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/ 11 April 2006

Lifting the cloud of depression

Sufferers from depression, who do not respond to existing treatments, could soon benefit from a new procedure in which electrodes are inserted into the core of the brain and used to alter the patient’s mood. Later this year, scientists at Bristol University in the United Kingdom will conduct the first trials of the so-called deep-brain stimulation method on sufferers from depression.

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/ 10 April 2006

UK anger at water restrictions

Flowerbeds and hanging baskets are banned, but patios are legitimate. The driveway is allowed, although the car parked there is off limits. And commercial vehicles can still be cleaned, except for taxis, which count as private motorcars. Confused? Millions of home-owners in the United Kingdom were recently, as sweeping hosepipe bans came into force across London.

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/ 8 April 2006

Boost for Spurs as Blackburn held by Pompey

Tottenham boosted their bid for Champions League football next season with a 2-1 win over Manchester City on Saturday as rivals Blackburn saw their push for fourth place stalled by Portsmouth’s battle for Premiership survival. Goals from Canadian defender Paul Stalteri and England midfielder Michael Carrick either side of half-time allowed fourth-placed Spurs to pull four points clear of Blackburn

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/ 7 April 2006

The write verdict for The Da Vinci Code

In a verdict worthy of a thriller, Britain’s High Court on Friday rejected a claim that author Dan Brown stole key elements of his blockbuster The Da Vinci Code from an earlier book by two other writers. Brown had been accused of breach of copyright by plagiarising passages from The Holy Blood And The Holy Grail, by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh, for his 2003 novel.

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/ 7 April 2006

Monster rabbit devours UK veggie plots

In a tale reminiscent of the last <i>Wallace and Gromit</i> movie, furious villagers in north-east England have hired armed guards to protect their beloved communal vegetable gardens from a suspected monster rabbit. Leeks, Japanese onions, parsnips and spring carrots have all been ripped up and devoured by the mystery were-rabbit.

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/ 7 April 2006

United seek ninth life in bid to catch Chelsea

Manchester United have done a record-breaking shirt sponsorship deal with American insurance giant AIG but it is Premiership leaders Chelsea who are in the market for some protective cover this weekend. Jose Mourinho’s side are in need of the nerve-calming tonic that a victory over West Ham in Sunday’s London derby would provide.

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/ 6 April 2006

London’s alive with The Sound of Music

Thousands of youngsters stood in line on Thursday to audition for the roles of the Von Trapp children in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s new stage production of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical The Sound of Music. By early Thursday, more than 2 000 youngsters were standing in line outside the Palladium Theatre.

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/ 6 April 2006

Bird-flu fear grips Britain after H5N1 strain kills swan

Fear of bird flu again swept Britain on Thursday as scientists confirmed that a wild swan found dead in a Scottish seaside village had the H5N1 strain that can be fatal to humans. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) said the swan — found a week ago on a harbour slipway in Cellardyke, Fife — perished from the same H5N1 strain that has killed more than 100 people.

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/ 5 April 2006

Smiles all around as Blair, Brown put on show of unity

With smiles all around and a well-timed pat on the back, the two most powerful figures in British politics made a carefully choreographed attempt on Wednesday to dispel talk of a bitter rift between them. Prime Minister Tony Blair and his heir apparent, Gordon Brown, put on a show of solidarity as they launched the start of the Labour Party’s campaign for the May 4 local-council elections.

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/ 4 April 2006

Blair enters end-of-term doldrums

As clouds gather over British Prime Minister Tony Blair with feverish speculation on when he will hand over power, he joins a motley group of Western leaders whose terms in office are ending much less auspiciously than they started. Like United States President George Bush, Blair suffers from a perception that he has become a lame duck.

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/ 3 April 2006

Playboy to go gay in Britain

Playboy, the United States-based adult publisher and broadcaster, is considering using Britain as a testing ground for moving into the gay market for the first time, The Times newspaper said on Monday. Playboy wants to launch a new gay brand to boost revenues, the daily said.

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/ 2 April 2006

Man United close in on Chelsea

Manchester United won 2-1 at Bolton on Saturday to cut Chelsea’s Premier League lead to seven points after the champions were held 0-0 by relegation-threatened Birmingham. Substitute Ruud van Nistelrooy scored the winner at the Reebok Stadium after United had trailed to Kevin Davies’s 25th-minute goal and Louis Saha equalised.

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/ 30 March 2006

Brazil’s World Cup secret: Plenty of sex

Brazil coach Carlos Alberto Parreira wants his team to play with a smile on their faces at this year’s World Cup — so has ruled out imposing a sex ban. While Parreira’s predecessor Luis Felipe Scolari ran a famously strict regime during the 2002 finals, a more relaxed mood will prevail in Germany — and that includes as much sex as his players want.

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/ 30 March 2006

Man United move up in English Premiership

Ruud van Nistelrooy scored a first-half goal on Wednesday to lift Manchester United to a 1-0 victory over West Ham in the English Premier League, moving the Red Devils nine points behind league-leading Chelsea. Van Nistelrooy, benched for five games, started as manager Alex Ferguson’s captain and scored in injury time.

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/ 29 March 2006

Apple trademark battle comes to the crunch

The Beatles’ record company Apple Corps re-entered battle with Apple Computer at London’s High Court on Wednesday, accusing it of breaching a trademark agreement by promoting music products. The dispute centres on Apple Computer’s revolutionary iTunes online music store, which allows users of its iPod to download and save songs through the internet.

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/ 29 March 2006

Victorious Arsenal don’t miss Vieira at all

Arsenal moved halfway toward their first appearance in the Champions League semifinals with a 2-0 victory over Italian league leaders Juventus on Tuesday and showed Patrick Vieira they don’t miss him at all. Goals by Cesc Fabregas and Thierry Henry gave the Gunners a quarterfinals first-leg lead that they defend next week in Turin.

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/ 28 March 2006

Formula-one breakaway threat fades

The threat of a breakaway in formula one seemed to fade on Monday when the teams planning their own series submitted entry forms for the 2008 season. The Grand Prix Manufacturers Association — made up of Renault, BMW Sauber, McLaren Mercedes, Honda and Toyota — said it was signing up to meet a deadline of March 31 established by world governing body FIA and its president Max Mosley.

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/ 28 March 2006

Muslim holy fish draw faithful in British city

Muslim worshippers are flocking to see a pair of fish in Liverpool which appear to bear the words "Allah" and "Muhammad", their owner said on Monday. Ali Al-Waqedi (23) who hailed the Oscar fish as a "message from God," said he had loaned them to a friend whose house was close to the local mosque so that worshippers could visit more easily.

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/ 27 March 2006

Parnaby’s late goal seals thriller for Middlesbrough

Stuart Parnaby’s goal in second-half injury time lifted Middlesbrough to a 4-3 victory on Sunday over Bolton, a victory that almost guarantees they will avoid relegation from the Premier League. Parnaby’s winner from a close-range shot came after Bolton had levelled the score after being two goals behind, the goals coming from Radhi Jaidi and Jay Jay Okocha.

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/ 27 March 2006

British men show where their loyalties lie

British men show far more loyalty, commitment and self-sacrifice towards their favourite football team than towards their partners, a study published on Monday showed. About 94% said they would never stop loving their team no matter how badly they fared while 52% would gladly ditch a relationship that was not going well.