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Nascent Drama

A man in Australia who was selling his "life" over the Internet -- including his home, job and the chance to meet his friends -- said Sunday he had sold the lot for 399,000 dollars (383,230 US).
 
British-born Ian Usher, 44, decided to sell his house in the western city of Perth along with his car, motorbike, jet ski and all his other goods as a way of moving on after breaking up with his wife.
 
The "life package" included not only his tangible assets such as his clothes and DVD collection but the opportunity to take on his former job as a carpet salesman and the chance to meet some of his friends.
 
Asked how he felt about the price, given that he had said earlier the near-new three-bedroom house was valued at 420,000 dollars alone and included thousands of dollars' worth of electrical goods, he said: "Pretty good."
 
Bidding on Usher's "life" opened on June 22 at one dollar and offers quickly shot up to more than 2.2 million dollars, prompting the Yorkshire-born man to break out the champagne and celebrate.
 
But it was not long before he realised a registration system for bidding on the site had not been activated and the highest bids were not genuine.
 
After the fake bids were removed, bidding went back down to 300,100 dollars. "It's been a pretty crazy week, but quite entertaining," said Usher, who has promised to retain nothing of his old life beyond his passport, wallet and the clothes on his back.
 
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A Swiss court has ordered that a chicken be locked up in a soundproof box every night so its neighbours can get a good night's sleep, the ATS news agency reported Friday.
 
The court at Ticino in southern Switzerland even stipulated that the box, in which the chicken must be kept from 10:00 pm to 7:00 am, should be at least eight centimetres (three inches) thick and insulated with glass wool.
 
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