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These Scottish Fans Showed The Most Incredible Sportsmanship After a Tournament Loss

While Scotland and Ukraine might have been facing off against each other for the World CUp qualifiers, the fans were standing together in a show of unity for Ukrainians. The plan for Scots to join Ukrainian fans in singing their national anthem inside Hampden as an expression of unity was prompted by the language learning app Duolingo. On the steps of the stadium, they put aside their sports rivalry and came together to sing the Ukrainian national anthem.

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Orphaned Macaque Punch Outgrows Plushie, Starts Making New Friends

At first, the tiny monkey would not let go of the plush toy. Now, he’s starting to let go just enough to grow up. Punch, a baby macaque at the Ichikawa City Zoo near Tokyo, captured hearts after visitors noticed him dragging around an oversized orangutan plushie for comfort. The toy became his constant companion after a difficult start to life. Punch was abandoned by his mother shortly after birth, likely because she was exhausted. Without a parent to cling to, zookeepers stepped in to care for him and introduced the plush toy to help him learn one of the most important skills for newborn macaques: holding tightly to something for safety. Photos of the tiny monkey hugging the much larger stuffed orangutan quickly spread online. In many of them, Punch could be seen running back to the toy whenever other monkeys pushed him away. But recently, something changed. Zookeepers say Punch is beginning to spend less time with the plush toy and more time with the other monkeys in the enclosure. On a recent day, he was spotted climbing onto another monkey’s back, sitting alongside adults and even getting groomed and hugged by members of the troop. For visitors who had been following his story, the change has been a relief. “It was good to see him grow, and I’m reassured,” said Sanae Izumi, a fan who traveled from Osaka to see him. “He is adorable!” The young macaque’s popularity has brought a surge of attention to the zoo. After images of Punch and his plush companion spread online, crowds began arriving to see him. Zoo staff eventually introduced quiet rules and limited viewing time to about 10 minutes so the more than 50 monkeys living there would not feel stressed. For keepers, Punch slowly leaving the toy behind is exactly what they hoped would happen. “Helping Punch learn the rules of monkey society and being accepted as a member is our most important task,” said zookeeper Kosuke Kano. Zoo director Shigekazu Mizushina says the plush toy served its purpose. It gave the orphaned monkey something to cling to during a critical stage of development. “When he grows out of the plush toy that encourages his independence, and that’s what we are hoping for,” Mizushina said. Punch has not completely let go of the toy yet. He still curls up with the stuffed orangutan each night when it is time to sleep. But if things keep going well, zookeepers say the next big milestone will be seeing him sleep in a tight huddle with the other monkeys. For now, the tiny macaque who once clung to a toy for comfort is slowly finding something even better: a place in the troop.

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Kenyan Cancer Survivor Knits Hope For Women After Mastectomy

Mary Mwangi thought her life might end when she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Instead, it changed direction. Today, the Kenyan survivor spends her days knitting soft prosthetic breasts for women who have undergone mastectomies, offering comfort and confidence in a country where medical alternatives are often far too expensive. Mwangi lives in Thika, just outside Nairobi, and began knitting while recovering from treatment. What started as a simple hobby in 2017 making hats and scarves soon became something much larger after she met another woman knitting prosthetic breasts for survivors. Now Mwangi leads a small group called New Dawn Cancer Warriors, where women gather in a shared tailor shop to knit prostheses and support each other through recovery. “Knitting takes you through a process of healing. Once you are not thinking about your disease, you are positive and that positive mind helps you, because healing starts from your mind,” Mwangi said. Breast cancer remains the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women in Kenya. About 6,000 new cases are reported each year, and many patients cannot afford reconstructive surgery after a mastectomy. Mwangi’s solution is both simple and practical. Her knitted prostheses cost about $10 each, roughly one-sixth the cost of silicone versions sold in the country. The soft forms are filled with fiber similar to what is used in pillows, making them gentle on the skin. Over the past three years, Mwangi and the women she trains have made and sold more than 600 prostheses. Many are purchased by organizations that donate them to cancer survivors who cannot afford them. For women like Nancy Waithera, a high school science teacher, meeting Mwangi before surgery changed how she viewed the future. When she first received her diagnosis, Waithera said, “everything turned dark.” Her husband had recently died, and the cancer diagnosis left her feeling overwhelmed. But after learning about Mwangi’s work, she began imagining life after surgery. When she wore the knitted prosthesis for the first time, heading to church, the emotional impact surprised her. “I felt like Nancy had come back,” she said. “My ego was restored. My dignity was restored.” Another woman, Hannah Mugo, had previously tried to fill her bra with clothing to restore her shape after surgery. The result often looked uneven and made her self-conscious. “I used to stay indoors because I didn’t want people to label me as the ‘woman with one breast’,” Mugo said. After meeting Mwangi, she learned how to knit prostheses herself and now makes them for both personal use and to sell. Doctors say the emotional support from hobbies and peer groups can be just as important as medical treatment. Daniel Ojuka, a surgeon at Kenyatta National Hospital, said the emotional impact of mastectomy can be profound. Even when patients are prepared for the surgery, he has watched many wake up and weep after realizing the physical loss. Having a plan for life afterward and a supportive community, he said, makes recovery “significantly easier.” In Kenya, reconstructive breast surgery is often out of reach financially and is not covered by the national health insurance system. As a result, many women choose mastectomy as the most affordable treatment option. Mwangi hopes her work can fill part of that gap. She continues to train other women to knit prostheses, turning a simple craft into both a source of income and a way to rebuild confidence. “There is life after cancer, and cancer is not a death sentence, because I’m a living testimony,” she said. For many women who walk into her small shop carrying grief and uncertainty, those words are the first stitches in a new beginning.

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Paramedics Honored As Community Heroes After They Saved a Security Guard Who Was Shot

Two emergency responders in Johannesburg have been honoured as community heroes after helping save the life of a security guard who was critically injured in a shooting. The Residents Action Group Security named paramedics Christopher Morris and Enrico Gasparani its 2025 Community Heroes of the Year during a ceremony on February 20. RAG chairperson Anjela da Silva presented the pair with certificates and gift hampers in recognition of their actions during a violent incident near the Bill Stewart Nature Reserve. “We are deeply grateful to Chris and Enrico for always going the extra mile for our community,” da Silva said. “We truly appreciate you! Thank you for your outstanding, selfless service to our community – in this incident and many others!” The two paramedics responded to a shooting reported at the corner of Florence Avenue and Kloof Road next to the nature reserve. Early information suggested a security officer had been attacked and was in critical condition. When they arrived, Morris and Gasparani immediately began assessing the patient. Their focus was on identifying major bleeding and life-threatening injuries that needed immediate treatment. The security guard had already suffered serious injuries. Without rapid medical intervention, the responders said, the situation could have quickly become fatal. “One has to act rapidly with decisive actions,” they explained. “People normally refer to it as the golden hour, but usually these are minutes to seconds when it comes to bleeding. We would definitely call them critical minutes rather than the golden hour.” The team stabilized the injured officer before he was transported to hospital. Gasparani said experience and training played an important role during the emergency response. Working in Johannesburg means paramedics regularly face severe trauma cases, helping them recognize critical situations quickly. “Good teamwork is essential to positive patient outcomes,” Morris said. “Enrico and I have been working together in the community for several years, and we work well as a team.” They also credited community groups for helping secure the scene and manage logistics during the response. Members of the local community policing forum assisted with traffic control, lighting and safety, while others helped coordinate ambulance communication and even locate a landing zone for a medical helicopter. Both men serve with Gauteng Emergency Medical Services. Gasparani works as an intermediate life support paramedic and began his medical career in 2014 as a basic ambulance assistant before advancing to his current qualification. Morris is an advanced life support paramedic who first qualified in emergency medical care in 2007 and later completed a master’s degree in emergency medicine. He has worked full-time in prehospital emergency care ever since. Despite their experience, the recognition came as a surprise. “Professionally, it’s always great to get recognition in your career – it holds you to a high standard,” Gasparani said. “It makes you want to inspire the younger generation that’s coming through.” Morris added: “I’m just thankful that people are seeing the work that we do. It’s good to be recognised.” The job can take a heavy emotional toll. Both paramedics say strong support networks and positive coping strategies are essential for dealing with the stress of emergency work. Morris says he tries to learn from every call, even when outcomes are difficult. “Even if cases don’t go the way we want them to – if there’s a bad outcome for a patient – you can always take it as a positive learning experience to improve your skills,” he said. For residents who want to help, the pair say supporting community safety organizations and respecting emergency responders on the road can make a difference. “If you see red lights and sirens, don’t obstruct us or cut us off; make way and yield,” they said. For now, the paramedics are simply hoping the security guard they treated continues recovering. And for Morris and Gasparani, the recognition is just another reminder of why they chose the job in the first place: helping people when every second counts.

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This Shelter Dog Found Her Forever Family After Waiting 803 Days

Some dogs wait days for a family. Some wait weeks. Scrappy waited 803 days. The German Shepherd mix spent more than two years at the Hardin County Animal Shelter before finally finding the forever home she had been hoping for. Shelter staff say Scrappy first arrived when she was just four months old. By the time she was adopted last week, she was nearly three years old and had spent most of her life growing up inside the shelter. Despite her playful personality and friendly nature, Scrappy somehow kept getting overlooked. “She is a good girl who just needs guidance and structure,” shelter staff wrote in a Facebook post about the dog. They added that she loves people, enjoys running outside and gets along well with other dogs. Earlier this year, workers marked a difficult milestone when Scrappy reached 800 days without being adopted. The shelter shared her story online along with a photo of the dog wearing a small cast after injuring a toe. “Her jumpy, desperate attempt to catch the attention of potential adopters landed her right in the vet’s office,” the shelter wrote. “Don’t worry, after a little TLC … her toe will be just fine.” Once her paw healed, Scrappy returned to her kennel to keep waiting. But this time, people were paying attention. The post about her long stay quickly spread online. Hundreds of people shared the story, and many left comments cheering the dog on and hoping someone would give her a chance. Some wrote that they wished they could adopt her but were unable to because of housing restrictions, work schedules or other challenges. Then, just days after the post began circulating, the wait ended. “We posted, you shared, and our sweet Scrappy has LEFT THE BUILDING to FINALLY begin her forever!” the shelter announced in a follow-up message. Scrappy was adopted by a woman named Carrie, who welcomed the long-waiting pup into her home. Shelter staff thanked her for giving the dog the fresh start they had hoped for since Scrappy first arrived as a puppy. “Thank you to Carrie for your kind and patient heart, and for giving our girl the opportunity to live her best life ever,” the shelter wrote. For the staff who watched Scrappy grow up behind kennel doors, the moment was emotional. After 803 days of waiting, the energetic dog who once jumped at every visitor finally walked out of the shelter and into a home of her own.

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Scientists Celebrate Breakthrough As New Drug Shows Promise For Children With Dravet Syndrome

For families living with Dravet syndrome, daily life can be unpredictable and exhausting. The rare genetic condition often causes severe seizures that resist standard treatments, along with developmental and speech challenges. Now, researchers say a new drug could offer a meaningful breakthrough. Early clinical trials of a medication called Zorevunersen have shown promising results, significantly reducing seizures in children with the condition. The preliminary trial, led by scientists at University College London and Great Ormond Street Hospital, involved 81 children between the ages of two and 18. Before the study began, participants experienced an average of 17 seizures per month. After receiving a 70-milligram dose of Zorevunersen, seizures dropped by about 50 percent on average. After three doses, researchers reported seizure reductions of roughly 80 percent. Equally important, the drug appeared safe and well tolerated by the children taking part. The findings, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, also showed improvements in quality of life, including better motor skills, communication and the ability to cope with daily activities. For clinicians who work with these patients, the results are encouraging. “I regularly see patients with hard-to-treat genetic epilepsies, who can have multiple seizures a week,” said Helen Cross, director and professor of childhood epilepsy at the UCL Institute of Child Health and honorary consultant in paediatric neurology at Great Ormond Street Hospital. “Many are unable to do anything independently for themselves; they require around the clock care and are at high risk of sudden expected death in epilepsy.” Cross said the next step will be a larger phase 3 clinical trial to study the drug over a longer period. Researchers will examine long-term safety, possible rare side effects and which patients are most likely to benefit. If those trials confirm the early results, she said the treatment could dramatically change lives. “This new treatment could help children with Dravet syndrome lead much healthier and happier lives.” Experts who were not involved in the study also welcomed the findings. Jowinn Chew, a researcher at London South Bank University, described the early results as a “clinically significant step forward” toward treatments that target the underlying cause of the disorder rather than simply managing seizures. Other scientists say the implications could reach far beyond Dravet syndrome. Dr Alfredo Gonzalez-Sulser of the University of Edinburgh said the findings were “incredibly exciting” and could point toward new therapies for other rare epilepsies. “There are now over 800 genetic epilepsies that need therapeutics similar to Zorevunersen,” he said. “This sets a clear path to achieve effective interventions for these severe life-altering diseases for both patients and carers.” Deb Pal, a professor of epilepsy at King’s College London, said the study offers “enormous hope for the families of thousands of children and young people affected by monogenic epilepsies worldwide.” For many families who have spent years searching for effective treatments, that hope alone marks an important step forward.

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This Assistant Coach Helped Remove a Disoriented Pelican From a College Baseball Game

A pelican caused quite a stir when it landed on a baseball field during a game between the University of California Santa Barbara and Loyola Marymount University in Santa Barbara, California, on Tuesday, March 3. UC Santa Barbara Baseball captured this video showing assistant coach Dylan Jones removing the large bird, which he wrapped in a towel, from Caesar Uyesaka Stadium. According to a game recap, the bird glided low over the field and became momentarily trapped in the netting behind home plate, which delayed the game. The bird eventually flew out of the area and UC Santa Barbara defeated Loyola Marymount 11-1. credit: UC Santa Barbara Baseball via Storyful

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Los Angeles Grants Historic Status To 'Brady Bunch' House

Here’s the story… of a house that just became a piece of history. The suburban home made famous by the classic sitcom The Brady Bunch has officially been designated a historic-cultural monument by the Los Angeles City Council. The vote on Wednesday gives landmark protection to the 1970s-era home on Dilling Avenue in Studio City, a neighborhood in the San Fernando Valley. The designation followed a 13-0 recommendation by the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Commission. For television fans, the modest suburban house is instantly recognizable. It served as the exterior home for the Brady family during the show’s original run from 1969 to 1974. Inside scenes from the sitcom were filmed on a sound stage, but the home’s distinctive façade helped set the scene for one of television’s most enduring family comedies. The house also returned to the spotlight years later when it appeared in the 1995 film The Brady Bunch Movie and its sequel. In recent years, the property gained new attention thanks to a renovation project by HGTV. The network purchased the house in 2019 and recreated the show’s interior as part of the series A Very Brady Renovation, carefully rebuilding the inside to match the famous TV set. After the renovation, the roughly 1959-built home was sold to Tina Trahan, a historic-house enthusiast and the wife of former HBO executive Chris Albrecht. She purchased the property for $3.2 million. The home had previously been listed for $5.5 million after HGTV acquired it for $3.5 million. Trahan has said she views the house less as a residence and more as a cultural artifact. “Nobody is going to live in it,” Trahan told The Wall Street Journal. “Anything you might do to make the house livable would take away from what I consider artwork.” Her plans include using the property for charitable causes and fundraising events. Before HGTV stepped in, the home had quietly remained in the same family for nearly half a century. Late last year, fans finally got a rare opportunity to step inside when the property opened for a three-day charity fundraiser called “The Brady Experience.” With the new landmark designation, the house now joins a long list of protected cultural sites across Los Angeles. For television lovers, it means the iconic Brady home — the one that greeted viewers week after week for decades — is officially recognized as part of the city’s history.

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This Wolf Was Just Rescued From a Canal In Northern Italy

Firefighters rescued a stranded wolf from a canal in San Giovanni Lupatoto, Italy, on March 3. Footage posted by the Vigili del Fuoco shows the wolf being rescued from a canal footbridge. According to local media, the wolf was to remain at a local animal recovery center before being released back into the wild. credit: Vigili del Fuoco via Storyful

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Pop Star Zara Larsson Joins Kids’ “Bike Bus” And Turns School Ride Into A Music Video

Most school buses do not come with a soundtrack. But in one neighborhood in Portland, Oregon, the morning ride to school often includes hundreds of kids on bikes, a Bluetooth speaker blasting music and the occasional pop star pedaling along. It all started four years ago when physical education teacher Sam Balto launched what he calls a “Bike Bus” for students in Northeast Portland. Known to many of his students and followers as Coach Balto, he wanted to create a safer, more exciting way for children to get to school. The idea is simple. Students ride bikes together along a set route through the neighborhood, traveling as a group so they are easier to see and safer in traffic. Along the way, they also draw attention to the need for safer cycling routes around schools. What began as a small effort has grown into a weekly event that now sees hundreds of children riding together. Balto leads the pack through the neighborhood at least once a week, music pumping from a speaker as the group pedals toward class. The concept has spread far beyond Portland. Today, there are more than 520 Bike Bus groups around the world. The rides have even started attracting celebrities. Balto and his students have previously welcomed artists like Justin Timberlake and Benson Boone, who joined the group for rides through the neighborhood while students sang along to their favorite songs. Last week, Balto set his sights on another guest. He posted a clip showing students riding through the rain while Zara Larsson’s song “Lush Life” played in the background. “This weekend you start your tour in Portland,” Balto wrote to Larsson. “Zara Larsson, want to ride in the Bike Bus with us? The kids would go absolutely crazy with excitement!!” Larsson quickly replied in the comments. “Oh I’ll be there! Check DM.” Just days later, she showed up. Before performing at the Crystal Ballroom on Saturday, February 28, Larsson joined Balto and his students for a ride along their usual route. Because the ride took place over the weekend, students from about 10 Portland schools were able to participate, Balto told Willamette Week. The moment quickly turned into something that looked closer to a music video than a commute. “Our ride with Zara Larsson felt like a Bike Bus music video,” Balto wrote on social media after the event. “Smiles everywhere, joy nonstop, singing and dancing the whole way.” Larsson appeared just as thrilled to take part. In one video she shared, the singer smiles at the camera while riding an e-bike and singing along to her new single, “Midnight Sun.” Text on the clip reads: “Portland Bike Bus I love youuuuu.” According to Balto, the singer stayed long after the ride ended. She took photos with students, signed autographs and even joined them for a TikTok dance to “Lush Life.” “I still can’t believe she said yes, and we pulled this off in three days,” Balto wrote on social media. “Zara Larsson is the kindest individual I’ve ever met.” Beyond the fun, Balto says celebrity visits have another effect. “Celebrity participation is a big accelerator,” he told Willamette Week. “It puts Bike Bus in front of people who would never see it otherwise because it breaks out of the usual algorithm bubbles.” Each time a well-known guest joins the ride, Balto says he notices a surge in messages from people asking how to start their own Bike Bus routes in other cities. For Larsson, the experience seemed to be just as memorable as the concert she came to town to perform. “Weeee!” she exclaimed in a TikTok video from the ride. In the caption she added: “Thank you so much for having [me]. This was a big moment for me!!!” And for the hundreds of kids pedaling alongside her that morning, the trip to school might have been the most fun commute they would ever have.

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Brazilian Researchers Use Ultrasonic Waves To Transform Cocoa Waste Into Nutrient-Rich Honey

Dark chocolate and honey already make a great pair. Now scientists say the combination might also reduce food waste. Researchers in Brazil have shown that ultrasonic waves can extract beneficial nutrients from leftover cocoa bean husks when the plant material is mixed with honey. The process turns what is normally agricultural waste into a nutritionally enriched honey product. Cocoa beans are prized for making chocolate, but most of the cocoa plant ends up discarded. The husks and surrounding material make up the majority of the harvest’s biomass. Despite being thrown away, those parts still contain many of the same plant nutrients found in cocoa beans. Among them are polyphenols linked to heart health, alkaloids such as theobromine and stimulants like caffeine. If producers could recover those compounds from the waste, they could reduce discarded material while creating new products. That idea led researchers at the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP) in São Paulo to experiment with a method based on “green chemistry.” Instead of using chemical solvents often found in food processing, the team used honey itself as the extracting medium. Solvents such as hexane are commonly used in food production to draw compounds from ingredients. For example, hexane helps extract polyunsaturated fats from cotton seeds to produce cottonseed oil. In the Brazilian experiment, honey played that role instead. The researchers mixed cocoa husks and shells into honey and inserted an ultrasonic wave emitter into the mixture. The sound waves broke down the plant material and helped release its nutrients into the honey. “Of course, the biggest appeal to the public is the flavor, but our analyses have shown that it has a number of bioactive compounds that make it quite interesting from a nutritional and cosmetic point of view,” Felipe Sanchez Bragagnolo, the study’s first author, told Agência FAPESP. The ultrasonic process may offer another benefit. The researchers believe the sound waves also reduced microbes already present in the honey. That could make the product easier to store and sell without relying on pasteurization or refrigeration. The team tested honey from five species of native Brazilian stingless bees. These honeys tend to contain more liquid and have lower viscosity than the honey produced by the European honeybee used in most commercial production. The researchers ultimately selected honey from the mandaguari bee, known scientifically as Scaptotrigona postica. However, they say cocoa plantations could use honey from whatever native species lives nearby. For producers that already work with cocoa and beekeeping, the technique could offer a new product made from materials that would otherwise be discarded. “We believe that with a device like this, in a cooperative or small business that already works with both cocoa and native bee honey, it’d be possible to increase the portfolio with a value-added product, including for haute cuisine,” said Professor Mauricio Rostagno, a coordinator of the study. By combining ultrasonic technology with natural ingredients, the researchers say cocoa waste could turn into something both useful and flavorful.

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What's Good Now!

Orphaned Macaque Punch Outgrows Plushie, Starts Making New Friends

Kenyan Cancer Survivor Knits Hope For Women After Mastectomy

Paramedics Honored As Community Heroes After They Saved a Security Guard Who Was Shot

This Shelter Dog Found Her Forever Family After Waiting 803 Days

Scientists Celebrate Breakthrough As New Drug Shows Promise For Children With Dravet Syndrome

This Assistant Coach Helped Remove a Disoriented Pelican From a College Baseball Game

Los Angeles Grants Historic Status To 'Brady Bunch' House

This Wolf Was Just Rescued From a Canal In Northern Italy

Pop Star Zara Larsson Joins Kids’ “Bike Bus” And Turns School Ride Into A Music Video

Brazilian Researchers Use Ultrasonic Waves To Transform Cocoa Waste Into Nutrient-Rich Honey