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Kareyth Patrickliving in Waterville, ME
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| TOTAL VIEWS: 22,376 | | | PUBLISHED CONTENT: 98 | | | FAVORITED BY: 20 | | | CONTENT PRODUCER SINCE: 05/20/2007 |
An insignificant essayist attempting to break open the shell in travel writing and green ecological information. Education/Experience: English and European Literature B.A., English Linguistics M.A. Words live like music and The Spirit's breath. Interests: Travel writing, green/ecology essay writing, general science essay writing. URL RSS |
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Showing Results 1 - 98 of 98
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The city of Montreux in Switzerland hosts the internationally famous Montreux Jazz Festival in July of every year. The 2008 summer Montreux Jazz Festival will be held July 4 -19. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 5/21/2008
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Casa Bonita is a nationally famous restaurant that has less-than-fabulous food (some would say less-than-adequate). Yet it is one of the top dinning destinations around Denver, Colorado. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 5/7/2008
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Happy news for dog lovers and for all children who want a dog! "Mommy! Can I have a dog! Please!" A dog in the home when children are infants significantly reduces the chances and severity of animal and other allergies. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 5/6/2008
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Johannesburg (jo-hahn'-nes-burg) abounds in people and history. You cannot visit the historic places to see in Johannesburg, South Africa without being deeply impressed by both. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 4/30/2008
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Johannesburg, South Africa, is a high-energy, metropolitan finance and business center that attracts many visitors every year. Americans' northern hemisphere summer is South Africa's southern hemisphere winter, so if you wish to escape the warm weather, go south! By Kareyth Patrick | Published 4/27/2008
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Summer activities in Les Diablerets, Switzerland start at 2 miles high on Glacier 3000. You ascend to the top of Glacier 3000 on a cable car and arrive near the top of the world at the Glacier 3000 Alpine Coaster for Alpine roller coaster fun! Then head to the valley! By Kareyth Patrick | Published 4/26/2008
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Hado water, the brain child and healing gift of Dr. Masaru Emoto, is water that is treated with the intrinsic electromagnetic vibrations of prayer and healing words, like "gratitude," "appreciation," and "thanks." By Kareyth Patrick | Published 4/24/2008
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In the 20th entury, linguistics documented 50 Danish dialects. Now there are less than a dozen Danish dialects. Disappearing dialects cause a delemma. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 3/17/2008
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In bright Amsterdam one evening day, two children on the pavement stopped to play. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 2/15/2008
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A poem of children playing in Kivu, Uganda By Kareyth Patrick | Published 2/14/2008
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A four-year old girl in a preschool playground has so much to do and tell!
By Kareyth Patrick | Published 1/28/2008
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Have you ever thought of studying English linguistics? Who's it good for? Writers and teachers, among others. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 1/16/2008
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Once you feel the rhythms of Quad and Asylum in Kingston, Jamaica, you can relax and find other rhythms of Kingston. Even if the vivacity of the Quad and Asylum are what you live for, spread your wings, breathe a little and see what else the night hours bring. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 1/9/2008
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"Another time I'll tell about what happened as night fell and the end of the day-long journey was in sight for the cows and the herdsmen who so attentively and carefully watched over them as they moved from their winter lands to their summer lands." By Kareyth Patrick | Published 1/9/2008
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Shop green. Build green. Heat green. Use green energy. Give green gifts. What exactly does it mean to be green? By Kareyth Patrick | Published 12/27/2007
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Are you in the mood for live jazz music played on a Baby Grand piano? Dancing to reggae? The hottest night scene in town? Rubbing elbows with tourists and Jamaicans alike? Then the 4Quad and the Asylum in Kingston, Jamaica are for you. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 12/20/2007
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When you land in Kingston, while flying in over aquamarine colored sea water--so different from the Mediterranean--and under a sky canopy of royal indigo blue, you'll be glad you stuffed your down coat into the outside pocket of your carry-on! By Kareyth Patrick | Published 12/10/2007
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Did you ever think that time spent waiting for a traffic light to change was contributing to global climate change? A study shows that modulation of traffic lights can significantly reduce CO2 emissions-as much as reductions in driving. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/28/2007
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A new report indicates that changing the academic ranking systems would immediately resolve the U.S.'s shortage of scientists and failing scientific productiveness. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/28/2007
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A report was released calling for the completion within ten years of a world oceans marine monitoring system and stating that human safety and well being are the motivating needs requiring a world marine monitoring system. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/25/2007
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The Economic and Social Research Council of the UK has announced that it is spearheading an investigation into the growing phenomenon of transnational English language television stations, such as Iran's Press TV and China's CCTV. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/25/2007
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In a press release from Cell Press it is announced that scientists in Japan have discovered that with the addition of four elements, adult skin cells can be made into pluripotent cells similar to stem cells. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/23/2007
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BASF has announced that its scientists are beginning a three-year project to produce needed three-dimensional photonic crystals that will replace electrical relay connections . By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/23/2007
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Press release reports on a new system that records deep ocean seafloor pressure in order to detect and warn against tsunamis immediately after they first develop in the deep ocean. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/21/2007
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A study shows that U.S. greenhouse gas emissions are expected to increase over the next 50 years and that new technologies may actually be contributing to the rise in greenhouse emissions. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/21/2007
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One of the mysteries of the universe has been solved by scientists who found that the highest-energy cosmic ray particle events that bombard Earth are not uniformly distributed across the sky. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/20/2007
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A United Nations sponsored report of a new study conducted) says that the world is facing an eminent crossroads: either agree to an international ban on reproductive cloning or agree on human rights protections for cloned individuals. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/20/2007
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According to researchers, the changing global milk market will open a door for developing countries to enter the international milk market. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/20/2007
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RAND Corporation researchers correlate low academic performance in second and third grades in California public schools with low school readiness scores at the level of entry to kindergarten. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/20/2007
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Economists find that people place a monetary value on distributive justice--though they may have different ideas of what that justice should be! By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/17/2007
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A new study shows that plants have unique, non-genetic environmental adapting mechanisms that are transmitted as cues from the maternal plant. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/17/2007
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In 2006 a supernova was observed that was so bright it defied all current theories of the mechanisms of supernovae, but now an astrophysicist has proposed a radical new theory. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/17/2007
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"Big Five" international oil companies (IOCs) are spending less money on oil exploration in real terms despite a four-fold increase in operating cash flow since the early 1990s. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/15/2007
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A new study to appear in the Journal of Consumer Research shows that social change is driven when information reaches easily influenced people who then influence other easily influenced people. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/15/2007
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Researchers have developed a way to detect and monitor where ozone transfers allegiance and switches from being friend to foe and good to bad, as the researchers put it. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/13/2007
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New research proffers a theory illuminating the emotional element associated with human risk taking behavior. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/7/2007
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Boreal forests and rainforests are important global carbon sinks that keep carbon dioxide emissions in balance; new model shows how forest fires effect boreal forest carbon emissions behavior. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/6/2007
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Scientists listen to the Beach Boys and Derek and the Dominos on infinitesimally small c arbon nanotube radio, perfect for the neighborhood ant--and you thought transistor radios were cool! By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/5/2007
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An engaging new study addresses the question of humor in the workplace and says that contrary to traditional attitudes humor at work is not only acceptable, it is actually a company asset. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/5/2007
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Sweet potatoes are advocated as a staple food source for developing countries because of sustainability and rich vitamin content, and the ASHS reports on most recent survey results regarding the health of sweet potato production in developing countries. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/3/2007
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UK scientists have analyzed ancient Chinese medical texts and deciphered the categorical meanings of their statements and words and have now created the Rosetta Stone for decoding traditional Chinese medicine. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/2/2007
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In a press release from the Swedish Research Council, new research is announced in which education in Afghanistan for girls is studied through interviews with adults and students in two Afghanistan villages. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 11/2/2007
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An archaeological discovery in a lake bed in Germany tell a new story for the beloved cashew nut as reported by the International Journal of Plant Sciences By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/21/2007
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The newly released polls reflecting the confidence ratings in various states for September are now available. Employee confidence can be affected by any important change in the economic picture. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/21/2007
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UK's Foresight Programme has published a paper reporting on the first phase of its study of obesity involving experts from across the spectrum of scientific disciplines stating three major conclusions about obesity. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/20/2007
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The National Center for Disease Control has released its latest assessment of health in our public schools and even though the results are optimistic, they are dismal overall. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/20/2007
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"We want to figure out how the human genome evolved. In the future, we will combine what we know about the evolution within genomes with comparative genomics in order to extend our view of evolution." By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/19/2007
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Mothers and infants affiliate, or bond, emotionally and behaviorally because of the hormone oxytocin, according to a unique study from Bar-Ilan University in Irsrael that will be published in Psychological Science. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/19/2007
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An ecologist at Washington University in St. Louis has discovered how ponds diversify after a drought. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/19/2007
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Laws mandate that wetlands that are destroyed due to development must be recreated elsewhere with a return of full biodiversity. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/18/2007
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Chemists have paradoxically discovered an innovative way to use the potential lethal gas carbon monoxide with its deadly reputation to save lives and boost health.
By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/18/2007
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Scientists have developed a new plastic membrane with a novel hourglass-shaped pore that allows select small particles to pass while targeted large molecules are left out. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/18/2007
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Computer science researchers bring two great ideas together to form a third that uses the latest in computer technology to aid individuals who are blind or visually impaired to do their grocery shopping unaided. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/15/2007
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"We want to figure out how the human genome evolved. In the future, we will combine what we know about the evolution within genomes with comparative genomics in order to extend our view of evolution." By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/15/2007
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A Princeton-led team of researchers has created a material from semiconductors that bends light in the opposite direction from all naturally occurring materials. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/15/2007
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Kevin Pope and John Terrell offer new insight to the original migrations of anatomically modern humans that in some ways contradicts popular Out-of-Africa theory. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/15/2007
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Developing countries have strong complaints against the policies and seeming manipulations of the World Bank now a Public Hearing on the World Bank will set future paths and alternatives. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/15/2007
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Chaotic and "messy" language has been ordered by square roots of frequency. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/15/2007
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Africa's Lake Malawi sedimentary core samples--one of the deepest lakes in the world--provide new information pertaining to the ecological systems of Africa and the development of fishes during and after the megadrought. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/13/2007
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"We found that females in the hybrid zone develop a sexual preference for males belonging to their own species and that this preference is determined by genes located on the sex chromosome." By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/13/2007
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Physicists have been working on ways to stop and trap atoms for several decades. Physicists at the University of Texas at Austin have found a way to slow down, stop and trap atoms for the purpose of exploring them. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/12/2007
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Researchers at Emory University have identified a compound in tree bark that mimics the chemical stimulation of neuronal cell signaling that plays a crucial role in the growth, plasticity and survival of brain cells. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/12/2007
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It has been recognized that joint attention is involved in the development of a theory of self: a recognition of unique separateness and identity. One of the main cognitive impairments of autism is the inability to participate in or spontaneously initiate joint attention. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/11/2007
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Clean Cities coalitions around the nation displaced the equivalent of 375 million gallons of gasoline in 2006 to decrease the nation's dependence on petroleum consumption through transportation solutions. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/11/2007
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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced that La Nina is on the scene and made its short-term winter weather predictions at the 2007-2008 Winter Fuels Outlook Conference in Washington, D.C. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/11/2007
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Every year there are tens of thousands of premature deaths in the continental United States because of poor air quality related to ground-level ozone, says the NOAA and EPA.
By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/11/2007
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Stanford University psychologists conducted a study that shows social and institutional organization of Math, Science and Engineering environments play a significant role in contributing to gender ratio imbalance in maths, sciences and engineering performance and careers. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/11/2007
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Mississippi's Gulf Coast is still cleaning up after its share of Katrina's destruction, and a press release announces that despite the real estate slump elsewhere in the country, Biloxi, Mississippi has a growing market. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/10/2007
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Collected data shows that genes play a role in the choices participants make in an experimental setting while playing a common economics game. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/10/2007
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Scientists say this year's smaller hole, a thinning in the ozone layer over the South Pole, is due to natural variations in temperature and atmospheric dynamics and not indicative of a long-term trend. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/8/2007
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Titan has a surface temperature that plunges to minus 274 degrees Fahrenheit; methane rains from the sky; dunes of methane ice and tar cover Titan's arid regions. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/8/2007
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According to a press release from the University of Navarra in Pamplona, Spain, the university has installed a thermal-gradient greenhouse to study the impact of climate change on plants. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/7/2007
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Researchers have identified the gene variant involved in the houseplant Mother of Thousands' (Kalanchoe diagremontiana) ability to propagate by making whole and complete plantlets. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/6/2007
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Improved understanding of the genetics of anthocyanins provides a platform for studying antioxidant properties, important in the fight against cancer, cardiovascular disease and age-related degeneration. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/6/2007
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UK scientists have now found an extremely effective way of growing diatoms in controlled laboratory conditions by basically letting nature do the hard work. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/6/2007
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"There are a lot of references in general literature to crocodiles feeding and crying, but it's almost entirely anecdotal." Vliet videotaped crocodilians closely related to the crocodile while they were eating on a spit of dry land. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/6/2007
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An aspirin-like compound such as that found in willow bark, alerts the plant's immune system to fight off the invading attack in a phenomenon called systemic acquired resistance. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/6/2007
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For the first time, a link has been made from the evolution of proteins to a species' metabolic rate. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/5/2007
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Scientists have sequenced the fungus' genes and are studying the mapped genetic make-up in the hope that it will help them discover what makes this particular pathogen so harmful. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/5/2007
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Les Diablerets (pronounced: 'lei dee-a-'blray) is very easy to find and is a "working" village that caters its tourism to the active and energetic set. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 10/4/2007
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The Papua New Guinea islands called Carteret Islands are submerging and are expected to be utterly uninhabitable by 2015 but evacuation is expected to take until 2020. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 9/21/2007
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On a visit in Europe one meets more than friends, one meets their appliances. And their appliances may not be altogether like American appliances. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 8/3/2007
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A trip through Belgium on my way from Rotterdam to Zurich rewarded me with surprising--and surprisingly beautiful--sights. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 7/31/2007
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Antarctica's Nunatak heads my list of favorites! South Africa and China topped my favorite countries list. Enrique Iglesias in Germany wraps up my favorites. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 7/24/2007
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International venues devoted to 24 hours of world unification on the urgency of the changes on the face of our Earth. Sing and Rock for a Green Earth. From Antarctica to Shanghai. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 7/3/2007
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Dr. Masaru Emoto begins his summer seminar tour. He discovered of how to study the nature of water, which led to the international Hado water movement. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 7/2/2007
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The most ancient tree in Britain predates Stonehenge. It had spiritual importance for thousands of years. Ancient trees host whole communities of eco-systems. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 6/28/2007
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Four time-tested methods help you get an idea for a novel. Classics, history, biographies, famous people, obscure people, personal chronicles, all are fair game for novel ideas. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 6/22/2007
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Asking if a French-speaker speaks French is not the best way for an English-speaker to make her was around the French sector of Switzerland.... Well, that says it all. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 6/22/2007
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Darfur's conflict began because farmers and herdsmen suddenly had too little water to share. Political differences fanned the flames. Tens of thousands of SudaneseN became refugees. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 6/21/2007
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Retirees and boomers learn to live and vacation atop placid lake waters. Is houseboating a new idea? Is Paradise problem free? By Kareyth Patrick | Published 6/18/2007
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A portfolio of investments grew to around $25 million. Bill's speeches and lectures earned about $40 million. Bill and presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton make full disclosure of all finances and dissolve blind trust fund. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 6/16/2007
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Live Earth Concerts are heading for another summer season of world's greatest concerts from all 7 continents. The British Antarctic Survey indie-rock house band Nunatak is a head-liner. From Antarctica to you! By Kareyth Patrick | Published 6/16/2007
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Cistercian nuns in Madrid, Spain, participated in a medical experiment to evaluate the effect of hops on health. Drinking beer daily, they said they did it for the good of humanity. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 6/13/2007
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Love at first sight is an intuitive sweep of delight, devotion and passionate bonding. Through what mechanism does it occur? Is it a way of finding your soul mate?
By Kareyth Patrick | Published 5/31/2007
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In an article that sites five historic cases of love at first sight, the qualities of love at first sight are expounded. And the potential outcomes are enlightened. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 5/31/2007
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I don't know why we do it, but we do. Here's a story about my love at first sight. It starts with a great pair of eyes. What's your story?
By Kareyth Patrick | Published 5/31/2007
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International complexities of counting can lead to guffaws and faux pas, well, minor ones. Better learn to rename your fingers before traveling in Europe. By Kareyth Patrick | Published 5/31/2007
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