Latest In Body Art? ‘Tattoos’ For Individual Cells
Engineers have developed nanoscale tattoos—dots and wires that adhere to live cells—in a breakthrough that puts researchers one step closer to tracking the health of individual cells. The new...
View ArticleReincarnation In Jewish 21st Century Mystical Thought – OpEd
Every human on earth has 8 great grandparents and 16 great great grandparents. Each of these 24 individuals contributes an equal amount of genetic material to their descendants. Nevertheless, siblings...
View ArticleUS Forces Arrive To Support Deterrence Efforts At Strait Of Hormuz
By C. Todd Lopez Sailors and Marines with the Navy's Bataan Amphibious Ready Group and the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit arrived in the Middle East Sunday as part of a pre-announced deployment to...
View ArticleMore Work Needed To Unlock Mysteries Of Asia’s Bees
Although the collapse of hives of European honey bees (Apis mellifera) has gained worldwide attention in recent years, there are massive gaps in knowledge of other bee species, particularly in the...
View ArticleWebb Spotlights Gravitational Arcs In ‘El Gordo’ Galaxy Cluster
A new image of the galaxy cluster known as “El Gordo” is revealing distant and dusty objects never seen before, and providing a bounty of fresh science. The infrared image, taken by NASA’s James Webb...
View ArticleChina, Germany Say Jeddah Talks On Ukraine Back International Efforts To End War
China and Germany on Monday have praised the recent international talks in Saudi Arabia on resolving the Ukraine crisis, with the Chinese foreign ministry saying the talks helped “consolidate...
View ArticleShrine Of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá: Construction Nears Major Milestone
Construction of the Shrine of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá is moving swiftly ahead with the project team preparing to cast the roof structure—a trellis that will span the central edifice where the sacred remains of...
View ArticleOppenheimer Paradox: Power Of Science And The Weakness Of Scientists – OpEd
The new blockbuster film on Oppenheimer has brought back the memories of the first nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima. It has raised complex questions on the nature of the society that permitted such...
View ArticleIndia: Lees Of Terror In Chhattisgarh – Analysis
By Deepak Kumar Nayak On July 22, 2023, a civilian, Sukka Singh Kachalam, was killed by cadres of the Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) on suspicion of being a ‘police informer’, at Rotad...
View Article‘The Work,’ A Community With Focus On Eucharistic Adoration, Receives Final...
By AC Wimmer The Spiritual Family “The Work,” a Catholic community founded in 1938 by Mother Julia Verhaeghe and recognized by St. John Paul II in 2001 as a “family of consecrated life,” has secured...
View ArticleAfreximbank Advances The AfCFTA At 2nd Russia-Africa Economic Forum – OpEd
With the prevalent dependency of African economies on external supply of fertilizers and grains and up to 30% of cereals imported from Russia, ensuring that critical trade flows continue uninhibited,...
View ArticleIndoctrination, Intimidation And Intolerance: What Passes For Education Today...
This is what it means to go back-to-school in America today. Instead of being taught the three R’s of education (reading, writing and arithmetic), young people are being drilled in the three I’s of...
View ArticleDe-Coupling Or De-Risking: India Poses Challenges To China And South East...
The US-China face off and the Ukraine war added a new layer of FDI culture in the world. Economic factors, like, low cost production and global network of supply chain, are outweighed by political...
View ArticleRussia’s Attack On Ukrainian Food Grain Infrastructures: New Challenges...
Russia initiated a series of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) assaults on Ukraine’s ports, escalating its assault on the nation’s food-export infrastructure after its withdrawal from a grain deal in the...
View ArticleUS, Iraq Examine New Strategic Relationship
By Jim Garamone U.S. and Iraqi defense leaders discussed an enduring strategic relationship between the two nations during talks at the Pentagon. Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III welcomed...
View ArticleNew Antarctic Extremes ‘Virtually Certain’ As World Warms
Extreme events in Antarctica such as ocean heatwaves and ice loss will almost certainly become more common and more severe, researchers say. With drastic action now needed to limit global warming to...
View ArticleBat Activity Lower At Solar Farm Sites
The activity level of six bat species was significantly reduced at solar farm sites, researchers have observed. Their findings, published in Journal of Applied Ecology, have the potential to...
View ArticlePause In Recent Coral Recovery On Much Of Great Barrier Reef
In-water monitoring by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) shows hard coral cover across the Great Barrier Reef remains at similar levels to that recorded in 2022, with small decreases...
View ArticleManaging Domestic And Wildcats Is Likely To Remain Fraught
Current efforts to protect and restore native biodiversity is being threatened by difficulties in identifying wild and domestic cats, and categorisation is likely to remain fraught for the foreseeable...
View ArticleIran, Vietnam To Launch Direct Flights
The speaker of the Iranian Parliament unveiled plans to operate direct flights between Tehran and Hanoi. Speaking at a joint press conference with Chairman of Vietnam’s National Assembly Vuong Dinh...
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