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- T-Rex prey grew 'like crazy' to avoid being dino dinner: study
- LONDON AFP — A duck-billed dinosaur which was a favourite prey of the Tyrannosaurus Rex grew "like crazy" from egg to adult-size to avoid being eaten by the king of the dino world, a study revealed Wednesday. The Hypacrosaurus grew three to five times faster than any of its...
- Research articles 2008-08-06
- Combined joint task force-horn of Africa: defense, diplomacy and development
- The Horn of Africa contains some of the most volatile areas in the world, countries ravaged by poverty, instability, violence, human rights violations, natural catastrophes and piracy. But the Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa, under the leadership of the State Department and supported by the U.S. Agency for International...
- Research articles 2008-04-01
- Taking one for 'Toppers nothing new for Rogers
- PHOENIX -- With Western Kentucky's season in jeopardy of suddenly being over, Hilltoppers coach Darrin Horn would have been happy for any of his players to hit a game-winning shot. That it happened to come from Ty Rogers, well, that was just priceless. ...
- Research articles 2008-03-27
- EastBridge Investment Group Takes Stake in Two Horns Energy Drink Company.
- M2 PRESSWIRE-22 August 2007-InvestSource Inc.: EastBridge Investment Group Takes Stake in Two Horns Energy Drink CompanyC1994-2007 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:22082007 Stocks in the News: EastBridge Investment Group, Inc. (OTC: EBIG), Delta Air Lines Inc. (NYSE: DAL), Northwest Airlines Corp. (NYSE: NWA),...
- Research articles 2007-08-22
- Poachers kill endangered rhinos near Indian sanctuary
- GUWAHATI, India AFP — Poachers shot dead two endangered one-horned rhinos fleeing a flooded Indian wildlife sanctuary, taking the number killed this year into double figures, officials said Tuesday. The poachers took away the animal's horns after using silenced light automatic rifles to kill them near the Kaziranga National...
- Research articles 2007-08-06
- Sleepy Berkeley to weigh safety of 'quiet zones'
- BERKELEY -- Those train whistle blasts that shatter Berkeley's nighttime silence may snap some people out of their dreams, but they also save lives. That's why trains are required to blow their whistles at crossings, and that's why engineers will continue laying on their horns unless Berkeley...
- Research articles 2007-07-24
- Berkeley weighing quiet zones for trains
- BERKELEY -- Those train whistle blasts that shatter Berkeley's nighttime silence may snap some people out of their dreams, but they also save lives. That's why trains are required to blow their whistles at crossings, and that's why engineers will continue laying on their horns unless Berkeley...
- Research articles 2007-07-24
- Train engineers keep chugging despite complaints
- Those train whistle blasts that shatter Berkeley's nighttime silence may snap some people out of their dreams, but they also save lives. That's why trains are required to blow their whistles at crossings, and that's why engineers will continue laying on their horns unless Berkeley establishes "quiet...
- Research articles 2007-07-22
- Policing the undergoverned spaces; Africa and the "war on terror".(America's army hunts terrorists in Africa)
- The Americans are intensifying their hunt for al-Qaeda in the Sahara and beyond FAR from the killing fields of Iraq or Afghanistan, Alher Ag Metky, an indigo-robed Tuareg commander in Timbuktu, is meant to be fighting on another front in America's war on...
- Research articles 2007-06-16
- Wildlife smuggling in Asia still a roaring trade
- HONG KONG AFP — Carved up for the dinner table, ground up for medicine or simply sold off as exotic pets, Asia's endangered species are at the core of a lucrative smuggling trade that shows little sign of easing off. An abandoned wreck of a boat off China's southern...
- Research articles 2007-06-02
- High alert in India over rhino poaching
- KAZIRANGA, India AFP — Wardens at a national park in northeastern India have raised the alarm following a sharp rise in the poaching of endangered one-horned rhinos, officials said Monday. "Six rhinos poached in about 100 days, including two of the beasts killed in the past week, is a...
- Research articles 2007-04-16
- Eight arrested for rhino poaching in Nepal
- KATHMANDU AFP — Eight men, including a former airline pilot and an army officer, have been arrested on suspicion of poaching rhino in one of Nepal's most important national parks. "The former pilot allegedly supplied guns to other smugglers and the army man supplied the live ammunition," the state-run...
- Research articles 2007-03-13
- US commander hails cooperation with Ethiopia
- ADDIS ABABA AFP — The US Commander of the Joint Task Force for the Horn of Africa lauded its joint anti-terrorism activities with Ethiopia, whose troops recently defeated an Islamist movement in Somalia. Rear Admiral Richard W. Hunt said Addis Ababa, whose military intervention received Washington's backing, was working...
- Research articles 2007-02-14
- US–funded Voice of America broadcaster revives Somali service
- WASHINGTON AFP — The US-funded broadcaster Voice of America is reviving a Somali radio program for the Horn of Africa as it expands its service in a volatile region that has become a front in the US "war on terror". The Somali-language service returns to the airwaves on February...
- Research articles 2007-02-01
- US sees Somalia as key front in war on terror
- WASHINGTON AFP — The rapid deployment of US military forces to track down Islamists fleeing Somalia has highlighted Washington's conviction that the unstable Horn of Africa region is a key front in its war on terrorism. US warships deployed off the coasts of Somalia and neighboring Kenya at midweek to...
- Research articles 2007-01-07
- The path to ruin - The Horn of Africa.(The threat of war plus uncontrolled population growth)
- Islamist militia guard Mogadishu A region endangered by Islamists, guns and its own swelling population BOSSASO is an exit point from the Horn of Africa and it is bursting. This port in northern Somalia already has 300,000 people, up from 50,000...
- Research articles 2006-08-12
- Summer shopping
- With the NBA's summer free-agency market now open, 25 names to ponder: TOP OF THE HEAP Ben Wallace, Pistons Jason Terry, Mavericks Al Harrington, Hawks SHOOT FOR THE MOON Peja Stojakovic, Pacers SAY IT AIN'T SO...
- Research articles 2006-07-01
- Fighting in the Shadows
- Mogadishu is a place most Americans would rather forget. During the 1990s, the "Black Hawk Down" debacle symbolized the dangers of dabbling in far-off lands we don't understand. TV images of a half-stripped GI being dragged through the dust by gleeful Somalis--he was one of 18 U.S. Army Rangers killed...
- Research articles 2006-06-05
- Pettersson still on top at storm-struck Memorial
- DUBLIN, Ohio AFP — Carl Pettersson was clinging to a one-shot lead when the third round of the Memorial was halted, with Masters champion Phil Mickelson among those within striking distance. Pettersson birdied the par-five 15th to get to 11-under-par with three holes remaining at Muirfield Village when a...
- Research articles 2006-06-03
- Kenya hunts rhino poachers in famed wildlife reserve
- NAIROBI AFP — Kenyan authorities have launched a massive manhunt for poachers suspected of killing rare black rhinos in the east African nation's famed Tsavo East National Park. The Kenya Wildlife Service KWS said it had begun a "major operation" in and around the park after recovering the carcasses...
- Research articles 2006-05-25
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