Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Australian finance minister's economic hero? Springsteen, not Keynes

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Australian finance minister's economic hero? Springsteen, not Keynes
Aug 1st 2012, 04:47

Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan speaks to reporters after attending the RMB Cross-border Trade and Investment Forum at Hong Kong government headquarters July 11, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Bobby Yip

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Belarus sacks top brass over teddy bear scandal

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Belarus sacks top brass over teddy bear scandal
Jul 31st 2012, 17:59

MINSK | Tue Jul 31, 2012 1:59pm EDT

MINSK (Reuters) - Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko on Tuesday sacked his air defense chief and the head of the border guards for failing to stop a Swedish plane drop hundreds of teddy bears over the hardline state in a pro-democracy stunt.

The plane, chartered by a Swedish public relations firm, crossed into Belarussian air space from Lithuania on July 4 and dropped about 800 of the toy bears near the town of Ivenets.

Each bear carried a message calling for Belarus to show greater respect for individual human rights.

In a statement on Tuesday, the presidential press service said that Dmitry Pakhmelkin, the country's air defense chief, and Igor Rachkovsky, the head of the border guards, had been dismissed "for not properly carrying out their duties in safeguarding Belarussian national security."

Other senior state security officials had been reprimanded too, the statement said.

In power since 1994 and once described as Europe's last dictator by the U.S. administration of George W. Bush, Lukashenko has been ostracized by the West because of a crackdown on his political opponents.

Authorities in Minsk initially denied that the air drop of teddy bears had taken place until Lukashenko finally confirmed the incident last week.

He made it clear that heads would roll over the stunt last Thursday when he said: "This plane was discovered in time, but why did the (air defense) authorities not intercept the flight? ... Come on lads. We are all grown up. The guilty ones have to answer for this."

(Reporting by Andrei Makhovsky; Writing By Richard Balmforth; Editing by Andrew Osborn)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Berlin museum dung heaps are reminder of Nazi past

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Berlin museum dung heaps are reminder of Nazi past
Jul 31st 2012, 16:55

BERLIN | Tue Jul 31, 2012 12:55pm EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - Visitors to Berlin's main modern art museum this summer should take care not to step on piles of horse manure, placed as a reminder of art that was stolen, destroyed or went missing under Nazi rule.

With his installation at the New National Gallery of four piles of artificial dung, painted blue, Austrian artist Martin Gostner has said he is paying tribute to Franz Marc's painting "The Tower of Blue Horses".

The Nazis seized Marc's seminal expressionist work in 1937, branding it "un-German" and "degenerate". To this day it is not known whether the work was destroyed or hidden away, but it has never been found.

Each of the piles of blue manure corresponds to one of the horses in the lost painting, and is intended to make it seem as though the horses were alive and trotting around the museum.

"What would happen if the painting still lived, if there were a sign of it, and the horses were to come by here?" said Dieter Scholz, the gallery's curator.

Gostner's installation also recalls a hoard of other modernist masterpieces that the Nazis destroyed or confiscated in an attempt to purge Germany of art they considered Jewish or Bolshevik influenced. The dung heaps are a tacit reminder that these works may still be retrieved.

The New National Gallery's permanent collection includes work from many artists, including Max Beckmann, Otto Dix, and Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, who were labeled "degenerate" by the Nazis.

Some visitors milling around Gostner's installation, entitled "The Oriel of the Blue Horses," were bewildered.

"It's exotic and foreign to me," said Jota, a 57-year-old clerk who declined to give her surname.

Confiscated Nazi art periodically has reappeared in the decades since World War Two. In 2010, 11 "degenerate" sculptures were recovered during construction of an underground rail line in Berlin.

"Perhaps other works are still hidden away out there," said Scholz. "Many could still come to light."

(Reporting By Samuel Frizell, editing by Gareth Jones and Michael Roddy)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Lithuania denies entry to Soviet-styled Porsche

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Lithuania denies entry to Soviet-styled Porsche
Jul 31st 2012, 16:56

VILNIUS | Tue Jul 31, 2012 12:56pm EDT

VILNIUS (Reuters) - A Belarusian man driving a Porsche sports car emblazoned with the red and yellow flag of the Soviet Union was denied entry into Lithuania on Tuesday on the grounds that the public display of such symbols in the Baltic country is illegal.

Under the rule of the former Soviet Union for almost half a century, Vilnius banned the public display of Soviet symbols in 2008, sparking protests from former colonial master Russia.

The bonnet of the offending Porsche 966 - driven by a 26-year-old man - had a giant Soviet flag painted on it complete with a yellow hammer and sickle symbol and star, Rokas Pukinskas, a spokesman for Lithuania's state border guard service, told Reuters.

"The border guards suggested the driver leave his car behind and enter Lithuania by foot or by bus, which he refused to do", Pukinskas added.

Belarus, ruled by former Soviet collective farm boss Alexander Lukashenko since 1994, revels in its past as one of the Soviet Union's 15 republics and encourages nostalgia for the defunct state.

Lithuania and Hungary are the only two European Union countries to outlaw public displays of Soviet symbols. However, the fine of 500-1000 litas (150-280 euros) for violators in Lithuania is rarely issued.

(Reporting by Andrius Sytas via Stockholm newsroom; Editing by Andrew Osborn)

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Monday, July 30, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: German trainee fined 227,000 euros for illegal Facebook party

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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German trainee fined 227,000 euros for illegal Facebook party
Jul 30th 2012, 14:56

A giant ''like'' icon made popular by Facebook is seen at the company's new headquarters in Menlo Park, California January 11, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith

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Friday, July 27, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Red Sox fans, fearing loss of mascot, see Yankee conspiracy

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Red Sox fans, fearing loss of mascot, see Yankee conspiracy
Jul 27th 2012, 21:36

BOSTON | Fri Jul 27, 2012 5:36pm EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - As if fans of the cellar-dwelling Boston Red Sox aren't downtrodden enough, for a spell on Friday the costume of Wally the Green Monster, the team's popular mascot, was missing. Fearing it was swiped, the team alerted the police.

A security guard at Fenway Park thought he saw a thief in the emerald green outfit getting away. On the Red Sox' website, Wally is described as "pretty big" - no matter who is wearing the outfit.

The timing of the incident inspired recurring mid-summer conspiracy theories. Some fans feared that Wally's disappearance was just another way to unsettle the Red Sox as they head into a crucial series against arch-rivals the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium that begins Friday night.

But shortly before 4 p.m. the Boston Police Department, which had tweeted Wally's disappearance, again tweeted that "Wally the Green Monster has been found."

"It was later revealed to officers that an employee took the costume and neglected to inform the proper supervisor. There is no one under arrest and Wally the Green Monster is safe," police said in a statement.

One fan, momentarily relieved, tweeted: "They found Wally the Green Monster. Maybe the Sawx could have the police look for pitching too."

(Reporting By Ros Krasny; Editing by Philip Barbara)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: U.S. Olympic swimming team show off dancing skills in spoof video

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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U.S. Olympic swimming team show off dancing skills in spoof video
Jul 27th 2012, 11:33

LONDON | Fri Jul 27, 2012 7:29am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - It's not all hard work and no play for the U.S. swimming team at the London Olympics.

A light-hearted, spoof video filmed by the team during training has gone viral on the internet with tens of thousands of viewers clicking to watch top names such as Michael Phelps, Ryan Lochte and Missy Franklin dancing and lip-syncing to hit "Call me Maybe" by Carly Rae Jepsen.

The video, billed by the team as an attempt to "blow off steam" in the run up to the Games, features swimmers dancing down the aisle of a plane, waving arms around on a bus and even strutting their stuff under water.

Lochte, a favorite with female swimming fans, smooches at the camera.

"This is one of the best teams I've had the opportunity to be a part of! We are having so much fun!" Franklin tweeted as she sent out a link to the video (bit.ly/Mac9yW).

USA Swimming said the project was led by swimmers Alyssa Anderson, Kathleen Hersey and Caitlin Leverenz and later finished off by a member of the U.S. team's staff, Russell Mark.

"USA Swimming's "Call Me Maybe" proves two things: 1. Swimmers are funny. 2. Taper makes you stir crazy," tweeted swimming journalist Mike Gustafson, referring to the reduction of swimmers' workloads just before a competition.

Other parodies of the much spoofed song include one from Harvard's baseball team, a women's college rowing team and even Sesame Street's Cookie Monster.

(Reporting by Clara Ferreira-Marques, editing by Mark Meadows)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Japanese men drop inhibition, turn to parasols to beat the heat

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Japanese men drop inhibition, turn to parasols to beat the heat
Jul 27th 2012, 10:47

A spectator watching the World Rowing Championships wears a traditional Japanese hat and holds an umbrella while sitting in the hot summer sun in Gifu, Japan August 29, 2005. REUTERS/Andy Clark AC/SA

A spectator watching the World Rowing Championships wears a traditional Japanese hat and holds an umbrella while sitting in the hot summer sun in Gifu, Japan August 29, 2005.

Credit: Reuters/Andy Clark AC/SA

By Teppei Kasai

TOKYO | Fri Jul 27, 2012 6:47am EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - It's summer in Japan, which means shaved ice, cold noodles and parasols against the blinding sun - for men.

While women have used sun umbrellas, or "higasa," for centuries, power conservation and increasingly hot summers have sent sales of men's sun umbrellas sharply higher, with department stores across Japan scrambling for stocks.

"There's been a spike in demand for men's sun umbrellas of about three times since last summer," said Mayumi Mio, a spokeswoman at Takashimaya, a major Tokyo department store.

"Most of them buy it for business when they have to step outside of the office to go to a meeting. They feel that it's rude to show up to work or a meeting all sweaty and worn out from the heat."

White, natural skin has long been thought beautiful for Asian women, and Japanese men have also become increasingly skin-conscious in recent years. But the real jump in sales came last summer, after power cuts in the wake of the March 11 disaster prompted new ways to beat the heat.

According to the Environment Ministry, the combination of casual business attire such as short sleeves and no tie, and a sun umbrella, can cut up to 20% of heat stress, providing almost the same impact as walking under the shade cast by trees.

Kazuhiro Miyatake, the fourth generation to own and run the Shinsaibashi-Miyatake umbrella specialty store in the western city of Osaka, feels it's high time that men be able to carry parasols as well, if they want.

"It's your own portable shade you can carry around anywhere," he said.

While women's parasols run to lighter colors - pink, beige, white and red as well as black - those for men are more somber shades of blue, grey, and green. They also tend to be larger.

Prices can run from as little as 2,000 yen ($25.56) up to 17,000 yen ($220), depending on the design and the materials.

"I believe if there was a 'sun umbrella God', I'm positive it wouldn't discriminate between men and women," said Miyatake, who sells a thousand a year. "If men want to use sun umbrellas, they should be able to without shame."

Japan is currently in the grip of a heat wave that sent temperatures in areas around Tokyo to well over 37 degrees Celsius (99 degrees Fahrenheit) by 1:00 p.m. on Friday. ($1 = 78.2400 Japanese yen)

(Reporting by Teppei Kasai, editing by Elaine Lies)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Opticians see advertising gold in Korean flag flap

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Opticians see advertising gold in Korean flag flap
Jul 27th 2012, 10:45

The flag of North Korea is raised during a welcoming ceremony for the team in the Athletes Village at the Olympic Park ahead of the London 2012 Olympic Games July 25, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Luke MacGregor

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Man charged with manslaughter in Florida butt-injection case

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Man charged with manslaughter in Florida butt-injection case
Jul 27th 2012, 10:50

By Barbara Liston

ORLANDO, Florida | Fri Jul 27, 2012 6:50am EDT

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - A man who injected a woman in the buttocks with unknown substances during an illegal cosmetic surgery was arrested on Thursday and charged with manslaughter in the woman's death, authorities said.

Oneal Ron Morris, 31, of Hollywood, Florida, is known to have injected other women with substances such as bathroom caulk, cement, Super Glue and the tire product Fix-A-Flat, officials with the Broward County Sheriff's Office said.

Authorities described Morris as a transvestite who went by the nickname "The Dutchess."

According to his arrest affidavit, 31-year-old Shatarka Nuby died in March in Tallahassee from what an assistant medical examiner called "massive systemic silicone migration" due to "cosmetic silicone injections of the buttocks and hips," according to the arrest affidavit.

She died months after her last injection by Morris. Before her death, Nuby told a Florida Department of Health investigator that she paid Morris at least $2,000 for about 10 treatments between 2007 and 2011 to enhance her buttocks, hips, thighs and breasts, according to the affidavit and a sheriff's report.

Morris once told Nuby's aunt that he was injecting her with silicone from Home Depot, the affidavit said. Morris made house calls for the injections and would seal the injection sites with cotton balls and Super Glue, Nuby's aunt told investigators.

Neither Morris, who remained in custody in Broward County Jail, nor a representative for him could be reached for comment on Thursday evening. He is awaiting trial on previous charges of practicing medicine without a license and causing injury.

Nuby's death in March occurred at Tallahassee Federal Correctional Institute where, according to CBS Miami, she was serving a 2-1/2 year sentence for identity theft, which she resorted to in order to pay for breast implants and liposuction.

(Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis and Anthony Boadle)

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Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Germans blow off steam with swearing hotline

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Germans blow off steam with swearing hotline
Jul 25th 2012, 15:40

By Chris Cottrell

BERLIN | Wed Jul 25, 2012 11:40am EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - Two German entrepreneurs have devised a way for passive-aggressive citizens to blow off some steam - dial a telephone number and give the person on the other end a verbal lashing.

The swearing hotline, known as "Schimpf-los" ("swear away") in German, has operators standing by seven days a week for frustrated individuals to jeer at and taunt using the most unsavory language they can muster.

"We don't judge people who are angry," said Ralf Schulte, who set up the hotline with his fellow media services provider Alexander Brandenburger.

"It happens. It's natural. With us you can blow off steam no strings attached," 41-year-old Schulte told Reuters.

The creators of the service found inspiration in their own stressful daily routines. The way Schulte sees it, he is doing people a favor by providing a release for pent-up aggravation and helping to avoid altercations in the workplace or at home.

"If you're stressed out at work, you go home and your partner gets an earful," he said. "Even though it's not her fault."

When callers are not creative in their cursing, or find themselves tongue-tied, operators on the hotline prod them with cheeky provocations like: "That's the third time I've heard that today - is that all you've got?"

The service costs 1.49 euros per minute - a figure Schulte feels is completely justified. "For getting everything off your chest, it's a bargain."

(Reporting by Chris Cottrell; Editing by Stephen Brown)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Singer quits Wagner festival over Nazi tattoos

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Singer quits Wagner festival over Nazi tattoos
Jul 25th 2012, 15:17

Actors perform during the rehearsal of the opera ''The Flying Dutchman'' by Richard Wagner in Bayreuth, southern Germany July 18, 2012. The opera will start this year's Wagner festival which begins July 25 and will run until August 28. Picture taken July 18, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Michaela Rehle

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Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Austrian find dates bras back to 15th century

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Austrian find dates bras back to 15th century
Jul 24th 2012, 14:59

1 of 4. A brassiere from the late Middle Ages is pictured at the University of Innsbruck, archaeology department July 24, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Michaela Rehle

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Cash-strapped Berlin stalked by 450-year-old debt

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Cash-strapped Berlin stalked by 450-year-old debt
Jul 24th 2012, 12:20

A combine harvester unloads rye on a trailer in a field near the town of Mittenwalde in Brandenburg state some 50 km south of Berlin July 30, 2003.

BERLIN | Tue Jul 24, 2012 8:20am EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - The sleepy hamlet of Mittenwalde in eastern Germany could become one of the richest towns in the world if Berlin were to repay it an outstanding debt that dates back to 1562.

A certificate of debt, found in a regional archive, attests that Mittenwalde lent Berlin 400 guilders on May 28 1562, to be repaid with six percent interest per year.

According to Radio Berlin Brandenburg (RBB), the debt would amount to 11,200 guilders today, which is roughly equivalent to 112 million euros ($136.79 million).

Adjusting for compound interest and inflation, the total debt now lies in the trillions, by RBB's estimates.

Town historian Vera Schmidt found the centuries-old debt slip in the archive, where it had been filed in 1963. Though the seal is missing from the document, Schmidt told Reuters that she was certain the slip was still valid.

"In 1893 there was a debate in which the document was examined and the writing was determined to be authentic," Schmidt said.

Schmidt and Mittenwalde's Mayor Uwe Pfeiffer have tried to ask Berlin for their money back. Such requests have been made every 50 years or so since 1820 but always to no avail.

Reclaiming the debt would bring significant riches to Mittenwalde, a seat of power in the middle ages, which now has a population of just 8,800. Red brick fragments of medieval fortifications still dot the leafy town centre.

The town's Romanesque church was once the provost seat for Paul Gerhardt, one of Germany's most prolific hymn writers. Gerhardt, who lived there briefly in the 17th century, is the only noted Mittenwalde resident to date.

Schmidt and Pfeiffer met with Berlin's finance senator Ulrich Nussbaum, who ceremonially handed them a historical guilder from 1539. The guilder was put in a temporary display at the Mittenwalde museum.

"This case shows that debts always catch up with you, no matter how old they are," Nussbaum told the Berliner Zeitung paper.

The debt-laden German capital would have difficulty meeting Mittenwalde's demands anyway. According to a report released by the senate finance administration in June 2012, Berlin is already close to 63 billion euros in the red.

(Reporting by Sophie Duvernoy, editing by Paul Casciato)

(This story corrects the figure in last graf to 63 billion euros)

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Sunday, July 22, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Singer quits Wagner festival over Nazi tattoos

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Singer quits Wagner festival over Nazi tattoos
Jul 22nd 2012, 14:58

BERLIN | Sun Jul 22, 2012 10:58am EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - A Russian opera singer has pulled out of the Bayreuth opera festival over Nazi tattoos on his chest days before the start of the celebration of Richard Wagner's works that was once popular with Third Reich leaders.

Evgeny Nikitin was meant to play the Flying Dutchman in Wagner's opera of the same name but German newspaper and TV images have shown him bare chested with tattoos that resemble symbols used by the Nazis.

One looks like a swastika, which appears to be covered by a new tattoo in more recent pictures.

"I had these tattoos done in my youth. It was a big mistake in my life and I wish I had never done it," Nikitin said in a statement on the festival's website.

"I was not aware of the extent of the irritation and pain these signs and symbols would cause especially in Bayreuth and in the context of the history of the festival," he added.

Nikitin resigned after the festival's management confronted him with the media reports showing his tattoos.

"His decision to give back the part of the Dutchman for these reasons is in line with the consistent rejection by the festival's management of any form of National Socialist thinking," the festival's management said on its website.

The Bayreuth Festival, which was conceived by Wagner, dates back to 1876 and is celebrated for its stagings of his operas, including "Tristan and Isolde", "Parsifal" and the four operas of the monumental cycle "The Ring of the Nibelung".

Although Wagner, who penned several anti-Semitic texts, died half a century before Adolf Hitler came to power, the Nazi dictator was an admirer and drew on the composer's writings in his own theories on racial purity and exterminating the Jews.

Winifred Wagner, Wagner's daughter in law, who headed the festival under Nazi rule, was a close personal friend and an admirer of Hitler's until her death in 1980. Hitler frequently attended the festival.

Wagner's work has played to sold out crowds at the festival since the mid-1950s, with eager opera enthusiasts often waiting as long as 10 years for tickets to the Bayreuth Festspielhaus theatre.

The annual opera frenzy is a highlight of German cultural life, providing both scandal and entertainment. Chancellor Angela Merkel visits it regularly and it is one of only few occasions a year where her husband Joachim Sauer accompanies her in public.

(Reporting by Annika Breidthardt; Editing by Michael Roddy)

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Friday, July 20, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Eye Eye captain: Bounty mutineer descendants may hold key to myopia

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Eye Eye captain: Bounty mutineer descendants may hold key to myopia
Jul 20th 2012, 13:38

SYDNEY | Fri Jul 20, 2012 9:38am EDT

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Descendants of the famous Bounty mutineers who now live on an isolated Pacific Island have among the lowest rate of myopia in the world and may hold the key to unlocking the genetic code for the disease, according to a new study.

A study of residents on Australia's Norfolk Island, 1,600 km (1,000 miles) northeast of Sydney, showed the rate of myopia, or short-sightedness, among Bounty descendants was about half that of the general Australian population.

Fletcher Christian led a mutiny on the British Royal Navy ship HMS Bounty against captain William Bligh in 1789 in the South Pacific. The mutineers settled in Tahiti but later fled, along with their Tahitian women, to remote Pitcairn Island to escape arrest.

Some 60 years after arriving on Pitcairn, almost 200 descendents of the original mutineers relocated to Norfolk Island to avoid famine.

"We found the rate of Pitcairn group myopia is approximately one-half that of the Australian population and as a result would be ranked among one of the lowest rates in the world," said David Mackey, the managing director of Australia's Lions Eye Institute which led the studies.

Mackey said there may be genetic differences in the Norfolk Island population that could lead to breakthroughs in the causes of short-sightedness, but added it was also apparent that spending too little time outdoors raised the risk of myopia.

"The big cities of East Asia like Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and mountain cities of China, myopia has become very common and we think that there are environmental factors that have changed," he said.

Myopia affects one in six people in Australia and more than one in four in the United States. A quarter of the world's population, 1.6 billion people, suffer from the disease.

(Reporting by Thuy Ong; Editing by Michael Perry)

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Thursday, July 19, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: New York area homeowners turning to "lawn painting"

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 area homeowners turning to "lawn painting"
Jul 19th 2012, 20:30

By Christopher Michaud

NEW YORK | Thu Jul 19, 2012 4:30pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Despite the summer's persistent heat waves, the grass really is greener in some neighborhoods in New York and New Jersey.

Homeowners with brown, dried-up lawns are turning to "lawn painting" to liven up their yards.

Business is booming, according to Joe Perazzo, who launched his lawn painting company in New York's most suburban borough of Staten Island a few years ago, inspired by the tinting process used to color professional athletic fields. Other companies have sprung up in the region and elsewhere in the country.

"We've had a lot more calls and jobs in the past few weeks," said Perazzo, who added that this season's heat has been particularly hard on lawns due to a lack of rain.

For about 15 cents a square foot ($1.61 a square meter), or $150 for 1,000 square feet ($161.40 for 100 square meters), Perazzo will spray a plant-based, non-toxic turf dye on lawns or even dried-up shrubs and trees.

The biodegradable spray can last up until next spring's new growth if grass is truly desiccated, he said.

For lawns with a bit of life left in them, the paint will last for "two to three mows," he said.

In such hot weather, with temperatures hovering near the triple digits, lawns are not growing very fast, he said.

Rich Pacailler of Howell, New Jersey, had his 1,500 square foot lawn sprayed this week.

"It gave me the green lawn I've been working for," he said. "I come home and see I've got the greenest lawn on the block."

He said it was very natural looking, "like new sod."

"It's not hampering the lawn, but really showcasing it and giving it that curb appeal," he said.

Perazzo said he can custom mix the lawn shade, "depending on how yellow or brown the turf is."

Someone recently suggested painting a lawn red, white and blue for the Fourth of July holiday, he said.

"I haven't gotten into blues and reds," he said. "But I've researched it, and it's a definite possibility."

(Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Cynthia Johnston; Desking by Cynthia Osterman)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: SpongeBob coins among assets seized by FBI from Peregrine HQ

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
SpongeBob coins among assets seized by FBI from Peregrine HQ
Jul 19th 2012, 17:54

By Ann Saphir and Nick Carey

CHICAGO | Thu Jul 19, 2012 1:54pm EDT

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Silver SpongeBob SquarePants coins minted by a private company in New Zealand were among assets seized by FBI agents from Peregrine Financial Group after its chief confessed to nearly 20 years of fraud last week.

Ira Bodenstein, the trustee in Peregrine's bankruptcy case in Chicago, said the coins were in a vault at the firm's Cedar Falls, Iowa, headquarters. The value of the takings was not immediately clear.

The coin disclosure adds a new twist to the case of Peregrine Finiancial Group's CEO Russell Wasendorf Sr., who was arrested last Friday after he confessed to doctoring bank statements to make regulators think his futures brokerage had nearly twice the assets that it did, leaving customers with an estimated shortfall of over $200 million.

Peregrine, which operated as PFGBest, filed for bankruptcy protection last week.

Peregrine ran a unit called PFG Precious Metals Inc., which offers investors "whole sale prices, fast & fully insured shipping" for gold, silver, and platinum coins, as well as novelty items created through a partnership with the Auckland-based minting firm.

Customers from as far away as Bulgaria bought coins through the program, using Paypal accounts or credit cards to fund the purchases, said James Koutoulas, CEO at Typhon Capital Management. The coins were stored in a vault in Iowa.

A four-coin set of SpongeBob Squarepants, housed in a "distinctive" treasure chest, went for $259, according to a Website that displays both the PFGBest logo and that of the New Zealand Mint. (www.spongebobcoins.com/)

Each coin in the set shows a character from the Nickelodeon animated series and bears the inscription "IN SPONGEBOB WE TRUST."

The mint told local reporters last week that it was paid in full by PFG for the coins.

(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Andrew Hay)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Experimental musicians use body as instrument

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
Experimental musicians use body as instrument
Jul 19th 2012, 13:21

By Chris Cottrell

BERLIN | Thu Jul 19, 2012 9:21am EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - Peter Kirn makes music with an unusual instrument - his own body.

The Kentucky native pinches two electrically charged pennies connected to a laptop via two short green wires.

The rudimentary contraption is held together by bits of solder and hot glue which allow him to measure the electrical currents of his body and synthesize them into melodic sound.

Kirn, 34, a writer of creative technology, is one of several artists performing in Berlin who are exploring new ways of composing music with the human body.

"As your mood changes, the skin responds because it is part of the same system as your brain, which controls the pores of your skin," Kirn told Reuters.

Fluctuating sweat levels affect the skin's ability to transmit electricity, a characteristic Kirn calls "galvanic skin response".

But Kirn's technique is just one way to tap into the human body's musical potential.

Marco Donnarumma, a 27-year-old teacher from Italy with a passion for live music, tunes into the sounds muscles make when they move. Listeners can literally hear the friction of tissue as it expands and contracts.

Using a sensitive microphone to amplify the low frequency sound waves a muscle emits when it is flexed, Donnarumma has learned how to produce actual rhythms by simply moving his body.

"In the beginning, for instance, I was just standing with my legs still and waving my arms," Donnarumma said. "Now I completely involve the whole body in the performance."

His song "Hypo Chrysos", for example, sees Donnarumma tie two concrete blocks to his arms - an idea inspired by Dante's classic poem "Inferno" in which the poet encounters sinners in hell wearing cloaks filled with lead. The extra stress gives off a dry, crackly sound.

The technical term for listening in on the body's internal functions and converting them into melodies is "musical biofeedback", according to Claudia Robles Angel, an audiovisual artist from Colombia who played a concert at Berlin's Leapknecht sound lab alongside Kirn and Donnarumma earlier this month.

Robles's specialty is using a so-called electroencephalogram, or EEG, to measure her brain waves while forcing her mind from a state of calm to one of utter stress, a feat she says is accomplished through breathing and meditation.

Sensors inside the device, which resembles an open helmet, relay the data back to a computer which then reprograms it into music.

"With this kind of bio-device you become more aware of your body," Robles said. "That's really how I can change my mood."

Complete relaxation is also what Kirn said produces the richest sound. He found that the more he tried to control his thoughts, the plainer the music became.

"If you too heavily try to think about what you're doing or apply intention to what you're doing, you can short circuit your own creative process," Kirn said. "The paradox of the brain is it thinks best when it's not really thinking."

(Reporting By Chris Cottrell, Editing by Gareth Jones and Paul Casciato)

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