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2/1/2006 4:41:00 PM -0500
Newstrack: Winter storms were dumping snow on Atlantic Canada as wind and ice closed roads and shut down airports. A glut of entertainment in the bedrooms of British children has kids staying inside and in their rooms more. New studies show new couples produce special hormones that die down and change over the course of a relationship. Lawyers for 10 victims of a deadly scaffolding accident at Chicago's John Hancock Center Wednesday settled their lawsuit for $75 million, a report said. A new federal report on the emergency relief response to Hurricane Katrina points the blame at the White House and the Department of Homeland Security. Bond was set at $1 million each for a couple accused of murder in the slaying of a Southern Illinois University student from Chicago, a report said. U.S. President George W. Bush, on his traditional post-State of the Union road trip, on Wednesday advanced his optimistic view of the United States. A 12-year-old Iraqi girl badly burned during 2003 fighting between U.S. and Iraqi forces has arrived in Kentucky for skin graft surgery, a report said. The San Francisco Board of Supervisors has condemned persecution of the Falun Gong spiritual movement in China. The Internal Revenue Service apparently is having a difficult time keep tabs on Bill Gates, said the Microsoft founder during a conference in Portugal.

NewsTrack

New type of aircraft is under development

MANTUA, Ohio, Feb. 1 (UPI) -- An unusual 120-foot-long, two-seat prototype aircraft is being developed in Ohio in hopes it will usher in a new transportation era.

The aircraft, although not a blimp, may be outfitted with two small engines and filled with 16,500 cubic feet of helium.

"Dynalifter is a hybrid aircraft," Robert Rist, a co-founder of Ohio Airships Inc., told National Geographic News. "The only comparison (with a blimp) is that they both use helium."

Unlike a blimp, the aircraft has wings, with its weight carried by aerodynamic lift on the wings and hull, augmented by helium lift. The prototype is one-eighth the size of the aircraft that Rist and his partner, Brian Martin, that they hope to test-fly this spring: a 990-foot-long Dynalifter, NGN reported.

Rist says such a craft could move materials at a lower cost than airplanes and at higher speeds than ships, delivering cargo to hard-to-reach places and making it especially useful in military and emergency situations.

"Like the cell phone has brought the third world to the communications era, the Dynalifter will allow freight to (avoid) infrastructure costs of road and train track," Rist said.

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Analysis: U.N. cannot ignore Iran


2/1/2006 2:52:00 PM -0500
With the impending nuclear crisis in Iran set to go before the International Atomic Energy Agency, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan is calling for a ...

French paper reprints Mohammed cartoons


2/1/2006 1:31:00 PM -0500
A French newspaper has waded into an international storm by printing all 12 controversial Danish cartoons spoofing the Prophet Mohammed.

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