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- Austrian woman finds dead frog in spinach: report
Whoever said spinach was good for you? Even Popeye's stomach would probably have churned at the grisly find made by a 32-year-old mother from Vienna who decided to cook frozen spinach for her family's evening meal, the daily Oesterreich reported on
- British Minister: 2009 May Bring Mideast Change
British minister: 2009 may bring Mideast change BEIRUT, Lebanon - Britain's foreign secretary said Wednesday he's hopeful 2009 will see opportunities for change in the Middle East. 'It's a year of change globally,' David Miliband said after meeting with
- Italy celebrates 50 years of Fellini's classic Dolce Vita
PrintEmail Feedback Discuss Related Stories: Zawahiri greets Obama with racial slurSuspected US strike kills 5 militants in PakTaliban attacks force NATO to look for alternative supply routeThaksin seeks to nurture Asia?s future leadersSyrians deny
- Report: Navy friendly fire killed UK Marine
A Navy F/A-18C pilot was acting in ?good faith? and with the ?best of intentions? when he mistakenly fired on a friendly position in Afghanistan and killed a British Marine in 2006, according to a recent report from the British and U.S. military.
- U.S. Support to Afghan Refugees and Returnees
ress Release: US State Department U.S. Support to Afghan Refugees and Returnees We are pleased with the outcome of the International Conference on the Return and Reintegration of Afghan Refugees, co-hosted by the Government of the Islamic Republic of
- Oil capture spotlights Somali pirates' reach
(The Christian Science Monitor)
The Christian Science Monitor - The capture of the Sirius Star, which can carry more than one-fourth of Saudi Arabia's daily oil output, helped send prices above $58 a barrel. And the fact that it was nabbed 450 miles off Kenya's coast is a sign of growing sophistication and reach by the pirates, who have tended to stay closer to the Gulf of Aden, a pinch point for sea traffic routed through the Suez Canal.
- Herod may have been buried among lavish artwork
(AP)
AP - King Herod may have been buried in a crypt with lavish Roman-style wall paintings of a kind previously unseen in the Middle East, Israeli archaeologists said Wednesday. The scientists found such paintings and signs of a regal two-story mausoleum, bolstering their conviction that the ancient Jewish monarch was buried there.
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