From Reuters Daily Briefing
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By Robert MacMillan, Reuters.com Weekend Editor
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- Leak in space: Five astronauts prepared for evacuation for about two hours as Russian cosmonauts tried to fix a crack on its portion of the International Space Station. NASA disagreed with how they wanted to do the repair and withdrew the order after the Russians paused their efforts, an official with the agency said.
- Maps to the stars: A vast web of cold cosmic gas stretches across the heart of our galaxy with threadlike filaments flowing through space and converging into bright clouds where new stars form. And now we have a really nice map for it.
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- First case in decades: A calf at a ranch in La Pryor, Texas tested positive for the flesh-eating parasite, which left a gaping hole around its umbilical cord. The World Health Organization pledged more than $500 million to fight the Ebola outbreak in Africa. The CDC warned that the outbreak could match or surpass the outbreak a decade ago.
- Protein alert: A Florida mother and daughter sued Campbell’s after they said they found “worm-like organisms” in their SpaghettiOs.
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- A somnolent duty: More than 20 police officers responsible for protecting the royal family were placed on restricted duties after being served with misconduct notices for falling asleep at Windsor Castle and leaving their posts unattended.
- Arrested: A Norwegian teenager traveled to Britain to carry out a murder for money after a Swedish crime group used by the Iranian government recruited him.
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- Legal fluidity: Sex education in Italian schools will require parental consent under a bill whose sponsor said it aims to protect children from “the confusion of gender propaganda.”
- Put it away: Poland will ban children under 16 from using mobile phones in schools and will introduce stricter age-verification rules for access to pornography.
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- A geopolitical contest: The team is staying in Tijuana and is scheduled to play against New Zealand and Belgium in Los Angeles, then against Egypt in Seattle.
- An own goal: About 60 people bought their cup tickets for free on FIFA’s website. The soccer body said it was a tech error and asked the fans to pay in full. FIFA banned vuvuzelas, whistles, air horns and other loud noise-making devices from the contest’s stadiums. It also banned reusable bottles and said fans can bring one factory-sealed disposable water bottle inside.
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