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Science News Archives for November 26, 2005

Japanese space probe may be in trouble
Nov 26 2005 11:26PM (CT)
TOKYO (AP) - A Japanese spacecraft showed signs of trouble Saturday after apparently landing on an asteroid and collecting surface samples in an unprecedented mission to bring the extraterrestrial material back to Earth, officials said.
 
Scientists probe Lewis & Clark encampment
Nov 26 2005 10:03PM (CT)
WARRENTON, Ore. (AP) - A fire that destroyed the replica of Fort Clatsop, where Meriwether Lewis and William Clark spent the winter of 1805-1806, has provided a rare chance for archaeologists to probe the ground where the fort stood, seeking even the subtlest evidence of the explorers or the Clatsop Indians who came before them.
 
New liquid-fuel rocket's launch scrubbed
Nov 26 2005 9:20PM (CT)
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) - The maiden flight of a new rocket designed to break into the orbital launch business was scrubbed Saturday because of problems with a liquid oxygen tank and an engine computer.
 
Couple sues operators of evolution site
Nov 26 2005 4:29PM (CT)
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - A California couple has sued the operators of a University of California-Berkeley Web site designed to help teachers teach evolution, claiming it improperly strays into religion.
 
Yellowstone cutthroat trout numbers down
Nov 26 2005 4:24PM (CT)
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (AP) - The Yellowstone cutthroat trout population in the nation's oldest national park "appears to be in peril," according to a new scientific journal article by National Park Service scientists.
 
China honors astronauts after mission
Nov 26 2005 9:50AM (CT)
BEIJING (AP) - China's top leaders honored two astronauts who spent five days in space with a military-themed ceremony broadcast live on television Saturday in an apparent attempt to rouse support for communist rule.
 
   

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