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Change of command
03/11 | 00:03 GMT

©AFP / Jay Directo
Soldiers march during a Change of Command Ceremony in Camp Aguinildo in Quezon City, suburban Manila.
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Ferguson lauds Rooney in 4-0 defeat of AC Milan
03/11 | 10:55 GMT

©AFP / Andrew Yates
Manchester United's Wayne Rooney celebrates scoring his second goal against AC Milan during their UEFA Champions League round of 16, second leg match at Old Trafford. United won 4-0.

©AFP / Andrew Yates
Wayne Rooney celebrates scoring his second goal
MANCHESTER (AFP) - Alex Ferguson believes Wayne Rooney could match the 42 goals that Cristiano Ronaldo provided for Manchester United in 2008 after the England striker reached the 30 mark with a double in the Champions League humbling of AC Milan.
Rooney, who had also scored twice in the 3-2 first leg win, laid the foundations for a 4-0 win on a night that United boss Ferguson described as one of the most satisfying of his illustrious managerial career.
"When I think that we've beaten Milan 4-0 -- not many teams have ever done that, if any," the Scot declared. "It was a fantastic night."
It was the first time United had eliminated their opponents for the first time in five attempts since two of European football's iconic institutions first met, 52 years ago.
Ferguson added: "I said it was a landmark victory when we beat them over there. I regard Milan as a great European example for us and that makes me particularly proud that we managed to beat that great team."

©AFP / Andrew Yates
Manchester United's Park Ji-Sung celebrates scoring against AC Milan
Rooney's early header was followed by a strike in the first minute of the second half which broke Milan's spirit and further goals from Park Ji-Sung and Darren Fletcher ensured it was an unhappy return to Old Trafford for David Beckham.
"I think the second goal was decisive," Ferguson said. "We were able to relax and play good football. Milan were forced to try and attack and left themselves a little bit open. It was a difficult night for them after that."
Ferguson was also delighted to have the luxury of withdrawing Rooney from the fray early, ensuring he did not aggravate a niggling knee injury that had threatened to keep him out of the tie.
"Wayne's performance was just a continuation of his form of the last two or three months. It is sensational. He is unbelievable and I'm very pleased with him."

©AFP / Giuseppe Cacace
Manchester United's Gary Neville (right) competes with AC Milan's Ronaldinho
Asked if he felt Rooney could match Ronaldo's haul in his penultimate season before his departure for Real Madrid, Ferguson replied: "It's a challenge. I was happy with him getting to the 30 mark, to be honest. But he just keeps getting better."
Ronaldo's departure has ensured Rooney has been consistently deployed as an out-and-out centreforward this term, but Ferguson feels his improved return in terms of goals is also a reflection of the work he has done on the training ground.
"The thing that has improved is his movement in the penalty box. Also, he has practised more than he's ever done and you get the rewards when you do that."
Milan's hopes of overturning their first-leg deficit disappeared after Ronaldinho and Klaas Jan Huntelaar failed to take a couple of early chances that could have transformed the complexion of the tie.
"You don't want to lose the first goal in a game like this," Ferguson acknowledged. "It would have encouraged Milan."
With Ronaldo's Real having gone out to Lyon on Wednesday evening, United look well placed to reach the final of the tournament for a third consecutive season and Ferguson said he was relaxed about the draw for the quarter finals.

©AFP / Giuseppe Cacace
AC Milan's David Beckham warms up as a substitute
"When we play at that tempo, we're very hard to beat. It doesn't matter who we play."
That view was endorsed by Milan coach Leonardo, who admitted United had been simply too powerful for his injury-depleted squad.
"I guess we can analyse the game in many ways, but the one thing we cannot deny is the performance of United," the Brazilian said. "They played a truly great game.
"Conceding a goal so early made a comeback even more complicated for us.
"In the first leg we played an equal match. We lost but we dominated for some periods. Today was different. We have some problems but United is a very strong team, they can use your mistakes in the best way. They are very clinical and that is what you have to be in this competition."

Football
Ferguson lauds Rooney in 4-0 defeat of AC ...'Phantom of the Opera' sequel gets mixed reviews
03/10 | 13:40 GMT

©AFP/Getty Images/File / Ethan Miller
Andrew Lloyd Webber is pictured here in 2006. Lloyd Webber's new musical "Love Never Dies" garnered mixed first reviews, after the world premiere of the highly-anticipated sequel to "The Phantom of the Opera."

©AFP/Getty Images/File / Ethan Miller
Andrew Lloyd Webber's sequel is set in New York a decade after the original musical
LONDON (AFP) - Andrew Lloyd Webber's new musical "Love Never Dies" garnered mixed first reviews Wednesday, after the world premiere of the highly-anticipated sequel to "The Phantom of the Opera."
The musical was given a standing ovation Tuesday night, but some newspaper critics voiced scepticism about Briton Lloyd-Webber's followup to his world-wide blockbuster "Phantom."
"A hit? Not quite. It is too much an also-ran to the prequel, and its opening is too stodgy," wrote the Daily Mail's reviewer, adding that the show "lacks human connection."
The Guardian awarded the show three out of five stars, saying: "What the show lacks, in a nutshell, is a narrative tension," while praising the costumes as "a glorious pastiche of burlesque tackiness."
The new show, which opened at London's Adelphi Theatre, is set in New York a decade after the end of the original musical.
In the Times reviewer Benedict Nightingale said the modern Phantom, played by Ramin Karimloo, lacks emotion, having "clearly taken an anger management course since landing in New York."

©AFP/File / Greg Wood
The original "The Phantom of the Opera"has been seen by 100 million people worldwide and been performed in 15 languages
"So where's the tension...? That's not helped by a narrative that might have been part-written by Ibsen’s ghost, there’s so much earnest poring over the past," he added.
An online debate also started on social networking site Facebook, where Lloyd-Webber devotees set up a group called "Love Should Die" to voice their disappointment.
Its mission statement called the show a "misguided venture" which fails to do live up to its world-beating predecessor.
The original has been seen by 100 million people worldwide and been performed in 15 languages. The sequel comes almost a quarter of a century after the first Phantom, which also received negative reviews on the opening night.

Entertainment
'Phantom of the Opera' sequel gets mixed ...Injury-hit England gear up for Bangladesh Test
03/11 | 08:48 GMT

©AFP / Munir Uz Zaman
England captain Alastair Cook pads up for a practice session in Chittagong on March 10. England go into the opening Test against Bangladesh on Friday hoping their depleted pace attack delivers and Kevin Pietersen ends his dismal run with the bat.

©AFP / Munir Uz Zaman
England's bowling resources have considerably dwindled due to injuries
CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh (AFP) - England go into the opening Test against Bangladesh on Friday hoping their depleted pace attack delivers and Kevin Pietersen ends his dismal run with the bat.
The tourists' bowling resources have considerably dwindled due to injuries since their arrival in Bangladesh, with seamer Ryan Sidebottom already ruled out of the two-Test series and paceman Graham Onions for the opening match.
Key fast bowler Stuart Broad is racing against time to be fit for the match after suffering a back spasm during the recent one-day series, won by the tourists 3-0.
"It's definitely not an ideal situation. The back spasm could come back very quickly," said Alastair Cook, leading England for the first time in Tests.
"He (Broad) bowled nine overs yesterday and two heavy spells today, so we'll see how he is tomorrow. That's another selection issue we'll have to play by ear and see how it goes."

©AFP / Munir Uz Zaman
England are without regular captain Andrew Strauss
The visitors, already without regular captain Andrew Strauss (rested) and fast bowler James Anderson (injured), will look to their second-choice attack to maintain their unbeaten Test record against Bangladesh.
England have won all of their four Tests against Bangladesh.
Off-spinner James Tredwell and seamer Steven Finn are likely to make their Test debuts after impressive performances in a recent drawn practice match.
England's biggest worry is the form of star batsman Pietersen, who made only 41 in three one-dayers against the hosts and 22 in two innings of the practice match.

©AFP / Munir Uz Zaman
England's biggest worry is the form of star batsman Pietersen (L)
"I hope he keeps failing because it'll be one less batsman to worry about," said Bangladesh coach Jamie Siddons.
"He is a great player. At some point in the next four innings he'll have a performance, but hopefully it won't hurt us."
Bangladesh will pin hopes on slow bowlers to trap England's batsmen on a pitch likely to help spinners, with Shakib Al Hasan, Abdur Razzak and Mohammad Mahmudullah expected to play big roles.
"We all know spin is important in the sub-continent. Spin is a huge issue and the England side over the last three or four years has made a huge effort to improve on that," said Cook.
"The way we dealt with spin in one-dayers was excellent and hopefully we can continue like that for the next two weeks. Their spinners will be a huge threat and for us to take them lightly would be a cardinal sin.
"For me, it's a huge challenge as captain. We have come here to win both the series and have done the first job very well. We now have the second part and we want to win these Tests."
Skipper Shakib will be looking forward to a consistent performance from their batsmen to keep pressure on the under-strength England attack.
Bangladesh have dropped experienced batsman Mohammad Ashraful following his indifferent form, but have talented batsmen in Tamim Iqbal, Shakib and Mahmudullah.
The hosts will also be without batsman Raqibul Hasan who surprisingly retired from the game on Wednesday, just a day after scoring a hundred and a half-century against the tourists in the practice match.
The final Test starts in Dhaka on March 20.

Cricket
Injury-hit England gear up for Bangladesh ...Gardening to sow seeds for a rosier Afghanistan
03/11 | 06:02 GMT

©AFP/File / Massoud Hossaini
Kabul University agriculture faculty dean Mohammad Yasin Mohsini walks in a garden at Kabul University. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE), which dates back to 1670, is working with the university to establish a four-hectare botanical garden site where future generations of green-fingered Afghanis will be able to appreciate native plants and learn horticultural skills.

©AFP/File / Massoud Hossaini
Mohammad Yasin Mohsini said the garden would be a popular asset to the campus
KABUL (AFP) - It is perhaps the only solution in the search for a better future for Afghanistan that world leaders have not yet considered: gardening.
A British scientific institute is planning to set up a botanical garden in Kabul where future generations of green-fingered Afghanis will be able to appreciate native plants and learn horticultural skills.
The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE), which dates back to 1670, is working with Kabul University's agricultural faculty to establish the project on a four-hectare (ten-acre) site in the capital.
Experts from the RGBE have visited Kabul to advise on the garden, which they hope will one day play a small part in helping Afghanistan emerge from decades of turmoil.
"We see great potential in this," said Matthew Hall, a botanist at the Scotland-based RBGE.
"It will promote plant diversity, which underpins all ecosystems and is fundamental to any country.
"The university is very enthusiastic, and we are discussing ways that we can bring our institutional expertise to help it build up a small botanic garden."

©AFP/File / Massoud Hossaini
The site will be open to the public and also function as an education centre
The site will be open to the public and also function as an education centre where the plant life of Afghanistan can be scientifically categorised and studied.
"We want to increase the local capacity for research work," Hall said. "Gardens are very important and when you get people coming to visit they soon support what you are trying to achieve.
"Obviously the situation in Afghanistan is uncertain but we intend to focus on basic training and field techniques."
The patch of land where flowers and trees may soon flourish is uncultivated rough ground at the moment, but greenhouses and flower beds are being sketched out.
Mohammad Yasin Mohsini, dean of the Kabul University's agriculture faculty, said the garden would be a popular asset to the campus and an essential resource for students across several disciplines.
"The plan is under way but is far from being completed, so we appreciate help from foreign institutions" he said.
"We need a botanical garden to teach horticulture, as well as forestry, biology and even medicinal studies."

©AFP/File / Massoud Hossaini
Mohsini said he hoped to introduce crop breeds from abroad that would suit Afghanistan's varied landscape
Mohsini said he also hoped to introduce crop breeds from abroad that would suit Afghanistan's varied landscape and improve the country's fragile rural economy.
Gardening and especially rose cultivation have a long tradition in Afghanistan and some attempts have been made to replace opium poppies -- responsible for most of the world's heroin -- with roses to produce oil for export.
Many Kabul homes have lawns lined with climbing roses, but gardening has lost its allure for people exhausted by three decades of war and an insurgency that has been intensifying for more than eight years.
Public parks are poorly tended and the city's former gentility is now hidden behind ugly concrete blast walls and sand bunkers.
At least one public garden in the centre of Kabul has been transformed into a military base, as thousands of the 121,000 NATO and US troops fighting the Taliban across the country are stationed in the heavily-fortified capital.
Hall, who plans to visit Kabul soon despite recent deadly suicide bombs in the city, said a botanic garden would help Afghanistan to repair its war-damaged natural environment.

©AFP/File / Massoud Hossaini
Gardening and especially rose cultivation have a long tradition in Afghanistan
"It has already been a massive achievement to get the project to where it is. Our role is to support the university and seek funding," he said.
"A garden can be just an outdoor collection of plants, but it can also be an institution that trains people and runs programmes for conservation and public awareness."
The RBGE team is planning to hold a three-day workshop during its visit to Kabul. It will guide a class of about a dozen through how to work with the IUCN Red List, the international register for endangered species.
"The Afghan environment has been under such pressure for so long that there are a good number of species that could be very threatened with extinction," he said.
The programme was scheduled for last year but was postponed after August presidential elections caused months of instability, only resolved when Hamid Karzai was declared president and inaugurated in November.
"We're expecting a real mixture of people," Hall said. "Both some of the professors who worked in this area before the Soviet occupation (in the 1980s), and some keen younger people."
The RBGE also hopes to help compile an easy-to-use guidebook of Afghanistan's huge variety of plants for the country's budding botanists and amateur gardeners.

Lifestyle
Gardening to sow seeds for a rosier ...'Lost Boys' star Corey Haim dies after apparent overdose
03/10 | 20:03 GMT

©AFP/Getty Images/File / Michael Buckner
Corey Haim, a 1980's heartthrob whose Hollywood career was derailed by wild parties and drug abuse, died Wednesday aged 38 in Los Angeles after an apparent overdose, police said.

©AFP/Getty Images/File / Michael Buckner
Corey Haim in March 2009
LOS ANGELES (AFP) - Corey Haim, a 1980's heartthrob whose Hollywood career was derailed by wild parties and drug abuse, died Wednesday aged 38 in Los Angeles after an apparent overdose, police said.
The Canadian-born actor, as well known for his off-screen indulgences as his brief reign as a teen idol in films such as "Lucas" and "The Lost Boys", was pronounced dead at a medical center in the Los Angeles suburb of Burbank.
"It was an apparent overdose," said Los Angeles Police Department spokesman Frank Albarren, adding that the drug or medication used was unknown.
Haim's mother, with whom he shared his apartment, alerted the emergency services overnight, according to assistant chief coroner Ed Winter.
"As he got out of bed, he felt a little weak, and... went down to the floor on his knees," Winter said. "She called paramedics. They responded, transported him to the hospital, where he was pronounced (dead) at 2:15 this morning."
Haim is best known for a string of film roles in the 1980s especially the 1987 Joel Schumacher vampire hit "The Lost Boys" and "Lucas" in which he appeared alongside Charlie Sheen and Winona Ryder.
He rose to fame alongside fellow "Lost Boys" star Corey Feldman and the two later collaborated on a reality television show "The Two Coreys," which was scrapped in its second season.




