Curiosity, discovery and gecko feet - Robert Full

131,630 views ・ 2012-12-20

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Transcriber: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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Nearly every one of your science classes
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starts off with the scientific method.
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You recognize this?
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Ask a question,
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form a hypothesis,
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perform an experiment,
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collect data,
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draw conclusions,
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and then memorize a bunch of facts.
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This is really boring!
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Science is not a simple recipe in a cookbook,
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and learning is not memorizing facts for tests.
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Yet, that is exactly what we do.
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We have to change this!
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We have to look at how curiosity can ultimately benefit society
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by looking towards tomorrow,
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by going through a path from involvement
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to imagination
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to invention
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to innovation.
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And I'd like to illustrate this by telling you the real story
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about how we discovered how geckos stick.
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First you need to get involved.
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You need to do curiosity-driven research yourself.
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We know that learning by being an active researcher
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is the best way to learn.
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Imagine being in my lab
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and trying to discover how geckos stick.
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"Here is one of our subjects.
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This is a crested gecko.
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We are going to put the gecko on glass
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and we're going to use a high speed camera
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that can capture up to 1,000 pictures in one second.
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There he goes.
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OK, record it.
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There's the animal's toes."
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"So how do their feet stick and unstick so quickly?"
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How <i>do</i> they do this?
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We wonder, it's kind of crazy, right?
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It's hard to believe.
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Well it turns out, it was already known that the geckos have hairy toes,
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and those hairs are really small compared to your hair,
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and the little tips at the end are even smaller.
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Well, my student Tanya,
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who is not much older than some of you when she did this,
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a sophomore undergraduate,
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tried to figure this out,
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and we told that her that in order to do this,
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you'd have to measure the force of a single hair.
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Though we kind of only did this jokingly
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because these hairs are so small,
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we didn't think it was possible.
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But Tanya didn't know that,
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and she went on to build the simplest,
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most beautiful measurement device ever.
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Here it is:
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she took one of those tiny little hairs
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and put it on to a probe,
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and then she began pushing it into the metal beam.
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Now she was very frustrated for months - it didn't stick.
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But she had figured out she had to orient it
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just like the gecko grabs on,
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and then it worked!
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And there's the little split ends grabbing the beam in that little window.
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And then she did something magical:
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for the first time ever,
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she measured the force of a single gecko hair
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that allowed her to discover
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a completely new way to stick to something,
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something no human has ever known before.
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They have hairy little toes,
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huge numbers of hairs,
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and each hair has the worst case of split ends possible,
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100 to 1,000 nano-tips that an animal has on one hair,
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and 2 billion total,
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and they don't stick by glue,
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or by suction,
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or by velcro.
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It was discovered that they stick by inter-molecular forces alone,
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by van der Waals forces,
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and you'll learn this in Chemistry and Physics, if you take it.
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It's unbelievable!
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It's a whole new way of thinking about making an adhesive!
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Well, this isn't the end of the story,
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there are still mysteries.
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Why are the gecko's feet looking like this?
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They have bizarre toes and we don't know why.
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If you go into a museum and look at each gecko species,
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you see they have all different hairs,
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different lengths, and thicknesses, and patterns.
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Why?
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I don't know!
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But you should come to Berkeley and help me figure this out.
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It's just about right, so, apply.
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But it's a mystery.
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There is even more stuff that is unknown.
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This tarantula also has hairs
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and can stick this way, too,
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but recently it was found that they also can secrete silk from their feet,
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not just their behind, like you know they do.
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And even more recently, my graduate student Ann showed
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that all spiders can secrete glue,
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and we know nothing about this glue
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except it was around way before this guy,
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millions of years before.
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So don't stop at the discovery,
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next imagine the possible uses for society.
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Here is the first human supported by a gecko-inspired adhesive.
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This is my former graduate student, Kellar Autumn,
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who is professor at Lewis and Clark,
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offering his second born child for the test.
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And she's a very good sport about it!
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Now imagine all the things you could make from this,
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not only adhesives, but products in sports,
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and biomedicine,
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technology,
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robotics,
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toys,
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automotive,
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fashion,
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clothes,
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and yes, even hair pieces.
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I swear to you, we got a call from Michael Jackson's hairdresser
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about hair pieces before he passed away.
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Who would have guessed from studying geckos?!?
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Next, invent a game-changing technology, device, or product.
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Like my engineering colleague at Berkeley, Ron Fearing, did
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when he made one of the first synthetic, self-cleaning dry adhesives
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after the simplest version that you see in animals.
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Believe it or not, right now, because of this work,
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you can make your own synthetic gecko nano-tape
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by nano-molding with just a few parts,
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and here's the recipe that we can give you.
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It's been incredible since we made this discovery
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of all the papers and the work
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and the different ways to make it,
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it's emerging into a billion dollar industry.
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And who would have imagined that it started
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because we were curious about how geckos can run up walls.
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Next you need to innovate,
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create a business that ultimately benefits society.
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Did you know that there are 6 million people per year that have chronic wounds,
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2 million develop an infection,
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and infections account for 100,000 hospital deaths?
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Imagine if you could build a company that could produce
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a gecko-inspired band-aid
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that would remove the pain and suffering.
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Just a simple invention.
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If you look at the last three great earthquakes,
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over 700,000 people were trapped and lost their lives.
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Imagine the company that made a search-and-rescue robot
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inspired from a gecko
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that could move anywhere
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and quickly find individuals that have been trapped,
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that sometimes survive as long as two weeks.
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There is a gecko-inspired robot, StickyBot,
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from the Stanford group,
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that can grab on to any surface.
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Now we ran our own, for TED, Mini Bio-inspired Design Challenge
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to get you to think about these kinds of products.
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We have a winner.
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Here's the winner.
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The winner came up with this design called StickySeat.
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Really clever.
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It's a seat that is not only comfortable,
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but it aids a seat belt, if you were in an accident,
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in terms of keeping your seat and moving.
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This is brilliant!
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We didn't think about this,
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although we might think about patenting it now,
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but there is a winner for this,
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and the winner, and you can't,
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you can't make up something like this,
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the winner's name
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is Harry.
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Where's Harry?
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Harry, come here, we have a prize for you.
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Where's Harry?
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Harry!
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Come here!
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We have a crested gecko for you
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that has very cool hairs on it.
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Congratulations for Harry!
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Excellent job!
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So don't worry, if you missed out on this, it's OK
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because we are doing another design challenge
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working with the San Diego Zoo.
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They're developing a best ideas project in San Diego,
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but it's going to go national.
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And I'll leave you with a fact that you should keep being curious
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because curiosity-based research leads to the biggest benefits,
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as we showed you in our example,
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and you <i>can</i> make a difference
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<i>now</i>
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because like Tanya,
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you don't know what can't be done.
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Thank you.
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