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Reported from Steve Quayle:
- Oil industry
awash in record levels of cash (July
22, 2005)
- When major oil companies report their quarterly profits next week,
they're once again expected to post record numbers. With crude
trading around $60 a barrel, the oil industry is enjoying one of the
biggest windfalls in its history. But as the industry looks for
places to put that cash, it's finding it harder and harder to put
funds to work finding new deposits of oil and natural gas. By just
about any measure, the past three years have produced one of the
biggest cash gushers in the oil industry’s history. Since January
of 2002, the price of crude has tripled, leaving oil producers awash
in profits. During that period, the top 10 major public oil
companies have sold some $1.5 trillion worth of crude, pocketing
profits of more than $125 billion. “This is the mother of all
booms,” said Oppenheimer & Co. oil analyst Fadel Gheit.
“They have so much profit, it’s almost an embarrassment of
riches. They don’t know what to do with it. more...
- Rare
Yemeni riots leave 16 dead (July
22, 2005)
- What began as anger over the country's struggling economy turned
into a rare open expression of fury at Yemen's leadership, with
rioters burning pictures of top officials, according to witnesses. Security
forces opened fire on protesters mobbing around government buildings
in the capital San'a -- including the oil ministry -- launched tear
gas and beat people with batons. Protesters responded by pelting
them with stones. Clashes erupted in at least a half dozen cities,
with rioters sweeping into a police station in one town, freeing all
the prisoners they found. more...
Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Strong
quake hits Indian islands (July
24, 2005)
- A strong earthquake of 7.2 magnitude has shaken India's Andaman
and Nicobar islands, but there have been no early reports of
casualties or damage. "The quake was felt in all the islands of
the Andaman and Nicobar chain," a police official told Reuters,
referring to the more than 550 islands in the remote Indian Ocean
archipelago that was devastated by last year's tsunami. In the
capital, Port Blair, hundreds of people fled their homes in panic.
The US Geological Survey web site has said authorities near the epicenter
of the tremor should be aware of local tsunami risks.
- Puzzling
activity at Mt. St. Helen's (July
24, 2005)
- There's a whole lotta shakin' going on at Mount St. Helens these
days as the restless peak does what it has done for thousands of
years: build new lava domes that totter and fall and become the
foundations for still more new ones. A series of unusually strong
earthquakes -- exceeding magnitude 3 -- has been reported in recent
days by the Cascades Volcano Laboratory in Vancouver, Wash., about
50 miles south of the mountain. The latest was a magnitude 3.1 quake
early Thursday that was accompanied by a rockfall. Quakes of that
magnitude would go mostly unnoticed elsewhere, but they're a clue to
activity at a volcano. Rockfalls during the quakes send up plumes of
ash. Some tower thousands of feet above the 8,364-foot crater rim; a
March plume reached 30,000 feet, raising concerns about area air
traffic. Some plumes don't escape the crater and some wispy, gritty
puffs crest just above the rim. more...
- Quake
hits Tokyo (July
24, 2005)
- A magnitude-6.0 earthquake shook the Tokyo area yesterday,
injuring at least 27 people, rattling buildings across the sprawling
capital and temporarily suspending flights and train services.
- Moslems
Destroy Temple Mount Artifacts (July
24, 2005)
- In November 1999, the Wakf or Islamic Trust that oversees the
Temple Mount, began illegally excavating an area at the southern end
of the compound. Workers dug up tons of earth and dumped the
“rubble” in the Kidron Valley. more...
- Quakes
jolt different parts of Iran (July
24, 2005)
- Three earthquakes hit the cities of Qidar, Genaveh and Kerman
Sunday. According to Iran's State News Agency (IRNA), the quakes
were respectively measuring 4.1, 3.7 and 3.9 on the Richter scale.
The seismological base of the Geophysics Institute, affiliated to
Tehran University, said in a statement that the 4.1 magnitude quake
hit the city of Qidar in the northwestern province of Zanjan at
08:20 hours local time (0350 GMT).
- Egyptian
TV 'experts' blame Israel (July
24, 2005)
- Several Egyptian "security experts" and "political
analysts" interviewed by Arab TV stations after the Sharm
e-Sheikh bombings on Saturday claimed that Israel and Jews were
behind the carnage. The accusations were made despite a claim of
responsibility by a group citing ties to al-Qaida, according to a
statement posted on an Islamic Web site. Similar charges have been
made against Israel in the past, particularly after the suicide
attack at the Taba Hilton Hotel in October 2004 and after the 9/11
attacks in New York and Washington. more...
- Rare
Scrolls Reveal Early Biblical Writing (July
24, 2005)
- Three ancient scrolls — one parchment and two silver —
recently have been identified as containing some of the world's
earliest known verses from the Hebrew Bible, also known as the Old
Testament. The discovery of two fragments of a 2,000-year-old
parchment scroll in the Judean Desert was announced last week by
Israeli archaeologist Chanan Eshel of Tel Aviv's Bar Ilan
University. The fragments contain verses from Leviticus, the third
book of the Hebrew Bible, attributed to the tribe of Levi from which
Israeli priests are said to be descended. The book consists of
regulations for both the priests and their followers. The two silver
scrolls were found by Bar Ilan archaeologist Gabriel Barkay in 1979
in a cave at Ketef Hinnom near Jerusalem. It was only until
recently, however, that technology made it possible for scientists
to read the scrolls, which date to the 7th century BC and likely
were worn around the neck as protective amulets. Project leader
Bruce Zuckerman told Discovery News that the scrolls not only are
the oldest known Hebrew amulets, but they also are the earliest
known artifacts to quote Biblical verses. more...
- 83
Die in Car Bombs at Egyptian Resort (July
23, 2005)
- A rapid series of car bombs and another blast ripped through a
luxury hotel and a coffeeshop in the Egyptian Red Sea resort of
Sharm el-Sheik early Saturday, killing at least 83, a hospital
official said. Terrified European and Arab tourists fled into the
night, and rescue workers said the death toll could still rise. more...
- Tokyo
Shaken by Magnitude 6.1 Quake; No Tsunami Risk (Update4) (July
23, 2005)
- Downtown Tokyo was shaken by a magnitude 6.1 earthquake at 4:35
p.m. local time. The tremor presented no risk of tsunami, the
powerful ocean surges sometimes caused by seismic activity, the
Japan Meteorological Agency said. The quake was centered 75
kilometers below the earth's surface about 30 kilometers southeast
of Tokyo in Chiba prefecture, according to the U.S. Geological
Survey. Buildings shook in the capital and the jolt was felt
throughout the Kanto region, which includes Tokyo and neighboring
Saitama, Kanagawa and Chiba prefectures, the agency said. more...
- Shh!
Don't tell them it's aliya (July
22, 2005)
- How do you get an American to leave the comforts of his US home
for a life in faraway Israel? Tell him how much money he'll save –
and don't tell him it's aliya. At least, that's the strategy the
Jewish Agency for Israel is hoping will help make 2005 a banner year
for North American aliya. In a campaign spearheaded by the Jewish
Agency's New York-based Israel Aliyah Center, the agency is trying
to draw North Americans to Israel with the lure of free education.
Rather than advertise aliya, which carries with it the incidental
benefit of free tuition, the Jewish Agency instead is promoting
programs of free education in Israel - with nary a mention that
aliya is a mandatory component. more...
e-mail: watchmanbiblestudy comcast.net
http://www.watchmanbiblestudy.com/
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