also has implications for disorders like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, autism, and schizophrenia involving disruptions in neural communication.

“If you have a broken radio and you have the circuit diagram, you’ll be in a better position to fix it.” said Nuno da Costa, Ph.D., associate investigator at the Allen Institute. “We are describing a kind of Google map or blueprint of this grain of sand. In the future, we can use this to compare the brain wiring in a healthy mouse to the brain wiring in a model of disease.”

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The multi-institution collaboration, which included Harvard scientists, was made possible by support from the IARPA and US National Institutes of Health’s BRAIN Initiative.

“Basic science building blocks—like how the brain is wired—are the foundation we need to better understand brain injury and disease, to bring treatments and cures closer to clinical use.”

“IARPA’s moonshot investment in the MICrONS program has shattered previous technological limitations, creating the first platform to study the relationship between neural structure and function at scales necessary to understand intelligence… and sets the stage for future scaling to the whole brain level,” adds IARPA’s Markowitz.

In 1979, famed molecular biologist Francis Crick stated that it would be “impossible to create an exact wiring diagram for a cubic millimeter of brain tissue and the way all its neurons are firing,” which inspired Allen Institute’s Senior Investigator Clay Reid to pursue the subject as his life’s work.

CHECK OUT MORE GOOD NEWS IN THE BRAIN AT GNN 

This map of neuronal connectivity, form, and function from a grain of sand-sized portion of the brain is not just a scientific marvel, but a step toward understanding the elusive origins of thought, emotion, and consciousness—and the “impossible” task first envisioned by Crick is now one step closer to reality.

TELEPORT THE AWE-INSPIRING NEWS By Sharing On Social Media… 

“Success is never final, failure is never fatal. It’s courage that counts.” – John Wooden

Getty Images for Unsplash+

Quote of the Day: “Success is never final, failure is never fatal. It’s courage that counts.” – John Wooden

Photo by: Getty Images for Unsplash+

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?

Getty Images for Unsplash+

Good News in History, April 10

100 years ago today, one of the great American novels, The Great Gatsby was published. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s work was a commercial disappointment and strangely, as it sometimes happens with artists, it only became a contender for the Great American Novel after his death. It was based on an affair that Fitzgerald had with a New York City socialite, and on the wild parties he would accompany her to on Long Island’s north shore during the Jazz Age. READ more about this seminal work… (1925)

Elk Can Migrate Through Private Colorado Ranch After First-of-its-Kind Deal with Conservation Group

Elk frequently migrate across the property in herds of hundreds - credit, Dave Gottenborg, supplied to Colorado Sun
Elk frequently migrate across the property in herds of hundreds – credit, Dave Gottenborg, supplied to Colorado Sun

A Colorado rancher has signed a first-of-its-kind agreement that will see a conservation organization help pay for his land leases in exchange for letting wildlife access it.

America is a leader across many dimensions, few more so than in innovative conservation strategies.

From the concept of the ‘national park’ to the Federal duck stamp, America has never been short of good ideas for how to help man and the great nature of North America coexist in harmony.

From the Colorado Sun comes yet another good idea—helping cattle ranchers afford land leases provided they agree to allow migratory elk to pass through their land, even if it means they eat grass and forage the cattle otherwise would.

The reality is that the North American Prairie is home to millions of agriculturalists whose working of the land has disrupted the ancestral wandering of many native species, in particular to this story, elk.

In Colorado, the Property and Environment Research Center (PERC) is paying not more than two-thirds of the cost for land leases that state cattle ranchers sometimes negotiate with private landowners. The Sun reports that such private landowning agriculturalists may live adjacent to a cattleman’s ranch, and it’s easier when winter forage is scarce to pay a little to allow the cattle to roam and forage since nothing is being grown there.

PERC was started during the Cold War to find ways to use markets to incentivize and or commoditize conservation. Though often objected to as an immoral and low-brow way of looking at the natural world, economic science states that it’s impossible for anyone to know the true value of a good or service without the market’s supply and demand functions working in conjunction to determine a price.

Perhaps, the conservationists would say, that’s because there is no value that can be put on a natural ecosystem and the rights of the animals and plants to live there, but that’s mostly an impossible position in the eyes of, for example, a rancher or a congressman fighting for space in a budget. They, like everyone else in society, operate in an economic environment, and need prices to be able to make key spending and saving decisions.

Take Colorado rancher Dave Gottenborg for example, who spends days repairing fences that he needs to keep his cattle from running away that the elk which wander through his 3,000-acre Eagle Rock Ranch property destroy every summer. He’s happy to donate his time repairing fences because he loves the elk, but probably could not afford to allow them to out-graze his cattle if PERC weren’t helping him cover the cost of additional land leases.

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By paying his lease fees in advance and over a period of years, PERC helps reduce the frustration and anxiety he and other ranchers feel “when 500 elk show up and eat 20 pounds of forage per day, per elk,” he told the Sun.

The Colorado Cattleman’s Agricultural Land Trust helped organize the money from PERC and the lease agreement with Gottenborg’s neighbor, an agreement which the trust says is the first of its kind, but just one method they’ve used to protect 800,000 acres of grazing land for cattlemen and wildlife.

MORE COLORADO NEWS: Colorado Wild Horse Bill Passes With Huge Majority of Politicians Supporting Laws to Protect the State’s Mustangs

As for what else is required of Gottenborg, the only addition is that he lays down his barbed wire fencing every winter so the elk don’t get caught in it. That way they can move through his ranch onto wherever it is they wish to roam.

SHARE This Unique Way Of Helping Restore Ancestral Elk Movements Across The Great Plains… 

Computer Chips Running at Speed of Light Boast Better Performance and Reduced Energy Use

A Lightmatter photonic processor - credit Lightmatter, released
A Lightmatter photonic processor – credit Lightmatter, released

A tech firm has just demonstrated that a computer chip using light and the speed at which it moves for processing is capable of handling real-world computer workloads at revolutionary speeds and energy efficiency.

The firm’s CEO has called it a “technology marvel” that stands to change the future of computing to one in which the single path of innovation that started with the first integrated circuit is departed from, and a multipolar world of computing possibilities is entered.

Described in two papers published in the journal Nature, Lightmatter’s photonic computer chips that combine the use of light and electricity are shown to increase computational performance, while reducing energy consumption, compared with conventional electronic chips.

These photonic chips might address the growing computing demands driven by advancing artificial intelligence technology.

“Computing stands at an inflection point unlike anything we’ve seen since the transistor was invented,” Lightmatter Co-founder and CEO Nick Harris wrote in a blog post heralding the invention. “Artificial intelligence workloads are driving computational demands beyond what traditional scaling laws can deliver.”

The problem, Harris lays out, is that existing ability to scale up the performance of closed circuits is encountering diminishing returns, as the increase in physical size to match the needs for increased performance will make them cost-prohibitive, but also just too large for modern devices.

Photonic computing by contrast uses photons rather than electrons, and presents a potential solution to these challenges. Multiplication and accumulation—central computational operations for artificial intelligence—can be performed faster and more efficiently using photonic circuits.

Lightmatter’s photonic processor performs 65.5 trillion adaptive block floating-point 16-bit (ABFP) operations per second, consuming only 78 watts of electrical power and 1.6 watts of optical power.

This integration level represents the highest yet achieved in photonic processing, and was used in the study to power a variety of currently-available state-of-the-art AI systems such as the natural language processing model BERT and a neural network called ResNet (used for image processing) at parity with the best of what the conventional silicon closed-circuit chip can offer an average consumer.

The authors show that their photonic processor has a range of applications, including generating Shakespeare-like text, accurately classifying movie reviews, and playing classic Atari computer games such as Pac-Man.

“Photonic computing has been in the making for decades, but these demonstrations might mean that we are finally about to harness the power of light to build more-powerful and energy-efficient computing systems,” notes Anthony Rizzo at Dartmouth College in a commentary piece released alongside the studies.

The photonic processors were built in a currently existing facility for microprocessor manufacture, and with the same machines. They fit into a normal motherboard, demonstrating that this is a technology that could be available in years rather than decades.

Lastly, the processor was built using only monochromatic light in a single spatial waveguide mode. This leaves plenty of room for future improvements that could use many frequency and spatial modes in parallel.

“For the first time in computing history, we’ve demonstrated a non-transistor-based technology capable of running complex, real-world workloads with accuracy and efficiency comparable to existing electronic systems,” said Harris.

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As Harris, a co-author on one of the two papers, points out, several other existing futures of computing are currently being investigated and developed, including quantum computing, computing systems based on DNA-RNA interactions or on human neurology, and traditional processors using carbon nanotubes rather than silicon.

Each has major hurdles to overcome, but Harris believes that together with Lightmatter’s photonic chips, they represent the future of computing— away from one in which the singular focus of making silicon chips smaller and more powerful, and into a new world where there are multiple methods of extreme-speed computation that are specialized to suit certain tasks.

MORE INNOVATION STORIES: This Innovation Could Extend Little-Used Zinc Battery Lifespan Hundreds of Times to Create Battery Revolution

“The invention of the integrated circuit, the microprocessor, or the transistor itself—none of
these innovations immediately replaced their predecessors, but each fundamentally changed what was achievable,” Harris writes.

“At Lightmatter, we’ve demonstrated that computing’s next chapter need not remain bound by transistor limitations. For an industry accustomed to continual reinvention, photonics represents an exciting and necessary new frontier.”

SHARE This Advance In The Future Of Computing With Your Friends…

Solar Tricycle Startup Helps Entrepreneurial Women Be Drivers of Change in Africa

Courtesy of Mobility For Africa
Courtesy of Mobility For Africa

In Zimbabwe, an Africa-born mobility startup is providing women with the catalyst they need to drive change in their community and society.

Called the Hamba, this durable electric tricycle is mobilizing a generation of working women and mothers, allowing them to perform arduous tasks with relative ease and comfort.

Manufactured in Africa and managed by the startup Mobility for Africa (MFA), a leasing program for women allowed one or several locals to lease a Hamba for $15 a month. This pilot program was a huge success, and now these electric tricycles are available to buy, on a lease-to-purchase agreement, and to rent—all on an ad-hoc basis.

It allows women to fetch water and firewood, take family members to medical facilities, or bring and buy produce at local markets, saving sometimes dozens of miles of walking each day.

“In the past transporting our produce to the market was a nightmare we would wake up at 3 am and travel a very long distance using an ox-drawn cart but now it is much easier we can reach the market on time,” a 34-year-old tomato farmer and mother of six, Hilda Takadini, told Africa News.

92% of female customers participating in the company’s pilot program noted an improvement in how safe they feel whilst traveling since they started using the Hamba compared with walking, and some have offered their services as couriers and drivers to other community members, sparking the spirit of entrepreneurialism.

Courtesy of Mobility For Africa

Among the women whose stories were changed by the appearance of the Hamba was Anna Bhobho, a 31-year-old housewife from rural Zimbabwe who was excluded from economic life.

Using EV 3-wheeler to transport crops in Zimbabwe – Courtesy of Mobility For Africa

MORE ELECTRIC VEHICLES IN AFRICA: Female Entrepreneur Set to Revolutionize Transportation for All of Africa, After Transforming her Native Ghana

Now, she’s the major bread winner in her house, and Takadini relies on her to bring tomatoes to market before they spoil.

“Even my husband and in-laws have more respect for me now. No one used to listen to me, but now I have a seat when important decisions are being made,” the mother of three told Africa News.

MORE ELECTRIC VEHICLES IN AFRICA: How Fog Nets Are Making Water Abundant in Arid Africa – And May Be Useful in California

70% of the Hambas are reserved for women, and 300 are estimated to currently own or rent one. The solar-powered trikes have just one moving part in the motor, making them easy to maintain and fix. Batteries can be exchanged when depleted at a cost of $5.00 at one of Infraco Africa’s solar power stations, a partner with MFA on the initiative.

Each Hamba can carry 1,000 pounds or so of cargo, and have a top speed of 37 mph (you couldn’t go much faster on a rural Zimbabwe road anyway).

WATCH the story below from Africa News…

SHARE This Brilliant Africa-Made Innovation That’s Bringing Housewives Into The 21st Century… 

Trading Cards Starring Middle-Aged Men Go Viral in Japanese Town, Boosting Volunteerism and Respect for Elders

Middle aged men (and older) trading cards created by Eri Miyahara of the Saidosho Community Council
Middle aged men (and older) trading cards created by Eri Miyahara of the Saidosho Community Council

In a story that will make you ‘aww’ and ‘ahh’ like the best Pixar film, a Japanese community center released a line of collectable trading cards featuring the town’s male elders.

Seeking a way for the younger generation to connect with the “amazing” community members, middle-aged and older, the center’s secretary general leveraged the youth’s enduring love of Pokémon trading cards to create these masterpieces of civic engagement.

The town of Kawara in Fukuoka Prefecture has a population of about 10,000. Limestone mountains, relatively famous from their appearance in a well-known novel, are all the northern Kyushu town can boast of that tourists might want to visit.

But a strange phenomenon has gripped the town’s youth originating from the Saidosho Community Center. They’re rapidly taking up a new trading card game, but the cards don’t depict fantasy creatures, anime heroes, or even famous baseball players.

Instead, the characters portrayed on the distinctly Pokémon-like cards are the town’s ojisan—middle-aged or older community members. Ms. Eri Miyahara, the Secretary General of Saidosho center, originally created them just as a collectable card game.

“We wanted to strengthen the connection between the children and the older generations in the community. There are so many amazing people here. I thought it was such a shame that no one knew about them,” she said in an interview with Fuji News Network, according to Tokyo Weekender. “Since the card game went viral, so many kids are starting to look up to these men as heroic figures.”

It costs less than a dollar per card, while $3.00 gets you a set of 6 that includes one shiny card.

The 47 characters include ‘Soba Master’ Mr. Takeshita, an 81-year-old maker of soba noodles and Mr. Fujii, a 67-year-old former prison guard-turned community volunteer whose card is so sought after that kids will approach him asking for an autograph on it.

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“I was honestly shocked when they asked me to sign it,” Mr. Fujii said, laughing. “I never imagined I’d become a trading card, let alone have fans.”

It was the kids, though, who took the idea and turned it into a card game where the town’s ojisan were given special abilities. A retired fire brigade chief can strike opponents for 200 fire damage, while a local electrician can do the same with electricity. His card explains how he can fix any electronic appliance in the country.

MORE JAPANESE NEWS: 

The cards are made by hand and virtually always sold out and, best of all, Ms. Miyahara’s idea has caused youth participation at the center to double—and the elders of the town are meeting more of their younger neighbors than ever before.

Japan has one of the oldest, fastest-aging populations, and lowest birthrates of any country in the world, and these sorts of efforts to connect those of silver hair with younger citizens will be more important here than virtually anywhere else.

SHARE This Brilliant Idea For Civic Engagement With Your Friends Who Love Japan… 

“Painting from nature is not copying the object; it is realizing one’s sensations.” – Paul Cezanne

Quote of the Day: “Painting from nature is not copying the object; it is realizing one’s sensations.” – Paul Cezanne

Photo by: Bryan van Wagner

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 9

16 years ago, Parks and Recreation, a television mockumentary debuted on NBC, and leaped right into the hearts of millions of Americans. Without being their introductory roles, the show nevertheless catapulted its cast into nationwide comedy acclaim, particularly for Amy Poehler, Aziz Ansari, Nick Offerman, Chris Prat, and Aubrey Plaza, who all went on to hugely successful careers. The show ran for 7 seasons, from 2009 to 2015, and wracked up 125 episodes. Produced and written by the creators of The Office U.S., “Parks and Rec” as it was commonly called, had a very similar style. WATCH some of the funniest moments… (2009)