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    New SKorean law tightens rules on cloning (AFP)

    This illustration shows the DNA double helix. South Korea's parliament on Friday passed a law to regulate research into cloning. Cross-species cloning, in which DNA from human somatic cells is inserted into animal eggs, will now be punishable by up to three years in prison, the health ministry said.(AFP/HO/File)AFP - South Korea's parliament on Friday passed a law to regulate research into cloning, following a scandal in which a now-disgraced expert claimed to have made the first human clone stem cells.


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    Fri, 16 May 2008 21:06:28 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    US halts new shipments to strategic oil reserve (AFP)

    A view of the Bryan Mound storage facility in Texas, one of four Strategic Petroleum Reserve sites in the US. The United States is halting shipments to its strategic oil reserve for the second half of the year after Congress passed a bill calling for the suspension, the Energy Department(DOE) said Friday.(AFP/DOE-HO/File)AFP - The United States is halting shipments to its strategic oil reserve for the second half of the year after Congress passed a bill calling for the suspension, the Energy Department said Friday.


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    Fri, 16 May 2008 21:05:43 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    American tourist joins pandas in 'surreal' earthquake ordeal (AFP)

    A young panda eats bamboo at the Chengdu Research Base in Sichuan(AFP/File/Liu Jin)AFP - An American tourist who survived China's deadly earthquake says he is not only lucky to be alive -- he had a "surreal" experience of sharing the moment with giant pandas.


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    Sat, 17 May 2008 02:14:37 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Space Station Crew Welcomes New Cargo Ship (SPACE.com)
    SPACE.com - Astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) welcomed the arrival of a new Russian cargo ship filled with fresh food, water and other vital supplies Friday after a flawless orbital rendezvous. -- read full article
    Fri, 16 May 2008 23:02:36 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    The Nation's Weather (AP)

    The Weather Underground forecast for Friday May 18, 2008 says a low pressure system in the Mid-Atlantic will push offshore with its cold front through the Southeast and southern Texas. This will result in scattered showers and thunderstorms across the East and South. Excessive heat continues in the West.(AP Photo/Weather Underground)AP - Wet weather was expected Friday from New England all the way south to the Gulf Coast.


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    Fri, 16 May 2008 09:58:21 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Same Sex Couples Common in the Wild (LiveScience.com)
    LiveScience.com - As gay couples celebrate their newfound right to marry in California and opposition groups rally to fight the ruling, many struggle with this question: Is homosexuality natural? -- read full article
    Fri, 16 May 2008 21:31:06 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Russian supply ship docks to space station (AP)

    This NASA handout image received in March 2008 shows the International Space Station. A Russian Progress M-64 cargo ship docked Saturday with the International Space Station, the Interfax news agency reported.(AFP/NASA/File/Nasa Photo)AP - A Russian supply ship docked to the international space station on Friday, delivering more than 2 tons of food, water, equipment and scientific experiments.


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    Fri, 16 May 2008 22:11:08 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    El Nino may have helped Magellan cross the Pacific (AP)

    Map locates Ferdinand Magellan's route around the world; 2c x 3 1/4 inches; 96.3 mm x 82.6 mmAP - The El Nino phenomenon that has puzzled climate scientists in recent decades may have assisted the first trip around the world nearly 500 years ago.


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    Fri, 16 May 2008 21:23:35 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Republicans abandon Bush on food, energy issues (AP)

    Senate Appropriations Committee members Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., left, and Sen. Wayne Allard, R-Colo., confer on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, May 15, 2008, during the committee's hearing on markup of the 2008 supplemental appropriations bill. (AP Photo/Lauren Victoria Burke)AP - Congress responded speedily to voters' angst over rising grocery prices and $4-a-gallon gasoline Thursday, bucking President Bush's veto threats with lopsided votes to boost food stamps and farm subsidies — after ordering Bush to quit pouring oil into the nation's emergency reserves.


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    Thu, 15 May 2008 21:20:29 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Polar bear gets new protection (AP)

    In this 2003 file photo provided by Subhankar Banerjee a polar bear walks in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The Interior Department has declared the polar bear a threatened species, saying it must be protected because of the decline in Arctic sea ice from global warming. Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne on Wednesday cited dramatic declines in sea ice over the last three decades and projections of continued losses. (AP Photo/Subhankar Banerjee, File)AP - Put at risk by global warming, the polar bear is getting a life line: The government has declared it a threatened species in need of increased protection. But another round of legal battles surrounding the majestic animal may be just beginning.


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    Thu, 15 May 2008 11:14:52 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    NASA Faces Rocket Test Delays for New Spaceship (SPACE.com)
    SPACE.com - NASA is expecting delays for the first tests of the rocket that will replace its aging space shuttles after they retire in 2010, agency officials said Thursday. -- read full article
    Thu, 15 May 2008 22:15:20 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    New storm deepens misery in cyclone-hit Myanmar (Reuters)

    Parts of water-processing units and humanitarian goods supplied by the German Red Cross for Myanmar, which was hit by Cyclone Nargis are pictured before being loaded into an aircraft at Berlin's Schoenefeld airport May 15, 2008. (Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters)Reuters - Torrential tropical downpours lashed Myanmar's Irrawaddy delta on Friday, deepening the misery of an estimated 2.5 million destitute survivors of Cyclone Nargis and further hampering the military government's aid efforts.


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    Fri, 16 May 2008 08:30:17 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Why the China Quake Was So Devastating (LiveScience.com)

    In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, local residents evacuate from quake-hit Beichuan County in southwest China's Sichuan Province, Friday, May 16, 2008.   (AP Photo/Xinhua, Yang Shirao)LiveScience.com - The 7.9-magnitude earthquake that hit China's Sichuan province, leveling buildings and taking tens of thousands of lives, might not have wrought such destruction in the United States, experts say.


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    Thu, 15 May 2008 19:45:29 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Robotic suit could usher in super soldier era (AP)

    Software engineer Rex Jameson, wearing a robotic soldier suit being made for the U.S. Army by Raytheon, poses next to a mockup statue of a future soldier on Monday, April 14, 2008, in Salt Lake City. The suit can multiply its wearer's strength and endurance as many as 20 times, with relatively little loss of agility, by sensing and almost instantly amplifying every movement the wearer makes. (AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac)AP - Rex Jameson bikes and swims regularly, and plays tennis and skis when time allows. But the 5-foot-11, 180-pound software engineer is lucky if he presses 200 pounds — that is, until he steps into an "exoskeleton" of aluminum and electronics that multiplies his strength and endurance as many as 20 times.


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    Thu, 15 May 2008 17:44:29 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Da Vinci to be honored by small helicopter flight (AP)

    In this photo released on Thursday, May 15, 2008 by Japanese helicopter manufacturing company Gen Corporation, the company employee Yasutoshi Yokoyama flies in the air by GEN H-4, a compact single-seater helicopter developed by Gen Corporation, during its test flight in Matsumoto in central Japan's Nagano Prefecture Jan. 14, 2005. Gennai Yanagisawa, 75, who has developed claimed to be the world's smallest one-man helicopter will take the aircraft on a flight on May 25 in the birthplace of Leonardo da Vinci near Florence, Italy, in tribute to his original idea. (AP Photo/Gen Corporation, HO)AP - A Japanese man who developed the world's smallest helicopter will take flight in the birthplace of Leonardo da Vinci in tribute to the Renaissance genius' original idea.


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    Thu, 15 May 2008 19:04:03 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
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