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Golfer Minjee Lee Just Won Her Second Greg Norman Medal

The 21st edition of the Greg Norman Medal was held in Brisbane on Tuesday night. Minjee Lee won her second medal after winning the Evian Championship in France. Her brother Min Woo was also nominated for the award. Young gun Steph Kyriacou won the WPGA Tour of Australasia player of the year award. Brad Kennedy won the PGA Tour ofAustralasia players' award. Cameron Smith's coach Grant Field was named high-performance coach of theyear.

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Mom Turns Weight Loss Into Powerlifting Passion — Now She’s Eyeing Nationals

At 4am, while most of Alice Springs is still asleep, Jessica Coombe is already at the gym. It's the only quiet moment she gets in a day packed with work, school drop-offs and parenting four kids. And it's when she's at her happiest — lifting heavy, surrounded by chalk dust and clanging metal. “I get up at 3am and I head to the gym at 4am. I spend two hours in there in my happy place, just lifting,” she said. Coombe is a powerlifter. On Saturday, she’ll compete in her first-ever meet, held hundreds of kilometres away in Bulli, south of Sydney. Her goal isn’t to win — not yet, anyway. It’s about getting a feel for competition and starting something bigger. “This meet that I'm going to is the regionals, but it opens the door for nationals and internationals,” she said. “It'd be lovely to get to nationals one day.” Her current lifting total is 270kg: an 80kg squat, 60kg bench press and 130kg deadlift. But the numbers only tell part of her story. Four years ago, Coombe weighed 220kg. A traumatic birth with her fourth child nearly cost them both their lives. Afterwards, her doctor told her to make a change. What started as a weight loss journey soon turned into something more. “I just love feeling strong,” she said. “When you're looking at the weights on the bar and they look like a lot, then you actually pick it up — it's a really good feeling.” She’s since lost 115kg, and says the physical transformation has brought a whole new lease on life. “I feel really active, energetic. I can keep up with my kids now. They love it. We go bike riding, we go to the park — it’s great.” Coombe hopes her story inspires more women, especially in Alice Springs, to pick up a barbell. She’s already invited others to train with her and dreams of one day hosting competitions in the outback town. “Come and join me. We can build up a strong community of women lifting and then maybe one day we'll have our own comps here,” she said. It’s not such a far-fetched goal. Powerlifting Australia’s Robert Wilks said it had been nearly 25 years since a sanctioned event was held in the Northern Territory — but that could soon change. “We used to have competitions in Alice Springs and Darwin somewhat sporadically, then it just faded away,” he said. “We're looking to get started in the territory mid to late this year.” According to Wilks, women are one of the sport’s fastest-growing demographics. Once only 5 per cent of members, they now make up as much as 40 per cent of Powerlifting Australia. “Powerlifting Australia wants everyone in Australia to take up the sport because it’s the most healthy thing you can do,” he said. “We particularly want women to take up the sport.” The physical benefits are well documented — improved bone density, muscular strength, and even reduced risks of chronic disease. But Coombe says the emotional and cultural strength she’s found is just as important. “Going in solo was very scary for me, but I overcame my fears,” she said. “It’s definitely different for women in the gym because you see all the men around and they’re screaming and they’re moving some really heavy weights, which can be very intimidating. “But I just want to say to all the ladies — take up the space. Don’t be ashamed. Don’t be afraid. Go up to the gym bros, they’re big teddy bears, I swear.” These days, she says her kids are her biggest cheerleaders. “They do say all the time, like, ‘Oh, my mum’s so strong’. I’m like, ‘Yeah, that’s great, but I’m not just strong in my body, I’m strong in my mind and strong in my culture as well’,” she said. “It’s been an incredible journey — and I’m definitely not done yet.”

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Returned After 36 Years, Beloved Library Book Finds Its Way Home

Most of us have misplaced a library book or returned one a few days (or weeks) late. But 36 years? That’s a record-breaker — and a heartwarming one at that. Late last year, staff at Chantilly Regional Library in Virginia received a surprise: a well-worn but intact copy of Harry the Dirty Dog — a children’s classic — returned nearly four decades after it was first checked out in 1989. Along with the book came a handwritten note from Dimitris Economou, who explained how the book had circled the globe since the day his diplomat parents borrowed it for him when he was five. “This book was checked out Nov. 6, 1989 by my parents who were diplomats based in DC at the time,” the note read. “They are now retired in Greece and I found this book on their shelves. It traveled the world and was well taken care of as you can see. And now it can find its way home.” Economou only realized the book was overdue when he pulled it off the shelf to read to his own son, now seven years old. “As we got to the end, I realized it was a library book,” he told Northern Virginia Magazine. “The moment I saw it, I felt like I had to return it. It just felt like the right thing to do.” Over the years, Harry the Dirty Dog had made stops in Syria, the Netherlands, Japan, and eventually Athens, Greece — riding out three decades of family moves before quietly landing back in its original home in Fairfax County. “We collected the book back with huge smiles,” the library posted on Facebook, sharing a photo of the returned copy and note. “Thank you to Dimitris' parents for taking such good care of our book and to Dimitris for helping the book find its way back to our shelves.” There were no fines involved — Chantilly Regional Library is now a fine-free library — so Harry simply got reshelved for the next kid to enjoy. For Ingrid Bowers, the library’s branch manager, the story underscores a simple but powerful truth. “People really care about library books,” she told The Washington Post. “And this kind of proves it.” In an age when attention spans are short and physical books can feel overlooked, the gesture reminded many of the enduring spirit of libraries — and the quiet, mutual trust that keeps them running. Public libraries offer far more than just books these days: tool libraries, language classes, museum passes, job search help. But at their heart, they remain a place built on a simple agreement — borrow something, and bring it back. Even if it takes 36 years.

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More Than 60,000 Birthday Cards Delivered to UK Girl with Cancer in Heartfelt World Record Attempt

What started as a simple birthday wish turned into a global outpouring of love — and a record-breaking moment for a young girl facing one of the toughest battles of her life. Amelia Kolpa, a seven-year-old from Rowley Regis in the UK, has spent much of her childhood in and out of hospital with neuroblastoma, a rare cancer. For her upcoming eighth birthday on March 3, she had one goal: to receive 8,000 birthday cards and break the UK record. She didn’t just beat it — she smashed it. More than 60,000 cards have now been delivered to Amelia, including many arriving in the back of three vans driven by a convoy of bikers. Hundreds of motorcyclists, including members of the Hells Angels, rode from a collection point in Stourbridge to Amelia’s home on Thursday to deliver the latest batch. “It took us probably double the time it usually would — about 40 minutes with 2,000 bikes,” said Matt Lem, one of the organisers and a Hells Angels member. “All she wanted was birthday cards.” Lem, who helped spearhead the appeal, said cards poured in from across the UK and far beyond — with some postmarked from Canada, the US, New Zealand, and Australia. “We collected 60,000, or in excess of 60,000,” he said. “It snowballed. I’m overwhelmed by the response.” Amelia's aunt, Charmaine Grace, said the family had already stored 23,000 cards from an earlier appeal and were stunned by the surge in support from around the world. “There’s so much love and support,” she said. “It’s nice to know that everyone out there is with us on this journey, and there’s still humanity in the world.” Amelia is currently receiving palliative care while awaiting a spot on a clinical trial, where she’s number 60 on the list. Despite everything, her aunt says she’s been “really smiley and happy,” and that the massive birthday card delivery lifted her spirits even more. “She’s going to open them and we’re going to do a massive collage to put on the wall to mark that we’ve done her wish again,” Grace said. “We’ve granted another wish — so thanks everyone.” What began as a hopeful request has turned into a beautiful reminder of how many people are willing to show up for a child they’ve never met — one card at a time.

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Winter Olympics 2026 Opens With Message Of Harmony Amid Global Divisions

The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympic Games opened with a lavish, multisite celebration of Italian culture, harmony, and music — and an emotional farewell to one of sport’s most iconic stadiums. With more than 1,200 performers across four venues, Italy put on a show as ambitious as it was elegant. The centerpiece unfolded at Milan’s 99-year-old San Siro stadium, which is scheduled to be demolished by 2032. Fittingly, the Olympic spotlight served as a grand sendoff. “The San Siro was always full of emotions,” said former AC Milan player and manager Fabio Capello earlier this week. “For me, San Siro is history. San Siro is life. San Siro is a monument.” Few would argue after Friday night’s spectacle. From a catwalk of models draped in the Italian flag to spine-tingling musical numbers, the Opening Ceremony pulled off a balancing act between tradition and forward-thinking — much like the Games themselves, which are being held across several locations, including Milan, Cortina, Livigno, and Predazzo. The ceremony’s theme, “Armonia” (Harmony), was woven through every element. From the simultaneous lighting of cauldrons in Milan’s Arco della Pace and Cortina’s Piazza Angelo Dibona, to the real-time athlete parades across four locations, organizers emphasized unity across distance, ideas, and people. Music was a driving force. Andrea Bocelli brought down the house with a powerful rendition of “Nessun Dorma,” his voice echoing through the rafters of San Siro in a moment that felt operatic in every sense. Earlier, Mariah Carey took center stage for a soaring version of “Volare” followed by “Nothing is Impossible,” delivered in full diva mode before her entourage whisked her off. In the stands, some fans were left puzzled by the gaps in San Siro’s seating arrangement, but the visuals — bright, bold, and tightly choreographed — kept most eyes on the field. The director cut seamlessly between venues, ensuring athletes marching in Cortina or Livigno received the same attention as those in Milan. The ceremony didn’t shy away from the realities of a tense global backdrop. Before the TV broadcast began, the crowd at San Siro was shown a video message from UN Secretary General António Guterres. Giovanni Malagò, president of the local organizing committee, reinforced the peace-through-sport message, saying: “At a time when so much of the world is divided by conflict, your very presence demonstrates that another world is possible. One of unity, respect and harmony.” Ukraine’s athletes drew one of the loudest cheers of the night. “Politics and sport don't exist in separate spheres,” said IOC president Kirsty Coventry earlier this week. “But our game is sport. That means keeping sport a neutral ground. A place where every athlete can compete freely, without being held back by the politics or divisions of their governments.” That sentiment may be tested over the coming weeks, especially given growing tensions in Sudan, Myanmar, Haiti and the Middle East. But on opening night, the Olympic flame — or flames, in this case — did its job: it lit up the Italian sky with hope, harmony, and a reminder of what global cooperation can still look like. For now, let the Games begin.

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UK Teen Wins $6K on Rainy Day in New Zealand With Rare Hole-in-One Shot

Eighteen-year-old Luca Walton wasn’t expecting to make headlines during his gap year trip to New Zealand. He just wanted to kill some time on a rainy day. Instead, he ended up sinking a shot that’s only been done 14 times in over three decades — and walked away with NZ$10,000 (about £4,400 or US$6,000) in prize money. The British teen from Woking, Surrey, hit a hole-in-one on a floating pontoon in Lake Taupo, a popular golf challenge located on New Zealand’s North Island. The goal? Launch a ball 104 meters (341 feet) from the lake’s edge and land it cleanly into the hole. Easy to try, almost impossible to nail. “When I won, it shocked me for the whole day — it was special,” Walton said. “When the money arrived three days later, that’s when it hit me.” Walton, who plays golf only occasionally with friends at Chobham Golf Club back home, said he never expected to win anything when he wandered into the challenge. “I had no idea what was going on,” he admitted, laughing that the staff were more excited than he was in the moment. Hole in One Lake Taupo confirmed Walton’s shot was only the 14th recorded since the attraction opened in 1993. They handed over a giant novelty cheque and let him keep the club and ball he used — both of which he’s been carrying with him ever since. “I’ve been lugging that around for the past two weeks,” he joked. After waking his dad up at 1:30 a.m. UK time to share the news, Walton now says the winnings will go toward making the rest of the trip more memorable for himself and his friends. “Now I owe it to my friends that we treat ourselves here and there,” he said. Next up: Australia, Thailand, and Vietnam — before heading home to start university. Not a bad way to break up a rainy day.

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NASA Unveils New Artemis Space Suit With Out-Of-This-World Mobility

For the first time in over half a century, astronauts are heading back toward the moon—and scientists are busy solving one of their most deceptively difficult problems: what they’ll wear when they get there. NASA’s Artemis II mission, slated to launch as early as March, will send four astronauts on a lunar flyby, bringing humans closer to the moon than they’ve been since 1972. But it's the follow-up, Artemis III, that will grab headlines. That mission plans to land astronauts on the lunar surface, kickstarting a new era of deep-space exploration. Before they can do that, they’ll need space suits that can handle the moon’s brutal extremes—and let astronauts move like never before. Forget flashy designs. A lunar suit is more like a personal spacecraft. It has to shield astronauts from cosmic radiation, extreme heat and cold, and lung-clogging moon dust. It needs to hold air, provide water for cooling and hydration, and give astronauts the mobility to work, climb, and stay out for hours. Designing a suit that can do all that—without turning its wearer into a human balloon—is one of the biggest challenges NASA faces ahead of returning to the moon. That job has been given to Axiom Space, a U.S.-based company tapped to develop NASA’s next-generation lunar suit. Their design, called the Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit (AxEMU), was unveiled in 2024 and is currently undergoing testing. On the surface, the AxEMU resembles the bulky white suits of Apollo missions. But under the hood, it’s packed with modern technology. “It’s really pushing the limits of material science,” said Paul Spana, director of collections at the Space Center Houston museum. “There’s going to be a lot of new things introduced for the new suit that will be used for moonwalking on Artemis III.” The lunar South Pole—Artemis III’s destination—is far more challenging than the near-equatorial region Apollo astronauts explored. The terrain is steeper, the temperatures more extreme, and light and darkness can last for weeks. “This region presents unique challenges,” NASA spokesperson Victoria Ugalde said, adding that the new suit needs to work across a range of landers, rovers, and spacecraft. To survive that environment, the AxEMU offers improved temperature control and is built to resist damage from rocks and moon dust. But the real breakthrough is in how the suit moves. Apollo astronauts often struggled with their rigid suits, likening the experience to fighting against an inflated balloon. The AxEMU changes that with flexible joints that allow for kneeling, climbing, and a much broader range of motion—even enough, reportedly, to do the splits. That flexibility is key for long-term missions and new lunar goals, like building a surface outpost or a future lunar space station. But one major concern remains: weight. Axiom hasn’t said exactly how much the AxEMU weighs, but reports suggest it’s heavier than the 200-pound Apollo suits. Even with lunar gravity reducing the load to about one-sixth, the suit still feels heavy—and that’s before you add tools, samples, or portable equipment. “Weight is always a key consideration in space suit design,” Ugalde acknowledged, but NASA remains confident astronauts will be able to perform essential tasks on the moon. Dr. Mike Barratt, a NASA astronaut and physician, warned that the added weight could pose injury risks during long surface excursions. Still, the Artemis III mission will serve as a proving ground. When astronauts return, they’ll bring back firsthand data on how the AxEMU performs in one of the harshest environments in the solar system. That feedback will help engineers refine the design for future missions—not just to the moon, but eventually, Mars. “Every step builds toward NASA’s goal of a sustained human presence on the moon,” Ugalde said, “as a stepping stone to Mars.”

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Sniffing History: Scientists Recreate Ancient Scents from Egyptian Mummification

Visitors to museums in Germany and Denmark are now getting a chance to do something remarkable: smell the past. Thanks to breakthroughs in biomolecular archaeology, researchers are using chemical signatures trapped in ancient objects to recreate the scents of rituals, medicines, and daily life from thousands of years ago. These “molecular fingerprints,” once invisible to visitors, are now becoming fully sensory experiences. The team behind this innovation, led by archaeo-chemist Dr. Barbara Huber of the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology and the University of Tübingen, say it’s a major step forward in making science more accessible to the public. “This research represents a significant shift in how scientific results can be shared beyond academic publications,” Huber said. The process begins with biomolecular analysis: scientists examine residues on artifacts to determine what compounds were once present. From there, it’s up to perfumers to translate that data into a full, believable scent. That challenge fell to Carole Calvez, who created a series of modern formulations based on ancient chemical profiles. But it’s not as simple as mixing a few known ingredients. “Biomolecular data provide essential clues,” said Calvez. “But the perfumer must translate chemical information into a complete and coherent olfactory experience that evokes the complexity of the original material, rather than just its individual components.” To bring the concept to life, the team created a scent called The Scent of the Afterlife — a recreation of the aromas once used in the Egyptian mummification process. They developed two ways to share it: a portable scented card and a scent diffusion station built into a museum display. The scented cards are now part of guided tours at the Museum August Kestner in Hanover, where the original artifacts that inspired the scent are housed. Curator Dr. Christian Loeben said the scent provides a welcome shift in how we view embalming. “Scent provides a new approach to mummification, moving away from the scare factor and horror movie clichés towards an appreciation of the motivations behind the actions and the desired results,” he said. The permanent scent station format has also been installed at the Moesgaard Museum in Aarhus, Denmark, as part of the exhibition Ancient Egypt – Obsessed with Life. There, curator Dr. Steffen Terp Laursen said the added smell completely changed the visitor experience. “Smell added an emotional and sensory depth that text labels alone could never provide,” Laursen said. The project blends archaeology, chemistry, storytelling, and scent design — and could be just the beginning of a new way to experience history. Sofia Collette Ehrich, a consultant who helped shape the project’s storytelling angle, said the team hopes to give museums “compelling new tools” for connecting visitors with the lived experiences of the past. It’s a reminder that ancient history wasn’t just visual or textual. It had a smell, too — and now, for the first time, we’re breathing it in.

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Volunteers Mobilize To Save Migrating Toads From Traffic In Lincolnshire

A team of volunteers in Lincolnshire is gearing up for what they’re calling “toadmageddon” — the annual migration of toads across a busy road, and the potentially deadly traffic that awaits them. Led by 52-year-old Emma Hallewell, the group, known informally as the Toad Patrol, is preparing to help hundreds of toads make it safely across Five Gates Lane in Belton, near Grantham. Last year, Hallewell counted more than 700 crushed toads on the same stretch of road. “They’ll get a helping hand across the road to their breeding pond this year,” she said. The toads’ journey takes place during their breeding season, typically in mid-February, and usually at twilight when temperatures are mild. If it's too cold, they tend to stay put. To coordinate the rescue effort, the group uses a colour-coded alert system on its website: toad green, toad amber, and toad red. When the alert hits red, volunteers grab their high-vis jackets, torches, and buckets, and head out for what they’ve dubbed “toadmageddon.” “We have a rota, and then we'll assess each night as it comes,” Hallewell said. “When it's full migration and peak, we call it toadmageddon.” The volunteers don’t just show up and scatter. They’ve got a plan, a group chat, and a sense of camaraderie that keeps things running smoothly. “We all chat to each other and make sure we have cover to make sure those toads are safe,” Hallewell said. “Knowing you are helping wildlife is just the best.” She credits her inspiration to Froglife’s “Toads on the Roads” project, a national conservation effort aimed at protecting the UK’s declining common toad population. The species, known for its bumpy skin and slow waddling gait, often falls victim to cars while crossing roads at night, en route to ancestral breeding ponds. According to Froglife, road traffic remains one of the biggest threats to toads during breeding season — especially since the animals tend to return to the same pond year after year, regardless of what urban development might have changed around them. This year, the team hopes their efforts will make a difference — and that far fewer toads will meet an untimely end under car tires.

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In Ukraine, One Veterinarian Has Helped Over 1,000 Animals — And Says Locals Are the Real Heroes

When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, the country was already struggling with a large stray animal population. Then came the mass exodus — 6.8 million people forced to flee — and more than a million pets left behind. Two years later, the number of strays had exploded, and Ukraine was teetering on the edge of a rabies crisis. That’s the situation Dr. Colleen Lambo walked into in 2024. The U.S.-based veterinarian traveled to Ukraine with support from Roo, a veterinary relief organization. What she found was a country holding onto normal life in extraordinary circumstances. “The Ukrainians we met were carrying on with their lives despite the war,” Lambo said. “They were considerate, generous, and tolerant.” In the small western city of Brody, Lambo met Oleg and Oksana, a married couple who had turned their home into an informal shelter for strays. While they offered her “endless pots of borscht and bread,” she and her team focused on the animals — sterilizing over 600 dogs and cats, treating illnesses, and helping keep disease at bay. In total, Lambo estimates she’s helped more than 1,000 animals across Ukraine since the war began. But she says the true credit belongs to people like Oleg and Oksana. “The most meaningful aspect of my work in Ukraine has been the gratitude we feel from the community,” she told Nice News. “It feels like we’ve accomplished so little … but every person we’ve met has been so kind and so generous. Our work is a drop in a bucket, but no one has treated it as such.” The war’s impact on Ukraine’s animals is still ongoing. Shelters remain overcrowded. The threat of rabies hasn’t disappeared. But thanks to local volunteers and international support, countless animals are surviving, and even thriving, amid unimaginable conditions.

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Local Therapist Delivers Unexpected Aid To Stranded Memphis Family During Winter Storm

A Memphis family sheltering from last week’s brutal winter storm is back on their feet, thanks to an unexpected act of generosity from a complete stranger. Gerald Driver, his wife, and their three kids had no choice but to seek refuge at the Ed Rice Community Center after freezing temperatures and icy roads made it impossible to stay in their home. For days, they slept on the floor, bundled up in whatever blankets volunteers could find. “We slept on the floor from Friday till today,” Driver told reporters. “Me and my wife, a 12-year-old, a 9-year-old, and a 1-year-old. The people here, the staff, they rallied with other people from other centers to bring us hot meals when they could and provide blankets.” It might have ended there — one family among many enduring tough conditions during the storm — if not for a local TV news segment that aired their story. One viewer, a therapist who asked not to be named, saw the broadcast and couldn’t let it go. “They hadn’t had anything hot for several days,” she said. “Beef jerky and fruit cups were all they’d had to eat. Three children and an older woman, and they’re all sleeping on the floor.” She immediately opened a delivery app and searched for any restaurants still operating. “They were hungry, and I thought, I can’t tolerate that,” she said. “So I went on DoorDash and looked around for places that were still delivering. I found a station that was still open. They made things like pizza and fried chicken.” She sent hot meals to the family that same night. But she didn’t stop there. Knowing they were still sleeping on the floor, she also sent over air mattresses, wipes, and other essential supplies. She kept in touch with them throughout the weekend, checking in and offering support. “She reminded us that someone cared,” said Driver. “It wasn’t just the food. It was knowing we weren’t alone.” The woman said she didn’t want recognition. “This wasn’t about me,” she said. “It was about doing the right thing. Sometimes people just need to know someone’s thinking about them.” The gesture offered relief during a week when thousands in the region faced power outages, limited shelter access, and dangerous road conditions. For the Driver family, the help was more than a warm meal — it was a sign that someone out there was paying attention.

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What's Good Now!

Mom Turns Weight Loss Into Powerlifting Passion — Now She’s Eyeing Nationals

Returned After 36 Years, Beloved Library Book Finds Its Way Home

More Than 60,000 Birthday Cards Delivered to UK Girl with Cancer in Heartfelt World Record Attempt

Winter Olympics 2026 Opens With Message Of Harmony Amid Global Divisions

UK Teen Wins $6K on Rainy Day in New Zealand With Rare Hole-in-One Shot

NASA Unveils New Artemis Space Suit With Out-Of-This-World Mobility

Sniffing History: Scientists Recreate Ancient Scents from Egyptian Mummification

Volunteers Mobilize To Save Migrating Toads From Traffic In Lincolnshire

In Ukraine, One Veterinarian Has Helped Over 1,000 Animals — And Says Locals Are the Real Heroes

Local Therapist Delivers Unexpected Aid To Stranded Memphis Family During Winter Storm