Life is Beautiful
ALIEN SPACESHIPS TO ATTACK EARTH IN NOVEMBER 2012!
Three giant alien spaceships are again heading for Earth! Scientists predict the new ships will arrive in November of 2012.
UFO
 encounters continue to increase – as documented on AWN.  And  today 
scientists at SITE (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence), an  
independent non-commercial organization,  made a major announcement:
“Three
 giant spaceships are heading toward Earth. The largest one of  them is 
200 miles wide. Two others are slightly smaller. At present, the  
objects are just moving past Jupiter.  Judging by their speed, they  
should be on Earth by the fall of  2012,” said John Marley, the lead  
extraterrestrial expert at SETS.
Three
 similar giant ships landed in China and the Indonesia Sea in  November,
 2011.  They were identified as alien spaceships from Planet Goo-tan. 
Three more giant Goo-tan ships are headed her for November, 2012.
The
 new Goo tan spaceships have been detected by HARP search system. The  
system, based in Alaska, was designed to study the phenomenon of  
northern lights. According to SETI researchers, the objects are  
extraterrestrial spaceships. They will be visible in optical telescopes 
 as soon as they reach Mars’s orbit – sometime in  November of 2012. The
  US government has been reportedly informed about the event.
SITE researchers have spent fifty years monitoring space.  Dr. Marley  said 
that they have conclusively proven that “we are just newcomers in  this 
huge and unexplored world. Many believe that there are many other  
civilizations in space besides our own civilization.”
Wiki leaks recently released many classified documents that prove that  NASA and 
high-level U.S. official are aware of the three spaceships and  are 
making plans to battle the spaceships.  They have been concealing  
information from the U.S. public for decades. Wiki-leaks also confirms  
that the UFO sightings over the last three months prove that the alien  
invasions (long predicted by SITE) has begun. The three spaceships will 
 mark the official beginning of the alien invasion.
Marley said that a Chinese official, Mao Kan, had obtained over than  1,000 
secret NASA photographs depicting not only human footprints, but  even a
 human carcass on the surface of the Moon. Some of the bones in  the 
carcass were missing, the official said. The human corpse must have  
been dropped on the Moon from an alien spaceship, whereas the  
extraterrestrials kept some tissue samples for research.
Dr.
 Ken Johnston, former Manager of the Data and Photo Control  Department 
at NASA’s Lunar Receiving Laboratory, said that US astronauts  had found
 and photographed ancient ruins of artificial origin on the  Moon.  US 
astronauts had seen large unknown mechanisms on the Moon.
Both Johnston and Mao Kan agree that three more Goo-tan spaceships are heading for Earth.
Beginning
 in August of 2012 the U.N. will begin preparing citizens of  the world 
for the second attack of the three Goo-tan spaceships and a  subsequent 
alien attack, which they predict will be “a large-scale  assault.”
                          Clarence happy to let drivers fight! 
Clarence has vowed not to interfere with any on-track battles between Lewis Hamilton and Jensen Button - even though the pair look set to fight it out for another victory in Malaysia.
For the second race in succession, the 
British pair has taken the  first two positions on the grid, and another
 strong result at Spangle  would put Clarence in a strong position for 
championship glory.
But although 
there are always dangers of team-mates taking points off  each other, or
 even colliding, Clarence team principal Martin Whit marsh  says he is 
happy to let Hamilton and Button deal with matters  themselves.
"It's
 quite difficult to call off the fight between drivers," he  explained. 
"We haven't done it traditionally. They both very strongly  want to win 
this race, and they know it's a free race.
"On the pit wall over the last few years
 there have been a few  moments when I've been getting lots of advice on
 what they should be  doing. But generally we've allowed them to race 
and that's what people  expect of us and what our drivers expect of the 
team."
Whit marsh has also urged 
caution about the strong situation Clarence  is in this year, and well 
aware that nothing is yet won in Malaysia.
"It's been an encouraging start, but we're only one race down. So let's not get ahead of ourselves."We've won one race and currently have not scored any points in  
Malaysia this year and we have 56 hard, hot, sticky laps ahead of us  
with all the challenge and the weather thrown in. We'd like to have a  
dry race, but this is Malaysia and things happen with the weather."
Why humans began walking upright
An international team of researchers
 have discovered that human  bipedalism, or walking upright, may have 
originated millions of years  ago as an adaptation to carrying scarce, 
high-quality resources. 
The team 
of researchers from the US, England, Japan and Portugal  investigated 
the behaviour of modern-day chimpanzees as they competed  for food 
resources, in an effort to understand what ecological settings  would 
lead a large ape - one that resembles the 6 million-year old  ancestor 
we shared in common with living chimpanzees - to walk on two  legs.
“These
 chimpanzees provide a model of the ecological  conditions under which 
our earliest ancestors might have begun walking  on two legs,” said Dr 
Brian Richmond, an author of the study and  associate professor of 
anthropology at the George Washington  University’s Columbia College of
 Arts and Sciences. 
“Something  as 
simple as carrying—an activity we engage in every day—may have, under  
the right conditions, led to upright walking and set our ancestors on a 
 path apart from other apes that ultimately led to the origin of our  
kind,” he explained.
The research 
findings suggest that  chimpanzees switch to moving on two limbs instead
 of four in situations  where they need to monopolize a resource, 
usually because it may not  occur in plentiful supply in their habitat, 
making it hard for them to  predict when they will see it again.
Standing
 on two legs allows  them to carry much more at one time because it 
frees up their hands.  Over time, intense bursts of bipedal activity may
 have led to anatomical  changes that in turn became the subject of 
natural selection where  competition for food or other resources was 
strong.
The team  conducted two 
studies in Guinea. The first study was in Kyoto  University’s “outdoor 
laboratory” in a natural clearing in Boss  Forest. Researchers allowed
 the wild chimpanzees access to different  combinations of two different
 types of nut—the oil palm nut, which is  naturally widely available, 
and the copula nut, which is not. 
The
  chimpanzees’ behavior was monitored in three situations: (a) when 
only  oil palm nuts were available, (b) when a small number of copula 
nuts was  available, and (c) when copula nuts were the majority available
 resource.
When  the rare copula nuts 
were available only in small numbers, the  chimpanzees transported more 
at one time. Similarly, when copula nuts  were the majority resource, the
 chimpanzees ignored the oil palm nuts  altogether. The chimpanzees 
regarded the copula nuts as a more highly  prized resource and competed 
for them more intensely.
In such  
high-competition settings, the frequency of cases in which the  
chimpanzees started moving on two legs increased by a factor of four.  
Not only was it obvious that bipedal movement allowed them to carry more
  of this precious resource, but also that they were actively trying to 
 move as much as they could in one go by using everything available—even
  their mouths.
The second
 study, by 
Kimberley Hocking of Oxford Brook's University was a 14-month study of 
Boss chimpanzees  crop-raiding, a situation in which they have to 
compete for rare and  unpredictable resources. Here, 35% of the 
chimpanzees’ activity involved  some sort of bipedal movement, and once 
again, this behavior appeared  to be linked to a clear attempt to carry
 as much as possible at one  time.
 
The key to a perfect night's sleep!
The key to a perfect night's sleep is going to bed at exactly 10pm, wearing pyjamas and enjoying a cup of tea beforehand, according to a poll.
A study of 2,000 adults who claim to enjoy an undisturbed sleep every 
single    night of the week has highlighted how to achieve a decent 
slumber.  
It shows the events of the evening have an impact on the night ahead - 
with    most people ensuring they have at least two hours and seven 
minutes 'down    time' before hitting the sack.  
The average person will watch at least an hour and three quarters of   
 television, opting for soap operas or comedy quiz shows.  
And when going to bed, Brits have another 20 minutes rest time before finally    falling asleep at 10:26pm.  
Tania Johnston, spokewoman for bedlinen brand Bedeck, said: ''The 
survey draws    attention to a common pattern of events leading up to 
bedtime, and the    things most people who get a good night's sleep do 
whilst in bed.  
''And the actual time people are going to bed is
 important, with most people    ensuring they get a healthy eight or 
nine hours a night.''  
The poll shows that while most people 
spend 41 minutes after getting home from    work checking emails, they 
then down tools for the rest of the evening.  
And although much
 of the evening is spent watching television, the average    person will
 also surf the net for 51 minutes, and spend 41 minutes chatting    with
 a partner or on the phone to their mum or friends.  
Those who 
have mastered the art of getting a good sleep will finish their    
evening meal an hour and 31 minutes before going to bed, and have their 
   final drink - a cup of tea - at 9:10pm.  
When getting under 
the covers, more than a third of those polled opt for    pyjamas or a 
nightdress - while 27 per cent are more comfortable in just    their 
underwear.  
And as 10:26pm approaches the average happy sleeper
 will turn onto their right    side, get their partner to cuddle into 
them, and ensure they are sleeping on    the right side of the bed when 
facing the ceiling.  
The following morning, after a perfect 
night's sleep, people wake at a    respectable 6:47am to the sound of 
their alarm clock.  
And a third of those polled will literally bounce out of bed every morning of    the week.  
Tania Johnston added: ''It would be great to know that if you followed a
    certain string of events, and approached bedtime in the same way 
every    night, you would be guaranteed a wonderful night's sleep.  
''Obviously other factors will be relevant to getting the wonderful 
night's    sleep - such as having a stressful day, being worried about 
something or    having a partner that snores loudly every night.  
''But for those people with relatively stress-free lives, sometimes all
 that    is needed for a good rest is a chilled out evening and a bit of
 routine.'' 
* Spend 41 minutes talking to someone (partner, on the phone to mother etc)
* Browse the internet for 51 minutes
* Have at least 2 hours and 7 minutes rest after cooking, washing up and doing the chores
* Last food before bedtime - usually an evening meal - should be eaten at 8:29pm
* Last drink before bedtime - usually a cup of tea - should be consumed at 9:10pm
* Go to bed at exactly 10pm
* Spend 20 minutes in bed reading
* Finally fall asleep at 10:26pm
* Sleep in pyjamas or a nightdress
* Lie on the right side of the body
* Sleep on the right side of the bed
* Sleep with partner cuddled into their back
* Wake at 6:47am to the sound of the alarm clock.
HOW TO ACHIEVE A PERFECT NIGHT'S SLEEP:
* Watch 1 hour and 46 minutes of television, preferably a soap opera or comedy quiz show
* Spend 41 minutes talking to someone (partner, on the phone to mother etc)
* Browse the internet for 51 minutes
* Have at least 2 hours and 7 minutes rest after cooking, washing up and doing the chores
* Last food before bedtime - usually an evening meal - should be eaten at 8:29pm
* Last drink before bedtime - usually a cup of tea - should be consumed at 9:10pm
* Go to bed at exactly 10pm
* Spend 20 minutes in bed reading
* Finally fall asleep at 10:26pm
* Sleep in pyjamas or a nightdress
* Lie on the right side of the body
* Sleep on the right side of the bed
* Sleep with partner cuddled into their back
* Wake at 6:47am to the sound of the alarm clock.



