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Positive Trends 10 Short Summaries of Top Stories
Proud China brings curtain down on epic Olympic Games 24 August 2008 - The Beijing Olympics ended with a blaze of deafening fireworks on Sunday, bringing down the curtain on a Games that dazzled the world with sporting brilliance and showcased the might of modern day China. Over the past two weeks, Beijing has wowed the visiting world with its superlative venues, army of smiling volunteers, glitch-free transport, and seamless organization. There was a United Nations feel to the sport, with a record 86 states winning medals -- some for the first time. (more)
Malaysia and Indonesia start talks to bridge cultural differences 23 August 2008 - Indonesia and Malaysia will start talks in August to bridge cultural differences following a squabble last October over a popular song, a foreign ministry spokesman said on Friday. The southeast Asian neighbours had bickered over the song which Indonesians claim as their own but was used by Malaysia in a tourism campaign. The spat sparked calls for a boycott of Malaysian products in Indonesia. A group of 14 diplomats and cultural experts set up by the Indonesian and Malaysian Presidents in July will start initial discussions on 29-30 August in Jakarta aimed at bridging differences. (more)
Record number of tourists flock to Japan 23 August 2008 - A record 4.3 million foreign tourists visited Japan in the first half of this year, up 10 per cent from the same period last year, Japan's tourism promotion agency said on Friday. South Korean tourists formed the largest group of visitors, with numbers rising 8.1 per cent to 1.3 million. Hong Kong visitors rose 36.7 per cent. (more)
South African volunteers make a difference 22 August 2008 - Greater Good South Africa (GGSA), an online social marketplace for people who want to make a difference, will be hosting a 'Do It Day' on Friday 19 September -- an annual opportunity for South Africans to unite in positive community action. Now in its fourth year, Do It Day encourages South Africans from all walks of life to come together to engage in volunteer activities. Projects range from the painting of children's hospital wards, planting of vegetable gardens, designing websites for community organizations, giving career guidance at schools, IT support, bookkeeping, baking, and building, etc. (more)
Wonderful women unite for a positive South Africa 20 August 2008 - Thousands of women from all walks of life will unite behind a positive South Africa on 31 August at the Absa Stadium in Durban. Known as the Wonderful Women Gathering, it will address the role of women in tackling negative perceptions and influencing positive change in the country. 'Our women are the backbone of our society and it is through them that we will begin to create the country we all want to live in,' said Di Smith, one of the organizers. (more)
Cambodia and Thailand begin border talks 19 August 2008 - Thailand expressed hope its dispute with Cambodia over border territory near an ancient temple would end with a peaceful resolution as formal talks began Tuesday. The two neighbours came close to an armed clash last month over competing claims to land surrounding the 11th-century Preah Vihear temple on on Thailand's northeastern border with Cambodia. (more)
Cuba to send animals to depleted Venezuelan zoos 12 August 2008 - Venezuela sends oil to Cuba and now Cuba will ship zoo animals to Venezuela, giving a new dimension to ties between the allies. Just as Cuba sends doctors to Venezuela in a barter arrangement for 92,000 barrels a day of oil, Venezuela will give medical equipment to Cuba in exchange for the animals, Havana zoo director Tomas Escobar said in a recent interview. Cuba has a reputation for giving its animals good care, despite economic hardships on the island. The zoo was hit hard by the economic crisis that followed the collapse of Cuba's then benefactor, the Soviet Union, in 1991, but it still has managed to create one of the best collections of African animals in the world. (more)
China opens its long-sought Olympics spectacularly 9 August 2008 - China didn't just walk onto the world stage. It soared over it. At last playing its long-sought role as Olympic host, China opened the Summer Games in spectacular fashion Friday with an extravaganza of fireworks and pageantry dramatizing its ascendance as a global power. The ceremony began at 8 pm on the eighth day of the eighth month of 2008 -- auspicious in a country where eight is the luckiest number. (more)
Town is piece of Africa in Colombia 9 August 2008 - Palenque, Colombia is one of a few surviving towns jealously preserving a language and culture more African than Latin. The name Palenque means 'fortified escaped slave village' and many of these villages were built throughout the Caribbean and Latin America. But only this one, with 3,000 residents, survives with its distinct tradition intact. (more)
Olympic Games bring joy, pride to China's millions 8 August 2008 - China is proud and happy to host the Olympic Games. 'Before China couldn't do this, we were too backward,' said shopkeeper Shao Ge as the spectacle of the ceremony was broadcast from the Bird's Nest, the state-of-the-art main stadium for the Games. 'I am very happy, all of China is very happy,' he said. (more)
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Success of Maharishi's Programmes 10 Short Summaries of Top Stories
Maharishi's programmes for enlightenment and invincibility reverberating throughout Canada - Part II 27 August 2008 - On 18 August 2008, Dr Paul Potter, Raja (Administrator) of Canada for the Global Country of World Peace, reported achievements which are bringing invincibility to Canada. Following Raja Paul's report (in Part I) on Consciousness-Based Education and Maharishi Sthapatya Veda developments, and plans for a group of 600 Yogic Flyers, the Minister of Communications for Canada reported on the completion of the Maharishi Global Radio broadcasting tower. (more)
Visitors to Iowa's newest city find balance with spirit, universe 8 August 2008 - Since the early 1990s, Iowa has been growing a 'vision for the future', starting with The Raj hotel and Ayurveda spa, and continuing with the fast-growing Maharishi Vedic City, a fully-blooming community of people who practise Transcendental Meditation and healthy living. (more)
US: Maharishi Vedic Pandits observe traditional Vedic celebration on American Independence Day 10 July 2008 - Speaking 4 July 2008 on Maharishi's Global Family Chat, Dr Bevan Morris, Prime Minister of the Global Country of World Peace, reported on the traditional Vedic Celebration of total Natural Law administering the universe, which was observed on American Independence Day by Vedic Pandits in Maharishi Vedic City, Iowa, USA. (more)
Germany: Weekend of Total Knowledge celebrates religion and culture 26 June 2008 - Speaking 17 June 2008 on Maharishi Global Family Chat, Dr Wolfgang Gied, National Director of Religion and Culture for the Global Country of World Peace in Germany, reported on Germany's second Weekend of Total Knowledge, which focused on the topic of religion and culture. (more)
Delegation from the Amazon visits MERU, Holland - Part III 19 June 2008 - A delegation of traditional leaders from the Amazon were recently welcomed at the International Capital of the Global Country of World Peace in MERU, Holland. Raja Jose Luis Alvarez, Raja of Invincible Latin America for the Global Country of World Peace, spoke about their visit and about traditional peoples enjoying Maharishi's programmes throughout his Domain. (more)
Delegation from the Amazon visits MERU, Holland - Part II 16 June 2008 - A delegation of traditional leaders from the Amazon in Latin America were recently welcomed at the International Capital of the Global Country of World Peace in MERU, Holland. The delegation enjoyed hearing about Maharishi's programmes to bring fulfilment to every culture in the family of nations, and about how these programmes are utilized by cultures around the world. (more)
Delegation from the Amazon visits MERU, Holland - Part I 15 June 2008 - The Ministry of Religion and Culture for the Global Country of World Peace recently hosted a delegation of traditional leaders from the Amazon at the International Capital of the Global Country of World Peace in MERU, Holland. (more)
Voice of America reports on David Lynch - Not your typical Hollywood director 22 May 2008 - Award-winning film director David Lynch credits his practice of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's Transcendental Meditation Programme with profoundly enhancing his creativity. (more)
Report by 20 Minutes, France: David Lynch and Transcendental Meditation 14 May 2008 - Renowned film director David Lynch recently wrote a book and made a documentary about Transcendental Meditation, a technique that has had a profound, life-transforming effect for him. (more)
US: David Lynch discusses Transcendental Meditation 13 May 2008 - Filmmaker David Lynch, a practitioner of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's Transcendental Meditation Technique for over thirty years, recently spoke at the David Lynch Weekend hosted by Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, USA. (more)
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Flops 10 Short Summaries of Top Stories
US: More women are having fewer children, if at all 19 August 2008 - More US women in their early 40s are childless, and those who are having children are having fewer than ever before, the Census Bureau said. In the last 30 years, the number of women age 40 to 44 with no children has doubled, from 10 per cent to 20 per cent. And those who are mothers have an average of 1.9 children each, more than one child fewer than women of the same age in 1976. About 36 per cent of women who gave birth in the previous 12 months were separated, divorced, widowed or unmarried. A bigger share of women in the Southeast and Southwest who gave birth in the year prior to the survey did so in poverty. (more)
Britian: Lack of role models drives kids into gangs 8 August 2008 - Too few role models and a lack of a sense of identity is pushing young people into joining gangs, according to a report. According to the Prince's Trust report 'The Culture of Youth Communities', 34 per cent of young people did not have a parent they considered a role model. It found 58 per cent joined a gang for a sense of identity with almost a quarter saying they joined gangs to find a role model. The survey of 14 to 25-year-olds also found young people were twice as likely to turn to friends if they had a problem than to a parent. (more)
Police in Kashmir open fire hundreds of Hindu protestors, killing two 1 August 2008 - Police opened fire Friday on hundreds of rioting Hindus, angry over a recent government decision to not transfer land to the Amarnath shrine, in Indian Kashmir. Two people were killed. Last month, the government in Jammu, India's only Muslim-majority state, decided to award about 100 acres of land to the Shri Amarnath Shrine Board, a trust that maintains the Amarnath shrine, a revered Hindu site. The state government was forced to revoke that order after a week of often violent protests, in which six people were killed and hundreds wounded, by Muslim Kashmiris who denounced the move as an attempt to build Hindu settlements in the area and alter the demographics in the state. But the cancellation set off protests by Hindus on Friday. The Amarnath shrine is a cave that houses a large icicle revered by Hindus as an incarnation of the Lord Shiva, the Hindu god of destruction and regeneration. Hundreds of thousands of Hindus are currently visiting the cave on an annual pilgrimage. (more)
Ukraine grapples with alarming rise in hate crimes 11 July 2008 - The number of hate crimes are rising at an alarming rate in Ukraine, which is trying to hone its reputation as a bastion of democracy as it pursues a spot in the European Union and NATO. London-based Amnesty International warned in a report released Thursday of an 'alarming rise' in the attacks in recent years in this nation of 46 million. Foreigners in Ukraine have been stunned by the sudden and ferocious spike in violence. Rights groups also say the government aggravates the problem by denying that racism is growing. (more)
Study: Many US teens get alcohol from adults 26 June 2008 - Many of the US' estimated 10.8 million underage drinkers are turning to their parents or other adults for free alcohol, a recent survey said. 'In far too many instances parents directly enable their children's underage drinking, in essence encouraging them to risk their health and well-being,' said acting Surgeon General Steven K. Galson. About one out of five of those aged 12 to 20, or roughly 7.2 million people, said they had taken part in binge drinking. About 3.5 million teens aged 12 to 20 each year meet the diagnostic criteria for having an alcohol use disorder, such as dependence or abuse. (more)
Women with children working more: US study 12 June 2008 - Women with children are working more than ever before despite the so-called 'opting out' revolution popularized by the media, according to a new study. Working mothers are also spending more time at their jobs, the study found. More than 15 per cent of those born after 1956 work 50 hours or more a week, compared to less than 10 per cent among women born in earlier years. Women who have children and work, sleep less, have fewer leisure activities, and have less time to spend in 'civic participation', the study's creator said. (more)
Afghanistan: Threat of ethnic clashes over grazing land 8 April 2008 - There are increasing fears of an imminent outbreak of ethnic conflict in central Afghanistan over access to grazing land between Kuchis and Hazaras. The estimated 2-3 million Kuchis (nomads) have traditionally moved all over the country with their camels, sheep, goats, and donkeys in search of greener pastures. The Hazara have warned that Kuchis will not be allowed to graze animals in 'their' areas. (more)
India hires women border guards 4 April 2008 - India is enrolling women for the first time in a combat role. They will be deployed along the country's borders with Pakistan to the west, and Bangladesh in the east, which New Delhi says are the most common entry points for militants plotting attacks against the country. (more)
World: Climate solutions seen harming indigenous peoples 2 April 2008 - Large-scale solutions to help slow global warming often threaten the very indigenous peoples who are among those hardest hit by a changing climate, the UN University said on Wednesday. Biofuel plantations, construction of hydropower dams and measures to protect forests, where trees soak up heat-trapping carbon dioxide gas as they grow, can create conflicts with the ancestral lands of indigenous peoples. (more)
Chinese minority faces cultural extinction 13 March 2008 - The culture and language of China's second smallest minority, the Shamanistic Hezhen who number less than 5,000, are rapidly slipping away and they need more state aid, a community leader said on Thursday. Fewer than 20 Hezhen still speak their mother tongue fluently, according to the United Nation's cultural body UNESCO, and Chinese officials have named it one of the country's most threatened languages, along with the old imperial tongue Manchu. The only Chinese minority group with fewer members are the Lhoba of Tibet. (more)
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