Strike cripples French public transport (EARTHtimes.org)



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Strike cripples French public transport (EARTHtimes.org)

The greatest risk to international travelers who are pregnant is the development of a complication in an area with inadequate facilities to manage the complication. When traveling by automobile, pregnant women should wear their seat belt with the lap belt positioned under the abdomen and the shoulder strap between the breasts. There is no evidence that use of safety restraints increases risk of fetal injury. The chief cause of fetal death in motor vehicle accidents is the death of the mother.

Strike cripples French public transport (EARTHtimes.org)

Paris - Commuters in Paris and 29 other French cities as well as passengers on the national train service had to look for other means of travel on Thursday as a strike by public transit workers crippled public transportation. Only 5 per cent of the s...

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Rugby fans launch French invasion (Liverpool Echo)

Paris awoke to the start of a cross-Channel invasion ahead of Saturday's rugby World Cup Final. Many England fans have already arrived in the French capital but tens of thousands more are expected to follow throughout Friday and Saturday, despite widespread travel disruption in strike-bound France.

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French strike forces Eurostar cancellations and puts rugby fans' travel plans in chaos (Daily Mail)

Eurostar has cancelled six of its scheduled trains today as a massive public transport strike crippled Paris - leaving England fans battling to get to the other side of the Channel in time for Saturday's Rugby World Cup final desperately seeking other routes to the French capital

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French commuters hit by transport strike (AAP via Yahoo!7 News)

French commuters are facing travel chaos after transport workers went on strike over plans to scrap their pension privileges.

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French transport strikes move into day 2 (Boston Globe)

Train service started back up throughout much of France but many commuters in Paris biked, roller-bladed and even used children's scooters Friday as city transit workers kept up a second day of strikes against proposed economic reforms.

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French transport crippled by strike (Gulf News)

Paris: French commuters faced travel chaos on Thursday after transport workers went on strike over plans to scrap their pension privileges, handing President Nicolas Sarkozy a first major challenge of his reforms.

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Saddle up for 2008 equestrian Olympics (Louisville Courier-Journal)

Equestrian athletes and spectators from around the world will converge on Hong Kong Aug. 8-22, 2008, for horse competitions of the 28th Olympiad's Summer Games, and the time to make travel arrangements is now.

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Indiana's pleasure palaces, restored (Lexington Herald-Leader)

Eliot Ness wasn't the first man to publicly dis Al Capone. It seems that honor went to Thomas Taggart, who in the early 20th century was the owner of the super- discriminating French Lick Springs Hotel in Indiana. Capone chose the area as the site of his Dec. 30, 1918, wedding to Mae Josephine Coughlin, and he decided that the hotel would make an excellent honeymoon spot. Taggart thought ...

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Silent orders (Guardian Unlimited)

Travel: William Little makes a pilgrimage to one of Belgium's top monastic breweries.

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Paris transit workers continue strikes against Sarkozy's reforms (Pravda)

Train, subway and bus travel around France remained a tangle Friday, as Paris transit workers continued their walkout and others gradually resumed service after the first major strikes against President Nicolas Sarkozy's economic reforms.

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Strike cripples French public transport (EARTHtimes.org)

Patients who have had a myocardial infarction should not fly for at least 3 weeks afterwards, and use of supplemental oxygen on a flight should be considered for up to 4 months. A general rule is that patients with cardiac problems should be able to walk 100 yd and climb 12 steps before attempting a long flight. Other cardiovascular problems are contraindications to air travel.

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