The role of volunteers in the Western Sahara Project Volunteers play a vital role in the work of the Western Sahara Project, and make a major contribution to the funding of the Project. Volunteering for a Western Sahara Project field season is a way of experiencing a unique desert environment and culture in a part of the world which is largely closed to outsiders. Volunteering is also an opportunity to learn about the fascinating and little-known archaeology of this remote region and of the (…)
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We are currently seeking volunteers for reconnaissance survey work in October 2009.
21 August 2009 par (Open-Publishing)
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William Karel: Dark Side of the Moon
23 June 2009 par (Open-Publishing)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7Ge8KiaWTA
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The American Revenue Authorities: Expansion of the Combat Area (on to Switzerland)
13 May 2009 par (Open-Publishing)
The American Revenue Authorities: Expansion of the Combat Area (on to Switzerland)
Discussion with Luis Suarez-Villa, professor for economy at the University of California, Irvine
Luis Suarez-Villa made his doctorate in international policy at the University of Cornell. He is a professor at the University of California, Irvine, whose member he has been since 1982. He specialized in innovative technology and its connections with social changes, economic development and regional analysis. (…) -
What a drop of blood can tell about you - dark field mikroscopy
13 December 2008 par (Open-Publishing)
What a drop of blood can tell about you - dark field mikroscopy Darkfield Microscopy or Live Blood Analysis
(Live Blood Examination in the Darkfield according to Prof. Dr. G. Enderlein)
Darkfield Microscopy or Live Blood Analysis is a way of studying live whole blood cells under a specially adapted microscope that projects the dynamic image onto a video screen. This allows you to view your inner terrain. Digestive, eliminative and immune functions can be assessed as well as the presence (…) -
Stop elite research now!
11 October 2008 par (Open-Publishing)
Research in universities across the globe is becoming more and more privatised.
This must be stopped because it will centre power in the hands of a few who will inevitably ask for the payment of very high university fees and will not give access to research which does not support their speculative interests.
Berlusconi in Italy is trying to privatise most of the public university research. This should be stopped!
Italian students and universtity professors are united in a "line of (…) -
UW-Madison News Release—’Training’ To Be Compassionate
26 March 2008 par (Open-Publishing)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 3/25/08
EDITOR’S NOTE: After 7 p.m. CDT on March 25, the open-access article will be freely available in full at http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0001897. CONTACT: Dian Land, (608) 263-9893, dj.land sCw hosp.wisc.edu
STUDY SHOWS COMPASSION MEDITATION CHANGES THE BRAIN
MADISON - Can we train ourselves to be compassionate? A new study suggests the answer is yes. Cultivating compassion and kindness through meditation affects brain regions that can make a person more (…) -
Scientists Use Sunlight to Make Fuel From CO2
12 January 2008 par (Open-Publishing)
1 commentScientists Use Sunlight to Make Fuel From CO2
By Chuck Squatriglia 01.04.08, 8:00 PM
Sandia researcher Rich Diver checks out the solar furnace which will be the initial source of concentrated solar heat for converting carbon dioxide to fuel. Eventually parabolic dishes will provide the thermal energy.
Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico have found a way of using sunlight to recycle carbon dioxide and produce fuels like methanol or gasoline.
The Sunlight to (…) -
Scientists on Svalbard eye underground CO2 storage
5 January 2008 par (Open-Publishing)
1 commentThe university on Svalbard is preparing to test out a possible underground storage facility for carbon dioxide in Longyearbyen, in hopes of making the area "CO2-neutral."
Ole Magnus Rapp Aftenposten’s reporter First published: 04 Jan 2008, 16:26
This fall students and construction workers have drilled 855 meters down in Longyearbyen, and found a thick layer of slate, under which lies a layer of porous sand. "The drilling tests are being analyzed and all indications are that here are (…) -
INTRUSIVE BRAIN READING SURVEILLANCE TECHNOLOGY: HACKING THE MIND
14 December 2007 par (Open-Publishing)
3 commentsGlobal Research, December 13, 2007 Dissent Magazine, Australia, Summer 2007/2008
By Carole SMITH
"We need a program of psychosurgery for political control of our society. The purpose is physical control of the mind. Everyone who deviates from the given norm can be surgically mutilated."
"The individual may think that the most important reality is his own existence, but this is only his personal point of view. This lacks historical perspective. Man does not have the (…) -
WHEAT BIOPIRACY :The Real Issues the Government is Avoiding, BY Vandana SHIVA
21 November 2007 par (Open-Publishing)
2 commentsZMAG, November 16, 2007
The epidemic of biopiracy is an assault on our living heritage of biodiversity and cumulative innovation embodied in the traditional knowledge of agriculture and medicine. In the long run, it determines livelihoods and economic sovereignty because what is commonly available becomes an ?intellectual property? of a company for which royalty must be paid.
It is the governments duty to protect the resources and heritage of the country and prevent its usurpation by (…)