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Marlin (L), desperate to find his missing son Nemo, is joined on his mission by a forgetful fish named Dory (R) in this scene from the new computer animated film 'Finding Nemo' created by Pixar Animation Studios. North American moviegoers fell hook, line and sinker for the fishy fable, which sold about $70.6 million worth of tickets in its first three days, according to studio estimates issued on June 1, 2003. (Disney/Pixar via Reuters)
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'Living History,' Hillary Rodham Clinton's new memoir covering her eight years in the White House is shown in this undated handout photo. Clinton, acknowledging tirades and tears in the book, over her husband's affair with Monica Lewinsky, says President Clinton lied to her about the relationship until the weekend before he admitted as much to a grand jury. (AP Photo/Simon & Schuster)
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An FBI agent carries two pieces of a wood containing nails investigators believe may be evidence against suspected bomber Eric Rudolph, seized Tuesday, June 3, 2003, from a campsite believed to be used by Rudolph near Fires Creek, N.C. A man-made rock patio and fire pit, believed to have been built by Rudolph, can be seen in the foreground. Nails were used in several of the bombs that federal prosecutors say Rudolph detonated in Birmingham, Ala., and the Atlanta area between 1996 and 1998. (AP Photo/Alan Marler)
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Carmelo Maldonado, 15, plays basketball in the street outside his Woolwich Township N.J. home, Wednesday, May 28, 2003. Under a new law proposed in the township, Maldonado would have to move the basket out of the street and onto the curb or driveway.. (AP Photo/Daniel Hulshizer)
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A U.S. soldier stops an Iraqi driver at gunpoint at a busy junction in Baghdad June 3, 2003. A U.S. soldier has died in Iraq after being wounded in an attack on a checkpoint in a town north of Baghdad, the U.S. Central Command said on Tuesday. The soldier died on Monday evening from wounds received in the attack with small arms and rocket-propelled grenades near Balad, 55 miles from Baghdad, Central Command said on its Web site. (Radu Sigheti/Reuters)
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Armed Iraqi policemen sport their new uniforms as they go out a street patrol in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday, June 2, 2003. The streets of postwar Baghdad, it turns out, really are not that different from anywhere else. But when it comes to police work, a lot of what happens here could turn up in the police blotter in any small midwestern American city: traffic stops, stolen cars, domestic disputes and safety lectures to schoolchildren. (AP Photo/Murad Sezer)
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Abu al Sukkar, the longest Israeli-held Palestinian prisoner, speaks to the press in Ramallah his release from jail June 3, 2003. Israel released dozens of prisoners in a goodwill gesture timed to coincide with landmark talks between President George W. Bush and Arab leaders to promote a U.S.-backed peace 'road map.' Al-Sukkar, spent almost three decades behind bars for his conviction for detonating an explosives-laden refrigerator in Jerusalem in 1975, killing 13 people. (Ammar Awad/Reuters)
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The Russian pop music duo 'T.A.T.U. performs at the 2003 MTV Movie Awards which were taped in Los Angeles May 31, 2003. The awards show featured musical performances and honored MTV viewers favorite movies and movie stars and will be telecast in the United States June 5. REUTERS/Fred Prouser REUTERS