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  • Texas UFO And Jets May Have Entered Restricted Presidential Airspace  By : Bill Knell
    A new video has surfaced and been presented by Stephenville, Texas, resident Steve Allen, the owner of a freight company and a witness to the sighting on January 8, 2008. Allen says that the video of a strange object in the sky was presented to him by an anonymous source and that it was taken on the occasion of the January 8th sighting. The video appears very similar to another UFO film taken years before which shows an object moving extremely fast and making bizarre and aerodynamically impossible moves.
  • Alissa Haddad - Lebanon News And Great Opportunities  By : Alissa Haddad
    Investing overseas is not unusualm but for first-time investors who want value for their hard-earned dollars, this kind of investment is novel. However, scouting for breaks can be frustrating, especially if you don't know where to look. Interestingly, Lebanon news classifieds have it all detailed and the best bet is real estate.
  • Alissa Haddad - Lebanese News: Getting A Clear Picture From The Middle East  By : Alissa Haddad
    Reading the morning's newspaper over a cup of coffee is a time-honored ritual. But the Internet has changed all that. The newspaper is contested by online news that include riveting videos and virtual tours. The "close encounter" experience heightens your satisfaction of reading Lebanese news and international summits for global concerns. On top of all this, you are alerted to breaking headlines minute by minute.
  • Cosmetics Fairy - Collagen Skin Care  By : Cosmetics Fairy
    Collagen is also one of the most abundant proteins found in mammals. Approximately one quarter of all of the protein in your body is collagen. Collagen is the main protein of connective tissue. It has great tensile strength, and is the main component of ligaments and tendons. It is responsible for skin elasticity, and its degradation leads to wrinkles that accompany aging. Collagen also fills out the cornea where it is present in crystalline form.
  • Anthony J. Namata - America’s Impending Recession Is Good News For MLM  By : Anthony J. Namata
    The United States’ Recession of 1937 -38 was a sharp economic downturn. In two months, unemployment rose from 5 million to over 9 million, reaching almost 12 million in early 1938. As unemployment rose, consumers’ expenditures declined, leading to further cutbacks in production. During the recovery phase that began in mid-1938 and when the war came, manufacturing employment leaped from 11 million in 1940 to 18 million in 1943. Back then the manufacturing industry saved the day, but today, with the advent of information technology that has in recent years been pioneering the telecommuting lifestyle, network marketing - otherwise known as multi-level marketing (MLM) - is set to come to the rescue of those brave and sharp enough to grab a work-from-home opportunity when they saw one.
  • Tom Phelps - Global Warming’s Fever  By : Tom Phelps
    Increasingly the view of mankind by mankind is that of intruder. In many ways it would seem that we are the earth’s enemy and our very existence is depleting the earth of resources that could keep an environmental balance.
  • Sarah BB - Climate Change On Coral Reefs  By : Sarah BB
    The loss of the coral reefs will have a catastrophic effect on communities that rely on them, many of which rely on fish and other marine life that shelter in the reefs. It would leave coastlines open to the effects of storm surges and damage lifeline revenue from tourism. Among one of the first to fall will be Australia's Great Barrier Reef. The world's largest organic structure will fall victim of the acidifying oceans.
  • Sarah BB - A Good Diet Is Essential  By : Sarah BB
    Without a good sustainable diet in your life you will find that it will be more difficult to lose weight than not. Although exercise is good, exercise alone won’t do you a bit of good if you are constantly breaking food barriers and snacking away whenever the mood strikes you.
  • Sarah BB - Global Warming Topics  By : Sarah BB
    Carbon dioxide, aka CO2 is a colourless and odourless gas made up of two oxygen atoms and one carbon atom. CO2 is produced when carbon is burned in an excess of oxygen. E.G. it is released into the atmosphere during natural forest fires and the man-made combustion of fossil fuels. CO2 can be found in other natural sources like volcanic eruptions, decay of dead organic matter (Plants and Animals ETC), evaporation from the oceans and breathing. Carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere by carbon dioxide absorbers, known as "sinks".
  • Nahshon Roberts - Video Surveillance Goes International  By : Nahshon Roberts
    Canada began taking advantage of video surveillance in the early nineties. It is widely used by such establishments as banks, restaurants, and convenience stores. Video surveillance is also usually present in offices, apartments, and transit stations. A large part of all robberies in Canada are captured on videotape. Needless to say, this is a huge help to law enforcement personnel. Even missing persons cases are solved with the help of surveillance systems.
  • Nahshon Roberts - Video Surveillance In The Kingdom  By : Nahshon Roberts
    Video surveillance in the United Kingdom started n 1986 in an industrial estate outside the town of King's Lynn. Video surveillance cameras were installed and their usefulness was immediately apparent. Before the cameras were put in place, almost 60 crimes were recorded. Two years after installation, there were no crimes reported. Needless to say, other town and cities followed suit.
  • Alan Graham - Check Out Charities: 5 Tips For Choosing A Worthwhile Charity And Getting Involved  By : Alan Graham
    There are so many ways to give of ourselves, our money and our time. We can volunteer for a local charity or send money overseas to the needy in faraway lands. When one’s heart is in the right place, any act of giving is a worthwhile pursuit. Still, with all of the options available to us, it makes sense that we think carefully about the form our giving will take.
  • Donald Mckenzie Jr - Global Warming - 10 Simple Ways To Lower Your Carbon Emissions  By : Donald Mckenzie Jr
    Replace a regular incandescent light bulb with a compact fluorescent light bulb. These light bulbs use significantly less energy than a regular bulb. This simple switch will save a couple thousand pounds of carbon dioxide a year.
  • David Mark - Peak Oil: Get Ready, Its Here  By : David Mark
    Most people know that oil being a fossil fuel is limited. This limitation on it's supply is a given, yet because scientists and geologists place the oil termination date around 2080 people think there is still plenty of time. This couldn't be farther from the truth. Like all limited resources oil production cost versus supply runs on a bell curve. This bell curve like all bell curves has a peak. Before the peak, oil has a reasonable enough supply to offset the price of extraction. After the peak the supply is not enough to warrant extraction.
  • Diane Diekman - Kobe Earthquake - Interview With A Survivor  By : Diane Diekman
    I interviewed a survivor of that earthquake. Ruth Harimoto grew up in Tokyo, the daughter of Lutheran missionaries from Wisconsin. In 1995 she was living in Kobe with her husband, Paul, and their two young sons.
  • John Hill - UK Asbestos Regulations  By : John Hill
    Research has shown that asbestos fibres are the catalyst for many diseases including Lung Cancer, Pleural Thickening and Mesothelioma. With this research in mind, and conclusive proof that asbestos kills, many governments from around the world have hastened to ban the usage of asbestos in any form. Many laws and legislations have been put in place to ensure that asbestos is not imported manufactured or used.
  • Donald Mckenzie Jr - Global Warming - 5 Simple Ways To Go Green And Save The Environment  By : Donald Mckenzie Jr
    Almost everyone today uses health supplements for good living. Often times they will go out and buy a large amount of bottles containing different vitamins. One great way to save on having to deal with the many bottles is the purchase multivitamins. Not only are they great for your health, but they are like having a lot of vitamins combined into one. This step will also help you to save a great deal of money.
  • Gavin Dye - What Are The Pros And Cons To Solar Energy  By : Gavin Dye
    1. It is a cheaper way to generate energy, than the normal means of energy generation. The suns power is free, and is a natural resource, using it means that you are not burning any fossil fuels that can ruin the earth’s atmosphere. It truly is an environmentally friendly alternative.
  • Christophe Catesson - The Real Causes Of Global Warming - Find Out How Our Daily Habits Have Disastrous Effects For The Planet  By : Christophe Catesson
    When we use fossil energies, such as coal, the oil or the gas, we burn carbon, adding thus carbon dioxide into the atmosphere: about 20 billion tons per year in the world. The oceans and the forests and the plants; do away with about the half of this excess of carbon dioxide. However, this concentration does not stop growing: from 0.028% fifty years ago to 0.0365% today.
  • Sohail Inayatullah - Five Futures For Pakistan  By : Sohail Inayatullah
    While the assassination of Benazir Bhutto certainly plunged Pakistan into one of its works crisis in decades, the recent successful electionsi appear to have brought hope back again. The extremist parties did poorly, and even with a low turn out and election violence, it appears that the latest cycle of military rule is over. But how long will this cycle last?
  • Johnny Summerton - Sarkozy Sees Sense On Blair Presidency  By : Johnny Summerton
    That should come as a relief to many a committed Europhile. During his decade in office Blair did little to move Britain any closer to the heart of EU policy making. On the contrary, if anything he pandered to a domestic public that had been force-fed euroscepticism for far too long.
  • Johnny Summerton - The Holiday That Was, Then Wasn’t And Now Is  By : Johnny Summerton
    But the seeds of confusion were sown in 2003 though as the government sought a knee-jerk response to the fatal heat wave in June of that year, which killed more than 11,000 (mainly) elderly people. Some bright spark in government hit on the idea of scrapping Whit Monday as a holiday and replacing it with a “Day of Solidarity.”
  • Warren Cornelius - Violence Erupts In Zimbabwe  By : Warren Cornelius
    According to the Associated Press, Zimbabwe’s opposition party and its presidential candidate Morgan Tsvangirai have linked the recent surge in violence after last months presidential election to the security forces and “war veterans” that are loyal to Robert Mugabe.
  • Anthony Arrigo - The Enemy Of The Night  By : Anthony Arrigo
    Light pollution is harmful, just as other forms of pollution are harmful. Also, it is relatively unnecessary, the glow that light pollution causes in the night sky, known as sky glow is not needed. One could might argue that light pollution is a ‘necessary’ effect of progress, but this is not true. Light pollution comes from inefficient lighting sources, which shine light aimlessly into the night sky. These lights that shine into the sky do not increase nighttime safety or security. After all, lights that shine downward or where they are more appropriately needed are those which increase safety and security.
  • Johnny Summerton - The Knives Are Out  By : Johnny Summerton
    Segolene Royal officially announced her intention to stand last Friday. And now the man many consider will be her main opponent, Bertrand Delanoë, has released a book “De l’audace” in which he sets out his vision for the future of the party and also takes aim at Royal.
  • Johnny Summerton - The First Lady Sings  By : Johnny Summerton
    Either way for fans and detractors alike July 21 has been confirmed as the release date for Carla Bruni-Sarkozy’s new album. It will be her first since she took up residence alongside her husband, Nicolas Sarkozy, at the president’s official residence, the Elysée Palace.
  • Paula Barton - Spray Foam Insulation  By : Paula Barton
    A power provider, burning fossil fuels, provides all of the power provided to our houses. By wasting this power each and every one of us is burning more fossil fuel than required. Admittedly looking at the power the individual wastes does not mount to a great deal, but if you multiply that by all the homes in the USA (119,117,000), that is an awful lot of wasted energy. If each and every household changed only one thing think what might be saved!
  • Johnny Summerton - A Taxing Day As Sarkozy Goes Walkabout Among The Fruit And Veg  By : Johnny Summerton
    And as soon as he was done with mixing with the masses it was off to the airwaves of a national radio station for his first broadcast away from the comfort of the presidential palace since taking office.
  • Johnny Summerton - A Nouvel Skyscraper For Paris  By : Johnny Summerton
    It won’t quite match the height of the Eiffel Tower – which stands at 324 metres - and is unlikely to become a major tourist attraction, but it’s early evidence that the president, Nicolas Sarkozy, wants to leave his architectural mark on the capital in much the same way as his predecessors.
  • Johnny Summerton - France's "Virgin Obsessed" Serial Killer Gets Life  By : Johnny Summerton
    His prey were girls and young women aged from 12 to 21 whom he stalked to feed what prosecutors during the trial called his “obsession for virgins”. Fourniret lured them into his car with the help of his wife before raping and then stabbing, shooting or strangling them to death.
  • Johnny Summerton - Martine Aubry – The Lady In Waiting.  By : Johnny Summerton
    Royal, who was the party’s defeated candidate in last year’s presidential election has already declared she’s standing. Delanoê, the mayor of Paris, has yet to confirm that he’ll be a contender even if everyone knows his intentions are obvious.
  • Mia Den Haan - Towards 2025 – When There Are Fewer Glaciers and Less Arctic Ice  By : Mia Den Haan
    The truth is that most people believe the present rate of melting ice mass is a natural occurrence, however, this is not the case. This rapid meltdown is not necessarily the result of man-made processes any longer. This meltdown is speeded up because most of the planet’s ecological structures are no longer functioning in optimum ways. As a result these ice masses can no longer remain in existence while the rest of the ecology is already so damaged.
  • Dave Text - Black Powder Guns 101  By : Dave Text
    Black powder guns are guns that are loaded with black powder. Similarly looks like the common guns that you see today where you put a bullet in and shoot. It is the number one way to shoot something. When you see a black powder gun, Civil War era can come into your mind where you think of the buckskin clad hunters. Most hunters prefer to use this since it is more accurate for long distance shots compared to the traditional guns of today in fact they prefer this than the newer ones.
  • Johnny Summerton - Ferrari to Return as PPDA is Given the Boot  By : Johnny Summerton
    PPDA as he is more affectionately known has been a familiar face on prime time news for more than three decades. For Ferrari it marks a return to TF1 – the country’s biggest private television channel - which she left in December 2006 to host a weekly political programme on rival station Canal +.
  • Kadence Buchanan - Choose Your Plastic Products With Care  By : Kadence Buchanan
    To a large part, that prediction came true. It's hard to imagine daily life without plastic. I type on my Think Pad made of light and durable plastic; plastic medical instruments, building materials, automobile parts, cell phones, toys and tools make things in America affordable, convenient and portable. A world without plastic is almost unimaginable.
  • Johnny Summerton - France Faces Fine Over Lack of Hamster Love  By : Johnny Summerton
    Last week the European Commission, the executive branch of the 27-member European Union, gave France a two-month deadline or else it would have to cough up the whopping fine for failing to comply with the Habitats Directive (yes we’re in Eurobabbleland here) to prevent the rodent’s extinction.
  • Attila Jancsina - The Nicaragua Canal: Will it Ever be Built?  By : Attila Jancsina
    Everyone knows about the Panama Canal, and how it connects the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. However, not everyone knows that the United States originally wanted to build this canal through Nicaragua, information on which can be found in nicafsbo.com. It was only through the efforts of a few lobbyists and the French intention to sell their interests on the Panama Canal that this plan was diverted.
  • Ray Subs - Algae Biodiesel: Fuel of the Future  By : Ray Subs
    Corn, soybeans, and waste oil are all known sources for fuel alternatives, but food crops used to produce fuel oil have proven to be counterproductive and waste oils are finite in supply. Corn and soybeans used for making fuel take away from food that would have otherwise gone to consumers. This creates the potential to raise food prices. Food crops used to make fuel are also not as efficient as algae. It takes an acre of soybeans to make about 50 gallons of oil and an acre of corn to make only about 20 gallons of oil.
  • Johnny Summerton - Sarkozy Starts Visit to Israel  By : Johnny Summerton
    That shouldn't be too difficult. In 1996, during a visit to Jeruslam's old town, Jacques Chirac lost his rag with Israeli security as he was jostled during a walkabout and famously threatened to take the first 'plane home.
  • Yuan-tsung Chen - A True-Life Story of David Versus Goliath  By : Yuan-tsung Chen
    According to the family lore, Eugene undid what the Allied Powers, led by Woodrow Wilson, had done to China at the Versailles Peace Conference in 1919. They agreed to transfer the defeated Germany's colonial interests in China’s Shandong to Japan and forced China to accept the Peace Treaty they had drafted, although China had fought with them and so was, also, a victor in the war. This was a true-life story of David versus Goliath, but if I could not find solid documentation, readers might suspect it was family adulation.
  • Johnny Summerton - Ad’ Campaign to Promote Sarkozy’s Election Promise  By : Johnny Summerton
    It’s all part of a drive by the government to get across three measures it has taken to increase purchasing power; the drop in the security deposit required for renting and buying properties, tax breaks for students and untaxed overtime for those who want it.
  • Johnny Summerton - Public Prosecutor Recommends Dropping (Jean) Sarkozy Charges  By : Johnny Summerton
    Bellouti apparently had the presence of mind to note down the licence number and reported it to the police. But when 10 months later they still hadn't traced the owner, Bellouti's insurance company took matters in hand and discovered the scooter belonged to Jean Sarkozy.
  • Christophe Catesson - The Effects of Global Warming  By : Christophe Catesson
    The Arctic and the earth’s northern latitudes will feel the most of the effects of global warming as they continue to escalate. As the Arctic packs and glaciers begin to melt from the increased temperatures the tundra and seas surrounding the areas will continue to absorb the warmth which was once reflected back into space. Climate models show that if temperatures throughout the rest of the world rise to 3 degrees Fahrenheit they will more than likely rise to at least 7 degrees Fahrenheit in the Arctic.
  • Johnny Summerton - Twice an Orphan - Barmy Bureaucracy or Welfare of the Child? You Judge.  By : Johnny Summerton
    In spite of looking after his son for a year under the supervision of the local authorities in the west-central department of Maine-et-Loire and the agreement of a family judge, Coulibaly only had a temporary residence and work permit.
  • Bill Knell - Vietnam UFO Crash Metal May Be the Smoking Gun  By : Bill Knell
    The object that crashed was first seen in the skies over Cambodia where officials said it appeared as a “fire in the sky.” The thing exploded shortly after that and what was left of it crashed on Phu Quoc Island. Citizens of a commune on the island retrieved a piece of metal from the crash that they described as measuring “one metre by about 60 centimeters.” The metal is unusual looking and appears to have symbols engraved or stamped into it.
  • Bill Knell - Did Howard Hughes View a Captured UFO and Its Occupants?  By : Bill Knell
    Linda is a retired teacher. She taught in public and private schools for over thirty years and has emailed me an impressive array of diplomas and certifications. She also emailed a few photos and some paperwork that verifies the fact that her father probably worked for Howard Hughes. Because she asked for anonymity, I cannot say much more about her or divulge where she currently lives at this time. I have encouraged her to come forward at some point and tell her own story in her own words.
  • Bill Knell - The Haunting Story of Alexandra Holzer  By : Bill Knell
    Hans Holzer is generally considered to be the father of modern spirit investigation. The author of over one hundred and forty-five books and novels, Hans wrote Ghost Hunter in 1963 and established the methodology that many within the field of paranormal investigation use today. He received his Ph.D from the London College of Applied Science and has made appearances on popular television programs such as In Search Of and Murder in Amityville.
  • Bill Knell - How Much is That Alien in the Window?  By : Bill Knell
    Romanek released what he said was a small portion of the video to the news media at the press conference with Peckman. Reporters that attended the event say that the video was dark and appeared to show what is commonly described as a small ‘grey’ type of alien peeking in a window that is said to be eight feet above the ground. The ’alien’ was bobbing up and down and blinking its eyes during the brief segment. Jason Sheehan, a reporter, self-proclaimed UFO witness and admitted believer attended the press conference and made this statement about Romanek’s video in the Denver Westword News, “I was just disappointed.
  • Bill Knell - UK UFO Encounters Blamed on Chinese Lanterns, But is That the TRUTH?  By : Bill Knell
    “These objects are easily identified.” Hanley says. “The size, colors and shape of the objects from the Tern Hill Hotel do not match what people described or photographed… Lanterns burn up after a short time and do not behave in the manner described by witnesses of the UFOs observed on June 7th… The hotel told me that they announce the release of lanterns in advance to avoid complaints from residents and local businesses that say they are a distraction and may cause fires.” Hanley claims that the hotel has been cited by local fire authorities on previous occasions.
  • Johnny Summerton - Sarkozy's Union-Bashing Barb  By : Johnny Summerton
    Speaking to a gathering of the governing Union pour un Mouvement Populaire (Union for a Popular Movement, UMP) party faithful, Sarkozy had the temerity to declare that strikes were of no consequence in France any longer.
  • Johnny Summerton - Betancourt's Unsung Hero  By : Johnny Summerton
    In today's issue it carries the story of the man without whom we would probably not have been able to share in Betancourt's joy as she stepped out of the 'plane on to the tarmac and into the lenses of countless cameras last week.
  • Johnny Summerton - Sarkozy's G8 Ennui  By : Johnny Summerton
    There was certainly none of the buoyancy or tactile back slapping of last year when Sarkozy floated into Heiligendamm, Germany on his presidential cloud, fresh from an electoral victory and smiled away as he handed over his mobile 'phone for then Russian president, Vladimir Putin to have a chat.
  • L.S. Sya - Coal And Forest Preservation  By : L.S. Sya
    Malcolm Turnball, Australian Minister for the Environment was quick to point out that Australia's contribution will focus on "practical measures", such as the promotion of better forest management, plantation of new forests and the use of remote-sensing technology to monitor the progress of deforestation in Indonesia, the Philippines and Pacific nations.
  • Johnny Summerton - Sarkozy's "Astonishing" Olympic Announcement  By : Johnny Summerton
    Basically it was always on the cards right back in March when Sarkozy first started digging himself into something of a diplomatic hole by saying he was shocked by China's security clampdown in Tibet and urging Beijing to re-open discussions with the exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.
  • Johnny Summerton - Sarkozy to Blame For Royal's Break-in?  By : Johnny Summerton
    It concerns last year's defeated candidate in the French presidential elections, Ségolène Royal, and her claims that she is paying the price for comments she made recently about the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy.
  • Johnny Summerton - Adieu PPDA  By : Johnny Summerton
    Think of a news anchor in your own country, someone who has been around for donkeys years and at a certain time of the day when the small screen is flickering becomes almost part of the sitting room furniture.
  • Becky Caulkin - Five Good Reasons To Love A Recession, Home Depot Coupons Not Withstanding  By : Becky Caulkin
    The best way to deal with recession? Smile, hoist half-filled cups of regular unleaded, and think of the ten good things about the looming bad times. Here are five reasons you just might grow to love a recession.
  • L.S. Sya - Brazil Cerrado Being Destroyed  By : L.S. Sya
    Dr Ricardo Machado, author of a study said, "The Cerrado was pretty much intact until the 60s, when most of the relevant economic activity was the cattle ranching. During the 70s, when new technologies and new varieties of plants (corn, soybean, rice, wheat, eucalyptus, and grasses for livestock) where introduced the Cerrado became an important region for the Brazilian agribusiness. More and more native areas were cleared to be converted for planted pastures (using African grasses) or croplands. The natural vegetation removed was converted to charcoal to be used by the steel industry."
  • L.S. Sya - Cuba to Plant 135 Million Trees  By : L.S. Sya
    The devastation of the forests begun in colonial times and continued under the Republic as more land was transformed for cultivation and cattle rearing. By the time of the Revolution in 1959, forests only covered 13.4% of the nation. The figure rose to 21.1% in 1997 and to 24.95%, with more than 2.7 million hectares of woodland in 2006.
  • L.S. Sya - Parks Protect Amazon in Perul  By : L.S. Sya
    Lead author Paulo Oliveira said, “We found that only 1 to 2 % of this disturbance in Peru happened in natural protected areas. However, there was substantial forest disturbance adjacent to areas set aside for legal logging operations. This leakage of human activity outside of logging concessions is a concern.”
  • Mark Smalls - Green Olympics - London and the Environment in 2012  By : Mark Smalls
    In the last year, the Chinese capital has been the subject of much media scrutiny surrounding its environmental and emissions policy. In 2005, the European Space Agency declared that Beijing contained unnecessarily high levels of nitrogen dioxide, a bi-product of many industrial processes, including thermal power plants. It is poisonous to inhale, and since the revelation, the Chinese government have been accused of endangering sportsmen and spectators with the volume of air pollution that affects the capital.
  • Mark Smalls - Florida Power and Light Company Given Go Ahead For Solar Power Facilities  By : Mark Smalls
    The first of these projects is 'The Martin Next Generation Solar Energy Center', scheduled for construction at the company's already existent 'Martin Plant' site. It is expected to be operational in 2010, and will produce a maximum 75W output. It will combine steam with solar thermal power in order to reduce the amount of natural gas used in the energy conversion process.
  • Robert Waugh - How to Beat the World Wide Recession  By : Robert Waugh
    However all is not doom and gloom there are still great opportunities out there which are enabling people to earn huge amounts of money and they are unaffected and untouched by the recession and all the downsizing. In fact there is a boom time of huge growth right on almost every person’s door step, and it is available and open to almost anyone who cares to look at it. The problem is that most people do not even realize that it exists, and that it requires no previous knowledge to get started and that they could earn more money in a couple of months than most people earn in a whole year!
  • Johnny Summerton - Sarkozy Set For a Constitutional Showdown  By : Johnny Summerton
    The French president, Nicolas Sarkozy is fighting constitutional reform on two fronts. There is of course the debate over how to deal with the Irish "no" vote in June to the Lisbon treaty. He'll be tackling further that issue on July 21 when he pitches up in Dublin in his role as the EU big cheese while France holds the 27-nation bloc's six-month rotating presidency.
  • Bill Knell - The Flushing Meadows Park Zoo Animal Mutilations and UFO Mystery  By : Bill Knell
    Because of its location and inability to be used for much else, the swampy land became a dumping area for ashes. By the 1920’s, it was known as the Corona Ash Dumps. F. Scott Fitzgerald called the place “a valley of ashes” in The Great Gatsby, his famous 1925 novel about Long Island Society. However, the once worthless area was about to be transformed into a marvelous showplace thanks to a grand event known as the World’s Fair.
  • John Schlismann - Alleviating Poverty Through Incentive Based Aid Programs  By : John Schlismann
    An article which appeared August 21, 2007 in the International Herald Tribune entitled Managing Globalization: To reduce poverty, money isn’t everything by Daniel Altman addresses this issue by examining two South American countries Brazil and Venezuela. Incomes in both countries are rising but poverty is only actually being alleviated in Brazil despite Hugo Chavez’s socialist platform and agenda of equality for all. Incomes in Venezuela have been rising due to the high price of oil of which they have an abundant supply whereas Brazil’s economy has been rising due to “relatively firm economic policies” and “confidence in its business prospects among both locals and foreigners” (Managing Globalization by Altman).
  • Bill Knell - Indiana UFO Invasion  By : Bill Knell
    When most people think of UFOs being chased by jets, they think of the Stephenville and Erath County, Texas, events that took place in January of 2008. In that case, recently released FAA radar reports show that unidentified objects were tracked along with military jets and that at least one may have violated presidential airspace over the Bush Ranch in Crawford, Texas. However, incidents like that one have taken place on numerous occasions in Indiana as well.
  • Bill Knell - Apollo Astronaut Mitchell Says Aliens Exist and the Government Doesn’t Want You to Know About Them  By : Bill Knell
    Born in Texas and brought up in New Mexico, he has three earned degrees including a Doctorate of Science degree in Aeronautics and Astronautics from MIT, as well as at least four honorary Doctorate degrees from prestigious universities. Among his many awards are the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the United States Navy Distinguished Service Medal.
  • Chris Woolfrey - Universal Solar Power - 'Solar Tres' and Commercial Solar Thermal Energy  By : Chris Woolfrey
    Solar Tres, located West of Ejica in the Andalusia district of Spain, has been modeled on the Solar One and Two projects, which were developed and updated in the Marstow Desert, California, in 1981 and 1995. Like its American predecessor, Solar Tres will produce energy through heliostats: large mirror assemblies that track and reflect the sun's rays throughout the day. From there, it is bounced onto a central column, named the 'Solar Power Tower', which absorbs and stores the energy, to be converted into thermal power.
  • Bill Knell - The Needles UFO Crash: What Really Happened?  By : Bill Knell
    It’s important to understand that the object in question has been seen in the Needles area before and elsewhere as well. An object described as oval shaped with a turquoise glow was spotted by a motorist traveling just west of Needles on I-40 on April 17, 2002 at around three thirty in the morning. During that incident the object hovered above the road in mid-air. Another sighting occurred in 1997 near Columbus, Ohio. A photographer was filming clouds when a glowing object described as turquoise in color appeared on several of the frames that were photographed.
  • Ryan Whatley - French Power EDF Ready to Take Over British Energy  By : Ryan Whatley
    EDF has been one of the leading contenders to buy British Energy since the British Government effectively put the power company up for sale by announcing it wanted to sell its 35% stake in the nuclear operator.
  • Bill Knell - Edgar Mitchell’s Roswell Revelations and Pentagon Briefing  By : Bill Knell
    Mitchell, a former Navy Officer and Astronaut that walked on the Moon, grew up in Roswell, New Mexico. Over the past several years he has indicated that he was living in the town when the 1947 UFO crash occurred and knew what happened based on conversations with first hand witnesses. He has also said that several other people with intimate knowledge about the UFO crash have taken him into their confidence. Mitchell gave this statement to Robert Collins:
  • Johnny Summerton - How Could Parents Forget?  By : Johnny Summerton
    Over the past four weeks there have been three separate incidents of young children or babies - being left alone in locked cars. In two of the cases, the infants died, in the third a passerby was able to intervene, break a window and save the child from probable death.
  • Johnny Summerton - There's Nothing Like Good Neighbours  By : Johnny Summerton
    While there's nothing too unusual perhaps in the report of an elderly person's death going unnoticed, especially when he or she lives alone, there must be more than a little cause for concern in cases such as this one.
  • Chris Woolfrey - The Solar Decathlon - Giving Solar Power a Makeover  By : Chris Woolfrey
    "Teams of college students design a solar house, knowing from the outset that it must be powered entirely by the sun. In a quest to stretch every last watt of electricity that's generated by the solar panels on their roofs, the students absorb the lesson that energy is a precious commodity. They strive to innovate, using high-tech materials and design elements in ingenious ways. Along the way, the students learn how to raise funds and communicate about team activities. They collect supplies and talk to contractors.
  • Chris Woolfrey - How the E.U Plans to Combat Global Warming  By : Chris Woolfrey
    The E.U is one of the biggest political organisations in the world. It comprises 27 member states and under its banner are close to 500 million people. The GDP that the E.U generates accounts for roughly 30% of the world.
  • Linda Cartwright - Turkey to Northern Cyprus Water Pipeline by 2012  By : Linda Cartwright
    As there has been a period of water shortage, President Demetris Christofias, the internationally-recognised Greek Cypriot leader, is presently trying to supply the southern part of the divided island through tankers bringing water from Greece.
  • Dilip Dahanukar - Global Warming Can Not Melt the Polar Ice Caps From Below  By : Dilip Dahanukar
    If so much energy is being absorbed by the Earth, it should continue to heat up and its temperature must continue to rise constantly. Within days the temp should surpass the maximum that any life could bear. All life would die and the trees whither and char.
  • Dilip Dahanukar - Kyoto Protocol and What it Means  By : Dilip Dahanukar
    The clearly defined objective was to achieve ‘stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system.’The Protocol makes a distinction between the carbon dioxide produced naturally through respiration and decomposition and the one made by burning fossil fuel. The one that is caused by man is called anthropogenic. The emission of carbon dioxide from burning of fossil fuels for generating power or for making cement is not a natural process.
  • Matt Gammie - International Wool Trade Shifts to Organic  By : Matt Gammie
    Against that backdrop one of the country's leading wool and textile dealers, Pedro Otegui, has outlined his vision of the country's wool industry as one where a shift toward the increasingly popular organic method of production will secure continued trade. In addition, he stated that the World's growing population – which is expected to be over one and a half billion people in the next twenty-five years – will ensure that there remains a large enough wool market for Uruguay to continue profitably exporting wool and textiles.
  • David H. Urmann - Global Studies on Climate Change  By : David H. Urmann
    Climate change is a significant weather change of a given region. Also called global warming, it increases the average temperature measurement of the Earth’s surface. This involves changes in the atmosphere over durations to millions of years. It is caused by external forces, dynamic processes and human activities. Temperature, wind patterns and precipitation are the average weather alterations of climate change.
  • Hannah Walker - Rainforest is Back on the Hit List  By : Hannah Walker
    This week, Brazil's National Institute for Space Research said that around 3,145 square miles – an area about half the size of Wales – of forest were destroyed between August 2007 and August 2008. The satellite images were captured by a real-time monitoring system, known in Brazil as Deter. It comes as a shock – and a terrible step backwards - that deforestation has picked up again after it seemed to be diminishing over the last three years.
  • Hannah Walker - Arctic Ice May Melt Completely Within Ten Years.  By : Hannah Walker
    “We had a bit more ice in the winter, although we were still way below the long-term average,” said Julienne Stroeve from NSIDC in Boulder, Colorado. “So we had a partial recovery. But the real issue is that most of the pack ice has become really thin, and if we have a regular summer now, it can just melt away”.
  • Hannah Walker - Italy Soars – Solar Style  By : Hannah Walker
    Italy is set to overtake Spain as Europe’s biggest solar power, as Spain’s market has recently dropped due to an end to solar subsidies from the government. Ernesto Macias is the managing director of Isofoton, Spain's biggest solar panel maker and is hoping that the solar market in Italy may expand to reach 1,200 MW next year, which is the maximum solar output that is still entitled to subsidies under existing regulations.
  • Hannah Walker - The Sahara Forest  By : Hannah Walker
    The vast majority of plants cannot grow in the desert due to the extreme temperature and lack of water, the seawater greenhouse can make these arid environments vegetation friendly. Charlie Paton is part of the Sahara team and the inventor of these greenhouses.
  • Hannah Walker - Positive Attitudes Set Cyprian Reunification Talks in Good Stead  By : Hannah Walker
    Due to the inability to reach a settlement in the past, United Nations officials are aware of the difficulties that lie ahead, however feel that both presidents are united in a common goal. Alexander Downer, the former Australian foreign minister who is the UN’s new special adviser to the talks, felt “a degree of optimism because I know the leadership is committed to a successful negotiation process. But I have no illusions on how difficult this is”.
  • Matt Gammie - Talks Begin in Cyprus  By : Matt Gammie
    When the moderate, left-wing Demetris Christofias was voted into power this February the world was reminded that long entrenched obstacles, and issues thought to be irresolvable, are often given that appearance of permanency only within a transitory political climate. In the case of Papadopoulos, his anti-reunification stance made it difficult to be optimistic over the issues that are now being discussed in Cyprus. Christofias, who has made public the fact that his primary objective as President is reunification of the island, has both an ideological and personal connection with his counterpart, Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat.
  • Sarah Martin - Metropolitan Life Insurance Company's Affect on Death Rates  By : Sarah Martin
    The mortality figures for industrial policyholders in the early 1900’s were about half what they were at the inception of the effort. Among children the saving in mortality was about 75%. The average child born at that time could expect to live 16 years longer than the one born a generation ago. These dramatic figures and the human values behind them attracted worldwide attention.
  • Brent McNutt - The Effect of Brain Drain in Developing Countries  By : Brent McNutt
    One of the best examples of professionals who are seeking employment abroad is the medical practitioners. Since the nurses are in demand in the different parts of the world, many take up the course, work for about two years, and leave their homeland to wear their landau scrubs somewhere else.
  • Marcilio David - What is Sustainable Development  By : Marcilio David
    What is sustainable development? The concept was brought to life and named by The World Commission on Environment and Development in 1987. Since it's conception, the concept has become a major focus in the 1990s to the present time.
  • Garson Smart - The Stogie Diaspora: How Revolution and Embargo Created Today's Cigar Industry  By : Garson Smart
    The trade embargo, banning imports to and exports from Cuba, is doubly ironic. After all, the two countries had enjoyed close trade relations for years; indeed, Cuba's political and economic ties to the United States were seen as one reason for the latter's willingness to go to war, in 1898, to secure the smaller island nation's freedom from colonial Spain—a "freedom" that, as many observers then and now have pointed out, was sharply limited by Cuba's utter dependence on the US. With the larger county accounting for a whopping percentage of the island's exports (eighty-two percent as of 1877) and making periodic attempts at seizing Cuba for itself throughout the nineteenth century (the most famous being the 1854 Ostend Manifesto), it's widely thought that Cuba, by accepting the assistance of its neighbor to the north in its struggle for independence, merely exchanged one kind of colonialism for another, slightly less obvious version.
  • RibOne - My Armageddon - Part II  By : RibOne
    At 4:45am, a strange time, the Lagos marines were finally discharged from their ‘guard’ duties and allowed to fly back to their home base. They were replaced by two Pathfinder marines who stood at arms all the time.
  • RibOne - My Armageddon - Part I  By : RibOne
    My latest adventure, or should I say mis-adventure, involved rib patrol boats and gunboats mixed in a heady concoction of deceit, death, corruption and desolation. It's a story that's still going around and around in my head, and hopefully by setting out my thoughts it will help me come to terms with what must be my experience of a lifetime.
  • Carole Whang Schutter - What We’ve Learned From 9/11: The Making of a Terrorist  By : Carole Whang Schutter
    Terrorism isn’t anything new and excessive religiosity isn’t a modern ailment – even in America. More than a hundred fifty years ago, on another September 11th, an act of religious terrorism left more than a hundred American men, women and children dead. And the perpetrators? Fellow Americans.
  • Michael DeVries - Why Just Go Green?  By : Michael DeVries
    We are “green” in that context, for sure, being an online shopping service, with an online catalog as opposed to a printed one. Our customers save gas by not having to get in their cars and drive someplace to shop. We all save paper through our online payment system. Even our accounting is online. We shop for environmentally friendly products to offer you and hope to add to that overall product category in the near future.
  • Stan Coleman - The Perfect Plan for Peace on Earth  By : Stan Coleman
    I am Ray Trevor Twine MA a retired Psychologist. I manage a UK Natural Health Research Charity Objective: Helping people to live longer with health in place. Ha! Ha! In a day in the life for people on Planet Earth.
  • Mariet Smart - Burj Al Arab Acknowledged as the Best in the World  By : Mariet Smart
    Burj Al Arab does not have rooms; it has 202 suites, each one arranged over two floors. The spacious suites feature floor-to-ceiling glass windows which offer simply breathtaking views of the Arabian Gulf. Decorated with lavish textures and exuberant colors, each suite features a sumptuous living and dining area, state-of-the-art entertainment system and office facilities. Their sheer opulence in every tiny detail is underpinned with technology that does everything from controlling the 42-inch Plasma screen TV to closing the curtains.
  • Mariet Smart - Global Spa Economy Estimated at $255 Billion Annually  By : Mariet Smart
    More than 220 industry leaders from around the world attended this year’s summit, which was highlighted by keynote speeches from hotelier Ian Schrager and Dr. Richard Carmona, 17th Surgeon General of the United States and Vice Chairman of Canyon Ranch.
  • Gordon Gumpertz - The Ring of Fire: Where Trouble is Born  By : Gordon Gumpertz
    While doing research for my adventure novel TSUNAMI, I found that this highly unstable seismic zone is called the Ring of Fire for good reason. 90% of the world's earthquakes, over 70% of volcano eruptions, and most of the tsunamis on Planet Earth are spawned around the Pacific Rim, where oceanic (seafloor) plates collide with and relentlessly slide under the continental (land) plates.
  • Michael DeVries - Why an Online Store is Good for the Environment  By : Michael DeVries
    We watched as merchandise was discounted and taken home by excited bargain hunters. We saw the floor area shrink as the liquidator moved merchandise closer and closer to the middle of the space, leaving behind an unimaginable number of tables, racks, shelving, signs, hangers, and other display paraphernalia.

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