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/ 9 October 2006

Censor sees through Yan Lianke’s guile

Millions of pints of blood are pumped through underground pipelines from a big developing country to wealthy consumers in the United States and elsewhere. The blood trade has produced the most spectacular boom in human history. In just five years, the formerly dirt-poor state at the heart of the haemo-business has become the richest nation on earth.

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/ 9 October 2006

ICC quashes Inzamam’s hopes

Banned Pakistan captain Inzamam-ul-Haq will not be able to play in the Champions Trophy final if his team qualifies, the International Cricket Council (ICC) ruled on Monday. Inzamam was banned for four one-day internationals last month after being found guilty of bringing the game into disrepute.

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/ 9 October 2006

Davis Love ends three-year drought

Davis Love won his first PGA title since 2003, firing a six-under par 66 on Sunday on a course he redesigned to take the Chrysler Classic of Greensboro by two strokes. Sparked by three birdies in a row starting at the 13th hole, the 42-year-old US veteran collected his 19th career PGA triumph by finishing 72 holes at the ,6-million event on 16-under par 272.

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/ 9 October 2006

Appleby, Allenby join strong field for Australian Open

Stuart Appleby and Robert Allenby will tee off in next month’s Australian Open along with Greg Norman, Adam Scott, Geoff Ogilvy and Aaron Baddeley. Organisers, reluctant to go after big-name overseas stars because of the cost of appearance fees, have settled for a strong home field for the national open championship at the Royal Sydney from November 13-19.

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/ 9 October 2006

Defiant North Korea conducts test

North Korea said on Monday it had safely and successfully carried out an underground nuclear test, flying in the face of a warning from the United Nations Security Council and opening its crippled economy to the risk of fresh sanctions. Pyongyang’s move, which came as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrived for a visit to Seoul, could heighten regional tensions.

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/ 9 October 2006

Websites offer students new way to cheat

Even the most efficient student would have agonised over the assignment — a 30-page term paper on the social value of literary criticism. But Richard finished it in one evening, cutting and pasting paragraphs off the internet for an online company that sells papers to desperate United States college students.