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Reported from Steve Quayle:
- Biblical
Pool Uncovered in Jerusalem (August
09, 2005)
- Workers repairing a sewage pipe in the Old City of Jerusalem have
discovered the biblical Pool of Siloam, a freshwater reservoir that
was a major gathering place for ancient Jews making religious
pilgrimages to the city and the reputed site where Jesus cured a man
blind from birth, according to the Gospel of John. The pool was fed
by the now famous Hezekiah's Tunnel and is "a much grander
affair" than archeologists previously believed, with three
tiers of stone stairs allowing easy access to the water, said
Hershel Shanks, editor of the Biblical Archaeology Review, which
reported the find Monday. "Scholars have said that there wasn't
a Pool of Siloam and that John was using a religious conceit"
to illustrate a point, said New Testament scholar James H.
Charlesworth of the Princeton Theological Seminary. "Now we
have found the Pool of Siloam … exactly where John said it
was." more...
- Syrian
president visits Iran (August
09, 2005)
- Syrian President Bashar al-Assad arrived here Sunday for a two-day
official visit, the official IRNA news agency reported. Bashar,
who is heading a high-ranking delegation, was welcomed by his
Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at the Presidential Office,
the report said. During his stay in Tehran, Bashar is scheduled
to hold talks with high-ranking Iranian officials on issues of
mutual interest. Earlier, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid-Reza
Asefi said that Assad's visit to Tehran was taking place on two
topics -- offering felicitations to Ahmadinejad and holding
negotiations on bilateral and regional issues. Assad became the
first head of state visiting Iran after Ahmadinejad took office on
Wednesday, according to IRNA.Iranian media on Saturday branded Syria
as a strategic ally and highly praised the visit, saying it will
have a significant impact on political and economic fronts for Iran,
Syria and Lebanon. Syrian Prime Minister Mohammed Naji Otri
paid a visit to Iran in February, during which the two sides called
for a united front to confront economic sanctions imposed on them by
the United States. Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Ahmad Azizi
said in March that Iran-Syria cooperation had no military or
security nature.After the assassination of former Lebanese Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri on Feb. 14, Syria was forced to withdraw all
of its troops from Lebanon in late April in line with UN Security
Council Resolution 1559, ending a 29-year military presence in its
neighbor. Iran maintains close relations with pro-Syrian
Hezbollah, a Shiite militant group which helped end Israeli
occupation in south Lebanon in 2000.
- Hints
of quake under central USA (August
09, 2005)
- The sleeping giant of American earthquake faults, the New Madrid
zone in the middle of the country, may be showing new signs of
activity. The journal Nature reported in June that a
University of Memphis study had detected a half-inch of fault shift
in the past five years. The movement, detected with the Global
Positioning System (GPS), could be a sign that pressure is building
toward a significant quake in a region that's home to millions.
"We go from nothing moving to a little movement. That's a huge
difference," says Arch Johnston, director of the university's
Center for Earthquake Research and Information. more...
- Why
Great Minds Can't Grasp Consciousness (August
09, 2005)
- At a
physics meeting last October, Nobel laureate David Gross outlined 25
questions in science that he thought physics might help answer.
Nestled among queries about black holes and the nature of dark
matter and dark energy were questions that wandered beyond the
traditional bounds of physics to venture into areas typically
associated with the life sciences. One of the Gross's questions
involved human consciousness. He wondered whether scientists would
ever be able to measure the onset consciousness in infants and
speculated that consciousness might be similar to what physicists
call a "phase transition," an abrupt and sudden
large-scale transformation resulting from several microscopic
changes. The emergence of superconductivity in certain metals when
cooled below a critical temperature is an example of a phase
transition. In a recent email interview, Gross said he figures there
are probably many different levels of consciousness, but he believes
that language is a crucial factor distinguishing the human variety
from that of animals. Gross isn't the only physicist with ideas
about consciousness. more...
- Russian
Warships Heading to China for Joint War games
(August 09, 2005)
- The warships of the Russian Pacific Fleet which will take part in
the joint exercises with China left Vladivostok for China on Sunday,
according to the Itar-Tass news agency. The ships include BDK-11
large landing ship, the Marshal Shaposhnikov large anti-sub ship and
the Burny destroyer, a source in the Pacific Fleet press center was
quoted as saying. The first-ever joint exercises conducted by Russia
and China will be held on Aug. 18-25, and its first phase is
scheduled for Aug. 18-19 on territory of the Far Eastern military
district. Chiefs of Russian and Chinese Staffs will gather in
Vladivostok for consultations. The second phase is planned for Aug.
20-22 on the Chinese territory. There will be a shooting training on
Aug. 23-25, and the Russian and Chinese defense ministers will watch
it. more...
Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Bishop
caught in battle over living Buddha (August
09, 2005)
- The Bishop of London, the Rt Rev Richard Chartres, was at the
centre of an unholy row last night after he participated in an
exotic spiritual ceremony with a disputed living Buddha. Bishop
Chartres welcomed six other faith leaders to the celebration
"of friendship and trust" at St Ethelburga's, a London
church transformed into a peace centre since it was bombed by the
IRA in 1993. Thaye Dorje's prescence caused a dispute among senior
Buddhists
But the bishop, who was supposed to have taken a full part in the
event, was forced to minimise his role amid the controversy. He was
represented by a stand-in as showers of rose petals were thrown,
prayers were read in Latin and Sanskrit and a colourful Japanese
tapestry was unveiled. The spirit of enlightenment had been
seriously disturbed after senior Buddhists denounced the presence at
the event of His Holiness Thaye Dorje. The 22-year-old's claim to be
the 17th Karmapa, one of the most revered figures in Buddhism, is
fiercely disputed. more...
- Atlantic
braces for record hurricane season (August
09, 2005)
- This year is set to be one of the worst on record for hurricanes,
scientists say, amid spectacular new evidence about the power of
these storms and fears that global warming is intensifying them.
Less than halfway through the six-month tropical-storm season,
experts are already warning that the brooding western Atlantic may
serve up as many as 21 severe storms and hurricanes this year. If
so, that would be more than twice the average annual tally since
records began in 1851. "The 2005 hurricane season could rival
historically significant years such as 1887, which had 19 named
storms; 1933, which had 21 named storms; and 1995, which had 19
named storms," says Barry Keim, assistant professor of
geography and anthropology at Louisiana State University, and a
climatologist for the state. more...
- Scientists
now creating exotic 'mutant mice' with ease (August
09, 2005)
- They're being bred now by the millions, the mutants, created to
carry the ghastliest of diseases for the benefit of the human race.
Since researchers published the mouse's entire genetic make-up in
map form three years ago, increasingly exotic rodents are being
created with relative ease. There's the Schwarzenegger mouse --
injected with muscle-building genes. The marathon mouse, which never
seems to tire. Researchers recently engineered some mice to be
extremely addicted to nicotine, and others to be immune to scrapie,
a close cousin to the brain-wasting mad cow disease. And scientists
are in hot pursuit of a Methuselah mouse, able to cheat death long
after its natural brethren meet their maker. Millions of these and
other mutant mice are routinely created now, by injecting
disease-causing genes or "knocking out" genes in mouse
embryos. Their decreasing cost and increasing availability is
helping researchers in pursuit of all manner of disease cures. more...
- Al-Qaida's
next base Jewish homes? (August
09, 2005)
- With Israel slated to withdraw its Jewish communities from the
Gaza Strip this month, and analysts warning Hamas may gain control
of the area, there have been growing indications the Palestinian
terror group's ideological "friend" al-Qaida may be
invited to use Gaza as the next base from which to stage its global
jihad. As WND reported, a group claiming to be
"Al-Qaida-Palestine, Jihad Brigades in the Border Land,"
announced last week the establishment of a cell in the Gaza Strip.
The group said it carried out a recent attack using a new kind of
rocket – the Sinjal – against Neve Dekalim, the largest
community in Gaza's Gush Katif slate of Jewish neighborhoods. more...
e-mail: watchmanbiblestudy comcast.net
http://www.watchmanbiblestudy.com/
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