Archive - Oct 2007
By K.S. Jayaraman for India eNews on 30 Oct 2007
Indian metallurgists have developed a type of corrosion-resistant iron that construction engineers would love. And vital clues for it came for Delhi's famous Iron Pillar that has been standing tall for over 1,600 years.
By Philip Batson for Kansas City Community News on 30 Oct 2007
Even with a math degree, Chris Kuttenkuler had never seen anything like Vedic math before. Now he cannot stop thinking about it. Vedic (Vay-dik) math refers to an ancient Indian system of mathematics rooted in 16 principles. Calculations can be completed mentally and solved without traditional math methods.
I have 200,000 thoughts a day (approximately). Or so they say. I have never tried to count, but I know that the majority don’t relate to Krsna. Always remember him and never forget him is the maxim, but what a failure! The only way it is possible to achieve this is complete craving for him, and complete engagement in only his service. But this can be motivated only by intense love. When will that day be mine?
By Brendan I. Koerner for Slate.com on 23 Oct 2007
As a longtime vegetarian, I've always been confident that my diet is better for the planet than that of your typical carnivore. But a vegan pal of mine says I could be doing a lot more, by rejecting all animal products—no eggs, no milk, not even the occasional bowl of mac 'n cheese. Is veganism really that much better for the environment?
Asian Image (UK) on 24 Oct 2007
The British government is being urged to speak to the Kazakhstan President to stop the harassment and human rights abuse against minority Hindu communities in that country. British MP's this week said they would pressure the Foreign Secretary to act after attending an event organized by the Hindu Forum of Europe at the House of Commons.
By Chad Heeter for PBS Frontline on 26 Oct 2007
Suicide by pesticide: It's an epidemic in India, where farmers try to keep up with the latest pest-resistant seeds only to find themselves trapped in a vicious cycle of pesticides that don't work, drought and debt. Since 1997, more than 25,000 farmers have committed suicide, many drinking the chemical that was supposed to make their crops more, not less, productive.
The Associated Press on 15 Oct 2007
STOCKHOLM, Sweden: Sweden wants to curb the influence of religion in private confessional schools in a move to prevent the spread of fundamentalism, government officials said Monday. The new rules being drafted by the center-right government would ban religious elements in subjects other than religion, such as biology, Education Minister Jan Bjorklund told Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter.
By Khelen Thokchom for Calcutta Telegraph on 25 Oct 2007
Iskcon has turned its personal experience of the reality of terrorism into a reel weapon in the fight against terror across the world. A year after an act of violence sullied its precincts midway through a Janmashtami function, the management of the Iskcon temple in Imphal, Manipur has produced a documentary that it hopes will hold a mirror to practitioners of terror.
IST AGENCIES on 24 Oct 2007
So-called hurricane modifiers aim to steer dangerous weather patterns off course and to weaken hurricanes in the hope of preventing disasters like Hurricane Katrina. Scientists have devised a plan to reduce hurricane wind speeds by having a plane drop soot into near-freezing clouds at the top of a hurricane, causing it to warm.
BBC News on 23 Oct 2007
People are getting fatter in all parts of the world, with the possible exception of south and east Asia, a one-day global snapshot shows.
By Eric Hornbeck for The Post (Athens, Ohio, USA) on 23 Oct 2007
Ohio University’s Global Leadership Center traveled three and a half hours last weekend through the multicolored autumnal Appalachian hills to visit New Vrindaban, a Hare Krishna farm — or an oasis or an amusement park, depending on whom you ask.
By Mukunda Goswami on 22 Oct 2007
What do C.S. Lewis, Quentin Tarantino and J.K. Rowling have in common? Maybe nothing, but here's what I think. One, all will have hit the big screen by December 2005; two, all are considered innovators; three, all have written about their characters entering a parallel world.
By Antony Brennan for ISKCON News on 21 Oct 2007
The devotee who turned '60s rock group the Beatles on to Krishna consciousness and introduced them to Srila Prabhupada, Shyamasundar das, is recovering from a live-donor transplant after discovering he had a tumor on his liver.
By Rosslyn Beeby for Stock and Land on 9 Oct 2007
They've got loose pages, ghee-spattered covers and smidges of turmeric marking favourite recipes. One was published in 1973 but its vintage recipes still outperform many of those found in latter-day lavishly illustrated cookbooks.
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