Saturday, March 31, 2012

Reuters: Lifestyle: Fish tanks and palm trees - Miami's new baseball stadium

Reuters: Lifestyle
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Fish tanks and palm trees - Miami's new baseball stadium
Mar 31st 2012, 16:29

Marlins Park, the new home of the Miami Marlins MLB baseball team is shown during a tour in Miami, Florida, March 28, 2012. The Marlins will open their season on April 4 against the St. Louis Cardinals. REUTERS/Joe Skipper

1 of 2. Marlins Park, the new home of the Miami Marlins MLB baseball team is shown during a tour in Miami, Florida, March 28, 2012. The Marlins will open their season on April 4 against the St. Louis Cardinals.

Credit: Reuters/Joe Skipper

By Kevin Gray

MIAMI | Sat Mar 31, 2012 12:29pm EDT

MIAMI (Reuters) - Get ready, baseball fans. Miami, the city of sun and fun, wants to bring some flair to America's favorite pastime.

When baseball's Opening Day kicks off next week, the Miami Marlins will inaugurate a new $515 million ballpark built with all the trappings of South Florida -- two enormous fish tanks, palm trees and a kitschy (of course) home run celebration display.

The stadium, named Marlins Park, "screams Miami," team owner Jeffrey Loria has said.

The white semi-domed, stadium is an attempt by Loria and city officials to reignite fan interest in a team that won the World Series in 1997, and again in 2003, but finished at the bottom of the National League East Division standings last year.

They also hope it will help revitalize Miami's Little Havana neighborhood, a rough-and-tumble district near downtown and a cultural symbol for many in Miami's large Cuban community.

The stadium's official opening on Wednesday will mark a new chapter for the Marlins, who have changed their name, redesigned their uniforms and embarked on a spending spree for a high-profile manager and free agents to breathe new life into the team.

To win over fans, the Marlins are offering up a baseball experience with a dash of Latin and South Beach style.

The stadium's signature feature will be its backdrop at home plate. Two 450-gallon salt water aquariums sit on either side and will be stocked with 100 tropical fish.

"When you think of Miami, you think of water, right?" said Claude Delorme, a Marlins executive vice president. "We wanted a unique piece that identifies where we are."

The fish tanks are built of durable fiberglass and protected by a material used in bullet-proof glass. To ensure they would withstand impacts from baseballs, team officials brought in a Marlins player to hurl balls to test out the glass.

The tanks will be lit with blue lights during games to make sure players do not lose sight of the balls.

Behind outfield is a home run celebration display few will confuse with being anywhere but South Florida. Team officials call it a "home run sculpture."

Designed by American pop artist Red Grooms, the 72-foot yellow, blue and neon pink structure features seagulls, flamingos, and a pointy-billed teal marlin that will leap every time a home run is hit. It is set next to - what else - palm trees.

The home run celebration will also include a 34-second splash effect and laser show.

"Some people have been critical of it," Delorme joked. "But it adds to the experience of coming out to the ballpark."

This being Miami, no new ballpark would be complete without a pool.

Yes, a pool.

Marlins Park will be the second major U.S. baseball stadium after Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona, to feature a swimming pool for fans looking to enjoy the game from a different vantage point.

"We wanted to have this party area in left field," Delorme said. "So people would see it on TV and say, you know what, I want to go there."

About four feet deep, the pool is part of an area that was conceived with the Clevelander, a well-known South Beach party-goers hotel. The poolside area includes a bar and DJs.

"There will be home run balls landing in the pool, so people will have to be alert," Delorme said.

Built on the old site of Miami's Orange Bowl, the stadium offers an intimate setting that will hold 37,442 spectators, the smallest capacity in baseball.

It also has a host of other amenities that fans complained were missing from the Marlins' previous home, Sun Life Stadium, in suburban north Miami, where the Miami Dolphins also play.

The stadium's roof is retractable -- key when Miami's rainy season sets in. Air conditioning in the stadium will maintain an average temperature of 75 degrees to keep fans comfortable during Florida's muggy summer months.

The stadium, however, has not been without controversy.

When plans for its construction were first announced, it drew howls from some Miami residents who complained taxpayers were picking up the tab for three-fourths of the stadium's costs. It was financed using municipal bonds.

The stadium's financing is now the focus of a probe by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Still, it has generated buzz in Miami and team officials say they hope it proves to be a draw not only for baseball fans.

"You could bring someone here who does not like baseball and they could have a really good time," Delorme said. "And they'll want to come back."

(Editing by Greg McCune)

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Friday, March 30, 2012

Reuters: Lifestyle: For sale in Singapore: $200,000 bottle of whisky

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For sale in Singapore: $200,000 bottle of whisky
Mar 31st 2012, 05:47

By John O'Callaghan and Eveline Danubrata

SINGAPORE | Sat Mar 31, 2012 1:47am EDT

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - A whisky made to mark the 60th year on the throne of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II is on sale in Singapore for a mere S$250,000 ($198,500) a bottle - and it may well find a buyer.

No doubt it's a premium sip. Only 60 bottles of Diamond Jubilee were made by the Johnnie Walker unit of Diageo PLC from a blend of whiskies distilled in 1952.

It's also a premium price for Asian aficionados at the month-long Master of Spirits II event featuring specialty wine and liquor put on by luxury travel retailer DFS Group, part of the LVMH empire of high-end goods and services.

Singapore is the first stop this year for a series of DFS events highlighting a wide range of luxury offerings.

The city-state, home to the world's highest concentration of millionaires, has become a playground for the global jet-set with casinos, expensive shops, fine dining, top hotels and showrooms featuring Ferraris, Lamborghinis and other supercars.

The same package - the vintage whisky in a crystal decanter with silver trimmings, two crystal glasses and a leather-bound booklet - is priced at 100,000 pounds ($159,100) in Britain.

Asia has seen a boom in wealth and a growing appetite for luxury goods, including top-of-the-line cars, jewelry, fashion, beauty products, watches and spirits.

The rest of the 84 items on show in Singapore, worth more than $1 million, include Dom Perignon Reserve de L'Abbaye 1978, Chateau Cheval Blanc 1986 Imperial and Luzhoulaojiao National Salute from Chinese liquor maker Luzhou Laojiao.

"I want to sell them all. Our plan is really to showcase the brands, our relationships and the uniqueness of our products," Harold Brooks, president of global merchandising at DFS, told Reuters at Saturday's invitation-only opening.

"Some of them are buying them for investment, some of them are buying them because they can and some people really buy it to enjoy it."

Brooks did not directly address the question of regional pricing but said Asia is a "critical opportunity" for Hong Kong-based DFS, especially China and its brand-conscious consumers.

The gold and black invitation for Saturday's event included RSVP numbers for China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Indonesia.

Singapore is also no stranger to pricey whisky.

Last year, a Chinese businessman spent S$250,000 on a bottle of rare 62-year-old Dalmore single malt at Changi Airport during the previous Master of Spirits promotion.

Diamond Jubilee is among the dearest whiskies ever sold, although exact comparisons are difficult because of shifting auction prices and differences between blends and single malts.

Not surprisingly, free samples of Diamond Jubilee are in short supply. Not even Brooks has had a sip.

So what does that much money taste like?

"Its different facets weave around each other: velvet texture, the refreshing bitter perfume of spices, pools of soft fruits as it flows down the throat," the Whisky Advocate blog said in a February review, giving it 93 marks out of 100.

($1 = 1.2593 Singapore dollars)

($1 = 0.6285 British pounds)

(Editing by Ed Lane)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Travel Picks: Top 10 sunrise destinations

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Travel Picks: Top 10 sunrise destinations
Mar 30th 2012, 18:41

NEW YORK | Fri Mar 30, 2012 2:41pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Residents of the Northern Hemisphere are downright giddy this time of year with the official arrival of spring. In honor of longer days, sunshine and the tantalizing prospect of summer on the horizon, Cheapflights.com has chosen its top 10 list of places around the world to see a magnificent sunrise. Reuters has not endorsed this list:

1. Haleakala National Park, Hawaii, USA

Boarding a bus in the wee hours of morning is a pain, particularly on vacation when the greatest indulgence is sleeping in. But the alarm-clock acknowledgement is worth it if the payoff is watching a sunrise from above the clouds, on the top of a volcano. Various van tours offer the trip through Haleakala National Park in Maui, picking visitors up at 3 a.m. and dropping them off to see the event from the summit. Should you want to (and we highly recommend it), you can bike the 28 miles down the mountain, back to sea level.

2. Svalbard, Norway

The sun doesn't set in Svalbardâ€"at least not between mid-April and late August each year. It's obvious, then, why the sun rising holds an almost magical appeal for visitors. Situated north of the Arctic Circle, the northernmost inhabited spot on the planet features the midnight sun, a phenomenon where the sun stays continuously in the sky for 24 hours a day. Glaciers and mountains clutter Svalbard's horizon, painting a landscape that merely enhances the event.

3. Angkor Wat Siem Reap, Cambodia

Angkor Wat any time of day is powerful, but arriving early enough to watch the sunrise offers visitors an even greater spectacle. The preserved temple attracts travelers to Cambodia from around the world, providing them architectural insight into Khmer and Hindu mythology and history. We advise that visitors dedicate more than a day to exploring the sacred grounds (and that one of those days begins before dawn).

4. Fiji

Smack dab on the 180-degree longitude line, Fiji is one of the first spots in the world to see the sun rise every day. The South Pacific destination, a favorite among lovers of turquoise seas and white-sand beaches (and who isn't), offers unrivaled scenery and inspirational landscapes. Itinerary tip: Follow an intoxicating sunrise up with a morning exploration; the "soft coral capital of the world" offers some of the best scuba diving in the world.

5. Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania

Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro is on practically every adventure traveler's to-do list. With the enormous undertaking comes a chance to see one of the most enchanting sunrises in the world. From Kili's summitâ€"19,341 feet above sea levelâ€"dedicated souls can reflect on their ascent, a massive accomplishment, while soaking up an unparalleled sight to see.

6. Stonehenge, England

Equinox devotees will gather every year for the Vernal Equinox. A place of sun worship still, Stonehenge is a mysterious destination that holds deep spiritual value for many travelers. Some researchers suggest the formation was erected as early as 2200 BC, while others argue it was even earlier, in 3000 BC. No matter the date of creation, Stonehenge is a powerful landmark, and well worth the visit for a beautifulâ€"and perhaps magicalâ€"sunrise.

7. Tres Cruces, Peru

A six-hour bus ride from Cuzco, the gateway to Machu Picchu, Tres Cruces is undeniably worth the long trek. The Incas held the mountain spot, situated on the Amazon basin, sacred. Nowadays, it's visitors looking to experience a mind-blowing sunrise who sanctify the destination. The view famously boasts celestial hues and Polaroid moments from above the clouds.

8. Tulum, Mexico

The coastal oasis of Tulum draws spiritual travelers and yoga-types year-round to soak up exquisite culture, history and scenery all in a single spot. The destination's think-green mentality and efforts toward sustainability set the tone for a raw form of vacationing, where visitors are up with the sun (and often in bed shortly after the sun goes down). No need to set an alarm in Tulum, where sun worshipers gather at the shoreline daily to watch the sunrise.

9. Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA

The most impressive sunrises in the continental United States occur every day across the Grand Canyon. Cool purples melt into shades bronze and orange against the awe-inspiring scenery, arguably America's greatest natural wonder. There isn't a best place to see the sunrise in the Grand Canyon, but Maricopa, Hopi, and Mather points, and along the South Rim are recommended highly by in-the-know travelers.

10. Mount Sinai, Egypt

First a history refresher: Jews, Christians and Muslims alike believe that Moses received the 10 Commandments at the biblical Mount Sinai, as mentioned in the Torah, Bible and Koran. Still an important religious destination, Mount Sinai today draws believers who scale the route by foot for religious purposes, and for the chance to see one of the most inspiring sunrises in the world.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Actress sues over vodka ad that sparked backlash

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Actress sues over vodka ad that sparked backlash
Mar 30th 2012, 18:20

By Jonathan Stempel

Fri Mar 30, 2012 2:20pm EDT

(Reuters) - The maker of Belvedere Vodka has been sued by an actress who said her likeness was used without permission in a print advertisement that she said appeared to glorify a possible rape.

The ad, briefly posted on Belvedere's Facebook and Twitter pages on March 23 before the company took it down and issued an apology, prompted a backlash in online and other media.

It depicts a frightened-looking woman appearing to try to escape from the arms of a smiling man. The tagline reads: "Unlike some people, Belvedere always goes down smoothly."

In her lawsuit filed Thursday, plaintiff Alicyn Packard accused Moet Hennessy USA Inc, a unit of LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA, of negligent infliction of emotional distress and misappropriating her likeness.

"While defendants have apologized to nearly everyone else, and admitted the offensiveness of the advertisement, they have yet to apologize to plaintiff," who has become "the face of the Belvedere advertising campaign that jokes about rape," the complaint said.

The lawsuit, filed in a California state court in Los Angeles, seeks compensatory and punitive damages.

Moet Hennessy did not immediately respond on Friday to requests for comment. Jeffrey Gersh, a lawyer for Packard, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to the complaint, the photo of Packard was a screenshot from a video from Strickly Viral Productions.

In that video, she and the man -- her friend and Strickly Viral owner Chris Strickland -- are asked by her parents to recreate a pose from a photo taken when they were young.

In its apology posted on its website, Belvedere called the ad "offensive" and "completely inappropriate," and said it pulled the ad the day it was posted.

Belvedere Vodka has more than 936,000 Facebook fans and more than 10,300 Twitter followers.

The case is Packard v. Moet Hennessy USA Inc et al, Superior Court of California, Los Angeles County, No. BC481858.

(Reporting By Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Martha Graybow and Gerald E. McCormick)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: London shirtmaker acts to comfort Afghan wounded

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London shirtmaker acts to comfort Afghan wounded
Mar 30th 2012, 16:22

Bespoke shirtmaker Emma Willis poses for a photograph in her shop in Jermyn Street in central London March 23, 2012. REUTERS/Toby Melville

Bespoke shirtmaker Emma Willis poses for a photograph in her shop in Jermyn Street in central London March 23, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Toby Melville

By Giles Elgood

LONDON | Fri Mar 30, 2012 10:01am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Emma Willis runs a fashionable men's shirtmaking business in the West End of London. She is also deeply impressed by the bravery and sacrifice of British soldiers in Afghanistan.

While the war garners grim headlines in the West and public doubts about the long and inconclusive campaign grow, there is no shortage of goodwill at home for the soldiers themselves.

After hearing about the rehabilitation centre where amputees and other victims of the conflict receive therapy, Willis worked out a way of combining her business with support for wounded soldiers - she makes them bespoke, luxury shirts.

"It gives me the opportunity to say this is a token of gratitude for what you do for us and our security," Willis said.

The shirts are made out of what she describes as "caressing cottons". She says she has had heard that for many of the wounded, young soldiers at the Headley Court rehab centre she visits, being measured up for a shirt is the first time they have been touched "in a non-medical way" since being evacuated from the front line.

Willis's regular customers include members of the British royal family, several dukes as well as bankers and pop stars. U.S. President Barack Obama owns one of her shirts.

Wealthy men ready to pay up to 390 pounds ($620) for a made-to-measure shirt are keen to support her "Shirts for Soldiers" venture, Willis told Reuters in an interview in a cafe opposite her Jermyn Street store near to Fortnum and Mason and The Ritz.

She said she has no difficulties in funding the shirt scheme. "My well-off customers feel so strongly as well. I just send a text and the cheques roll in," Willis said.

She has provided several hundred soldiers with high-end cotton shirts - monogrammed, gift-wrapped and with a photograph of the women who make them in Willis's factory in Gloucester, southwest England.

In another venture, Willis is providing custom-made walking sticks for wounded soldiers to replace the crutches handed out by hospitals. Made by John Faulkner, a craftsman in the west of England, the sticks are furnished with a handle made of buffalo horn and the recipient's regimental badge engraved in silver.

While the admiration felt by many Britons for each soldier is not in doubt, public attitudes towards the decade-long war as a whole are markedly cooler, with many having reached the conclusion that it is time to bring the mission to a close.

'GREEN ON BLUE'

In Britain, which provides the second-biggest contingent after the United States to the NATO-led force in Afghanistan, service charities are well supported and many turn out to watch the return of soldiers killed in the fighting.

But while the war in Iraq drew hundreds of thousands to protest in the streets, the Afghan campaign is not really inflaming passions among the British despite an inexorably rising death toll, which this month passed 400.

The death of six soldiers when their infantry fighting vehicle hit a roadside bomb this month was Britain's largest single loss of life in Afghanistan since 2006.

An increase in "green on blue" killings, in which Afghan security personnel have turned their guns on foreign soldiers, has raised awkward questions for the British public ahead of the 2014 date for the withdrawal of most Western combat troops.

In the United States, 69 percent of those surveyed thought their country should not be at war in Afghanistan compared with 53 percent four months ago, according to a New York Times/CBS News opinion poll published this week.

France responded in January to the killing of four of its troops at the hands of a rogue Afghan soldier by suspending training and support operations, effectively bringing to an end its frontline military operations in Afghanistan.

A Comres/ITV News opinion poll this month showed that three-quarters of Britons felt that the Afghan war is unwinnable, up from 60 percent last year, and more than half of those surveyed felt that Britain should withdraw its troops now.

"I think that there is a general sense that we are done in Afghanistan, but have to leave properly," said a serving senior British military officer, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"THE COUNTRY IS A MESS"

Patrick Bury, a former British Army captain and Afghanistan veteran now working as a security consultant, said the British deployment was never really thought through.

"Within two weeks of arriving there as a platoon commander, I knew we couldn't win," he said in an interview.

"The reality is that the country is a mess. The Afghan National Army loses about three percent of its strength every month which means it's losing about a third every year. That's completely unsustainable."

And with British troops now fighting in Afghanistan for the third consecutive century, something of a gallows sense of humor looks to have taken root.

"The Pashtuns have a saying," said one official with considerable experience in a country whose inhabitants have long taken pride in calling it "the graveyard of invaders".

"They say 'First one British comes to hunt, then two come to make a map, then they come with an army. Better to kill the first'" he said.

For Adam Cocks, a reservist with the London-based Honourable Artillery Company, the oldest regiment in the British Army, January 20, 2008 was what he calls a "bad day at the office".

He was blown up twice within the space of 20 minutes by two separate landmines. He fractured his knee, his nose sort of "got blown off" and he suffered shrapnel injuries.

"I just remember waking up in hospital," said the 28-year-old, who now works for an investment consultancy, P-Solve Meridian, in London.

He is wearing one of Willis's Swiss cotton shirts, in smart blue and white stripes, and is convinced that they provide a morale boost for wounded soldiers. "It's definitely a conversation starter," he said.

(Additional reporting by Peter Apps)

(This story was refiled to clarify attribution of quote in paragraph 5 )

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Titanic centre launches N.Ireland tourism drive

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Titanic centre launches N.Ireland tourism drive
Mar 30th 2012, 14:09

Images of people are projected on a wall in a replica first class cabin room in the Titanic Belfast building in Belfast, Northern Ireland March 27, 2012. REUTERS/David Moir

1 of 5. Images of people are projected on a wall in a replica first class cabin room in the Titanic Belfast building in Belfast, Northern Ireland March 27, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/David Moir

By Ian Graham

BELFAST | Fri Mar 30, 2012 10:09am EDT

BELFAST (Reuters) - Two flares fired into the morning sky above Belfast on Saturday will mark the opening of a 97-million pound ($154 million) Titanic centre at the site of its launch, telling the story of the doomed liner which sank 100 years ago.

Titanic Belfast is one of a number of signature projects designed to generate tourism in Northern Ireland, better known for decades as a region of violence and sectarian strife.

Some 100,000 people from 20 countries have booked tickets in advance to visit the showcase building constructed beside the slipway from which the liner was launched by the Harland and Wolff shipyard a century ago.

Shaped like the vessel's hull - and the same height - the centre is covered in 3,000 aluminium panels and its six floors containing nine galleries telling the story of the doomed steamship and the Belfast of the early 1900s.

"We're letting the building speak for itself, with a simple ceremony, marked by the firing of two flares - as was the case when Titanic was launched," said Tim Husbands, Titanic Belfast's CEO.

There is also an interactive ride and film footage of the wreck of Titanic in its final resting place 3,784 metres (yards) below the Atlantic - some of it never seen before.

Near to the building stands the Harland and Wolff Drawing Office where the Titanic's plans were drawn.

In the dock is Titanic's refurbished tender, the SS Nomadic, which ferried passengers from the French port of Cherbourg to the Titanic and sister ship Olympic.

The Nomadic was returned to Belfast in 2006 -- saved from the scrapyard after ending her life as a floating restaurant on the Seine in Paris.

The Titanic story has taken a central position in a major tourism campaign launched in 22 countries at a cost of 19 million pounds ($30.23 million), that has also employed the global pulling power of Northern Ireland golf champions Rory McIlroy, Darren Clarke and Graeme McDowell.

Other projects include a 20 million pound interpretative centre at the Giant's Causeway World Heritage site on the Co Antrim Coast and the restoration of the walled city of Londonderry.

But it is Titanic Belfast which is expected to lead the way and there is a target for it to draw 125,000 visitors a year from outside the British Isles.

"This is all about a new era. This is our Eiffel Tower, our Guggenheim, and it's our time to completely change how people across the world see our city," Titanic Belfast spokeswoman Claire Bradshaw said.

Other businesses in the city are cashing in as the big day approaches with Titanic beer and Titanic whiskey in the pubs and Titanic potato crisps in the shops.

Even fish and chip shops and cafes in east Belfast have been named after the liner and the railway station nearest to the Titanic building was also given the Titanic name this week.

And tucked away in an east Belfast street where some of the thousands of shipyard families lived for generations, a life size bronze of three shipyard workers was unveiled on Wednesday.

The opening marks the start of an extended Titanic festival for the 100th anniversary of the sinking of Belfast's most famous creation - April 15 1912.

It will include what is being billed as the world's largest lighting show and an MTV concert with a host of global stars that will be broadcast around the world.

"Titanic is a globally recognized brand and the new signature project is injecting a renewed and positive interest in Belfast," Tourism Minister Arlene Foster said.

"It is wonderful to see Northern Ireland making headlines for all the right reasons."

($1 = 0.6285 British pounds)

(Reporting by Ian Graham)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Zurich chocolate show treats nation of chocoholics

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Zurich chocolate show treats nation of chocoholics
Mar 30th 2012, 12:36

Doves are seen inside a dress made of chocolate presented at the first Salon du Chocolat (Zurich Chocolate Show) in Zurich March 29, 2012. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann

1 of 3. Doves are seen inside a dress made of chocolate presented at the first Salon du Chocolat (Zurich Chocolate Show) in Zurich March 29, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Christian Hartmann

By Caroline Copley and Nathalie Olof-Ors

ZURICH | Fri Mar 30, 2012 8:36am EDT

ZURICH (Reuters) - Exhibitors at Zurich's Salon du Chocolat are celebrating "Swissness" with chocolate watches and Easter egg clocks as the travelling confectionary fair opens its doors for the first time in a country renowned for its love of chocolate.

Founded in Paris in 1994, the 'Salon du Chocolat' gala has toured the world to destinations such as Tokyo, New York and Cairo, and offers smaller, independent artisans the chance to exhibit their latest wares.

One such company is Swiss-based "Chocowatch", which launched its novelty chocolate timepieces sculpted into a rock from the Swiss Alps in February this year.

Designed by Francis Gerber, who has worked as a graphic designer for Richemont's watch brand Jaeger lecoultre, the 70 percent cocoa watches come in two styles: milk chocolate and dark chocolate and retail at 14.50 Swiss francs ($15.98).

His Renault car laden with the edible watches, distributor Bernard Matthey toured Swiss tourist hotspots, such as Verbier, Zermatt and Interlaken - popular with Asian visitors who are snapping up the real Swiss watches.

"We're not in Lucerne yet, because we didn't have time to stop," said Matthey's wife Mary Josee. "But we hope to get there soon."

Home to chocolate companies like Nestle and Lindt & Spruengli, famed for its gold foil-wrapped bunnies, the Swiss invented milk chocolate in 1875 and have been a nation of chocoholics ever since.

The Swiss consumed 94,008 tonnes of chocolate products in 2011, according to statistics from the Association of Swiss Chocolate Manufacturers.

After two years in development, Confectioner Voland, has succeeded in building a working clock mechanism into its 128 Swiss franc Easter egg. Only 18 exclusive pieces have been made for sale at the Salon du Chocolat Zurich, which runs from March. 30 until April 1.

Also playing on the Swiss theme is Geneva-based Du Rhone Chocolatier, which has produced Easter eggs embossed with chocolate Swiss franc coins for a price of 40 Swiss francs.

For more expensive tastes, Lindt & Spruengli artisans are hand-decorating three giant Easter eggs during the fair, each weighing some seven kg and costing 2,000 Swiss francs. ($1 = 0.9073 Swiss francs)

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Grandparents more responsible for grandchildren: poll

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Grandparents more responsible for grandchildren: poll
Mar 30th 2012, 10:29

NEW YORK | Fri Mar 30, 2012 6:29am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Generational differences and the economy are shifting more responsibilities for children from their parents to grandparents, according to a new survey.

More than one-third of grandparents aged 50 and older contribute financially to their grandchildren's' upbringing, and 11 percent have a grandchild living with them, the poll by AARP, the lobbying group for 36 million older U.S. citizens, showed.

Forty percent of people who responded to the telephone survey, whose average age was 69, reported spending more than $500 on grandchildren over the past year beyond traditional gifts. Education costs accounted for 53 percent, daily expenses for 37 percent and medical and dental costs for 23 percent.

Sixteen percent they provided daycare for grandchildren.

"They are the safety net for American families, helping to pay for practical expenses and necessities," said Amy Goyer, AARP's multigenerational and family issues expert.

"We see many providing daycare services, while growing numbers even have grandchildren living with them," she said, referring to the 16 percent who watch their grandchildren while the parents are at work or school.

Overall nearly 90 percent of the 1,904 grandparents questioned said they play a very or somewhat important role in their grandchildren's lives, and about 70 percent live within 50 miles of the closest one.

The poll conducted by Woelfel Research Inc. also showed that grandparents were increasingly keyed in to the younger generation's life issues and preferred ways of communicating.

More than one-third connect with their grandchildren via email, Skype or text messaging, while half said they routinely discuss topics ranging from values and spirituality to drug and alcohol use.

Nearly 40 percent said they had discussed dating or sex with at least one grandchild. About 60 percent said they spoke with their grandchildren at least once a week.

Most of the grandparents said they had five or more grandchildren, while one-fourth said they have grandchildren of a different race, mixed race or different ethnicity.

(Reporting by Chris Michaud; editing by Patricia Reaney)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Wounded British soldiers on charity Everest climb

Reuters: Lifestyle
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Wounded British soldiers on charity Everest climb
Mar 30th 2012, 07:17

By Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU | Fri Mar 30, 2012 3:17am EDT

KATHMANDU (Reuters) - Five wounded current and former British Army soldiers, including one who lost an arm, depart on Saturday for the base camp of Mount Everest to try to climb the world's tallest peak for charity.

The soldiers are part of a 30-climber British expedition to the 8,850-metre (29,035-foot) summit. They will take the normal South East Ridge route pioneered by New Zealander Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa in 1953.

The expedition is sponsored by Walking with the Wounded, a charity that raises funds to train and educate wounded soldiers and help them return to work once they leave the military. Britain's Prince Harry is a patron of the charity.

"I am so excited, very excited and a little bit nervous," said Martin Hewitt, 31, who trekked to the North Pole with the charity in 2011 and is a former captain who has a paralyzed right arm after being shot in Afghanistan in 2007.

The team climbed Mount Manaslu, the world's eighth tallest peak at 8,163 meters (26,781 feet) in western Nepal last year as part of their training.

"It is teamwork," said David Wiseman, a 29-year-old captain shot in the chest during a battle with the Taliban in 2009. "If one guy finds a particular thing like using the crampons difficult, the others can help him."

The others taking part are private Jaco van Gass, 25, who lost an arm in a grenade attack in Afghanistan, ex-private Karl Hinett, 25, who sustained burns to his legs, hands and face in Iraq, and Captain Francis Atkinson, 31, whose right arm no longer functions properly after a gunshot wound in Afghanistan.

Everest climbing season started in March and continues through May. Climbers wait in tents for a window of good weather to make the summit bid before the onset of annual monsoon rains.

Although summit bids are generally made in May when the weather improves, climbers begin heading to the mountain in March or early April to have time to set up camps and shuttle between them in order to adjust to the thin air at high altitude.

Hundreds of foreign climbers go to Mount Everest and other peaks in Nepal every year. Mountain climbing is a key component of tourism, which accounts for four percent of gross domestic product annually.

More than 4,000 people have reached the top of Mount Everest since Hillary and Tenzing's climb - among them a 13 year-old American boy, a 76-year-old man, a blind person and a man with artificial limb. More than 200 have lost their lives attempting to scale the peak.

(Reporting by Gopal Sharma, editing by Elaine Lies and Ron Popeski)

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Thursday, March 29, 2012

Reuters: Lifestyle: Grandparents more responsible for grandchildren - poll

Reuters: Lifestyle
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Grandparents more responsible for grandchildren - poll
Mar 29th 2012, 22:32

NEW YORK | Thu Mar 29, 2012 6:32pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Generational differences and the economy are shifting more responsibilities for children from their parents to grandparents, according to a new survey.

More than one-third of grandparents aged 50 and older contribute financially to their grandchildren's' upbringing, and 11 percent have a grandchild living with them, the poll by AARP, the lobbying group for 36 million older U.S. citizens, showed.

Forty percent of people who responded to the telephone survey, whose average age was 69, reported spending more than $500 on grandchildren over the past year beyond traditional gifts. Education costs accounted for 53 percent, daily expenses for 37 percent and medical and dental costs for 23 percent.

Sixteen percent they provided daycare for grandchildren.

"They are the safety net for American families, helping to pay for practical expenses and necessities," said Amy Goyer, AARP's multigenerational and family issues expert.

"We see many providing daycare services, while growing numbers even have grandchildren living with them," she said, referring to the 16 percent who watch their grandchildren while the parents are at work or school.

Overall nearly 90 percent of the 1,904 grandparents questioned said they play a very or somewhat important role in their grandchildren's lives, and about 70 percent live within 50 miles of the closest one.

The poll conducted by Woelfel Research Inc. also showed that grandparents were increasingly keyed in to the younger generation's life issues and preferred ways of communicating.

More than one-third connect with their grandchildren via email, Skype or text messaging, while half said they routinely discuss topics ranging from values and spirituality to drug and alcohol use.

Nearly 40 percent said they had discussed dating or sex with at least one grandchild. About 60 percent said they spoke with their grandchildren at least once a week.

Most of the grandparents said they had five or more grandchildren, while one-fourth said they have grandchildren of a different race, mixed race or different ethnicity.

(Reporting by Chris Michaud; editing by Patricia Reaney)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Baby Beyonce dreams big as world's tiniest puppy

Reuters: Lifestyle
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Baby Beyonce dreams big as world's tiniest puppy
Mar 29th 2012, 19:38

Beyonce, a Dachshund mix female puppy, is pictured on an iPhone in this March 10, 2012 handout photo. REUTERS/Lisa Van Dyke/El Dorado Dog Photography/Handout

Beyonce, a Dachshund mix female puppy, is pictured on an iPhone in this March 10, 2012 handout photo.

Credit: Reuters/Lisa Van Dyke/El Dorado Dog Photography/Handout

By Piya Sinha-Roy

LOS ANGELES | Thu Mar 29, 2012 3:38pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - R&B superstar Beyonce has some stiff celebrity competition on the horizon as there's a new little diva making headlines and winning fans with her cute, furry face.

At only three-weeks-old, a puppy named Beyonce is aiming for stardom. Her rescuers have submitted her to the Guinness World Records for a declaration as the world's tiniest rescue dog.

The miniature puppy, who was born March 8 after her mother, Casey, was taken off the streets of a California town, weighed less than 1 oz. (28.3 grams) at birth and could fit into a table spoon. She is said to be a mix of Dachshund, Miniature Pinscher and Chihuahua based on her mother, but the father is unknown.

Her rescuers at the Grace Foundation in northern California were concerned the pup may not live after being stillborn, but after a heart massage and CPR, she started breathing on her own.

Named after the award-winning R&B singer in reference to her song "Survivor," Beyonce is holding her own despite being the runt of the litter, joining siblings Bono, Jagger, Lady Gaga and Jay-Z at meal times.

"She is a wonderful mascot, representing what can happen with a rescue dog," said Jeanne Warr, Director of Operations at the Grace Foundation, which takes in last-chance dogs from rescue centers and animal control.

Beyonce has already been certified by the World Records Academy as the world's tiniest puppy, a new category created especially for her, and Warr hopes the new title will bring more awareness of the benefits of adopting rescue pets.

"We are glad we could help such an amazing organization (The Grace Foundation) devoted to the dog's rescue," said World Records Academy certifying director Ramona Nita in an email.

But the same title is unlikely to be bestowed upon the pup by Guinness World Records, who only accept entries from animals who are at least 1-year-old.

"We are not going to open this as a new category, but we can re-evaluate once Beyonce does turn one, and put her up against the current title holders," said Jamie Panas, public relations manager at Guinness World Records.

Currently, the smallest living dog in height is a female Chihuahua called Boo Boo in Kentucky at 4 inches and the smallest living dog in length is Heaven Sent Brandy, a female Chihuahua from Florida, at 6 inches.

(Reporting By Piya Sinha-Roy)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Menswear fuels global luxury boom, executives say

Reuters: Lifestyle
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Menswear fuels global luxury boom, executives say
Mar 29th 2012, 19:08

By Phil Wahba

NEW YORK | Thu Mar 29, 2012 3:08pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Whether it's a desire to be as dapper as Don Draper on television's "Mad Men," a need to look good for a job interview or just a hankering for new duds, men have increased their spending on fancy clothes, and executives expect the boom to continue.

German fashion house Hugo Boss AG, which generates the vast majority of its sales from menswear, is targeting sales gains of 50 percent to 3 billion euros by 2015, helped by a cultural shift around the world that has led more men to be interested in fashion and invest in their appearance.

"Men are just waking up to the beauty of being dressed well," Hugo Boss Chief Executive Claus-Dietrich Lahrs told Reuters on the sidelines of the Fairchild Fashion Media Men's Wear Summit in New York on Thursday.

The global luxury menswear market is growing at about 14 percent a year, or nearly double the pace of luxury women's wear, according to consulting firm Bain & Co.

With demand in Europe cooling because of a slow economy and questions about whether the Chinese luxury market can keep up its torrid pace of growth, many retailers are betting on -- and benefiting from -- a luxury boom in the United States.

Alfred Dunhill, a British men's chain owned by Swiss luxury goods group Richemont, operates three U.S. stores and aims to add five more within two years.

"We look at America as a bit of an unpicked fruit," Dunhill CEO Christopher Colfer told Reuters this week. "There's a resurgence of man and our willingness to make ourselves look nice."

Hugo Boss's U.S. plans include expansion of its flagship store in Manhattan's Columbus Circle, Lahrs said.

Everything from the sharp 1960's styles on shows such as "Mad Men" -- a popular drama about a New York advertising agency -- to the proliferation of fashion blogs have ignited men's interest in fashion and nicer clothes, executives say.

"Those shows are having an influence on the way guys are dressing," said Matthew Singer, men's fashion director at Neiman Marcus Group. Men are also less shy about buying accessories such as bracelets and scarves, he said.

Saks Fifth Avenue has expanded its men's private brand collection and this week CEO Steve Sadove told investors that it will probably be Saks' largest men's brand this year.

Coach Inc is also banking on more business from men. Globally, Coach expects sales of men's products this year to reach $400 million, or 8 percent of total sales, and climb to $1 billion within a few years.

For the New York-based leather goods maker, it is sort of a return to its roots: Coach started in 1941 as a men's business. In 1997, men's goods still accounted for 25 percent of sales.

Men have also been fueling luxury sales in China, the fastest growing luxury market, despite a recent slowdown in the pace of growth there.

Trinity Ltd, a leading high-end menswear retailer in China, said same-store sales rose 19.5 percent last year, and that it eventually plans to operate 500 stores in greater China, up from about 370 now.

"Men do not shop that often, do not buy a lot but they are consistent. Men are very loyal to brands," Trinity group managing director Sunny Wong told Reuters this week.

Even outside of the pricey luxury market, men in the United States are spending more on clothes.

American men increased their spending on clothing more than women did in 2011, buying more dress clothes in particular as the economy improves, a study showed.

Men's clothing sales rose 4 percent during the year, while women's grew 3 percent, market researcher the NPD Group said on Thursday.

(Reporting By Phil Wahba in New York; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Amazon founder Bezos finds Apollo 11 engines on sea floor

Reuters: Lifestyle
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Amazon founder Bezos finds Apollo 11 engines on sea floor
Mar 29th 2012, 18:07

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos holds up the new Kindle Fire at a news conference during the launch of Amazon's new tablets in New York, September 28, 2011. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos holds up the new Kindle Fire at a news conference during the launch of Amazon's new tablets in New York, September 28, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

By Irene Klotz

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida | Thu Mar 29, 2012 2:07pm EDT

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - Space enthusiast and entrepreneur Jeff Bezos has found the rocket motors used to send the Apollo 11 astronauts to the moon and plans to mount a recovery expedition soon, the Amazon.com CEO and founder reported on a blog post.

The five F-1 engines were fired up on July 16, 1969, sending the massive Saturn 5 rocket on its way to the moon. The motors burned out a few minutes after liftoff from the Kennedy Space Center and tumbled into the Atlantic Ocean.

Astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins flew on into the history books, becoming the first humans to reach the moon.

"I was 5 years old when I watched Apollo 11 unfold on television, and without any doubt it was a big contributor to my passions for science, engineering, and exploration," Bezos, the founder of Amazon.com and the Blue Origin rocket company, wrote in his blog on Wednesday.

"A year or so ago, I started to wonder, with the right team of undersea pros, could we find and potentially recover the F-1 engines that started mankind's mission to the moon?" he wrote.

Using a deep-sea sonar scanner, Bezos' team found the engines on the sea floor, some 14,000 feet below the surface.

"We're making plans to attempt to raise one or more of them," Bezos said.

"We don't know yet what condition these engines might be in. They hit the ocean at high velocity and have been in salt water for more than 40 years. On the other hand, they're made of tough stuff, so we'll see," he said.

NASA, which retains ownership of its space artifacts, said it was reviewing a recovery proposal it received from Bezos on Thursday.

"We'll be working with his expedition, not necessarily out there physically, but with his team on ownership issues and what he'd like to do with them," NASA spokesman Bob Jacobs told Reuters.

"We'll be interested to see what condition the engines were in, how they survived the high impact on the water and after so much time sitting in the ocean," he said.

If the salvage operation is successful, the Saturn 5 engines would be the second major piece of space history to be recovered from the sea floor.

In 1999, Discovery Channel staged an expedition to find and recover the Liberty Bell 7 capsule that was used by Mercury astronaut Virgil "Gus" Grissom on the second U.S. human space flight.

The capsule's door blew off early and Grissom nearly drowned after his 15-minute suborbital ride. It sat on the ocean floor for 38 years until it was found and recovered by a team led by Oceaneering for a television documentary.

The capsule was refurbished by the Kansas Cosmosphere & Space Center, a Smithsonian-affiliated museum in Hutchinson, Kansas, and is now the centerpiece of a exhibit.

A spokeswoman for the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, the repository for NASA artifacts, said it was way too early to know whether the Apollo 11 rocket motors might someday be part of the national collection.

(Editing by Jane Sutton and Lisa Shumaker)

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