Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Watch this amazing wingsuit flying through a small cave opening (VIDEO)

Alessandro Chickens is a professional BASE-jump athlete. But his latest video showcases a critically dangerous stunt, as Chickens in his wingsuit flies through a small opening into a steep mountain.

The opening itself is barely wide enough for chickens walking, let alone try a maneuver life-threatening air at 150 mph.

But he would not be a famous BASE jumpers if I wasn't willing to try anything extreme. Also, chickens, said Roca Foradada mountains of Montserrat in Spain, have inspired throughout his life.

To prepare for the flight, chickens run two test jumps in which he flew through a banner marked "2013". In the first test, hit the side of the flag. It was an impressive display of accuracy, but if you had actual cave, almost certainly would have been a fatal error.

The second jump, he ripped perfectly through the Center.

With a test flight successfully completed, chickens stepped up for the real thing, launching from a helicopter with a camera mounted on top of his helmet to give viewers a first-person perspective as part of a project for EPIC TV.

And in a thrilling video clips, Chickens in fact successfully goes through the opening, as multiple cameras capture his creation from different angles.

More than 2 million people have already seen the flight in less than 48 hours since it was posted to YouTube account of chickens.

Still, that hasn't stopped several commentators to accuse Chickens to orchestrate a hoax.

"Honestly it makes me sooo happy when people think it is untrue," Chickens wrote on his Twitter account.


View the original article here

Mont. Man reunited with bird that lost in a divorce

BUTTE, Mont. (AP) — A Great Falls man who lost his ara in a divorce more than five years ago has been reunited with the bird, thanks to a friend.

Mike Taylor picked up the 25-year-old he calls "Love Love" of Montana Parrot exotic Bird Sanctuary & in Butte on Sunday.

Taylor said that his wife sold the bird after a nasty divorce. "Kind of been looking for him all the time," he said.

A friend of Taylor, Steven Campbell, recently sighted bird during a visit to the shrine.

It took some time for Campbell to convince Taylor. Then Taylor had to convince founder Lori McAlexander sanctuary. But she said she knew things about the bird that could know only one previous owner, as if he was blind in one eye, said "love love" and liked to play peek-a-boo.

The bird was surrendered to the sanctuary a couple of years ago, after a woman so hard that requested medical assistance, bit McAlexander said.

"I don't even deal with him because he, he exclaimed," he said.

Love appeared to recognize immediately Taylor.

"Hanging upside down already, let me grab its beak makes her peeky-boo, love to slide your head," said Taylor, who has called the "heart touching reunion."

"He is the same again already, he really is. I mean, he (does). "

Taylor also has original bird cage had returned after a search on Craigslist. A woman who got the contents of storage units of his ex-wife has agreed to give him the cage back at no charge.

"It's kind of weird how he's getting his pecker and the cage," McAlexander said.

Taylor said that initially the bird in a sanctuary in Salt Lake City, after it was saved by a woman who reportedly beat him with a broom.

Ara can live up to 50 years, according to the San Diego Zoo.


View the original article here

Monday, April 29, 2013

Kan woman meets circus tiger in the bathroom

SALINA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas woman probably Central doesn't remember the first circus to clown or performance — is the tiger in the bathroom.

The big cat had escaped briefly after his time in the ring Saturday at the circus Shrine of ISIS in Salina. Staff members locked out the concourses in the Middle as the Tiger wandered bicentennial in bath, where a gate was locked.

At about the same time, Salina resident Jenna Krehbiel decided that she needed to use the bathroom. When he walked in the door he had not locked out, he found a tiger Standing about 2 feet away, The Salina Journal reported (http://bit.ly/11eq218).

"You don't expect to go into a bathroom door, they closed behind you and see a tiger walking towards you," Krehbiel said.

Chris Bird, manager at the center of the bicentennial, said the toilet was only 25 feet long.

"Once we saw the Tiger, I'm sure she knew to go to the other side," said the bird. "Overall, it was a scary moment, surreal. I'm glad no one was hurt or injured.

The tiger was captured in a few minutes and returned to his enclosure.

Krehbiel, a social worker, said she doesn't scream or run because she is trained to remain calm.

"Looking back, it was a scary ordeal," he said. "At the moment, I was thinking that I just need to get out."

Krehbiel said that 3-year-old daughter had a different reaction.

"My daughter wanted to know if they had washed their hands," Krehbiel said. "That was his only concern. I think that shows the thoughts of children and who do not have known there was no danger ".


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Fund set up to repay Maine hermit victims

AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — The attorney for a Maine man who lived in the woods as a hermit for 27 years has established a fund to repay people who think they were victims of burglaries at their cottages by the recluse.


Christopher Knight, known as the North Pond Hermit, may have committed as many as 1,000 burglaries over the years for food, clothing, camping and cooking gear and other supplies that allowed him to live at a camp in the woods of the rural town of Rome, police have said.


Knight, who is 47, was arrested earlier this month while allegedly breaking into a camp for people with special needs to steal food. He is being held on $25,000 bail.


Knight's lawyer, Walter McKee, told the Kennebec Journal the account will pay for "what will be the substantial restitution he will owe for what he took."


"Chris very much wants to make things right," McKee told the Augusta newspaper via email. People who want to contribute to the fund can send donations to McKee at his Augusta law firm.


Lillie Cogswell of Wimberley, Texas, whose camp on Little North Pond was burglarized, said that her family "the monetary issue is not an overriding issue" and that there should be consequences for Knight's behavior.


"The bigger part was all of us feeling uncomfortable and not feeling safe and feeling like someone was watching us in our homes," said Cogswell.


District Attorney Maeghan Maloney said following Knight's initial court appearance Tuesday that she expects he will be charged in connection with 15 to 20 burglaries that were reported to police in recent years. Knight's next hearing was scheduled for June 11. So far, he has entered no plea on several burglary and theft charges.


___


Information from: Kennebec Journal, http://www.kjonline.com/


View the original article here

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Affidavit: hermit Maine carried Bacon, syrup, $ 395

AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — A State police affidavit says a Maine man who lived as a hermit in the woods for nearly three decades was carrying $ 395, marshmallows and bacon in cash when he was arrested on suspicion of burglary.

An affidavit obtained by the Kennebec Journal (http://bit.ly/13oW4cH) that lists the articles 47-year-old Christopher Knight has possessed when he was arrested on charges of stealing of food this month from a camp for children with special needs.

The articles also include wrenches, pliers, electrical tape, a clock, a baseball hat, coffee, burgers burgers, chicken nuggets, cheese, corn syrup and chips.

Since his arrest, Knight drew a marriage proposal and telephoned a stranger's offer to bail him out. Knight refused the offer of bail and remains in jail.

Police say that may have been responsible for a total of 1,000 burglaries.

___

Information from: Kennebec Journal, http://www.kjonline.com/


View the original article here

Spas for pigs, dogs with psychics: meet the "Spoiled Rotten Pets"

By Eric Kelsey


LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Every dog has its day, and for Afghan pooch Aiden, today is for dancing lessons while cats Lucky and Missy are legally guaranteed their nightly shrimp dinners according to their owner's last testament.


These are just a few of the "Spoiled Rotten Pets," a new television series that dives into the world of fawning pet owners who outfit rats in formal wear and pamper Burmese pythons like princes.


The series, which will debut on U.S. cable network Nat Geo Wild on Saturday, follows host Beth Stern as she meets devoted pet owners who go above and beyond spoiling their pets - a venture the network's chief, Geoff Daniels, said was not so hard to find.


"This is about saying that this is more pervasive that anybody thinks," Daniels, executive vice president for Nat Geo Wild, a sister network of the Natural Geographic Channel, told Reuters.


"The show is about colorful and relatable people," he added. "Everybody knows someone like this or does something for their pets to this degree."


Indeed, as the series seeks out the over-the-top pet owner, it also shows they are not alone. After all, there is a thriving market for their spoils of clothing and comfort.


New York resident Cynthia takes time to iron the countless dresses and sweaters that her Yorkie, Toto, wears every day.


"Toto is spoiled," Cynthia says. "I want to do everything possible that I can to make sure that Toto is happy and healthy."


But Toto also has her own psychic, who cautions that the toy-sized dog feels trapped in her fashionable threads.


"She wants to run naked on the beach," pyschic Madrette says while reading Toto's paw print.


"Just once in a while, make sure that she feels that she's being put first ... I think she would really like a mommy-and-me day," Madrette says in her final analysis.


'PIG-TICIANS' AND 'BARK MITZVAHS'


"It's really interesting to see how these people put their pet care above their own," Daniels said. "You consistently get the sense that there's nothing too great for these animals if you see them as family and friends."


Enter Dave and Jennifer, who drop off pet pigs Wilma and Pebbles at a nearby "pig spa" for the night, which will be the couple's first night without them in eight years.


Wilma and Pebbles get the five-star treatment, like Chinese massage from a "pig-tician," while Dave and Jennifer have a quiet but uneasy night as empty-nesters.


Not to be outdone, Diane from upstate New York keeps her 10 rats on a strict vegan diet while spoiling newcomer Vinnie with a special first birthday party where he gets his own tuxedo.


"It's one thing about spoiling dogs and cats, but we're talking pigs and donkeys and rats and tortoises," Daniels said.


Religion also gets its due when New Jersey couple David and Donna give their Pomeranian dog, Sophia, a "bark mitzvah," a canine take on the Jewish coming-of-age bar mitzvah ceremony.


"She's my daughter so I feel like I'm going to do whatever it takes to make her happy," says Donna.


More than 70 guests, including dogs, attend the ceremony under a tent in the couple's yard. But it is not the first bark mitzvah for the rabbi, who says she has done the same for the dogs of comedians Joan Rivers and Roseanne Barr.


Daniels said Nat Geo Wild sees "Spoiled Rotten Pets" as adding a lighter touch to its wildlife-heavy programming, which attracts many more male viewers.


"We are really trying to transform our offerings and bring in more women, especially," Daniels said. "We're looking for differentiation in the marketplace and a more balanced demographic."


Nat Geo Wild is owned by the National Geographic Society and News Corp.


(Reporting by Eric Kelsey, editing by Jill Serjeant and Sandra Maler)


View the original article here

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Cops: Men toss dead groundhog, grouse into Pa. bar

BROOKVILLE, Pa. (AP) — Police in one western Pennsylvania town are investigating a case of bar kill: a groundhog and a grouse, both dead, tossed into a tavern by unsatisfied customers.


The (Dubois) Courier-Express reports that the animals were tossed into Bill's Bar hours apart Sunday in Brookville, about 70 miles northeast of Pittsburgh.


Brookville police Chief Ken Dworek tells The Associated Press that the suspects are an underage man who was refused service at the bar and another who was turned away because of "an alcohol problem."


The chief says such use of animals is a fairly common problem in Brookville. He says, for example, "a guy will get in an argument and put a dead squirrel on his girlfriend's doorknob, that kind of thing."


View the original article here

Bizarre email exchange between state senator and displeased constituent

State Senator Brian Nieves (photo: Wikipedia)Missouri state Sen. Brian Nieves (photo: Wikipedia)


When an unsolicited email arrives, most people hit delete and move on with their lives. Not Bart Cohn.


The Wildwood, Mo., resident received a newsletter from Brian Nieves, a Republican member of the Missouri Senate with whom Cohn does not see eye to eye on the issues. According to River Front Times, which originally reported the story, Cohn wrote a seven-word reply to Nieves' newsletter. "Take me off your mailing list. Freak."


And thus began a wackadoo exchange of insults between Cohn and Nieves, all of which were forwarded by Cohn to River Front Times.


After Cohn's tersely worded response, Nieves issued a retort:



Who are you? Is there something wrong with you? Are you incapable of communicating in a way that common, decent people do?


Tell me this, how did you ever even get on MY Distribution list?


Cohn fired back:



Remove me from your list. I despise you.


Nieves then wrote this:



Tell me who you are and how you ever got on my list. I don't take we'll to some troll sneaking on to my distribution list.


Things get weird(er). From Cohn:



I don't care what you take well to. Take me off your list. I don't know how I got on your list. And I don't sneak. I'll tell you to your face I think you're a freak. Now act like a big boy, senator, and remove me from your list as I've requested. And stop harassing me or I'll make an issue of it.


Nieves apparently took issue with the word "issue." He wrote:



Explain "issue"


Are you threatening an elected official? I'm sure your very Big & Bad & Tuff.


The ONE and ONLY way for you to have gotten on my list is by YOU having communicated with me via email. I guess your the type who wants to be able to throw something my way but not hear back?


You'll be removed but be Very Careful to NEVER Threaten me! Also, don't ever send anything to this email address again because every time you do, you automatically get put back on the distribution list. :-)


Think that's the end? Nope. Cohn responded with more insults:



I didn't threaten anyone, you tool. You are such a douchetard it's not even funny. Now go do some work on your insane conspiracy theories that everyone laughs about behind your back. You're a joke!


To which Nieves wrote:



Wow. Your communications are so thought provoking, well written, and intelligent. Perhaps you secretly want to be on my distribution list because every time you send me a message, your email is recaptured and put on my distribution list. I'm tiring of taking you off every time you email me AGAIN so unless you are in love with me or have some other sort of sick obsession with me (sorry, I'm straight as an arrow) you should probably stop emailing me so that you don't keep getting put back on the list. Should I type these instructions slower? Are you having a hard time understanding? BTW - I archive ALL questionable emails like yours in case there's ever any doubt about who got ugly first. Go back to the grade school playground where people you can successfully bully and out smart are playing cuz junior... You are way out of your league with me.


Cohn apparently did not respond. But Nieves couldn't resist writing one more email and referencing a photo of Cohn from Facebook.



BTW... You really don't look good with a beard.


In a comment posted on the River Front Times story, a person identified as Cohn expressed some regret for his part in the exchange.



I shouldn't have called him names. But I'd just had enough of him. He was spamming me left and right with his insane newsletters, I'd just had surgery, and I couldn't take it anymore. I was shocked he wrote me back immediately, I had expected him just to remove me from his distribution list. And then for him to write me back 5 more times after that... I'll let the public be the judge of what went down between us.


Messages seeking comment from Nieves were not immediately returned.


View the original article here

Playboy club to lose data with sun-kissed State

By Jamkhandikar

MUMBAI (Reuters)-plans to open the first Playboy club of India Goa coastal State hit a stumbling block, with local politicians, rejecting the idea of "bunnies" on its pristine beaches amid increasing pressure for better treatment of women after a fatal gang rape last year.

The India has strict censorship laws and there is no Indian version of Playboy Magazine, but the promoters of the Playboy brand in India last year revealed plans to open clubs around the country, with adapted dress to fit Indian mores.

A legislator from the right-wing of the party that rules the State had threatened a hunger strike if the Government allowed Playboy set up a shop in Goa, saying you want to tarnish the image of the State.

"If the Government had to give a license to Playboy, amounts to giving a license for prostitution," Michael Lobo told Reuters, adding that Playboy promoted vulgarity.

"We respect our women," she said. "We don't want to promote Goa as sex tourism destination like Thailand."

Tens of thousands of tourists visit Goa during the peak season, October to March to enjoy the golden beaches, which are also famous for night-long parties.

Media reports suggest that many other politicians and women's groups share concerns of Lobo, but the Bharatiya Janata Party which rules Goa has not officially made his displeasure known.

Monday, however, Goa Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar told the State Assembly that Playboy license application had been rejected for "technical reasons", citing rules that allow such licenses for individuals, but not companies.

Playboy Club are part of the hedonistic lifestyle promoted by the octogenarian Hugh Hefner, founder of Playboy magazine with pictures of nude women. Playboy clubs around the world feature waitresses dressed in black satin corsets, neckties, wristbands and rabbit ears.

The clash highlights the increasing pressure for a more restrictive climate in India after the brutal gang rape of a young woman in the capital of New Delhi in December caused widespread outrage about attitudes towards women.

Undaunted, the promoters of the Playboy brand in India-PB Lifestyle, which has a licensing agreement with US-based Playboy Enterprises Inc.-said want to try again.

"There are some technical glitches that we must correct and then you can take it from there, said Sanjay Gupta, CEO of PB Lifestyle."I can't predict what will be the decision of the Government ".

Gupta said they tried to secure the Playboy club clothes did not offend the Indian sensibility, even toning down characteristic bunny costumes for local tastes-a first for Playboy clubs around the world.

He added that the property of Goa was intended not as a nightclub, but as a beach café where women were given special privileges. He did not specify what were those privileges.

"The environment and the atmosphere that we're creating are women friendly," said Gupta. "It's not a male bastion, spouses are more than welcome."

The company plans to open Playboy Clubs in other Indian cities.

(Written by Tony Tharakan, Editing by Elaine Lies and Michael Perry)


View the original article here

Friday, April 26, 2013

Sinkhole swallows 3 cars in Chicago

This is not how most people expect to start the day.


A sinkhole unexpectedly opened up on a residential street in Chicago’s southeast side Thursday morning, swallowing three cars.


Officials blamed the sinkhole on a broken water main, according to the Chicago Tribune. Heavy rains and flooding have also been drenching the area.


[See a slideshow of the flooding in Chicago.]


One man on his way to work could not avoid driving his car into the crevasse. He was taken to a local hospital for minor injuries, according to report from Reuters.


Witnesses told the Tribune that the hole appeared to open up around 5 a.m., quickly spreading from 20 to 40 feet wide.


Neighborhood resident Ola Oni told the paper she was getting ready for work around 5 a.m. but had not yet gotten into her car when it fell into the gaping hole.


"It could have happened to me, I am lucky, I'm happy," Oni told the Tribune. She added,"In this kind of neighborhood, I don't think this should happen."


Sinkholes have plagued other areas like Florida, which has seen the underground dangers swallow businesses and homes, even taken a life.


Jeff Bush, a resident of Seffner, Fla., near Tampa, was killed last month when a hole opened up under his bedroom and swallowed him.


View the original article here

Police: Upstate NY man's bad idea results in crash

JAMESTOWN, N.Y. (AP) — It turns out coasting an SUV with no brakes downhill to a scrap yard isn't a good idea after all.


Police say a 28-year-old man found that out Tuesday evening when he attempted to drive an SUV to a scrap yard in Jamestown, 60 miles south of Buffalo.


Officers tell The Post-Journal of Jamestown (http://bit.ly/12m2F8K ) that the man told them he had disconnected the battery before coasting down a hill to get to a nearby scrap yard. Police say he also told them the 1995 Chevrolet Tahoe had no brakes.


Officials say he was unable to stop at an intersection and collided with another vehicle. He and the other driver suffered minor injuries.


The man was charged with reckless endangerment, failure to stop at a stop sign and having inadequate brakes.


___


Information from: The Post-Journal, http://www.post-journal.com


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Thursday, April 25, 2013

China's Internet abuzz about presidential taxi ride that wasn't

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's Internet was abuzz on Thursday over a report that President Xi Jinping, who is striving to portray himself as a humble man, had hailed a cab in Beijing last month. The report was later dismissed by state media as being false.


Many Chinese news portals, which had carried the story, removed it, including the website of the newspaper that wrote the original piece.


The report, which first appeared in the Beijing-backed Ta Kung Bao newspaper of Hong Kong, went viral on Chinese microblogs and the Internet before the official Xinhua news agency stepped in to say it was all untrue.


The Ta Kung Pao later posted an apology on its website.


"Because of our lapse, a significant false report appeared," the newspaper said. "For this, we sincerely apologise to our readers, We take this as a warning, and will return to producing accurate and rigorous reporting for the public."


The story had portrayed Xi, who has been keen to break from the stiff and aloof style of past leaders, as a man who takes random taxi rides and gives moderate tips.


The Ta Kung Pao said that China's new leader hailed a cab in the capital last month to take him to the Diaoyutai Hotel, part of the well-guarded state guesthouse.


Taxi driver Guo Lixin said he picked up two men, one of whom turned out to be Xi, who at the time was Chinese Communist Party secretary and was two weeks later named China's president.


"This is hilarious. It shows that people will believe anything," wrote one user on Sina Weibo, China's answer to Twitter, after Xinhua's denial.


(Reporting by Terril Yue Jones and Eleven Du; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)


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Message in a bottle found after 28-year trip from Canada to Croatia

 A message in a bottle traveled almost 5,000 miles from Canada to Croatia (File/AFP)In 1985, a man named Jonathon dropped a message in a bottle to a woman named Mary. Twenty-eight years later, the message in a bottle was discovered after having made a voyage of almost 5,000 miles from Canada to Croatia.


“Mary, you really are a great person. I hope we can keep in correspondence. I said I would write,” reads the message, which was published in the Toronto Star. “Your friend always. Jonathon. Nova Scotia 1985.”


According to the AFP, the bottle traveled approximately 4,971 miles between the two points.


The bottle was discovered by Matea Rezik, who said she found it washed up on the banks of the Neretva river.


Rezik then posted a picture of the message, saying she wanted to help reunite Mary and Jonathon. Since then, people have been posting about the message across social media sites in an attempt to find out exactly who the two are, where they might live and even if they're still alive.


Of course, others have been understandably confused as to why Jonathon would attempt a correspondence via a message in a bottle dropped into the ocean.


In August 2012, an even older bottled message was discovered that had been adrift for 98 years, setting a Guinness world record. But there was little mystery about that message, as it was part of an experiment by the government of Scotland. And that bottle didn’t travel far, being discovered at a relatively close distance from where it had been deposited nearly a century before.


So how exactly did Jonathon’s bottle travel thousands of miles before ending up in a brush pile alongside a Croatian river?


The Toronto Star says that over the years, the bottle likely traveled across the Atlantic, passed through the Mediterranean Sea, the Strait of Gibraltar and finally through the Adriatic Sea in order to reach the Neretva.


Those lengthy journeys are not entirely unheard of. In August 2011, a girl in Hawaii discovered a message in a bottle written by an Oregon boy. That message managed to travel more than 2,000 miles in a single year.


"Dear finder of my message, My name is Thomas and I live in Oregon,” the message read. “I'm ten years old and this week I'm salmon fishing deep in the ocean. I would like to hear from you."


Sure enough, Thomas Craig and Trinity Ballesteros, the then 9-year-old girl who discovered the bottle, have become pen pals.


View the original article here

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Price of fame: Performers and sports stars die younger

By Belinda Goldsmith


LONDON (Reuters) - The price of fame can be high with an international study on Thursday finding that people who enjoy successful entertainment or sporting careers tend to die younger.


Researchers Richard Epstein and Catherine Epstein said the study, based on analysing 1,000 New York Times obituaries from 2009-2011, found film, music, stage performers and sports people died at an average age of 77.2 years.


This compared to an average lifespan of 78.5 years for creative workers, 81.7 for professionals and academics, and 83 years for people in business, military and political careers.


The Australian-based researchers said these earlier deaths could indicate that performers and sports stars took more risks in life, either to reach their goals or due to their success.


"Fame and achievement in performance-related careers may be earned at the cost of a shorter life expectancy," the researchers wrote in their study published in QJM: An International Journal of Medicine.


"In such careers, smoking and other risk behaviors may be either causes of effects of success and/or early death."


Britain's most high-profile celebrity publicist, Max Clifford, said the pressure that celebrities and sports stars put on themselves to succeed had to play a part, and even at the top they were always worried about who could replace them.


"People assume that fame and success is all about riches and happiness but as someone who has worked with famous people for 45 years I know that is not the case," Clifford told Reuters.


"The success becomes like a drug to them that they have to have and they are always worried about losing it so they push and push and work harder and harder. You have to be competitive in these fields otherwise it will not work."


WARNING TO ASPIRING STARS


For the study the researchers separated the obituaries by gender, age, and cause of death as well as by occupation, with anyone involved in sports, acting, singing, music or dance put into a performance category.


Others were split into creative roles such as writing and visual arts, into a business, military and political category, or a group of professional, academic and religious careers.


The study found that the list was heavily skewed towards men who accounted for 813 of the obituaries and the main causes of earlier deaths were linked to accidents, infections including HIV, and cancer.


Lung cancer deaths - which the authors considered a sign of chronic smoking - were most common in performers.


Richard Epstein, a director at the Kinghorn Cancer Centre at Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital, acknowledged that the one-off analysis could not prove anything but raised interesting questions.


"If it is true that successful performers and sports players tend to enjoy shorter lives, does this imply that fame at younger ages predisposes to poor health behaviors in later life after success has faded?" he said.


He suggested maybe psychological and family pressures favouring high public achievement could lead to self-destructive tendencies or that risk-taking personality traits maximized the chances of success, with the use of cigarettes, alcohol or illicit drugs improving performance output in the short-term.


"Any of these hypotheses could be viewed as a health warning to young people aspiring to become stars," he said.


(Reporting by Belinda Goldsmith)


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Pup named Huckleberry crowned ' beautiful Bulldog '

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — If at first you can't clean the Slobber and try again.

Just ask 4-year-old pup Huckleberry, who was crowned Monday as "Beautiful Bulldog." this year

Huckleberry competed for the title in 2010, just walk away empty-pawed. That changed this year, when he strutted along a blue track at Drake University in Des Moines, dressed in a beige dress as the main character in the movie "Forrest Gump".

"He is just a lover, said its owner, Stephanie Hein, Huckleberry sitting next to her toy miniature basketball and a suitcase similar to the one owned by Forrest Gump.

The competition is now in its 34th year and is held in front of the track and field meeting annual Drake Relays. The University mascot is a bulldog, and each year the winner becomes the mascot for the relay event.

Huckleberry beat other 46 bulldogs to wear the Crown and mantle, and competition was stiff. There was a bulldog dressed as a character "Thing" by Dr. Seuss, another wore an eyepatch and Earring hoop fake to match its owner dressed as a pirate. Diva, wearing a Tutu, took home the award for best dressed.

Huckleberry seemed unfazed by all the attention, more interested in a dog pie that is served annually from his throne, painted in gold. He threw in a few kisses slobbered its owners.

When not competing, Huckleberry loves to cuddle and hang out with a girl bulldog who lives nearby, according to Hein and her husband, Steven.

Huckleberry wore a Mohawk when he competed in 2010. But Stephanie Hein spent weeks narrowing and sow together this year's outfit, which included a checkered blue shirt similar to that worn by Forrest Gump.

"It was just a baby then," he said of his first attempt. "But it's definitely grown itself now."

___

Follow Barbara Rodriguez at http://twitter.com/bcrodriguez


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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Wallaby sull'allentato in Austria _ sì, Austria

VIENNA (AP)-volunteers are looking for a pair of kangaroos hopping through the Austria — Yes, Austria.

Marsupials like kangaroos, which are smaller than "roos" and mostly found in Australia, escaped from a farm in the countryside of Upper Austria, about 180 kilometers (about 110 miles) northwest of Vienna. Thursday was the third day of searching to find them.

There are actually three Wallabies on the loose — Gabrielle Schrammel owner says that the female has a joey in the pouch.

The Austrians often express irritation at being confused for Australians abroad, meant for the Australia occasionally surfaces in this central European Alpine country.

Those souvenir shops of Vienna do not selling t-shirts with the slogan "kangaroos in Austria" may be necessary to initiate a recall campaign.


View the original article here

Liverpool well Suarez to bite, but he did not dismiss

(Reuters)-Liverpool have fined Uruguay striker Luis Suarez an amount reserved for biting Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic at the weekend, but it won't fire him, the Premier League club said Monday.

Suarez, top goalscorer with 23 goals, has been widely condemned for his behavior in 2-2 draw on Sunday and is expected to get a long ban by the Football Association but Liverpool Director Ian Ayre has said that the club would stand by him.

"I think the most important thing is that we acted swiftly yesterday," Ayre said the club's site (www.liverpoolfc.com).

"Luis issued an apology and then we talked to him last night and then again this morning. We have taken steps to end Luis for his actions. "

Ayre did not specify the size of the fine but Suarez has asked the money to be donated to the Hillsborough family support-an organization set up after the 1989 football stadium disaster which left 96 Liverpool fans died.

The former Liverpool midfielder Graeme Souness said Sunday that Suarez had reached "last chance saloon" at Anfield after the latest in a series of misdeeds while others have suggested the club could take a moral stance and terminate his contract.

However, Ayre said Manager Brendan Rodgers would work with the players to help improve its discipline.

"The owners are happy for how we are handling the matter," said the CEO.

"He's a very popular player with his teammates. As we continue to say, signed a new four-year contract last summer and all we'd see him here all that contract.

"He is a fantastic player, top scorer and everything we want in a striker so there is no change there."

The Professional Footballers Association (PFA) said Monday that Suarez would offer classes in anger management.

(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Tony Jimenez)


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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Ingested ring retrieved from the NH police

MANCHESTER, NH (AP) — police say they've got the engagement ring $ 3,200 in New Hampshire allegedly ingested during a jewelry store robbery attempt.

The authorities in charge of 52-year-old Ronald Perley theft and falsifying physical evidence after saying that x-rays showed the ring in 14 Karat white gold with princess-cut diamonds inside him.
WMUR-TV (http://bit.ly/15cl7n3) reports the Manchester Police had recovered the ring starting on Saturday.
Perley was presumably Bellman Jewelers on Thursday, calling for engagement rings. Workers said he grabbed a ring then swallowed it after being compared.
Police say surveillance video Shows Perley taking the ring and put his hand to his mouth.
Perley was being held on $ 50,000 bail. It is unclear whether he has an attorney.

View the original article here

Lost Civil War ring returned to kin of Pa. soldier

READING, Pa. (AP) — A ring lost by a Union soldier from Pennsylvania during the Civil War has completed a long journey home.


The ring was worn by Levi Schlegel, a Reading-area native who is believed to have lost it nearly 150 years ago at an encampment near Fredericksburg, Va.


Relic hunter John Blue found the ring at a construction site in 2005. Though it was engraved with Schlegel's name and unit — "Co. G., 198th P.V.," or Pennsylvania Volunteers — Blue wasn't sure how to find Schlegel's descendants, and kept the ring in a box for several years.


A genealogist ultimately helped Blue track down Schlegel's family. On Tuesday, Blue presented the ring to a distant cousin during a ceremony at Levi Schlegel's grave in Reading.


"This is truly a hero's journey," said the cousin, Ernie Schlegel.


Another distant relative, James W. Schlegel of Reading, said he felt pride as he touched the ring.


"I think about all the time that passed since Levi and so many others fought for our freedom," Schlegel, who served in the Air Force during the Vietnam War, told the Reading Eagle. "As a veteran, I know the importance of fighting for freedom, and I'm proud to know the Schlegel family did its part."


After the war, Levi Schlegel returned to Reading, where he worked as a carpenter and helped raise 11 children. He died in 1932 at age 91.


___


Information from: Reading Eagle, http://www.readingeagle.com/


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Friday, April 19, 2013

RI Supreme Court settles $8,500 Vegas loan dispute

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — What happens in Vegas non deve necessariamente rimanere a Las Vegas, la Corte Suprema di Rhode Island detto venerdì come governato un uomo della Provvidenza che ha chiamato un amico da Sin City in prestito $8.500 per le perdite di gioco d'azzardo si deve pagare indietro nonostante una vecchia legge che dice il contrario.


Il parere della Corte conclude una lunga controversia sul denaro dato a Juan Catala da David S. Vogel, un avvocato di Provvidenza che correva per il Congresso ultima caduta come indipendente. Ma nonostante la sentenza dell'alta Corte, Catala ha detto che lui non sarà mai ripagare il suo ex amico.


"Andrò in prigione prima di dargli un dollaro," Catala ha detto Associated Press.


Secondo documenti del Tribunale, Catala e la sua fidanzata erano su un viaggio a Las Vegas nel 2007 quando Catala chiamato Vogel per aiuto. Secondo Vogel, Catala ha detto che aveva perso una notevole somma di denaro, gioco d'azzardo e necessarie per recuperare le sue perdite. Vogel ha accettato di filo $8.500 al Bellagio Hotel.


Dopo Catala ha rifiutato di rimborsare il prestito, Vogel in giudizio. Catala inizialmente contestato che aveva ricevuto i soldi ma più successivamente ha sostenuto che il prestito era vuoto a causa di una legge di Rhode Island di più di un secolo-vecchia che invalida accordi di prestito quando il creditore sa che il denaro sarebbe stato utilizzato per il gioco d'azzardo. Su venerdì, Catala ha detto che Vogel diede il denaro come un investimento, con la comprensione che egli sarebbe stato pagato indietro solo se Catala ha vinto.


Un giudice della Corte superiore stabilito che il divieto di gioco d'azzardo prestiti non si applica e ordinato Catala a ripagare i $8.500 plus $8.500 in interessi e danni. Catala appello alla Corte suprema dello stato, ma perché il suo avvocato ha fatto non inoltrare una copia della trascrizione corte inferiore, l'alta Corte ha concluso che ha non avuto "nessuna scelta, ma per sostenere le conclusioni della corte inferiore."


"Si dice che ciò che succede a Las Vegas rimane a Las Vegas — tranne in questo caso, dove le parti contestano ciò che è successo lì," ha scritto di giustizia Gilbert V. Indeglia nella prima frase della sentenza.


In un dissenso, giustizia William P. Robinson III detto che Catala non avuto alcun obbligo giuridico di rimborsare Vogel a causa della legge invalidando prestiti gioco d'azzardo. Ha detto che la trascrizione della corte inferiore non era necessaria perché Vogel riconosciuta sapeva Catala previsto di utilizzare almeno parte del denaro per il gioco d'azzardo.


Anche se ha vinto, Vogel ha detto che è stato deluso che l'alta Corte non pesare sulla legge vietare prestiti, il gioco d'azzardo che è stata emanata in un momento quando il gioco d'azzardo era illegale. Ha detto che la legge è superata e deve essere annullata perché potrebbe dare ai giocatori un modo semplice per evitare di rimborsare i prestiti.


"Forse è il momento per il legislatore di togliere semplicemente dai libri," ha detto.


Catala e Vogel ha incontrato a un tavolo di poker al Foxwoods Resort Casino diversi anni fa, ha detto Vogel. Ha detto che erano gli amici fino al prestito ma non hai parlato recentemente.


Catala fu arrestato nel 2009 in Massachusetts e accusato di rapimento e aggressione. Le accuse sono in sospeso. Egli affronta anche accuse di furto di fellonia nel Rhode Island che derivano da un'indagine di frode di ipoteca dello stato nel 2011. Catala ha dichiarato non colpevole per le accuse e ha detto venerdì che sono estranei alla controversia prestito.


Vogel ha detto che lui non è ottimistico che egli sarà mai raccogliere i soldi. Egli non ha prestato alcun grandi somme di denaro dal e non intende.


"Ho imparato la lezione nel modo più duro", ha detto.


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Boat full of protected species hits coral reef

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A Chinese boat which ran into a reef in the Philippines in the Southwest held evidence of destruction of the environment even more inside: more than 10,000 kilograms (22,000 pounds) of meat from a protected species, the pangolin, or scaly anteater.

The steel-hulled ship hit an atoll 8 April at Tubbataha National Marine Park, designated a UNESCO World Heritage site on the island of Palawan. Coast Guard spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Armand Balilo said Monday that 400 boxes, each containing 25-30 kilograms of frozen pangolins were discovered during a second inspection of the boat Saturday.

The World Wide Fund for Nature Philippines said the Chinese ship F/N Min Yu Long might be bringing up to 2,000 animals without teeth, eating insects in coils in the boxes, with their stairs already removed.

"It's bad enough that the Chinese have illegally entered our seas, sailed the boat without documents and crashed recklessly a national marine park and world heritage site," said WWF Philippines chief executive officer Jose Ma. Lorenzo Tozzi. "It's just unfortunate that they seem to be posing as fishermen to illegal wildlife trade".

12 Chinese Sailors of the boat are in jail on charges of poaching and attempted bribery, said Adelina Villena, lawyer of the marine park. He said that additional charges are being prepared against them, including damage to the corals and violating wildlife laws in the country for being found in possession of pangolin meat.

It is not yet clear which of the four Asian pangolin species the meat comes from. The International Union for conservation of nature lists two as endangered: the Sunda pangolin, or Malay and the Chinese pangolin. Two others, including the Philippine pangolin endemic to Palawan, are classified as near threatened.

The animals are protected in many Asian Nations and international trade ban has been in force since 2002, but illegal trade continues. The meat and scales of the pangolin fetching hundreds of dollars per kilogram in China, where many believe that cure various diseases.

The IUCN says growing demand for pangolins and lax laws are erasing the Anteaters pilosans from their forest habitat in Southeast Asia.

Alex Marcaida, a government official of Palawan Council for sustainable development, Philippine authorities consider the Philippine pangolin endangered due to illegal trade unabated. He said that Chinese sailors have said pangolins have come from Indonesia, but officials had yet to verify the claim.

WWF-Philippines said that the illegal trade in wildlife is estimated to yield overall at least $ 19 billion per year, which includes the fourth-largest global illicit trade after narcotics, and counterfeit currency and trafficking in human beings. He said that the risks are low compared to other crimes, and that high-level dealers are rarely arrested, prosecuted or convicted.

The Philippine Army quoted the fishermen as saying that wandered accidentally into the waters of the Philippines Malaysia. They were detained in the city of Puerto Princesa's Southwest, where Chinese consular officials have visited them.

Tubbataha is a 97,000-hectare Marine Sanctuary (239,700 hectares) and the popular diving destination 640 kilometers (400 miles) southwest of Manila. The massive reef was already damaged by a ship of the United States Navy who blocked in January and had to be dismantled.

Fishermen face 12 years in prison and fines of up to $ 300,000 for poaching charge alone. For possession of pangolin meat, can be imprisoned for up to six years and fined, Villena said.


View the original article here

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Opulent Hotel Crillon bids farewell to treasures at Paris auction

By Tara Oakes


PARIS (Reuters) - One of the grandest luxury hotels in Paris will put most of its of furniture and fine wines under the hammer next week to help raise funds for a lengthy restoration.


The sumptuous Hotel Crillon, hushed after the departure of its last guests in March, has been transformed into a buyer's wonderland as it closes its doors for a two-year renovation.


Full suites of furniture are on display ahead of a series of auctions scheduled for April 18-22, with about 3,500 lots including carpets and curtains expected to raise hundreds of thousands of euros.


Buyers seeking to recreate a little bit of the hotel in their homes can even stock up on reception counters, staff uniforms and bathrobes.


"A sale like this is a unique moment, a real cherry on the cake," auctioneer Stephane Aubert from auction house Artcurial said.


Such vast hotel sales are rare, with once-in-a-lifetime treasures available.


A highlight is the hotel's mirror-encrusted bar designed by 20th-century French sculptor Cesar, who gave his name to the annual French film awards where, similar to the Oscars, miniature reproductions of one of his works are distributed.


The artist's signature is inscribed on the twinkling glass front of the bar - protected beneath a perspex panel ever since a cleaner unwittingly took the first version for graffiti and scrubbed it off. Cesar was able to return and sign again before his death in 1998.


Dominating one side of Place de la Concorde, the Crillon has housed the great and the good since its construction as a private home under French King Louis XV in 1758.


The ill-fated Queen Marie Antoinette took music lessons on its first floor only to be guillotined years later in the shadow of the palace's grand neoclassical façade.


Since its conversion into a hotel in 1909, it has welcomed U.S. pop singer Madonna, former president Bill Clinton and was the site of the formal founding of the League of Nations.


U.S. composer Leonard Bernstein regularly set up home in a top floor suite with a view onto the Arc de Triomphe. One anonymous client rents that same suite every year to watch the finale of the Tour de France with friends and an unspecified amount of champagne.


Bidders with deep pockets can fork out for the piano Bernstein is believed to have used during his stays, while fans of lesser means can still hope to go home with light fittings and rugs.


A large part of the Crillon's vast wine and spirit cellar is likely to be snapped up by connoisseurs, including a rare Louis XIII Black Pearl Remy Martin cognac with a list price of 7,000 euros ($9,200). Mini-bars and chairs customized by artists are also being auctioned for two French charities.


Profits raised from the auction will fund a sweeping modernization to bring the hotel up to date while preserving its character, with work due to last until 2015.


The Ritz in Paris is also out of action for a revamp, with both hotels aiming to reinvigorate their classic grandeur and poach customers tempted by high-end newcomers such as the Shangri-La opened in Paris in 2010.


A sad tale of a grand old dame selling off her jewels? Not at all, according to Aubert.


"It's part of the story of these objects that they go and have a new life," he said, eyeing up his favorite lots - the silver-plated cocktail shakers from the bar.


($1 = 0.7642 euros)


(Reporting by Tara Oakes; Editing by Catherine Bremer and Paul Casciato)


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Brits, Americans feud over park, tongues in cheeks

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The British and the Americans are quarreling — albeit with tongues in cheek — over territory again, this time over who has the world's smallest park.


One, in Portland, Ore., is essentially a concrete planter, 2-feet in diameter, with soil and some vegetation, and the Guinness Book of World Records says it's the smallest.


The other is about 5,000 miles away, in England. Those guys don't claim to have a physically smaller park — theirs is 15 feet by 30 feet. But they are disputing whether Portland's is a park at all.


What started as two Brits' stunt to drum up publicity for a charity run at their park sparked some cross-pond banter. One online commenter wrote: "If that's a park then my window box should take the title."


Someone who said they were from Portland replied: "Yes, but our park has leprechauns. Does yours?"


Leprechauns? Yes, that's right. The faux-feud has helped unearth the curious story of a Portland newspaper columnist's quest to get the park declared the smallest and his claim that it was home to leprechauns.


The tale stretches back to 1946, when newspaperman Dick Fagan returned from World War II. From his office at the Oregon Journal newspaper, he could see a hole in the street where a light post was supposed to be erected. Fagan got tired of looking at the hole and planted flowers in it.


An Irishman with a vivid imagination, Fagan wrote about the park in his columns — spinning tales about leprechauns who lived there. Somehow, Guinness proclaimed Mill Ends Park the world's smallest park in 1971.


Jamie Panas, the record-keepers spokeswoman, said she didn't know how that determination was made. But she said the entry in the Guinness database reads, in part: "It was designated as a city park on 17 March 1948 at the behest of the city journalist Dick Fagan (USA) for snail races and as a colony for leprechauns. "


Snail races? That's right. Snail races.


Over the years, Portland has been kind to the tiny park, giving it equal care as that afforded to the 200 or so normal-size parks scattered around the verdant city.


St. Patrick's Day ceremonies have been held there. It has plants and other vegetation. Strange objects have appeared mysteriously within it — a miniature swimming pool with a diving board, a tiny Ferris wheel and a UFO.


The Occupy Wall Street movement, those protesters against income inequality, gave the park some recognition. In December 2011, a small group put miniature protest signs and toy tents in the teeny park and held a protest (a month earlier they had been evicted from a very real park they had occupied for six weeks). One of the protesters was arrested for refusing to leave.


And now, Portland's littlest park is getting big headlines. It started with a British sports management company called KV Events, based in Lichfield, north of Birmingham. It was promoting the "world's shortest fun run," around Prince's Park in Burntwood.


The park has the Guinness title of the United Kingdom's smallest park. It has a fence, a bench and three trees. It was founded in 1863 to commemorate the marriage of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, to Princess Alexandra of Denmark.


Promoters Paul Griffin and Kevin Wilson decided to have some fun, launching a faux challenge to Portland's claim — figuring that would generate publicity for the race and for the charity the race is intended to benefit.


The gauntlet was thrown down when Wilson told LichfieldLive.co.uk, a local website, that the Portland park was just a "glorified flower pot." Griffin followed up with interviews on Portland broadcast stations.


"We understand the definition of a park to be a fenced area, usually in a natural state, possibly for recreation purposes," Griffin said on KPAM radio's "Bob Miller Show."


Parks, said Griffin, are places where you can take family and friends for a picnic.


"We don't think you can do that in your fair park," Griffin quipped.


Portlanders have come to the defense of their Lilliputian park. Someone put a toy soldier with a bazooka in the vegetation as well as a fence — a defensive perimeter.


"We Americans have a pretty good track record when it comes to taking on the Brits. Perhaps they're still smarting over that whole American Revolution thing," said Mark Ross, spokesman for Portland Parks & Recreation.


Wilson says he has no intention of actually asking Guinness to take away Portland's title. There is talk, however, of a North Atlantic alliance: A sister-park relationship between the two, whatever that might look like.


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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Japanese fish survive 5,000-mile trip across Pacific in tsunami boat

By Elaine Porterfield


SEATTLE (Reuters) - Scientists are baffled as to how a group of small fish native to Japan survived a journey across the Pacific after they were found on a boat swept away by the 2011 tsunami and washed up last month on the coast of Washington state.


The batch of striped beak fish - five in all - were discovered submerged in the hold of the 20-foot-long fishing skiff, dubbed the Sai-shou-maru, on Long Beach in southwestern Washington.


The vessel, found beached right-side-up, was confirmed this week to have originated from the region of northern Japan devastated in the immense tidal surge generated by the March 2011 Fukushima earthquake.


Other boats carried away by the tsunami have previously washed up along the U.S. Pacific Northwest and Alaska, as have chunks of piers and large quantities of other debris. But the fish found aboard the Sai-shou-maru are the first vertebrates - animals with backbones - known to have made the voyage.


Marine biologists studying the phenomenon are puzzled over precisely how striped beak fish, natural denizens of warmer, shallow southern Japanese waters, ended up as live stowaways in the well of the boat, and how they endured a two-year journey across the ocean.


"It is quite remarkable," Curt Hart, a spokesman for the Washington state Department of Ecology, told Reuters. "Everyone is very amazed that these fish survived for two years in that hold."


The fish were apparently swept up with the skiff as it was washed down the coast of Japan and out into the Pacific.


Scientists surmise that the fish made their home beneath the boat for much of the trip as it drifted upside down and partially submerged, feeding on other organisms that became encrusted or otherwise attached to the inverted vessel. Then they might have been scooped up into the skiff's hold when wind or waves righted the vessel, Hart said.


NOURISHMENT MYSTERY


The middle of the Pacific is far less rich in nutrients than coastal waters, raising questions of how the fish found enough food to survive the trip, said Jeff Adams, an expert at Washington Sea Grant, an agency supporting marine research.


The 6-inch-long striped beak fish, named for their protruding mouths and black-and-white striped markings, were the most surprising of an estimated 30 to 50 species of marine organisms that hitchhiked across the Pacific with the skiff.


Other stowaways included various types of algae, anemones, crabs, marine worms and shellfish.


Many were believed to be non-native species, and all were treated as potentially invasive - capable of displacing native organisms and disrupting the natural ecological balance if allowed to escape into the environment and propagate.


As a precaution, state officials swiftly removed the Sai-shou-maru from the shoreline before samples of organisms were collected for study, and the boat was scraped and steam-cleaned, Hart said.


Four of the fish found alive in the boat on March 22 have since died, and the lone surviving specimen has been moved to an aquarium in Seaside, Oregon.


The Sai-shou-maru is not the only Noah's ark of potential invasive species carried to the U.S. West Coast by the tsunami. Several more Japanese boats have washed ashore since last year in Washington, Oregon and California, and a fishing vessel found drifting off Alaska was scuttled by the Coast Guard.


Dozens of non-native and potentially invasive species - more than hitched a ride aboard the Sai-shou-maru - were previously found attached to two large hunks of piers that washed up, one in Oregon and one in Washington, Hart said.


(Editing by Steve Gorman, Cynthia Johnston and Patrick Graham)


View the original article here

No heads lost in Thatcher statue debate...yet

By Christine Murray


LONDON (Reuters) - Revered or reviled, history shows that the placement of a public statue of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher anywhere in the capital risks becoming a lightning rod.


Reactions to the idea of Thatcher atop the empty fourth plinth in London's Trafalgar Square mirror the emotions stirred up by the death of Britain's "Iron Lady" on Monday.


Some mourners left flowers outside her home, while others "celebrated" with a street party and buying so many copies of the 74-year-old "Wizard of Oz" song "Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead" that it surged into a top 10 spot in the UK charts.


One small indication of the future prospects for a public statue of Thatcher happened more than a decade ago.


Theatre producer Paul Kelleher decapitated a statue of Thatcher in 2002, saying it "looked better that way".


The work, created by sculptor Neil Simmons, was on display at the time at London's Guildhall, just a short walk from St. Paul's Cathedral where her funeral will be held on Wednesday.


In a telephone interview with Reuters, Simmons laughed as he recalled hearing of the attack on the statue, adding that he knew it was a "poisoned chalice" when he took on the commission.


"I thought it might be sprayed with graffiti, maybe a few eggs thrown at it, but the decapitation was something else," he said.


Conservative London Mayor Boris Johnson said his office would do everything it can to ensure Thatcher gets a high profile London memorial.


A tribute in Trafalgar Square would put Thatcher on equal footing with King George IV and British army generals Henry Havelock and Charles Napier who occupy the other plinths. Though she would still be some way below the 50 meter-high monument of naval hero Horatio Nelson, who won the Battle of Trafalgar.


London Labour leader Len Duvall said on Thursday that such a gesture would be "crass triumphalism", particularly as the popular tourist spot was one of the sites of the riots over a deeply unpopular "poll tax" which contributed to her downfall.


Visitors to the square on Thursday were split over the idea.


"It would become a monument of hatred, you'd have a deluge of people coming from the north to vent their anger," said 57-year-old Glasgow-born Laurie who declined to give his last name.


But 20-year old Mia Cook said Britain's first female prime minister did a lot for the country.


"I think it would be a good idea and right now there's only men around here," she said.


Kelleher's first attempt at the Thatcher statue in 2002 with a cricket bat failed to get the job done, but a second swipe with an iron pole took its head clean off.


"Mr Kelleher was an Englishman armed with a cricket bat and inevitably destined to fail," the prosecution noted. Kelleher was later sentenced to three months in jail.


Simmons's original 2.6-metre likeness of Thatcher was designed for the Members' Lobby of Britain's House of Commons where a new larger-than-life bronze statue was placed in 2007.


"I might have preferred iron, but bronze will do," Thatcher quipped to laughter and applause at the statue's parliamentary unveiling. "It won't rust. And, this time I hope, the head will stay on."


(Additional reporting By Dasha Afanasieva, editing by Paul Casciato)


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Bullet hits Philadelphia shop worker's belt buckle

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A grocery store employee said Thursday that he is thanking God and his belt buckle for saving him from a stray bullet that smashed through the market's front door.

The bullet lodged in the metal buckle worn by Bienvenido Reynoso, who had only recently started his job at 8 Brothers Supermarket in Philadelphia.

"It saved my life," Reynoso said of the belt. "I keep it for (my) whole life now."

Reynoso, 38, said he was about to wheel a hand truck outside the market in the city's Grays Ferry section when he heard gunshots around 4 p.m. Wednesday. He hit the floor.

Surveillance footage shows a man on a bike firing a gun outside the market. One person outside the store was hit in the abdomen and was hospitalized in critical condition, police said.

At first, Reynoso didn't realize he could have been a second victim.

"When I check my body, I don't see nothing, no blood, nothing," he said in an interview at his home Thursday. "And I said I'm going to be OK."

Then someone noticed a hole at the bottom of Reynoso's shirt. That's when he found the bullet stuck to his belt buckle.

Police took the bullet and shirt as evidence. But Reynoso, the father of a young daughter, got to keep the belt, which he said he got in New York three years ago.

Christian Vinas, 21, was working behind the counter and also dived to the ground when the shooting began. Reynoso had perfect timing in dropping to the floor, he said.

"That has to be God," Vinas said. "Out of all the places you could get hit in the body, you get hit right there. It was truly amazing."

Police arrested a 24-year-old suspect and charged him with attempted murder and aggravated assault.

___

Follow Kathy Matheson at www.twitter.com/kmatheson

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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Hawaii fisherman gets up close with hungry shark

WAIANAE, Hawaii (AP) — A Hawaii fisherman has an unbelievable fishing tale: a close encounter with a 9-foot shark that jumped dangerously near his kayak. But, he has the video to prove it.


Isaac Brumaghim, 37, was kayak fishing off the Waianae Coast Sunday when the shark sprang up and chomped on the tuna he was fighting to reel in for a tournament.


"He exploded under my kayak, his dorsal hit my kayak," Brumaghim said Thursday. "It was just like a rush."


Many thoughts ran through his head: fear, excitement and disappointment at losing a big catch. "The shark scared me," he said. "But I really needed that fish for my job."


The next thought after the rush subsided: "I hope I got that on camera."


He often goes fishing with a camera mounted to his kayak. At home, he watched the footage and posted it online, not expecting it to generate the attention it's getting.


Reporters nationwide are calling. Many are still skeptical, accusing him of doctoring the footage.


The father of three is still in shock, himself. "I just have to laugh about it," he said, hoping that the experience at least brings some attention to the growing sport of kayak fishing and Aquahunters, the company he runs.


While he lost the kawakawa, or mackerel tuna, to the shark, he continued fishing that afternoon, later catching an 18-pound kawakawa.


The experience, he said, was a humble reminder of the creatures he shares the ocean with.


"You get the chills when it happens," he said, "but it never scares me from going in."


___


Follow Jennifer Sinco Kelleher at http://www.twitter.com/jenhapa


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Car Court held in contempt for its smartphones

IONIA, Mich. (AP) — Michigan Judge who interrupted a hearing smartphone in its Chamber held the same contempt and paid $ 25 for the infraction.

Judge Raymond Voet has a policy sent to District Court of Ionia County 64 claiming that electronic devices that cause a disturbance during Court sessions will result in the owner being cited with contempt, the Sentinel-Standard of Ionia and MLive.com reported.

Friday afternoon, during the discussion of a Prosecutor as part of a jury trial, Voet's new smartphone began to emit sounds that requires voice commands. Voet said he thinks it has bumped up the phone, and the embarrassment probably left red-faced.

"I'm guessing that bumped. Started talking really loud, saying, ' you don't understand. Say something like MOM, ' "he said.

Voet has used a mobile phone Blackberry for years and said she was not familiar with the operation of the new touchscreen, Windows-based phone.

"That is an excuse, but I do not take those excuses from anyone else. Set the bar high, because cell phones are a distraction and there is very serious, "he said. "The House is a special place in the community, and needs more than that."

Over the years, the judge whose court is about 110 km northwest of Detroit took the phones away from police officers, lawyers, witnesses, spectators and friends. During a break in the trial, Voet itself held in contempt, fined himself and paid the fine.

"Judges are human beings," said Voet. "I'm not above the rules. I broke the rule, and I have to live by it. "


View the original article here

Sunday, April 14, 2013

3 accused of smoking pot in NJ police parking lot

TOTOWA, N.J. (AP) — State troopers in northern New Jersey didn't have to go far to make a pot bust. They didn't even have to get in their cruisers.


Police say they caught three men lighting up in a car in the parking lot of the barracks in Totowa (TOH'-toh-wah).


What gave the men away? Police say a trooper setting out for night patrol caught a whiff of marijuana.


The three men were charged with drug possession. Police say they were waiting for another man who was inside the station picking up paperwork for an impounded car. He was also charged with drug possession.


Authorities say for some reason, the men didn't expect to see a trooper in the parking lot of the state police barracks.


View the original article here

Worker denies drinking old whiskey at Pa. mansion

SCOTTDALE, Pa. (AP) — A former mansion caretaker denied that he drank four dozen bottles of well-aged whiskey worth $100,000, claiming it would have been unsafe to drink and saying the booze had "evaporated" instead.


"Yuck! That stuff had floaters in it and all kind of stuff inside the bottles," John Saunders, 63, of Irwin, told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (http://bit.ly/16jQrhx) outside a district judge's courtroom on Wednesday. "I don't think it would even be safe to drink."


Saunders' comments came after his preliminary hearing on theft and receiving stolen property charges was postponed until May 15 so he could apply for a public defender.


Patricia Hill found the Old Farm Pure Rye Whiskey hidden in the walls and stairwells of her century-old Georgian mansion, which was built by coal and coke industrialist J.P. Brennan. She converted the mansion into a bed and breakfast and hired Saunders as a live-in caretaker, only to discover the bottles had been emptied and replaced back into slots in their original wooden cases.


Scottdale police charged Saunders with stealing the whiskey — by drinking it — after his DNA was found on the lips of some empty bottles, Chief Barry Pritts said.


Saunders downplayed that evidence and denied drinking the booze which, police said, Saunders claimed must have "evaporated" over time.


"I moved those cases three times for Hill. ... I can't believe she would accuse me of doing that. I have nothing to hide," Saunders said, noting he's been friends with Hill and her family for 40 years.


Hill told police she stored the 52 bottles of whiskey in the original cases, which contained 12 bottles each. After Saunders moved out, Hill said she discovered last March that the bottles in four cases were empty.


Police had Bonhams, a New York City auction house, appraise four remaining bottles and concluded the value of all 52 bottles — had 48 of them not been emptied — would have been $102,400. Bonhams' whiskey specialist said the liquor would have remained valuable as long as the corks remained sealed and the whiskey untouched.


Saunders disputed that appraisal saying he believed Hill was "looking for money. I'd say that whiskey's real value is about $10 a bottle and she hired someone to inflate the price."


___


Information from: Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, http://pghtrib.com


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' The Hangover ' re-imagined as a horror movie (video)

In 2009, "The Hangover" has dominated the summer box office on its way to becoming more profitable "R" rated comedy ever. But the movie and its sequel, certainly are not without their critics.

Regardless of where you are, you'll probably enjoy this hilarious edited movie trailer for the film, which re-imagines the Hangover as a horror movie.

So beware, there are two points of vulgar language in the trailer, this one in front of your children.

Film student Richard w. Scott edited the footage as part of her college thesis to, in the words of Scott, serve as, "an experimental investigation of the power of post-production techniques typically a movie".

Scott employs different editing techniques that are common in today's horror films. For examples, the color-coding of the trailer has been saturated in sepia tones, in contrast with bright colours and cosy Royal movie. And the music was replaced with acute sound cues and hard that the viewer has come on board.

But the real creativity lies in the way that Scott has rebuilt the footage together to make the film appears to be a dark journey into a world where the character of Alan, played by Zach Galifinakis, is actually a murderer on the loose in Las Vegas wreaking havoc on the lives of her friends unaware and anyone who comes across his path.

As Alan says at the end of the clip, "I don't care what happens. I don't care if I kill someone. "

And if you want to see more of Scott's work, has put together another clip to his thesis, which re-imagines the 2005 film "Batman Begins" as a comedy.

[Via Badass Digest]


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Saturday, April 13, 2013

UK-Odd Summary

Japanese Mountaineer octogenarian aims for Everest records

KATHMANDU (Reuters)-an 80-year-old Japanese mountaineer who had heart surgery four times is heading to Mount Everest to try for a third ascent of the world highest peak and become the oldest person to reach the top if he succeeds. Yuichiro Miura has risen to the top of the mountain, 8,850 metres (29,035 ft) in 2003 and 2008. She skied down Everest from an altitude of 8,000 meters (26,246 ft) in 1970.

April Fool's crushed by hi-tech marketing ...

London (Reuters)-the April Fool's is dead. Or at least the sweet ordinary fool has metastised in a giant company controlled by global marketing executives, bypassing the Internet necessarily familiar brands deeper into the collective consciousness.

Google says to close YouTube in early April Fools ' gag

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters)-Google Inc, get a head start on the annual tradition of April Fool's jokes, posted a YouTube clip on Sunday, declaring that the site of the world's most popular video turns off at the stroke of midnight. The three-minute video, intended as a gag-a montage of clips and cameos from viral video star as David Devore from "David after dentist"-explains how the Web site will be wind as some 30,000 technicians begin trawling through 150,000 clips, select the world's best video.

After 55 years, Easter Eggshelland of Ohio comes to an end

CLEVELAND (Reuters)-after more than 50 years, loyal fans have one last opportunity to visit the Easter Bunny and other Easter-themed mosaics made of thousands of coloured eggs on a lawn in a suburb East of Cleveland. The display drew thousands of visitors each year to the sprawling lawn of Betty and Ron M.taha in Lyndhurst, Ohio, but the 55th Annual event this year will be the last.

Tokyo bar offers cocktails of alcohol and Buddhism

TOKYO (Reuters)-Japanese Buddhist monk enjoys Yoshinobu Fujioka, leading his congregation together, a cocktail at a time. Fujioka has 23-seat "Vowz Bar" in downtown Tokyo, where Buddhist chants replace karaoke songs and the shaved head Bartenders serve sermons and homilies along with drinks.

Restaurant meals for children nutrition test-consumer group of the United States

WASHINGTON (Reuters)-the menu offered to children by most restaurant chains in the United States have too many calories, too much salt or fats and often a hint of vegetables or fruits, according to a study by the Center for Science in the Public Interest. The group, which has agitated for everything from healthier popcorn at the cinema to calorie labelling in supermarkets, has found that among the nearly 3,500 respondents, children's meal combinations is not able to meet the nutritional standards 97 percent of the time.

Pennsylvania stage aims to please fans with urinal video games

(Reuters)-Play does not need to stop for a stop bath to a baseball stadium Minors Pennsylvania who installed video games in the men's room urinals, sports fans. The game "hands-free" is played by directing themselves right or left in the urinals at Coca-Cola Park of the Lehigh Valley IronPigs in Allentown, Pennsylvania. The game is aimed at increasing awareness of prostate health.

Going, Going, gone-oxo dodo for sale in London

London (Reuters)-a four-inch fragment of a rare dodo bone will go on sale in Britain in April, about 300 years after the flightless bird and icon of obsolescence was hunted to extinction. Auctioneers Christie's said Wednesday that he hoped to collect as more than 15,000 pounds ($ 22,600) for the piece of thigh bone of a bird.

New York COP on tour with the band accused of fraud by disability

NEW YORK (Reuters)-A New York police officer was charged Tuesday with mail fraud for allegedly claiming disability for two years while at the same time performing and touring with his band of heavy metal, "Cousin Sleaze", according to court documents. Christopher Inserra, an officer with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, was the lead singer with the band in Brooklyn, where "Sick maniacs" album features songs like "Infection" and "Walk of Shame," according to an affidavit filed in the United States District Court in Brooklyn.

Battle rages over bones of Richard III of England

London (Reuters)-King Richard III is at the center of a new struggle over the location of his final resting place, a few weeks after the remains of the last English King to die in combat were found under a Council car park. Archaeologists have announced one of the most remarkable discoveries in recent British history when they confirmed the discovery of the body of Richard, who was killed at the battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, during excavations at Leicester last month.


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More than 300,000 homes are foreclosed "zombies," study says

By Barbara Liston


ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - A national survey found 301,874 "zombie" properties dotting the U.S. landscape in which homeowners in foreclosure have moved out, leaving vacant property susceptible to vandalism and degradation.


Florida tops the list of zombie properties with 90,556 vacant homes in foreclosure, according to a foreclosure inventory released on Thursday by RealtyTrac, a real estate information company in Irvine, California.


Illinois and California ranked a distant second and third with 31,668 and 28,821 zombie properties respectively on the list.


The number of homes overall in foreclosure or bank-owned rose by 9 percent to 1.5 million properties nationally in the first quarter of 2013 compared to a year ago, according to RealtyTrac.


Another 10.9 million homeowners nationwide remain at risk because they owe more than their property is worth, according to company vice president Daren Blomquist.


RealtyTrac for the first time analyzed data on zombie properties after a Reuters' special report in January examined the special problem of zombie titles, Blomquist said.


Reuters revealed the plight of people who walked away from their homes not realizing that their names remained on the deed and that they were financially liable for taxes and other bills related to the abandoned property.


In some cases, homeowners vacated after receiving a notice from the bank of a planned foreclosure sale, only to find out later the bank never followed through.


Zombie properties can be easy to spot as they deteriorate into neighborhood eyesores and havens for criminal activity.


While Florida leads in volume of zombie properties, Kentucky, with less than 1,000 zombie properties, leads in percentage, with zombies representing 54 percent of its total foreclosure inventory, Blomquist said.


Zombies in Washington, Indiana, Nevada and Oregon also constitute 50 percent or more of the properties in foreclosure, according to the report.


Blomquist said the number of zombie properties could be higher than represented in the RealtyTrac report, which used a conservative methodology.


In Florida, for example, the company does not count any property that has been in foreclosure longer than the state average of 853 days and for which there has been no significant recent activity. The report also does not take into account cases in which a bank chose not to follow through on a foreclosure judgment, leaving the property in limbo.


Blomquist said the long average time to complete a foreclosure case in Florida likely contributes to the high number of zombie properties, as people give up hope over time and walk away.


Blomquist said the findings overall show a housing recovery is under way but not yet deeply rooted.


"I think the empty foreclosures is less of a long-term threat but it certainly is affecting individual communities and neighborhoods," Blomquist said.


According to the Reuters special report, municipalities are left to deal with the mess when people move out after receiving a notice of a planned foreclosure sale that the bank then cancels.


Some spend public funds on securing, cleaning and stabilizing houses that generate no tax revenue. Others let the houses rot.


Unsuspecting homeowners have had their wages garnished, their credit destroyed and their tax refunds seized. They've opened their mail to find bills for back taxes, graffiti-scrubbing services, demolition crews, trash removal, gutter repair, exterior cleaning and lawn clipping.


In some cities, people with zombie titles can be sentenced to probation, with the threat of jail if they don't bring their houses into compliance.


(Editing by Jane Sutton and Chris Reese)


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Friday, April 12, 2013

After 55 years, Easter Eggshelland of Ohio comes to an end

By Kim Palmer

CLEVELAND (Reuters)-after more than 50 years, loyal fans have one last opportunity to visit the Easter Bunny and other Easter-themed mosaics made of thousands of coloured eggs on a lawn in a suburb East of Cleveland.

The display drew thousands of visitors each year to the sprawling lawn of Betty and Ron M.taha in Lyndhurst, Ohio, but the 55th Annual event this year will be the last.

Eggshelland was created by Ron M.taha, 80, who died in August. This final view is dominated by a 16-foot by 15 foot portrait of a man who spent months digging every year and hand-painting anywhere from 3,000 to 10,000 eggs. A message below the picture reads "thank you all and see you.

This year, children and grandchildren of M.taha set the 21,630 eggs in 24 colors in an exhibition entitled "a labor of love", in homage to their grandfather. Egg mosaics depict a 45-foot cross, an Easter Bunny and a EGGSHELLAND sign propped in front of the couple's House.

"Our kids did this all their life. Betty M.taha "they thought that everyone does this, told Reuters. But the months it takes to design and two or three weekends for installation are too to support his family.

Mosaic egg in past years are depicted characters of Sesame Street, Winnie the Pooh, Harry Potter and spring scenes.

M.Taha said that because her husband was the creative force behind the project, it would be too difficult to continue without him Eggshelland.

"Actually, I was amazed that we were doing for 55 years," he said. "If he (Ron) was still around I think we would do until we died. I'm going to lose next year. "

Others will miss Eggshelland too. A typical day, cars line up on their street and around the corner to see the display that began with a simple egg 750 saved during one year in 1957. At the peak of Eggshelland in the 1970s were called local police to direct traffic.

Local and national Media have described Eggshelland as a childhood fantasy land, but in truth this is adult enough followed including a website dedicated to its 55-year history and its creators (http://eggshellandeaster.tripod.com) and a 2004 award-winning documentary about their efforts.

Eggshelland will be until 5 April. After that, M.taha has not yet decided what will happen to eggs. Previously, have retained their eggs for the year and replaced those who had broken.

"We have not decided what to do with them. We got some calls, "said M.taha. "My grandchildren, of course, told me to put them on eBay."

(Edited by Jackie Frank)


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Teen makes tearful apology to wisdom teeth after surgery

Some people will tell you that pain is the basis of spiritual growth. Sorrow, regret and eventually letting go are life lessons we all go through at some point.


But not all of us experience those painfully emotional moments in association with our wisdom teeth. And even fewer have had to deal with the moment being captured on video and posted to the delight of countless strangers.


But that’s exactly what Kansas teen Abbie Kritz is going through, after her boyfriend posted a video of Kritz lamenting the loss of her wisdom teeth while under the influence of pain medication.


"I did it against my own will, I would have kept you," Kritz says earnestly to the removed wisdom teeth, which she is holding inside a plastic jar while being driven home by her mother.


"I loved you from the first moment on."


Her boyfriend and mom can be heard laughing in disbelief as Kritz continues the soliloquy to her lost choppers.


"They were just trying to help me chew and I didn't accept them," she explains." I could have accepted them."


Eventually, Kritz came to terms with the situation. Or, put another way, the dentist’s drugs wore off. And for her part, Kritz appears to be taking in all the attention with a toothy smile.


“Oh my goodness it was awful,” she wrote on her Twitter account. “I just remember wanting to stop crying the whole time but I couldn't!”


Still, there’s no word on whether Kritz stands by her previous offer of putting the wisdom teeth back in place.


"They just wanted to be a part of my body and I said 'No, get out,'" she said tearfully in the video after making it back home. "I didn't meant it. You can come back if you want."


Then again, Kritz might be onto something, not just previously on something. While many people eventually have their wisdom teeth removed, there is growing opposition to having them removed without a clinical reason to do so.


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Thursday, April 11, 2013

Mystery elf door in park sparks attention on the Web

A tiny addition in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park is getting big attention on the Web. A photo on the neighborhood site Richmondsfblog.com first published a photo of a teeny wooden door that mysteriously appeared at the bottom of a tree with a small, gnome-sized gap.


The door has opened up plenty of interest on the Internet—and spurred visitors to the urban oasis to explore the door that's not on any map. It can be found by searching for the grove of old trees in the park's concourse near the Golden Gate Band Shell between the de Young Museum and the California Academy of Sciences.


Creative theories about how it got there abound—mostly as fanciful as the mystery door itself. An elf? A fairy? A house for a mouse?


Kids and kids at heart weighed in with ideas. As “Dude” joked on the neighborhood website, “It’s a very tiny coffee shop. It’s already played out.”


Another commenter, "Hobbit," suggested, “Looks like a squirrel with a [k]nack for architecture."


Everyone seems to agree, it’s cool.


Over on Twitter, K L ?@miss_kr15 posted, “I totally dragged my bf to the park & hunted that door down after seeing it in your blog. Seriously the coolest thing ever!”


Allyson E-B ?@allysoneb added, “My daughter left some candy, when we came back 2 hours later it was gone. Fairies!”


The Editor of RichmondSFBlog, Sarah Bacon, noted to Yahoo News in an email that the tree door has been the site's most popular topic ever. “It’s really captured people's imaginations and has gotten more attention than we ever expected. It's a delightful and magical gift someone gave to the park.”


She added, “We're thrilled by the response to the story—I think it's proof that everyone has a child inside that enjoys whimsy and fantasy. It's these little finds that make our neighborhood so special.”


The little find has inspired lots of speculation, but nobody so far has come forth to take credit for building the opening. The good news: The minidoor won’t be closed down anytime soon.


Acknowledging the interest in the door sized for sprites, Andy Stone, Golden Gate Park's department’s section supervisor, wrote in an email to Yahoo News, "We do not encourage such doors but will leave it in place unless it causes problems."


The tiny tree door is not the first to mysteriously appear in a park. Commenters have pointed out there’s the Elf Tree near Lake Harriet in Minneapolis that also has a tiny door in a living tree. Kids leave messages and candy for the invisible resident.


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Japanese Mountaineer octogenarian aims for Everest records

Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU (Reuters)-an 80-year-old Japanese mountaineer who had heart surgery four times is heading to Mount Everest to try for a third ascent of the world highest peak and become the oldest person to reach the top if he succeeds.

Yuichiro Miura has risen to the top of the mountain, 8,850 metres (29,035 ft) in 2003 and 2008. She skied down Everest from an altitude of 8,000 meters (26,246 ft) in 1970.

Miura and a nine-person team you get the standard path Southeast Ridge pioneered by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay when they became the first people to reach the Summit in May 1953.

"The record is not so important for me," Miura Canute told Reuters in the nepalese capital Kathmandu before leaving for the mountain.

"It is important to get to the top".

The record for the longest person to climb the mountain is held by Min Bahadur Sherchan of Nepal, who reached the peak at the age of 76, in 2008.

A doctor who specializes in diseases of the heart is in the team to keep an eye on the health of Miura. The Group hopes to the Summit in May.

Miura skied down the highest mountains on each of the seven continents and is simply following in the family tradition. His father Keizo Miura skied down Mont Blanc to Europe at the age of 99 years.

"If you want to strongly, have courage and strength, then you can reach the peak of your dream," said Miura.

Already has a new dream. He wants to ski down Cho Oyu, the sixth highest mountain in the world at 8,201 metres (26,906 feet), also in the Himalayas.

"Maybe when I become 85 years old, and if I stay alive, I want to climb and ski down Cho Oyu," Miura said. "It's my next dream."

Were about 4,000 climbers to the Summit of Everest and about 240 people have died on its slopes.

(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by Elaine Lies and Robert Birsel)


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Obese airline passengers should pay extra, economist says

(Reuters) - Airlines should charge obese passengers more, a Norwegian economist has suggested, arguing that "pay as you weigh" pricing would bring health, financial and environmental dividends.


Bharat Bhatta, an associate professor at Sogn og Fjordane University College, said that airlines should follow other transport sectors and charge by space and weight.


"To the degree that passengers lose weight and therefore reduce fares, the savings that result are net benefits to the passengers," Bhatta wrote this week in the Journal of Revenue and Pricing Management.


"As a plane of a given make and model can accommodate more lightweight passengers, it may also reward airlines" and reduce the use of environmentally costly fuel.


Bhatta put together three models for what he called "pay as you weigh airline pricing."


The first would charge passengers according to how much they and their baggage weighed. It would set a rate for pounds (kg) per passenger so that someone weighing 130 pounds (59 kg) would pay half the fare of 260-pound (118-kg) person.


A second model would use a fixed base rate, with an extra charge for heavier passengers to cover the extra costs. Under this option, every passenger would have a different fare.


Bhatta's preferred option was the third, where the same fare would be charged if a passenger was of average weight. A discount or extra charge would be used if the passenger was above or below a certain limit.


That would lead to three kinds of fares - high, average and low, Bhatta said.


Airlines have grappled for years with how to deal with larger passengers as waistlines have steadily expanded. Such carriers as Air France and Southwest Airlines allow overweight passengers to buy extra seats and get a refund on them.


Asked about charging heavier passengers extra, Southwest spokesman Chris Mainz said: "We have our own policies in place and don't anticipate changing those."


United Air Lines Inc requires passengers who cannot fit comfortably into a single seat to buy another one. A spokeswoman said the carrier would not discuss "future pricing."


About two-thirds of U.S. adults are obese or overweight.


In a 2010 online survey for the travel website Skyscanner (www.skyscanner.net), 76 percent of travelers said airlines should charge overweight passengers more if they needed an extra seat.


(Reporting by Ian Simpson; editing by Andrew Hay)


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