Monday, April 30, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: "Octomom" files for bankruptcy in California

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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"Octomom" files for bankruptcy in California
May 1st 2012, 02:49

California Octuplets mom Nadya Suleman has a new Web site (www.thenadyasulemanfamily.com) shown in this screenshot taken on February 11, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/www.thenadyasulemanfamily.com

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Bomb-sniffing dogs enlisted to stem Florida python invasion

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Bomb-sniffing dogs enlisted to stem Florida python invasion
Apr 30th 2012, 20:59

By Barbara Liston

ORLANDO | Mon Apr 30, 2012 4:59pm EDT

ORLANDO (Reuters) - Some bomb-sniffing dogs trained to help fight terrorism are turning their olfactory attention toward a different scourge: Burmese pythons in Florida's Everglades National Park.

The dogs are members of "EcoDogs," a three-year-old collaboration at Alabama's Auburn University between the science departments and the school's Canine Detection Research Institute, which trains dogs to detect explosives.

"The dogs are really, really good," said Christina Romagosa, a biologist at Auburn.

She said in a test of python detection in south Florida, the dogs could cover a search area 2.5 times faster than a person.

"People can only see that the snake is there if they can see the snake. The dogs can smell the snake even if it's not visually apparent to us," she said.

Todd Steury, an Auburn conservation biologist and co-founder of the project, said many of the EcoDogs were found temperamentally unsuitable for indoor explosives work but thrive outdoors searching for ecological targets.

Steury estimated training a new dog to detect a scent takes six to 10 weeks. Training for each additional scent takes "about 10 minutes. You can do it by accident if you're not careful," he said, by inadvertently rewarding the dog for something you weren't looking for, which then becomes part of the dog's repertoire.

Two black Labrador retrievers from EcoDogs, Ivy and Jake, went on assignment in 2010 to demonstrate to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers their potential usefulness in battling the python problem in the 2,358-square-mile (6,100-sq-km) Everglades park.

UPSETTING BALANCE

Environmentalists fear the pythons are upsetting the native ecological balance of South Florida. The invasion is generally attributed to both irresponsible pet owners dumping their snakes and 1992's Hurricane Andrew, which destroyed an adjacent exotic snake warehouse.

In controlled experiments, the EcoDogs success rate in finding pythons at the park was 75-92 percent, Romagosa said. The dogs helped researchers trap 19 pythons, including a pregnant snake with 19 eggs, according to an EcoDog report.

Linda Friar, spokeswoman for the Everglades National Park, said the snakes are so thoroughly adapted to the Everglades, and the park is so wild and inaccessible that there is no expectation of eradicating them, even with the dogs' help. The best hope is to prevent the pythons from spreading and be prepared for future invasions of new exotics, she said.

Romagosa said analysis is underway to determine whether the dogs can play a role in a rapid response team and whether funding their role , in a cost-cutting era is possible.

"The dogs would be useful in a scenario where we might not be sure the python has moved on beyond a certain range. The dogs can give us an idea of whether the species is present or not," she said.

Meanwhile, Ivy retired and was adopted, Steury said. Jake switched to a new project assessing the deer population in Alabama, looking for fawns and deer antlers.

Other EcoDogs are rooting out a tree fungus damaging forests in the state, and locating various skunk, bear and other animal populations based on their scat, or droppings.

"Pretty much a dog can be trained to find anything," Romagosa said.

SMART DOGS NOT THE BEST HUNTERS

Three years of working with the dogs disproved a common misconception that a smart dog is best, added Steury.

"The worst dog is a really smart but kinda lazy dog. Because that dog is always trying to figure out how he can cheat. Once you reward him for cheating, he's done. He'll never work again. The best dogs are the ones that are kind of dumb but just work really hard. We can train those dogs to work all day long and they're the best detection dogs," Steury said.

And the dogs enjoy the work so much that ones like Kasey, who searches for weasel, bobcat and gray fox scat, eventually lose interest in the reward, he said.

"She finds a scat, you'll give her the ball, she plays with it for a really short time, then she's back to the search. She likes the search," Steury said.

(Editing by David Adams and Eric Walsh)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Artist Lucian Freud leaves $156 million in will - paper

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Artist Lucian Freud leaves $156 million in will - paper
Apr 30th 2012, 18:04

Impressionist art expert David Norman holds artist Lucian Freud's ''Self Portrait'' at Sotheby's before its preview exhibition of highlights from its upcoming London sale of Impressionist Modern and Contemporary art in New York January 10, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Merkel's old Volkswagen sold at auction, second time lucky

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Merkel's old Volkswagen sold at auction, second time lucky
Apr 30th 2012, 18:28

Mon Apr 30, 2012 2:28pm EDT

(Reuters) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel's old Volkswagen wasn't worth the 130,000 euros ($172,100) bogus online bidders kited it to earlier this month, but the first woman chancellor's 1990 Golf finally went to the highest bidder on Monday for 10,165 euros.

Successful bidder Dirk Fricke, who bought the car for his company Frisch-Licht, told Reuters he was happy with what he saw as a low price tag, though he wasn't a fan of Merkel's.

"We're politically totally neutral," he said by telephone. "It was just about keeping the car in Germany. A car like this can't be lost to Germany, like the Pope's car years ago."

In a similar auction in 2005, a U.S. bidder paid nearly $250,000 for a 21-year-old gray 1990 Volkswagen Golf that once belonged to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who later became Pope Benedict.

A previous attempt to sell Merkel's car earlier this month failed after online auction platform eBay noticed the offers came from fake bidders, prompting a second auction, in which bidders had to pre-register and identify themselves.

The seller, an anonymous Berlin resident, had advertised the vehicle on eBay with 190,000 km (118,000 miles) on the clock as "Angela's Merkel first Western car: unique collector's item".

The posting included a copy of the registration papers and photographs of it parked in front of the chancellor's office.

Merkel bought the Golf, a white 1990 model worth a few hundred euros today, about a month before German reunification on October 3, 1990.

At the time, she had just shifted from the East German opposition political movement Democratic Awakening to the eastern faction of the Christian Democrats.

She drove her Golf until entering Chancellor Helmut Kohl's cabinet as a minister in 1994. It was eventually sold in 1996.

Nowadays Merkel rides around in an armored Audi but media reports say her husband still drives a Volkswagen, which literally translated means "people's car".

(Reporting By Elisa Oddone and Annika Breidthardt; Editing by Michael Roddy)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Berlin yodel school revamping alpine sound of music

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Berlin yodel school revamping alpine sound of music
Apr 30th 2012, 17:52

A participant holds his song sheet during a yodel workshop at Berlin's Kreuzberg district March 31, 2012. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

1 of 2. A participant holds his song sheet during a yodel workshop at Berlin's Kreuzberg district March 31, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch

By Alice Baghdjian

BERLIN | Mon Apr 30, 2012 1:52pm EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - The distinctive warble of yodeling strikes a dissonant note in the middle of a gritty Berlin district that is home to a thriving Turkish population and peppered with trendy bars.

But if you walk down the street from the kebab shops and anarchist graffiti scrawled on the pavement, you will catch the mellifluous sounds usually heard in Swiss Alps -- a noise that grows louder when you enter Doreen Kutze's hairdressing salon.

Instead of perms and highlights, Kutze rents out the space to offer wannabe yodellers lessons in the art of alpine singing.

"It's good to be able to offer this to people here in Berlin, so they can try it out without having to travel all the way to Switzerland," Kutzke said.

Once used by alpine cattle herders to communicate across the open meadows and deep valleys of the Alps, yodeling is usually associated more with the fusty repertoire of the Sound of Music's von Trapp family than the edgy music scene of Berlin.

But the 37-year-old is coaxing yodeling down from the snow capped peaks and into the urban jungle of the German capital, in the hope of stripping alpine singing of its kitschy image.

"Yodeling used to mean standing in the middle of some marketplace in a dirndl (traditional German woman's dress) during a folk festival," she said.

"I do a lot to try to work against yodeling clichés."

"FILTHY SOUND"

Furnished with an old-fashioned wood burner and decorated with pine cones, the hairdressing salon where Kutzke holds her workshop is reminiscent of a cozy alpine lodge -- save for the barber's chair.

Kutzke draws the curtains across the huge window front to stop local children from staring, before the pre-yodeling warm up of stretches begins, interrupted only briefly by a passer by wanting to make a hair appointment.

There is enough demand from Berliners to learn the technique that her workshop for beginners runs every month, with up to 10 participants, Kutzke said.

"It's not tiring exactly, to yodel, but I feel hoarse," said one participant named Michaela, during one of the regular breaks to allow the budding yodellers to rest their vocal chords. She said she had read about the yodeling school in a newspaper and had always wanted to try it out.

The remainder of the group were unwilling to talk, seemingly embarrassed to be caught yodeling in a hairdressers' for three hours on a sunny Saturday afternoon.

It took a while for the troupe of mostly middle-aged yodellers to overcome their shyness and bellow "yo" and "hee" at the top of their lungs as they slouched awkwardly in a circle.

"Children pick up yodeling a lot faster than adults because they can mimic and are so uninhibited, they have no fear," Kutzke said.

The tricky technique requires quick alternation between shrill falsetto and rough chest voice. A good singing voice can often hamper learning how to yodel, Kutzke said.

"People who sing well can have problems because they are just not used to making those sounds," she said.

"It sounds a bit like a donkey. It's not a pretty sound, it's really quite filthy."

Kutzke, however, can both sing and yodel, and has showcased her talents on German national television and in clubs.

Under the performing name Kutzkelina, the singer experiments with yodeling and dub music - a genre of emphatic bass beats that grew out of reggae.

The result is a brand of yodeling you can dance to and that recasts the trilling song for the warehouses, power plants and concrete basements that house Berlin's club scene.

"The echo element in dub fits well with the echo in yodeling. Single phrases and echoes are used and then sampled," Kutzke said.

"But yodeling can also be sung to jazz and classical music -- there are really no limits to it. I want to show the diversity," she said.

It's a message she tries to impart to her students, whom she guides through the many facets of yodeling, from country music to a yodel-lay-ee-oo-ing rendition of "You Are My Sunshine", a song made famous by Bing Crosby.

EVIL SPIRITS

Aside from its musical versatility, yodeling also serves other purposes, far removed from its alpine form.

The cry is used by African tribes to ward off evil spirits, Kutzke said.

"The idea was that wherever a yodeler was singing there would be no room for demons," she explained.

To hear the hollering of five yodellers in the small hairdressing salon, it is easy to understand why -- it is impossible to yodel quietly.

For the urban yodeler, the volume of the technique can be a stress buster for the strains of modern life.

"Yodeling can get rid of stress and it can really put you in a good mood because adults are rarely so loud," Kutzke said.

"In yodeling there's this 'Aha!' factor, when you realize 'I can sing loudly -- I'm allowed to sing loudly!'"

But this aspect of yodeling can also be a curse - suitable practicing space for yodellers is hard to come by in the crowded city.

Kutzke recommends her students practice in the closed-off space of their car to avoid annoying others with their yodeling endeavors -- if they want, that is.

"Some people just decide they don't care about their neighbors," she said.

(Reporting by Alice Baghdjian, editing by Paul)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Australia billionaire to launch "unsinkable" Titanic

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Australia billionaire to launch "unsinkable" Titanic
Apr 30th 2012, 17:54

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A general view of the dock in East Belfast where the Titanic was built. January 17, 2012. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton

A general view of the dock in East Belfast where the Titanic was built. January 17, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Cathal McNaughton

CANBERRA | Mon Apr 30, 2012 1:54pm EDT

CANBERRA (Reuters) - An Australian billionaire announced plans on Monday to build an "unsinkable" version of the Titanic, 100 years after the original sank after hitting an iceberg.

Titanic II is expected to make its maiden voyage from England to North America, the old Titanic route, in late 2016.

"It is going to be designed so it won't sink," mining and tourism tycoon Clive Palmer told reporters. "It will be designed as a modern ship with all the technology to ensure that doesn't happen."

The original Titanic, the largest liner in world when it was launched and dubbed "virtually unsinkable" at the time, sank after hitting an iceberg on April 15, 1912, killing 1,517 passengers and crew.

Palmer said his new shipping company, Blue Star Line Pty Ltd, had signed a memorandum of understanding with the Chinese state-owned company CSC Jinling Shipyard to build Titanic II. The original ship was operated by the White Star Line.

The design work had started for the new Titanic, which will have the same dimension as its old version with 840 rooms and nine decks.

(Reporting by Maggie Lu Yueyang; Editing by Nick Macfie)

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We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/

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Friday, April 27, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Report of Mexican woman expecting nine babies a hoax

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Report of Mexican woman expecting nine babies a hoax
Apr 28th 2012, 00:04

MEXICO CITY | Fri Apr 27, 2012 8:04pm EDT

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Reports that a woman in northern Mexico is pregnant with nine babies are a hoax, health authorities said on Friday.

Mexico's main broadcaster Televisa and top daily newspapers ran stories about a woman expecting nonuplets late on Thursday after she provided welfare officials with supposed evidence of the multiple pregnancy, including an ultrasound video, said a spokesman for the health ministry of Coahuila state.

Following the news, local health authorities offered assistance to the woman, who was identified as 32-year-old Karla Perez from Villa Arteaga, east of the state capital Saltillo.

Reports said Perez had conceived the babies after receiving fertility treatment, but tests carried out by doctors on Friday revealed she was not even pregnant. It was not clear why the mother of three had made the claims, the spokesman added.

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Getting married in South Korea? Bring a lot of cash!

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Getting married in South Korea? Bring a lot of cash!
Apr 27th 2012, 20:26

Newlyweds give three cheers during a mass wedding ceremony at Sun Moon University in Asan, south of Seoul October 14, 2009. REUTERS/Segye Times /Handout

Newlyweds give three cheers during a mass wedding ceremony at Sun Moon University in Asan, south of Seoul October 14, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Segye Times /Handout

By Eunhye Shin

SEOUL | Fri Apr 27, 2012 4:26pm EDT

SEOUL (Reuters) - The Beatles may have sung "all you need is love," but in South Korea a couple wanting to get married also needs cash, a lot of it - nearly $200,000, or more than four times the average annual income.

The sky-high costs stem from a combination of cultural traditions that mandate expensive pre-wedding gifts between families, such as mink coats and diamond rings, along with a decades-old custom that the groom must fork over money to provide a home.

The average cost for a wedding in 2011 rose about 270 percent from 1999, while the inflation during the same period rose 45.5 percent. Total costs far outstripped the average annual household income at around 48.3 million Korean won ($42,400), according to government data.

Thus, young couples seeking to unite in wedded bliss are forced to borrow from parents or take out loans. With candid discussions of money a cultural taboo in Korea, many are reluctant to speak about the high cost of exchanging vows.

"Korean society is very tightly knit, and people here are very concerned about how others view them," said Harris H. Kim, a sociology assistant professor at Ewha Womans University.

"The wedding works as a status symbol, like a marker of where you stand in the society," he added.

One 27-year-old woman working in the financial industry, who like many others asked to remain anonymous, said her parents paid nearly 90 percent of her 140 million won ($122,900) wedding costs.

"We had to use our parents' money, which probably came from the sacrifice of their own retirement savings," she said.

A 30-year old kindergarten teacher who would only give her surname, Kim, said her husband, whose income is 40 million won, took out a loan for 45 million won in addition to financial aid from their parents for a wedding with 600 guests. The couple didn't know half the people, who were their parents' friends.

Gift-giving also takes a hefty chunk of the cash. Traditionally, the bride and groom's families have exchanged gifts - good silk for new clothes and simple jewelry - as a way of thanking the other family. But these days the silk has turned into fur or luxury handbags, while the jewelry has morphed into a full set of gems.

But the biggest part of the wedding budget comes from soaring housing prices, according to data from couple.net, a matchmaking company. The money spent by happy couples for housing last year was 2.5 times higher than in 2000, making up nearly 70 percent of the total cost of a wedding.

"I've had many customers in the last five years who directly asked for a spouse who can at least afford to rent a house," said Sungmi Lee, a manager at couple.net.

Although most couples choose to spend the money, many are less than happy about it.

"None of that expensive jewelry is actually useful or beautiful, and you know you'll just regret using the money for that after you're actually married and need money for your married life," said Kisun Lee, a 29-year-old consultant. ($1 = 1138.6000 Korean won)

(Reporting by Eunhye Shin, editing by Elaine Lies and Bob Tourtellotte)

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Thursday, April 26, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Mexican woman pregnant with nine babies: report

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Mexican woman pregnant with nine babies: report
Apr 27th 2012, 05:18

MEXICO CITY | Fri Apr 27, 2012 1:18am EDT

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - A Mexican woman is pregnant with nine babies - six girls and three boys - the country's main broadcaster Televisa reported on Thursday night.

The woman was identified as Karla Vanessa Perez of the northeastern state of Coahuila, which borders Texas. She is currently being treated at a hospital in the state capital Saltillo, the broadcaster said in the report.

Perez, whose age was not given, had fertility treatment leading to the multiple pregnancy, it said.

State-owned news agency Notimex also reported the pregnancy, saying Perez was due to give birth on May 20.

"It's very early to think of names for the babies," Perez told Notimex. "First I hope that everything goes well."

The successful delivery of nonuplets would be one of the highest multiple births ever recorded.

In 2009, a woman in California gave birth to octuplets, sparking worldwide media attention.

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Man jailed for smuggling iguana meat into United States

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Man jailed for smuggling iguana meat into United States
Apr 27th 2012, 00:24

By Tim Gaynor

Thu Apr 26, 2012 8:24pm EDT

(Reuters) - A Las Vegas man who tried to sneak 115 oven-ready iguanas into the United States from Mexico has been sentenced to two years in prison for illegally importing the reptiles, authorities said on Thursday.

A federal judge ordered Eliodoro Soria Fonseca, 38, to serve 24 months in prison, the U.S. Attorney's office for the Southern District of California said.

Fonseca was arrested as he tried to cross into California through the Otay Mesa port of entry, south of San Diego, last June with the iguana meat packed in coolers.

A search found the beheaded, skinned, and deboned bodies of 115 green iguanas weighing 159 pounds (72 kg) hidden beneath fish in the coolers.

"According to admissions in his guilty plea, the defendant imported the iguana meat for the purpose of serving it as food to humans," the attorney's office said in a press release.

Green iguanas are eaten in Mexico and Central America. They are enjoyed in stews or roasted and served in tacos or flautas, usually with condiments. Some recipes recommend parboiling the reptiles first.

But iguanas are also regulated by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). While they are not endangered, CITES say they may become threatened if trade is not tightly controlled.

Fonseca, who said he obtained the iguanas in Nayarit in western Mexico, had neither an import license from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service nor any CITES permit from Mexico's wildlife management authority.

According to sentencing documents, a researcher working for an iguana conservation program in Mexico concluded that removing more than 100 iguanas from the Nayarit area essentially "means that the local population was technically wiped out."

The sentencing hearing noted the risk of food poisoning from iguana meat, which prosecutors said frequently carries salmonella bacteria.

(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Xavier Briand)

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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: HIV-positive man fights charge that saliva was deadly

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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HIV-positive man fights charge that saliva was deadly
Apr 25th 2012, 20:53

By Dan Wiessner

ALBANY, New York | Wed Apr 25, 2012 4:53pm EDT

ALBANY, New York (Reuters) - A gay-rights group is urging New York state's high court to overturn the conviction of an HIV-positive man whose saliva was found to be a "dangerous instrument" in a biting case.

David Plunkett was sentenced in 2007 to 10 years in prison for aggravated assault, a felony that requires the use of a "dangerous instrument."

Plunkett argued unsuccessfully the charge could not be sustained because HIV cannot be transmitted through saliva. The Court of Appeals, New York's top court, will hear Plunkett's case on Thursday.

Lambda Legal, a national group that advocates for gays and lesbians and people with HIV, argued in a court brief filed this week that upholding Plunkett's conviction would further stigmatize people living with HIV and AIDS.

"Clearly, the trial court here erroneously believed that HIV could be transmitted by saliva," the Lambda Legal brief reads.

In 2006, the staff at a medical clinic in Ilion, about 70 miles east of Syracuse, called police to complain that Plunkett was causing a disturbance. Police said he punched and bit one of the responding officers, according to court documents.

Herkimer County Court Judge Patrick Kirk in 2007 denied Plunkett's motion to dismiss the aggravated assault charge, ruling that while Plunkett's teeth could not be considered a dangerous instrument, his saliva could.

Plunkett pleaded guilty and was given a 10-year prison sentence. In 2010, an appeals court found that by pleading guilty, Plunkett had forfeited his right to challenge any trial court error.

Plunkett and Lambda Legal argue that under New York law, only substances that are "readily capable of causing death or other serious physical injury" can be considered dangerous instruments.

A number of studies have found saliva does not contain sufficient concentrations of HIV to transmit the virus to other people. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "contact with saliva alone has never been shown to result in transmission of HIV."

Plunkett's attorney, Audrey Baron Dunning, argued in an appellate brief that upholding Plunkett's conviction could "open the door for enhanced prosecution of persons with many forms of illness, contagious disease or condition."

The Herkimer County District Attorney's office did not return a call seeking comment.

(Editing by Todd Eastham)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Dutch "burqa ban" may go after government falls

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Dutch "burqa ban" may go after government falls
Apr 25th 2012, 19:17

Protestors demonstrate against the ban on Muslim women wearing the burqa in public in The Hague, November 30, 2006. REUTERS/Toussaint Kluiters

1 of 2. Protestors demonstrate against the ban on Muslim women wearing the burqa in public in The Hague, November 30, 2006.

Credit: Reuters/Toussaint Kluiters

By Gilbert Kreijger

AMSTERDAM | Wed Apr 25, 2012 3:17pm EDT

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - With the collapse of the Dutch centre-right government, the Netherlands may now drop some of its most eye-popping proposals aimed at Muslims and other immigrants and could soften its strong anti-immigration rhetoric.

A ban on Muslim face veils, such as the Arabic-style niqabs that leave the eyes uncovered and Afghan-style burqas that cover the face with a cloth grid, is less likely to go ahead after the government collapsed at the weekend.

The minority Liberal-Christian Democrat coalition's alliance with Geert Wilders' Freedom Party (PVV) fell apart when they could not reach agreement on crucial budget cuts. An election has been called for September 12.

In return for Wilders' support in parliament, the government had proposed a number of laws, including bans on Muslim face veils and on dual nationality.

If it appears clear that there is no longer a parliamentary majority in favor of such proposals, they could soon be taken "off the table", said Maurits Berger, professor of Islam in the contemporary West at Leiden University.

"These policies were driven by PVV but also by this government in order to maintain their relationship with PVV. They have turned Holland into a pariah," Berger said.

"These are the legacy of the PVV. Face veils, dual nationality - both these proposals have not really been thought through."

The Christian Democrats will no longer support a proposal to ban dual nationality, a source within the party told Reuters. The party also feels uneasy about the face veil ban, Dutch daily De Volkskrant said.

Many opposition parties, including Labor, Democrats 66 and GreenLeft, had already opposed the proposed face veil and dual nationality bans, leaving the proposals without majority support in parliament if the Christian Democrats don't back them.

Now that the government has fallen, Dutch Immigration Minister Gerd Leers will no longer push for issues such as the need to make it harder for immigrants to bring in other family members, his spokesman said.

Over the past decade there has been a pronounced shift in the Netherlands towards tougher immigration policies, pushed by politicians like Pim Fortuyn and, more recently, by Wilders.

Wilders' tough stance on immigrants, particularly Muslims and more recently those from European Union member countries including Poland, have backfired on the Netherlands.

Leers tried to mend ties with Poland last month after Wilders, who requires 24-hour protection because he has received death threats, launched a website targeting workers from eastern and central Europe.

His website drew criticism from the European Commission and Parliament as well as from countries including Poland, Bulgaria and Romania but Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte declined to speak out publicly against it.

(Additional reporting by Sara Webb; Editing by Alessandra Rizzo)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Police arrest 6-year-old who threatens, kicks principal

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
Police arrest 6-year-old who threatens, kicks principal
Apr 25th 2012, 19:22

By Susan Guyett

INDIANAPOLIS | Wed Apr 25, 2012 3:22pm EDT

INDIANAPOLIS (Reuters) - Police in a small Indiana town hauled a six-year-old from his elementary school and charged him with battery and intimidation after he kicked and threatened a principal, police said on Wednesday.

The incident followed one earlier in April where police handcuffed a 6-year-old girl who was screaming and crying and had injured a principal and damaged property at an elementary school in Milledgeville, Georgia. She was not charged.

The Indiana student, who had been suspended from school recently for biting and hitting a staff member, was arrested April 18 at Hendricks Elementary School in Shelbyville, which is about 30 miles southeast of Indianapolis.

"This was not an isolated incident," Shelbyville Police Lieutenant Michael Turner said.

School officials called police, reporting that the student, who was not identified, had kicked Principal Patrick Lumbley and told him and Assistant Principal Jessica Poe that he was going to kill them, a Shelbyville police report said.

The student was yelling and screaming and lying on the floor of Poe's office when police arrived, the report said.

Poe led the student to a police car where an officer placed him in the back seat, buckled him in and drove him to the police department, the report said. He was not handcuffed.

Turner said he hoped the filing of juvenile charges would help get the child needed help.

"Putting him into the system can open up avenues perhaps the parents don't have," Turner said.

(Reporting by Susan Guyett; Editing by David Bailey and Leslie Gevirtz)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Ukraine government's office art swapped for fakes

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
Ukraine government's office art swapped for fakes
Apr 25th 2012, 16:56

KIEV | Wed Apr 25, 2012 12:56pm EDT

KIEV (Reuters) - Two valuable paintings in the offices of the Ukrainian government have been mysteriously swapped for replicas, the former Soviet republic's Culture Ministry said on Wednesday.

The landscape paintings by 20th century Ukrainian artist Mykola Hlushchenko have been on display in the government building since August 2001.

"Chemical tests have shown that both paintings are replicas of Hlushchenko's works," the ministry said in a statement.

Insurers have valued the paintings at about $144,000 combined.

The ministry said the replicas appeared to be 5-10 years old. Ukraine has had five prime ministers since August 2001, two of whom - current president Viktor Yanukovich and his rival Yulia Tymoshenko - have held the post twice.

(Reporting by Natalya Zinets; Writing by Olzhas Auyezov, editing by Paul Casciato)

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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: New York woman fired after donating kidney to help boss

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
New York woman fired after donating kidney to help boss
Apr 24th 2012, 22:46

By Jonathan Allen

NEW YORK | Tue Apr 24, 2012 6:46pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York woman who donated a kidney so her ailing boss would move up the transplant waiting list says she was fired shortly after the operation, according to a complaint she filed with the New York State Division of Human Rights.

Deborah Stevens said her former employer, Atlantic Automotive Group, discriminated against her over disabilities brought about by complications from the surgery, and she plans to sue the company for lost earnings and damages.

The company, which runs car dealerships on Long Island, said Stevens's complaint is groundless.

"My gal is just a good-natured woman who's trying to save a life and as soon as she did it, everything changed," said Stevens' attorney Lenard Leeds on Tuesday.

"When she wanted to take time off, she was scolded, she was yelled at," he said. "Instead of being sympathetic, they were very hostile towards her."

Stevens, of Hicksville, New York, said she learned that Jacqueline Brucia, who worked at Atlantic Automotive, was in need of a kidney in November 2010. Stevens had worked there as well but at the time had temporarily moved to Florida.

Stevens said she told Brucia she would donate a kidney.

"Brucia declined, but told her, ‘You never know, I may have to take you up on that offer one day,'" the complaint said.

Stevens learned the company would rehire her following her return to New York and not long afterward, Brucia told her a potential donor had not been approved by the hospital and asked if she was still willing to donate.

Stevens now believes Brucia was "grooming (Stevens) to be her ‘back-up plan,'" the complaint said.

Stevens's kidney was not a good match for Brucia, but she agreed to donate it to a stranger in St. Louis, Missouri, setting up a transplant chain that enabled Brucia to receive a better-matched kidney from a donor in San Francisco.

Surgeons removed Stevens's left kidney in August, and she returned to work about a month later. The surgery left her with damaged nerves in her leg, digestive problems and mental health issues, her lawyer said.

At work, Brucia became "curt and dismissive," the complaint said. Stevens said she was berated for taking sick days and forced to relocate to a less desirable office after she complained to human resources about Brucia's behavior.

On April 11, the company fired her, citing performance reasons.

Stevens's lawyer said the complaint filed with the Division of Human Rights last week was a necessary step before a federal lawsuit is filed against Brucia and the company.

Telephone calls to Brucia's home were not answered on Tuesday.

Atlantic Automotive released a statement saying: "It is unfortunate that one employee has used her own generous act to make up a groundless claim.

"Atlantic Auto treated her appropriately and acted honorably and fairly, at every turn," it said.

(Editing By Ellen Wulfhorst and Eric Walsh)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Virginia woman wins $1 million - twice in same lottery

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
Virginia woman wins $1 million - twice in same lottery
Apr 24th 2012, 12:52

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U.S. 100 dollar notes are seen at a bank in this picture illustration in Seoul September 20, 2011. REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won

U.S. 100 dollar notes are seen at a bank in this picture illustration in Seoul September 20, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Lee Jae-Won

Tue Apr 24, 2012 8:52am EDT

(Reuters) - A Virginia woman found out on April 7 she won $1 million in a lottery drawing. And then she won again.

Virginia Fike of Berryville, Virginia, had the good luck to buy not one but two lottery tickets from a truck stop that both turned out to be $1 million winners, matching five of the six Powerball numbers. Lottery officials presented her with a $2 million check on Friday.

Fike said she found out that she had won - and won again - while sitting in a hospital room with her mother, according to a statement distributed by the Virginia lottery.

"I saw a scroll on TV about there being two $1 million winners," she said. "I looked at my mom and said ‘Wouldn't it be funny if it was us?'"

She said she planned on using the money to "take care of my parents" and pay bills.

For selling the tickets, the lottery awarded a $20,000 bonus to the Olde Stone Truck Stop.

To win the full Powerball jackpot, which currently stands at $131 million, a ticket must match the numbers on all five white balls in the drawing, plus the red Powerball. The $1 million cash prize is awarded for a ticket that matches the five numbers on the white balls, in any order.

The odds of winning $1 million? One in 5,153,632.65. The drawing takes place every Wednesday and Saturday night.

"I just love the jackpot games and I play when I can afford it," Fike said in the statement.

(Reporting by Paul Thomasch; Editing by Greg McCune and Jackie Frank)

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