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Young diners 'time travel' back to ancient China
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Rise of the robots: the promise of physical AI
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Itoje summons spirit of 2019 as England bid for New Zealand win
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Australia capable of upsetting 'flat' Irish, says MacNeill
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Asian markets sink on concerns over tech rally, Fed rates
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Video podcasts become next streaming battleground
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Ukraine capital under 'massive' attack: Kyiv mayor
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Trump eyes $2,000 checks, 50-year mortgages as economic fears loom
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Dodgers' Ohtani wins fourth MLB MVP award, Yankees' Judge bags a third
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England stars buy into team-first mantra: Tuchel
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Fight over fossil fuels drawdown looms at UN climate summit
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Blue Origin launches NASA Mars mission and nails booster landing
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Ronaldo red 'nothing to do with me': Ireland coach
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France qualify for World Cup as Portugal, Norway forced to wait
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US says trade talks with Swiss 'very positive'
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Brazil rebuts UN complaint about COP30 security, but boosts presence
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Swiss Gruyere crowned world cheese champ
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Palestinian Authority says Israel killed two teens in West Bank
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Blue Origin launches NASA Mars mission and sticks booster landing
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Stocks slide despite end of US government shutdown
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MLS to align calendar with world's top football leagues
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BBC says sorry to Trump, but rejects defamation claim
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Mbappe, Olise star as France seal spot at 2026 World Cup
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Ronaldo sent off as Ireland stun Portugal in World Cup qualifier
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England cruise against Serbia with Bellingham reduced to cameo role
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Osimhen strikes twice as Nigeria set up World Cup clash with DR Congo
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Alcaraz beats Sinner to year-end world number one after defeating Musetti at ATP Finals
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25 oil-supplying states accused of 'complicity' in Gaza war
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Eagles aim to keep rolling despite Brown turmoil
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Alcaraz to end year as world number one after seeing off Musetti at ATP Finals
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Schmidt eager for fan's eye view before last Dublin clash as Wallabies boss
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Strong first-half profits keep Alstom firmly on rails
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Pfizer completes Metsera acquisition in deal worth up to $10 bn
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Boeing union votes to end strike, accept new contract
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Farrell says Hansen 'ready and able' to step-in at full-back for Ireland
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Osimhen strikes twice as Nigeria keep World Cup hopes alive
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Bad Bunny in box seat as Latin Grammys hit Vegas
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We need to talk about our fossil fuel addiction: UNEP chief
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Wales boss Tandy 'excited' to see Rees-Zammit start against Japan
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UK artist turns 'money for old rope' into £1m art exhibition
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Nagelsmann backs Woltemade to shine for injury-hit Germany
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Zelensky sanctions associate as fraud scandal rocks Ukraine
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Starbucks baristas launch strike on chain's 'Red Cup Day'
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Fiji unchanged for France Autumn Nations Series trip
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All Blacks boss Robertson at ease with 'respectful' England challenge to haka
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Stocks on the slide despite end of US shutdown
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Church bells ring as France marks decade since Paris attacks
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France scrum-half Serin commits for two more seasons to Toulon
Donald Sutherland in five films
Here is a look at five key films in the career of Canadian actor Donald Sutherland, who has died at the age of 88:
- 'The Dirty Dozen' (1967) -
In his first big screen role, Sutherland starred alongside Lee Marvin and Charles Bronson in Robert Aldrich's film set in World War II.
He played an army sergeant whose 30-year prison term for murder will be suspended if he survives a mission to assassinate German officers in Nazi-occupied France.
- 'M*A*S*H' (1970) -
Sutherland's star turn in the anti-war black comedy hit "M*A*S*H", directed by Robert Altman, as snarky, charming US Army surgeon Hawkeye Pierce brought him wider recognition.
The role was taken over by Alan Alda for the subsequent television show about the zany field hospital in Korea.
- 'Klute' (1971) -
Sutherland starred as enigmatic small-town private detective John Klute, who gets entangled with a New York call girl (Jane Fonda) as he hunts for a missing man in this suspense thriller directed by Alan J. Pakula
The film is the highlight of Sutherland's partnership, both private and professional, with Fonda, who won an Oscar for her work.
- 'JFK' (1991) -
In Oliver Stone's biopic, Sutherland played the chilling role of X, a shadowy intelligence figure who gives crucial information to a district attorney (Kevin Costner) investigating the politics surrounding the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
- 'The Hunger Games' (2012) -
Sutherland glowered as the tyrannical President Coriolanus Snow, ruling over a post-apocalyptic state, in this blockbuster film and its sequels, delivering what The Hollywood Reporter called a "sinister performance".
The franchise is based on a series of best-selling young adult novels by Suzanne Collins.
P.M.Smith--AMWN