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Published by Reuters | By Frank Jack Daniel | Thursday, March 2, 2006

Tens of thousands of Mexican miners and metal workers joined a nationwide strike on Wednesday in two separate disputes that crippled output at the country's biggest mines, metals refineries and steel mills.

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Published by Inter Press Service News Agency | By Emad Mekay | Wednesday, March 1, 2006

The main public investor in a controversial gas pipeline in Peru's Amazon rainforest that has ruptured four times already appears adamant not to bow to pressure from green groups demanding a full investigation after a study asserted that the pipeline is shoddily built and likely to break again.

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Published by The Anchorage Daily News | By Wesley Loy | Wednesday, March 1, 2006

Crude oil leaking from a major North Slope pipeline might have oozed over 3 to 5 acres of frozen, snow-clad tundra, prompting a major cleanup effort Thursday, an oil company spokesman said.

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Published by TechWeb | By Antone Gonsalves | Wednesday, March 1, 2006

A diverse coalition of groups, many of them not-for-profits, has launched a campaign to pressure America Online (AOL) into halting plans for a pay-to-send email system.

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Published by Wired Magazine | By Jennifer Kahn | Wednesday, March 1, 2006

The market in India for outsourced clinical drug trials will hit $1.5 billion by 2010. Enticed by numbers like these, developing countries have been scrambling to catch Big Pharma's eye - India most aggressively of all.

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Published by BBC News | By Karen Allen | Wednesday, March 1, 2006

The UK has failed to act on promises to plug loopholes that allow the sale of arms to countries with poor human rights records, aid agency Oxfam says. It says that military vehicles were sold to Uganda by a South African subsidiary of the UK firm BAE Systems.

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Published by Associated Press | By Marcus Kabel | Tuesday, February 28, 2006

One of Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s most vociferous critics launched a campaign Tuesday with 17 current and former Wal-Mart workers speaking out against health insurance coverage they claim is too expensive, leaving them uninsured or on taxpayer funded programs.

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Published by The Houston Chronicle | By David Ivanovich | Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Houston's Halliburton Co. earned nearly $100 million from its controversial no-bid contract to repair Iraq's oilfields and import fuel into that violence-torn country, Pentagon records show.

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Published by The New York Times | By By James Glanz | Monday, February 27, 2006

Even though the Pentagon auditors identified more than $250 million in charges as potentially unjustified, the Army has decided to reimburse Halliburton for nearly all of its disputed costs on a $2.41 billion no-bid contract to deliver fuel and repair oil equipment in Iraq.

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