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/ 17 November 2006

Harmison in doubt for first Ashes Test

England pace spearhead Steve Harmison is in doubt for next week’s Ashes opener with a side strain that forced him out of the tourists’ final lead-up match on Friday. Harmison, who has taken 179 wickets in 45 Tests, was left out of the three-day tour practice match against South Australia at Adelaide Oval as a precaution.

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/ 16 November 2006

Out-of-this-world response to online ghost hunt

Australian paranormal investigators on Thursday claimed an out-of-this-world response to a global ghost hunt to expand an eerie but under-explored body of knowledge. Tapping into an explosion of interest in phenomena that defy scientific explanation, researchers from Australia’s Monash University set up an online survey to assess their impact on individuals and society.

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/ 16 November 2006

Wild and weird weather baffles Australia

Wild and weird weather has hit Australia, with a combination of drought, storms, bushfires, snow and record low temperatures baffling a population usually heading for the beach at this time of year. Icy winds from the South Pole had Sydney residents shivering on the way to work on Thursday as the city recorded its coldest overnight November temperature in more than a century.

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/ 14 November 2006

England players racially abused

The ugly spectre of racism in cricket has reared its head again with claims two England players were abused by spectators on the Ashes tour of Australia. Spinner Monty Panesar, a bearded Sikh, was allegedly called ”a stupid Indian” by a spectator during the tour match against New South Wales.

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/ 14 November 2006

Greg Norman hints at Australian swansong

Greg Norman’s first Australian Open appearance since 1999 might also be his last, the golf great said on Tuesday. Norman (51), a five-time champion, could not rule out the possibility the tournament starting at Royal Sydney on Thursday would be his last on home soil. ”It could be. I’m not saying which one is going to be my last,” he said at a news conference.

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/ 14 November 2006

Comeback kid Anderson eyes Ashes start

James Anderson had the first Ashes Test in Australia well off his radar as he spent six weeks in a corset to cradle a stress fracture of the back last English summer. Now the Lancashire paceman is on target to play against the Australians in the opening Ashes Test in Brisbane next week after a strong bowling performance in the drawn three-day tour match against New South Wales.

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/ 14 November 2006

Thurston back at scrumhalf for Aussies

Johnathan Thurston was on Tuesday reinstated as scrumhalf in the Australian team to face Britain in the Tri-Nations rugby league Test in Brisbane on Saturday. Thurston ousted utility Ben Hornby from the number seven jersey following Australia’s upset 23-12 loss to the Lions in Melbourne on November 4.

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/ 13 November 2006

Diabetes threatens many of world’s indigenous people

Diabetes poses a deadly threat to indigenous people across Asia, the Pacific and the Americas as Western lifestyles and diets replace traditional habits, medical experts warned on Monday. Professor Martin Silink, head of the Brussels-based International Diabetes Foundation, said indigenous people had a greater genetic risk of contracting Type 2 diabetes.

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/ 13 November 2006

Wallabies slammed despite win over Italy

The Wallabies have been heavily criticised by coach John Connolly and sections of the Australian media despite recording their first win on foreign soil this year, 25-18 over Italy in Rome on Saturday. Connolly said his team’s performance was their worst effort since he took charge at the start of this year while Australia’s newspapers described the side’s display as woeful.

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/ 13 November 2006

Fielding horrors return for England

England’s fielding horrors returned on Tuesday as their three-day practice match with New South Wales petered out to a tame draw at the Sydney Cricket Ground. NSW batted out their second innings from lunch to an agreed stumps on the final day, yet England blotted their Ashes preparations with a couple of fumbles.

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/ 11 November 2006

ICC ranked Hair second-best umpire

The International Cricket Council rated Australian Darrell Hair the second-best umpire in the world before it sacked him for alleged incompetence. The Daily Telegraph newspaper said it had uncovered a copy of the performance appraisal that Hair received before the ICC’s board of directors sacked him.

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/ 1 November 2006

Drought-hit Australia battles climate change

Australia is already feeling the heat from climate change with a five-year drought devastating rural life, severe early season wildfires and record unseasonal temperatures. Every four days, a farmer commits suicide under the stress of failing crops, dying livestock and debt as the worst drought in 100 years bites deep into the nation’s psyche and erodes economic growth.

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/ 30 October 2006

New internet technology aids paedophiles

New high-tech advances were making internet crimes against children easier for paedophiles to commit and more difficult to detect, experts told a conference in Australia on Monday. Faster broadband, DSL and cable connections have contributed to an increase in paedophile activity on the internet, the 19th Computer Facilitated Crimes Against Children conference heard.

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/ 29 October 2006

Blatter apologises to Australian fans

Fida boss Sepp Blatter has apologised to Australian fans — saying the Socceroos should have played in this year’s World Cup quarterfinal instead of eventual champions Italy. Australia’s players and fans were outraged when Spanish referee Luis Medina Cantalejo awarded Italy a penalty in the fifth minute of stoppage time after Lucas Neill had brought down Fabio Grosso.

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/ 26 October 2006

Wallabies plan backline experiments

The Wallabies are set for some revolutionary positional changes on next month’s four-Test European tour as they look ahead to next year’s Rugby World Cup in France. Coach John Connolly is tinkering with a revamp of the backline to maximise Australia’s chances of challenging World Cup favourites New Zealand and France.

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/ 25 October 2006

Australia plans world’s biggest solar plant

Australia on Wednesday announced plans for the world’s biggest solar power plant under a Aus$500-million ($375-million) radical rethink on climate change. The government said it would contribute Aus$75-million towards a Aus$420-million solar-power concentrator in the first of a series of projects aimed at reducing the greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming.

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/ 24 October 2006

Warne defends ageing Australia

Spin-king Shane Warne on Tuesday defended Australia’s ageing top-order batsmen and the form of fast bowler Glenn McGrath ahead of next month’s Ashes series against England. Australian fast-bowling legend Dennis Lillee said on Monday he feared the age of Australia’s top order batsmen would expose the home side to defeat in the much-anticipated clash.

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/ 23 October 2006

Courier pleads guilty to hairy theft

An airline baggage courier pleaded guilty in Australia on Friday to stealing samples of women’s hair from their lost bags and keeping them on file. Rodney Petersen (30) had faced 110 charges of theft and stalking after taking strands of both head and pubic hair from the luggage of female passengers.

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/ 21 October 2006

Report: SA could bow out of Super 14

South Africa may withdraw from the Super 14 rugby competition after 2010, leaving room for a Japanese team, while Argentina could join an expanded Tri-Nations, reports said on Saturday. Support is flagging for the Super 14 provincial series in South Africa, the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper said.

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/ 20 October 2006

Slim prisoner back behind bars

An Australian prisoner shed 14kg so he could slip between the bars of his cell and escape, a court in Sydney was told on Friday. Robert Cole (37) spent three days at large after escaping in January despite breaking his leg when he jumped from a high perimeter wall.

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/ 19 October 2006

Wallabies try Larkham at inside-centre

One of rugby’s premier flyhalves, Stephen Larkham, says he may have a run at inside-centre on the Wallabies’ tour of Europe next month. As assistant coach Scott Johnson attempts to reshape the backline, Larkham has been training at inside-centre, with regular number 12 Matt Giteau at scrumhalf and winger Mark Gerrard at flyhalf.

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/ 19 October 2006

Australian farmers commit suicide as hope evaporates

One Australian farmer commits suicide every four days, defeated by the country’s worst drought in 100 years which has left them with dust-bowl paddocks and a mountain of debt, says a national mental health body. As drought rolls into a sixth year, stoic farmers are reduced to tears under the stress of trying to produce a crop and hold on to land.

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/ 18 October 2006

Barmy Army scoffs at hooligan fears

The Barmy Army, a group of die-hard English cricket fans, have scoffed at fears hooligans will accompany a flood of up to 50 000 British tourists expected in Australia during the upcoming Ashes tour. The comments came after New South Wales Premier Morris Iemma said on Tuesday he had sought intelligence from British police on known troublemakers.