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/ 1 March 2006

Apple unveils iPod home stereo

Apple Computer on Tuesday unveiled a new mini-computer designed as a hub for digital entertainment, and a home stereo system linked with its popular iPod music player. The mini-PC is Apple’s answer to the so-called digital media hubs that run on Microsoft’s Windows Media Centre platform.

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/ 1 March 2006

Iraq pushes Bush support to all-time low

Profound pessimism about the Iraq war has pushed United States President George Bush’s popularity to an all-time low of 34%, as polls on Tuesday showed American civilians and soldiers at odds with the White House over US objectives and strategy. Asked what Washington would do if civil war broke out in Iraq, Bush said: ”I don’t buy your premise that there’s going to be a civil war.”

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/ 1 March 2006

Inquiry reveals 25-year scandal of silence

A rogue consultant removed the wombs of 129 women because his work went unchallenged for almost a quarter of a century, according to a report into one of Ireland’s worst medical scandals. The findings of an investigation into abnormal maternity unit practices at Our Lady of Lourdes hospital in Drogheda triggered calls for fundamental reforms of hospital procedures in the republic.

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/ 1 March 2006

Our growth is slowing, Google admits

Google lost yet more of its shine on Tuesday after a senior executive at the internet search giant admitted growth at the company was slowing. Shares in Google fell 13% in early trading on Wall Street and dragged stock markets lower on both sides of the Atlantic after chief financial officer George Reyes told an investor conference in New York that ”growth will slow”.

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/ 1 March 2006

Election under way: Mbeki casts ballot

South Africa’s third post-1994 local government election got under way without obvious hitches at 7am on Wednesday. President Thabo Mbeki was the first voter to cast his ballot at the Colbyn voting station in Pretoria. He was welcomed by Independent Electoral Commission chairperson Brigalia Bam and chief electoral officer Pansy Tlakula.

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/ 1 March 2006

Beneath Iraq and a hard place

Watching the news from out of the Middle East, you might be wondering what’s going on and why — and, mostly, when’s it going to stop. The simple answer is: it isn’t. The world is now in the first stages of a multistep "end game" for global domination by the last remaining superpowers. The "energy wars" have begun in earnest and will keep on going, from here onwards.

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/ 1 March 2006

French winemakers mull screw cap vs cork

To lovers of fine wine there is no more satisfying sound then the pop of a cork as a favourite vintage is opened. The twist of a screw cap just doesn’t carry the same hint of promise. But the metal top is moving up market. "We are convinced about screw caps. They are better, certainly for white wine," said Veronique Bouffard, communications manager at Andre Lurton.

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/ 1 March 2006

Marriage = equality

I was recently on a discussion programme with a fully signed-up card-carrying feminist. ”Damn,” she said, as we came off, ”I said ‘husbands’ by mistake, instead of ‘partners’.” She’d made the ultimate faux pas — the assumption that couples must be married. But is it right, particularly when so many feminists — like herself — have chosen to get married, that marriage should continue to be taboo?

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/ 1 March 2006

Angola’s dangerous profession of motherhood

Walking into the Angolan capital’s main maternity hospital, the first thing that hits any visitor is the stench: a nauseating combination of blood and excrement. After a short while, the stomach settles and the eyes adjust to the poor light in the Maternidade Lucrecia Paim; then, the true wretchedness of the grey walls and broken windows begins to sink in.