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/ 11 February 2006

‘Schoolboy errors’ bedevil Ireland

Ireland were the only side to turn up for the Six Nations match with France, coach Eddie O’Sullivan claimed after his men in green had gone down 43-31 to France at the Stade de France on Saturday. The Irish gifted France three of their six tries and at one point trailed their opponents 43-3 before staging an extraordinary comeback which at one stage threatened to see them overhaul the French.

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/ 9 February 2006

Belgian Grand Prix off the menu

This year’s Belgian formula-one grand prix has been called off because of track-improvement works, the sport’s governing body, the FIA, announced on Wednesday. One of the favourite races for drivers, the Spa Francorchamps circuit will be back on the formula-one calendar in 2007.

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/ 8 February 2006

Nigeria reports first deadly bird flu in Africa

A ”highly pathogenic” strain of the H5N1 bird-flu virus has been found in poultry stocks in Nigeria — the first reported case of the disease in Africa, the Paris-based World Organisation for Animal Health said on Wednesday. Nigeria reported the outbreak among commercial, battery-cage poultry in a village in Kaduna state.

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/ 2 February 2006

Mosquito-borne disease hits Reunion

About 50 000 people on France’s Indian Ocean island of Reunion have been hit by an epidemic of a crippling mosquito-borne disease that has no known cure. Doctors have recorded 45 000 new cases of ”chikungunya” since mid-December, when the epidemic started to gather pace.

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/ 2 February 2006

Schumacher backs Rossi to make it in F1

World motorcycling champion Valentino Rossi has received backing in his pursuit of switching to Formula One from Michael Schumacher. Schumacher, like Rossi a seven-time world champion, believes the Italian who has been testing for Ferrari in Spain this week has what it takes to make it on the Grand Prix circuit.

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/ 1 February 2006

France’s Pompidou Centre looks east for expansion

From the heights of the twisted external blue, red and green pipes which lace its futuristic glass facade, the bosses of the Pompidou Centre in Paris are eyeing new horizons to the East. In collaboration with other partners, the Pompidou is taking part in government-run competitions in Hong Kong and Singapore to build new museums of modern art.

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/ 26 January 2006

Nervous? Have sex!

People who are nervous about public speaking should first have penetrative sex to ease the stress, although masturbation is unlikely to have the same effect, an unusual study says. A British psychologist compared the effect of different sexual activities on blood pressure when a person later undergoes a stressful experience.

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/ 26 January 2006

Interest revives worldwide in nuclear energy

Nuclear power, the long-time foe of the environmental movement, is returning to favour in many countries where issues of energy dependency and the rising cost of fossil fuels are driving policy changes. On Monday, Britain announced a public consultation on its future energy supplies, raising the spectre of a return to nuclear power.

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/ 25 January 2006

Robots grab the headlines in space exploration

Twenty years ago, the loss of the United States shuttle Challenger dealt an enduring blow to confidence in manned space flight yet also helped open up a golden era of exploration by machine. As Nasa this Saturday mourns the 1986 disaster, the contrast in fortunes between human and unmanned missions in space has never seemed more acute.

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/ 17 January 2006

Airbus remains number one, but lags Boeing on big jets

A December sales surge kept Airbus on top of the global passenger jet market in 2005, the company said on Tuesday — bettering Boeing’s orders and deliveries in a record year by both measures. But Airbus also conceded it had lost ground to Boeing in the market for larger, more profitable planes and said it plans to review its A340 jet in the wake of disappointing sales.

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/ 13 January 2006

You too can probe the mystery of the universe

Fed up with the daily grind? Eager for something different? A little glory, perhaps? Well, how about helping a quest to understand the life and death of stars? And how about the reward of making your name immortal? Scientists are looking for people with keen eyesight, lots of patience and spare time on their home computer to help them sift through the results from an extraordinary space mission.

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/ 12 January 2006

‘Doomsday vault’ to house world’s seeds

Norway is to build a ”doomsday vault” in a mountain close to the North Pole that will house a vast seed bank to ensure food supplies in the event of catastrophic climate change, nuclear war or rising sea levels. Built with Fort Knox-type security, the -million vault will be designed to hold around two-million seeds representing all known varieties of the world’s crops.

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/ 9 January 2006

Concrete, eggshell and chain mail enter hi-tech homes

Fast-evolving technologies and shifting family dynamics are forcing a rethink on furniture designers. Armed with new and surprising materials such as concrete, these designers are aiming to restyle our homes. The explosion of the latest must-have gadgets such as flat-screen televisions and home cinemas has raised the tricky question of just where we should put them.

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/ 5 January 2006

Hammer-wielding man attacks Dada urinal

A 77-year-old Frenchman was in police custody in Paris on Thursday after he attacked the famous urinal that Dada pioneer Marcel Duchamp presented as an art work, police said. The man, who was not identified, went at what is arguably the world’s most famous bit of porcelain plumbing on Wednesday with a small hammer.

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/ 30 December 2005

Who is the greatest of them all?

The sporting year of 2006, packed with high-profile events dotted around the globe, will reignite fresh debates over best teams, greatest players. Brazil, England or Argentina for the World Cup? Bode Miller or Hermann Maier to snatch the Winter Olympics limelight?

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/ 27 December 2005

Champagne sales rise outside France

French wine exports may be falling, but there is a sparkling exception to the prevailing gloom, as sales of champagne fizz with health thanks to a growing thirst for it abroad, especially at this time of year. French drinkers remain the chief clients for the legendary tipple, but they are consuming less.

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/ 23 December 2005

In France, it’s not Christmas without logs for dessert

Paris pastry chefs are outdoing each other this holiday season in reinventing the most kitsch of all French desserts, the Christmas yule log cake, dressing them in ivy, marshmallows and snowflakes. More traditional than turkey, more feted than foie gras, the buche — literally ”log” — has crowned the French Christmas table since the 19th century.

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/ 19 December 2005

France moves to restrict digital piracy

French MPs this week are to examine a Bill that, if passed, would impose tough restrictions on digital copies of music, software and films, despite an outcry from consumer groups that fear ordinary internet users would be punished. The draft law is to be debated by the Lower House of Parliament on Tuesday and Wednesday.

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/ 18 December 2005

Scientists rebuild part of woolly mammoth’s genome

In a world first, German scientists say they have reconstructed a key sequence in the genome of the woolly mammoth, enabling them to show that the extinct beast’s closest modern relative is the Asian elephant. The researchers say they devised a new technique for the feat, teasing out DNA from just 200mg of bone found at a mammoths’ graveyard in the Siberian permafrost.

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/ 5 December 2005

Chinese prime minister to announce big Airbus deal

Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao was expected to announce an order for Airbus airliners worth about seven billion dollars in Paris on Monday, a day after a deal that could see some Airbus aircraft built in China. According to sources close to the negotiations, the order entails China buying over 100 A320 aircraft, the mid-range, 150-seat workhorse of the Airbus fleet.

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/ 30 November 2005

Bok captain banned for six weeks

South Africa captain John Smit received a six-week ban in France on Tuesday for striking French counterpart Jerome Thion and fracturing his larynx in the 26-20 defeat last Saturday. Smit’s suspension — which he will not appeal against — will start on January 14 next year, the opening day of the new season in South Africa.

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/ 28 November 2005

Laporte says there’s room for improvement

France coach Bernard Laporte says his team, which has recently beaten Australia and South Africa, must still improve to stand a chance of winning the 2007 World Cup. France beat South Africa 26-20 on Saturday at Stade de France to give Laporte a fourth straight win following comfortable successes against Tonga and Canada and a 26-16 win over the Wallabies.

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/ 28 November 2005

Aids: The struggle for good news

Twenty-five million people have died from HIV/Aids in 24 years, more than three million of whom died this year alone, and at least 40-million people today have HIV, a rise of about five million over the past 12 months. With just a month left to go, the World Health Organisation’s goal of providing anti-retroviral drugs for three million poor people by the end of 2005 is poised to fall dismally short of the mark.

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/ 28 November 2005

All gold for All Blacks

Everything the All Blacks touch seems to turn to gold. That’s the opinion of Wallabies coach Eddie Jones and the embattled handler is not far wrong. Aside from coming from behind to land the right to host the 2011 World Cup, New Zealand finish the year with the British Isles Grand Slam, a 3-0 series win over the British and Irish Lions and the Tri-Nations trophy.