Germans put price on protesting
They refuse to rally for neo-Nazis, but as long as the price is right a new type of German mercenary will take to the streets and protest for you.
Young, good-looking, and available for around 150 euros (£100), more than 300 would-be protesters are marketing themselves on a German rental website.
They feature next to cars, DVDs, office furniture and holiday homes.
For some, these protesters show how soulless life has become. For others, they breathe new life into old causes.
Staging a protest
Their descriptions read like those on a dating site.
Next to a black and white posed picture, Melanie lists her details from her jeans size to her shoe size and tells potential protest organisers that she is willing to be deployed up to 100km around Berlin.
Six hours of Melanie bearing your banner or shouting your slogan will set you back 145 euros.
A spokesperson for erento.com was unable to say how many demonstrators had been booked since the service was launched earlier this month, but that there had certainly been demand.
Organisations using the service are unlikely to reveal themselves, keen to pass off their protesters as genuine supporters of the cause. But German media reported a Munich march had hired protesters because its own adherents were too old to stand for hours waving banners.
Erento.com stresses that no protester needs to offer their services to a cause they object to, and therefore many may genuinely believe in the protest they are joining.
But the fact they are paid has perturbed a number of commentators in Germany, especially those who remember the passion-fuelled protests of 1968.
"It seems to confirm the increasingly common assumption," wrote one, "that democracy is for sale".
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/6292341.stm
Spain resizes clothes for women
Spain is to overhaul its clothing sizes for women as part of a government drive to ease pressure on young girls over their body size.
There are fears that efforts to conform could be leading to eating disorders.
The move follows Spain's ban of ultra-thin models on the catwalk during Madrid fashion week last September.
Among the range of measures being introduced in Spain to address the body image issue, is an agreement that shop window mannequins should get larger.
It is a source of frustration for customers and shop assistants alike that in Spain women tend to go into the changing rooms with an armful of different sizes never knowing which one will fit this time or whether any will fit at all.
Survey of sizes
But by 2008 those days could be over. Spain's biggest fashion retailers have bowed to government pressure to standardise their sizes and reflect the real size of Spain's growing population.
For the first time ever the National Consumer Institute will measure Spanish females - more than 8,000 of them to be exact - between the ages of 12 and 70.
Spanish fashion houses will then try to fit them, rather than the other way round.
They have also agreed to decorate their shop windows with slightly bigger mannequins.
The health ministry described the current ones as unreal dolls of alien dimensions, which it sees as directly encouraging eating disorders such as anorexia.
The move is likely to affect women and girls all over the world as international brands such as Mango and Zara have signed up to the agreement.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/6300793.stm
Elementary, my dear Rankin: Fight to save Holmes' house
Novelists Ian Rankin and Julian Barnes to fight Tessa Jowell's decision not to protect Sherlock Holmes' house
By Anthony Barnes, Art & Media Correspondent
Published: 11 February 2007
The leafy country mansion Undershaw, where Sir Arthur Conan Doyle created his most famous work, The Hound of the Baskervilles, is at the centre of a literary controversy.
The home is revered by millions of Sherlock Holmes devotees around the world. Campaigners are furious that their efforts to upgrade the listed status of the 36-room property in Surrey, designed partly by Conan Doyle himself, to preserve it for future generations, have been blocked by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. The writer was judged not significant enough to merit such a move.
Leading writers - including Julian Barnes and Ian Rankin - have condemned the Secretary of State for Culture, Tessa Jowell, for failing to recognise the author's place in the nation's cultural canon.
Barnes, whose own Booker-shortlisted novel Arthur & George features the home extensively, has criticised Ms Jowell for the "regrettable" failing.
He told The Independent On Sunday: "Given that you can't channel-surf without coming across a Conan Doyle adaptation of some sort, I think the Secretary of State is profoundly misguided. It's a fine and interesting property and a rare example of a house where a writer was the co-architect of their house. The only other I can think of is Thomas Hardy's."
Rankin, the creator of Inspector Rebus,has also added his voice to the criticism. He said it appeared to be "literary snobbery", and added: "He created one of the most recognisable and archetypal figures in literature, and if his house is not worth saving, then I would say that no house is worth saving."
The home was commissioned in 1896 at Hindhead in Surrey because the area's "microclimate" was said to help ease the difficulties of TB sufferers, a condition that his wife Louisa had been diagnosed with three years earlier. Conan Doyle lived there until 1906, writing Baskervilles and many other stories at the location, as well as entertaining guests such as Bram Stoker and Virginia Woolf.
It is now in a terrible state of disrepair after years of neglect, and lead from the roof has recently been stolen. Water is said to gush through the home during rainstorms and stained-glass windows, based on Conan Doyle family designs, have been damaged.
Recent plans to divide the property into flats and build more homes in the grounds were recently turned down. Although it has Grade II listed status, the Victorian Society wanted this raised to Grade I, to give added protection and attract funding for its preservation.
However, the Department for Culture turned down the application after its advisers from English Heritage noted that Conan Doyle "cannot be said to be an author of the standing of... Charles Dickens or Jane Austen".
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Marketing Stunt Backfires
Cadbury Schweppes has apologised after a marketing stunt forced the closure of a historic graveyard in the US city of Boston.
The 347-year-old Old Granary Burial Ground was shut after Cadbury's Dr Pepper unit hid a gold coin there as part of a 23-city treasure hunt promotion.
Thousands of people flocked to the cemetery to find the coin, prompting fears that graves would be desecrated.
The cemetery is the final resting place of American Revolutionary patriots Paul Revere, Samuel Adams and John Hancock, as well as about 5,000 other people.
Customers entering the promotion bought specially-marked bottles of Dr Petter each day to get codes printed on them.
Entering the codes on the Dr Pepper website brought up daily clues.
Advertisement
The 29th clue for Boston indicated the coin was in the vicinity of the Orpheum Theatre, across the street from the cemetery, with the 30th and final clue saying: "You're hot on the trail, though the place may feel chilly. The coin rests by the name of a patriot at rest in Philly."
That clue was released Tuesday at 3 am, and within minutes, dozens of people were camped out in front of the cemetery, waiting for it to open.
Cadbury Schweppes donated the $10,000 (£5,000) Boston prize to the graveyard for "its time and trouble,'' the Boston Globe reported.
It also said that the company would pay the city $500 (£255) for a police team called to guard the cemetery.
The problems caused Dr Pepper to cancel the entire promotion, meaning that the top prize of $1m (£510,000) will not be won.
"It absolutely is disrespectful," said Boston Parks Commissioner Toni Pollak. "It's an affront to the people who are buried there, our nation's ancestors."
http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/...253153,00.html
Survey Is Food For Thought
Thousands of British children think cows lay eggs, a survey has suggested.
Townies fared worst in the research designed to find out if kids know where their food comes from.
Dairy Farmers of Britain asked more than 1,000 children aged eight to 15 where they believed food like cheese, yoghurt and beef burgers originated.
Although knowledge improved with age, more than one in 10 (11%) of eight-year-olds did not know that pork chops come from pigs.
City children were almost three times as likely not know that beef burgers come from cows as their rural counterparts - 8% against 3%.
One in 10 townie children did not know where yoghurt comes from, compared to 6% of those from the countryside.
Worst of all, 2% of city kids in the sample survey thought that eggs come from cows, and that bacon is from cows or sheep.
Welsh children proved to be the least clued-up when it comes to cheese - with 11% unaware that it came from cows or sheep, compared to just 3% in the East Midlands.
But there was one piece of reassuring news for dairy farmers - all of the children knew that cows produce milk.
Dairy Farmers' Phil Gibson said: "With the Government and health organisations encouraging healthy eating in schools, it is important that children are taught about the way food is produced as well as what it contains."
:: Dairy Farmers of Britain is a company owned and run by 2,750 farmers in England and Wales.
http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/...569871,00.html
US woman crashes into test centre
An 80-year-old woman has crashed her car into a driving test centre in Florida, after being summoned to retake a road safety examination. Therese Smith smashed into the office's waiting room, injuring 11 people.
It is thought she was moving out of her parking space but accelerated too hard, propelling her through an outside wall.
The accident was caught on surveillance camera and shows people rushing up to Ms Smith who was still buckled in her seat belt. No-one was seriously hurt.
The videotape also shows a man in a Superman costume walking around the car, but he did not stop to help the driver or any of the victims. His identity is unknown.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6414003.stm
I wanna know who the guy in Superman costume was!!! :D
Body parts sent to wrong address
Body parts from China intended for a US laboratory have been mistakenly sent to a Michigan home by a delivery firm. The recipient, in Cascade near Grand Rapids, said her husband opened two packages - one containing a liver, the other a partial human head.
"He started the second one, but stopped as soon as we saw the ear," she told the Grand Rapids Press newspaper.
The delivery company, DHL, said it was not immediately clear what happened but the labels were reportedly in Chinese.
The company says it is co-operating with investigators.
The authorities believe 28 more bubble-wrapped human organs could have been dispersed across the country.
The body parts - which are preserved - were for medical research, police spokesman Roger Parent said.
"There will definitely be a shock to people if they see these things, but there is no hazard to health," he added.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6416459.stm
Attraction 'determined by walk'
There really is something in the way she moves, according to researchers.
An hourglass figure has long been perceived to be the ideal figure for a woman to have.
But New York University researchers have found that to be found attractive, a woman had to move in a feminine way - swaying her hips.
Men, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper found, were more attractive if they moved with a "shoulder swagger".
The waist-hip ratio has long been thought to be key to Western perceptions of attractiveness, with a small waist and bigger hips the ideal combination.
Marilyn Monroe, and now Beyonce and Jennifer Lopez are famous examples of women with that figure.
Its popularity may be down to media images, or because Western women do not need to have strong and muscular bodies in order to carry out manual labour, unlike women in developing countries.
But the US research, which was also published in the journal Psychological Science, suggests they would never have achieved their sex symbol status if they did not move in the right way.
Not just measurements
The team carried out a series of studies involving over 700 participants who were shown a variety of animations and videos of people moving.
Some showed shadow figures, where it was not possible to see if it was a man or a woman, while others obviously showed a man or a woman.
No matter which format was being used, the participants rated women or "female" figures as more attractive if their hips swayed as they walked, while men were more attractive if they had the characteristic shoulder movement.
The research also confirmed the waist-hip ratio assumption, with women's attractiveness being rated higher if their waist-hip ratio was small and men's being higher if their ratio was large.
The ideal waist-hip ratio for women is to have a waist measurement which is no more than 70% of their hip measurement.
But Kerri Johnson and Louis Tassinary who led the research, say their work shows attractiveness is not as simple as the difference between two measurements.
Writing in PNAS, the researchers said: "The body's shape and motion provoke basic social perceptions, biological sex and gender - ie masculinity or femininity respectively.
"The compatibility of these basic precepts predicts perceived attractiveness."
The team say their findings only apply to Western cultures, and other societies will judge attractiveness depending on their most prized feminine and masculine traits.
Dr George Fieldman, principal lecturer in psychology at Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College said: "This is quite plausible.
"It's the movement which attracts, and not just the waist-hip ratio per se."
He added: "It would be interesting to see what the ideal combination of measurements and wiggle is."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6444851.stm?ls