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Nature provides everything we need. While we buy food from stores, it came from the Earth first. The challenge is, many of us feel disconnected from the source. We donât know how to grow our own food or anything about edible plants that are freely available.
This is what led me to the vibrant green patch of chickweed in my yard. It was thriving, with no help from me. Many people regard it as a nuisance, but for centuries many cultures have used it as food and medicine.
I didnât know it was chickweed, at first. I was investigating plants that were growing around me, inspired by the 2020 book âWild Remedies: How to Forage Healing Foods and Craft Your Own Herbal Medicine,â by Rosalee De La Foret and Emily Han. The book features detailed information, photographs and illustrations of some of the most common edible plants, along with simple recipes.
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In April 1924 Rabindranath Tagore arrived in Shanghai for a lecture tour of China. Soon after receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913, Tagore had become an international literary celebrity, lecturing to packed audiences from Japan to Argentina. His message that modern civilization, built upon the cult of money and power, was inherently destructive, and needed to be tempered by the spiritual wisdom of the East had a receptive audience among many people in the West who had been forced by World War I to question their faith in science and progress. But when, traveling in the East, he exhorted Asians not to abandon their traditional culture, he was often heckled and booed.
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This news release, issued by Johns Hopkins Medicine, describes a novel targeted immunotherapy approach. This new approach employs bispecific antibodies to treat cancer by eliciting a Tcell response against mutated p53. The researchers used the Highly Automated Macromolecular Crystallography (AMX) and Frontier Microfocusing Macromolecular Crystallography (FMX) beamlines to characterize the molecular structure of the proteins. AMX and FMX are beamlines at the National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II) a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility at Brookhaven National Laboratory. NSLS-II offers a comprehensive suite of life science research capabilities. Johns Hopkins media contacts: Amy Mone, 410-614-2915, amone@jhmi.edu, or Valerie Mehl, 410-614-2916, mehlva@jhmi.edu. Brookhaven Lab media contacts: Cara Laasch, 631-344-8458, laasch@bnl.gov or Peter Genzer, 631-344-3174, genzer@bnl.gov.
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