| Today on New Scientist: 16 November 2010 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-17 3:00) | 
  | All today's stories on NewScientist.com, including: why you're probably weird, how to cloak a crime in a beam of light and sudoku-playing bacteria 
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  | How will the UK's well-being index shape up? 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-17 2:35) | 
  | The UK's national performance will soon be judged on general well-being as well as GDP. Has Prime Minister David Cameron been reading New Scientist? 
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  | Red light forces cancer cells to suck up drugs 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-13 21:00) | 
  | When cancer cells are treated with red light, they absorb a greater volume of drugs than those left to diffuse into cells naturally 
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  | History's biggest lungfish pops up in Nebraska 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-13 19:00) | 
  | 'Humongous' tooth must have come from exceptionally large lungfish, though mystery surrounds how it came to be found in the state 
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  | Blood camera to spot invisible stains at crime scenes 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-13 3:13) | 
  | Finding diluted blood, sweat, or obscure fingerprints could be a snap thanks to this prototype 
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  | Indonesia's volcano continues spewing 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-13 3:10) | 
  | Mount Merapi continued spewing ash yesterday, and reports suggest that a cloud is spreading towards Indonesia's capital, Jakarta 
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  | Today on New Scientist: 12 November 2010 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-13 3:00) | 
  | All today's stories on NewScientist.com, including: finding Jupiter's lost stripe, treating cancer with bubbles and how chalk may help climate change 
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  | Ladies and gentlemen, our cars are floating in space 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-13 2:40) | 
  | An unfinished car seems to float in space, whilst technicians and robots appear around it in a blur of colour 
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  | US internet hosts are linchpin of criminal botnets 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-13 2:20) | 
  | Cybercriminals choose US internet companies to host their botnet control servers, a new study commissioned by New Scientist reveals 
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  | It's life– only much, much bigger 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-11-13 1:45) | 
  | The mathematical universe known as the Game of Life has been recreated on a grand scale– and now it even responds to your touch 
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