GROUP:  We are the (Inaudible) Warriors.  We are (inaudible) CNN Student News.  Take it away, Carl.
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CARL AZUZ, HOST, CNN STUDENT NEWS:  That`s a great way to launch  today`s show.  From those students in Ohio to the CNN Newsroom here in  Atlanta, Georgia, we are welcoming our viewers from around the world.   This is CNN Student News.
First up, strong words from the Gulf  Cooperation Council about a crisis taking place in Syria.  The Gulf  Cooperation Council is a group of Arab countries, and it describes the  violence in Syria as a massacre against defenseless people.  
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AZUZ (voice-over):  There are reports that dozens of people are dying  in Syria every day.  Activists and other groups blame the Syrian  government for launching attacks against citizens.  The government says  the violence is being caused by armed terrorist groups.  
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AZUZ:  You know, it`s hard for CNN to confirm reports from either side  in this story, because the Syrian government has restricted how much  access journalists have inside the country.  But we did hear from an  activist inside Syria, who talked about the conditions there and the  world`s reaction to what`s going on.
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Let me say one word, I think that the entire world should be ashamed  of what`s happening here.  Everybody is just silent and looking at us  being slaughtered every moment for no reason, just for asking for our  freedom.  No power, no fuel, it`s too cold.  This is too much, for God`s  sake.  This is too much.
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UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE:  See if you can ID me.  I was formed in the 1850s.   Some of my members who were elected president were William Taft,  Calvin Coolidge and Teddy Roosevelt.  I`m the U.S. political party whose  symbol is the elephant.
I`m the Republican Party, and I`m also known as the Grand Old Party or the GOP.
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AZUZ:  There are four candidates hoping to be the Republican Party`s  nominee in this year`s presidential election.  To do that, to be the  nominee, they need to win delegates in primaries and caucuses.  
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AZUZ (voice-over):  Yesterday was the most recent opportunity to do  that.  We had caucuses in Minnesota, in Colorado, and there was a  primary in Missouri.  The results had not been announced when we  produced this show last night.  
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AZUZ:  Now we`ve had several primaries and caucuses already, but  yesterday was the first time there had been more one of those in the  same day.  And according to some political analysts, besides the  delegates, momentum was the big thing at stake here.
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AZUZ (voice-over):  And these are the people who are hoping to get some  of that momentum.  Starting from the left, we have former House Speaker  Newt Gingrich, then U.S. Representative Ron Paul, former Massachusetts  Governor Mitt Romney and former Senator Rick Santorum.
Now if  you go to the "Spotlight" section on our home page, you will see a link  for CNN`s Election Center.  That is the place where you can get all the  latest news on the race for the White House, including the full results  from yesterday`s contests.
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AZUZ:  Out  in California there`s a legal battle over Proposition 8.  Proposition 8  was a referendum that voters passed in 2008.  And what it did was ban  same-sex marriage.  Yesterday a federal appeals court ruled that Prop 8  is unconstitutional.  It said the ban singles out gays and lesbians for  discrimination by denying their right to civil marriage.
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AZUZ (voice-over):  The reaction, as you can probably imagine, was  split.  People who support same-sex marriage celebrated.  People who are  opposed to it said they were upset by the court`s decision.  They also  said they`re willing to take the issue up to the U.S. Supreme Court.  
There won`t be any same-sex marriages in California right now.  They`ve  been halted while this legal process plays out.  The appeals court  judges pointed out that their decision only refers to Prop 8 in  California.  They say other states would have to decide the issue of  marriage themselves.
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AZUZ:  Having  your house overrun by robots and rockets might not sound like the best  thing.  But that`s what President Obama asked for.  He hosted the second  White House science fair yesterday, honoring students who won  competition in science, math, technology and engineering.
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AZUZ (voice-over):  More than 100 students had the chance to show off  their research and inventions.  Robots in the Blue Room, rockets in the  Red Room and in the State Dining Room, the extreme marshmallow cannon.  
The thing works with compressed air.  Looks like the president had a  bit of trouble pumping enough air into the machine, but after he was  able to get it filled it up, he took a turn firing marshmallows at the  drapes.
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UNIDENTIFIED MALE:  Today`s  Shoutout goes out to Mr. De Jong`s economics and government classes at  Ontario High School in Ontario, California.
Which of these  snakes is a constrictor?  Here we go.  Is it the cobra, python, mamba or  rattlesnake?  You`ve got three seconds, go.
The only constrictor on the list is the python, which squeezes its prey.  That`s your answer, and that`s your Shoutout.
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AZUZ:  Because they`re not poisonous, a lot of people keep pythons or  boa constrictors as pets.  But they`re not welcome everywhere.  Burmese  pythons, for one thing, are huge.  They`re among the largest snakes on  earth.  They can get up to 23 feet long.  They can weigh up to 200  pounds.  
The question you might be asking is what does  something that big eat?  The answer, you might already know, is a lot,  especially based on this next report from John Zarrella.  In one part of  Florida, the fact that they eat so much is what is becoming the real  problem.
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JOHN ZARRELLA, CNN  REPORTER (voice-over):  Florida`s Everglades, home to an incredible  cluster of species.  But some are disappearing and disappearing quickly.
LINDA FRIAR, EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK:  Raccoons were such a problem  that we actually had to put a policy in place to try and manage them.
ZARRELLA (voice-over):  No policy needed now.  Scientists believe this  invader to the Everglades, the Burmese python, is responsible for nearly  wiping out several species.  For eight years, researchers drove back  and forth over two main roads in Everglades National Park.  They  compared the number of dead animals they found -- road kill -- to the  numbers recorded in past decades.
In areas inhabited by pythons  the longest, the findings were stunning.  Rabbits and foxes gone.   Raccoons and opossums down 99 percent.
SKIP SNOW, NATIONAL PARK  BIOLOGIST:  If a bobcat is looking for something to eat, those are no  longer available.  What does a bobcat do now?
ZARRELLA  (voice-over):  And scientists worry what will the snakes eat next?  Even  more frightening, these non-venomous constrictor snakes may be here to  stay.  No way to get rid of them all.
SNOW:  No example we can turn to that they`ve ever been eradicated by any of the tools and techniques we have.
ZARRELLA (voice-over):  It`s a problem that has frustrated park   biologist Skip Snow for years.  Poison would kill native creatures, too.   Traps would catch others besides pythons.  And visually hunting them  down across a million-plus acres, next to impossible.
ZARRELLA:   Here`s one of the problems with trying to completely eradicate the  python.  You probably don`t even see it.  It`s right here, a six-footer.   Now you could walk up on this snake, and you wouldn`t even know it`s  sitting there.
ZARRELLA (voice-over):  There may be as many as  100,000 pythons slithering through the `Glades.  The perception that  they are everywhere, rangers say, is flat out wrong.  But it is a  perception not lost on park visitors.
SUSAN BUCK, TOURIST:  And  I says I don`t even know if I want to stop here, because I was afraid  that there would be snakes everywhere, pythons and everything.
ZARRELLA (voice-over):  It`s not great mystery how the pythons got here.   People bought these exotic pets, and when they got too big, they got  rid of them.  No one would have guessed, just a decade ago, snakes in  this river of grass might upset the balance of nature here forever --  John Zarrella, CNN, Everglades National Park.
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AZUZ (voice-over):  We want you to think of cnnstudentnews.com as your  home -- your home page.  It`s a one-stop shop for tons of free  resources.  Our daily discussion questions for one.  You can also find  our show archives there.  We have downloadable maps.  It`s all free.  
Plus we have links to our blogs, "From A to Z" with me, and there`s  also our new "Schools of Thought" blog about all things education.  Have  all of them right at your fingertips.  Make cnnstudentnews.com your  home page.  You`re going to love it.
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AZUZ:  All right.  Before we go, some tributes can get pretty big.  
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AZUZ (voice-over):  This might be the biggest -- at least physically.   It`s a giant snow sculpture that`s tebowing.  In fact it depicts Tebow  tebowing. The term is named after Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow  and the way he prays at games.  
The sculptor said he moved  about 10 tons of snow to build this tribute.  Of course, some people say  if he wanted to be really ambitious, he could have made 10 more players  and had them run an offensive play.  They`d probably be able to pull  off a great shovel pass --
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AZUZ:  --  but we guess those other snow sculptures just got left out in the cold.   It`s time for us to take a hike, but we hope you will take the option  to join us back here tomorrow for more CNN Student News.  We`ll see  y`all later.
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