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/ 6 December 2005

Meteor shower lights up Australian skies

A spectacular meteor shower turned night into day across a large swathe of Western Australia at the weekend, witnesses said. ”It lit up the countryside for hundreds of kilometres around the southwest of Western Australia,” astronomer Peter Birch told ABC radio of the meteor flare late on Saturday night.

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/ 5 December 2005

Proof: Stress makes you sick

Australian researchers said on Monday they had scientifically proven a long-suspected link between emotional stress and illnesses ranging from the common cold to cancer. The group’s findings were published in Monday’s edition of the Journal of Experimental Medicine.

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/ 3 December 2005

Australian jet’s windscreen cracks mid-flight

An Australian jet’s windscreen cracked mid-flight, causing a major scare when the cabin rapidly decompressed, ambulance officers said on Saturday. A Queensland state ambulance service spokesperson said nine people were treated in hospital for nosebleeds, nausea and earaches after the Virgin Blue Boeing 737 made an emergency landing at Brisbane airport on Friday morning.

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/ 2 December 2005

Australian rugby coach Eddie Jones sacked

Wallabies coach Eddie Jones was sacked on Friday because his recent results were unsatisfactory, the Australian Rugby Union (ARU) said. ”This is a very difficult decision, but the ARU strongly believes we must give the Wallabies a fresh start with a new coach who will give us the best possible chance of future success,” ARU chief executive Gary Flowers said in a statement.

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/ 28 November 2005

Resignation in Australia that drug runner will hang

Australians were on Monday urged to mark a minute’s silence if a convicted drug-trafficker is hanged in Singapore this week, amid growing resignation that the city state will go ahead with the execution. Church leaders and politicians from across the political divide have backed the call for a minute’s silence for Nguyen Tuong Van, found carrying 400g of heroin in Singapore en route to Australia in 2002.

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/ 21 November 2005

Woman in court for trying to open jet door mid-flight

A French woman with a fear of flying and a history of sleepwalking appeared in an Australian court on Monday after she attempted to open a jet airplane’s door in mid-flight so she could light a cigarette. Sadrine Helene Sellies had taken sleeping tablets and alcohol ahead of the Cathay Pacific flight from Hong Kong to Australia on Saturday, Brisbane’s Magistrates Court heard.

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/ 14 November 2005

Fix Aussie scrum or forget the World Cup, say press

Judgement day has arrived for Australian rugby over the inadequacy of its scrummaging and something had to be done quickly to rectify it in time for the 2007 World Cup, Australian media said on Monday. Not only did the Wallabies crash to a record-equalling seventh successive defeat to world champions England at Twickenham last Saturday, but the scrum was humiliated.

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/ 9 November 2005

Australian press horrified by home-grown terror threat

The alleged emergence of a home-grown terrorist threat was a chilling development that dispelled any lingering misconception Australia was immune to attack, newspapers said on Wednesday. ”Osama’s Aussie offspring” declared The Australian following Tuesday’s raids in Sydney and Melbourne said by police to have foiled a large-scale attack inspired by a radical Muslim cleric.

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/ 4 November 2005

Robot rescues Tweety from crumbling building

A robot designed to disarm bombs was sent on Friday to rescue a pet bird from a Sydney apartment building crumbling because of a tunnel collapse. The cockatiel, Tweety, was stranded in an apartment directly above a section of the building that partially collapsed when a giant hole opened up near the site of a new tunnel earlier this week.

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/ 26 October 2005

Australian navy denies link to stranded whales

The Australian navy on Wednesday denied its ships were behind two mysterious mass strandings in 24 hours that left 130 pilot whales dead on the coast of the island state of Tasmania. About 80 pilot whales beached themselves at Marion Bay on Tuesday, just hours after nearly 60 of the animals died in an earlier stranding in the same spot.

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/ 23 October 2005

Defiant Ponting plans to hold on to captaincy

Ricky Ponting has defiantly told would-be suitors to his Australian Test cricket captaincy that he’s staying put and not going anywhere. Ponting, who along with team coach John Buchanan received most of the fall-out from Australia’s relinquishing of the Ashes to England last month, says he is running the show and intends to remain captain.

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/ 22 October 2005

Waugh opens up on Warne in new book

Former Australian captain Steve Waugh says star leg spinner Shane Warne is insecure, hits out at Ian Chappell and takes aim at the national selectors in his keenly-awaited autobiography. Prime Minister John Howard will launch Waugh’s Out Of My Comfort Zone in Sydney on Sunday with publishers Penguin reportedly paying Aus,3-million in the biggest advance paid to date for an Australian book.

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/ 21 October 2005

Australia to crack down on errant Wallabies

Australia will throw the book at misbehaving Wallabies following a South African nightclub spat. The Wallabies were forced to send scrum-half Matt Henjak home in disgrace last July after he scuffled with teammate Lote Tuqiri at a Cape Town nightclub just two days before their first Test against the Springboks.

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/ 21 October 2005

Dead man found in car with parking ticket on windshield

A man who died in his car at a busy Australian shopping centre sat there for a week and even collected a parking ticket on his windshield before anyone realised he had passed away, reports said on Friday. Sky News reported the 71-year-old motorist was issued with a parking ticket at the shopping centre in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs two days before his death was discovered.

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/ 20 October 2005

Australia downplays report of Timor-Indonesia clashes

Australia said on Thursday it was confident the Indonesian military was not involved in recent violence on the East Timor border and rejected a report that militia activity in the area was increasing. Australia, which angered Jakarta by supporting East Timor’s successful push for independence, said it had received no reports of Indonesia provoking border violence.

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/ 20 October 2005

Hewitt’s ‘other side’ leads to court

Tennis bad boy Lleyton Hewitt’s attempt to show fans his softer side in a documentary has ended up with the world number three facing legal action in Australia brought by his former best friend. Hewitt has included footage of himself and Australian-rules football player Andrew McLeod visiting Aboriginal sacred sites together.

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/ 18 October 2005

Scientists to search for greenhouse evidence

An Australian scientific team set off for Antarctica on Tuesday to search for definitive proof in the polar ice cap that human activity is responsible for rising levels of greenhouse gases. The team from the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation will drill 250m below the surface to obtain cylinders of ice containing trapped bubbles of methane dating back to 1750.

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/ 17 October 2005

MacGill, Warne spin Aussies to victory

Leg-spin terrors Stuart MacGill and Shane Warne spun Australia to a comprehensive 210-run victory over the World XI in the Super Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Monday. The Australians wrapped up another conclusive triumph following last week’s 3-0 clean sweep of the one-dayers, ending the match just over an hour after lunch on the fourth day of the scheduled six-day Test.

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/ 16 October 2005

Flintoff, Muralitharan give world hope

Andrew Flintoff and Muttiah Muralitharan triggered an Australian batting collapse of 5-30 off 17 overs to give the World XI a glimmer of hope for a come-from-behind victory in the Super Test in Sydney on Sunday. Australia were travelling smoothly at 164 for two at lunch, but wickets clattered after the interval.

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/ 15 October 2005

Warne, MacGill unhinge world stars

Shane Warne and Stuart MacGill bamboozled the world all-stars with their tandem leg-spin attack to put Australia in command on the second day of the Super Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Saturday. Warne, introduced after 24 overs, struck three times in the middle session.

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/ 14 October 2005

Hayden leads Australian effort

Matthew Hayden defied attempts to pension him out of the Australian Test team with a fighting century to lead his country into a strong position after the opening day of the six-day Super Test against the World XI in Sydney on Friday. Hayden’s position has been under threat after a below-par Ashes campaign against England.

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/ 14 October 2005

Aussies pay for technology in Super Test against world

Cricket technology intervened to give the World XI two crucial Australian wickets on a history-making opening day of the Super Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Friday. Michael Clarke became the first batsman given out in Test cricket by the video umpire Darrell Hair midway through the afternoon session to a bat-pad catch off spinner Daniel Vettori for 39.