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At this moment of the year,
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newspapers of the English-speaking world become obsessed with roundups, news
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quizzes, retrospectives, and predictions of one kind or another. For example,
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the Age of Melbourne,
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Australia, has published a very long feature called "Another Year Down the
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Drain." This is largely devoted to the failures of Australians in all walks of
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life, but it also mentions Barbra Streisand's new, hugely publicized
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relationship with actor James Brolin, as discussed on television with Barbara
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Walters. "Pass the sick bag," suggests the Age . Other victims of the
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newspaper include Earl Spencer (Princess Diana's brother, "what a bounder and a
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cad"; click here for
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Slate
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's "Assessment"), Boris Yeltsin, and
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Mike Tyson.
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country takes astrology more seriously than India, but the Asian Age has moved on to tarot
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cards. By Western standards, the predictions are very precise. For example, in
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"Health for Next Month" (i.e., January), the Asian
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Age predicts
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"colds and coughs" for Aries, a "skin problem" for Taurus, "a urinary problem"
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for Gemini, "circulatory or liver problems" for Cancer, "weight problems" for
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Leo, "a wheezing problem" for Libra, "chilblains" for Scorpio, hormonal
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problems for Sagittarius women, a "crick in the neck" for Capricorn, "personal
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anxieties and work-related stress" for Aquarius, and "a sore throat or a loose
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tooth" for Pisces.
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The Times of India, in an editorial, takes issue with a Dutch
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university that has compiled a vast world database of happiness "to judge the
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happiness of each country." "The HLE [Happy Life Expectancy] is calculated by
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multiplying a country's life expectancy in years with a 0-10 scale of average
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happiness," the newspaper explains. "But for all the complications in arriving
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at the final figures, they become simple enough when it comes to India, and it
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is not good news or glad tidings in tune with the season of good will. For, the
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list of 48 industrialised countries lumps India almost at the bottom--among the
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ten unhappiest countries--only ahead of Lithuania, Latvia, Russia, Belarus,
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Nigeria and Bulgaria."
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The list,
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says the newspaper, "has annoyed almost as many as it has pleased, for it has
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arbitrarily included almost the entire Scandinavian seaboard countries and the
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rich nations, regardless of the extent of societal heartache caused by broken
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homes and dysfunctional families." "More paradoxical still is the fact that
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Northern Ireland has got in fairly near the top, despite all its troubles."
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Northern Ireland's troubles increased over
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Christmas with the murder in the Maze prison of "King Rat," the jailed
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Protestant terrorist Billy Wright, and the subsequent retaliatory shooting in
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County Tyrone of a Roman Catholic, Seamus Dillon. While the conservative
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British newspaper the Daily Telegraph demanded the resignation of the Northern Ireland
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Secretary Mo Mowlam, on the grounds that she was "responsible for both these
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things," Irish newspapers generally backed her up. The Irish Times, in fact,
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sounded like a loyalist British newspaper when it demanded greater security at
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the Maze ("if the government--any government--loses control of the prisons, it
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has lost everything") and insisted that the British-generated peace process
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"may have to adjust to the wind, but ... is unlikely to be sunk by the latest
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atrocities."
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The great massacre of
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chickens in Hong Kong took place after an improvement in chicken sales from 10
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percent to about 50 percent of normal since the "avian flu" crisis began,
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according to the South China
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Morning Post. Only one Hong Kong family was identified as having eaten
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chicken for the traditional Chinese "winter solstice" celebration Dec. 25, but
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many other chickens were reported to have been bought, though not eaten, as
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"traditional offerings to the gods." The flu crisis caused the Cathay Pacific
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airline to stop serving chicken on its flights to Taiwan, where panic was high,
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though it continued to serve Brazilian frozen chicken on other flights. In Hong
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Kong itself, said the SCMP , fast-food chains and hotels had switched to
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serving frozen chickens from the United States.
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According
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to the same newspaper, Malaysian crime syndicates have been ripping off
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chicken-deprived Hong Kong gourmets by passing off cheap fish as the highly
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prized red arowana. Found only in certain Indonesian rivers, red arowana
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retails for more than $5,000 per fish. Common forms of yellow, green, and
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silver arowana were made to appear like red arowana by being treated with
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hormones imported from Singapore; the fish were then smuggled into Japan,
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Taiwan, and Hong Kong. Another food crisis was reported from Australia, where
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the Sydney Morning Herald
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reported that an estimated 800 out of 30,000 flocks of sheep in New South Wales
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were infected with OJD (Ovine Johnes disease), a wasting disorder similar to
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leprosy in humans. The crisis had been made worse by a dispute over
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compensation payments that had caused most sheep farmers in NSW to refuse to
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allow their flocks to be tested for the disease.
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In South Africa, which recently banned Hong Kong chickens,
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the Johannesburg
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Star reported that a woman had been "trampled and kicked" to death by an ostrich at a farm near Cape
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Town while her husband, already badly injured by the same bird, lay helplessly
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by "for hours" on a dirt road. The same newspaper reported the "disappointment and grave concern" expressed by
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South African President Nelson Mandela over the detention without charges on
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Christmas Day of the Zambian founder-president and independence hero, Kenneth
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Kaunda, by the current Zambian president, Frederick Chiluba, who claimed that
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Kaunda had been implicated in an attempted coup d'état last October.
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The opposition Zambian
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newspaper, the Post, which bills itself as "Zambia's Leading Independent
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Newspaper," published a long and lively editorial condemning the arrest of Kaunda as "a national and
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international disgrace" and "a lasting shame which renders the entire
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Government of the Republic of Zambia utterly ludicrous." It claimed that
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Kaunda's innocence of involvement in the coup had been confirmed previously to
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President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe by Chiluba, whom it called a "liar and
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crook" and described as "primitive and uncultured--not even fit to be a village
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headsman."
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In Britain, the Sunday
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Telegraph reported exclusively that billionaire philanthropist John Paul
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Getty II, 65, had "sealed his love affair with Britain by taking out UK
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citizenship after 25 years' residence in this country." "The heir to what was
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once the world's largest private oil fortune received his British passport in
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the week before Christmas and immediately revoked his US nationality," the
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newspaper said. "The American Government is, by contrast, thought to be very
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disappointed by the development."
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