Digital Journal

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Starving mountain bear

Bear forced to take Coca-Cola for amusement of customers, dies

2 November 2010

A dying mountain bear held captive at a cafe in Azerbaijan was forced to drink Coca-Cola for the amusement of customers. It died shortly, and was replaced by another bear. The incident came to light after a video of the cruel incident was released by Daryl Willard, a British sports coach who was working in the former Soviet republic. The pictures were taken last month in the city of Gabala. Willard told The Sun: "People cheered and shouted as they watched the starving bear drink from the cola...

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The Yanomami

Amazon tribe ravaged by suspected malaria epidemic, dozens dead

2 November 2010

An epidemic, suspected to be malaria, has killed dozens of people of the Yanomami tribe in the Venezuelan Amazon. Leaders of the three villages told health workers that around 50 people have died so far, many of them children. "There are still many, many sick people," Andres Blanco told the Associated Press (AP) over telephone from Puerto Ayacucho in southern Venezuela. Blanco, a Yanomami health worker in a government program for the indigenous communities, alerted regional officials this month...

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Oral sex

Oral sex linked to higher rates of teen intercourse

1 November 2010

Most teens who engage in oral sex for the first time will have vaginal intercourse within six months, and half the teens who initiate oral sex in ninth grade will have vaginal intercourse before the end of junior year, researchers have found. The three-year study of 600 high school students by researchers at the University of California - San Francisco and University of California, Merced has found that schools need to provide more comprehensive sex education to teens if they want to be more...

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Google music

Google launches legal music search for India to combat piracy

23 October 2010

Google has announced the launch of a music service in India to help users search for legal online music streams and downloads. The move is being seen as as one meant to fight piracy which has been bleeding the music industry. The official Google India blog announced on Friday that the service is now currently in the labs stage. Using the Google Music Search India service, users in India (and even those outside) can search for Bollywood/Hindi songs from current hits to old classical numbers. The...

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God bless America

US now more diverse, but belief in Christian nation rising: Study

22 October 2010

As the US establishment tries hard to project itself as a religiously diverse country, the conviction that America is a Christian nation is gaining currency and becoming more intensified, a study has found. "Though initially paradoxical, these trends are less mysterious if the idea of a Christian America is understood, not as a description of religious demography, but as a discursive practice that seeks to align the symbolic boundaries of national belonging with the boundaries of the dominant...

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Martin Freeman

Martin Freeman to play Bilbo Baggins in The Hobbit

22 October 2010

The first names in the cast of Peter Jackson's The Hobbit have been announced. Martin Freeman will play Bilbo Baggins, the hobbit whose adventures and discovery of the One Ring led to The Lord of the Rings. He replaces Sir Ian Holm. "Despite the various rumors and speculation surround this role, there has only ever been one Bilbo Baggins for us," Peter Jackson told Deadline.com. "There are a few times in your career when you come across an actor who you know was born to play a role, but that was...

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Giza tourists

Over 200 cultural heritage sites at risk, tourism biggest culprit

20 October 2010

Over 200 of the world's most significant cultural heritage sites are at risk and in need of immediate intervention to stem irreparable loss and destruction, says a new report, Saving Our Vanishing Heritage. These damages can cost developing nations over $100 billion in lost revenue. The years spanning 2000 to 2009 have been highly destructive—one of the most damaging decades in recent history except for periods of major war and conflict, the report says. Five manmade threats are the cause of 90...

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Psalms Scroll

Google gives Dead Sea Scrolls a new lease of life on the Internet

20 October 2010

Google and the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) have announced a joint venture to document the entire collection of the 2,000-year-old Dead Sea Scrolls and make it freely accessible on the Internet. The IAA and Google and said that the collection ― 30,000 fragments comprising 900 manuscripts ― will be photographed in its entirety for the first time since the 1950s. The $3.5 million project will be funded by Leon Levy Foundation, Arcadia Fund and Yad Hanadiv Fund, according to Haaretz. The...

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Quick love

A fifth of a second is all that it takes to fall in love: Study

20 October 2010

Some believe in love at first sight, some think it is nothing more than literary trope. But if you were looking for a scientific argument to believe in it, researchers have come up with numbers ― it takes a fraction of a second to fall in love. A team of researchers from Syracuse University has found that when a person falls in love, 12 areas of the brain work in tandem to release euphoria-inducing chemicals such as dopamine, oxytocin, adrenaline and vasopression. The love feeling also affects...

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Tomb of Rudj-Ka

4,400-yr-old tomb of ancient Egyptian priest discovered at Giza

19 October 2010

Archaeologists have discovered a 4400-year-old tomb, south of the cemetery of the pyramid builders at Giza, Egypt. The discovered tomb belongs to a priest named Rudj-Ka (or Rwd-Ka), and is dated to the 5th Dynasty - between 2465 and 2323 BC. The Egyptian Minister of Culture Farouk Hosny said in a statement that the ancient Egyptian tomb was unearthed during routine excavations supervised by the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA) near the pyramid builder's necropolis. Dr Zahi Hawass, Secretary...

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