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Warne, wife reunite

SYDNEY: Cricketer Shane Warne and his estranged wife Simone have reunited and are moving to England with their three children, the Sunday Telegraph newspaper says. The newspaper said the family will settle on the south coast of England, where Warne has at least two more years to play for county cricket side Hampshire. He retired from all other cricket in January. The couple separated in 2005 after 10 years of marriage. — AP

Special beer for Euro

VIENNA: Austrian police want fans to drink weak beer served in plastic cups at the 2008 European Championship to reduce potential violence. Authorities said they’re pressing co-hosts Austria and Switzerland to consider special “Euro 2008 beer” and “Euro 2008 mugs.” “We’re close to working out a light beer with the beer industry,” Vienna police spokesman Peter Jedelsky said after meeting with security organizations. The plastic cups would be branded with the tournament logo and serve as souvenirs. Jedelsky said the cups “wouldn’t inflict pain on anyone.” — AP

Juan Joya dead

MONTEVIDEO: Juan Joya, a Peruvian who helped lead Penarol to Uruguyan and international glory in the 1960s, has died. He was 73. Penarol team executive Jose Dominguez announced Joya’s passing. Joya starred alongside Ecuadorean striker Alberto Spencer during one of Penarol’s most famous chapters, between 1961-1969. Still revered here for his speed and attacking brilliance, Joya’s years with Spencer still are widely remembered by older generations. — AP

Gore shares lead

HUMBLE: Jason Gore shot a 4-under 68 to share the lead with five others after two rounds of the Houston Open. Defending champion Stuart Appleby, Bubba Watson, DJ Brigman and Texans Bob Estes and Jeff Maggert also were 6 under after two rounds, and Hunter Mahan, Tommy Armour III and Tom Byrum were one shot back. Appleby followed a 66 with a 72 on Friday, failing to break 70 for the first time in six rounds at the new Redstone course. — AP

Phelps wins 6th gold

Melbourne: Michael Phelps stayed on track for a record gold-medal haul at the world championships, edging American teammate Ian Crocker by 0.05 seconds to win the 100m butterfly on Saturday. Phelps is 6-for-6 with two races remaining. His latest gold tied Australian Ian Thorpe’s record from the 2001 worlds in Japan. But Phelps failed to set a world record for the first time in five nights. As he and world record holder, Crocker was the one guy who could’ve stopped Phelps’ gold rush. But it didn’t happen. Crocker was first at the turn, with Phelps third — the first time in four individual races that he didn’t zoom to the lead. — AP