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Consent gives Morris and Prescott another memorable Arc weekend
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Reinach and Marx star as Springboks beat Argentina to retain Rugby Championship
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South Africa edge Argentina to retain Rugby Championship
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Sinner starts Shanghai defence in style as Zverev defies toe trouble
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Russell takes pole position for Singapore Grand Prix as McLaren struggle
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Robertson praises All Blacks 'grit' in Australia win
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Ethiopia hits back at 'false' Egyptian claims over mega-dam
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Sinner breezes past Altmaier to launch Shanghai title defence
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All Blacks down Wallabies to stay in Rugby Championship title hunt
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Marsh ton powers Australia to T20 series win over New Zealand
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Test skipper Gill replaces Rohit as India ODI captain
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Jadeja stars as India crush West Indies in first Test
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Minnie Hauk, Graffard, Japan vie for Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe glory
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Anisimova thrashes Gauff in 58 minutes to make China Open final
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Flights resume at Munich airport after second drone scare
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Hostage families urge immediate end to Gaza war
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Czech ex-PM who wants to halt Ukraine aid set to win vote
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India close in on innings win with West Indies 66-5 in first Test
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Sanae Takaichi, Japan's first woman PM-to-be
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China hawk Takaichi set to be Japan's first woman PM
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China hawk Takaichi, youthful Koizumi in Japan ruling party runoff
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For the 280th time, senator urges US to 'wake up' on climate
US senator Sheldon Whitehouse dusted off his dog-eared "Time to Wake Up" poster Wednesday to deliver his 280th climate speech in the upper chamber -- ending a year-long break from delivering weekly addresses urging lawmakers to mobilize on global warming.
Until last year, Whitehouse would put up the same green sign next to a desk on the Senate floor once a week and launch into the monologues pushing for clean-energy initiatives and aggressive action to take on the fossil fuel lobby.
He retired the placard, imagining he had given his last lecture on the topic, when President Joe Biden arrived at the White House with a pledge to slash greenhouse gas emissions.
"After I stopped these speeches, the Smithsonian asked me if they could have this old poster," Whitehouse told colleagues on the floor of the Senate on Wednesday.
"It's the most used poster in Senate history, it turns out, and I came pretty close to turning it over to them. But something made me hesitate and, well, here it is back again."
Whitehouse lamented that Americans "just aren't making progress" on planet-warming gas emissions.
"We are one year in with no bill, no carbon regulation and no litigation and look at the climate havoc," he said.
Biden was counting on his signature Build Back Better social welfare and climate bill to achieve his ambitious climate goals, including a 65 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions within a decade.
But the package withered on the vine in December as Senate Democrats failed to strike an agreement on an overall price tag and the priorities that should be included in the final text or jettisoned.
The backing of every Democrat is required to advance Biden's agenda in the evenly-divided Senate but moderate Joe Manchin, from the coal mining state of West Virginia, was unwilling to get on board.
Biden told a news conference in January he was confident that large parts of this investment project could be saved.
R.Adler--BTB