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A killer site for Dexter victims
Showtime partners with video and chat service Meebo to promote series about vigilante serial killer. Showtime Networks is partnering with Meebo, a firm that fuses video programming and chat rooms, to offer Dexter fans additional content after the serial-killer show airs its season finale on Sunday. A...

Motorola i335 (Nextel)
The Motorola i335 isnt showy or exciting, but it offers superior call quality and the standard Nextel features in an accessible design.

Shaggy Dog Story - My Turn To Spin By Shaun Udal
Loverboy reviews Shaun Udals book, My Turn To Spin and votes it good. Loverboy rarely pulls his punches and doesnt suffer fools gladly, but on this occasion shows a fair degree of reverence to Middlesexs new signing. And why not? The subject matter is interesting and the book well written and presented. Loverboy explains......

NASA releases e-mails in Nowak case (AP)

This photo provided by NASA shows astronaut and U.S. Navy Capt. Lisa M. Nowak, March 7, 2005 in Houston. Nowak was arrested Monday Feb. 5, 2007 for attempting to kidnap a woman she believed was romantically involved with another astronaut she was in love with, police said. NASA on Wednesday Dec. 11, 2007 released copies of the early e-mails between Nowak and astronaut William Oefelein, and messages between Oefelein and Nowaks romantic rival, Air Force Capt. Colleen Shipman.  (AP Photo/NASA)AP - Newly released NASA e-mails hint at something more than a professional relationship between former astronaut Lisa Nowak and a space shuttle pilot.




Japan scientists develop fearless mice (AP)

In this undated photo released by Tokyo Universitys Department of Biophysics and Biochemistry Graduate School of Science, a genetically modified mouse approaches a cat in Tokyo. Using genetic engineering, scientists at Tokyo University say they have successfully switched off the rodents instinct to cower at the smell or presence of cats, showing that fear is genetically hardwired and not leaned through experience, as commonly believed.   (AP Photo/Ko and Reiko Kobayakawa, Tokyo University Department of Biophysics and Biochemistry Graduate School of Science, HO)AP - Cat and mouse may never be the same. Japanese scientists say theyve used genetic engineering to create mice that show no fear of felines, a development that may shed new light on mammal behavior and the nature of fear itself.




Hunley commanders watch no smoking gun (AP)

This undated photo, provided by The Friends of the Hunley, show the gold watch that belonged to the commander of the H.L. Hunley,  Lt. George Dixon.  Scientists announced Friday, Dec. 14, 2007, in Charleston, S.C.,  that the gold watch did not slowly wind down but stopped quickly, leaving unanswered questions about why the Confederate submarine sank sank off Charleston in 1864. (AP Photo/Friends of The Hunley)AP - When scientists opened the watch belonging to the H.L. Hunley commander three years ago, they thought they had the key clue to why the Confederate submarine sank off Charleston.




SKorean scientists clone cats that glow (AP)

This picture taken through a special filter in a dark room shows, a cat, left, possessing a red fluorescent protein that makes the animal glow in the dark when exposed to ultraviolet rays, appearing next to a normal cloned cat, right, at Gyeongsang National University in Jinju, south of Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2007. South Korean scientists have cloned cats that glow red when exposed to ultraviolet rays, an achievement that could help develop cures for human genetic diseases, the Science and Technology Ministry said.   (AP Photo/ Yonhap, Choi Byung-kil)AP - South Korean scientists have cloned cats that glow red when exposed to ultraviolet rays, an achievement that could help develop cures for human genetic diseases, the Science and Technology Ministry said.




Global warming blamed for Walrus deaths (AP)

This photo provided by Pacific Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography shows a female walrus, after a stampede on Cape Vankarem, Russia in March, 2007. Thousands of Pacific walruses above the Arctic Circle died in stampedes earlier this year after the disappearance of sea ice caused them to crowd onto the shoreline in extraordinary numbers. (AP Photo/Pacific Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography Anatoly A. Kochnev)AP - In what some scientists see as another alarming consequence of global warming, thousands of Pacific walruses above the Arctic Circle were killed in stampedes earlier this year after the disappearance of sea ice caused them to crowd onto the shoreline in extraordinary numbers.




 

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