Gnome poster removed before Medvedev visit?
MOSCOW
(Reuters) – Theater posters proclaiming "We await you, merry gnome"
were taken down from a Russian town shortly before a visit by the
country's diminutive
President Dmitry Medvedev, a local website reported on Friday.
The advertisements were for a children's theater show, but were removed
from a street that the president's convoy was due to use on his visit
to Omsk on
February 12, the
nr2.ru website reports, citing local sources.
Russian media say Medvedev is 5 feet, 4 inches tall.
The poster depicted a child fairy but was one of a number of sudden
renovation projects that took place ahead of the Medvedev's visit, it
reported, quoting bloggers and journalists.
The authorities recommended that fresh snow should be sprinkled over older dirty snow as part of the facelift, it said.
Cat food latest weapon against Australia's cane toads
A tin of cat food may be the solution to reducing the
number of toxic cane toads in Australia, one of the country's major
pests which environmentalists have tried for years to stop from killing
off the native wildlife.
Scientists from the
University of Sydney
said that putting cat food close to ponds inhabited by baby cane toads
attracts carnivorous ants that are also immune to the toads' poisonous
skin. The ants then attack the baby toads and eat them.
"In one spot we tested, 98 percent of the baby toads were attacked
within the first two minutes," researcher Rick Shine told Reuters. "It
was a bit like a massacre."
Scientist have spent years -- and a significant amount of money --
trying to find ways to get rid of the toxic toad that has plagued
Australia's flora and fauna for decades and which is considered one of
the country's worse environmental mistakes.
The toads, introduced from
Hawaii
in 1935 in a bid to control native cane beetles, have led to dramatic
declines in populations of native snakes, goanna lizards and quolls, a
cat-sized marsupial.
Shine said the study was aimed at boosting the numbers of ants around the breeding areas of cane toads, and not upsetting the
ecological balance by introducing the insects to an area that they wouldn't normally be in.
"All we're doing is encouraging the ants to flourish somewhere where
they already flourish, letting them know there's particularly good food
around so we get more of them down there on a very short-term basis,"
he said.
"Baby toads are incredibly stupid and their reaction to being attacked
is to freeze. I think they're trying to advertise the fact they're
poisonous and let the predator get a taste of that, but it doesn't work
for the ant because it isn't affected."
While Shine realizes the study's findings will never eradicate cane toads from
Australia, he said cat food was a relatively simple way to try and limit their numbers.
"I'm optimistic that we'll find ways to reduce toads numbers, I think
I'd have to be a very optimistic person indeed to think we'll ever get
rid of cane toads from Australia," he added.
Service at sword point at "Ninja" restaurant
Waitresses wield swords and flare flames at diners, who
have to get past a moat before sitting at their table in the dimly lit
dining hall.
The same customers are also encouraged to take photos with the
warrior-like waitresses, who dress in black or red to look like ninjas
in keeping with the theme of a dark but lively restaurant that opened
last month in Taiwan's capital.
"The ninja is mysterious," said Ou Chia-wei, owner of the restaurant
simply named Ninja, explaining why he chose that theme for the
Japanese-style restaurant. "On that premise, we can do magic tricks and
light up the food."
Waitresses working the barely lit
dining room floor burn specialty menus, which vanish without a trace of ash, and send flames snaking across tables as customers watch.
A moat and screen of cascading water just past the front entrance make
customers wait a few minutes until the drawbridge goes up, leading to a
dark stairwell toward the dining hall.
There are professional magic shows, as well as cabarets, for those who walk in at the right times.
Ninjas were mercenaries who resorted to unusual warfare strategies such
as espionage, sabotage and assassination from as far back as 700 years
ago in
feudal Japan. They remain a common, enduring theme in
Japanese folklore.
Ou, who also owns a hospital-theme restaurant in
Taipei,
and his wife put the three-storey Ninja eatery together on their own
without hiring a designer, said his landlady Ting Tsui-lan. The overall
investment was T$15 million ($470,000).
"The owner had already liked ninjas and figured that would be a pretty obvious, visual theme for the restaurant," said
restaurant sales manager Hsiao Dai.
Ninja competes with restaurants that specialize in airliner, dinosaur and toilet decor in a city teeming with theme diners.
Owned and staffed by Taiwanese, it serves Japanese food priced for
office workers who frequent it at its location in a congested part of
town.
Japanese cuisine and culture are popular in
Taiwan, where Ninja has seen steady full-house crowds of 150 since opening in late January.
Customers are intrigued by the theme, with a 26-year-old woman saying she might rather work than eat there.
"We make friends with the customers," said waitress Tu-tu Lin, laying
her sword aside to explain to the woman the tricks of her trade.
Twitter dating for tech-savvy singles
For tech-savvy singles who are unlucky in love, shy or just looking for a new way to meet people, Flitter could be the answer.
Hundreds of singles attended the first Flitter parties across the
Canada last week in the latest
dating game which is a play on words of the microblogging site
Twitter and flirting.
Each guest wore a white sticker with a number and gazed closely at their
iPhones and Blackberrys in a dimly lit room in
Toronto, their thumbs tapping away at their
mobile devices on Twitter.
They were Flittering and trying to catch the attention of other tweeters who were flying solo on the eve of
Valentine's Day.
"#129, you're so fine, but #152, you're hot too. Man oh man, what will
#72 do?" tweeted one guest as the comment showed up on a giant
projector screen set up inside the venue.
Will Lam, a 27-year old banking professional and Twitter fanatic,
attended the event because he was interested in seeing how Flitter
worked.
"I was just wondering how they would leverage Twitter and facilitate
interaction between people," said Lam, who found the tweeting to be
awkward and distracting in his attempts to strike up conversations with
women.
"I actually tweeted #19 was really cute, but I can't even find her anymore," he said.
But Halley Trusler, a 23-year old event co-ordinator who recently moved
to Toronto, found Flittering to be a great way to meet people.
"It allows people who are a little more shy to put themselves out there," she said.
Trusler received plenty of tweets offering to buy her drinks and revealed she may have someone in mind by the end of the night.
The tweeter can choose to sign off with his, or her, assigned number or
send an anonymous message or compliment. The recipient can respond and
meet the tweeter if interested, or just read the anonymous compliment
and move on.
All senders must end the tweet with the word "Flitterme."
Justin Parfitt, founder and CEO of Fastlife, the Canadian-based dating service provider, originated Flitter singles events in
Australia and introduced them to
North America.
He thought there must be some way of getting people to interact using work devices, such as their Blackberrys or
iPhones, to make people feel social as oppose to anti-social.
The Flitter parties, which were also held in
Vancouver,
Ottawa and
Montreal, were advertised on the Internet.
Give up your iPod for Lent, bishops urge
British church leaders are encouraging people to give up their iPods for Lent, instead of more traditional vices such as chocolate, to help save the planet.The
Bishop of London,
Richard Chartres, and the
Bishop of Liverpool,
James Jones, are among those calling for a carbon fast for Lent -- a period ahead of
Easter which Christians traditionally consider a time of penance and reflection -- which begins on Wednesday.
As well as spending a day without using technology such as mobile
phones or iPods, the 46 daily suggestions also include eating by
candlelight, cutting meat and vegetables thinner so they cook faster
and flushing the toilet less often.
"Instead of giving up chocolate for Lent, why not fast for justice ...
to help those suffering from the effects of climate change," said Jones.
Police: Man rides on car hood in his underwear
Police expect to file charges against a 57-year-old man who was
wearing only underwear in frigid temperatures when he hopped on the
hood of his girlfriend's moving car during an argument. Police have yet
to identify the man or his 28-year-old girlfriend, saying they'll
release the names once they sort out what charges to file.
Police
were called about 3:20 a.m. Thursday by someone reporting a man riding
on the hood of a car, screaming at the woman driving it.
The woman had a bruise under her
left eye and police said they found
drug paraphernalia in the car.
Uniontown is about 40 miles south of
Pittsburgh. The region has been hit by heavy snows and overnight temperatures were in the teens on Thursday.
Information from: Herald-Standard,
http://www.heraldstandard.com/
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