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Positive Trends 10 Short Summaries of Top Stories
New study: Cows seem to know which way is north 27 August 2008 - Cows seem to have a built-in compass. Somehow, cattle seem to know how to find north and south, say researchers who studied satellite photos of thousands of cows around the world. Most cattle that were grazing or resting tended to align their bodies in a north-south direction, a team of German and Czech researchers reports in Tuesday's issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (more)
Study: Deer, cattle align bodies with Earth's magnetic field 27 August 2008 - Grazing cattle and sleeping deer tend to align their bodies along the North-South axis of the Earth's magnetic field, European researchers said on Monday. Researchers found that whether grazing or resting, these animals face either magnetic North or South. And since the direction of the wind and sun varied widely where the images were taken, the researchers believe the Earth's magnetic field to be the polarizing factor. (more)
First mass US crossing for hydrogen cars completed 25 August 2008 - Hydrogen fuel cell cars from nine automakers completed a 13-day cross-country trip this weekend, in the first such mass US crossing for vehicles powered by a zero-emission technology still in its infancy. Cars on the tour came from Honda, GM, Toyota Motor Corp, Ford Motor Co, BMW AG, Daimler AG, Hyundai Motor Co, Nissan Motor Co, and Volkswagen AG. (more)
Netherlands: Hydrogen-powered cars meet in championship race 23 August 2008 - Six international university teams competed in the Dutch city of Rotterdam on Saturday in what was billed as a motor racing championship for hydrogen-powered vehicles. The 'Formula Zero' series aims to demonstrate the viability of zero-emission fuel cell technology, even if the average speeds of around 50 kph (32 mph) were more akin to those of a cycle race than of Formula One. (more)
Untapped geothermal energy offers 26,000 years of power for Australia 22 August 2008 - Barely one per cent of Australia's untapped geothermal energy could produce 26,000 years worth of clean electricity, scientists said, as the government announced a A$50 million (US$43 million) project to help develop the technology. 'One percent of reserves would produce 26,000 years of energy supplies,' Geoscience's Anthony Budd told Reuters on Wednesday. (more)
Kenya: Scientists in rare joint-project with traditional rainmakers 17 August 2008 - Traditional rainmakers are helping scientists unravel the mysteries of Mother Nature. The modern-day climate experts are hoping ancient indigenous African knowledge, which has its basis in an ancient global Vedic Culture that existed in harmony with Natural Law, will help solve the negative effects of climate change. (more)
Little robin from Gabon is world's newest species 15 August 2008 - A red-breasted bird discovered by accident in the forests of Gabon is a new species, US scientists said on Friday. They have named the little bird the olive-backed forest robin, or Stiphrornis pyrrholaemus. The Smithsonian Institution team found the bird while visiting the forest on a biodiversity project. (more)
Scientists 'listen' to plants to find water pollution 14 August 2008 - Scientists in Israel have discovered a new way to test for water pollution by 'listening' to what the plants growing in water have to say. By shining a laser beam on the tiny pieces of algae floating in the water, the researchers said they hear sound waves that tell them the type and amount of contamination in the water. Scientists say that testing algae photosynthesis can determine water quality more accurately and easily than labor-intensive methods now used like chemical and radioactive carbon testing. (more)
Genetically modified crops not the answer, says Britain's Prince Charles 12 August 2008 - Britain's Prince Charles, owner of an organic farm, says that increased use of genetically modified crops to help solve world food shortages could lead to environmental disaster. The heir to the British throne was quoted as saying in an interview published Wednesday that he believes new experiments with modified crops could worsen problems with food supplies. Prince Charles, whose farm has supplied products to stores since 1992, is a longtime critic of genetic modification of food. (more)
Some big whales recovering since hunt ban: survey 12 August 2008 - Some large whale species such as the humpback, minke, and southern right whale are recovering from a threat of extinction, helped by curbs on hunts since the 1980s, the world's largest conservation network said on Tuesday. The world imposed a moratorium on hunts of whales in 1986 after many were driven towards extinction by decades of commercial exploitation. (more)
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Success of Maharishi's Programmes 10 Short Summaries of Top Stories
The power of 'Invincibility groups': Raja Peter Warburton - Part I 27 August 2008 - On a recent Global Family Chat, Raja Peter Warburton, Raja of Great Britain for the Global Country of World Peace, spoke about the power and influence of the coherence created by the Invincibility Assembly currently taking place in Great Britain, which is similar to those in the United States and other countries. (more)
New brain research indicates Transcendental Meditation Technique develops peak performance 9 August 2008 - The recent research of Dr Fred Travis and Dr Harald Harung shows statistically significant markers of enlightenment, the most developed state of consciousness, in practitioners of the Transcendental Meditation Technique -- providing evidence that anyone can develop higher states of consciousness, including the traits of 'peak performance' found in the fields of business and world-class athletics, through this programme. (more)
Dr Peter Swan demonstrates Vedic principles of nature's food cycle 8 August 2008 - Speaking 29 July 2008 on Maharishi Global Family Chat in continuation of the Global Guru Purnima Assembly in MERU, Netherlands, Dr Peter Swan, Minister of Communication for the Global Country of World Peace, honoured the knowledge of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi with a presentation on the food cycle and its underlying Vedic principles. (more)
Raja Michael Dillbeck reflects on Maharishi's achievements in the context of scientific research - Part III 28 July 2008 - Speaking 22 July 2008 on Maharishi Global Family Chat, Raja Michael Dillbeck, Raja of Invincible France for the Global Country of World Peace and leading expert on scientific research on the programmes of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, concluded his summary of Maharishi's many achievements as they relate to the field of modern science and scientific research. (more)
Raja Michael Dillbeck reflects on Maharishi's achievements in the context of scientific research - Part II 26 July 2008 - Speaking 22 July 2008 on Maharishi Global Family Chat, Raja Michael Dillbeck, Raja of Invincible France for the Global Country of World Peace and leading expert on scientific research on the programmes of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, summarized Maharishi's many achievements as they relate to the field of modern science and scientific research. (more)
Raja Michael Dillbeck reflects on Maharishi's achievements in the context of scientific research - Part I 25 July 2008 - Speaking 22 July 2008 on Maharishi Global Family Chat, Raja Michael Dillbeck, Raja of Invincible France for the Global Country of World Peace and leading expert on scientific research on the programmes of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, summarized Maharishi's many achievements as they relate to the field of modern science and scientific research. (more)
State considering proposal from Maharishi University of Management, USA, to create algae bioreactor 23 July 2008 - The State of Iowa is considering a proposal from Maharishi University of Management to create an algae bioreactor, which would both produce and refine algae for use as fuel. The university has applied to the Iowa Power Fund to help support the project, which is currently in the laboratory stage. (more)
German scientists inspired by correlations between quantum physics and consciousness 24 June 2008 - Speaking 17 June 2008 on Maharishi Global Family Chat, Col Gunther Chasse, International Deputy Minister of Invincible Defence for the Global Country of World Peace, reported on his recent meeting with a top physics professor at the University of the German Armed Forces in Munich. The professor later corresponded with Raja John Hagelin, world-renowned quantum physicist and Raja of Invincible America, to discuss topics of quantum physics and consciousness. (more)
Professor Eckhart Stein honoured for lifetime of achievements 21 June 2008 - Speaking 17 June 2008 on Maharishi's Global Family Chat, Raja Emanuel Schiffgens, Raja of Invincible Germany for the Global Country of World Peace, honoured Dr Eckhart Stein, world-renowned physicist and pioneer in Consciousness-Based Education. (more)
Maharishi University of Management to host conference on Transcendental Meditation Technique and brain function 31 May 2008 - Speaking recently on Maharishi Global Family Chat, Dr Robert Roth, National Director of Expansion for the Global Country of World Peace in the United States, reported plans for an international conference on the effects of the Transcendental Meditation Technique on brain functioning, to be held at Maharishi University of Management (MUM) in Fairfield, Iowa, USA. (more)
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Flops 10 Short Summaries of Top Stories
Ocean dead zones become a worldwide problem 14 August 2008 - Like a chronic disease spreading through the body, 'dead zones' with too little oxygen for life are expanding in the world's oceans. Robert J. Diaz of the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and co-author Rutger Rosenberg report in Friday's edition of the journal Science that there are now more than 400 dead zones around the world, double what the United Nations reported just two years ago. (more)
US: Researcher says Gulf dead zone bigger than ever due to pollution from fertilizers related to Mississippi River flooding 23 July 2008 - A 'dead zone' in the Gulf of Mexico off the Texas-Louisiana coast this year is likely to be the biggest ever and last longer than ever before, with marine life affected for hundreds of miles, a scientist warned. The Gulf of Mexico dead zone is so named because the oxygen-depleted water can kill marine life. The phenomenon is caused when salt water loses large amounts of oxygen, a condition known as hypoxia that is typically associated with an area off the Louisiana coast at the mouth of the Mississippi River. The fresh water and salt water don't mix well, keeping oxygen from filtering through to the sea bottom, which causes problems for fish, shrimp, crabs, and clams. This year's zone is believed to be caused by nutrient pollution from fertilizers that empty into rivers and eventually reach the Gulf. It has been aggravated by flood runoff from heavy spring rains and additional runoff moving into the Gulf from record floods along the Mississippi. (more)
Mother's smoking tied to oral birth defect 11 July 2008 - Pregnant women who smoke or regularly breathe second-hand smoke may be raising the odds that their baby will be born with a cleft lip, a new study shows. Cleft lip and cleft palate are among the most common types of birth defect. They arise when the tissues that form the roof of the mouth and the upper lip do not fuse properly, sometime between the fifth and ninth week of pregnancy. In the current study, Norwegian researchers found that women who smoked more than 10 cigarettes per day during their first trimester were nearly twice as likely to have a baby with a cleft lip as nonsmokers were. Similarly, nonsmoking women who were near a smoker for at least two hours each day had a 60 per cent higher risk than women who were not exposed to passive smoking. (more)
Severe danger to coral reefs caused by acidifying oceans 11 July 2008 - The carbon dioxide spewed into the atmosphere by factories, cars and power plants is not just raising temperatures. It is also causing what scientists call 'ocean acidification' as around 25 per cent of the excess CO2 is absorbed by the seas. The threat to hard-bodied marine organisms, such as coral reefs already struggling with warming waters, is alarming, and possibly quite imminent, marine scientists gathered this week for a coral reef conference in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, said. (more)
This summer may see first ice-free North Pole 28 June 2008 - There's a 50-50 chance that the North Pole will be ice-free this summer, which would be a first in recorded history, a leading ice scientist says. The weather and ocean conditions in the next couple of weeks will determine how much of the sea ice will melt, and early signs are not good. Preliminary February and March data from a NASA satellite shows that the circle of ice surrounding the North Pole is 'considerably thinner' than scientists have seen during the five years the satellite has been taking pictures, NASA ice scientist Jay Zwally said. The explanation is a warming climate and a weather phenomenon. (more)
US: Survey suggests research misconduct is common 19 June 2008 - Research misconduct at US institutions may be more common than previously suspected, with 9 per cent of scientists saying in a new survey that they personally had seen fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism. The findings come at a time of concern among US lawmakers and others about research integrity in the United States and abroad, financial conflicts of interest by scientists who get paid by drug companies, and study results being warped by the influence of pharmaceutical industry research funding. The findings indicate that more than 2,300 cases of misconduct may be occurring each year at US research sites. (more)
Mediterranean shark numbers drop dramatically 11 June 2008 - The number of sharks in the Mediterranean has fallen by 97 per cent in the last 200 years, putting the sea's ecological balance at risk, a report released on Wednesday said. 'It will have a major impact on the ecosystem because large predatory sharks are at the top of the food chain,' said Francesco Ferretti, the report's lead author. A report last month by the International Union for Conservation of Nature found 11 kinds of shark faced extinction due to overfishing, partly caused by booming demand for shark fin soup in Asia. Fishers from all over the world catch and trade sharks for their lucrative fins, often discarding their carcasses, the report said, noting Indonesia and Spain are among the top culprits. More of a problem in the Mediterranean is 'by-catch' -- where sharks are caught in long-line fishing meant to snag tuna and swordfish. (more)
China's shoreline waters seriously polluted - expert 8 June 2008 - Vast stretches of China's coastal waters are seriously polluted, and the country's coastal wetlands and mangrove forests are vanishing, Xinhua news agency reported on Sunday, citing a marine specialist. Severely affected areas included waters near East Liaoning, Bohai, and Hangzhou bays, and the estuaries of the Yellow, Yangtze, and Zhujiang rivers, as well as inshore areas of major coastal cities. (more)
US report: Caribbean monk seal declared extinct, monk seal population in serious danger 7 June 2008 - Federal officials have confirmed what biologists have long thought: The Caribbean monk seal has gone the way of the dodo. Humans hunting the docile creatures for research, food and blubber left the population unsustainable, say biologists who warn that Hawaiian and Mediterranean monk seals could be the next to go. The Hawaiian monk seal population, protected by NOAA, is declining at a rate of about 4 per cent annually, according to NOAA. The agency predicts the population could fall below 1,000 in the next three to four years, placing the mammal among the world's most endangered marine species. (more)
Rising ocean acidity threatens low-lying islands 2 June 2008 - Rising acidity in the ocean caused by seas absorbing greenhouse carbon dioxide could make low-lying island nations like Kiribati and the Maldives more vulnerable to storms as their coral reefs struggle to survive, say scientists. Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is at its highest level in the past 650,000 years, and half has now been dissolved into the oceans making them more acidic. Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels are expected to reach about double pre-industrial levels within this century, resulting in an acidification of oceans three times the level experienced during the last major rise in carbon dioxide during the last glacial period 15,000 years ago. (more)
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