Friday, August 31, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Something Wilde: Book returned to Chicago library after 78 years

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Something Wilde: Book returned to Chicago library after 78 years
Aug 31st 2012, 22:12

By Mary Wisniewski

CHICAGO | Fri Aug 31, 2012 6:12pm EDT

CHICAGO (Reuters) - A Chicago-area woman wanted to return an overdue copy of "The Picture of Dorian Gray" to the Chicago Public Library, but first she wanted to be sure she wouldn't go to jail.

That's because the book, a rare limited edition of the Oscar Wilde novel, was checked out in 1934. Harlean Hoffman Vision found it in her late mother's possessions, with a Chicago Public Library stamp.

The library is conducting a rare three-week amnesty program for overdue items, and Vision figured this was her chance to return the book, said Ruth Lednicer, the library's marketing director. The books was returned Thursday.

"She kept saying, 'You're not going to arrest me?' and we said, 'No, we're so happy you brought it back'," said Lednicer.

Vision didn't know the library caps late fines at $10 on books -- without the cap and the amnesty, total fines on "Dorian Gray" would have amounted to $6,000.

The last amnesty was held 20 years ago, and resulted in the return of 77,000 items.

(Reporting by Mary Wisniewski; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Pancake puzzler: Maple syrup heist baffles Quebec

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Pancake puzzler: Maple syrup heist baffles Quebec
Aug 31st 2012, 20:08

By Julie Gordon

TORONTO | Fri Aug 31, 2012 4:08pm EDT

TORONTO (Reuters) - Thieves in the Canadian province of Quebec may have pulled off the sweetest heist of all time, siphoning off a reservoir of maple syrup from a warehouse and cleverly covering up their caper to evade detection, an industry group said on Friday.

The warehouse in rural Quebec held more than C$30 million ($30.4 million) worth of maple syrup, a whopping 10 million pounds of the amber pancake topping.

It was not clear exactly how much of the sweet stuff was taken in the heist, which occurred at some point over the last few days and was uncovered during a routine inventory check.

"We don't know yet how much is missing - we do know it is significant," said Anne-Marie Granger Godbout, executive director of the Federation of Quebec Maple Syrup Producers.

Numerous barrels in the warehouse were emptied of their sticky contents. The remaining barrels need to be weighed and tested to ensure the syrup inside had not been tampered with.

The robbers "were wise enough, they tried to hide their crime," said Granger Godbout. "We just want to make sure we know how much is missing and how much is still there."

The warehouse, some 160 kilometers (100 miles) northeast of Montreal, is one of many locations where Quebec's maple syrup is temporarily stored ahead of sale and distribution.

The agency believes the syrup was taken to be sold on the black market. Quebec's provincial police force is investigating the robbery.

With Quebec's 2012 harvest expected to top 96 million pounds, the province produces some 75 percent of the global supply of maple syrup, made from the sap of maple trees.

All the syrup held by the Federation of Quebec Maple Syrup Producers is insured and the agency maintains a stockpile of syrup that it likens to a "global strategic reserve," according to a press release.

"I can assure you there will be no shortage in maple syrup," said Granger Godbout.

($1 = 0.9869 Canadian dollars)

(Editing by Frank McGurty)

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Thursday, August 30, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Love-triangle books a headache for France's Hollande

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Love-triangle books a headache for France's Hollande
Aug 30th 2012, 17:00

France's President Francois Hollande gestures during a joint news conference with Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy (not pictured) after their meeting at the Moncloa Palace in Madrid August 30, 2012. REUTERS/Juan Medina

France's President Francois Hollande gestures during a joint news conference with Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy (not pictured) after their meeting at the Moncloa Palace in Madrid August 30, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Juan Medina

By Catherine Bremer

PARIS | Thu Aug 30, 2012 1:00pm EDT

PARIS (Reuters) - Stuck with dismal approval ratings for his presidential debut, France's Francois Hollande is now having his private life raked over in a series of books that dissect the alleged jealousy between his current and former companions.

Despite Hollande's insistence he wants his home life kept private, public interest has been rife since first lady Valerie Trierweiler sent a "killer tweet" in June that exposed the animosity between her and Segolene Royal, the president's partner up to mid-2007.

A book out this week describes how Hollande's flirtation with Trierweiler goes all the way back to the early 1990s and that in 2003 Royal warned the journalist, 11 years her junior, to stay away from her man, then head of the Socialist Party.

Two other new books pore over the long-running rivalry between Trierweiler and Royal, whom Hollande allegedly wavered about leaving but finally quit to set up home with Trierweiler following Royal's unsuccessful presidential bid in 2007.

None of the books contains scandalous revelations, but the constant raking-over of the messy love triangle does not help Hollande's image as he battles criticism that his soft-touch leadership style is proving ineffective.

Even left-wing media have accused Hollande of dilly-dallying in his first three months in office. Some commentators see the new books as reinforcing negative opinions of him.

"What we ask of men of power, and thus of presidents, is to show self-control beyond the average," psychologist Serge Hefez wrote in an editorial in weekly Le Nouvel Observateur about "L'Ex" ("The Ex"), a book by one of the magazine's editors.

"Torn in two, he struggles to master the twists and turns in his personal life and could thus, if faced with new dilemmas, show limits in his capacity to govern," Hefez said.

BE VERY CAREFUL

Hollande has returned from the summer break to a chorus of criticism and the steepest slide in popularity of any recent president, due in large part to a fresh surge in unemployment.

He is so concerned about a plunge in his ratings to as low as 44 percent and a perception that he is slow-acting that he this week ordered his ministers to sharpen their communication skills.

Magazines are reveling, however, in the juicy new books, which depict Trierweiler as obsessively jealous and Hollande as indecisive as he struggled with his early attraction to the reporter assigned to cover his party for Paris Match magazine.

"Whenever she appeared you would see Francois Hollande's gaze go dreamy," L'Ex quotes a political journalist who was often present in their company as saying.

The book says that in early 2003 Royal summoned Trierweiler and said: "You can guess why I've called you in. You are aware of the rumors," adding: "I have four children. Be very careful."

The romance between Hollande and Trierweiler allegedly began in earnest in 2005, and L'Ex says that Royal battled to have Trierweiler removed from her post to limit their contact.

The break-up of the Hollande-Royal couple was played out in the public eye, but interest in the drama has intensified since the night of Hollande's election when eagle-eyed TV viewers noted Trierweiler's glare as he kissed Royal on the cheek.

Her now infamous tweet, stating her support for a rival to Royal in a local election race, is still regarded as the biggest public relations gaffe of Hollande's three months in office.

People close to Trierweiler say she was sternly rebuked by Hollande, and she has kept a low profile ever since.

Government sources say Hollande is unruffled by the new books. "Hollande is unflappable. This business about the tweet is old history," one source told Reuters.

But the authors of a second tome, titled "Entre Deux Feux" ("Between Two Fires"), say Trierweiler's tweet has made their relationship fair game for examination.

Political commentator Pierre Haski, founder of the Rue 89 news website, agrees. "The first lady's tweet opened the floodgates," he said. "Things will never be the same again."

(Additional reporting by Elizabeth Pineau; editing by Andrew Roche)

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Arizona drifter jailed for skinning cat, wearing tail

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Arizona drifter jailed for skinning cat, wearing tail
Aug 30th 2012, 00:35

PHOENIX | Wed Aug 29, 2012 8:35pm EDT

PHOENIX (Reuters) - An Arizona drifter who skinned a cat and wore its tail and innards around his neck was sentenced to two years in prison on Wednesday.

An Arizona Superior Court judge also sentenced Russell Christopher Hofstad, 25, to four years probation on his release, the Maricopa County Attorney's office said.

Hofstad pleaded no contest last month to a felony animal cruelty charge and guilty to a burglary charge. According to the criminal complaint, police arrested Hofstad in January after he broke into a Phoenix warehouse used as a music venue.

Officers found the skinned and gutted remains of a cat inside, and Hofstad wearing the cat's tail and a piece of its "internals" around his neck on a rope. Some of the cat's other internal organs were kept in a cooler.

Hofstad told police he had recently been released from jail and had nowhere to live. He said he had not eaten in a few days, so he hit the cat with a stick and then stabbed it.

He planned to stuff the animal and save the skeleton "for a decoration for a party."

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: UK firemen called to rescue cow stuck up a tree

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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UK firemen called to rescue cow stuck up a tree
Aug 29th 2012, 15:51

LONDON | Wed Aug 29, 2012 11:51am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - A cow had to be rescued by fire services in northern England after it tumbled down a 30 meter river embankment and got stuck in a tree.

Fire crews in Cumbria were surprised to receive a call to rescue the cow, which had toppled 10 meters down a slope of the river Leith before a tree broke its fall.

The bruised bovine was discovered after its farmer noticed one of his cows was missing.

The animal was sedated by a vet before being winched out of the tree by firemen using specialist equipment.

"(Fire crews) had to wear body armor in case a stray hoof lashed out at them," said a spokesman for Cumbria Fire and Rescue Service.

"The vet checked the cow over and it seemed reasonably happy and relatively unscathed," he said.

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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Man apparently attempting Bigfoot hoax killed on Montana highway

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Man apparently attempting Bigfoot hoax killed on Montana highway
Aug 28th 2012, 23:14

By Lori Grannis

MISSOULA, Montana | Tue Aug 28, 2012 7:14pm EDT

MISSOULA, Montana (Reuters) - A man wearing a bushy, military-style camouflage suit in an apparent attempt to impersonate the mythical creature Bigfoot has died after being struck on a Montana highway by two cars, police said on Tuesday.

Randy Lee Tenley, 44, was dressed in a "ghillie" -- an outfit favored by military snipers and game hunters -- and standing in the middle of southbound lanes on U.S. Highway 93 near Kalispell on Sunday when he was struck twice in quick succession, Montana Highway Patrol spokesman Sergeant Steve Lavin said.

"From what I understand, at least one of his friends said that he was trying to induce a sasquatch sighting by using the suit along the highway," Lavin said. "This is a first for me after 20 years on the highway patrol. It's strange."

Tenley was first hit by a car driven by a 15-year-old girl (15-year-olds are allowed to drive in Montana with a learner's permit). A second car driven by a 17-year-old girl struck him moments later when he was already down on the roadway, Lavin said. Police said they do not know which impact killed him.

Friends of Tenley told Montana Highway Patrol trooper Jim Schneider that the man had attempted a similar hoax before, but never along the highway, police said.

Bigfoot, or sasquatch, is the name given to an ape-like creature whose existence has never been proven. Still, some people believe the creature lives in forest areas in North America, particularly the Pacific Northwest.

The Kalispell Army-Navy supply store sells the same kind of ghillie suit that police say Tenley was wearing.

Manager Dennis Petersen, who did not recall selling one to Tenley, said the shaggy $100 suits are often bought by boys who use them in paintball games. "I don't usually sell them to well-grown adults," he said.

(Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis, Cynthia Johnston and Ciro Scotti)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Wanted: Sri Lanka hangman. Very light work. Only males need apply

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Wanted: Sri Lanka hangman. Very light work. Only males need apply
Aug 28th 2012, 13:19

COLOMBO | Tue Aug 28, 2012 9:19am EDT

COLOMBO (Reuters) - Sri Lanka on Tuesday began interviews for the post of hangman a year after two positions fell vacant, with at least 480 convicts on death row.

But it was not quite clear how the two successful candidates would fill their days - the death penalty has not been used in Sri Lanka, a predominantly Buddhist country, since 1976.

"About 176 applicants are there and interviews are going on today and tomorrow," Gamini Kulatunga, commissioner operations at the Prisons Department, told Reuters. "Only males will be eligible for the post."

The two posts fell vacant after one hangman was promoted and the other retired.

At least 480 people convicted of murder and drugs offences could potentially be executed, Kulatunga said.

There has been an alarming rise in child abuse, rapes, murders, and drug trafficking since the 25-year war against Tamil Tiger separatists ended in May 2009, prompting some lawyers and politicians to push for the death penalty to be reintroduced.

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Monday, August 27, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Italy health minister mulls France-style drinks tax

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Italy health minister mulls France-style drinks tax
Aug 27th 2012, 13:31

ROME | Mon Aug 27, 2012 9:31am EDT

ROME (Reuters) - Italy's health minister is considering the inclusion of a tax on drinks deemed unhealthy in a spending bill due to go before the Italian cabinet later this week, a health ministry official said on Monday.

The official confirmed Health Minister Renato Balduzzi may propose a drinks tax of 3 euro cents a bottle to raise revenues of 250 million euros ($312.9 million), but did not clarify which beverages would be affected.

"It is a nudge to mothers and fathers towards a more suitable diet," Balduzzi told the daily La Repubblica, adding that revenue raised could be used for public health costs.

The official said Balduzzi was gauging public reaction to the suggestion before deciding whether to include the measure in the bill, which aims to reform health spending as the country grapples with a financial crisis and a large debt burden.

France last year put a tax on soft drinks to help combat increasing obesity. The measure is expected to raise 280 million euros this year.

Lawmakers in the United States have also considered a similar law, but have come up against opposition from the beverage industry.

Nestle, Coca Cola Co and Sanpellegrino Group are key drinks sellers in the Italian market. ($1 = 0.7989 euros)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Tokyo robot revue drawing crowds at cabaret

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Tokyo robot revue drawing crowds at cabaret
Aug 27th 2012, 09:51

A 3.6 metre-high custom-made female robot is pictured at the newly opened ''Robot Restaurant'' in Kabukicho, one of Tokyo's best known red light districts, August 16, 2012. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao

1 of 7. A 3.6 metre-high custom-made female robot is pictured at the newly opened ''Robot Restaurant'' in Kabukicho, one of Tokyo's best known red light districts, August 16, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Yuriko Nakao

By Mari Saito

TOKYO | Mon Aug 27, 2012 5:51am EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - In a restaurant down an alley in one of Tokyo's best-known red light districts, four massive female robots wink and wave as they lumber to the beat of traditional Japanese drums and a Lady Gaga dance tune.

It's show time at the "Robot Restaurant," a new and high-tech take on the city's decades-old cabaret scene that puts a friendly, if unusual, face on the robot technology in which Japan is a world leader.

More than half the world's industrial robots are used here, but the featured performers at the brand-new venue, which owners say cost 10 billion yen ($125.8 million) and took three years to build, are 3.6 meter-high, custom-made female robots with facial features controlled by the club's women dancers.

The lower half of each robot resembles the iconic Japanese character Gundam on wheels, while its curvaceous human-like upper body is clad in a futuristic gladiator outfit. They have blonde, brown or red hair with blue or green eyes.

Each is controlled by two bikini-clad women, who perch in a high seat attached to the robot's stomach and control the facial features and legs using joysticks attached to the seats for the hour-long "Fighting Females" performance.

"The concept behind this restaurant is fighting, feisty females, and the robots are part of that theme," said the club's spokesman, who goes only by his last name, Watanabe.

"Everything apart from the central component of the robots is made and assembled by us."

Japan has a long-standing fascination with robots, which have always been seen as friendly and helpful - in contrast to the West, where they are more often seen as cold or sinister.

One of the Japan's best-loved cartoon series, "Astro Boy," about a robotic boy who fights injustice and crime, was written by Osamu Tezuka, often referred to as Japan's Walt Disney. The comic was created and produced in Tezuka's studio not far from where the robot restaurant stands today.

The robot show and glitzy club hark back to the days of Japan's bubble economy, the boom of the mid- to late-1980s that saw flashy clubs sprout up in Tokyo to cater to the newly-rich.

After a short intermission, in which visitors enjoy a drink and a bento boxed meal that come with the 4,000 yen ($51)admission, the women reappear in military-themed costumes and charge onto the stage maneuvering the robot-vehicles, which move up and down between the crowds.

By the end of the hour-long spectacle, the dancers are aboard a miniature airplane that zips overhead as American rock music blares over the speakers. One last dance routine involving fairy costumes and light sabres, and the audience is ushered out of the theatre.

"I saw a blog about this and tweeted it to my friends and dragged them along to the show," said one Tokyo man, watching with two female friends. "I honestly don't know what I expected out of it, but it's something I knew I would never see anywhere else."

Others appeared somewhat baffled.

"I'm not sure what I just saw in there," several audience members said as they headed to the nearest train station. ($1 = 78.6500 Japanese yen)

(Reporting by Mari Saito, Editing by Elaine Lies)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Mud runs draw the fit and their muck-caked friends

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Mud runs draw the fit and their muck-caked friends
Aug 27th 2012, 09:25

By Dorene Internicola

NEW YORK | Mon Aug 27, 2012 5:25am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Mud runs, essentially military-style obstacle races in muck, might appall the neat freak but for some people mud is the medium for a challenging test of true grit and fitness.

Neal Pire, owner of Inspire Training Systems, in Ridgewood, New Jersey, has trained several people for mud runs, which come in varying lengths and levels of difficulty and appeal to people who enjoy performing and withstanding the elements.

"Most of the people I've seen do it are the extreme fitness enthusiasts," said Pire, an expert with the American College of Sports Medicine. "The oldest was in her late 40s. It's not a lifetime affair."

"Spartan run, Mud Run, Tough Mudder -- each have their own flavor," he said, naming a few mud runs which are organized by organizations, companies and charities. "They all have obstacles, like water, climbing and crawling under barbed wire."

Roni Noone, 36-year-old wife and mother who has sloshed through at least two mud runs so far, said there is something motivating and inspiring about climbing a wall and jumping into a lake.

"The mud is just there and there's something very primal about it," said Noone, who is based in Baltimore, Maryland.

A runner and blogger, Noone was seeking a fresh challenge when she started doing obstacle-based runs. This year she completed a five km (3.1-mile) mud race called Rebel Run and the Tough Mudder, an approximately 12.5-mile (20-km) obstacle course trek, climb and swim through fire, mud and ice water designed by British Special Forces.

"Tough Mudder is a notch up from the typical mud run," said Noone, who trained for 12 weeks to prepare.

She said teamwork and camaraderie make mud runs less lonely than long-distance running.

"They're challenging, fun and very team oriented," she explained. "You're not supposed to go through it without someone helping you."

Matt Sauerhoff plans to run his first Tough Mudder in October.

Sauerhoff, who manages personal trainers at a New York Health and Racquet Club in New York City, will be joined by his work colleagues.

"It's great for team building, to bring us all close together."

EXTREME, MESSY

The Tough Mudder is an extreme event, he added.

"You're running and diving in the mud, climbing over logs and up cargo nets," said Sauerhoff, who hopes to come out of the messy adventure with some ideas he can pass on to his fitness clients.

"Some people don't like to be pushed to the point of exhaustion," he said. "I don't need to lift a car off of my chest. What's important to me is high endurance."

To prepare his clients Pire runs a type of boot camp that features a lot of change of direction, crawling and performance-based drills.

"These are essentially simple things: climbing, crawling, running," he said, but very demanding physically and mentally.

"If you're not used to that stress, you're not going to feel so good. Not to mention the blood from the barbed wire," he added.

But he added that mud runs are very social affairs.

"I don't know anybody who's done this without a friend," he said. "The social aspect drives people. Lots of husbands and wives, boyfriends and girlfriends and friends. Then they party afterwards."

Christine Bohle, a senior industry marketing manager at Eventbrite, an online self-registration and ticketing company that includes mud runs, said they tend to attract people of all fitness levels.

"It's about having fun and getting through it," Bohle said.

(Editing by Patricia Reaney)

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Sunday, August 26, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: "Go-Topless Day" in New York seeks equal rights to bare chests

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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"Go-Topless Day" in New York seeks equal rights to bare chests
Aug 26th 2012, 20:51

By Jonathan Allen

NEW YORK | Sun Aug 26, 2012 4:51pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Some two dozen topless women protested in a New York City park on a hot, sweaty Sunday as part of what they called "National Go-Topless Day" to draw attention to inequality in topless rights between men and women.

There were topless men in the park, too, but nobody paid them much attention, a disparity, organizers said, that demonstrated the need for the event.

The topless women drew crowds of onlookers who took pictures and video with their cell phones.

"We say there is nothing wrong with the female nipple," Karen Heaven, an organizer of the event, told the crowd that quickly formed around her in Manhattan's Bryant Park. She was wearing white pants and not much else besides a purse over her shoulder. "My dog has six, I have two, but I can be put in jail for showing my nipples. It's 2012 -- what are we thinking?"

It is legal for women to go topless in public in New York City but laws vary widely across the United States. Heaven and her colleagues say discrimination is unconstitutional and they want full equality.

Similar protests were scheduled in about 30 U.S. cities and 10 around the world, organizers said.

The annual Go-Topless Day was established in 2007 by a former sports car journalist called Rael, who founded a religion called the Raelian Movement after he said he was visited by a space alien in a French volcano park who told him life on Earth was created by extraterrestrial scientists, according to an account on his website.

Occasional references to alien creators did not seem to register with the crowd, which focused mostly on the breasts.

"I'll show these to a few friends and then delete them after a few days," Rudy Sison, a New Yorker who happened to visit the park on Sunday, said as he thumbed through photographs and video he had just taken on his phone. "They're topless."

Several women waved signs saying: "Equal Topless Rights For All."

After the speeches, a guitarist led the crowd in a reworking of The Beatles' song "Let It Be."

"Let 'em breathe," people sang. "Let 'em breathe."

(Editing by Daniel Trotta)

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Thursday, August 23, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Norwegian gallery loses a Rembrandt in the mail

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Norwegian gallery loses a Rembrandt in the mail
Aug 24th 2012, 00:24

OSLO | Thu Aug 23, 2012 8:24pm EDT

OSLO (Reuters) - A Norwegian art gallery lost a Rembrandt etching worth up to $8,600 in the mail after trying to save money on courier and insurance costs, the gallery's chief said on Thursday.

The Soli Brug Gallery in Greaaker, about 80 kilometers south of Oslo, purchased a copy of Rembrandt's 'Lieven Willemsz, van Coppenol, Writing-Master' made in around 1658 from a British dealer, only to have it lost in the Norwegian postal system.

"Using a courier or special insurance is quite expensive so we have used regular mail until now," Ole Derje, the gallery's chairman said.

"It is worth around 40,000 to 50,000 crowns ($6,900-$8,600)and the postal service is offering us compensation of 500-1,000 crowns."

Derje said his gallery, which is displaying works by Dürer, Rembrandt, Goya, Munch and Dali, received notice to pick up the package but when he went to collect it, it was nowhere to be found.

Derje declined to name the seller, citing confidentiality concerns.

"We are sorry that this has happened; we have advised him to use a more appropriate form of mail when sending items that are worth as much as this with the appropriate insurance connected," said Hilde Ebeltoft-Skaugrud, a spokesman for the postal service.

($1 = 5.8280 Norwegian krones)

(Reporting by Vegard Botterli)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Nepali man bites snake to death in revenge attack

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
Nepali man bites snake to death in revenge attack
Aug 23rd 2012, 06:10

KATHMANDU | Thu Aug 23, 2012 2:10am EDT

KATHMANDU (Reuters) - A Nepali man who was bitten by a cobra snake bit it back and killed the reptile in a tit-for-tat attack, a newspaper said on Thursday.

Nepali daily Annapurna Post said Mohamed Salmo Miya chased the snake, which bit him in his rice paddy on Tuesday, caught it and bit it until it died.

"I could have killed it with a stick but bit it with my teeth instead because I was angry," the 55-year-old Miya, who lives in a village some 200 km (125 miles) southeast of the Nepali capital of Kathmandu, was quoted by the daily as saying.

The snake, called "goman" in Nepal, is also known as the Common Cobra.

Police official Niraj Shahi said the man, who was being treated at a village health post and was not in danger of dying, would not be charged with killing the snake because the reptile was not among snake species listed as endangered in Nepal.

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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Gibbons on helium sing like opera stars

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Gibbons on helium sing like opera stars
Aug 23rd 2012, 04:30

A white-handed gibbon looks up at the White House Press Corps during U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to the Honolulu Zoo in Hawaii January 3, 2011. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

1 of 2. A white-handed gibbon looks up at the White House Press Corps during U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to the Honolulu Zoo in Hawaii January 3, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

By Ben Hirschler

LONDON | Thu Aug 23, 2012 12:02am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Gibbons are jungle divas. The small apes use the same technique to project their songs through the forests of southeast Asia as top sopranos singing at the New York Metropolitan Opera or La Scala in Milan.

That was the conclusion of research by Japanese scientists who tested the effect of helium gas on gibbon calls to see how their singing changed when their voices sounded abnormally high-pitched.

Just like professional singers, the experiment found the animals were able to amplify the higher sounds by adjusting the shape of their vocal tract, including the mouth and tongue.

It is a skill only mastered by a few humans, yet gibbons are able to do it with minimal effort, according to Takeshi Nishimura from the Primate Research Institute at Kyoto University.

Singing is particularly important to gibbons, which use loud calls and songs to communicate across the dense jungle. Their exchanges, described by primatologists as "duets", can carry as far as two kilometers (just over one mile).

"Our data indicate that acoustic and physiological mechanisms used in gibbon singing are analogous to human soprano singing, a professional operatic technique," Nishimura and colleagues wrote in a study in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology on Thursday.

Professional sopranos' ability to fine-tune their vocal tract resonances allows them to maintain their volume when they hit the high notes.

The fact that gibbons can do the same thing suggests the complexity of human speech may not have needed specific modifications in our vocal anatomy.

Making gibbons sing on helium may sound eccentric but Nishimura said it was a logical way to test how the animals controlled vocalization when the resonance frequencies in the vocal tract were shifted upwards.

"Using the helium environment, we can easily see how the resonance works and how the gibbon makes its loud pure-tone calls," he said in an interview.

His team used a captive white-handed gibbon to record 20 calls in normal air and 37 calls in a helium-enriched atmosphere to show how the animals could consciously manipulate their vocal cords and tract.

They worked out the gibbon's vocal tract had been adjusted by analyzing the sounds it produced.

Helium causes its distinctive effect because sound travels much faster through the gas than through air.

(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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Saturday, August 18, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Finn throws Olympic distance with old Nokia

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Finn throws Olympic distance with old Nokia
Aug 18th 2012, 20:06

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A mobile phone made by Nokia is pictured in this photo illustration taken in Warsaw May 8, 2012. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

A mobile phone made by Nokia is pictured in this photo illustration taken in Warsaw May 8, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Kacper Pempel

SAVONLINNA, Finland | Sat Aug 18, 2012 4:06pm EDT

SAVONLINNA, Finland (Reuters) - A Finnish teenager won a mobile phone throwing contest on Saturday by hurling his old Nokia phone 101.46 meters.

The annual contest is one of many offbeat events such as wife-carrying that are held in the summer when normally reserved Finns like to celebrate the warmer weather with silliness and outdoor sport.

Ere Karjalainen, who beat around 50 contestants, including some who had travelled from England and India, said he had practiced only once and prepared mainly "by drinking".

Not that the skills are totally comparable, but he bettered the gold medal javelin throw at the London Olympics by nearly 17 meters.

Finland is home to Nokia and is one of the world's most mature mobile phone markets, with people paying for tram tickets and parking spaces with their phones.

(Reporting by Attila Czer; Writing by Ritsuko Ando; Editing by Alison Williams)

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Thursday, August 16, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Brooklyn bar owner accuses police of draining his liquor stock

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Brooklyn bar owner accuses police of draining his liquor stock
Aug 16th 2012, 23:16

By Jonathan Allen

NEW YORK | Thu Aug 16, 2012 7:16pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The owner of a Brooklyn bar is suing New York City after police emptied the bar's entire stock of alcohol down the drain in a liquor license dispute, according to court papers.

David Kelleran, 51, claimed in his lawsuit that the police's Prohibition-style tactics violated state law and trampled on his rights. And, in any case, the police got the wrong address.

Kelleran, who owns the restaurant called 68, is seeking an unspecified amount of damages for the loss of alcohol worth "thousands of thousands" of dollars, his attorney Craig Trainor said on Thursday.

According to the lawsuit, Kelleran was notified in July 2011 by the New York State Liquor Authority that his $4,382 check to renew 68's liquor license bounced and he had ten days to make the payment.

Before the ten days were up, Kelleran said police came to his apartment over the restaurant in Brooklyn and arrested him for selling alcoholic drinks without a license. He spent the night in jail, the lawsuit said.

While he was in jail, police went into Coco66, a bar Kelleran owned next door to 68, and poured all his wine, beer and liquor down a drain, the lawsuit said.

Both the bar and restaurant have been closed since, even though the liquor license for Coco66 was valid, his suit said.

"Frankly, it is hard for any reasonable person to fathom that, in 2011, a high-level NYPD ranking officer would order his subordinate police officers to destroy lawful private property in this way," Trainor said in an email.

The city's law department said it was reviewing the lawsuit, which was filed last week in federal court in Brooklyn, but did not offer further comment. A spokesman for the New York Police Department did not respond to a request for comment.

(Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Smoke, donkey mascot for U.S. Marines in Iraq, dies in Nebraska

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Smoke, donkey mascot for U.S. Marines in Iraq, dies in Nebraska
Aug 16th 2012, 17:04

Thu Aug 16, 2012 1:04pm EDT

(Reuters) - Smoke, the Iraqi donkey whose journey from a desert battleground to a peaceful retirement in the United States captured the attention of the world, has died in Nebraska.

Smoke became lethargic and died this week after frolicking with miniature horses at Miracle Hills Ranch and Stable north of Omaha. Smoke had served as an equine therapy animal to help veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Smoke's Facebook page has friends from around the world.

Smoke was taken in by U.S. Marines after he showed up malnourished and wounded at Camp Taqaddum in Anbar province in 2008. Regulations prohibited keeping the donkey, but Marine Colonel John Folsom of Omaha, then commander at the camp, found a Navy psychologist to designate Smoke as a therapy animal because he reduced stress among Marines.

The donkey learned to walk into offices and open desk drawers to find apples, carrots and other treats planted there by Marines. Deployed dads sent their children pictures and stories of Smoke.

U.S. Army troops who relieved Marines at the camp turned the donkey over to a local sheikh. Folsom, now retired, tracked down the donkey and cut through layers of red tape to bring him to Nebraska last year. He said Smoke may have died of colic.

"He was a great little donkey," Folsom said.

(Editing by Mary Wisniewski, Cynthia Johnston and M.D. Golan)

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