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This 16 Year Old Chess Prodigy Just Beat The World Champion Title Holder
Sixteen-year-old Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa beats Magnus Carlsen in Airthings Masters. He is only the third Indian grandmaster to win against the five-time world champion. Sachin Tendulkar and Viswanathan Anand among those to congratulate Pragg.
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This Toronto Lawyer Just Donated $10 Million to an OCD Treatment Centre After Achieving Remission
Brian Reeve spent decades trying to outmaneuver his obsessive-compulsive disorder. Some days it meant walking in and out of a doorway over and over. Other days it meant taking out his contact lenses, putting them back in, and starting again until something in his mind clicked into place. He kept going like that for years, managing as best he could, until he finally couldn’t anymore. Seven years ago, at 62, he hit the point where the rituals were running his life. They consumed whole stretches of his day and chipped away at time with his children. After years of trying to manage it alone, he entered the OCD program at the Frederick W. Thompson Anxiety Disorders Centre at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto. That decision changed everything. Reeve calls the program a “game-changer” and a “life reset.” Now 69 and in remission, the lawyer and private equity investor has donated $10 million to the centre that helped him rebuild his life. Established in 2012, the Thompson Centre is the country’s first and only facility dedicated specifically to OCD and related disorders. It estimates that about 400,000 Canadians live with OCD. Dr. Peggy Richter, the centre’s head and a professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, says the disorder can be far more complex than the public tends to understand. It isn’t only about washing hands or straightening objects. It can show up as repetitive counting or intrusive thoughts that have nothing to do with a person’s values or intentions. She says it can range from mild cases, where someone might run late because they’re stuck in rituals, to severe cases that are “profoundly disabling.” As she puts it, “People can basically be prisoners in their own homes, unable to do even the most basic activities of daily living.” Reeve was diagnosed in the 1990s, when treatment options were limited. Even so, he managed well enough to build a career, get married, and raise a family. But by 2019, something shifted. The rituals multiplied, each one needing to be repeated until it felt “just right.” Even simple tasks, like checking an alarm clock, could spiral into dozens of repetitions. “Checking once isn’t that big of a deal, but when it becomes 10 times or 20 times, and you have to keep turning the switch off and on until it feels right, that's what OCD becomes,” Reeve told As It Happens host Nil Köksal. Later that year, at the suggestion of his family doctor, he enrolled in the Thompson Centre’s intensive program. For four months, he attended five days a week for eight hours a day. It was demanding, but it gave him something he hadn’t had in decades: a toolkit that actually worked. He kept using it after the program ended and reached remission three years later. Richter says the centre’s strength comes from its wide range of supports. It offers diagnostic consultation, psychiatric care, cognitive-behavioural therapy, and an intensive program designed for people at the severe end of the spectrum. It also connects patients with trained volunteers who have gone through treatment themselves, offering both group and one-on-one peer support. And once formal treatment ends, an aftercare program keeps that support going. Reeve’s donation will help accelerate the centre’s long-planned move from rented space to a permanent home at Sunnybrook’s Bayview campus next spring. The new facility will bring improved amenities, a dining space, closer ties with the hospital’s brain sciences program, and more treatment capacity. The funding will also support a new chair in OCD at Sunnybrook and the University of Toronto, along with fellowships to train future clinicians and researchers. For Reeve, the gift is about sending a message to anyone struggling the way he once did. Effective treatment exists. Help exists. And no one should have to feel alone. “What we’re trying to do with the Thompson Centre [is] to make you feel that you’re not walking the road alone and that there’s a lot of resources and you don’t have to be ashamed or embarrassed that you’ve got OCD,” he said.

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Punch, the Internet's Favorite Lonely Monkey, Is Making Friends, Zoo Says
Punch the monkey, who won hearts online after turning to a soft toy for company, is now reported to be getting on well with his real-life zoo companions. In an update on X, Ichikawa Zoo said Punch was not being “scolded” by others, and was playing with baby monkeys. “He continues to do well,” the zoo said. Footage here shows Punch staying close to a larger monkey and following it around the enclosure. “This big monkey has accepted Punch, and Punch has completely grown attached,” the source, @iT4rai, wrote on X.

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ISS Crew Suits Up for Space Workouts as Scientists Study How to Stay Fit in Zero-G
Being 260 miles above Earth doesn’t get you out of going to the gym. The Expedition 74 crew aboard the International Space Station has been striking poses in workout gear — but the quirky photos come with a serious mission: figuring out how to keep astronauts healthy on long-duration spaceflights. ESA flight engineer Sophie Adenot recently exercised on the station’s advanced resistive exercise device, a machine designed to mimic free weights on Earth. While she worked through squats and deadlift-style motions, four specialized cameras captured her muscles and bones in action from inside the Tranquility module. NASA said the research aims to understand “the forces an astronaut’s muscles and bones experience when exercising in weightlessness to maintain fitness and health during a long-term spaceflight.” Microgravity takes a toll fast. Without constant loading from gravity, muscles shrink and bones lose density, which makes daily training essential for anyone living off the planet for months at a time. Astronauts typically spend about two hours a day exercising in orbit just to maintain basic strength and cardiovascular health. 6 Right now, crews rely on a cycling machine that has been aboard the station since 2009, along with treadmills and resistance equipment. But a new tool is on the way. In April 2026, the ISS will receive the European Enhanced Exploration Exercise Device, or E4D — a compact, next-generation fitness system built for future missions. The E4D is designed to be more versatile and space-efficient than current hardware, offering better options for full-body workouts while taking up less room in an already crowded station. With future missions expected to push deeper into space — including long journeys to the Moon and Mars — scientists want to ensure astronauts can stay strong and healthy far from home. For now, Expedition 74’s workout sessions are giving researchers a rare, close-up look at how the human body operates in microgravity. And if the photos are any indication, astronauts are proving that even in orbit, fitness is still very much part of the job.

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Scientists Finally Unravel How Horses Neigh — They’re Actually Whistling and Singing at Once
Horses whinny for all kinds of reasons — to find friends, greet familiar faces or get excited about feeding time. But the sound itself, a mix of squeal and grunt, has puzzled scientists for decades. It’s unusually complex, made of both high and low pitches produced at the same time. Now researchers say they’ve finally figured out how horses pull it off. According to a new study published in Current Biology, horses whistle. The low notes were never much of a mystery. Like humans, horses create their deeper sounds by pushing air over vibrating bands of tissue in the voice box. But the high-pitched tones were harder to explain, especially because larger animals — horses included — usually make lower sounds. To solve it, researchers inserted tiny nasal cameras into live horses to watch their vocal tracts in action as they whinnied and made softer calls like nickers. They also studied scans and blew air through the isolated voice boxes of deceased horses. What they found surprised even equine experts. When a horse whinnies, tissue in the voice box vibrates to form the low frequencies, while a structure just above tightens, leaving a small opening. Air rushing through that narrow space produces a whistle — the source of the high notes layered on top of the low ones. Humans whistle with their mouths. Horses, it turns out, whistle from deep in their throats. “I’d never imagined that there was a whistling component. It’s really interesting, and I can hear that now,” said Jenifer Nadeau, a University of Connecticut horse researcher not involved in the study. A few rodents can whistle similarly, but horses are the first known large mammals capable of it — and the only animals known to whistle and sing at the same time. “Knowing that a ‘whinny’ is not just a ‘whinny’ but that it is actually composed of two different fundamental frequencies that are created by two different mechanisms is exciting,” said Alisa Herbst with Rutgers University’s Equine Science Center. Why horses evolved this unusual two-toned call remains an open question. Wild Przewalski’s horses and elks can make similar sounds, but donkeys and zebras cannot. Study author Elodie Mandel-Briefer of the University of Copenhagen believes the dual frequencies may help horses express more nuanced emotions. “They can express emotions in these two dimensions,” she said, suggesting the combined pitches allow horses to convey multiple messages at once when socializing. For an animal so familiar, the discovery underscores how much there still is to learn. A whinny, it seems, isn’t just a whinny — it’s a duet, performed by a horse’s own built-in whistle and its singing vocal cords working together.

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Campaigners Push for Permanent Traffic Ban to Save a Historic Bridge
Boxted Bridge, a weakened Victorian structure on the Essex–Suffolk border, may be spared from demolition if Essex County Council (ECC) approves a permanent ban on motor vehicles. The steel bridge, near Colchester, has been restricted to pedestrians and cyclists since January after corrosion forced its closure to traffic for two years. ECC had previously considered demolishing the “dangerously weak” bridge and installing a modern replacement strong enough to carry heavy goods vehicles. But those plans could be withdrawn if a new Traffic Regulation Order (TRO) permanently prohibiting vehicles is approved, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service. Campaigners hoping to preserve the bridge say this is their most promising opening yet. They’re now trying to raise £12,300 to fund an independent assessment from Mann Williams, a structural engineering firm known for repairing historic buildings and advising the National Trust. Lewis Barber, a Conservative county councillor supporting the effort, said the shift in direction is encouraging. “One battle done, we move on to the next one and now we need to keep putting the pressure on like we've been doing to get the repair option on the table,” he said. “We just want it explored. That’s as little as we’re asking for at this stage.” The future of the bridge sits on Friday’s agenda for ECC’s development and regulation committee. An update prepared for members says responses to the TRO consultation are now being reviewed. If the vehicle ban is approved and legally enacted, the report notes, “the planning application to replace the bridge would be withdrawn.” If the TRO is rejected, however, the council says a long-term solution will still be required — leaving demolition and replacement back in the conversation. For residents and preservation advocates, the decision represents a pivotal moment. A permanent traffic ban may be the only viable way to protect one of the area’s surviving pieces of Victorian infrastructure, while keeping it open to the people who use it most: walkers and cyclists.

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Tintoretto’s Long-Separated “Genesis” Paintings Reunite in Venice After 200 Years
For the first time in more than two centuries, four paintings from Tintoretto’s early “Stories from Genesis” cycle are hanging together again in Venice. Their reunion marks the culmination of a year-long restoration project that stripped away darkened varnish and layers of grime, revealing colors and details that had been obscured for generations. The exhibition, Tintoretto Recounts Genesis: Research, Analysis, and Restoration, at the Gallerie dell’Accademia, highlights how much had been hidden beneath the surface. Three canvases — The Creation of the Animals, Original Sin, and Cain Kills Abel — belong to the Venetian museum and had long suffered from yellowed varnish, soot and the effects of repeated moves over the centuries. A fourth painting, Adam and Eve Before the Eternal Father, arrived on exceptional loan from the Uffizi Galleries in Florence. A fifth work from the original series, Creation of Eve, remains in a private German collection. Together, they offer a rare opportunity to see one of Tintoretto’s earliest and most ambitious biblical cycles as a nearly complete set. Giulio Manieri Elia, director of the Gallerie dell’Accademia, said the project shows “how scientific study and restoration can become a powerful narrative tool.” For him, the exhibition demonstrates the museum’s role not only in protecting and conserving artworks but also in expanding the knowledge around them. Tintoretto completed the Genesis cycle in the early 1550s for the Scuola della Santissima Trinità. Even then, the paintings stood out. His trademark speed, theatrical contrasts and charged brushwork helped define Venetian Mannerism. But one of the revelations of the restoration is how much he relied on landscape as an active force — not just a backdrop. In Original Sin, for example, the dense foliage surrounding Adam and Eve has reemerged in multiple shades of green, restoring the emotional tension Tintoretto originally built into the scene. The project also brought new insights into Tintoretto’s evolution. Technical analysis revealed his interest in Titian’s color and Michelangelo’s sculptural figures, showing how he blended those influences while refining his own dynamism. Researchers were able to trace his process from canvas preparation to charcoal underdrawings, paint application and late-stage revisions — a map of an artist still finding his signature speed and drama. The restoration work, carried out between February 2024 and January 2025, prepared the paintings for an earlier exhibition at the Cincinnati Art Museum. It was jointly funded by the museum and the Foundation for Italian Art and Culture in New York. Now back in Venice, the canvases appear almost newly illuminated. The softened colors and murky shadows that once dulled them have given way to fresher tones, sharper edges and a renewed energy that brings Tintoretto’s early ambition into focus. Tintoretto Recounts Genesis: Research, Analysis, and Restoration runs at the Gallerie dell’Accademia through June 7.

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Scientists Find the Body’s Built-In “Stop Scratching” Signal, Opening Door to New Eczema Treatments
Millions of people who live with chronic itching may be closer to relief after researchers uncovered what tells the brain it’s time to stop scratching. It turns out the sensation of “that’s enough” isn’t random at all — it’s controlled by a sensory channel acting as the body’s internal brake. A team led by Professor Roberta Gualdani at the University of Louvain in Brussels identified a surprising role for an ion channel called TRPV4, revealing how the body regulates itch and why that system breaks down in conditions like eczema, psoriasis and kidney disease. “We were initially studying TRPV4 in the context of pain,” Gualdani said. “But instead of a pain phenotype, what emerged very clearly was a disruption of itch, specifically, how scratching behaviour is regulated.” TRPV4 belongs to a family of ion channels — tiny molecular gates in sensory neurons — that help the body detect pressure, temperature and physical stress. Although TRPV4 has long been suspected of contributing to touch sensitivity, its place in itch has been debated. To get clarity, Gualdani’s team engineered a mouse model that removed TRPV4 only from sensory neurons. Earlier studies deleted the channel from all tissues, making it harder to know where it mattered most. This precision approach let researchers isolate TRPV4’s role in nerve pathways tied to touch, itch and pain. The results were unexpected. In a chronic itch model resembling atopic dermatitis, mice lacking TRPV4 scratched less often — but when they did scratch, they scratched for much longer. “At first glance, that seems paradoxical,” Gualdani said. “But it actually reveals something very important about how itch is regulated.” What the data showed was that TRPV4 isn’t simply an itch generator. In certain mechanosensory neurons, it helps trigger a negative feedback signal — the brain’s internal message that says, “You’ve scratched enough.” Without TRPV4, that message never arrives. Relief feels incomplete, and scratching drags on. “When we scratch an itch, at some point we stop because there's a negative feedback signal that tells us we're satisfied,” Gualdani said. “Without TRPV4, the mice don't feel this feedback, so they continue scratching much longer than normal.” The team found that TRPV4’s role is more complicated than previously understood. In skin cells, the channel contributes to itch. In neurons, it helps restrain it. That dual nature means potential therapies must be far more targeted. “This means that broadly blocking TRPV4 may not be the solution,” Gualdani said. “Future therapies may need to be much more targeted — perhaps acting only in the skin, without interfering with the neuronal mechanisms that tell us when to stop scratching.” The findings, presented at the 70th Biophysical Society annual meeting in San Francisco, could reshape how scientists approach chronic itch — a condition that disrupts sleep, affects mental health and remains stubbornly hard to treat. For millions living with eczema and similar disorders, understanding the body’s “stop-scratching” signal marks a promising shift. Instead of only dampening itch sensations, future treatments may finally help restore the very mechanism that tells the brain when relief has arrived.

Score (98)
Hearing Dog Hailed as a Hero After Saving Owner Who Fell on Black Ice
Arlo isn’t just a loyal pet. To Sue Davis of Wolverhampton, he’s a lifeline. And on a recent winter walk, he proved exactly why. Davis, 67, who is profoundly deaf, slipped on black ice and fell hard while taking Arlo out. She couldn’t stand, couldn’t call for help and was suddenly alone on a quiet street. Arlo, a black cocker spaniel trained as a hearing dog, rushed to her side and lay across her body to keep her warm and still. Then he did something he’d never been trained for: he looked for help. When a passerby appeared down a nearby alleyway, Arlo shifted into full alert, barking and howling until the woman came over. She tried to lift Davis but couldn’t manage it alone. Moments later, a man walking by joined in and helped get Davis back on her feet. “If it hadn't been for Arlo, I don't know what I'd have done,” Davis said. “There was no one else around, so I would've had to crawl to get help.” The fall left her badly bruised. She was taken home and later reflected on how quickly things could have gone wrong. “We were only about two minutes from my house when I put my left foot out and that was it — I went down with a bang,” she said. “I felt dizzy and light-headed and I couldn’t get up. I just started crying and he knew something was wrong.” Davis lost her hearing in her early 40s and has been open about how difficult living alone became. Everything shifted in 2021 when Hearing Dogs for Deaf People paired her with Arlo. She calls him her comfort blanket, the companion who gives her confidence and safety she feared she had lost. “I’m safe with him,” she said. “Having Arlo is the best thing that’s ever happened to me, he loves me unconditionally, and I love him unconditionally. I couldn’t ask for a better friend.” On a day when a fall could have turned dangerous, it was Arlo’s instincts, and his refusal to leave her side, that brought help. Sometimes heroes arrive in bright jackets or uniforms. Sometimes they show up in wagging tails and soft paws.

Score (97)
Moving Crew Helps Stop Suspect and Save Missing Toddler After Amber Alert
Sometimes the right people are in the right place at the right time. In the Phoenix area, that meant a security guard, a moving crew and a missing three-year-old girl whose case had triggered an Amber Alert the day before. Little Kehlani Rogers had allegedly been taken from her Avondale home. By Sunday morning, the alert had reached a QuikTrip security guard who immediately recognized both the toddler and 23-year-old suspect Marina Noriega. Instead of waiting for backup, he decided to act. He spotted a Camelback Moving crew parked at the station and asked for help. The workers listened, looked at the suspect’s vehicle and quickly came up with a plan. They pulled their trucks into position and boxed in the pickup Noriega was driving, making it impossible for her to leave while the guard called 911. “We’re a moving company, so we’re not professional heroes by any means,” said Chad Olsen, president of Camelback Moving. “But to listen to the dashcam and watch the dashcam footage of the crew kind of identifying the situation and who this was, and putting the plan together that we’re going to block this truck in with our truck and not allow them to leave. I couldn’t be more proud.” Phoenix police arrived within minutes. Noriega was taken into custody, and officers confirmed that Kehlani was safe and unharmed. Camelback Moving posted about the rescue shortly after, praising both the teamwork and the quick instincts that helped bring the little girl home: “We couldn’t be more proud of our Camelback Moving employees this morning for assisting in the recovery of an abducted 3-year-old after an Amber Alert was issued last night. Recognizing the situation alongside a QT security guard, our crew acted quickly and positioned their trucks to block the suspect’s vehicle, preventing the suspect’s vehicle from fleeing until police arrived. Their awareness, teamwork and willingness to take initiative helped bring her home safely, for which we are immensely grateful. Awareness matters. Action matters. This is why the Amber Alert system works!” The company also publicly thanked team members Robert Hernandez, Ralph Vollmert, Christopher Dixon, Kevin Place, Kevin Kimes, Gerardo Galacia, Kobe Brown and Michael Macallum for stepping in when it mattered. It wasn’t a planned rescue. It wasn’t anyone’s job description. But a guard paying attention and a group of movers willing to get involved turned an ordinary stop at a gas station into something far bigger. And for one family, it meant everything.

Score (97)
A Piglet With a Love for Zoomies is Finally Settling Into Sanctuary Life
Percy doesn’t walk anywhere. He trots, twirls and occasionally launches himself into the air, which is how a five-month-old piglet ended up charming an entire animal sanctuary. The miniature black-and-white Juliana cross is the newest resident at Bleakholt Animal Sanctuary in Ramsbottom, Lancashire. He arrived in December after outgrowing the house he had been living in. What began as a litter-trained, indoor pet quickly turned into a stronger, louder and far more energetic animal than his former owners expected. “He's so sweet and he loves to do 'zoomies' and then jump in the air,” said sanctuary manager Karen Weed. People can picture it instantly. A tiny piglet skittering sideways, picking up speed and darting around his pen like a wind-up toy. Juliana pigs, despite their reputation as manageable companions, still grow to about 45 centimetres tall and carry a surprising amount of strength. Weed says it’s a common pattern. Families fall for the look, the small size and the novelty, only to discover that even miniature pigs aren’t really suited to being inside a home all day. “It’s a common reason we get pigs in,” she told BBC Radio Lancashire. Percy is adapting quickly to his new setup. He’s friendly, loves attention and owns six outfits to help keep him warm. The sanctuary isn’t looking to rehome him. Instead, they’re hoping he’ll settle in and eventually bond with Boris, one of the seven pigs already living on the site. For now, he’s doing what young pigs do best. Playing, exploring and figuring out what it means to be a pig after starting his life on carpets and couches. Weed says sanctuary life suits him. He’s curious, vocal and a little chaotic. “Percy will melt your heart — he's so funny.” Caring for him comes with a cost. Feeding, bedding and general upkeep are expected to reach “a couple of thousand pounds” a year. With about 250 animals onsite and soaring operating expenses, the sanctuary is looking for people to sponsor Percy to help cover his care. He may be small, but he’s not shy about taking up space or attention. And from the sound of things, no one at the sanctuary minds. Percy runs his zoomies now on solid ground, with room to grow and a community ready to cheer him on.