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WASHINGTON The Obama administration on Wednesday appealed a federal judge's
order to lift all age limits on who can buy morning-after birth
control pills without a prescription.In appealing the ruling, the administration
recommitted itself to a position Obama took during his re-election campaign
that younger teens shouldn't have unabated access to emergency contraceptives,
despite the insistence by physicians groups and much of his Democratic base
that the pill should be readily available.A day earlier, the Food and
Drug Administration lowered the age that people can buy the Plan B
One-Step morning-after pill without a prescription to 15 -- younger than
the current limit of 17 -- and decided that the pill could
be sold on drugstore shelves near the condoms, instead of locked behind
pharmacy counters.That decision appeared to fly in the face of a judge's
decision last month that women of any age should be allowed to
buy both Plan B and its cheaper generic competition as easily as
they can buy aspirin. U.S. District Judge Edward Korman of New York
gave the FDA 30 days to comply, and the Monday deadline was
approaching fast, prompting the administration on Wednesday to ask the court
to put the ruling on hold while it reconsiders.With the appeal, the
Obama administration is making clear that it's willing to ease access to
emergency contraception only a certain amount -- not nearly as broadly as
doctors' groups and contraception advocates h
NASA's $690 million Fermi space telescope was nearly hit by the dead
Russian spy satellite Cosmos 1805 on April 3, 2013. This NASA graphic
depicts the orbital paths of the two spacecraft.NASA's Goddard Space Flight
CenterArtist's illustration of NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope.NASAThis
NASA graphic depicts the amount of space junk currently orbiting Earth.
The debris field is based on data from NASA's Orbital Debris Program
Office. Image released on May 1, 2013.NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/JSCA
high-tech NASA telescope in orbit escaped a potentially disastrous collision
with a Soviet-era Russian spy satellite last year in a close call
that highlights the growing threat of orbital debris around Earth.NASA's
$690 million Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope which studies the most powerful
explosions in the universe narrowly avoided a direct hit with the
defunct 1.5-ton Russian reconnaissance satellite Cosmos 1805 on April 3,
2012, space agency officials announced Tuesday, April 30. The potential
space collision was avoided when engineers commanded Fermi to fire its thrusters
in a critical dodging maneuver to move out of harm's way.- NASA's
Fermi project scientist Julie McEneryNASA created a video of Fermi's near
miss with space junk to illustrate how high the risk of a
space collision really was. [Space Junk Photos & Cleanup Concepts]Fermi
mission scientists first learned of the space collision threat on March
29, 2012 when they
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