Reuters
Oddly Enough - Reuters

More than 100 sick as too many cooks spoil broth

2 hours, 24 minutes ago

BEIJING (Reuters) - Some 170 wedding banquet guests were rushed to hospital in north China when powdered rust remover was added to the pot instead of salt after they all decided it needed added flavor, Chinese media said.

  • Official undone by tight trouser crackdown 2 hours, 25 minutes ago

    JUBA, Sudan (Reuters) - A senior official in South Sudan who ordered a crackdown on young women wearing tight trousers has been sacked, officials said Saturday.

  • China's Wang to get help after karaoke club fight 2 hours, 25 minutes ago

    BEIJING (Reuters) - China's national table tennis team will give Olympic medalist Wang Hao counseling after he reportedly got into a fight with a security guard for trying to stop him from urinating outside a karaoke club.

  • 106-year-old Obama-supporting nun shocked by fame 2 hours, 26 minutes ago

    ROME (Reuters) - A 106-year-old American nun who became a minor celebrity after she appeared on television saying she is voting for Barack Obama is "startled and a bit anguished" by all the attention she is getting, her order said Monday.

  • A combination picture shows the Forbidden City in Beijing taken August 1, 2008 (top) and a three dimensional virtual tour of the Forbidden City October 10, 2008. Culture fans thousands of miles from Beijing can now visit its famous Forbidden City, through a three dimensional re-creation of the vast palace that also allows them to wander through the courtyards and temples, meet a courtesan and even dress up as an imperial eunuch. (Staff/Files/Reuters)
    Visit China's Forbidden City -- as a virtual eunuch Fri Oct 10, 3:28 PM ET

    BEIJING (Reuters) - Culture fans thousands of miles from Beijing can now visit its famous Forbidden City, through a three dimensional recreation of the vast palace that also allows them to dress up as an imperial eunuch and meet a courtesan.

  • French writer Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio attends a news conference in Paris October 9, 2008 after he won the 2008 Nobel prize for Literature. (Benoit Tessier/Reuters)
    Swedish Academy worried by possible Nobel lit leak Fri Oct 10, 1:50 PM ET

    STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - The Swedish Academy is concerned its decision to award Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio the Nobel Prize for Literature may have leaked ahead of the announcement, a prominent member of the academy was quoted as saying on Friday.

  • Waiter Papa Yansanhe, 28, picks up a chair outside what remains of Paradise Beach Bar and Restaurant in Freetown October 8, 2008. (Katrina Manson/Reuters)
    Beach bars demolished in tourism revamp Thu Oct 9, 1:29 PM ET

    FREETOWN (Reuters) - Demolition teams wielding axes and machetes this week smashed up popular beach bars, one still bearing a sign saying "Paradise," as part of an improvement scheme to develop tourism in Sierra's Leone's capital Freetown.

  • Off duty San Diego sheriffs employee Jill Farris prepares her throw in a 'break room' at Sarah's Smash Shack during an evening session in San Diego, California September 29, 2008. At Sarah's Smash Shack, pent-up patrons can relieve stress by hurling dinnerware and bric-a-brac against a wall, as hard as they can, day and night, seven days a week. Picture taken on September 29. (Mike Blake/Reuters)
    Angry about economy? Smash some plates and move on Thu Oct 9, 1:24 PM ET

    SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - All over sunny San Diego, tough economic times have forced people to cut back on their $4 lattes and sushi dinners.

  • Republican vice presidential nominee Alaska Governor Sarah Palin waves supporters during a rally in Cleveland, Ohio October 8, 2008. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)
    Tennessee man indicted for hacking Palin e-mail Thu Oct 9, 1:27 PM ET

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Tennessee man has been indicted for hacking into Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin's personal e-mail account, the Justice Department said on Wednesday.

  • Crackdown on tight trousers cancelled Wed Oct 8, 12:27 PM ET

    JUBA, Sudan (Reuters) - South Sudan's president shut down a police investigation Wednesday that saw scores of young women arrested for "disturbing the peace" by wearing tight trousers.

  • Ignacio Jardon places a bike next to a tree in Buenos Aires, October 3, 2008. (Enrique Marcarian/Reuters)
    How safe is your city? Put it to the bicycle test Wed Oct 8, 12:26 PM ET

    BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - How long will an unchained bicycle last on a city street before someone steals it?

  • A shopper enters a Neiman Marcus store in Oak Brook, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, May 2, 2005. (John Gress/Reuters)
    For sale: Yourself, in Legos Wed Oct 8, 12:28 PM ET

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - For the golf enthusiast who still has $1 million to spare after the Wall Street meltdown: a backyard golf course custom-designed by champ Jack Nicklaus for Christmas.

  • The Kariba Dam wall on the Zambezi river is seen with three flood gates open February 26, 2000. (Stringer/Reuters)
    Soccer player drowns in ritual swim Tue Oct 7, 2:15 PM ET

    HARARE (Reuters) - A Zimbabwean soccer player drowned in a crocodile infested river during a ritual to cleanse his team of bad spirits before a match, a state newspaper said on Tuesday.

  • A naked man swims in the moat of Japan's Imperial Palace in Tokyo October 7, 2008. (Kyodo/Reuters)
    Naked swimmer evades police in Tokyo palace moat Tue Oct 7, 2:15 PM ET

    TOKYO (Reuters) - A bald, naked man who said he was a British tourist went swimming in the moat of Japan's Imperial Palace on Tuesday, climbing the palace wall, throwing rocks and splashing water at police before being taken into custody.

  • Brits value sex and in-laws, Web dating company finds Tue Oct 7, 2:14 PM ET

    LONDON (Reuters) - Being too tired for sex is less of a problem for married Britons than for U.S. or Australian couples, and Brits place more importance on agreeing on how to handle their in-laws, online dating company eHarmony has found.

  • Bao Xishun, 57, a 2.36-metre (7 feet, 9 inches) herdsman listed by the Guinness World Records as the tallest living man, looks at his new-born baby at a hospital in Zunhua, Hebei province October 2, 2008. The world's tallest man, China's Bao Xishun, became the world's tallest father this week with the birth of his first child, a boy whose initial height seems a compromise between his gigantic dad and average-sized mom. Picture taken October 2, 2008. (Stringer/Reuters)
    World's tallest man becomes world's tallest dad Mon Oct 6, 3:44 PM ET

    BEIJING (Reuters) - The world's tallest man, China's Bao Xishun, became the world's tallest father this week with the birth of his first child, a boy whose initial height seems a compromise between his gigantic dad and average-sized mum.

  • An iguana in a file photo. (Jorge Silva/Reuters)
    Kids want an exotic pet? Ask your doctor first Mon Oct 6, 3:38 PM ET

    CHICAGO (Reuters) - Reptiles, monkeys, rodents and other exotic pets are growing in popularity but should be discouraged in homes with small children or people with immune system problems, according to a report published on Monday.

  • France's Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner addresses a news conference in Brussels in this September 15, 2008 file photo. REUTERS/Thierry Roge
    Dropped "h" causes trouble for France's Kouchner Mon Oct 6, 3:42 PM ET

    PARIS (Reuters) - A dropped 'h' landed English-speaking French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner in trouble on Sunday after he was mistakenly quoted as saying Israel could gobble up Iran if it wanted to.

  • A large male crocodile watches a crowd gathered for feeding time at Darwin's Crocodile Farm located 100 kilometres south of Darwin in this file photo from May 10, 2005. (David Gray/Reuters)
    Australian boy wreaks zoo havoc while feeding croc Mon Oct 6, 3:39 PM ET

    CANBERRA (Reuters) - The parents of a 7-year-old boy who broke into an Australian outback zoo and fed a string of small animals to its resident crocodile are likely to be sued after police said the boy was too young to be held responsible.

  • Many workers do not respect their bosses Mon Oct 6, 3:45 PM ET

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Almost half of U.S. workers do not respect their boss and only half believe they are competent, according to an online survey released on Friday.