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Trump, 78, says feels in 'very good shape' after annual checkup
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Man executed by firing squad in South Carolina
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Ballester apologizes to Augusta National for relief in Rae's Creek
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McIlroy, DeChambeau charge but Rose clings to Masters lead
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Langer misses cut to bring 41st and final Masters appearance to a close
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Rose knocking on the door of a major again at the Masters
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All Black Barrett helps Leinster into Champions Cup semis
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Round-two rebound: Resilient McIlroy right back in the Masters hunt
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Asset flight challenges US safe haven status
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Menendez brothers appear in LA court for resentencing hearing
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McIlroy, DeChambeau charge as Rose clings to Masters lead
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UN seeks $275 million in aid for Myanmar quake survivors
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Frustrated families await news days after 221 killed in Dominican club disaster
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Trump wants to halt climate research by key agency: reports
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Fed official says 'absolutely' ready to intervene in financial markets
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Slumping Homa happy to be headed into weekend at the Masters
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Morbidelli fastest ahead of cagey MotoGP title rivals in Qatar practise
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Musetti stuns Monte Carlo Masters champion Tsitsipas to reach semis
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Abuse scandal returns to haunt the flying 'butterflies' of Italian gymnastics
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Trump defends policy after China hits US with 125% tariffs
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Frustrated families await news days after Dominican club disaster
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McLarens dominate Bahrain practice, Verstappen rues 'too slow' Red Bull
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Eight birdies rescue Masters rookie McCarty after horror start
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RFK Jr's autism 'epidemic' study raises anti-vaxx fears
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Trump -- oldest elected US president -- undergoes physical
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Rose clings to Masters lead as McIlroy, DeChambeau charge
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Brazil's Bolsonaro hospitalized with abdominal pain, 'stable'
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Canada, US to start trade talks in May: Carney
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Six arrested for murder of notorious Inter Milan ultra
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Musetti stuns defending champion Tsitsipas at Monte Carlo Masters
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UN shipping body approves global carbon pricing system
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McLaren dominate Bahrain practice as Verstappen struggles
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Dollar plunges, stocks wobble over trade war turmoil
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Trump says tariff policy 'doing really well' despite China retaliation
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African Development Bank chief warns of tariff 'shock wave'
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Jolted by Trump, EU woos new partners from Asia to Latin America
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Brazil's Bolsonaro hospitalized with 'unbearable' abdominal pain
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Moment of reckoning for pandemic agreement talks at WHO
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Declare gender violence in S.Africa a national disaster, campaigners say
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US Fed officials see higher inflation ahead as consumer confidence plunges
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Rose keeps three-shot Masters lead as Aberg, DeChambeau charge
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Brazil's Bolsonaro hospitalized with severe abdominal pain: party

Bosnian war survivors rally against Ukraine invasion
Several hundred people marched Monday in the Bosnian capital Sarajevo, which was besieged during a brutal civil war in the 1990s, asking Russia to end the Ukraine war.
Bosnia's inter-ethnic war killed nearly 100,000 people, of whom more than 11,000 died during the Sarajevo seige by Serb forces.
The march was organised by associations gathering Bosnian Muslim war victims and their families.
"Stop the massacre in Mariupol", proclaimed a giant in both Bosnian and English carried by the marchers, referring to a strategic Ukrainian port besieged and destroyed by Russian troops.
"Stop the war now! Sarajevo 1992-1995, Mariupol 2022-?", read another banner.
The march coincided with parades and marches in Russia to mark the Soviet defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday blamed the West and Ukraine for the conflict, telling thousands of troops in Moscow's Red Square that Russia faced an "absolutely unacceptable threat".
Marcher Munira Subasic, the head of a leading association gathering families of Bosnian war victims, said: "We, the mothers who know what it means when someone kills your son or rapes your daughter ... ask the world to put an end to what is going on in Ukraine".
"Look at Mariupol. Its siege reminds the one of Sarajevo and other (Bosnian) towns," Alija Hodzic, whose 17-year-old daughter was killed in Sarajevo in 1993, told reporters.
"But they (Russians) will lose since they are the ones who are attacking. It's always the one who defends himself who wins," he added.
J.Gomez--AT