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We'd like to invite you to join our free WORLD SCIENCE e-newsletter, which contains some of the world's most exciting science news and photos long before they're in the papers and magazines. A sample newsletter is below.

To join, just send an email with "subscribe" in the subject line to: neutrino750 @ yahoo.com (remove the spaces).

The newsletter, sent out about every 3-10 days, contains short summaries of our new stories, with links to web pages containing the full stories. It's free: no pop-ups, passwords, spam, or gimmicks -- that's our pledge! The full story pages do contain small side ads (non pop-up), which are what supports our news- letter. YOU pay nothing ever. You can cancel anytime simply by replying to a newsletter email and typing "unsubscribe" in the subject line.

Below is a sample newsletter. It doesn't contain the full story links because we're not allowed to provide them here, but the real newsletter will contain working links.

****************************************************** LAST WEEK'S WORLD SCIENCE EMAIL NEWSLETTER

  • Possible dinosaur-bird missing link found: It's not the first bird-like dinosaur ever found -- but it is the closest yet found to the actual dinosaur ancestor of birds, researchers say.

Click here for full story (link will work in the real newsletter)

  • Science in Images - A more life-friendly Mars: Most Mars photos show a rocky, dry-looking land- scape. This is another view: an area of the planet that researchers think might have once been habitable. They plan to explore further.

Click here for full story (link will work in the real newsletter)

  • Another record: biggest blast ever in our galaxy: The most powerful explosion in our galaxy ever recorded occurred recently when an exotic star's magnetic field snapped, astronomers say.

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  • New robots walk nearly like humans: An older robot does it too, but it used 10 times as much energy as humans do, researchers say; that is changing.

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  • Brain doesn't have universal language rules, researchers claim: Some researchers argue that language is more like a creation of itself than a creation of our brains.

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