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  1. HELLO({"responseHeader":{"status":0,"QTime":7,"params":{"json.wrf":"HELLO","q":"*:*","group.field":"bt.nearDupCluster","group.main":"true","json.nl":"map","group":"true","wt":"json"}},"grouped":{},"response":{"numFound":1004,"start":0,"docs":[{"id":"13c3e161-e745-40b3-a6b9-71b9f381b4a3","contents":"Search for missing plane, with 4 aboard, continues in Wyoming
\n Plane goes missing with 4 aboard . \nSTORY HIGHLIGHTS . \nThe plane vanished from radar Monday . \nBad weather has hampered the search . \nA Minnesota paper says a company president and three children were aboard . \n(CNN) -- More ground searchers will be deployed Wednesday as authorities in Wyoming look for a small plane that dropped off radar. \nOfficials have been unable to locate the plane, with four people on board, since it took off from Jackson Hole Airport Monday afternoon. \nDet. Sgt. Ryan Lee of the Fremont County Sheriff's Office said Tuesday searchers were working in a very remote area of the county with elevations around 13,000 feet. \nSnow storms, high winds and low visibility have hampered the search, he said. Lee said authorities would not release the identities of those on board pending notification of family members and also would not say whether there were children aboard. \nBut the Minneapolis Star Tribune reported that the plane carried the president of a Twin Cities web development company and three children. \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"0","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:21:57Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/0005A72C-B036-46F7-844E-F22090BD638A.txt","md_resourceName":"0005A72C-B036-46F7-844E-F22090BD638A.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"0"},{"id":"8736731f-f082-407e-9f62-381f24203fa1","contents":"Philippine bands coming to a bar near you
\n 4 November 2010 Last updated at 19:30 ET By Kate McGeown BBC News, Manila Manila's bars are full of hard-working house bands . \nWearing sparkly black outfits, Beth and Grace are belting out a Lady Gaga hit in a windowless room at the back of a restaurant in Manila. \nThe room has been decorated to look like a nightclub, but it is not yet midday and the only people in the audience are the venue's owner, Jackson Gan, and a cameraman. \nThe girls hope they will soon be far away from the Philippines. A hotel in Bahrain is interested in hiring their band, Fire and Rain, and they are making the video to try to seal the deal. \n\"It's a good opportunity for us,\" says Beth. \"I don't know much about Bahrain, but I've heard it's a nice place.\" \n\"Actually, I would go anywhere,\" she adds after a moment's thought. \nVersatile and cheap Beth and Grace are just the latest singers to take advantage of the international demand for cheap house bands. \nIt is a market which, according to Mr Gan, Filipinos are uniquely placed to fill. \nThey speak good English, they are prepared to work for what - by international standards - is a fairly cheap wage, and they are versatile in what they can sing, he says. \nThe world tour starts here . \nMr Gan's company, First Champion, sends hundreds of bands abroad every month, and there are several other Manila-based recruiters like him. \nFive years ago, the largest market was definitely Japan. But demand there has been declining, while it is still growing in the Middle East. \nGroups are also sent to China, Russia and even as far away as Brazil, although the most popular destination is the United States or a season on a Caribbean cruise ship. \nAccording to government figures, about 3,000 Filipino performing artists were officially hired overseas in 2009, but in reality there are likely to be far more than that working in hotel lobbies, bars and shopping centres around the world. \nTalent pool It is not hard to find where the recruitment companies get their bands. Every evening, the bars of Manila Bay are full of groups singing their hearts out. \nContinue reading the main story “Start Quote . \nI know I will never be famous. I just want to do this while I'm still young enough” \nEnd QuoteLaurieSinger with Soundwave . \nOn our visit to Calle Cinco bar, an eight-member band named Soundwave is the first act of the night. They sing a mixture of current chart hits, although they can apparently sing soul, jazz and hard rock as well. \nLaurie, one of the lead singers, says she gets paid just 300 pesos ($6; £4) a night to sing at Calle Cinco - so it is not hard to see why a foreign job looks so attractive. \n\"Abroad we'd get $500 (£315) a month as a minimum, but here we get just enough for food and transport. How can you live like that?\" she says. \nMusicians and singers are just a tiny part of a huge exodus of Filipinos who find they can earn far more overseas than they ever would at home. \nAbout nine million Filipinos work abroad - and the money they send back to the Philippines makes up more than 12% of the country's GDP. \nThe head of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration, Jennifer Manalili, says these overseas workers are the \"heroes of the Philippine economy\". \nThe big break?Of course, unlike many other overseas jobs, the music industry also offers the slight possibility of being \"discovered\" - with all the fame and fortune that entails. \nMany bands have their own promotional pictures and videos . \nIn the Philippines, where singing comes second nature - even the president was persuaded to sing on the night of his inauguration - artists who make it big abroad are hero-worshipped back home. \nThe ultimate story for many low-budget singers is that of Arnel Pineda, who used to work in a cover band singing tracks popularised by the US band Journey. \nThe members of Journey were so impressed with Pineda's performance, which they noticed in a video on Youtube, that when a space came up for a lead singer, they asked him to join them. \nBut in the bars of Manila Bay, most singers and musicians are under no illusions about their prospects. \n\"I know I will never be famous,\" says Laurie. \"I just want to do this while I'm still young enough, then I'll go back to my home province and maybe open up a business.\" \nIn fact, unlike those in the West, these bands do not cultivate a unique image or specialise in a particular style of music. Most see their careers in terms of hard economics. \nThey may have originally formed as groups of friends growing up together in the countryside, but the final make-up of the groups that go abroad is determined by people like Mr Gan, to fit the requirements of a particular client. \nSmaller hotels and bars want two or three-member bands, singing to synthesised music, while shopping malls and larger hotels tend to want bigger bands with a rhythm section, as well as vocalists. \nSoundwave, for example, have been told they need a ninth member if they have a chance of being booked by a hotel in Dubai. \nBut they are willing to accept this - in fact they are willing to go anywhere and sing anything - so they can earn enough money for their families back home. \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"1","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:21:58Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/001013CB-5998-4EEA-B6C7-B879EACD7884.txt","md_resourceName":"001013CB-5998-4EEA-B6C7-B879EACD7884.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"1"},{"id":"5578d09c-2cf7-472e-aa1a-85ea8d58384a","contents":"Iraq power-sharing talks stall on key issues
\n 9 November 2010 Last updated at 14:15 ET Nouri Maliki and other leaders have failed to hammer out a coalition . \nA second round of top-level talks on ending the Iraqi political crisis has ended in Baghdad without major results. \nThe chairman of the meeting said there had been discussion and agreement on some issues, including commitment to the constitution. \nBut the issue of who should be prime minister, president and speaker of parliament had not been discussed. More meetings are expected on Wednesday. \nIraq has set a world record for the longest time to form a new government. \nNouri Maliki's State of Law bloc won 89 seats in March's election, two fewer than Iyad Allawi's al-Iraqiyya movement. \nAs neither bloc secured an outright majority, there has been intense and so far fruitless political negotiations to try to cobble together enough support to head a new government. \nParliament to meet?The leaders of the main political blocs had met publicly for the first time since March on Monday in the northern city of Irbil. \nThe talks resumed in Baghdad on Tuesday but were not attended by Mr Allawi nor by Sunni Vice-President Tareq al-Hashemi. \nAnother issue still to be resolved is whether parliament will meet on Thursday as previously announced. Since March, parliament has met for just 20 minutes. \nCorrespondents say one deal discussed would envisage Mr Maliki staying on as prime minister and Jalal Talabani, who is Kurdish, retaining the presidency. \nMr Allawi's coalition would be given the speakership of parliament and also the presidency of a new national council for higher policy. \nHowever, there has been no further news on whether such a deal could be hammered out. \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"2","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:21:58Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/0015A886-EF71-4FB2-B7BA-D79063030CFD.txt","md_resourceName":"0015A886-EF71-4FB2-B7BA-D79063030CFD.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"2"},{"id":"4e4acd26-973f-48e2-a241-41b124f35fe6","contents":"US ban on openly gay troops to stay - Americas
\n The US military's ban on openly gay troops will remain in place while the Obama administration challenges a court ruling overturning the policy, a US appeals court has ruled. \nMonday's decision means that the controversial \"don't ask, don't tell\" law will remain in place for the duration of a landmark legal battle that saw the policy briefly dropped before being re-instated. \nIn September, a district judge ruled that the law infringed on constitutional rights of gay men and women serving the military, prompting the Obama administration to appeal. \nBarack Obama insists that he supports ending the \"don't ask, don't tell\" rule, but argues that congress rather than the courts should make the decision once the US military completes plans for an orderly transition to a new policy towards gay recruits. \nThe Pentagon has warned that a sudden change to a new law will hamper military readiness and cohesion. \nThe three judges sitting on the appeals court ruled 2-1 in favour of suspending the earlier decision, concluding that \"the public interest in ensuring orderly change of this magnitude in the military - if that is what is to happen - strongly militates in favor of a stay.\" \nConfusion . \nIt could be months before the appeals court issues a ruling on whether or not the law, which requires gay service personnel to keep their sexuality secret, should be abandoned in line with the earlier ruling.  . \nThe initial decision to lift the ban sparked confusion at recruitment offices, where a number of openly gay former servicemen sought to re-enlist, despite warnings they could face dismissal if the law is re-instated. \nThe legal debate comes at an awkward moment for Obama and the Democrats, who are facing a potential rout from Republicans in Tuesday's mid-term elections. \nMany Republicans are fiercely opposed to gays serving in the military and are likely to gain from any controversy over social issues that could galavanise their conservative base at the polls. \nThe \"don't ask, don't tell\" law was introduced by former president Bill Clinton as a compromise between previous rules that excluded gays from serving in the military, and allowing them to serve as openly homosexual. \nAn estimated 13,000 men and women have been discharged from the military for being gay since the law came into effect, angering gay-rights campaigners.      . \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"3","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:21:59Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/0018A126-52AB-455D-BEE1-47011E8F88A0.txt","md_resourceName":"0018A126-52AB-455D-BEE1-47011E8F88A0.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"3"},{"id":"8f256b9a-9cc9-4c70-9786-bf242a2edc82","contents":"Fresh Darfur clashes raise concerns - Africa
\n . \nJEM leaders withdrew from peace talks with the government last May accusing the army of continuing attacks [AFP] . \nFighters from the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), Sudan's main rebel group, have engaged in fresh clashes with security forces as the rebels ambushed a food and supplies government convoy in southern Darfur.The fighting that erupted on Wednesday between the two sides was the first in months. \nConflicting reports on the death toll have emerged, and the country's ministry of interior said that the police force killed \"many\" JEM fighters and \"suffered only several losses\" in the clashes, without giving specific figures. \n\"The rebels attacked a commercial convoy and the Central Reserve Police protecting the convoy engaged them, suffering several losses,\" the ministry said in a statement. \nBut Ali Alwafi, a JEM spokesman, told reporters that at least 50 police were killed, while \"three of JEM's members were injured in the combat, none of them seriously\". \nHe also said that the group \"captured 13 vehicles [from the government convoy] and destroyed many more\". \n'Retaliatory attack' \nHowever, police insisted that none of the convoy's contents were taken and that troops were pursuing them. \nSuleiman Sandal, JEM's chief commander, who also reported scores of police casualties, told Reuters news agency that Wednesday's attack was carried out in retaliation to an earlier attack by government troops in the eastern side of South Darfur. \nJEM leaders halted their participation in the latest round of peace talks with Sudan's government, which was hosted in Doha, the Qatari capital, last May.They accuse government troops of continuing attacks on the group in Darfur despite a deal aimed at a cessation of hostilities, signed in February. \nLast week, the rebel group released several statements saying that the government was mobilising troops in the western region in preparations to launch a major attack on its strongholds. \nFighting in Darfur, which began with a 2003 rebellion by numerous groups that accuse the government of mistreatment, has killed up to 300,000 people and displaced 2.7 million from their homes, according to UN figures. \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"4","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:21:59Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/002BB719-4FBC-421E-B6A9-FBC2E2EB011A.txt","md_resourceName":"002BB719-4FBC-421E-B6A9-FBC2E2EB011A.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"4"},{"id":"cbd90e3d-74ec-4056-b65a-a0f1fdc09929","contents":"Why doesn't game packaging make more sense?
\n \"Castlevania: Lords of Shadow\" features a painting of a somber warrior on the front of its box but not much else. \nSTORY HIGHLIGHTS . \n Game manufacturers rely on pretty graphics, catchphrases to get message across . \n Keeping things simple makes perfect sense when selling a sports game . \n Tiny photos make it impossible for diehards to get an impression of a game's caliber . \nEditor's note: Scott Steinberg is the head of technology and video game consulting firm TechSavvy Global, as well as the founder of GameExec magazine and Game Industry TV. The creator and host of online video series Game Theory, he frequently appears as an on-air technology analyst for ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX and CNN. (CNN) -- Critics have had a field day debating why retail video game sales have been on the decline lately. As a visit to any GameStop reveals, though, the slump may have less to do with quality, price or new-fangled distribution methods than helping fans understand exactly just what they're buying. \nBrowse the aisles of your local electronics retailer and you may notice something strange about modern game boxes. Most feature large, attractive cover paintings and logos, but comically small screenshots and less than a paragraph of text on their backs. Squeezed into the same limited space are French and Spanish translations, health warnings, legal mumbo jumbo, barcodes and age ratings. Precious little room is left to describe the software itself. \nAs a result, manufacturers are relying more than ever on pretty graphics and short, witty catchphrases to get their message across. But tiny photos make it impossible for diehard enthusiasts to get even a passing impression of a game's caliber. Likewise, vague double entendres do little to help casual admirers discern between frantic arcade outings and slow-paced puzzlers. The rear cover of recent Nintendo DS title \"Ben 10: Cosmic Destruction\" literally says only \"control all new alien heroes\" and \"go ultimate to annihilate enemies!\" Presumably, it's a great game. We just couldn't tell you what type of game. \nThat's a hard line to walk in an age where digital diversions are becoming increasingly complex and genres are blurring to the point that few fit traditional categories such as \"racing game\" or \"shooter\" anymore. \nKeeping things simple makes perfect sense when selling a sports game such as \"NHL 11\" or a workout program like \"Jillian Michaels Fitness Ultimatum,\" where a single snapshot suffices to get the point across. But how much sense can the average shopper make of more unique outings like \"Castlevania: Lords of Shadow?\" The fantasy/horror-themed adventure features a painting of a somber warrior on the front, with two imperceptible screenshots and the words \"Dark Times Need a Dark Hero\" on the back. (Perhaps what they really call for is a magnifying glass.) Even a player who's intimately familiar with the monster-mashing franchise may be left perplexed at what's being offered by this radical series reboot. \nLikewise, recent release \"Front Mission: Evolved\" clearly states in a press release that it's a \"third-person shooter\" where \"players control giant, customizable walking tanks known as wanzers,\" or giant robots. Nowhere on a box featuring lofty proclamations like \"a new world will rise from the ashes of the old\" is this information repeated, though, and the game's fancy website hides that info several screens deep. Print, video and online ads increasingly seem to make similar mistakes by using arresting imagery to catch viewers' eyes at the expense of clarity and conciseness. Game makers are obviously keen on knocking players' socks off with fancy visual gimmicks and reams of imaginative prose. But what manufacturers forget is that at first glimpse, gaming fans aren't just looking for a pretty face. They're hoping to instantly comprehend an interactive outing's concept, gauge how well it lives up to expectations, and get a sense of each title's individual personality. You know what they say about first impressions. \nDesigners would do better to realize that with hundreds of competing games clogging the aisles, picking a new title is a lot like speed dating. Fans may be a sucker for a winning smile, but make no mistake: Given high prices, endless choices and the time commitment involved -- often weeks on end -- gamers want to feel like their purchases are worth getting to know better. \nBesides, just think of poor bewildered grandma in the aisle of her local Best Buy, trying to figure out which game to get her grandson for Christmas. It couldn't hurt game makers to help her out a little by explaining more than how to \"go ultimate.\" . \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"5","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:21:59Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/002C27B1-37D1-447B-9A3F-98FBF2A150FC.txt","md_resourceName":"002C27B1-37D1-447B-9A3F-98FBF2A150FC.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"5"},{"id":"74ef18d5-37a9-4eec-868c-f251f38c4a28","contents":"Israel arrests top Hamas legislator - Middle East
\n Israeli troops have arrested Mahmoud Ramahi, the secretary-general of the Palestinian Legislative Council, Hamas sources have said. \nThe troops stormed the Hamas legislator's home in the city of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank in the early hours of Wednesday morning. \nMona Mansour, another Hamas legislator, said Ramahi had called her as the troops entered his house to tell her that he was being arrested. \n\"Then the phone call disconnected and no one knows where he was taken to,\" she said. \nThe Israeli army said Ramahi was one of twelve West Bank Palestinians taken into custody overnight. \nThe developments come as representatives from Hamas and the Fatah party started a meeting in Damascus on Tuesday night for reconciliation talks. \nThe political rivals have been fiercely divided since Hamas seized power in Gaza in June 2007, limiting Fatah's authority to the West Bank. \nSeveral previous attempts to reconcile the groups have failed. \nOmar Abdul Razek, a senior Hamas official in the West Bank, told the AFP news agency that Ramahi's arrest appeared to be an attempt by Israel to undermine the reconciliation talks. \n\"There is no justification for Ramahi's arrest unless Israel's aim is to sabotage the reconciliation process,\" Abdul Razek said. \nThree weeks ago, Hatem Qafaish, another Hamas legislator, was detained in the southern West Bank city of Hebron for what the Israeli army termed \"security questioning\". \nIsraeli forces last arrested Ramahi in 2006 in a roundup of dozens of Hamas officials, after members of Hamas seized the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"6","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:21:59Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/002D39A4-FF66-463F-82EC-FABFBA5580FC.txt","md_resourceName":"002D39A4-FF66-463F-82EC-FABFBA5580FC.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"6"},{"id":"2893cbdc-f097-458e-a84d-b8e19c3a7d37","contents":"BBC News - Today - 'Bad luck' of the Irish businessman
\n European finance ministers are to meet to decide whether Ireland should be forced to accept a bail out. Evan Davis spoke to businessman Myles Fleming who, like the Irish government, borrowed too much when the times were good and is now struggling to keep up the payments. Get in touch with Today via email  , Twitter  or Facebook  or text us on 84844. \n","bt.nearDupCluster":"7","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:21:59Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/003D724A-6921-40F5-B5A8-D4C1B60E7083.txt","md_resourceName":"003D724A-6921-40F5-B5A8-D4C1B60E7083.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"7"},{"id":"a1bbfb43-877c-47fc-9cf1-0a5d97e5fd00","contents":"VOA | Hillary Clinton Endorses UN Human Rights Office in Cambodia | News
\n  Robert Carmichael | Phnom Penh 01 November 2010 . \n Photo: AP . \nUS Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton looks at a wall of faces of those killed by the Khmer Rouge regime, during a tour of the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, formerly the regime's notorious S-21 prison, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 01 Nov 2010 . \nShare This . \nRelated Articles . \nU.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has thrown her support behind the U.N. human rights office in Cambodia, and also addressed the issue of Cambodia's debt to the United States during a visit to Phnom Penh as part of two-week long tour of Asia. The Cambodian government wants the United Nations to close its human rights office here.  But Secretary Clinton defended the office Monday, calling it \"a valuable resource.\" \n\"It provides technical assistance to the government,\" Clinton said. \"It also works with these NGOs [non-governmental organizations] that are in Cambodia, both Cambodian NGOs and international NGOs on a variety of concerns including human rights, trafficking in persons, and the rule of law.\" Clinton added, \"So, the High Commissioner's office is active in ways that we think are very complementary to what the Cambodian government is committed to doing, and we think the work is important and we would like to see it continue.\" \nWhile she endorsed the work of the U.N.-sponsored tribunal prosecuting the leaders of the Khmer Rouge, Clinton said her immediate priority is to ensure there is sufficient money to fund the next trial.  This second case of four Khmer Rouge leaders is set to begin next year, and she estimates will cost up to 50 million dollars to complete. \nBut the Cambodian government has said it wants the international tribunal to shut down after that case and not pursue more. Clinton noted the government's concerns about political instability should the tribunal prosecute more cases, a concern many human rights groups do not share. \n\"That is something that we in the international community should consult closely with the Cambodian government on,\" said Clinton.  \"But the first piece of business is getting 002 to trial. And I want to see that happen as soon as possible.  So I will be personally reaching out to help raise the money to get that done,\" she said. \nMore than a million Cambodians died of starvation, illness and execution when the Khmer Rouge ruled the country in the 1970s.  The tribunal concluded its case, against a prison commandant, a few months ago.   . \nClinton indicated the United States is willing to consider different options regarding $445 million that Cambodia owes it from the 1970s. The debt stemmed from U.S. support for the Lon Nol government, which ran Cambodia from 1970 to 1975 before the nation fell to the Khmer Rouge. Phnom Penh says the debt should be canceled.  But talks on resolving the debt have not been held since 2006. \n\"We have agreed that the United States will send a team of experts as soon as possible to resume discussions over ways to settle this debt,\" said Clinton. \"The discussions as you know ended in 2006. We very much want to see this matter resolved.\" \nShe added, however, that the United States would be interested in seeing the money spent in Cambodia on improving education or environmental protection, instead of taking a direct repayment.    . \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"8","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:22:00Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/003DA2F7-10E0-426D-A4AF-C067A4061CB8.txt","md_resourceName":"003DA2F7-10E0-426D-A4AF-C067A4061CB8.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"8"},{"id":"d286ab05-1669-410d-846f-0cbe23192776","contents":"New large species of squid found
\n 15 November 2010 Last updated at 13:42 ET Squid of this type have light-producing organs to attract prey . \nA new species of squid has been discovered by scientists during a research cruise in the southern Indian ocean. \nThe 70cm-long specimen is a large member of the chiroteuthid family. \nSquid from this group are long and slender with light-producing organs, which act as lures to attract prey. \nIt was found during analysis of 7,000 samples gathered during last year's Seamounts cruise led by the conservation group IUCN. \nThe project started a year ago when marine experts embarked on a six-week research expedition in the Indian Ocean. The aim of the cruise was to unveil the mysteries of seamounts - underwater mountains - in the southern Indian Ocean and to help improve conservation and management of marine resources in the area. \n\"For 10 days now 21 scientists armed with microscopes have been working through intimidating rows of jars containing fishes, squids, zooplankton and other interesting creatures,\" says Alex Rogers, of the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford, . \n\"Many specimens look similar to each other and we have to use elaborate morphological features such as muscle orientation and gut length to differentiate between them.\" \nSo far, more than 70 species of squid have been identified from the Seamounts cruise, representing more than 20% of the global squid biodiversity. \n\n","bt.nearDupCluster":"9","md_Content-Encoding":"UTF-8","md_format":"text/plain","md_date":"2011-05-06T01:22:00Z","md_Content-Type":"text/plain","md_identifier":"/Users/benson/data/1k_news/003F64A1-00B9-48CB-92F4-C8895E4A4BF7.txt","md_resourceName":"003F64A1-00B9-48CB-92F4-C8895E4A4BF7.txt","bt.nearStoryCluster":"9"}]}})
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