International space trio lands in Kazakhstan (Reuters)

ALMATY (Reuters) ? Three astronauts inside a Russian Soyuz capsule parachuted safely back to Earth Tuesday after nearly six months on the International Space Station (ISS), the first landing since NASA retired its space shuttles this summer.

U.S. astronaut Mike Fossum, Japan's Satoshi Furukawa and Russian cosmonaut Sergei Volkov landed at 0226 GMT, shortly before sunrise on the snowbound steppe of central Kazakhstan, NASA TV showed.

"The landing was great. Everything's good," said Volkov, flashing a thumbs-up signal after he was extracted from a Soyuz TMA-02 capsule blackened by the extreme temperatures on re-entry to the atmosphere.

The closure of NASA's shuttle program means Russian spaceships are the only way to ferry goods and crews to and from the $100-billion ISS, which is shared by 16 nations, until commercial firms develop the ability to transport crews.

Russia hopes the textbook landing will help to restore confidence in its space program after the August crash of an unmanned Russian cargo flight suspended manned space missions.

The returning crew have been replaced in orbit by NASA's Daniel Burbank and Russians Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin, whose successful launch last week allayed fears that the station would be left empty for the first time in a decade.

But the troubles have left the space station with half the usual handover time. The new crew had only six days with the outgoing astronauts to get up to speed on the quirks of life in space and the station's operations.

NASA said the Soyuz capsule had landed on its side, not unusual in windy conditions, about 90 km (55 miles) north of the town of Arkalyk. Temperatures at the landing site were 15 degrees Celsius below zero.

The three-man crew had spent 167 days in space and their return to Earth took about three-and-a-half hours.

Volkov, huddled in a thermal blanket, is a second-generation cosmonaut and was following in the footsteps of his father, NASA said. It called him: "a rising star in the cosmonaut corps."

Fossum, second to emerge from the capsule, called his loved ones by satellite phone from the landing site. Furukawa, a 47-year-old professional surgeon, was last to emerge. An assistant mopped sweat from his brow.

After initial medical checks in an inflatable tent on site, the returning crew will be taken be helicopter to the city of Kostanai in northern Kazakhstan.

The ISS will regain full, six-person occupancy with the late December launch of U.S. astronauts Don Pettit, cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko and Andre Kuipers of the European Space Agency.

(Additional reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Myra MacDonald)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111122/wl_nm/us_space_kazakhstan

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Occupy Fairbanks: Borough mayor says protesters have no 'right to warmth'

FAIRBANKS -- Saturday marks the two-month anniversary for the Occupy Fairbanks movement. Instead of the police crackdowns seen elsewhere around the country, the Interior Alaska protesters are contending with punishing cold and local grumbling about the legality of warm-up tents.

Brent Baccala, a 41-year-old self-described preacher and software designer from Maryland, continued his vigil at Veterans Memorial Park sporting a donated Northern Outfitters blue suit and matching boots Friday. He slept in the nearby tent as overnight temperature dropped to minus 36, Thursday, three degrees cooler than the record low for that date, set in 1969. ?It was the second time this week area temperatures set new daily lows, according to the National Weather Service.?

Baccala, who's been in Fairbanks two weeks, said he felt a religious calling to join the movement while reading about Occupy Fairbanks in Juneau, where he'd been preaching to tourists. People should live the Christian life of "giving, forgiveness and generosity," he said Friday. "My focus is the immorality of capitalism."

John Watts, 50, had ice forming on his mustache Friday as he explained his motives for supporting Occupy Fairbanks.

"Elements of the tea party are connecting with the thinkers," he said. "Something is wrong. Media wants to set it up to look like the solution is either we are free or not free, the far left side or far right."

Baccala and other protesters contend the First Amendment's protection for free speech implies a right to stay warm in the process. The Fairbanks North Star Borough, which maintains that protesters are squatting on downtown space, prohibits camping in its parks, except specific camping sites.

Occupy Fairbanks turns 2 months old Saturday

Nov 18, 2011

Occupy Fairbanks protesters believe they have a right to warmth, too. Fairbanks North Star Borough Mayor Luke Hopkins disagrees.

Casey Loeschen photo

Occupy Fairbanks turns 2 months old Saturday

Nov 18, 2011

Other Occupy protesters Outside may be battling police and politicians, but Occupy Fairbanks protesters face -40 F temperatures.

Saryn Walsh photo

Occupy Fairbanks turns 2 months old Saturday

Nov 18, 2011

Fairbanks North Star Borough Mayor Luke Hopkins contends the protesters are "camping" because there is a wall tent and sleeping bag for warmth.

Casey Loeschen photo

Occupy Fairbanks turns 2 months old Saturday

Nov 18, 2011

Occupy Fairbanks protester Brent Baccala traveled up from Juneau to join the demonstration. He called capitalism immoral.

Saryn Walsh photo

Occupy Fairbanks turns 2 months old Saturday

Nov 18, 2011

Heavily frosted hand-printed signs leaning against the park gazebo and tents were all used in Fairbanks protests and marches over the last month.

Casey Loeschen photo

"I appreciate discussion, but I disagree with them," Fairbanks North Star Borough Mayor Luke Hopkins said of Occupy Fairbanks' recent installation of two tents.

The small, stove-heated wall tent set up across from the park's Centennial Gazebo contains a sleeping bag on top of cardboard for insulation. To the borough, that is camping. At a meeting earlier this week with Hopkins, Fairbanks police and Occupy representatives, the borough requested the protesters take down the tents.

If the request to remove tents is ignored, the borough will schedule another meeting, said Hopkins, who added that he understands many Americans have fallen on hard times. "There are lots of issues citizens want addressed," he said. "But it takes time to see political change from protests."

Fairbanks mayor: 'I'm not losing sleep' over tents

It's the city, not the borough, that provides police service. But local officials aren't eager to police a few tents popping up in the snowy lot across the street from city hall. "If they want to camp, I'm not losing any sleep over it," Fairbanks Mayor Jerry Cleworth said Friday.

As with Occupy groups elsewhere, the motives and goals of Fairbanks supporters defy simple characterization.?

"We want to have a discussion between everybody and find a way to change the system," said Ethan Sinsabaugh, a 27-year-old anthropology major at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. To him, setting up tents in minus-36 temperatures to get attention was worthwhile.

Jim Hunter, 74, a self-described capitalist, said government has an essential role in implementing the distribution of essential utilities like water, heat and a police force. "Capitalism is not bad. How it is being used is bad.?We left one kind of royalty in leaving England to follow another in the corporations."

This is about freedom, added Watts, who urged people to get educated, participate and be active, while pushing away "extremists."

Heavily frosted, hand-printed signs leaning against the park gazebo and tents were used in protests and marches over the last month, according to Sinsabaugh. "We're fighting for their voice," he said of the people who made, waved and carried the signs. "Most can't afford to pay for voices to be on the radio or TV."

Local officials said emails indicate Fairbanks residents are split on whether protesters should be able to reside in the park.?Borough Mayor Hopkins called for community members to remain tolerant of the difference of opinions being presented.

"I hope the protest remains civil and orderly," Hopkins said.

Tori Middelstadt and Casey Loeschen are journalism students covering the Occupy Fairbanks protest for the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

Source: http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/occupy-fairbanks-borough-mayor-says-protesters-have-no-right-warmth

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NASA Probe Beams Home Best Moon Map Ever (SPACE.com)

Scientists have stitched together the highest-resolution topographic map of the moon ever created, using observations made by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft.

The new lunar map covers 98.2 percent of the moon and depicts the natural satellite's surface and features at a pixel scale of about 330 feet (100 meters). A global view of Earth's nearest neighbor at such high resolution had never existed before, scientists said.

"Our new topographic view of the moon provides the dataset that lunar scientists have waited for since the Apollo era," said Mark Robinson of Arizona State University, principal investigator of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC), in a statement Thursday (Nov. 17).

"We can now determine slopes of all major geologic terrains on the moon at 100-meter scale, determine how the crust has deformed, better understand impact crater mechanics, investigate the nature of volcanic features and better plan future robotic and human missions to the moon," Robinson added.

The new map was created using thousands of pictures acquired by the Wide Angle Camera, part of the LROC imaging system. The Wide Angle Camera maps nearly the entire moon every month from LRO's average altitude of 30 miles (50 kilometers), building up a record of how the lunar surface looks under varying lighting conditions.

NASA launched the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter in 2009 on a $504 million mission to map the moon in unprecedented detail. The spacecraft is about the size of a Mini Cooper car and carries seven instruments to study the lunar surface.

In addition to its mapping role, the spacecraft has also spotted several historic artifacts of moon exploration, including NASA's Apollo landers and the boot prints left behind by moon-walking astronauts during the six manned lunar landings between 1969 and 1972.

The new moon map from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter doesn?t cover 100 percent of the moon because persistent shadows prevent the camera from snapping good photos near the north and south poles. However, another instrument aboard LRO, the Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter, can map out polar terrain, so the "holes at the poles" may soon be filled in. [Photos: Our Changing Moon]

But even with the small polar blank spots, the new map is still plenty exciting, researchers said.

"I could not be more pleased with the quality of the map ? it?s phenomenal!" Robinson said. "The richness of detail should inspire lunar geologists around the world for years to come."

Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111118/sc_space/nasaprobebeamshomebestmoonmapever

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Keen On? The Big Lesson America Can Learn From China (TCTV)

Screen Shot 2011-11-17 at 12.33.41 PMSometimes, it's the soft spoken guys who throw the biggest bombs. At this week's Techonomy conference, Intuit co-founder Scott Cook was pretty radical in his economic and political analysis. Arguing that all companies need to turn themselves upside down, he told me that it's the young technology entrepreneur - the Zuckerberg or the Shawn Fanning - who is most skilled at navigating today's ever-turbulent economic waters. "The most brilliant things are done when we are young", he reminded me, in his message to older executives unwilling to hand over power to their younger colleagues.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/XLQPLFudelA/

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Wagner not a suspect in Natalie Wood's death: police (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Homicide detectives who have reopened an investigation into the death of Natalie Wood after three decades said on Friday that the film star's husband, actor Robert Wagner, was not considered a suspect.

The new inquiry into Wood's mysterious drowning off the California coast in 1981 comes amid new attention to the case on its 30th anniversary. The captain of the yacht she was on before her death now says that he lied to police at the time and holds Wagner responsible for her death.

Los Angeles County Sheriff's Lt. John Corina told reporters at a news conference on Friday that two homicide detectives had been assigned to reexamine new tips.

"Recently we have received information which we felt was substantial enough to make us take another look," Corina said. He declined to elaborate on the new information.

Asked by reporters if the now-81-year-old Wagner, one of three people on board the "Splendour" with Wood that night, was a suspect, Corina responded: "No."

Wood's body was found floating in a Catalina Island cove on the morning of November 29, 1981. The 43-year-old actress was dressed for bed in a long nightgown and socks, but wearing a red down jacket over her nightclothes.

The Los Angeles County Coroner at the time ruled the "West Side Story" star's death an accidental drowning, but questions have lingered for 30 years.

Corina said her death remained classified an accidental drowning, but added: "If our investigation at the end of it points to something else, then we'll address that."

Sheriff's officials have asked that anyone with knowledge about the case contact homicide investigators.

"TERRIBLE DECISIONS"

In an interview with NBC's "Today" show on Friday, "Splendour" captain Dennis Davern said Wagner fought with Wood in the hours before she went missing and showed little interest in trying to find her.

Davern, who co-wrote a 2010 book, "Goodbye Natalie, Goodbye Splendour," about Wood's drowning, told the show that he made "terrible decisions, terrible mistakes" at the time and lied on a police report.

Asked by an interviewer if he considered Wagner responsible for her death, he said: "Yes, I would say so. Yes."

Wood, who had spent the night before her death dining and drinking with Davern, Wagner and her "Brainstorm" co-star Christopher Walken, was said to have a lifelong fear of drowning and dark water.

A spokesman for Wagner has said in a statement that the actor's family had not been contacted by the sheriff's officials but "fully supports" the department's efforts.

The family members trust that the sheriff's department "will evaluate whether any new information relating to the death of Natalie Wood Wagner is valid and that it comes from a credible source or sources, other than those simply trying to profit from the 30-year anniversary of her tragic death," spokesman Alan Nierob said in the statement.

The opening of the new investigation coincides with a TV special airing Saturday on the CBS-TV news show "48 Hours," which in conjunction with Vanity Fair magazine purports to have new findings which "make it clear that there was reason to reopen the case," Vanity Fair said in a statement.

The TV special, called "Vanity Fair: Hollywood Scandal" is based on revelations first reported in a 2000 article in the magazine that is being republished this week in a special edition. Vanity fair said "everything seemed to come together at once."

Wood, who was born Natalia Nikolaevna Zakharenko to Russian immigrant parents in San Francisco, appeared as a child in such films as the Christmas classic "Miracle on 34th Street" and "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir."

She was nominated for a best supporting actress Academy Award as a teenager for her role opposite screen legend James Dean in the classic 1955 film "Rebel Without a Cause."

Wood was also nominated twice for best actress Oscars, for parts in the 1961 film "Splendor in the Grass" and "Love with the Proper Stranger" two years later. She never won the award.

(Editing by Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111118/en_nm/us_nataliewood

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Ex-DA: PSU case referred due to wife's family tie (AP)

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. ? A former Pennsylvania county prosecutor said Wednesday that he referred an allegation that former Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky had sexually abused a child to state prosecutors because his wife's brother was Sandusky's adopted son.

Former Centre County District Attorney Michael Madeira told The Associated Press that he cited the possible conflict of interest in passing the 2009 report to the state attorney general's office, which at the time was headed by now-Gov. Tom Corbett.

"I reviewed it and I made the decision it needed to be investigated further," Madeira told the AP in a phone interview. "But the apparent conflict of interest created an impediment for me to make those kinds of decisions."

Sandusky was charged Nov. 5 with 40 criminal counts that accuse him of sexually abusing eight boys over 15 years.

In an interview Tuesday with the AP, Madeira declined to specify his family tie to Sandusky, but he revealed the connection Wednesday. He said he hasn't spoken to his brother-in-law in years and rarely spoke to Sandusky.

"I can count on one hand the number of times I've spoken with Jerry Sandusky or my wife's brother," he said Wednesday.

Madeira's wife, Lisa, also was adopted, but by a different family. Including Madeira's brother-in-law, Sandusky has six adopted children.

Madeira declined to identify his brother-in-law by name.

Asked if he had any concerns over how his wife's brother was treated by Sandusky, Madeira said, "My wife hasn't expressed anything like that to me, and I don't know them well enough to have an opinion on that."

Madeira was Centre County's top prosecutor from 2005 to 2009, when he lost a re-election campaign to Stacy Parks Miller. He is in private practice.

The case initially brought to Madeira is referred to in the 23-page grand jury report as "Victim 1." That report said the victim testified about instances of abuse that happened in 2007 and 2008, and that Sandusky had contact with the boy at a high school in Clinton County, just north of Centre.

Madeira said the case was referred to him by Clinton County prosecutors in early 2009 after they determined that the allegations mainly occurred in Centre County. He said he was not aware of any previous allegations against Sandusky, including ones reported in 1998 and 2002, and that he had no further contact with the investigation after referring it to the attorney general's office.

"These kinds of things are serious to me," Madeira said when asked his reaction when he heard about the charges announced Nov. 5. "Instantly saddened, deeply saddened, with the regards to the number of alleged victims."

In hindsight, Madeira said, the state grand jury was the right jurisdiction to handle the case since two counties were involved, and allegations spanned years.

The grand jury report detailed a 1998 investigation by Penn State police, begun after an 11-year-old boy's mother complained that Sandusky had showered with her son in the football facilities. Then-District Attorney Ray Gricar declined to file charges.

Gricar was the DA before Madeira took office, and the Sandusky case has renewed attention on the mystery surrounding Gricar's whereabouts. Gricar disappeared in April 2005 and was declared legally dead earlier this year.

Investigators have said they don't believe there's a connection between his disappearance and the decision to not charge Sandusky.

"I don't know what was in the report that Ray saw," Madeira said. "Unless we know different, it's unfair to suggest that Ray didn't do something that he should have done because I don't know what he had in front of him. He's the one who talked to the victims. He saw the other portions of the investigation that I am not privy to."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111116/ap_on_sp_co_ne/fbc_penn_state_abuse_prosecutor

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Evernote Clearly Makes Web Pages More Readable and Transportable Into Evernote [Video]

Evernote Clearly Makes Web Pages More Readable and Transportable Into Evernote Chrome: Albeit a little late, Evernote has jumped on the improved web site readability bandwagon and introduced a new feature called Clearly. Much like most browser extensions and bookmarklets, it takes a given web site and converts the layout into a more readable format. This makes clipping web content to Evernote a lot nicer as you won't have to deal with improper formatting as the page transitions to your notebook.

Evernote is clearly (no pun intended) adding a feature that has existed on the web forever. Readability, Instapaper, and ReadItLater are all popular and long-established options. Chances are you already use one of them, so you're likely asking the question why you'd bother switching to Clearly instead. Since it provides much of the same functionality, the main draw is that you can save pages for later in Evernote. One of Evernote's main features is clipping web content to your notebooks. Clearly is just a natural extension, and should be very welcome if you rely on Evernote to save content from the web.

Currently Evernote Clearly is available as a browser extension for Chrome only, but wider support is underway. You can download it right now, for free, in the Chrome Extension Library.

Evernote Clearly | Chrome Extension Library via the Evernote Blog


You can follow Adam Dachis, the author of this post, on Twitter, Google+, and Facebook. ?Twitter's the best way to contact him, too.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/UWCK1jYPvqA/evernote-clearly-makes-web-pages-more-readable-and-transportable-into-evernote

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Mariah Yeater Text Messages: Who's the Daddy?!?


The Justin Bieber baby drama might finally be over.

Earlier this week, Mariah Yeater dropped her lawsuit against the singer, although the 20-year old's lawyer claims the two parties are still working toward a settlement figure. But now even more evidence has come out that appears to prove one thing: YEATER IS A LIAR.

Mariah Yeater Text

TMZ has been sent a slew of texts by a friend of Yeater's. This individual was evidently on the receiving end of messages that...

  1. Referred to someone named "Robbie" as the father of her child.
  2. Pleaded with the recipient to go along with her Bieber claim and, if he/she does so, as Yeater writes in one of the texts posted on TMZ: "Ill kick u when we get paid."

Bieber, to his credit, still plans on suing Yeater. Her credibility might be destroyed, but there's a message to send here: no one dares mess with the Biebs!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/mariah-yeater-text-messages-whos-the-daddy/

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East-West split threatens nuclear unity on Iran (AP)

VIENNA ? The U.S. and its Western allies face an unpalatable choice over Iran at a key U.N. atomic agency meeting Thursday.

They can defy Russia and China with a demand that the Islamic Republic start answering questions on its alleged secret nuclear arms program or face renewed referral to the U.N. Security Council. Or they can settle for a milder rebuke of Tehran that leaves the big powers formally speaking with one voice but leaves the world's hands tied in investigating the suspicions about Iran.

Both ways, the United States, Britain, France and Germany stand to lose as they head into the opening session of the International Atomic Energy Agency's 35-nation board meeting.

If they push for a tough resolution that sets a time frame for Iran to cooperate with the IAEA's probe, then Russia and China are likely to vote against it. That may doom further attempts to speak with one Security Council voice at any future negotiations with Iran over its nuclear defiance ? and increase Sino-Russian resistance against new U.N. Security Council sanctions on Tehran.

Going too far the other way keeps the facade of unity, by allowing Moscow and Beijing to endorse a weakly worded resolution with no deadline for Iran's cooperation and no warnings of penalties if it doesn't. But it once again stalls attempts to probe the allegations and signals Iran that it can thumb its nose at the world community.

The big power split along East-West lines is not new ? but is becoming more of a problem for Washington and its allies as Tehran advances in enriching uranium, which can be used for making weapons as well as fueling reactors.

Tehran denies hiding a weapons program and insists its enrichment activities are meant only as an energy source. But as Iran gets closer to bomb-making ability, Israel may opt to strike militarily rather than take the chance that its arch foe will possess nuclear weapons.

Israeli government officials have increased warnings that such strike is being contemplated, and the U.S. also has refused to take that option off the table.

Israeli officials have suggested they could accept crippling Iran sanctions as an alternative to force. But despite four rounds of economic sanctions, the United Nations is being held back from tougher measures by Russia and China, both of them veto-wielding Security Council members and bound to Iran by strategic and economic interests. They've offered no sign of a change in posture since President Barack Obama's meetings Saturday with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Chinese President Hu Jintao.

The West had hoped that an unprecedented detailing of Iran' alleged secret weapons work contained in a restricted Nov. 8 IAEA report could sway Moscow and Beijing. For the first time, the agency said Iran was suspected of clandestine work that is "specific to nuclear weapons."

But Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was quoted as saying Monday that the IAEA report "contains nothing new" and provides no further evidence that Tehran is developing nuclear weapons. He also repeated Russia's opposition to any new U.N. sanctions. Beijing has been less unequivocally opposed to tough measures but tends to follow Moscow' s lead.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says IAEA fears are "absurd" accusations fabricated by Washington. On Wednesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said his country was drawing up an in-depth technical response to show the IAEA report is wrong.

The lack of progress on Iran also has created domestic fallout for Obama, with Republican presidential hopefuls seizing on it as proof that the U.S. president is weak on foreign policy.

Western officials sounded a tough line ahead of the IAEA meeting.

U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Washington is "looking for strong action" from the board, as part of "ways to increase the pressure on Iran, be they multilateral or unilateral."

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said that the board "must adopt a very firm resolution demanding Iran to finally, in the briefest time possible, make known its activities, past and present, regarding a military program, allowing IAEA inspectors to work without restriction."

Diplomats speaking on background in Vienna, however, depict a Western stance that is less clear.

One senior Western diplomat suggested the West was ready to risk further strains with Russia and China, telling The Associated Press that a strong resolution with priorities outlined by Juppe was preferable to a weak text that Russia and China can live with.

Others, however, emphasized maintaining six-power unity ? even at the risk of watering down any text.

The diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the talks.

___

Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington, Ali Akhbar Dareini in Tehran, Cassandra Winograd in London, Angela Charlton and Elaine Ganley in Paris and Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed.

___

George Jahn can be contacted at http://twitter.com/GeorgeJahn

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111116/ap_on_re_eu/iran_nuclear

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