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NEXUS MAGAZINE Volume 10, Number 2 FEBRUARY - MARCH 2003 PUBLISHED BY NEXUS Magazine Pty Ltd, ABN 80 003 611 434 EDITOR Duncan M. Roads CO-EDITOR Catherine Simons ASSISTANT EDITOR/SUB-EDITOR Ruth Parnell OFFICE ADMIN/EDITORS' ASSISTANT Jenny Hawke MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT Richard Giles; Susie Foster CONTRIBUTORS THIS ISSUE Robert Gagosian, PhD; Sherrill Sellman; Jenny Hawke; José Chung; Graeme Sait; Genesis World Energy; Lloyd Pye; Laurence Gardner, Kt, FSA; Steven McFadden CARTOONS Phil Somerville COVER GRAPHIC John Cook, jscook@ozzienet.net PRINTING Goodhed Print Group, Bicester, Oxon., UK DISTRIBUTION Seymours, London, UK UK OFFICE - 55 Queens Rd, East Grinstead, West Sussex, RH19 1BG. Ph: 01342 322854; Fax: 01342 324574 e-mail address: nexus@ukoffice.u-net.com Website: www.nexusmagazine.com EUROPE OFFICE - PO Box 48, 1600 AA Enkhuizen, The Netherlands. Ph: +31 (0)228 324076; Fax: +31 (0)228 312081 e-mail address: nexus@fsf.nl HEAD OFFICE - Articles, Reviews, etc. PO Box 30, Mapleton, Qld 4560, Australia. Ph: +61 7 5442 9280; Fax: +61 7 5442 9381 e-mail address: editor@nexusmagazine.com ITALY OFFICE - c/- Avalon Edizioni, Piazza Mazzini 52, 35137 Padova, Italy Ph/Fax: +39 (0)49 912 6006 e-mail address: info@nexusitalia.com USA OFFICE - 2940 E. Colfax, #131, Denver CO 80206 USA Tel: 303 321 5006; Fax: 720 941 9352 E-mail: nexususa@earthlink.net STATEMENT OF PURPOSE NEXUS recognises that humanity is undergoing a massive transformation. With this in mind, NEXUS seeks to provide ‘hard-to-get’ information so as to assist people through these changes. NEXUS is not linked to any religious, philosophical or political ideology or organisation. PERMISSION-TO-REPRODUCE POLICY While reproduction and dissemination of the infor- mation in NEXUS is actively encouraged, anyone caught making a buck out of it, without our express permission, will be in trouble when we catch them! Editorial elcome again to NEXUS. As we go to print with this edition in mid-January 2003, my attention is upon several possible futures facing mankind. First up is climate change and, in particular, the prospect of a sudden ice-age. It appears that glacial and polar ice is melting, triggering a change in the ratio of fresh to salty water in the oceans. This in turn is expected to trigger significant ocean current changes, especially with the Gulf Stream which is considered to regulate the climate of Europe. Next are the rumours that Earth is about to receive a heavenly visitor in the form of a planetoid, a comet, an asteroid, a brown dwarf or a black dwarf star. As many readers are aware, there is a lot of information warning specifically that this visitor is going to be here in or by March 2003. We have selected an article by José Chung, which dis- cusses a mysterious object photographed by NASA but removed from their databases. José has made his findings available for other amateur astronomers to check and follow. There is also considerable debate on Mayan "end times". This issue we have an informative and positive article on the Mayan world view, which suggests that the plan- et, far from ending in December 2012 (as does the Mayan calendar, the Tzolk'in), will be transformed—if we actively seek peace and choose a spiritual path. Sherrill Sellman phoned me late last year (2002) and was all fired up about how drug companies are "preying" upon the ignorance of young women. Her article, titled "The Medical Assault on Young Women", is the result of her passion to alert all people to the unnecessary and ongoing "chemical castration" of women. Another "must read" article is the interview with Dr Phil Callahan. This man is a legend! The impact of his research and insights into paramagnetism and nature will be felt for many generations to come. Just one of his findings is that plants emit infrared radiation, which magnifies scent molecules. Insects use their antennae to detect the source of these molecules. Healthy plants emit a different signal than unhealthy plants, and insects are more attracted to the nutritionally deficient plants. At long last we have an article on Stevia. Stevia is a plant that yields an incredible sweetness. It's good for you, and it doesn't upset insulin levels. If you wish to get off refined sugar, get onto stevia (or xylitol, which was featured last issue and is already becoming a popular sugar alternative). The article also looks at efforts to keep stevia hidden from public view in the USA particularly. We have something new and interesting in Science News (again), except this time it's not too technical, leaving you no excuse not to read it. It is an announcement by Genesis World Energy, a mysterious group of apparently benevolent-minded experts who have developed a viable alternative to coal, gas, oil and nuclear energy sources. I look forward hearing more about this technology. It could be what we all are using in years to come, if it gets the "thumbs up" from those who make such decisions. Lloyd Pye is back with yet more evidence that humans could not have evolved from primates. I have received quite a few letters from upset readers that Lloyd dares to point out the errors in current thinking but doesn't suggest a replacement. I would point out to those of such thoughts that the author is not intending to suggest where or how life first came to be. He is merely pointing out that the theory that all life on Earth acci- dentally evolved from goo to humans is now in need of an upgrade or total replacement. Modern science's own findings are destroying Darwinism, and as far as I am concerned it is open season on better suggestions. Laurence Gardner is back with an article that encapsulates his soon-to-be-released book, Lost Secrets of the Sacred Ark. Did the priestly hierarchies of the ancient Middle East and Egypt employ the mysterious properties of "white powder gold"? As I write this editorial, the USA is on the brink of invading Iraq. Today I read of opinion polls which show that most people, including Americans, consider the USA— not Iraq, not North Korea, not Israel—as the country which is the biggest threat to world peace. Government leaders appear to be wondering if they can control the inter- nal dissent of their respective populations. Civil disobedience is being planned across Europe, the UK, USA, Canada, Australia and elsewhere, and the authorities know this. The real battle to watch for, however, is the battle for your mind. Examine regularly what you choose to believe about the world, and reflect your personal integrity via the manner in which you live. Now is the time to pray and act for peace. TD DISTRIBUTION Seymours, London, UK UK OFFICE - 55 Queens Rd, East Grinstead, West Sussex, RH19 1BG. Ph: 01342 322854; Fax: 01342 324574 e-mail address: nexus@ukoffice.u-net.com Website: www.nexusmagazine.com Duncan WARRANTY AND INDEMNITY Advertisers upon and by lodging material with the Publisher for publication or authorising or approving of the publication of any material INDEMNIFY the Publisher and its servants and agents against all liability claims or proceedings whatsoever arising from the publication and without limiting the generality of the foregoing to indemnify each of them in relation to defamation, slander of title, breach of copyright, infringement of trademarks or names of publication titles, unfair competition or trade practices, royalties or violation of rights or privacy AND WARRANT that the material complies with all relevant laws and regulations and that its publication will not give rise to any rights against or liabilities in the Publisher, its servants or agents and in particular that nothing therein is capable of being misleading or deceptive or otherwise in breach of the Part V of the Trade Practices Act 1974. All expressions of opinion are published on the basis that they are not to be regarded as expressing the opinion of the Publisher or its servants or agents. Editorial advice is not specific and readers are advised to seek professional help for individual problems. © NEXUS New Times 2003 2 - NEXUS www.nexusmagazine.com FEBRUARY — MARCH 2003