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/ 20 October 2004
An egg mixture in a bottle with virtually no fat will go on sale on Thursday in Britain, where a national fat problem of huge proportions has been matched by expanding diet-food sales. The Health Living Liquid Eggs contain the equivalent of five medium-sized eggs in a bottle, but have had almost all the yolk removed.
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/ 20 October 2004
The controversial Atkins diet, credited by a host of celebrities for helping them acquire a svelte figure, has a new figurehead — a portly British cat that has shed half its body weight under the regime. Fidget has slimmed down from a hefty 10kg to only 5kg, his owner said on Wednesday.
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/ 20 October 2004
A limited-edition magnum of champagne believed to be one of 12 selected to mark the 1981 marriage of Prince Charles and Princess Diana is expected to fetch thousands of pounds at auction, a saleroom official said on Wednesday. The Cuvee Dom Perignon 1961 vintage was selected by makers Moët & Chandon for the royal wedding in 1981.
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/ 19 October 2004
A new science technique inspired by natural processes millions of years old could revolutionise public health care by allowing vaccines to be stored for years without refrigeration, British scientists announced on Tuesday. The technology would spell radical improvements in medical access to children in developing countries.
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/ 19 October 2004
Items from Pharmacy, the restaurant set up by British artist Damien Hirst, fetched £11,1-million (about R126,7-million) at an auction in London, Sotheby’s said on Tuesday. Pharmacy became London’s most fashionable spot at the height of Cool Britannia, Britpop and New Labour’s rise to government.
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/ 19 October 2004
Reuters, the British news and financial information provider, on Tuesday reported a 4,4% drop in core subscription revenue to 528-million pounds ( million) during the third quarter from the same period of last year. Reuters had itself forecast subscription income, or underlying core recurring revenue, to fall by 5% during the third quarter.
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/ 18 October 2004
Are global stock markets proving resilient in the face of surging oil prices or in danger of going nowhere — except downwards — unless crude futures reverse their relentless march higher? That’s the puzzle analysts were trying to solve on Monday as oil prices pushed into new uncharted territory above a barrel.
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/ 18 October 2004
British pop singer Marc Almond, best known for the song Tainted Love, a global hit for his band Soft Cell in 1981, has been critically injured in a motorbike crash, police said on Monday. Almond (48) was riding as pillion passenger on the bike when it was involved in an accident with a car on Sunday afternoon in central London’s financial district.
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/ 15 October 2004
Padmanabhan Krishna Murthy had only just arrived in London, but on Tuesday afternoon he had one matter on his mind: how to find Marx’s grave in Highgate cemetery. Its inscription — ”Workers of all lands unite” — seemed an apt summary of the reason for his latest trip. But he corrected that suggestion: ”It’s not only workers. It’s people of the world,” he said.
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/ 13 October 2004
Prime Minister Tony Blair on Wednesday vigorously denied misrepresenting pre-war intelligence on Iraqi weapons and rejected growing demands for an apology from opponents in Parliament who accuse him of misleading the country. Blair again insisted he had been right to back the United States-led invasion.
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/ 13 October 2004
London Mayor Ken Livingstone unveiled plans on Tuesday to spend 10-billion pounds (,8-billion) over five years to improve commuting and travel on the city’s crumbling road and rail networks. ”This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reverse decades of under-investment,” Livingstone said.
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/ 13 October 2004
When United States magician David Blaine starved himself for 44 days last year inside a perspex box suspended over London, many condemned the stunt as pointless. Not so, say doctors specialising in malnutrition. The medics gained valuable insights into how to treat hunger strikers and others who have starved themselves.
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/ 12 October 2004
It has been fenced in, roughed up — critically and literally — and monitored by closed-circuit cameras. Now the problem-plagued Princess Diana memorial fountain in London is to close again for an unspecified period so that the surrounding turf can be re-laid, park officials said on Tuesday.
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/ 12 October 2004
A 16-year-old Welsh teenager has defrauded customers of the internet auction site eBay out of the equivalent of 000 by offering non-existent electronic goods, British press reports said on Tuesday. The unnamed teenager, who has turned 17 since being caught in October last year, used the money to finance a lavish lifestyle.
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/ 11 October 2004
Spiders, cockroaches and other creepy crawlies scare the British more than the threat of a terrorist attack, suggests an opinion poll released on Monday by a Hollywood studio. The poll of 1 000 adults, conducted at 65 locations around the nation, put insects at the top of Britain’s most-feared list, followed by the spectre of a terrorist strke.
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/ 11 October 2004
Spiders, cockroaches and other creepy crawlies scare the British more than the threat of a terrorist attack, suggests an opinion poll released on Monday by a Hollywood studio. The poll of 1 000 adults, conducted at 65 locations around the nation, put insects at the top of Britain’s most-feared list.
The British government said on Friday it was investigating a report on a Middle East television station that hostage Kenneth Bigley had been killed by his captors in Iraq.
”We are trying urgently to corroborate reports that Mr Bigley has been killed, but have not yet done so,” a Foreign Office spokesman said.
Harry Potter author JK Rowling said on Friday that one of her characters will not survive the next book in her series about the young wizard — but refused to say who would die. Asked on her official web site whether she planned to kill off any more characters, Rowling replied, ”Yes, sorry.”
The Iraq Survey Group, after 17 months of hunting through Iraq and interviewing hundreds of members of Saddam Hussein’s regime, last week delivered a verdict unhelpful to George W Bush or Tony Blair: that Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction when they went to war and that there was no imminent threat. The two leaders will have to justify the war in Iraq in terms of Hussein’s intentions rather than the reality.
A puppeteer who has been putting on his Punch and Judy show for English children for the past 15 years is likely to have his show banned by councillors in the Cornish town of Bodmin in southwestern England. Bodmin’s Women’s Rape and Sexual Abuse Centre had bombarded Reg Payn (48) the town’s officially licensed puppeteer with leaflets on domestic violence, The Times reported on Friday.
Representatives of Botswana’s Bushmen who have been resettled away from their ancestral land in the Kalahari desert on Thursday accused the government of Botswana and the De Beers diamond mining giant of stealing their lands to exploit their mineral wealth.
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/ 29 September 2004
An exclusive restaurant in London’s Docklands is demanding that customers ordering a rare burger sign a disclaimer that guards against legal action should the customer suffer food poisoning, the British press reported on Wednesday. The current issue of the weekly Lawyer magazine reported that the document also had to be signed by the duty chef and the restaurant supervisor.
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/ 24 September 2004
US officials last night defended the deportation of Yusuf Islam, previously known as Cat Stevens, as it emerged that the former pop star met White House officials earlier this year. British foreign Jack Straw secretary intervened in the row by telling the US that the decision to ban Islam ”should not have been taken”.
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/ 23 September 2004
Cat Stevens, the British-born former pop star who has been denied entry to the United States on security grounds, said he was ”totally shocked” by the decision. He arrived in London Thursday. Stevens, whose heyday was in the 1960s and 1970s, told reporters: ”Half of me wants to smile, half of me wants to growl.”
‘Terrorist’ pop star barred from US
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/ 22 September 2004
Don’t give up the training. Traffic was snarled up for kilometres on a highway in the northern United Kingom on Wednesday after four police cars collided with each other and blocked the road, apparently during a training exercise. Three officers suffered whiplash while another was more seriously injured.
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/ 22 September 2004
Two recent studies have shown we now become adults much later in life. Adulthood being judged not on the budding of breasts (which these days applies to both sexes) or the ability to vote, but on when one moves away from home, is financially independent or starts a family. But it seems we’ve got it all the wrong way around. We want children to grow up really fast, and as adults we want to be the children we never were.
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/ 17 September 2004
Oil prices bubbled higher on Friday as traders assessed the impact of Hurricane Ivan on supplies, even as another storm loomed. The price of Brent North Sea crude oil for delivery in November rose by 53 cents to ,28 a barrel in late-morning trading in London.
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/ 16 September 2004
The British army is going into battle — for a slice of the sneaker market. A new running shoe that bears the force’s crossed-swords insignia and has the endorsement of army fitness instructors was launched this week in Britain, where it will compete for sportswear profits.
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/ 16 September 2004
Long hours spent in the office and the lure of easy contact over the internet are acting as a spur to divorce, marriage counsellors in Britain believe. The national divorce rate is up — again — and this time it’s not the permissive society that’s to blame, but rather the ease with which old flames, possibly from as far back as school days, can be contacted through a variety of websites.
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/ 15 September 2004
The value of a British woman’s handbag and its contents is a lot higher than most women — or men — realise, according to a survey by an insurance company published on Wednesday. The survey of 1 700 women found many women were shocked to find the total value of all the items in their handbags.
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/ 15 September 2004
Firefighters in Derbyshire county in central Britain have been banned from playing team sports during work breaks because they keep getting injured. The fire and rescue service said on Wednesday nearly 80 staff have been injured during volleyball and football matches in the yards of firestations over the past four years.
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/ 14 September 2004
Security measures at Buckingham Palace need improving, a minister said on Tuesday, a day after a protester dressed as Batman slipped past police and scaled the royal residence’s facade. But people shouldn’t be prevented from coming close to Britain’s main palaces and monuments, Home Secretary David Blunkett added.