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'I don't recognise my country,' says Angelina Jolie
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French politicians bicker over Palestinian flags outside town halls
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Super Typhoon ploughs towards Philippines, Taiwan
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Heavy rain forces Toulon-La Rochelle Top 14 postponement
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Adeyemi sends Dortmund past Wolfsburg, Burke hat-trick stuns flat Frankfurt
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Brazilians protest bill boosting lawmakers' immunity
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Adeyemi sends Dortmund past Wolfsburg, Burke treble stuns flat Frankfurt
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Abhishek fires India to win over Pakistan but no handshakes again
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India beat Pakistan, refuse handshakes in Asia Cup
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Cox fires England to T20 series win in Ireland
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Arsenal late show denies Man City, Villa still winless
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PSG clash with Marseille postponed, Ansu Fati at the double for Monaco
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Burke treble stuns flat Frankfurt, Leverkusen held by Gladbach
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Martinelli's last-gasp leveller rescues Arsenal in Man City draw
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Heavy rain washes out LPGA NW Arkansas event
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Evenepoel crushes Pogacar to win 3rd straight time-trial cycling world title
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Cheers, hugs at Palestinian mission as UK recognises statehood
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Pakistan reach 171-5 after India refuse handshake in Asia Cup
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Military-ruled Guinea votes on new constitution
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Frustrated Atletico held at Mallorca as Alvarez misses penalty
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Paolini takes Italy to Billie Jean King Cup triumph
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Flat Frankfurt fall to Union despite late flurry
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Wealth tax economist hits back at French tycoon's 'pseudo-academic' claim
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Evenepoel wins third straight time-trial cycling world title
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Aston Villa still winless, Newcastle and Bournemouth draw
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Verstappen reminds McLaren he can shake up title run-in
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American track stars bid golden farewell to worlds
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Piastri blames himself for 'silly error' on opening lap crash
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India again refuse handshake with Pakistan in Asia Cup
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Outcry after Trump urges Justice Department to charge his enemies
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France's richest man riles left with attack on 'pseudo-academic' behind tax plan
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UK, Australia and Canada recognise Palestinian state
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Future bleak unless Ukraine invests in young sporting talent: athletics chief
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Verstappen wins 'incredible' Azerbaijan GP as Piastri crashes out
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Embattled Turkey opposition re-elects leader at party congress
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Verstappen wins Azerbaijan GP as Piastri crashes out
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Roma outcast Pellegrini comes in from cold to win derby with Lazio
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Lyles seals world double as USA men win sprint relay
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Jefferson-Wooden completes world sprint treble with US relay win
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Reusser ends long chase for gold with women's cycling world title
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McLaughlin-Levrone claims second world gold in relay
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Reusser ends long chase for gold with women's world title
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Swiatek recovers from slow start to win Korea Open title
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Hocker wins world 5,000m as Ingebrigtsen finishes empty-handed
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Kenya's Odira upsets Hodgkinson to win world 800m gold
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Kenyan duo Sawe and Wanjiru triumph at Berlin Marathon
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UK to recognise Palestinian state ahead of UN debate
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Olympic champion An dominates in repeat China Masters badminton win
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US deal on Bagram base 'not possible' says Afghan Taliban official
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Kenya's Sabastian Sawe wins men's Berlin Marathon

Vienna calling: Strauss's 'Blue Danube' waltzes into outer space
Austrian composer Johann Strauss II's "The Blue Danube" has, for many people, been synonymous with space travel since it was used in Stanley Kubrick's 1968 sci-fi classic "2001: A Space Odyssey".
But the world-famous waltz truly travelled among the stars on Saturday when the European Space Agency's antenna broadcast a live performance of it into space to celebrate the composer's 200th birthday.
The Vienna Symphony Orchestra played a concert in the Austrian capital.
The concert was broadcast live on the internet and also shown at a public screening in Vienna, in New York at Bryant Park, and near the antenna in Spain.
"The digitised sound will be transmitted to the large 35-metre satellite dish at ESA's Cebreros ground station in Spain," Josef Aschbacher, the ESA's director general, told AFP ahead of the performance.
And from there, the waltz will be "transmitted in the form of electromagnetic waves", the Austrian astronomer said.
- 'Typical of space' -
"The Blue Danube" evokes the elegance of 19th-century Vienna, which lives on in the city's roaring ball season.
For Norbert Kettner, director of the Vienna tourist board, the Danube waltz is a "true unofficial space anthem" because of Kubrick.
The timeless waltz is the "typical sound of space", Kettner said, with the tunes being played "during various docking manoeuvres of the International Space Station (ISS)".
When the waltz was performed on Saturday, the Vienna Symphony Orchestra noted the waltz's airiness as if it were floating through space, its director Jan Nast said.
Nast, who put together the programme for Saturday's hour-long "interstellar concert", said music is a language "which touches many people" and has "the universal power to convey hope and joy".
- Filling a gap -
Once transmitted via Spain's satellite dish, the signal will travel at the speed of light to eventually reach NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft -- the most distant man-made object in the universe -- in approximately 23 hours and 3 minutes.
After surpassing Voyager 1, it will continue its interstellar journey.
By catching up with the spacecraft and its twin, Voyager 2, Austria also seeks to right a perceived wrong.
Both Voyagers carry "Golden Records" -- 12-inch, gold-plated copper disks intended to convey the story of our world to extraterrestrials.
The record holds 115 images of life on Earth, recorded in analogue form, and a variety of sounds and snatches of music.
While "The Magic Flute" by Austria's composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was included among the selection of 27 music pieces, Strauss's famous waltz was not.
F.Bennett--AMWN