Friday, March 30, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: For sale in Singapore: $200,000 bottle of whisky

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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For sale in Singapore: $200,000 bottle of whisky
Mar 31st 2012, 05:47

By John O'Callaghan and Eveline Danubrata

SINGAPORE | Sat Mar 31, 2012 1:47am EDT

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - A whisky made to mark the 60th year on the throne of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II is on sale in Singapore for a mere S$250,000 ($198,500) a bottle - and it may well find a buyer.

No doubt it's a premium sip. Only 60 bottles of Diamond Jubilee were made by the Johnnie Walker unit of Diageo PLC from a blend of whiskies distilled in 1952.

It's also a premium price for Asian aficionados at the month-long Master of Spirits II event featuring specialty wine and liquor put on by luxury travel retailer DFS Group, part of the LVMH empire of high-end goods and services.

Singapore is the first stop this year for a series of DFS events highlighting a wide range of luxury offerings.

The city-state, home to the world's highest concentration of millionaires, has become a playground for the global jet-set with casinos, expensive shops, fine dining, top hotels and showrooms featuring Ferraris, Lamborghinis and other supercars.

The same package - the vintage whisky in a crystal decanter with silver trimmings, two crystal glasses and a leather-bound booklet - is priced at 100,000 pounds ($159,100) in Britain.

Asia has seen a boom in wealth and a growing appetite for luxury goods, including top-of-the-line cars, jewelry, fashion, beauty products, watches and spirits.

The rest of the 84 items on show in Singapore, worth more than $1 million, include Dom Perignon Reserve de L'Abbaye 1978, Chateau Cheval Blanc 1986 Imperial and Luzhoulaojiao National Salute from Chinese liquor maker Luzhou Laojiao.

"I want to sell them all. Our plan is really to showcase the brands, our relationships and the uniqueness of our products," Harold Brooks, president of global merchandising at DFS, told Reuters at Saturday's invitation-only opening.

"Some of them are buying them for investment, some of them are buying them because they can and some people really buy it to enjoy it."

Brooks did not directly address the question of regional pricing but said Asia is a "critical opportunity" for Hong Kong-based DFS, especially China and its brand-conscious consumers.

The gold and black invitation for Saturday's event included RSVP numbers for China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Indonesia.

Singapore is also no stranger to pricey whisky.

Last year, a Chinese businessman spent S$250,000 on a bottle of rare 62-year-old Dalmore single malt at Changi Airport during the previous Master of Spirits promotion.

Diamond Jubilee is among the dearest whiskies ever sold, although exact comparisons are difficult because of shifting auction prices and differences between blends and single malts.

Not surprisingly, free samples of Diamond Jubilee are in short supply. Not even Brooks has had a sip.

So what does that much money taste like?

"Its different facets weave around each other: velvet texture, the refreshing bitter perfume of spices, pools of soft fruits as it flows down the throat," the Whisky Advocate blog said in a February review, giving it 93 marks out of 100.

($1 = 1.2593 Singapore dollars)

($1 = 0.6285 British pounds)

(Editing by Ed Lane)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: South Korea looks to ease name pain for London

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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South Korea looks to ease name pain for London
Mar 30th 2012, 10:13

Fri Mar 30, 2012 6:13am EDT

(Reuters) - South Korea is planning to unify the spelling of athletes names in English at this year's London Olympics to ease confusion among foreign journalists and fans, local media reported on Friday.

The initiative will lead to a universal enforcement of the system revised in 2000, in which Koreans are required to use their family name before their given names, in accordance with the National Institute of the Korean Language.

Several South Korean athletes, however, continue to use the initials of their given name before their family names in international competition, something they will no longer be able to do at the July 27-August 12 Games.

At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, baseball player Kim Hyun-soo wore "H S Kim" on his uniform, while swimmer Park Tae-hwan opted for Park T.H." on the back of his tracksuit.

In London, Olympic champion Park will be required to spell his name either "Park Taehwan" or "Park Tae-hwan", which can be shortened to "Park T." in case of initialization.

Anglicized South Korean names have baffled overseas fans, officials and journalists for years, with the discrepancy between what is written on team sheets and shirts triggering panic for journalists at deadline time.

(Reporting by Alastair Himmer in Tokyo; Editing by John O'Brien)

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Thursday, March 29, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Urine-soaked eggs a spring taste treat in China city

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Urine-soaked eggs a spring taste treat in China city
Mar 29th 2012, 10:08

By Royston Chan

DONGYANG, China | Thu Mar 29, 2012 6:08am EDT

DONGYANG, China (Reuters) - It's the end of a school day in the eastern Chinese city of Dongyang, and eager parents collect their children after a hectic day of primary school.

But that's just the start of busy times for dozens of egg vendors across the city, deep in coastal Zhejiang province, who ready themselves to cook up a unique springtime snack favored by local residents.

Basins and buckets of boys' urine are collected from primary school toilets. It is the key ingredient in "virgin boy eggs", a local tradition of soaking and cooking eggs in the urine of young boys, preferably below the age of 10.

There is no good explanation for why it has to be boys' urine, just that it has been so for centuries.

The scent of these eggs being cooked in pots of urine is unmistakable as people pass the many street vendors in Dongyang who sell it, claiming it has remarkable health properties.

"If you eat this, you will not get heat stroke. These eggs cooked in urine are fragrant," said Ge Yaohua, 51, who owns one of the more popular "virgin boy eggs" stalls.

"They are good for your health. Our family has them for every meal. In Dongyang, every family likes eating them."

It takes nearly an entire day to make these unique eggs, starting off by soaking and then boiling raw eggs in a pot of urine. After that, the shells of the hard-boiled eggs are cracked and they continue to simmer in urine for hours.

Vendors have to keep pouring urine into the pot and controlling the fire to keep the eggs from being overheated and overcooked.

Ge said he has been making the snack, popular due to its fresh and salty taste, for more than 20 years. Each egg goes for 1.50 yuan ($0.24), a little more than twice the price of the regular eggs he also sells.

Many Dongyang residents, young and old, said they believed in the tradition passed on by their ancestors that the eggs decrease body heat, promote better blood circulation and just generally reinvigorate the body.

"By eating these eggs, we will not have any pain in our waists, legs and joints. Also, you will have more energy when you work," said Li Yangzhen, 59, who bought 20 eggs from Ge.

The eggs are not bought only at street stalls. Local residents are also known to personally collect boys' urine from nearby schools to cook the delicacy in their homes.

The popularity of the treat has led the local government to list the "virgin boy eggs" as an intangible cultural heritage.

But not everyone is a fan. Chinese medical experts gave mixed reviews about the health benefits of the practice, with some warning about sanitary issues surrounding the use of urine to cook the eggs.

Some Dongyang residents also said they hated the eggs.

"We have this tradition in Dongyang that these eggs are good for our health and that it would help prevent things like getting a cold," said Wang Junxing, 38. "I don't believe in all this, so I do not eat them."

(Editing by Elaine Lies and Paul Casciato)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Japan bees cook enemy in 'hot defensive bee ball'

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Japan bees cook enemy in 'hot defensive bee ball'
Mar 29th 2012, 08:26

By Mariko Lochridge

TOKYO | Thu Mar 29, 2012 4:26am EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - Don't mess with Japanese honeybees. Not only do they cooperate to attack their enemies, researchers now say their brains may actually be processing and responding to the threat.

When confronted with their arch-enemy, the aggressive giant Asian hornet, the honeybees will attack it by swarming en masse around the hornet and forming what scientists call a "hot defensive bee ball" - a move unique to their species.

With up to 500 bees all vibrating their flight muscles at once, the bee ball cooks the hornet to death.

While this defensive maneuver has been known for some time, the mechanism behind it has been shrouded in mystery. But researchers at Japan's University of Tokyo, through study of the bees' brains, have now found that neural activity in bees taking part in the attack picks up.

"When the hornet, the Japanese honeybee's natural enemy, enters a colony, the bees quickly form a 'hot defensive bee ball,' trapping the hornet inside and heating it up to 46 degrees C (115 F) with their collective body heat," said Atsushi Ugajin, a University of Tokyo graduate student.

He said that while the high temperature phase lasts about 20 minutes, it often takes up to an hour before the hornet dies inside the ball.

Set off if bees posted as "guards" at the entrance to the colony detect an intruder, the move evolved because the bee's stingers aren't strong enough to penetrate the hornet's tough exo-skeleton, researchers said.

The research team, whose latest research on the phenomenon appeared in the scientific journal PLoS ONE in mid-March, was astounded by the fact that the collective heat generated by the group, while fatal for the hornet, leaves the bees unaffected.

They were also surprised that the bees used perfectly coordinated teamwork during the process, said Takeo Kubo, a professor at the University of Tokyo graduate school.

"When an outsider enters, the honeybees are immediately on their guard. Then, all at once, they gather to attack," he said.

"So, it isn't one commanding all the rest, we believe in this moment of emergency they're acting collectively."

Curious about why the bees attack this way, the researchers examined their brains and found that neural activity increased in the bees involved with the bee ball, apparently reflecting processing of thermal stimuli.

The group also said that while this discovery may seem to demonstrate that the Japanese honeybee is "smarter" than its European counterpart, this is not the case - it's merely a matter of development in response to environmental factors.

"When a member of the colony, a worker drone, is killed, this is a grievous loss for the hive. Evolution has reacted in this way (for their survival)," said Masato Ono, a Japanese honeybee and hornet expert who was also part of the study.

And many fundamental unknowns remain.

"One of the great mysteries for us is how animals' brains have evolved and how they operate," Kubo said. "This will be for us the next great puzzle to examine."

(Editing by Elaine Lies and Ron Popeski)

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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Wife shot dead by husband after dog poops in house: police

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Wife shot dead by husband after dog poops in house: police
Mar 28th 2012, 23:25

By Marice Richter

DALLAS | Wed Mar 28, 2012 7:25pm EDT

DALLAS (Reuters) - A 76-year-old Texas man was charged with murder for shooting his wife and two dogs after one of the animals pooped in the house.

Police arrested Michael Stephen Stolz after a five-hour standoff at the man's home in the Dallas suburb of Lewisville late Tuesday. He was charged with murder in the shooting death of his wife, Bernice Stolz, and remained in the Denton County Jail on Wednesday on a $250,000 bond.

Stolz told officers he shot his 49-year-old wife and the couple's two dogs after the German Shepherd mix defecated on the floor on Saturday, said Lewisville Police Capt. Kevin Deaver. He told officers that he shot the dog, then their other dog, a Rottweiler, then his wife, who was screaming because of the shootings of the dogs, Deaver said.

Police were called to investigate after Bernice Stolz' employer reported that she failed to show up at work for several days. Stolz rebuffed officers who asked to enter the house and check on the woman's welfare, Deaver said.

Officers reported smelling an odor of decomposition from the home and called for SWAT officers to help encourage Stolz to surrender. SWAT officers finally sent a robot with a camera inside for a look, Deaver said. They noticed Stolz was unarmed and lying on the floor.

Stolz finally surrendered peacefully. Bernice Stolz's body was found on the kitchen floor with a gunshot wound to the head. Stolz told officers he had also intended to kill himself but ran out of bullets after shooting his wife and dogs, Deaver said.

"Sometimes it's just a trivial little thing that sets people off," Deaver said.

Police had previously responded to calls for medical assistance at the home but Stolz had no history of mental illness, Deaver said.

(Editing By Corrie MacLaggan and Greg McCune)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Medvedev reassures Russia his cat is safe

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Medvedev reassures Russia his cat is safe
Mar 28th 2012, 12:52

MOSCOW | Wed Mar 28, 2012 8:52am EDT

MOSCOW (Reuters) - President Dmitry Medvedev reassured Russians on Wednesday that his cat Dorofei was safe after reports that it had run away made him an object of satire on Twitter.

"About the cat. A source close to #Dorofei says he has not got lost anywhere. Thank you all for your concern!" Medvedev tweeted from a trip to Asia.

By then a newly created Twitter account in the cat's name had almost 400 followers and attracted many remarks making fun of Medvedev's subordinate relationship to President-elect Vladimir Putin.

"It's simple. I ran away from Medvedev because he promised to hand me over to Vladimir Putin. Help me hide!" @KotDorofey tweeted in a play on words after Medvedev said this week he would pass on a message from U.S. President Barack Obama to Putin after talks in Seoul.

Medvedev was overheard telling Obama: "I will transmit this information to Vladimir." In Russian, the same expression is used to say "hand over to".

Reports that Dorofei had been lost spread after a tabloid newspaper, Sobesednik, said he was missing and that appeals to find him had been posted on telephone poles in the elite Moscow suburb near Medvedev's official residence.

"Police are already nervous and searching for the cat under every shrub," it wrote beside pictures of the fluffy, blue-eyed cat, described as a rare Nevsky Masquerade acquired by his wife for about $1,000 in 2003.

Some Twitter users were sympathetic but many joked the cat showed good sense to make a break for it.

"'It's now or never,' Dorofei thought," Anatoly Srakarny tweeted.

"Run, #Dorofei, Run!" was another popular tag line.

Alexander Gorbunov joked: "Dorofei's owner should learn from his example. The cat has character and doesn't need to agree his actions with anyone!"

(Reporting by Alissa de Carbonnel, editing by Paul Casciato)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Referee dishes out five red cards in dressing room

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Referee dishes out five red cards in dressing room
Mar 28th 2012, 08:41

LONDON | Wed Mar 28, 2012 4:41am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - A referee sent off five players in the dressing rooms after a post-match brawl at an English League Two (fourth tier) game between Bradford City and promotion-chasing Crawley Town.

"I can't believe this has happened," Bradford manager Phil Parkinson, who had three players shown red cards after the 2-1 home defeat on Tuesday night, told the BBC.

"I have never been in a situation before where a ref has come into the dressing room, pulled players on one side and sent them off. He wouldn't allow me in there."

Six Crawley players and one from Bradford were booked during the match with Bradford's Andrew Davies, who was sent off, now set for a five-match ban after being shown red cards twice previously this season.

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Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Couple to wed live on Country Music Awards show

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Couple to wed live on Country Music Awards show
Mar 27th 2012, 19:00

LOS ANGELES | Tue Mar 27, 2012 3:00pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A New Jersey couple, who unexpectedly found love during the grief of bereavement, plan to marry on a country music awards show on Sunday and be serenaded by Martina McBride.

Country fans Christina Davidson, 31, and Frank Tucci, 33, will exchange wedding vows live on television during the Academy of Country Music Awards in Las Vegas, show organizers said.

Martina McBride and Train frontman Pat Monahan will perform their new single "Marry Me" as the couple marry onstage in what is thought to be a first live wedding during an awards show.

Davidson lost her husband Paul in a drowning accident in 2009 when she was 29-years-old and pregnant with their second child. She founded a support group for young widows and widowers in her Washington Township hometown, where she met Tucci, whose wife Danielle had died in the same year from thyroid cancer, leaving him with a young son.

The pair became friends, supported each other and later fell in love. They were picked to be married on the awards show by McBride.

"When I was asked to perform 'Marry Me' with Pat on the ACM's, the first thought that popped into my head was, 'Wouldn't it be cool if we actually had a couple get married live on the show while we sang the song?' I think it's so special that we will be witnessing the union of these two wonderful people and that we will all be sharing that moment together," McBride said.

McBride is nominated for female vocalist of the year at the ACM awards, which will be broadcast live on Sunday on CBS. Kenny Chesney leads the nominations with nine, followed by Jason Aldean with six.

(Reporting By Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

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Monday, March 26, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Austrian saws off own foot to avoid work - report

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Austrian saws off own foot to avoid work - report
Mar 26th 2012, 13:53

VIENNA | Mon Mar 26, 2012 9:53am EDT

VIENNA (Reuters) - An unemployed Austrian man sawed his foot off, apparently to avoid being found fit to go back to work.

Hours before an appointment on Monday for the labor office to check on his health, the 56-year-old man held his left leg against an electric saw in his home workshop and severed his foot just above the ankle, Austrian broadcaster ORF reported.

Bleeding profusely, the man from the province of Styria then threw the foot into an oven, hobbled to his garage and called an ambulance. An emergency operation was unable to reattach the foot, ORF said.

(Reporting by Angelika Gruber; Writing by Michael Shields, editing by Paul Casciato)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Ready, steady...stack at Japan competition

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Ready, steady...stack at Japan competition
Mar 26th 2012, 12:23

TOKYO | Mon Mar 26, 2012 8:23am EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - More than 100 people gathered to vie for the title of Japan's fastest hands, competing to stack a set of plastic cups into a pyramid in the shortest time possible.

The 2012 Sport Stacking competition allowed competitors to show off their skills in a "sport" that organizers say teaches eye-hand coordination, improves reaction time and uses as much energy as archery, bowling or volleyball.

Using the 12 specially designed plastic cups, contestants took part in either individual, team relays or with a partner, with each person allowed to use only one hand.

The room filled with clattering as hands moved so rapidly to stack the cups that most almost seemed like film run at fast-forward speed.

Participants struggled to explain the allure.

"Once I actually tried it, it's really quite interesting and now I'm kind of hooked," said Shuuji Hirasaki, 53, who took part in a parent-child team with son Ryouya, 10.

The contestants on Sunday ranged from four years old to Senzaburo Kunimatsu, 83, who said he took part mainly for fun.

"I'm just doing it to help prevent getting old, I don't really worry about setting a record," he said.

The winner, for the fourth year running, was teenager Sota Takamori, who came in at 1.93 seconds for the simplest version of the pyramid.

He qualified to take part in the World Stacking Championships to be held in Germany in April.

(Reporting by Chris Meyers; editing by Elaine Lies and Paul Casciato)

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Saturday, March 24, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: "Cash Mobs" gather to splurge in locally owned stores

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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"Cash Mobs" gather to splurge in locally owned stores
Mar 25th 2012, 02:45

Customers line the aisles and hold up their money as they participate in a ''cash mob'' at a small locally owned organic store called Nature's Bin, in Lakewood, Ohio March 24, 2012. In less than six months Andrew Samtoy says the Cash Mob movement has spread to at least 170 different cities in the U.S. and cities in Canada and Italy and all planned on taking part in Saturday's International Cash Mob Day. REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk

Customers line the aisles and hold up their money as they participate in a ''cash mob'' at a small locally owned organic store called Nature's Bin, in Lakewood, Ohio March 24, 2012. In less than six months Andrew Samtoy says the Cash Mob movement has spread to at least 170 different cities in the U.S. and cities in Canada and Italy and all planned on taking part in Saturday's International Cash Mob Day.

Credit: Reuters/Aaron Josefczyk

By Kim Palmer

CLEVELAND, Ohio | Sat Mar 24, 2012 10:45pm EDT

CLEVELAND, Ohio (Reuters) - Flash mobs have been blamed as a factor in looting during urban riots. But now a group of online activists is harnessing social media like Twitter and Facebook to get consumers to spend at locally owned stores in cities around the world in so-called Cash Mobs.

At the first International Cash Mob day on Saturday, wallet- toting activists gathered in as many as 200 mobs in the United States and Europe, with the aim of spending at least $20 a piece in locally owned businesses, according to the concept's founder, Cleveland lawyer Andrew Samtoy.

"It's my baby but I'm not a helicopter parent," Samtoy told a crowd of more than 100 people gathered Saturday at Nature's Bin, a grocery store that specializes in local and organic food, in Lakewood, an inner ring suburb of Cleveland.

The 32-year-old dreamed up the Cash Mob idea last year after spending time in Britain during summer riots that unleashed looting in cities including London, Manchester and Birmingham. His first Cash Mob, in Cleveland last November, brought around 40 shoppers packing in to the Visible Voice book shop, on a welcome spree in which each of them spent on average $40 within an hour-and-a-half. "We are kind of slow in November so I wasn't going to turn it down," said the independent book store's owner, Dave Ferrante, who estimated he made about eight times his normal take on that day.

"We have a very limited marketing budget and it brought in people who wouldn't have been here. It sounds corny but we really build a base one customer at a time," he added.

After the original Cash Mob in Cleveland, Samtoy's Facebook friends in other cities picked up on the idea and organized their own gatherings.

Samtoy can rattle off a list of friends from Los Angeles to Boston, from church camp to law school, who were the ‘early adapters' of the Cash Mob phenomenon.

MEET PEOPLE, SPEND AND HAVE FUN

As well as the spree in Cleveland on Saturday, gatherings also took place in Kansas City and New York. Reuters was unable to verify independently if community shoppers splurged in other U.S. cities and worldwide.

Samtoy's approach is to target one location bringing as many people to one site as possible but other cities have taken a different approach. "There is no science to it and there are also no hard and fast rules," he explains.

He told the group gathered in Cleveland that he only has three rules or goals as he explains them: "You have to spend at least $20, meet three people you never met before and have fun."

Cash Mob participant Amy Marke, from Independence, Ohio, came with her cousin because she wanted to support local businesses and was drawn to this event because the store does vocational training for disabled adults.

"I never do anything spur of the moment or crazy like this but I heard about it and had to come," she said. Kelly Ziegler, co-founder of the Cash Mob movement in Kansas City, Missouri, told Reuters activists planned flash spending sprees in nine different locations around the metro area on Saturday. "Kansas City is really spread out. We have a really strong following on Facebook and there were calls for cash mobs at all of these areas. There are so many shops to hit we thought 'why not hit a lot all at once?'"

"I grew up in a family with a small business. I know these small businesses can't afford a million dollar ad campaign. When you spend $1 at these local stores that stays in the community," she added.

And in Brooklyn, New York, activists noted how easy they are to organize. "It really doesn't take a lot of effort," said Park Slope Cash Mob organizer, Amy Cortese, author of ‘Locavesting: The Revolution in Local Investing and How to Profit From it.'

With the large amount of locally-owned business and culture of entrepreneurship in Brooklyn she says it only made sense to get behind the Cash Mob movement. "It is surprising that no one had thought to do this before," she added.

(Editing by Tim Gaynor and David Bailey)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Borat anthem played by mistake at medals ceremony

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Borat anthem played by mistake at medals ceremony
Mar 24th 2012, 08:22

British actor Sacha Baron Cohen, in character as a Kazakh TV reporter known as 'Borat', holds a boomerang and can of beer in Sydney November 13, 2006 during the Australian premiere of his film ''Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan''.

Credit: Reuters/David Gray (AUSTRALIA)

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Friday, March 23, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Danish lottery winners go from riches to rags

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Danish lottery winners go from riches to rags
Mar 23rd 2012, 16:02

COPENHAGEN | Fri Mar 23, 2012 12:02pm EDT

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Three hundred Danes who thought they'd won enough money on the lottery to last them several lifetimes were brought down to earth with a bump minutes later when they learnt their actual prizes wouldn't even pay for a weekend break.

State lottery company Danske Spil blamed "human error" for a glitch that held out the promise for part of Tuesday of jackpots ranging from an astronomical 1 billion Danish crowns to a mind-blowing 280 billion ($49.7 billion).

The shamefaced lottery firm shattered the 302 winners' dreams by email an hour and a half later.

"All won prizes but not billions of crowns," Thomas Rorsig, spokesman for Danske Spil, said. "The correct winnings .. were typically 200, 300 or 400 crowns (around $35 to $70)".

Rorsig said most had taken the bad news on the chin, though a few were "very angry" and demanded their original prize. Danske Spil was considering whether to boost the payouts by way of compensation, he added.

He said the mishap was caused by "human error" when employees at Danske Spil were preparing letters to winners of Eurojackpot, a game with a large payouts though nowhere near the billions announced.

Nothing like it had ever happened at Danske Spil, he said, "and I hope it never does again."

($1 = 5.6351 Danish crowns)

(Reporting by John Acher; Editing by John Stonestreet)

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Thursday, March 22, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Norwegian gains instant fame as taxpayers' everyman

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Norwegian gains instant fame as taxpayers' everyman
Mar 22nd 2012, 19:21

By Victoria Klesty and Joachim Dagenborg

OSLO | Thu Mar 22, 2012 3:21pm EDT

OSLO (Reuters) - A 36-year-old business consultant became Norway's best known taxpayer this week after the government accidentally displayed his records to everyone who logged onto its tax website.

Kenneth Belcovski's name is on every Norwegian taxpayer's lips this week after a glitch on the Norwegian government's 2011 tax website redirected people logging on to check their declarations to a page detailing Belcovski's tax details.

Belcovski's social security number, earnings, mortgage payments and the kinds of other juicy details that will have identity thieves rubbing their hands together were on display.

Although Norwegians are able to check online some of the income details of public figures -- including the king and the prime minister -- the recent breach goes far beyond what is considered acceptable.

Belcovski is now known among Norway's five million inhabitants as "Altinn-Kenneth" - "Altinn" being the tax authority's website.

"Today we are all Kenneth," has become a popular catchprase.

In total some 1,500-2,000 Norwegians who logged on to the system found themselves redirected to Belcovski's tax page.

Belcovski declined to discuss the incident when he was contacted by Reuters.

"I don't have anything else to add to what has been reported," he said.

Tax authorities, who have apologised for the mistake, have suspended access to the tax website until the problem is fixed.

"We are in dialogue with the person, and will do our best to assist him," a Tax Office spokeswoman said.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Messi's footwork part of anti-Syria conspiracy: TV

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Messi's footwork part of anti-Syria conspiracy: TV
Mar 22nd 2012, 19:25

By Oliver Holmes

BEIRUT | Thu Mar 22, 2012 10:08am EDT

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Barcelona footballers don't just have a slick passing game, they can also secretly indicate arms smuggling routes to Syria, a pro-government Syrian television channel claimed this week.

Without a hint of irony, Addounia TV superimposed a map of Syria on a screen to show how Lionel Messi and his team-mates, representing smugglers, had kicked a ball, representing a weapons shipment, into Syria from Lebanon.

The subtle signals to rebels were transmitted when Barcelona played Real Madrid in December, said the channel, which is owned by a cousin of President Bashar al-Assad. It did not trouble viewers by revealing Barcelona's motives for the exploit.

"First we see how the guns are brought from Lebanon," the presenter comments as one player passes the ball. "Then they cross into Homs and give the weapons to other terrorists in Abu Kamal," he added, referring to rebel strongholds in Syria.

Messi's final flick indicates the successful handover of the weapons to their destination in eastern Syria, he said.

Bizarre it may be, but paranoid conspiracy theories are common coin in the deeply divided and conflict-ridden state.

Take a documentary aired by Addounia in December on how French and American film directors had purportedly helped build mock-up Syrian city squares in Qatar to enable Doha-based Al Jazeera TV to film actors staging phony anti-Assad protests.

Such fantasies feed into Assad's narrative that the year-long unrest against him is all a foreign-orchestrated plot.

"We will defeat this conspiracy," he declared in January, pledging to crush what he has cast as terrorism and sabotage.

"Regional and international sides have tried to destabilize the country," the former ophthalmologist said. "We will not be lenient with those who work with outsiders against the country."

Assad, 46, has indeed earned himself some foreign enemies.

Western powers and the Arab League have told him to step aside in a peaceful transition, while Saudi Arabia and Qatar have gone further by calling for Syrian rebels to be armed.

Syria expert Joshua Landis of Oklahoma University says conspiracy theories reflect the mistrust between ruling minority Alawites and majority Sunni Muslims who spearhead the revolt.

"How can you expect them to be any less conspiratorial? The sectarian lines of hatred are growing and (Assad) thinks that everyone is a traitor," he said. "This has plagued the country since it was created."

MEDIA WAR

The United Nations says more than 8,000 people have been killed in the uprising, which started peacefully but has turned violent with daily clashes between rebels and security forces.

Paranoia is compounded by the media environment in which Syrians can watch Al Jazeera, which often shows graphic footage of casualties inflicted by security forces, or state-sponsored television, which portrays rebels as blood-crazed terrorists.

In the old city of Damascus, Assad loyalists have laid a poster with the hated Al Jazeera emblem on it along a main walkway for shoppers to trample on.

The uprising has spawned a media war, with both sides fighting to sway public sentiment through online propaganda and conspiracy theories, consigning truth to an ever greyer area.

Britain's Guardian newspaper said last week it had obtained a trove of emails, via anti-Assad activists, in which the president takes advice from Iran on countering the revolt and his wife Asma spends tens of thousands of dollars on internet shopping sprees while Syria descends into bloodletting.

Within hours, Assad loyalists had uploaded videos on YouTube saying that the emails were faked by revolutionaries.

"So these are supposed 'leaks' from the President & First Lady?" a group calling itself the Syrian Truth Network sneered in one video. "Try again later, Guardian."

The government and its opponents traded blame when dozens of people were found dead with their hands tied behind their backs in the city of Homs on March 10. Each side lit up Twitter and Facebook with detailed theories. The facts remain unclear.

Syria's state news agency website SANA said terrorists had killed civilians and then mutilated their corpses, staging a government massacre to vilify Assad's forces. Opposition activists accused Assad loyalists of carrying out the killings.

Independent journalists have repeatedly been denied access into Syria, making it hard to assess conflicting reports.

Many Syrians are befuddled by the claims and counter-claims. "We might not believe pro-government television, but we don't trust the satellite channels either," a Damascus resident said.

(Editing by Alistair Lyon)

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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Pink-haired student invited back to school

Reuters: Oddly Enough
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Pink-haired student invited back to school
Mar 21st 2012, 17:08

Delaware middle school student Brianna Moore stands in front of the mirror with pink hair at her residence in Newark, Delaware March 20, 2012. Moore was sent home from school for having pink hair that her father helped her dye after she improved her grades.

Credit: Reuters/Tim Shaffer

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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: 400-pound gorilla escapes, bites zookeeper at Buffalo Zoo

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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400-pound gorilla escapes, bites zookeeper at Buffalo Zoo
Mar 20th 2012, 22:04

Koga, a 400-pound adult male gorilla, is seen in this undated handout photo from the Buffalo Zoo released on March 19, 2012. Koga escaped his cage at the Buffalo Zoo on Monday, biting a female zookeeper before being tranquilized and captured in what a SWAT team leader called, ''the scariest thing I've ever done.'' Zoo officials said Koga, a 24-year-old silverback gorilla, took advantage of an unlocked door in his living quarters around 11 a.m. and slipped into the space behind it, used by zoo personnel but closed to the public. REUTERS/The Buffalo Zoo/Handout

Koga, a 400-pound adult male gorilla, is seen in this undated handout photo from the Buffalo Zoo released on March 19, 2012. Koga escaped his cage at the Buffalo Zoo on Monday, biting a female zookeeper before being tranquilized and captured in what a SWAT team leader called, ''the scariest thing I've ever done.'' Zoo officials said Koga, a 24-year-old silverback gorilla, took advantage of an unlocked door in his living quarters around 11 a.m. and slipped into the space behind it, used by zoo personnel but closed to the public.

Credit: Reuters/The Buffalo Zoo/Handout

By Neale Gulley

BUFFALO, New York | Tue Mar 20, 2012 6:04pm EDT

BUFFALO, New York (Reuters) - A 400-pound adult male gorilla escaped his cage at the Buffalo Zoo on Monday, biting a female zookeeper before being tranquilized and captured in what a SWAT team leader called, "the scariest thing I've ever done."

Zoo officials said Koga, a 24-year-old silverback gorilla, took advantage of an unlocked door in his living quarters on Monday morning and slipped into the space behind it, used by zoo personnel but closed to the public.

A keeper who has cared for Koga since he arrived in 2007 was bitten on her hand and calf, in what officials said was an act of excitement rather than aggression.

"He was probably just as surprised coming face to face with her as she was with him," Buffalo Zoo President Donna Fernandes said.

The keeper, whose name was not released, took refuge inside the habitat of a female gorilla and her newborn baby, Fernandes said. The keeper had a good relationship with the mother who, like Koga, is a West Lowland gorilla, native to West Africa and the Congo River Basin, she said.

Meanwhile, police sent in the SWAT team to secure the area while a veterinarian used a handheld blow pipe to sedate Koga through a porthole.

Visitors to the zoo were moved indoors and stayed there throughout the roughly 45-minute ordeal -- the zoo's first escape, Fernandes said.

"That was the scariest thing I've ever done in my career," said SWAT team captain Mark Maraschiello.

"It's a 400 pound animal that's capable of who knows what. He could rip your arm out of its socket," Maraschiello said.

The sedated gorilla was dragged by zoo staff back to his habitat once the drugs took hold, about 15 minutes after they were administered.

The keeper's decision to lock herself inside the separate habitat likely kept her from being further harmed, according to officials at the zoo. Several locked doors kept Koga from running amok through the zoo and beyond.

Fernandes promised an investigation into how Koga escaped.

"I'm sure it was very dramatic for (the zoo keeper) and for all the keepers. It was pins and needles," she said.

The wounded zookeeper was undergoing an evaluation at a nearby hospital but her injuries were not considered serious.

Koga was born at the Bronx Zoo in New York City and transferred in 1994 to the Memphis Zoo before landing in Buffalo. Fernandes said he has no history of unusual aggression.

(Editing By Barbara Goldberg and Greg McCune)

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