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/ 24 September 2005

International team keeps slim lead over US

More great play from Retief Goosen and Adam Scott helped the International team keep their slim lead over the United States at 6-5 after better-ball matches in the Presidents Cup on Friday. Goosen and Scott remained perfect at 2-0, along with Justin Leonard and Scott Verplank who prevented the International team from an even larger lead by rallying to win their match 2 and 1.

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/ 24 September 2005

Sato hopes for Formula One reprieve

Japanese driver Takuma Sato said here on Friday that he still hopes to be racing in Formula One in 2006 after being dropped by BAR-Honda for next season. BAR confirmed earlier this week that Briton Jenson Button and Brazilian Rubens Barrichello will be their race drivers for 2006 and that Sato would have to drop down to a third driver or leave the team.

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/ 24 September 2005

Back injury forces Henman out of Thai Open

A back problem which resurfaced during training has forced Tim Henman to pull out of next week’s  000 Thailand Open, the British number one confirmed on his website. Henman had been due to make his first appearance on court since losing in the first round of the US Open last month to Fernando Vedasco of Spain, a match where he suffered with a stiff back.

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/ 24 September 2005

Ganguly tries to keep spat with coach under wraps

Indian cricket captain Sourav Ganguly said on Saturday that a spat with coach Greg Chappell should stay between the two men and should not be allowed to drag down the team ahead of a busy international schedule. The coach-captain spat worsened on Friday when Chappell reportedly said in an e-mail sent to the Indian cricket board that he believed Ganguly was no longer fit to lead the side.

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/ 24 September 2005

Hurricane Rita slams into land

Hurricane Rita hurled its full fury at Texas and Louisiana on Saturday, as the storm’s potent eyewall ripped ashore, lashing coastlines with a terrifying barrage of near 200kph winds and walls of driving rain. Rita smashed into a coastline bristling with vital oil and chemical installations after its outer bands dumped fresh floods on New Orleans.

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/ 24 September 2005

Peer review organisers urged to ‘walk with a friend’

South Africa’s civil society groups are demanding a bigger role in the national self-assessment to be conducted under the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM). APRM is the brainchild of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (Nepad), an initiative that seeks to attract more foreign investment to the continent by improving the management of African states.

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/ 24 September 2005

Planners argue over site for Mandela statue in London

Planning inspectors are being asked to resolve a dispute over the site of a statue honouring South Africa’s first black president Nelson Mandela in London’s Trafalgar Square. The Greater London Authority, on behalf of the Nelson Mandela Statue Fund, wanted the 2,8m bronze statue to stand on the north terrace of the British capital’s most popular piazza.