Monday,  October 15, 2012 • Vol. 13--No. 90 • 19 of 27 •  Other Editions

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a.m. -- the latest opportunity to look for clues about the future of the economy.

• 6. WHERE ENDEAVOR WILL SPEND ITS RETIREMENT
• "It's like Christmas!" one staffer exclaimed when the shuttle reached its home at the California Science Museum after a 12-mile crawl through Los Angeles.

• 7. LAST NOBEL PRIZE TO BE AWARDED
• The Economic Sciences winner will be announced after 7 a.m., the sixth and final honor of the year.

• 8. GOOD NEWS ON THE HPV VACCINE
• A study finds the shots that protect against cervical cancer do not make girls promiscuous, as some parents had worried.

• 9. A STEP TOWARD PEACE IN THE PHILIPPINES
• The government and rebels signed a preliminary peace pact that grants minority Muslims broad autonomy in exchange for ending more than 40 years of violence.

• 10. PANDA MAKES PREHISTORIC DINNER MENU
• A scientist has found evidence that China's beloved national symbol was seen quite differently by ancient humans: as food.

AP News in Brief
Judge in Sept. 11 trial at Guantanamo asked for rules that would shield torture testimony

• GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (AP) -- A U.S. military judge is considering broad security rules for the war crimes tribunal of five Guantanamo prisoners charged in the Sept. 11 attacks, including measures to prevent the accused from publicly revealing what happened to them in the CIA's secret network of overseas prisons.
• Prosecutors have asked the judge at a pretrial hearing starting Monday to approve what is known as a protective order that is intended to prevent the release of classified information during the eventual trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who has portrayed himself as the mastermind of the terror attacks, and four co-defendants.

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