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/ 5 October 2005

British weather ‘not being dumbed down’

The unpredictable and often confusing story of the British weather is to be told more simply in future in order to make forecasts more ”relevant” to the public. The Meteorological Office said efforts to introduce greater clarity to the weather report do not represent an attempt to make the weather appear ”more positive”.

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/ 5 October 2005

Scorpions hearing to be open to public

Judge Sisi Khampepe on Wednesday ruled that commission hearings into the Scorpion’s future will be open to the public. Police advocate Philip Jacobs earlier submitted that discussions around intelligence functions in relation to the Constitution and those about cases that are pending should be held in camera.

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/ 5 October 2005

Zimbabwe to start growing oil-rich tree for fuel

Zimbabwe will soon start growing the oil-rich jatropha tree to manufacture its own blend of diesel as the country battles to overcome acute fuel shortages, state radio reported on Wednesday. The jatropha plant — a small deciduous tree that can grow in arid areas — has seeds rich in vegetable oil that can be burned as a substitute for diesel.

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/ 5 October 2005

Australia upset World XI in series opener

Shane Watson took three wickets and made a crucial run-out on Wednesday to help Australia to a 93-run win over the World XI and a 1-0 lead in the limited-overs Super Series. Openers Simon Katich (58) and Adam Gilchrist (45) led the scoring as Australia made 255 for eight after winning the toss and batting first.

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/ 5 October 2005

Iraq makes about-turn on Constitution voting rules

Under United Nations pressure, Iraq’s Parliament on Wednesday reversed changes to an electoral law that critics had charged made it harder to reject the new and deeply divisive Constitution in next week’s referendum. The move came as thousands of United States troops widened a sweep for al-Qaeda fighters in a new offensive.

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/ 5 October 2005

Nobel Prize for carbon-chemistry breakthrough

Yves Chauvin of France and Americans Robert H Grubbs and Richard R Schrock on Wednesday won the Nobel Prize for a breakthrough in carbon chemistry that opens the way to smarter drugs and environmentally friendlier plastics. The Nobel jury declared ”fantastic opportunities” had resulted from the trio’s work.