Dubai tournament fined $300,000 for barring Israeli National Post Sat, 21 Feb 2009 05:29 AM PST The Dubai Championships was fined a record $300,000 by the governing body of womenâs tennis on Friday after top Israeli player Shahar Peer was denied a visa into the UAE and barred from taking part in the event | Man found dead with gunshot wound after SWAT called in The Trentonian Sat, 21 Feb 2009 05:07 AM PST HAMILTON â" The townshipâs SWAT team entered into a house on the 1000 block of Estates Boulevard and found the dead body of a 56-year-old male gunshot victim, police said yesterday. | Hexham Courant The Hexham Courant Sat, 21 Feb 2009 04:12 AM PST THE memory of his sonâs battered, unconscious body being lifted out the back of an ambulance haunts Steve Barrett. Alerted to the fact Jake, then aged 13, had been knocked down in front of Hexhamâs Queen Elizabeth High School, he was waiting at the entrance of Newcastle General Hospital. | Total body workout on the elliptical trainer The Buffalo News Sat, 21 Feb 2009 04:01 AM PST Just as your triceps, abdominals and gluteus maximus need exercise, your heart muscle could use a workout, too, and the elliptical trainer is a great exercise machine to use. | Body found in Polk County Eastex Advocate Sat, 21 Feb 2009 03:42 AM PST The Polk County Sheriffâs Office (PCSO) received a 9-1-1 call about a body in the Holiday Lake Estates subdivision. The victim, identified as Linnie Jo Sanders, 50, was discovered deceased in her residence the evening of Monday February 16 by a neighbor. | Regrets over brain damage blunder Express and Star Sat, 21 Feb 2009 03:12 AM PST The body which oversees healthcare in the region has said it âdeeply regretsâ the injuries suffered by a Tipton man who was left brain damaged after his brain was starved of oxygen during his birth. | To Enhance Its Survival Malaria Parasite Zeroes In On Molecule Medical News Today Sat, 21 Feb 2009 03:12 AM PST A team of researchers from Princeton University and the Drexel University College of Medicine has found that the parasite that causes malaria breaks down an important amino acid in its quest to adapt and thrive within the human body. By depleting this substance called arginine, the parasite may trigger a more critical and deadlier phase of the disease. | | |
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