Sunday, September 12, 2010

Watching the World

From Awake Magazine March 2007, published by Jehovah Witness's

World’s Highest Railway

The world’s highest railway, inaugurated in July 2006, links Beijing with Tibet’s capital, Lhasa, a distance of about 2,500 miles [4,000 km]. “The railway,” says The New York Times, “is an engineering marvel that traverses unstable permafrost and reaches more than 16,000 feet [4,800 m] above sea level.” Among the challenges overcome by engineers was that of keeping the track bed frozen all year round to reduce instability. The altitudes reached make it necessary to pump air into the compartments, which are also equipped with oxygen for individual passenger use.

“Phantom Students”

From 10 to 20 percent of first-year students enrolled to study literature at one French university “never show up for lectures,” reports the newspaper Le Figaro. Some take advantage of student status to obtain social security benefits and discounts on flights, hotels, public transportation, and movies. To receive benefits “phantom students” sign up for undersubscribed courses, such as Belarusian, Finnish, or Swahili. Phony registrations are common because attendance is not checked. “Students” enroll online and receive student cards within days, explains the report.

‘Sealed Off From the World’

Israeli scientists believe that they have discovered eight new species of invertebrates in a cave that “had been sealed off from the outside world” for countless centuries, says The Jerusalem Post. Excavators working in a quarry found a small opening that led down to a cave that had a total length of about one and a half miles [2.5 km] and contained a chamber with a lake. The new species, some of which resemble scorpions, include two seawater and two freshwater crustaceans and four terrestrial species.

Ghost, OUT!

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