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I've been gone a couple days, so this is longer than
usual cause lots of stuff is happening.
Reported from Steve Quayle:
- London
Blasts Cause Chaos On Tube (July 21, 2005)
- London's Tube network has been plunged into chaos with stations
cleared after minor blasts on two trains and a bus. Met Police chief
Sir Ian Blair said three Tube lines were suspended but it was time
London returned to normal. The minor explosions - two weeks after
blasts killed 56 - involved detonators only, a BBC reporter said.
There was one injury. Police sources say the blasts may have been
near simultaneous and that they are being linked with the 7 July
bombs. They say a number of fugitives are being sought. Two people
have been arrested in Whitehall. more...
- Hollywood
Finds Jesus (July
21, 2005)
- Hollywood has found a new marketing tool, Jesus Christ. Following
the tremendous success of Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the
Christ" which took in $370 million at the domestic box office,
mainstream Hollywood is adjusting to what it perceives to be a
rising religiosity in America. Directors, studio executives and
marketing experts have been seeking to entice an audience that made
its power felt with "Passion," according to a report in
the International Herald Tribune. "Mel Gibson did us a
service," said Bob Waliszewski, a media specialist with Focus
on the Family, an evangelical group. "The Hollywood elites'
eyes widened big time. They said, 'I thought the church was dead. Is
it possible that we don't know what's happening in state after state?
And the answer is a resounding yes." more...
- As
Hot As It's Ever Been (July 20, 2005)
- Temperatures tied all-time highs for both Denver and Colorado on
Wednesday. The mercury reached 114 degrees Fahrenheit in Sedgwick,
near the Nebraska border. That matched temperatures recorded in Las
Animas in 1933 and Sedgwick in 1954, according to the Colorado
Climate Center of Colorado State University. In Denver, it was 105
degrees, equaling a record set on Aug. 8, 1878. Wednesday's reading
was at Denver International Airport, the official checkpoint. It was
106 degrees downtown. The heat didn't seem to have a great effect on
most people's activities. There were some power outages and some
heat maladies, but most kept on with their routines. more...
Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Tunnel
revealed at U.S.-Canada border (July 21, 2005)
- After monitoring its construction for several months, federal
agents arrested three Canadians in connection with an elaborate
smuggling tunnel at the U.S.-Canada border in Washington state.
Border Patrol officials, who provided video of the tunnel, said it
was the first discovered on the northern border. Thirty-three
tunnels have been found along the U.S.-Mexican border in California
and Arizona. Police said the tunnel, about 360 feet long, was used
for smuggling marijuana, but it also was a threat to national
security. more...
- Israeli
march to Gaza called off (July 21, 2005)
- After an intense standoff last night between tens of thousands of
protesters and a massive police force, the Israeli march to Gaza to
halt next month's evacuation of the area was called off. Meanwhile,
about two thousand marchers still are attempting to reach Gaza and
breach its main checkpoint. Yesterday, tens of thousands of marchers
rested in the Kfar Meimon farming community about 15 miles south of
Gaza after pushing through a barrier of thousands of security forces
who tried to halt their protest the night before. The marchers
awakened to find themselves completely surrounded by a force of over
20,000 police officers and soldiers. more...
- Canada
Legalizes Gay Marriage (July 21, 2005)
- Canada legalized gay marriage Wednesday, becoming the world's
fourth nation to grant full legal rights to same-sex couples.
Supreme Court Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin signed the
legislation making it law, hours after it was approved by the Senate
late Tuesday night despite strong opposition from Conservatives and
religious leaders. The bill gives homosexual couples the same rights
as those in traditional unions between a man and a woman, something
already legal in eight of Canada's 10 provinces and in two of its
three territories. The legislation drafted by Prime Minister Paul
Martin's minority Liberal Party government easily passed the Senate,
which essentially rubber stamps any bill already passed by the House
of Commons, which passed it late last month. more...
- Quake
sounds reveal Earth 'ripping apart' (July
21, 2005)
- Scientists are gaining insight about December's devastating
earthquake and tsunami from the actual sounds of the magnitude 9.3
quake in the Indian Ocean. "It's really quite an eerie sound to
hear the Earth ripping apart like that. We hear it on smaller
earthquakes quite frequently but something of this scale that goes
on for eight minutes is very much unprecedented," said Maya
Tolstoy, a marine geophysicist at Columbia University's
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. "It really gave me the chills
when I first heard it," she said. The dramatic soundtrack of
the rupture of the Sumatra-Andaman Fault comes from a little known,
and sometimes hard- to- access resource. The microphones that
captured the sound are part of a global network of instruments that
monitor compliance with the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. more...
- New
super bug outbreak sweeps southern England (July
21, 2005)
- An outbreak of a super bug resistant to antibiotics has infected
more than 1,000 people and caused dozens of deaths. The bug, which
can lead to blood poisoning, is spreading in southern England and is
more serious than Clostridium difficile, which hit the headlines
last month after a virulent strain infected 15 hospitals. The new super bug,
an antibiotic-resistant strain of E.coli, put 357 people in hospital
in the Southampton area in 2004, half of all those infected, and
caused 29 deaths. It is still spreading through the community and
attempts to control it have so far failed. more...
- 400
scientists skeptical of Darwin (July 21, 2005)
- More than 400 scientists from all disciplines have signed onto a
growing list of skeptics of claims for the ability of random
mutation and natural selection to account for the complexity of
life, according to the Seattle-based Discovery Institute.
"Darwin's theory of evolution is the great white elephant of
contemporary thought," said David Berlinski, a mathematician
and philosopher of science with Discovery Institute's Center for
Science and Culture, or CSC. "It is large, almost completely
useless, and the object of superstitious awe." The Discovery
Institute, a leading proponent of Intelligent Design, first
published its Statement of Dissent from Darwin in 2001. more...
- `Godcasts'
booming across the Internet (July 21, 2005)
- Behold the Godcaster, spreading religion and spirituality, one
iPod at a time. Godcasts, religious and spiritually themed podcasts,
have been fruitful and multiplied, becoming the most popular use of
the new online technology since it debuted less than a year ago.
Searches for "Godcast" and "pod preachers"
increased 355 percent in just one month this spring, according to
the Internet search engine Lycos, on par with searches for the super
model Naomi Campbell and the television show "ER." In a
podcast, radio-style broadcasts are posted on the Internet and can
be downloaded to an iPod or MP3 player so that the listener can tune
in anywhere, anytime. What makes podcasting so novel is that fans
can also subscribe to their favorite podcasts, programming their
digital music player to download the latest show
automatically. more...
- CVS,
7-Eleven, and others have announced plans to deploy contactless
readers in test markets nationwide (July
20, 2005)
- On Track Innovations announced that its Saturn 5000 contactless
reader has received certification from Visa USA to support its
contactless payment program. The Saturn 5000 has already received
certification by major US financial institutions. Visa along with
MasterCard and American Express have already announced that they are
in different stages of implementation for contactless payment
programs. Recently 7-Eleven, CVS, and others have announced plans to
deploy contactless readers in test markets nationwide. more...
- Death
Toll Up to 13 in Phoenix Heat Wave (July
20, 2005)
- A blistering heat wave is being blamed for the deaths of at least
13 people in Phoenix, prompting officials to ask for donations of
ice and water bottles for those sweltering without air conditioning.
Eleven of the victims since Saturday were homeless, and the other
two were elderly women, including one whose home cooling system
wasn't on, police said Wednesday. more...
- An
earthquake measuring 5.4 on the Richter scale jolted Taiwan (July
20, 2005)
- The quake struck at 9:06 pm (1306 GMT), with an epicenter 38.9
kilometers (23.34 miles) northeast of Suao, a coastal town in
northeastern Ilan county. It originated 1.8 kilometers under the
sea, the Seismology Center said Wednesday. The strong quake came
hours after a weaker 4.6-magnitude earthquake with an epicenter 26
kilometers (15 miles) northwest of Peinan village in the southeast.
Taiwan, lying near the junction of two tectonic plates, is shaken
regularly by earthquakes. The country's worst, measuring 7.6 on the
Richter scale, struck in September 1999 and left some 2,400 people
dead.
- Israeli
Police Seal Off Gaza Settlers
(July 20, 2005)
- Israeli police backed by officers on horseback sealed off an
encampment filled with thousands of Jewish settlers and their
supporters Tuesday, trading punches and dragging off protesters in
the biggest confrontation yet over Israel's withdrawal from Gaza.
The government has vowed to stop protesters from marching to Gaza
Strip settlements marked for evacuation in August, fearing that more
Israeli hard-liners at the sites would further complicate the
contentious pullout. more...
- Former
Bush official to get RFID tag
(July 19, 2005)
- Tommy Thompson, the Health and Human Services Secretary in
President Bush's first term and a former Governor of Wisconsin, is
going to get tagged. Thompson has joined the board of Applied
Digital, which owns VeriChip, the company that specializes in
subcutaneous RFID tags for humans and pets. To help promote the
concepts behind the technology, Thompson himself will get an RFID
tag implanted under his skin. more...
- Second
Earthquake Hits Big Island
(July 19, 2005)
- Residents of the Big Island, Maui and Oahu felt another temblor
Sunday morning. The estimated five-point-two magnitude earthquake
struck at 9:15. The U-S Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano
Observatory located the quake off the coast, about 69 miles south of
Hilo. No injuries or damage were reported as the result of the
quake.
- Moderate
Earthquake In Molucca Sea
(July 19, 2005)
- A moderate earthquake measuring 5.8 on the Richter scale occurred
at 3.37 am Tuesday in the Molucca Sea of Indonesia. According to the
Malaysian Meteorological Services Department, the earthquake
occurred at 0.3 degrees South and 125.7 degrees East of the Molucca
Sea or 987 km southeast of Tawau, Sabah. It said in a statement that
tremors might not be felt in the east coast of Sabah.
- Russia’s
Basmanny Court Asked Again to Criminalize Jewish Organizations
(July 19, 2005)
- Yet another demand to ban Jewish religious organizations in Russia
was lodged Monday with Moscow’s Basmanny Court. The 15,000
signatories have asked the court to force prosecutors to launch a
criminal case against the leaders of Jewish organizations that, in
their words, are “the propagators of the morals of Shulchan Aruch,”
the Interfax news agency quoted the letter as saying. more...
- 100,000
Israelis march to Gaza (July 19, 2005)
- Nearly 100,000 people have poured into a central meeting site
several miles south of Gaza for a massive protest rally against next
month's Gaza evacuation. The protesters will shortly begin marching
to Gaza to halt the evacuation, while over 10,000 Israeli police and
soldiers prepare to stop them. The Yesha settlers council last month
called for tens of thousands to meet for a rally today in the
southern town of Nativot and walk the 20 miles to the main entrance
to Gush Katif, the large slate of Jewish neighborhoods in Gaza. The
rally was called for 4 p.m. local time but was postponed when only
about 4,000 people were able to get past dozens of makeshift
checkpoints on the roads leading to the area. more...
- The
sweltering Arctic
(July 19, 2005)
- As two sea-doos bounced around in the cool water, the river was an
ideal place for residents of this Nunavik community to escape from
the oppressive heat. “Half the community is there, I’ve never
seen so many people in the water before,” said one woman who
confessed to going to work wearing a wet swimsuit under her clothes
to keep cool. Temperatures in this Eastern Hudson Bay community hit
36.6 C on Monday, making Kuujjuaraapik the hottest place in Quebec
and breaking the previous record of 29.4 C, set in 1969. But Tuesday
was even hotter. The day’s high climbed to 37 C, breaking the
previous record high of 28.3 C set in 1998. These temperatures were
much higher than the normal temperature range of around 15 C. more...
- Drought
sweeps away tons of soil (July 18, 2005)
- Australia is getting flatter as a combination of drought and wind
sweeps millions of tons of topsoil into the ocean, an expert has
warned. Griffith University dust storm scientist Grant McTainsh said
that recent rainfall across Australia's eastern states could,
ironically, fuel a fierce dust storm this year like that responsible
for blowing 4.85 million tons of topsoil into the atmosphere and
ocean in less than 24 hours in October 2002. "That was a
massive huge front that extended from Mildura (in Victoria) to Mount
Isa (in Queensland) and was equivalent to more than 100,000
semi-trailer loads of top soil," Dr McTainsh said. "For
comparison, annual sediment captured by the Brisbane River equals
about 100,000 tons annually. more...
- Drought
tightens its deadly grip in Europe
(July 18, 2005)
- Drought in Europe tightened its deadly grip on Monday as a forest
blaze that killed 11 firefighters raged in Spain, and with weekend
temperatures soaring in France, authorities scrambled to protect the
elderly. Spain and Portugal are suffering their worst droughts since
records began in the 1940s, and in western France, water levels are
at their lowest since the major drought of 1976. Parched conditions
now stretch from north Africa to the French capital, causing
billions of euros worth of damage as crops shrivel, rivers dry up
and pastures turn to dust. more...
- Million
at risk in Italy heat wave
(July 18, 2005)
- A heat wave in Italy has put the health of one million people at
risk and the government has warned the situation could be even worse
than the summer of 2003 when 20,000 people died due to soaring
temperatures. Authorities have asked local doctors to keep an eye on
their patients above 75 years of age who are most vulnerable, hoping
to avoid a repeat of the death-rate of two years ago which has just
been revised up from 8,000. "We are faced with a heat wave that
is equal if not worse than in 2003 (and) around one million people
are at risk," Health Minister Francesco Storace told a news
conference. more...
- Jewish
Settlers Clash With Israeli Forces
(July 18, 2005)
- Israeli security forces clashed early Monday with Jewish settlers
trying to break a blockade placed on Gaza Strip settlements, a
possible preview of confrontations later in the day when opponents
to a planned withdrawal from Gaza try to march to the coastal area.
The two days of clashes at the crossing point between Jewish
settlers and police are expected to get worse when security forces
enter the Gaza Strip in mid-August to evacuate 8,500 settlers. In
early September the army will remove an additional 500 settlers from
four West Bank settlements. Elsewhere, Israel on Sunday threatened
to invade Gaza if Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas does not control
militants who have stepped up rocket and mortar attacks ahead of
Israel's planned pullout from the coastal strip next month. more...
- Earthquake
centers near NyaungU
(July 18, 2005)
- An earthquake of moderate intensity 5.5 Richter Scale with its
epicentre near NyaungU, about 270 miles north of Kaba Aye
seismological observatory was recorded at 7 hours, 35 minutes and 46
seconds MST today. The earthquake caused no damage.
- Another
earthquake shakes the Big Island (July 18, 2005)
- The estimated five-point-two magnitude temblor struck at 9:15 and
was felt throughout the Big Island and as far away as Maui and Oahu.
- Moderate
earthquake jolts Kupang eastern Indonesia (July
18, 2005)
- A 5.6-magnitude earthquake jolted the eastern Indonesian province
of East Nusa Tenggara on Monday morning, but there were no reports
of casualty or damage, officials said. The quake shook Kupang, the
provincial capital of East Nusa Tenggara on the western part of
Timor island at about 8:05 a.m. local time, said Wijayanto, an
official at Jakarta's Meteorology and Geophysics Agency (BMG).
- Earthquake
Jolts Mount St. Helens Volcano
(July 17, 2005)
- A magnitude 3 earthquake rattled Mount St. Helens on Friday,
triggering rockfall and sending an ash plume above the crater rim,
the U.S. Geological Survey reported.
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