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At 84, Chuck Norris Is Still Ripped. Take a Look for Yourself

At 84 years old, Chuck Norris is still going strong with an impressive workout video shared on Instagram. Fans loved his sense of humor and self-deprecating jokes in the caption. From poking fun at himself to inspiring admiration from followers, Chuck continues to amaze with his fitness levels even in his golden years. And as one fan put it, when Chuck Norris jokes about himself, he reveals a new power that leaves everyone entertained and inspired by his incredible energy levels.

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Two Original Jungle Book Illustrations Lost For More Than a Century Resurface in a London home

Two watercolor illustrations created for Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book have resurfaced after more than 100 years, surprising a London family who only recently learned the artwork hanging in their home carried major historical weight. The rediscovered pieces were part of a set of 16 illustrations made in 1903 for a deluxe portfolio titled Sixteen Illustrations of Subjects from Kipling’s ‘The Jungle Book’, commissioned by book publisher Macmillan & Co the year before. Only six originals are known to survive today. Until now, the other four were split between private collections, the Natural History Museum, and the National Trust. One watercolor, by Edward Detmold, shows Mowgli with Bagheera. The second, by his twin brother Charles Maurice Detmold, depicts Cold Lairs, home of the Bandar log. Both works had been quietly displayed in the owners’ home for decades. They had no idea what they possessed. “These drawings were never treated as ‘important’ works in our family, they were simply part of our home,” the owners said. “Finding out that they restore a missing piece of the visual history of Kipling’s The Jungle Book has been completely unexpected.” London auction house Roseberys plans to offer both paintings on March 10 and expects them to sell for about $20,000 each. Lara L’vov Basirov of Roseberys says the opportunity to acquire originals of this kind is almost unheard of. “To be able to bid for two of the six known surviving original watercolors is a vanishingly rare opportunity,” she said. The Detmold twins were only 20 when the portfolio was published. The limited run of 500 copies was released separately from the book itself, which first appeared in 1894. A standard printed edition that included the Detmold illustrations did not arrive until 1908. Many of the 1903 portfolios were dismantled over time, as owners removed the plates to frame them. Only one complete set is held by the Library of Congress. L’vov Basirov says contemporary reviewers immediately grasped the importance of the images. Their publication drew headlines on both sides of the Atlantic. A reviewer for The Guardian singled out the two rediscovered watercolors for praise when the portfolio first appeared. The sale will also mark the first time the watercolors have ever appeared on the market. The moment is bittersweet. The portfolio was the twins’ last joint project. Charles Maurice died by suicide at age 25, cutting short what had already become a remarkable artistic partnership. Their rediscovered work now joins a growing list of art surprises that have surfaced in recent years, from estate sale finds to long missing masterpieces that quietly reappear.

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Lost Prosthetic Leg Reunited With Owner After Months At Sea

A woman in East Yorkshire has been reunited with her prosthetic leg nearly a year after it was swept away during what was meant to be her first open water swim. Brenda Ogden, 69, lost the limb in April while entering the sea at Bridlington. A rogue wave knocked her off her feet and carried the leg away before she could react. Brenda, whose leg was amputated after a car crash, had added sea swimming to a list of goals she wanted to try before turning 70 and had joined the Flamborough Flippers group for the occasion. “I just thought, where has my leg gone?” she said. Members of the group searched the area, but it vanished almost instantly. Sarah Miles, one of the swimmers, recalled, “We got in the water and a rogue wave came. Brenda fell and as I went to grab the leg a wave came and took it.” Brenda believed the £2,000 custom made titanium blade, which she had named Freda, was gone for good. Comfortable and reliable, she said the prosthetic felt “like putting slippers on.” She spent the next 10 months assuming the sea had carried it far from the Yorkshire coast. Instead, it drifted 19 kilometres downshore and washed up near Skipsea. Fossil hunter Lizi Forbes, 38, came across it on the Holderness coast and posted a photo in a fossil hunting Facebook group. The post spread quickly and Brenda was identified as the owner. Lizi then travelled to return the leg in person on Saturday. The meeting was “emotional,” Brenda said. Lizi added, “I felt wholly responsible for collecting it and bringing it home for her, so it’s a great feeling. It’s boosted my spirits. I think I’ve got a friend for life there.” The leg suffered some damage during its months at sea, but Brenda plans to return to swimming once it is repaired. She said she is grateful to everyone who spent months looking for it, including volunteers who used drones. “I’ve definitely learned my lesson and I can go back in the sea again, when it’s a bit warmer maybe!”

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Scientists Use Sound Cues to Influence Dreams and Boost Problem Solving

Most people have heard the advice to “sleep on it” when stuck on a problem. A new study from Northwestern University suggests there may be science behind that idea. Researchers found they could influence what people dream about and that puzzles appearing in dreams were more likely to be solved after waking. Dreams are hard to study in a lab because they cannot usually be controlled. The team used a technique called targeted memory reactivation, or TMR. Participants first tried to solve a series of difficult brain teaser puzzles, each paired with its own sound. During REM sleep, researchers played the sounds linked to half of the unsolved puzzles, but only after confirming the sleeper had entered the proper stage of sleep. The result was striking. About 75 percent of participants reported dreams that included images or ideas connected to the puzzles they had been cued with. Those cued puzzles were solved 42 percent of the time after waking compared with 17 percent for puzzles that did not appear in dreams. The findings do not prove that dreams themselves cause creative insight, but they show that influencing dream content is possible and may be tied to better problem solving. Ken Paller, senior author of the study and the James Padilla Professor of Psychology at Northwestern, said, “Many problems in the world today require creative solutions. By learning more about how our brains are able to think creatively, think anew and generate creative new ideas, we could be closer to solving the problems we want to solve, and sleep engineering could help.” The study involved 20 people who already had experience with lucid dreaming. Each person got three minutes per puzzle during the evening session. Most puzzles went unsolved. Overnight, participants slept in the lab while researchers monitored brain activity with polysomnography. During REM sleep, scientists replayed the soundtracks associated with selected puzzles. Some dreamers used prearranged sniffing patterns to signal they heard the cues and were trying to work on the problems inside their dreams. In 12 of the 20 participants, dream reports mentioned the cued puzzles more often than the uncued ones. Those same participants doubled their success rate, going from solving 20 percent of the puzzles to 40 percent after the REM sleep session. Karen Konkoly, the study’s lead author, said one of the biggest surprises was how well the cueing worked even when people were not aware they were dreaming. She said some dreamers interacted with dream characters about the puzzles. Others woke up with vivid imagery tied to the themes that had been cued. “These were fascinating examples to witness because they showed how dreamers can follow instructions, and dreams can be influenced by sounds during sleep, even without lucidity,” she said. Researchers say the next step is to test whether targeted reactivation and interactive dreaming could help with emotional processing or other forms of learning. Konkoly said the hope is that findings like these will help clarify the purpose of dreaming. “If scientists can definitively say that dreams are important for problem solving, creativity and emotion regulation, hopefully people will start to take dreams seriously as a priority for mental health and well-being.” The study, titled “Creative problem solving after experimentally provoking dreams of unsolved puzzles during REM sleep,” was published February 5 in the journal Neuroscience of Consciousness. Co authors include Daniel Morris, Kaitlyn Hurka, Alysiana Martinez and Kristin Sanders.

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He Saved His Twin Brother's Life With a Timely Blood Test Amid a Cancer Battle

A man from Portsmouth living with stage four prostate cancer says he saved his twin brother’s life by persuading him to take a simple blood test. Andy Gissing, a sailing instructor and longtime volunteer with RNLI, was diagnosed in 2020. By then the cancer had already spread to his bones, lungs and soft tissue. Five years later he convinced his brother to take a PSA test. His brother agreed reluctantly, Andy said, and was diagnosed with prostate cancer at an early stage when it was still operable. “To people who don't want to get checked, I say ‘Look through the lens of having to tell your children’,” he said. “My brother would only go to the doctor if his arm was falling off. I did save his life.” Andy said the day he told his wife Polly and their two children about his diagnosis was “the hardest day of my life”. He still tracks his PSA scores closely as part of ongoing treatment. “Every time I see the consultant, they want to know what my score is. They are living it with me.” He believes the cancer took hold long before he noticed his first symptom, which was needing to go to the toilet more often at night. He is now publicising his diagnosis to raise awareness and to help fund treatment he hopes will extend his life. Andy is fundraising for private lutetium 177 therapy, a targeted radiation treatment that delivers radiation directly to tumours. The therapy showed positive results in clinical trials reported by Prostate Cancer UK in 2021. Andy said the treatment could give him as much as 18 more months. Colleagues from sailing and the RNLI have raised more than £53,000 toward his £80,000 goal. Andy, now on his third and final round of chemotherapy, said he is “humbled” by the support. He was initially told he might have only nine months. “Chemo seems to be keeping the cancer at bay. But as my consultant has said, after that the cupboard is bare,” he said. “Extra time would mean so much. And, if it is to be the last phase of my life, I would also like to play my part in testing a pioneering treatment.” Prostate cancer affects the gland located under the bladder. It most often occurs in men over 50, according to NHS. Andy said he hopes his story encourages more men to get checked early, especially those who tend to avoid the doctor.

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Larry The Cat Marks 15 Years as Britain’s Chief Mouser, a Symbol of Stability in Chaotic Political Times

In a country that has cycled through six prime ministers in 15 years, one figure at 10 Downing Street has remained steady, whiskered and entirely unfazed. Larry the cat, Britain’s Chief Mouser, is marking his 15th anniversary on Sunday as the government’s official rodent catcher and unofficial morale booster. “Larry the cat’s approval ratings will be very high,” said Philip Howell, a Cambridge University professor who studies human-animal relations. “And prime ministers tend not to hit those numbers. He represents stability, and that’s at a premium.” Larry’s path to power started far from the corridors of government. The grey and white tabby was adopted from London’s Battersea Dogs and Cats Home by then prime minister David Cameron. He arrived at No. 10 on February 15, 2011, with an official job description that included “greeting guests to the house, inspecting security defenses and testing antique furniture for napping quality.” Since then, Larry has perfected the art of upstaging world leaders. Justin Ng, a freelance photographer who has tracked Larry for years, said, “He’s great at photo-bombing. If there’s a foreign leader that’s about to visit then we know he’ll just come out at the exact moment that meet-and-greet is about to happen.” Larry has forced visiting dignitaries to step over him more than once. Although he is famously indifferent to most men, he warmed to former U.S. president Barack Obama and even drew a smile from Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy. During Donald Trump’s 2019 visit, Larry stole the moment by strolling into the frame and then napping under the Beast, the president’s armored vehicle. His hunting record is mixed. While he has been photographed catching the occasional mouse and once a pigeon that ultimately escaped, Larry is better known for lounging than for lethal efficiency. “He’s more of a lover than a fighter,” Ng said. Larry’s time at Downing Street has included tense cohabitation with a revolving cast of ministerial pets. Boris Johnson’s Jack Russell cross, Dilyn, and Rishi Sunak’s Labrador, Nova, shared space with varying degrees of success. He is kept apart from current prime minister Keir Starmer’s family cats, JoJo and Prince, who stay in the private quarters. His fiercest rivalry was with Palmerston, the Foreign Office’s top cat. The two fought often until Palmerston’s retirement in 2020. Palmerston later moved to Bermuda, where he served as “feline relations consultant” before his death this month. At around 18 or 19 years old, Larry has slowed down but remains a fixture at No. 10. He continues his daily patrols and favours a warm spot above the radiator near the front door. He has also become a form of soft power, representing British character in a way no political slogan quite can. Howell said any leader who tried to remove him would face public backlash. “A cat-hating PM, that seems to me to be political suicide,” he said. Part of Larry’s appeal is that he refuses to be scripted. “The fact that cats are less tractable is part of the charm, too,” Howell said. “He’s sort of whimsically not partisan in a political sense, but he tends to take to some people and not to others and he won’t necessarily sit where you want him to sit and pose where you want him to pose. There is a certain kind of unruliness about Larry which I think would endear him, certainly, to Brits.” As Britain’s political world continues to churn, Larry remains unbothered. He claimed Downing Street long ago, and by all appearances, he plans to stay.

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Missing New Jersey Man Rescued After His Apple AirTag Alerted First Responders

A man who went missing in New Jersey was found in an icy ravine after first responders picked up a ping from his Apple AirTag, according to New Jersey Transit Police. Authorities had been searching for the man since Thursday, February 5. The next morning, at around 8:40, emergency crews near the 9th Street light rail station in Jersey City detected his AirTag signal. The New Jersey Transit Police and the Hoboken Fire Department located him about 12 metres down an embankment on the Hoboken Jersey City border. Police said he had fallen into a ravine and was too injured to move. He had been exposed to freezing temperatures for several hours. Body cam footage posted on YouTube shows responders setting up ropes and a rescue board before pulling him up the slope. In a statement, New Jersey Transit Police said, “Officers with New Jersey Transit Police’s highly specialized Emergency Services Unit created a rope rescue system, using their truck as an anchor, to pull the man to safety as part of a team effort with Hoboken Fire Department.” Apple’s AirTag sends a secure Bluetooth signal to nearby devices on the Find My network, a feature meant to help people locate lost items like keys or luggage. In this case, the device gave responders the location they needed to track the man down. He was taken to hospital for treatment and is expected to survive, police said.

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Rescue Dog Turned Conservation Worker is Helping Scientists Track Rare Species Across the Globe

A former rescue dog from Montana has become an unexpected asset in conservation work, using his nose to track species that researchers often struggle to find. The Missoulian reported that Charlie, an 8 year old dog taken in by Working Dogs for Conservation, has spent the past five years helping scientists locate elusive animals, from sea wolves on the Canadian coast to kit foxes in the southwest United States. Working Dogs for Conservation, based east of Missoula, focuses on two missions. The group rescues neglected dogs and then trains them to detect scents that support wildlife protection. Trainers teach each dog to search for specific targets so they can assist with ecological monitoring of endangered species, detecting invasive species, and identifying environmental contaminants. Not every dog excels at the same task. Michele Lovara, a K 9 field specialist with the organization, said Charlie has contributed to wolf research in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Another dog helped conservation teams in the Falkland Islands by inspecting boats for non native rats that can devastate local wildlife. The group has been doing this work for 26 years, operating in 36 countries and 45 states. Aimee Hurt, a cofounder and director of Special Projects, told The Missoulian, “The impact these dogs make every day is incredible, but it's our community that makes this work possible.” Handlers say dogs can do things researchers simply cannot. Their sense of smell gives them a way to find rare species, invasive threats, or subtle changes in an area’s ecology with a level of precision that would otherwise be out of reach. That information helps scientists understand how species are being pressured and what interventions might help. The organization also keeps caring for its retired dogs, many of whom worked on earlier conservation assignments. Staff make sure they “live out a good life in retirement,” according to The Missoulian. Charlie, still active in the field, is one of dozens of dogs now helping researchers protect vulnerable species and the places they depend on.

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Archaeologists Just Uncovered a 10,000-Year-Old Rock Art Site in Egypt’s Sinai

Archaeologists in Egypt have announced a find that stretches back 10,000 years, revealing a previously unknown site packed with rock art on the Umm Irak Plateau in the Sinai Peninsula. The Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities said Thursday that the newly documented formation runs about 100 metres and shows a timeline of human artistic expression from prehistoric periods through to the Islamic era. The Supreme Council of Antiquities said it had uncovered “one of the most important new archeological sites, of exceptional historical and artistic value.” Officials described the discovery as unusually rich because it layers thousands of years of cultural expression in a single open space. Hisham El Leithy, the council’s secretary general, said the site’s chronological range makes it “an open air natural museum.” Archaeologists said the ceiling of the natural rock shelter is covered in drawings made with red pigment, depicting animals, symbols, and inscriptions in both Arabic and the Nabataean language. The team also found traces of daily life inside the shelter. Animal droppings, stone partitions, and hearth remains all point to long term use as a refuge. Tourism and Antiquities Minister Sherif Fathi said these remnants “provide further evidence of the succession of civilisations that have inhabited this important part of Egypt over the millennia.” He called the discovery a “significant addition to the map of Egyptian antiquities.” The site sits in the southern Sinai, a region where Cairo is pushing a major development project to boost mass tourism around Saint Catherine. The mountain town, home to Bedouin communities and a UNESCO World Heritage site, has been at the centre of a debate over how to expand tourism without threatening ancestral land.

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The Olympic Couples Bringing Their Love Stories to Milan Cortina

Hundreds of elite athletes are competing at the 2026 Winter Games, and some of them just happen to be dating, engaged or married. Some train in the same sport, others come from completely different disciplines, but all of them are trying to manage the same challenge, balancing a relationship with the pressure of performing on the biggest stage in sport. One of the most well known stories belongs to Oksana Masters and Aaron Pike. They met at a Para Nordic competition in 2013 and bonded over a shared love of coffee before things deepened at the 2014 Sochi Games. Masters told NPR that they realised on a gondola ride that their connection was more than friendship. Pike proposed on another gondola in Wyoming in 2022. They have not announced a wedding date, though they have joked publicly about who is doing the planning. Masters said Italy could be the perfect place for it. Two more familiar faces in Milan are Hilary Knight and Brittany Bowe. Their relationship began during the tightly controlled Beijing Olympics in 2022, when Knight asked Bowe if she wanted to go for a walk. That simple routine became a daily touchpoint. Now they are sharing another Olympics without the pandemic restrictions. Knight, competing in her fifth Games, said having both families there adds to the energy. Bowe said being able to attend each other’s events has been a rare and meaningful change. In bobsled, Kaysha Love and Hunter Powell are experiencing their first Olympics together as teammates. They met as track and field athletes in college. Love encouraged Powell to try bobsled, pushing him to attend a recruitment event. “She talked me into it, and I'm so thankful that she did,” he said. They got engaged in 2025 and are now living the full Olympic experience at the same time. “It’s the coolest thing in the world,” Powell said. Snowboarders Red Gerard and Hailey Langland have known each other since age 12. They have been together for eight years, competing side by side at the 2018 and 2022 Olympics. Gerard is competing again this year. Langland is recovering from an ACL injury but is staying in Italy with him and his family. Ice dancers Madison Chock and Evan Bates started as training partners long before they became a couple. Bates said he told Chock he loved her in 2017, which changed everything. They were engaged in 2022 and married in Hawaii in 2024. “The skating career is short and finite, the relationship is much, much longer,” Bates told NPR. Chock said the sport has strengthened their bond and shaped how they grow together. Another American ice dance duo, Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik, are also partners on and off the ice. There are international stories too. Two stars of women’s hockey, Marie-Philip Poulin and Laura Stacey, compete together for Montreal and for Team Canada. They have been together since 2017 and married since 2024. Skeleton racers Kim Meylemans and Nicole Silveira represent different countries but married less than a year before arriving in Italy. Swedish hockey player Anna Kjellbin and Finnish player Ronja Savolainen met as teammates in Sweden. Now they are fiancées playing on rival Olympic teams. Curling also has no shortage of relationship dynamics. Three married couples are competing in the mixed doubles field: Canada's Jocelyn Peterman and Brett Gallant, Switzerland’s Yannick Schwaller and Briar Schwaller-Hürlimann, and Norway’s Kristin Skaslien and Magnus Nedregotten. And in ice dance, Italy’s own Charlene Guignard and Marco Fabbri have been together since 2009. Their on ice chemistry has become part of their competitive identity. From gondola proposals to shared training sessions, quiet walks in Olympic villages and big family gatherings in the stands, these couples add an extra layer to the Games. Behind the medals and the pressure are people navigating long distance, shared ambitions and the rare experience of competing at the highest level alongside someone they love.

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Airline Welcomes VIP Endangered Turtle Needing Hospital After Powerful Winter Storm

When Storm Goretti battered Europe on January 9 with winds reaching 110 miles per hour, most of the disruption was on the ground. But one young loggerhead turtle ended up hundreds of miles off course, washing ashore on the Island of Jersey near France. The warm water species had been “cold stunned,” a state where turtles become immobile after prolonged exposure to cold temperatures. A beachcomber found the juvenile reptile and brought it to New Era Hospital, where veterinarian Peter Haworth stabilised it with warmed seawater provided by The Jersey Oyster Company. The turtle, later named Crush after the character from Finding Nemo, was weak and malnourished and needed more care than the small Jersey facility could provide. A transfer across the English Channel by boat was considered too risky, so Haworth looked to the skies instead. Loganair agreed to fly Crush to Britain as a First Class passenger, allowing the endangered animal to travel calmly and with minimal stress. “This was certainly one of the more unusual passengers we’ve welcomed on board,” said Ronnie Matheson, Loganair’s chief commercial officer. “Our teams worked closely with Peter and his colleagues to ensure that she could travel as calmly and comfortably as possible.” Crush landed in Southampton, where airport staff coordinated her transfer to the SeaLife Centre in Weymouth, about 90 miles away. “We’re delighted to support this special journey and play a small part in helping this young turtle get the expert care it needs,” said Dan Townsend, head of airside operations at Southampton Airport. Before her flight, CT scans showed an unusually large amount of sand in her oesophagus. Some of it was removed to prevent complications, and specialists in Weymouth will monitor her long term recovery. The goal is to release her back into loggerhead habitat range this spring. Crush’s journey from a storm battered beach to a First Class cabin has given rescuers hope that she will make a full return to the ocean.

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What's Good Now!

Two Original Jungle Book Illustrations Lost For More Than a Century Resurface in a London home

Lost Prosthetic Leg Reunited With Owner After Months At Sea

Scientists Use Sound Cues to Influence Dreams and Boost Problem Solving

He Saved His Twin Brother's Life With a Timely Blood Test Amid a Cancer Battle

Larry The Cat Marks 15 Years as Britain’s Chief Mouser, a Symbol of Stability in Chaotic Political Times

Missing New Jersey Man Rescued After His Apple AirTag Alerted First Responders

Rescue Dog Turned Conservation Worker is Helping Scientists Track Rare Species Across the Globe

Archaeologists Just Uncovered a 10,000-Year-Old Rock Art Site in Egypt’s Sinai

The Olympic Couples Bringing Their Love Stories to Milan Cortina

Airline Welcomes VIP Endangered Turtle Needing Hospital After Powerful Winter Storm