Thursday, October 25, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Canadian Mountie does not get his moose

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Canadian Mountie does not get his moose
Oct 25th 2012, 21:42

Thu Oct 25, 2012 5:42pm EDT

(Reuters) - Legend has it that a Canadian Mountie always gets his man. But nobody said anything about a moose.

An officer with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police was injured early on Thursday after being charged by a bull moose while driving on patrol in central British Columbia.

The officer was driving toward two moose at an intersection in the small community of Prince Rupert in an attempt to head off another vehicle approaching the same junction.

As the officer neared the animals, a bull moose charged his vehicle, breaking the front bumper as it jumped on the roof of the car. The moose began stomping and kicking, and a hoof broke the driver's side window, injuring the officer.

The moose then jumped on the trunk of the car and finally back on the road.

"Both the culprit and accomplice departed the area on hoof," the RCMP said in a statement.

The officer suffered bruising on his left shoulder, but did not require medical attention. He finished his shift and went home to rest, the police said.

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: China's Ai Weiwei bemoans block on his "Gangnam" parody

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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China's Ai Weiwei bemoans block on his "Gangnam" parody
Oct 25th 2012, 21:54

Dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei (front) dances with his friends as they make a cover version of music video of ''Gangnam Style'' by South Korean singer Psy at the courtyard of Ai's studio in Beijing, October 24, 2012. Picture taken October 24, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Courtesy of Ai Weiwei/Handout

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: China's Ai Weiwei bemoans block on his "Gangnam" parody

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
China's Ai Weiwei bemoans block on his "Gangnam" parody
Oct 25th 2012, 20:29

Dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei (front) dances with his friends as they make a cover version of music video of ''Gangnam Style'' by South Korean singer Psy at the courtyard of Ai's studio in Beijing, October 24, 2012. Picture taken October 24, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Courtesy of Ai Weiwei/Handout

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: HSBC swings to victory at Hong Kong's hedge fund fight night

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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HSBC swings to victory at Hong Kong's hedge fund fight night
Oct 25th 2012, 19:13

Steven ''The Wizard of Wanchai'' Taw from South Ocean Management Ltd emerges as he takes part in the Hedge Fund Fight Nite white collar charity boxing event in Hong Kong October 25, 2012. REUTERS/Bobby Yip

1 of 3. Steven ''The Wizard of Wanchai'' Taw from South Ocean Management Ltd emerges as he takes part in the Hedge Fund Fight Nite white collar charity boxing event in Hong Kong October 25, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Bobby Yip

By Michael Flaherty and Nishant Kumar

HONG KONG | Thu Oct 25, 2012 3:13pm EDT

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Adam Gazal trained for six months to stand in the ring for six minutes of live boxing. He remembers the noise, and not much else, and said he'd like to try it again, though he realizes that the time in the gym took time away from home.

"I think my wife will divorce me if I go through another six months of training," Gazal said after the fight.

The managing partner of National Australia Bank was one of 14 contenders who on Thursday took part in Hong Kong's sixth annual IronMonger Hedge Fund Fight Night, a fundraising event that is now a staple of the city's financial community.

Gazal, who fought his pal Grant Livingston, an executive director at JPMorgan with a long reach and quick jab, won by unanimous decision.

A survey of the crowd found more bankers than hedgies in attendance, perhaps a sign of the industry's struggles in the region. Asian-focused hedge funds as measured by the Eurekahedge index rose 3.8 percent through September this year, falling short of a 7 percent rise in the MSCI Asia index. At least 73 Asia hedge funds have shut down this year.

The city's bankers and financiers aren't faring much better, though the sector's woes failed to impact attendance on Thursday night. At more than HK$2,000 ($260) a seat, the black-tie crowd filled every chair inside the makeshift boxing tent. Proceeds go to children's charities Operation Breakthrough and Operation Smile, with last year's event raising more than HK$500,000.

American Anthony Carango, an executive director at Nomura Holdings, had a focused plan going into his match - a plan that he said "went out the window" as soon as the bell rang.

Carango, who squared off against Craig Barnish, a managing director at BAH Partners Ltd, said it came back to him occasionally - "head, body, head, body" - enough to allow him a unanimous-decision victory.

HSBC fielded three fighters on the night. Richard Rouse, an account manager at the bank, held steady in his match against Andrew Wylde, head of sales and operations at Hatstand consultancy. Wylde fought hard, needing to stop twice to mend a bloody face, but Rouse held on to win.

Blair Crichton, an assistant vice president of HSBC, and Brad Moreland, a director of prime services at the bank, each won their matches, pulling off a clean sweep. Crichton defeated Stephen Taw, a director at South Ocean Management Ltd, while Moreland won against Frenchman Nicolas Boulay, a derivatives broker at Louis Capital.

"As the fight goes on, you get tired, you tend to lose form, which was obvious," said Boulay, who noted his strong crowd support from friends and clients.

Danielle Midalia, a creative manager at Operation Smile, defeated Andrea Glynn, an associate at the Bank of Montreal, in the night's only female match-up. Mark O'Reilly, a managing director at Astbury Marsden, lost to George Radford, a consultant at IP Global.

Taw, 53, was the eldest boxer and crowd favorite, known as the "Wizard of Wanchai". With grey hair protruding from his red headgear, he went down in the first of three rounds, then held tough throughout.

"My strategy was simple: do not get hit in the face," he said, a strategy that quickly fell apart. Standing near the ring in his boxing outfit after the fight and holding two glasses of beer, Taw reflected on his performance.

"I think I won the third round," said Taw, his face now cleared of blood. "But I didn't land my jabs."

(Editing by Dale Hudson)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Suit filed to block deer shoot in Washington park

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Suit filed to block deer shoot in Washington park
Oct 25th 2012, 18:35

WASHINGTON | Thu Oct 25, 2012 2:35pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Animal rights activists filed a lawsuit on Thursday to try to stop a plan to cull deer in a Washington park, saying it would create a "killing field" in the heart of the U.S. capital.

The deer population in Rock Creek Park has soared in recent years, creating a threat to plant life, and the National Park Service said in May that it would launch a program to trim numbers to 15 to 20 per square mile (six to eight per square km), from 67 (26) recorded in a 2009 census.

Residents and activists filed suit in a U.S. District Court charging that the planned cull in the 12-mile-long (19-km-long) park would create a "killing field" in the heart of Washington.

The NPS plans to use sharpshooters or reproductive controls to cut deer numbers. Shooting would be carried out mostly at night in the winter and autumn and the meat donated to food banks.

The suit by five area residents, including economist Jeremy Rifkin, and the In Defense of Animals advocacy group said the NPS would be violating its statutory obligations to conserve wildlife and allow visitors to enjoy the park.

The suit said that if the cull went ahead it would be the first time the killing of wildlife had been allowed in the park since it was created in the 19th century.

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: New York police officer charged with plan to cook, eat women

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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New York police officer charged with plan to cook, eat women
Oct 25th 2012, 16:00

By Basil Katz

NEW YORK | Thu Oct 25, 2012 12:00pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York City police officer was charged on Thursday with conspiring to kidnap, torture, cook and eat women whose names he kept in a list on his computer.

Gilberto Valle III, 28, of Forest Hills, Queens, was arrested on Wednesday by the FBI, a spokesman for the agency said.

In a criminal complaint unsealed on Thursday in Manhattan federal court, Valle was charged with conspiring to cross state lines to kidnap and with illegally accessing a federal database.

The complaint said investigators had uncovered a file on Valle's computer containing the names and pictures of at least 100 women, as well as the addresses and physical descriptions of some of them.

The complaint said that Valle had undertaken surveillance of some of the women at their work and at their home.

In an excerpt of a July conversation with an unnamed co-conspirator, Valle is quoted in the complaint as saying: "I can just show up at her home unannounced, it will not alert her, and I can knock her out, wait until dark and kidnap her right out of her home."

"I was thinking of tying her body onto some kind of apparatus... cook her over a low heat, keep her alive as long as possible." The woman in question is identified only as "Victim 1."

Valle was not charged with carrying out any of the alleged planned attacks, according to the charges, suggesting he was arrested before any of the targeted women were harmed.

A lawyer for Valle could not immediately be identified.

A spokesman for the New York Police Department could not immediately be reached for comment.

(Reporting By Basil Katz; Additional Reporting by Chris Francescani; Editing by Vicki Allen)

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Rare "headless" ladybug discovered in Montana

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Rare "headless" ladybug discovered in Montana
Oct 25th 2012, 03:44

By Laura Zuckerman

SALMON, Idaho | Wed Oct 24, 2012 11:44pm EDT

SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) - Sleepy Hollow has its headless horseman and now Montana has a headless ladybug.

The newly discovered insect tucks its head into its throat - making it not only a new species but an entirely new genus, or larger classification of plants and animals.

Ross Winton captured the insect in 2009 in traps he set in a sand dune while an entomology graduate student at Montana State University. Winton, now a wildlife technician in Idaho, at first thought he had parts of an ant but then discovered the bug can hide its head, much like a turtle ducking into its shell.

Winton sent his discovery to scientists in Australia working on this group of insects and the headless ladybug was formally described in a recent issue of the peer-reviewed journal Systemic Entomology.

Just two specimens of the tan, pinhead-sized ladybugs, also known as ladybird beetles, have ever been collected, a male in Montana and a female in Idaho, scientists said, making it the rarest species in the United States.

Entomologists historically used males to describe beetle species so the credit for the new discovery went to Winton.

However, the new species - Allenius iviei - was named after his former professor and Montana State University entomologist Michael Ivie.

The insect, with the proposed common name "Winton's Ladybird Beetle," may prey on aphids and other plant pests.

Ivie said it was rare to discover a new beetle in the United States and rarer still to uncover a completely new genus. The discovery is no small accomplishment considering the bug is the size and color of a grain of sand, he added.

He said it was unclear why the beetle slips its head into a tube in its midsection.

"It's a whole new kind of ladybug. Whatever this does, it is very specialized. It's quite the exciting little beast," Ivie said.

(Editing by Mary Slosson and Lisa Shumaker)

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