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/ 23 March 2006

Mr Reliable retires on 100th birthday

After more than three-quarters of a century working for public transit agencies, a bus maintenance worker will retire on Tuesday on his 100th birthday. For decades, Arthur Winston reported to work at a bus yard at the crack of dawn. By 6am he would be supervising a crew of workers as they cleaned and refueled the region’s bus fleet.

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/ 23 March 2006

Study shows happier moms have happier children

Treating mothers for depression can mean long-term happiness for their children, according to a study published on Tuesday. Depression is known to be passed on genetically, but it can also be affected by the environment in which a child is raised, according to authors of an article published by the Journal of the American Medical Association.

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/ 22 March 2006

US professor killed by crocodile in Botswana

A professor at the University of Washington Medical School who moved to Botswana to help alleviate a shortage of doctors there, was killed when a crocodile dragged him from a canoe, his family and colleagues said. Richard Root (68) was on a wildlife tour of the Limpopo River in remote north-eastern Botswana with his wife, Rita O’Boyle, on Sunday when it happened.

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/ 22 March 2006

Johnson-Sirleaf urges speedy Taylor extradition

Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, on a red-carpet visit to the United States, called on Tuesday for exiled former Liberian strongman Charles Taylor to be extradited home swiftly. ”I wish we had the luxury of time on this issue. But it has become an impediment to our being able to move forward to be able to pursue our development agenda,” she said after talks with United States President George Bush.

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/ 21 March 2006

US concert marks anniversary of Iraq war

Anti-war artists, musicians and activists marked the third anniversary of the United States-led invasion of Iraq with a concert to benefit groups campaigning against the war. Musician Michael Stipe, actress Susan Sarandon and activist Cindy Sheehan were among the headliners at the ”Bring ‘Em Home Now!” concert.

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/ 18 March 2006

Liberia wants Taylor tried for war crimes

Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf said she wants ex-president Charles Taylor handed over to a war crimes tribunal for prosecution for his role in Sierra Leone’s civil war, with the agreement of African leaders. Taylor was given asylum in Nigeria to help end the war and Johnson-Sirleaf said on Friday she and Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo had agreed to seek African leaders’ views before any handover.

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/ 17 March 2006

Row threatens to derail Ground Zero project

The future of Manhattan’s Ground Zero was thrown into uncertainty on Thursday after negotiations between New York authorities and the tycoon who owns the lease of the site were acrimoniously abandoned. The governor of New York state, George Pataki, accused the developer Larry Silverstein of betraying the public’s trust.

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/ 16 March 2006

Liberia raises $50-million in aid from the US

Liberia’s new leader, the first woman elected president of an African country, on Wednesday urged American lawmakers to help her make Liberia ”America’s success story in Africa”. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf compared Liberia’s devastation from two decades of warfare to that done by the December 2004 tsunami in Asia.

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/ 16 March 2006

Bush’s place in history hangs on crisis in Iraq

President George Bush’s place in history — standard-bearer or war-mongerer — is perhaps being decided at this moment in Iraq, three years after the United States-led invasion. Bush recognised the gravity of the current situation in Iraq by saying that Iraqis were at ”a moment of choosing.” But in the end they had turned away from ”the abyss” of civil war, he said.

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/ 13 March 2006

A competition to remember

It’s no easy task to promote a sport that even your national champion admits is about as fascinating as watching paint dry. "I don’t think it could be more boring if it tried. Think of a roomful of students sitting their exams and you’re getting close," Josh Foer said on Saturday, shortly before being crowned Memory Champion of the United States.

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/ 11 March 2006

Nasdaq makes bid for London Stock Exchange

The Nasdaq electronic stock exchange confirmed on Friday it had made a bid for the London Stock Exchange (LSE), calling it an ”attractive offer” for shareholders. The news came hours after the LSE said it had rejected the unsolicited offer from the United States group as one that ”substantially undervalues” the company.

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/ 10 March 2006

Being drunk at work is no brainwave

A seemingly drunken neurosurgeon was wrestled into custody by sheriff’s deputies while on his way to the operating room in a San Francisco-area hospital, officials said on Thursday. Frederico Castro-Moure (45) was also suspended from his post as head of neurosurgery at the Alameda County Medical Centre.

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/ 9 March 2006

US cigarette sales hit 55-year low

Cigarette sales hit a 55-year low in 2005 and have fallen by more than 21% since state attorneys general negotiated a landmark settlement with the industry eight years ago. The National Association of Attorneys General said on Wednesday that the 378-billion cigarettes sold in the United States last year marked the lowest number sold since 1951.

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/ 9 March 2006

IMF upholds sanctions on Zimbabwe

The International Monetary Fund on Wednesday said it would keep in place sanctions on Zimbabwe because of money still owed the bank, and urged Harare to urgently implment reforms to stablise its economy. In a statement the IMF board urged Harare ”to continue its efforts to resolve the remaining overdue financial obligations”.

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/ 7 March 2006

Tennis tours to use TV replays

When the call is close, the pro tennis tours want to take another look. The ATP and WTA Tours have decided to use television replays starting with the Nasdaq-100 Open in Key Biscayne, Florida, in two weeks, officials said on Monday. This year’s United States Open will be the first Grand Slam event to review disputed calls on videotape.

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/ 7 March 2006

Two plead guilty to filming Michael Jackson on plane

Two men pleaded guilty to federal charges of secretly videotaping Michael Jackson more than two years ago as he flew to Santa Barbara, California, with his attorney to surrender in a child-molestation investigation. Jeffrey Borer and Arvel Jett Reeves admitted on Monday they installed two digital videorecorders to record ”a professional entertainer” and his lawyer.

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/ 7 March 2006

Scientists warn of powerful sunspot cycle

A new computer model suggests that the next solar cycle will be more active than the previous one, potentially spawning magnetic storms that will be more severe and disruptive to communication systems. The next sunspot cycle will be between 30% to 50% more intense than the last one, scientists said on Monday.

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/ 6 March 2006

Woods wins second straight title at Doral

Tiger Woods added to his impressive run of success as a frontrunner on Sunday as he parlayed his overnight lead into a one-stroke victory at the Ford Championship at Doral. The world’s number one golfer finished one shot in front of fellow American David Toms and unheralded Colombian Camilo Villegas in the ,5-million tournament.

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/ 6 March 2006

Crash pulls off Oscar upset for best picture

Crash pulled off one of the biggest upsets in Academy Awards history, winning best picture on Sunday over the front-runner Brokeback Mountain. Crash, featuring a huge cast in crisscrossing story lines over a chaotic 36-hour period in Los Angeles, rode a late surge of praise that lifted it past the cowboy romance Brokeback Mountain.

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/ 5 March 2006

A San Francisco man with a knack for numbers has come up with a formula to help United States wine lovers figure out when a vintage is a bargain. QPR Wines compares critic reviews and retail price data to reveal which bottles are steals and which are rip-offs, according to its founder, Neil Monnens.

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/ 5 March 2006

Tension mounts as Brokeback Mountain rides high

Tension reached fever pitch as Hollywood began the final countdown to Sunday’s Oscars, with a posse of ”serious” films, led by Brokeback Mountain, set to overrun the big night. As workers frantically put the finishing touches on preparations for the 78th annual Academy Awards, which start with the legendary red carpet celebrity fashion show, the anxious nominees are crossing their fingers.