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   BROWSE BY SOURCE : NEW YORK TIMES
A Shift in the Debate Over Global Warming -- Andrew C. Revkin  -- New York Times  -- April 06, 2008

With recent data showing an unexpected rise in global emissions and a decline in energy efficiency, a growing chorus of economists, scientists and students of energy policy are saying that whatever benefits a cap on greenhouse gas emissions yields, it will be too little and come too late.

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Pentagon Is Confident Missile Hit Satellite Tank -- Thom Shanker  -- New York Times  -- February 21, 2008

Just hours after a Navy missile interceptor struck a dying spy satellite orbiting 130 miles over the Pacific Ocean, a senior military officer expressed high confidence early Thursday that a tank filled with toxic rocket fuel had been breached.

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Missile Defense Future May Turn on Success of Mission to Destroy Satellite -- Thom Shanker  -- New York Times  -- February 16, 2008

The order by President Bush for the Navy to launch an antimissile interceptor to destroy a disabled satellite before it falls from orbit carries opportunity, but also potential embarrassment, for the administration and advocates of its missile defense program.

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U.S. to Attempt to Shoot Down Faulty Satellite -- Thom Shanker  -- New York Times  -- February 15, 2008

The military will try to shoot down a crippled spy satellite in the next two weeks, senior officials said Thursday. The officials laid out a high-tech plan to intercept the satellite over the Pacific just before it tumbles uncontrollably to Earth carrying toxic fuel.

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Pursuing Synthetic Life, Dazzled by Reality -- Natalie Angier  -- New York Times  -- February 05, 2008

Scientists who seek to imitate living cells say they can't help but be perpetually dazzled by the genuine articles, their flexibility, their versatility, their childlike grandiosity. No matter what outrageous or fattening things we may ask our synthetic cells to do, scientists say, it's nothing compared with what cells already have done of their own accord, usually in the format of bacteria.

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Satellite Spotters Glimpse Secrets, and Tell Them -- John Schwartz  -- New York Times  -- February 05, 2008

An article on the community of visual satellite spotters, amateur hobbyists who enjoy the challenge of identifying and tracking government satellites and sharing the information on the internet.

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Google's Next Frontier: Renewable Energy -- Brad Stone  -- New York Times  -- November 28, 2007

Google will spend hundreds of millions of dollars to develop and help stimulate the creation of renewable energy technologies that are cheaper than coal-generated power.

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U.S. Secretly Aids Pakistan in Guarding Nuclear Arms -- David Sanger and William Broad  -- New York Times  -- November 18, 2007

Over the past six years, the Bush administration has spent almost $100 million on a highly classified program to help Gen. Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's president, secure his country's nuclear weapons, according to current and former senior administration officials.

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Arctic Melt Unnerves the Experts -- Andrew C. Revkin  -- New York Times  -- October 02, 2007

The Arctic ice cap shrank so much this summer that waves briefly lapped along two long-imagined Arctic shipping routes, the Northwest Passage over Canada and the Northern Sea Route over Russia. Over all, the floating ice dwindled to an extent unparalleled in a century or more, by several estimates.

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Liberties Advocates Fear Abuse of Satellite Images -- Eric Schmitt  -- New York Times  -- August 17, 2007

A new plan to allow emergency response, border control and, eventually, law enforcement agencies greater access to sophisticated satellites and other sensors that monitor American territory has drawn sharp criticism from civil liberties advocates who say the government is overstepping the use of military technology for domestic surveillance.

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