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/ 28 February 2005
A 10-year-old boy has died in Scotland after being crushed by a giant snowball rolling down a hill, police and reports said on Monday. In what appeared to be ”a tragic accident”, the schoolboy was playing with friends when a ”giant snowball” they had been making rolled down a hill and engulfed him, a police spokesperson said.
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/ 27 February 2005
Wayne Rooney kept Manchester United’s bid to catch Chelsea at the top of the Premiership on track with a superb double strike to secure victory over battling Portsmouth at Old Trafford on Saturday. Arsenal’s lingering hopes of retaining their Premiership title appeared to have been crushed after a 1-1 draw at relegation-threatened Southampton.
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/ 24 February 2005
Heads should roll in the royal household over a series of missteps in the preparations for the wedding of Britain’s heir to the throne Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles, experts say. From the rushed marriage announcement to the sudden decision by Queen Elizabeth II to miss her son’s civil ceremony, has tarnished the whole family’s reputation, they say.
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/ 23 February 2005
Queen Elizabeth II stunned royal observers on Wednesday by announcing she would not attend her son Prince Charles’ civil wedding to his longtime companion Camilla Parker Bowles, with some declaring it a snub to an indecorous city hall ceremony.
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/ 22 February 2005
For years, it has been as much a feature for many fans of attending a match at Lord’s Cricket Ground as the Pavilion, the slope on the pitch and the Father Time weather vane. But this season, spectators wanting to reflect after a day’s international play in the Lord’s Tavern pub will, for the most part, have to drink somewhere else.
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/ 21 February 2005
Fallen giants Leeds United crashed to a 3-0 Championship defeat at Wigan on Saturday in a match marred by an altercation between two of their own players. Gary Kelly and Sean Gregan squared up to each other in a bitter war of words early in the match at the JJB Stadium but they were defended by manager Kevin Blackwell.
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/ 18 February 2005
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) got an overhead view of the planned central area for the 2012 Olympics on Thursday. From a specially constructed viewing platform on the 22nd floor of a retirement home, the IOC’s evaluation commission viewed the 200ha proposed Olympic Park in Stratford, a largely run-down area of East London.
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/ 17 February 2005
Manufacturers planning a breakaway formula-one world championship claimed on Wednesday that their series will be fairer and more cost-effective than the established competition. BMW, DaimlerChrysler, Honda, Renault and Toyota, who make up the Grand Prix World Championship, met nine of the formula-one teams in London to outline their proposals.
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/ 17 February 2005
Ukraine’s bid on Wednesday to qualify an unprecedented three teams for the Uefa Cup’s last eight had mixed results. With the three guaranteed to avoid each other in the next round, Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, Shakhtar and Dynamo Kiev are looking to achieve rare European glory for the former Soviet republic.
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/ 17 February 2005
Oil trading was interrupted for more than an hour on Wednesday in the world’s second largest energy market when 35 Greenpeace activists invaded the International Petroleum Exchange in London on the day the Kyoto global warming treaty came into effect.
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/ 16 February 2005
A British fish-and-chip-shop owner pledged on Wednesday to embark on a 12-hour cooking epic to make the world’s biggest bag of chips. Kelvin Baines aims to make his mark by frying 1 134kg of potatoes at the Chip Stop in Plymouth, south-west England.
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/ 16 February 2005
A British supermarket chain said on Tuesday it will start selling £19 (R210) replicas of Camilla Parker Bowles’s royal engagement ring when she marries Prince Charles on April 8. "Camilla’s ring is a timeless classic, and we want our customers to have a taste of royalty for a fraction of the price," said Justine Reid, who purchases jewellery for Asda.
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/ 16 February 2005
Mark Thatcher, who pleaded guilty in South Africa to charges linking him to a coup plot in Equatorial Guinea, plans to move to Switzerland if he fails to obtain a United States visa, a report said on Wednesday. The disgraced son of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher would be joined in Switzerland by his wife Diana, who is waiting for him at her home in Dallas.
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/ 15 February 2005
A three-year-old boy with an intelligence quotient of 137 has become the youngest current member of the British chapter of Mensa, the international society for highly intelligent people, Mensa said on Monday. Mikhail Ali, from the northern English city of Leeds, was admitted to Mensa after undergoing tests at the University of York.
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/ 15 February 2005
As inspectors from the International Olympic Committee arrive in London to examine the city’s bid to host the 2012 Games, those behind the British capital’s attempt to stage the world’s most famous sports festival believe they are starting to close the gap on long-time favourites Paris.
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/ 15 February 2005
Arsenal celebrated fielding their first-ever all-foreign squad by thrashing relegation-threatened Crystal Palace 5-1 in London on Monday. Thierry Henry scored twice to record a memorable 200th Premiership appearance for the Gunners. Palace’s leading scorer Andy Johnson scored a penalty for the visitors.
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/ 14 February 2005
Oil giant Shell is fighting calls for a windfall tax after it recorded the biggest profits by a British company to date. The £9,4-billion earned in 2004 from oil and gas — £1-million an hour and equal to nearly 1% of the United Kingdom’s gross domestic product — came after the prices of UK domestic gas, electricity and petrol soared. Banking group HSBC is predicted to match Shell’s profits.
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/ 11 February 2005
Former South Africa skipper Corne Krige has announced he will retire from rugby at the end of the season after his contract with English side Northampton is finished. Krige said he will then return home to Cape Town with his wife, Justine, and their new baby, Sophia. Krige arrived at Northampton just before the start of this season.
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/ 11 February 2005
Saudi Arabia, one of the world’s most traditional absolute monarchies, took a tentative step towards democracy on Thursday when male citizens went to the polls in the first municipal elections the country has witnessed for 40 years. Candidates have splashed out money on advertising and laid on feasts for potential voters, but the authorities’ ”progressive step” has left reformers disappointed.
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/ 11 February 2005
Almost two-thirds of money promised by governments to help the millions of people affected by the Indian Ocean tsunami has not yet been received by the United Nations, confirming fears that many countries would try to wriggle out of their commitments. Speaking in Geneva this week, a UN official urged governments to pay up.
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/ 10 February 2005
A man was stabbed and five other people received hospital treatment after thousands of bargain-hungry customers caused a stampede at the midnight opening of a new Ikea furniture store in north London, British authorities said on Thursday. The Swedish retailer expressed shock and regret at the incident
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/ 10 February 2005
Prince Charles is to marry his partner Camilla Parker Bowles, the prince’s office said on Thursday. The prince will marry Parker Bowles on Friday April 8, his official residence in London confirmed on Thursday. It also said Parker Bowles will be known as the Princess Consort, and not Queen Camilla, once Prince Charles becomes the British monarch.
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/ 9 February 2005
Spoon-bending entertainer Uri Geller was set to appear before the august Oxford Union debating society on Wednesday to prove he really is a psychic, the union has announced. Geller (58) has offered to fix, under the watchful eye of a special camera, any broken watches that members of the union may have.
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/ 9 February 2005
Stealing toiletries and even bathrobes from hotels is one thing, but a British couple have taken pilfering to new heights after liking their hotel shower so much they took it home with them. After they checked out of the room, staff found the entire shower unit had been taken from the en suite bathroom.
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/ 8 February 2005
The seven deadly sins — anger, gluttony, sloth, envy, pride, lust and greed — are out of date and should include cruelty, adultery and bigotry, the results of an opinion poll suggest. Greed is the only one of the seven that should remain a sin in today’s Britain, according to the poll by the Mori organisation for BBC television’s <i>Heaven and Earth</i>.
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/ 8 February 2005
A British great-grandfather said on Tuesday he has decided to boycott his local pub after being asked to remove his flat cap under rules designed to stop thugs hiding their faces from security cameras. John Lalor used to drop into the Jolly Falstaff pub just metres from his home in Warrington, north-west England, virtually every day.
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/ 8 February 2005
British energy giant BP reported on Tuesday a 26% rise in pro-forma net annual profit to ,21-billion in the wake of record high oil prices and strong demand. Alongside its results, BP said it will return up to -billion in excess cash to investors in 2005 and 2006 via share buybacks and dividends.
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/ 8 February 2005
A Welsh rugby fan cut off his own testicles to celebrate Wales beating world champions England at rugby in Cardiff for the first time in 12 years, newspapers reported on Tuesday. Geoff Huish (26) told drinkers at a social club: ”If Wales win, I’ll cut my balls off,” the Daily Mirror and The Sun reported.
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/ 8 February 2005
British sailor Ellen MacArthur broke a solo round-the-world sailing record on Monday with a time of 71 days, 14 hours, 18 minutes and 33 seconds, her control team said. She battled stormy seas, gale-force winds, mechanical problems, a broken sail, burns, bruises and extreme exhaustion — even a close encounter with a whale.
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/ 7 February 2005
The concept of lovesickness might be more than just a flighty poetic notion, as it can burden the afflicted with genuine mental trauma, a British psychological study warned on Sunday. In the most serious cases, the "disease" can prove fatal, the researchers said, calling for lovesickness to be taken more seriously by the medical profession.
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/ 7 February 2005
When most people rummage through their kitchen drawers, they rarely uncover anything more exciting than a mislaid knife. Joanne and David Austin, however, found a lottery ticket that made them rich. The couple, from Hull in northern England, were oblivious to the fact they had bought a winning ticket in Britain’s National Lottery a month ago.
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/ 7 February 2005
Oil prices fell on Monday on expectations of warmer weather in the United States’s north-east, as traders digested comments from the Group of Seven (G7) finance meeting at the weekend, dealers said. New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in March fell 40 cents to ,08 a barrel in electronic deals.