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North Korea vows to rip up military safeguards with South

Reuters - Thu, 2010-05-27 02:57
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea said on Thursday it was ripping up military agreements signed with the South in a step seen as a prelude to shutting down a joint factory park, just as Seoul staged anti-submarine drills in tense border waters.


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BP: Appears only drilling mud flowing from well

Reuters - Thu, 2010-05-27 01:42
HOUSTON (Reuters) - BP Plc Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles said on Wednesday it appears drilling mud, not oil, was gushing from a ruptured undersea well six hours into an effort to halt a growing oil spill.


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Obama extends drilling moratorium as BP fights oil spill

Reuters - Thu, 2010-05-27 01:41
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - BP said it was making headway in plugging its ruptured Gulf of Mexico oil well on Thursday as President Barack Obama fought off criticism that his government has been slow to respond to the crisis.


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NY man accused of helping al Qaeda denied bail

Reuters - Thu, 2010-05-27 00:01
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York man accused of pledging allegiance to al Qaeda in Yemen and buying digital watches prosecutors said could be used as explosives timers, was denied bail on Wednesday in Manhattan federal court.


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Troops not militarizing Mexico border: U.S. envoy

Reuters - Wed, 2010-05-26 23:35
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - U.S. troops deployed to the Mexican border will take a backseat role to civilian security forces combating illegal flows of drugs and migrants and will not militarize the frontier, the U.S. ambassador to Mexico said on Wednesday.


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BP starts deep-sea bid to plug gushing oil well

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 22:37

By Chris Baltimore and Tom Bergin

HOUSTON (Reuters) - BP Plc launched an ambitious deep sea operation to choke off a gushing oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday, but President Barack Obama cautioned Americans there was no guarantee it would work.

[More]
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Virulent wheat fungus invades South Africa

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 22:01

By Natasha Gilbert

Two new forms of a devastating wheat fungus, known as Ug99 stem rust, have shown up in South Africa, a study has found.

The two South African forms are able to overcome the effects of two resistance genes in wheat that normally prevent stem rust from taking hold. [More]

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Airport security: Intent to deceive?

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 22:00

By Sharon Weinberger

In August 2009, Nicholas George, a 22-year-old student at Pomona College in Claremont, Calif., was going through a checkpoint at Philadelphia International Airport when he was pulled aside for questioning. [More]

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Madagascar bird driven to extinction by invasive fish

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 22:00

A bird from the Indian Ocean island of Madagascar called the Alaotra grebe ( Tachybaptus rufolavatus ) has been declared extinct by conservation group BirdLife International. BirdLife contributed to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species with a major update on the world's bird species, which was released on Wednesday.

The grebe, previously found only on Lake Alaotra in eastern Madagascar, was driven to extinction in part by the introduction of snakehead murrel, a carnivorous fish, to the area. Fishermen's modern nylon gillnets, which caught and drowned the birds, also contributed to their demise. The bird was incapable of long flights, so it had a limited range and was vulnerable to attack.

[More]
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Unlocking the Chemistry of Exercise: How Metabolites Separate the Physically Fit from Unfit

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 21:30

The virtues of exercise are myriad: better cardiovascular health, decreased risk for diabetes, boosted mood, and even perhaps a leaner physique. But aside from such macro links and knowledge about the heart rates, blood–oxygen levels and hormonal responses related to exercise, scientists have a relatively cursory understanding of the chemical mechanisms at work in the body during and after physical activity . [More]

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Back off, asteroids--We've got nukes

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 21:20

MIAMI--To avoid Armageddon, we may have to invoke Armageddon . You know, the Bruce Willis version. [More]

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"Udderly weird yam" and "killer sponge" among top 10 new species of 2010

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 20:20

Every year hundreds if not thousands of new species are described for the first time by science. And every year, the International Institute for Species Exploration (IISE) takes a look at the previous year's new species and picks the "Top 10 New Species".

This year's list --containing species first found in 2009--contains some doozies: a bug-eating slug, an electric fish, a "far-out frogfish" and several other fun and weird creatures .

[More]
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Facebook boosts privacy controls amid criticism

Reuters - Wed, 2010-05-26 19:46
BOSTON (Reuters) - Facebook is beefing up privacy protections on the world's most popular online social network, addressing mounting pressure to better secure personal data exchanged among its nearly 500 million members.


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Small Triceratops relative suggests new dinosaur migration routes from Asia to Europe

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 18:20

Some 100 million to 65 million years ago, when Europe was an island archipelago, a small horned dinosaur roamed what is now Hungary. Fossil remains from this tiny dinosaur represent the first ceratopsian found in Europe and shed new light on the distribution and movement of dinosaurs during that period. It is described online May 26 in Nature ( Scientific American is part of Nature Publishing Group). [More]

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Wayward Gluttons: Galactic Black Holes Can Migrate or Quickly Awaken from Quiescence

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 17:20

MIAMI--Observations from NASA space telescopes have revealed new quirks about the supermassive black holes at the heart of two galaxies. In the supersize elliptical galaxy M87 some 55 million light-years away, for one, the black hole is not in the galaxy's center of mass, apparently having been pushed askew by some violent process. And in the Andromeda Galaxy, a neighbor to our own Milky Way just 2.5 million light-years away, the black hole appears to have recently--and very suddenly--awoken from a slumber. Two groups presented the black-hole findings Tuesday at the semiannual meeting of the American Astronomical Society being held here this week. [More]

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Science Maps Explore New Ways of Displaying Information [Slide Show]

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 16:59

Data visualization is something of a cottage industry these days--witness Edward Tufte, an emeritus professor of political science at Yale University, who has built a mini empire founded on his well-received books, which bear titles like Visual Explanations; Envisioning Information; and The Visual Display of Quantitative Information . In addition to leading one-day courses and securing a recent presidential appointment to an advisory panel relating to accountability in the economic recovery package, Tufte is, according to his Web site , opening a gallery, ET Modern, in New York City's Chelsea neighborhood. [More]

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Alzheimer's Prevention Strategies Remain an Elusive Challenge

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 16:00

The search for new drugs that can reverse the course of Alzheimer's has frustrated pharmaceutical companies, with several failures reported in recent years. Research advances have arrived, not in the form of new drugs but, rather, in technologies that track the underlying biology of the disease before the first symptoms appear. [More]

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Global Emissions Predicted to Grow through 2035

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 15:15

Global carbon dioxide emissions will increase 43 percent by 2035 if major nations remain tied to existing energy policies and do not act to curb global warming, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration .

EIA, in its 2010 long-term global energy analysis, predicts oil prices will hover around $133 a barrel in 2035 and energy use will increase 49 percent between 2007 and 2035. Most of that new energy consumption will be out of China, India and other developing countries as they churn out steel, build more power plants and drive more cars.

[More]
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And the Weirdest New Species Are...

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 15:08

What do a carnivorous sponge, a lobular yam and a flat-faced psychedelic frogfish all have in common? They’re among the Top 10 Species first described in 2009. That’s according the International Institute for Species Exploration at Arizona State University. [ http://species.asu.edu/Top10 ] [More]

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Are the Rules That Determine Who Can Donate Blood Outdated?

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-05-26 15:00

The victim of a car accident can require as many as 100 pints of blood--that's blood from 100 generous donors across the country, meticulously matched for blood type and screened for diseases. More than 38,000 blood donations are needed daily in the U.S., but only 38 percent of Americans are eligible to donate blood, and of those, only 8 percent actually do. [More]

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