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    Iraqi oil pipeline sabotage drops sharply (AP)

    A U.S. soldier holds a poster of anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr found during a search operation in Maysan province near the border with Iran, 320 kilometers (200 miles) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq on Friday, June 20, 2008. U.S.-backed Iraqi security forces are in their second day of military operations in the southern city of Amarah. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)AP - A sharp drop in attacks on pipelines has enabled Iraq to increase oil exports from northern oil fields and profit from the rise in world energy prices, the country's oil minister said Friday.


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    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 20:06:23 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Fla. to sue Army Corps of Engineers over water (AP)
    AP - Florida said it intends to sue the Army Corps of Engineers for violating the Endangered Species Act, a move which could further complicate already strained regional relations over shared water resources. -- read full article
    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 22:20:43 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Space Shuttle Statues to be Painted for Student Scholarships (SPACE.com)
    SPACE.com - Over 100 space shuttles will land this November at the Kennedy Space Center, though NASA can take credit for only one. The additional orbiters will be courtesy the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation, which on Thursday formally announced the "Shuttles Orbiting the Space Coast" program, a public art exhibit organized to celebrate the first half-century of U.S. space exploration. -- read full article
    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 22:01:17 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    New Orleans streetcar reopens as transit struggles (AP)

    In a Saturday, Nov. 10, 2007 file photo, streetcars run along the Uptown section of the St. Charles Ave. line in New Orleans. The full 13-mile length of the city's historic St. Charles street car line will be up and running for the first time since Hurricane Katrina on Sunday, June 22, 2008, a milestone in New Orleans' recovery from the storm nearly three years ago.  (AP Photo/Ann Heisenfelt, File)AP - For the first time since Hurricane Katrina, the 1920s-era St. Charles Avenue streetcar will clack along its entire 13-mile route Sunday.


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    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 18:24:29 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    RE: FWD: Beware Hoax E-Mails!!! (LiveScience.com)
    LiveScience.com - You may have been looking for her if you are one of the hundreds of thousands of people who got the following e-mail, with the subject line "Please look at this picture then forward": -- read full article
    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 19:31:33 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Mexico recovers 929 pre-Columbian pieces (AP)

    Photographers take pictures of pre-Columbian artifacts that were stolen and recently recovered at a press conference in Mexico City, Friday, June 20, 2008.  Hundreds of pre-Columbian artifacts were returned to Mexico after being seized from smugglers in the U.S. and Canada.  (AP Photo/Alexandre Meneghini)AP - Mexico recovered more than 900 pre-Columbian artifacts seized from smugglers in the U.S. and Canada, including 800-year-old fiber sandals, spears and hunting bows looted from nomadic caves, officials said Friday.


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    Sat, 21 Jun 2008 00:09:02 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Floodwaters to widen 'dead zone' in Gulf of Mexico (AP)

    Graphic shows the ?Dead Zone? in the Gulf of Mexico; 1c x 4 1/4 inches; 46.5 mm x 108 mmAP - Floodwaters loaded with farm runoff are heading down the Mississippi River, and scientists fear the deluge will dramatically increase this summer's dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico, covering an area the size of Maryland.


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    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 20:02:52 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Study: Moving virus research could be costly (AP)

    In this Aug. 7, 2007, file photo a worker in protective clothing directs the loading of a dead cow into a truck at a farm outside Normandy, south England, where tests confirmed a second outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease.  According to a report released Friday, June 20, 2008, by the Department of Homeland Security the economic risk of an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease could surpass $4 billion if the current U.S. research lab of such dangerous pathogens on Plum Island, N.Y., was moved to the U.S. mainland,  near livestock herds in Kansas or Texas, two options the Bush administration is considering.  (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, File)AP - An outbreak of one of the most contagious animal diseases from any of five locations the White House is considering for a new high-security research laboratory would be more devastating to the U.S. economy than from the isolated island laboratory where such research is now conducted, says a report published Friday.


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    Sat, 21 Jun 2008 00:40:39 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Scientists ponder whether ice on Mars ever melted (AP)

    This combination of images provided by NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander's Surface Stereo Imager on Sunday, June 15, left, and Wednesday, June 18, 2008, right, or Sols 20 and 24, shows sublimation of ice in the trench informally called 'Dodo-Goldilocks' over the course of four days. In the lower left corner of the left image, a group of lumps is visible. In the right image, the lumps have disappeared. (AP Photo/NASA/JPL/CALTECH)AP - The apparent discovery of ice near Mars' north pole has scientists asking: Did the frozen water melt at some point in the planet's long history to create an environment friendly for life?


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    Sat, 21 Jun 2008 06:36:33 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Even Texan oilmen think energy supplies have to be diversified (AFP)

    A view of an oil refinery in Galveston , Texas. The Texan oilmen dining at Midland's Petroleum Club are not very happy with the energy policies coming out of Washington these days.(AFP/File/Robert Sullivan)AFP - The Texan oilmen dining at Midland's Petroleum Club are not very happy with the energy policies coming out of Washington these days.


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    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 13:50:44 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Japan police arrest Greenpeace members over whale meat (AFP)

    Police officers enter the Greenpeace Japan office in Tokyo to seize evidence. Japanese police on Friday arrested two Greenpeace members who had alleged corruption in the country's controversial whaling programme, accusing the activists of stealing whale meat.(AFP/JIJI Press)AFP - Japanese police on Friday arrested two Greenpeace members who had alleged corruption in the country's controversial whaling programme, accusing the activists of stealing whale meat.


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    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 15:57:14 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    NASA Launches New Satellite to Map Rising Seas (SPACE.com)
    SPACE.com - PARIS — The U.S.-European Jason-2 ocean altimetry satellite was launched successfully June 20 aboard a Delta 2 rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., on a five-year mission to continue the uninterrupted study of ocean levels and currents that was begun in the early 1990s in a U.S.-French partnership. -- read full article
    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 16:45:31 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Spike Lee may revisit Katrina (Reuters)

    Director, writer, actor and producer Spike Lee poses as he arrives at the 6th annual Behind The Lens Award ceremony honoring Lee in Beverly Hills, California March 26, 2008. (Fred Prouser/Reuters)Reuters - Spike Lee may not be done with Hurricane Katrina yet.


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    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 07:43:58 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Why Oil Prices Skyrocketed (LiveScience.com)
    LiveScience.com - With the cost of crude oil surging to record highs, a heated battle of blame is in full swing, with a lineup of suspects that includes the oil industry, Congress, commodity speculators, environmentalists and developing countries in Asia. -- read full article
    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 15:45:54 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Business leaders call for global warming action (AP)

    Richard Samans, managing director and chief knowledge integration officer of World Economic Forum speaks during a press conference in Tokyo, Friday, June 20, 2008. The world's developed countries should take the lead in the battle against global warming and push for halving global emissions of greenhouse gases by 2050, the group of business leaders said Friday.(AP Photo/Katsumi Kasahara)AP - The world's developed countries should take the lead in the battle against global warming and push for halving global emissions of greenhouse gases by 2050, a group of business leaders said Friday.


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    Fri, 20 Jun 2008 09:16:16 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
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