Archive for the ‘Amusing News’ Category

Goldilocks in reverse

Tuesday, June 20th, 2006

Woman finds bear eating her oatmeal

Tuesday, June 20, 2006; Posted: 10:02 a.m. EDT (14:02 GMT)

WEST VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — It was a real-life version of Goldilocks and the Three Bears — only in reverse — when a woman came home to find a young bear eating oatmeal in her kitchen.

The bear apparently entered through an open sliding glass door, broke a ceramic food container and started eating, West Vancouver police Sgt. Paul Skelton said.

“It sounds like a nursery rhyme, doesn’t it?” Skelton said. “At least we have a health-conscious bear on our hands.”

Three police officers who went to the home Thursday couldn’t get the bear to budge, so authorities let the animal finish its meal.

“The bear didn’t appear to be aggressive and wasn’t destroying the house, so they just let it do what it was doing and eventually the bear decided to make its way out of the residence and down toward a forested gully,” Skelton said. “It ended the best it could.”

Skelton said bears in the suburbs north of Vancouver have been coming out of hibernation as hungry as ever but later than usual but this spring because of a heavier than normal snowpack from the winter. The report Thursday was one of six complaints police said they received about bears in the area that day.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

from: http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/americas/06/20/oatmeal.bear.ap/index.html

D’oh! More know Simpsons than Constitution

Wednesday, March 1st, 2006

Study: America more familiar with cartoon family than First Amendment
The Associated Press
Updated: 1:22 a.m. ET March 1, 2006

CHICAGO – Americans apparently know more about “The Simpsons” than they do about the First Amendment.

Only one in four Americans can name more than one of the five freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment.

But more than half can name at least two members of the cartoon family, according to a survey.

The study by the new McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum found that 22 percent of Americans could name all five Simpson family members, compared with just one in 1,000 people who could name all five First Amendment freedoms.

Joe Madeira, director of exhibitions at the museum, said he was surprised by the results.

“Part of the survey really shows there are misconceptions, and part of our mission is to clear up these misconceptions,” said Madeira, whose museum will be dedicated to helping visitors understand the First Amendment when it opens in April. “It means we have our job cut out for us.”

The survey found more people could name the three “American Idol” judges than identify three First Amendment rights. They were also more likely to remember popular advertising slogans.

It also showed that people misidentified First Amendment rights. About one in five people thought the right to own a pet was protected, and 38 percent said they believed the right against self-incrimination contained in the Fifth Amendment was a First Amendment right, the survey found.

The telephone survey of 1,000 adults was conducted Jan. 20-22 by the research firm Synovate and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

_________________________________________________________

Editor’s note: The five freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment are freedom of speech, religion, press, assembly and petition for redress of grievances.

© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

from: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11611015/?GT1=7850

‘Car-chase capital’ deploys new weapon — GPS gum balls

Tuesday, February 7th, 2006

Tuesday, February 7, 2006; Posted: 9:18 a.m. EST (14:18 GMT)

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) — The car chase capital of the world is going high-tech to end dangerous pursuits across Southern California.

Police Chief William J. Bratton unveiled a strange new weapon in the police department’s strategy to halt high-speed pursuits — adhesive darts with a global positioning system that are fired at fleeing cars by police.

Once fired from a patrol car, the GPS dart is designed to stick to a fleeing car, allowing squad cars to back off the chase.

“Instead of us pushing them doing 70 or 80 miles an hour,” Bratton said, “this device allows us not to have to pursue after the car. It allows us to start vectoring where the car is.”

U.S. Department of Justice officials suggested testing the StarChase system in Los Angeles. A small number of patrol cars will be equipped with the compressed air launchers, which fire the miniature GPS receivers in a sticky compound resembling a golf ball.

There were more than 600 pursuits in Los Angeles and more than 100,000 nationwide last year. Critics have long questioned the wisdom of police pursuits because they can endanger bystanders and officers.

Bratton, who often calls the city the car chase capital of the world, was asked why there are so many pursuits in Los Angeles: “There are a lot of nuts here,” he said.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

from: http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/02/07/lapd.gps.ap/index.html

dumb news

Wednesday, January 25th, 2006

CNN had a link to the dumbest business news: http://money.cnn.com/magazines/business2/101dumbest/?cnn=yes

here’s a sampling:
Winner, Dumbest Moment, Security
May I see my ID?

In February, ChoicePoint — the self-proclaimed “leading provider of identification and credential verification services” — admits that it sold the personal data of 145,000 people to a number of unauthorized recipients, including an identity-theft ring in Los Angeles. ChoicePoint thoughtfully offers the victims a free credit report — but still makes them pay to see the detailed information that was provided to the criminals. The incident kicks up an identity-theft furor serious enough to draw congressional hearings; the company later reports the incident cost it $21 million.

Winner, Dumbest Moment, Outsourcing
Told you we shouldn’t have rented that list from the Department of Homeland Security.

Blaming a mailing-list vendor for providing bad information, JPMorgan Chase apologizes for sending a form letter about its credit card services to an Arab American man in California addressed to “Palestinian Bomber.”

24. Damn those infernal computating hoochamagooches.
In November ex-MTV veejay Adam Curry logs on to Wikipedia and edits the entry about podcasting, playing up his role as an early pioneer and deleting mentions of other inventors. Caught by server logs that point to his involvement, Curry admits to the attempt but claims that — despite being smart enough to invent podcasting — he was befuddled by Wikipedia’s interface and altered the entry by accident.

26. And maybe the cops come three days later and find you stabbed to death on your kitchen floor.
“If there’s a burglar in my home, maybe I send an e-mail or a text message to the police instead of making a call.”
– Skype co-founder Niklas Zennstrom, on his VOIP service’s lack of 911 access.

36. We know why you fly … JetBlue.
The winner of the American Airlines “We Know Why You Fly” contest, which promised to award 24 round-trip tickets to the traveler who submitted the best video about his airborne experiences, turns down the grand prize. Why? Because American fails to cover the winner’s federal, state, and local income taxes, which amount to about $19,000, or $800 per ticket.

98. Call it a merger of equals.
A few weeks after eZiba.com sends out its winter catalog, the call center’s pin-drop silence begins to worry execs. As it turns out, a bug in a program designed to identify the best prospects on eZiba’s mailing list led to the catalog instead being sent to those deemed least likely to respond. “Sadly, our probability estimates were correct,” says eZiba founder Dick Sabot. On Jan. 14, eZiba suspends operations while seeking new investors to cover its cash shortfall. Overstock.com later buys the retailer’s assets for $500,000.

101. Little Big Man
In September, as the result of a typo in a spreadsheet, Electronic Arts issues an update to Madden NFL 06 that reduces 6-foot-3, 305-pound New York Jets lineman Michael King to a height of 7 inches. The next day, EA fixes the bug — to a chorus of complaints from customers who enjoyed watching the shin-high blocker get steamrollered by full-size players such as seven-time All-Pro linebacker Derrick Brooks of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

8. Here’s to you, Mr. Insult-Your-Customers Marketing Guy.
In January a new installment of Anheuser-Busch’s “Real Men of Genius” ad campaign celebrates “Mr. Discount-Airline-Pilot Guy” for putting “the fly in fly-by-night.” When the ad comes to the attention of executives at low-fare carrier AirTran Airways, director of marketing Tad Hutcheson calls the brewer to complain and is put on hold — where he hears not Muzak but a loop containing the offending ad. AirTran threatens to yank Budweiser from the airline’s galleys.

84. And now, 15 words from our sponsors.
In July, Nascar holds an event at Colorado’s Pikes Peak International Raceway. Its official name: ITT Industries, Systems Division, & Goulds Pump Salute to the Troops 250 presented by Dodge.

dubai anyone?

Sunday, January 15th, 2006

anyone want to go to dubai? they just opened up a mall with indoor snow!!

——————————————————————————
In Dubai, Let It . . . Snow?

By Jonathan Finer
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, January 15, 2006; P01

It might have been shorts weather on a recent winter day in Dubai at the juncture of sand and sea, the air a typically cloudless 85 degrees, the breeze desert-dry. But inside a stadium-size sanctum at the brand new Mall of the Emirates, the forecast called for man-made snow.

So instead of beachwear, I rented a parka and mittens and stepped into a surreal, faux-winter bazaar, where gleeful children flung ice balls, careened down a bobsled run and darted in and out of igloos impossibly out of place in a building whose parking lot is lined with palm trees. Sandal-clad men and women, some also wearing traditional Arab robes and head scarves, looked on in amusement through the mall’s fogged windows.

Ski Dubai, a $275 million wonderland with five sloping runs and a chairlift reaching diagonally into the misty expanse 25 stories above, opened in December, along with a quarter-pipe for snowboarders.

“It really is mind-boggling. You can see your breath,” said Sadia Mahmud, a smiling financial analyst who visited with her 5-year-old son. “You go from the desert to the Alps in just a few steps.”

I had traveled to Dubai (population 1.2 million as of 2003) to see what I had heard was a city rapidly becoming a caricature of excess, a surreal oasis on a horn of the Arabian Peninsula jutting into the mouth of the Persian Gulf. “You have to see this place to believe it,” said a college friend I was visiting on a stopover from Baghdad, where I normally work. He was right.

With a more permissive attitude than their neighbors toward Western-style capitalism and lifestyle features like bars and dance clubs, Dubai’s government has carefully cultivated an exploding economy centered on oil, financial services and, increasingly, real estate and tourism. Even a stock exchange opened in September.

An advantage for travelers is an abundance of swanky hotels and restaurants, although prices ($200 per night and way, way up for luxury accommodations) may seem daunting to those more accustomed to the region’s less lavish locales. Nonetheless, tourists and business travelers are flocking. The number of hotel guests the country has accommodated nearly doubled in the past five years to about 5.4 million per year, according to the tourism office.

The ability of this small city-state — one of seven that make up the United Arab Emirates — to adapt to a seemingly inhospitable geography is first viewed on approach from the air, as an unbroken sea of yellow sand to the west gives way to vibrant green irrigated plots for giant stone houses.

Dubai draws frequent comparisons with Hong Kong, for its role as a financial center linking two cultures — in Dubai’s case, the Middle East and the West–and to Las Vegas for its “top-this” approach to opulence and development. (Most forms of gambling, however, are illegal.) Along the main highway through the center of the city, the scope of construction is simply staggering. Hundreds of large construction projects are underway at once, including dozens of high-rise buildings. Reportedly, about 16 percent of the world’s large construction cranes are in Dubai, a number often cited and difficult to verify. A collage of glass-and-steel skyscrapers, half-built towers and a veritable forest of cranes define the skyline in all directions.

“When my aunt first went to New York and saw the skyline, she told them it didn’t seem like much because she had already been to Dubai,” said my host, Hassan Sattar, a Pakistani investment banker who moved to Dubai with his family last year.

Among them is the world-renowned Burj Al Arab Hotel, built on a man-made island in the Persian Gulf and shaped like a sailboat mast and mainsail. It bills itself as a “seven-star” resort, and guests are assigned a butler with every room. Other artificial archipelagos — one of which is shaped like a palm tree, another a map of the globe — house some of the emirate’s most lavish and exclusive new developments, including homes bought by such Western celebrities as aging rocker Rod Stewart and English soccer star David Beckham.

On a billboard near the center of town, next to a vast building foundation, is an artist’s rendering of the Burj Dubai, a spiraling tower under construction. At up to 160 stories, developers say, it will be the world’s tallest building upon completion, set for 2009. “Throughout history, only a handful of structures have had the power to change history,” says a statement on the project’s promotional Web site, above a photo of Egypt’s pyramids.

Ski Dubai is the latest, and perhaps the most incongruous, attraction for a growing legion of tourists and business travelers, who heretofore have engaged in more climate-appropriate pursuits like water sports and sand safaris that take them deep into the rolling dunes of the Arabian Desert in all-terrain vehicles.

As part of the $13.60 cost of admission to the snow park ($10.90 for children), the resort provides matching black winter garments that make kids all but indistinguishable to parents as they frolic in the snow. Access to the ski slopes is a bit more expensive (about $35 for adults and $30 for children for a two-hour pass during peak times).

Inside the sprawling complex, which covers about 5 1/2 acres and can accommodate up to 1,500 customers at once, the temperature was a frigid 28 degrees (it is lowered even further at night to assist with making snow). Developers say it’s the world’s first indoor black diamond run.

I visited the mall with Hassan, his wife Sadia, a doctor, and their children, Uzer, 6, and Maha, 4. Uzer took his first-ever sledding runs, tumbling off of the plastic cart at one point but smiling all the way. Maha preferred the igloo and a large ice sculpture of a polar bear. After about an hour, their parents and I got cold.

“Next time we’ll go skiing,” Hassan said as he tried to corral the kids, who clearly did not want to leave. “Imagine telling people you learned to ski in Dubai.”

Ski Dubai, at the Mall of the Emirates, is on Shiekh Zayed Road, Exit 39, heading toward Al Barsha. Various snow park passes are offered, such as the ski slope day pass ($56-$60), which includes the whole ski or snowboard getup, down to the pants and socks (but bring your own hat and gloves). Group and private lessons also available. Ski Dubai info:http://www.skidubai.ae.

For information on travel to Dubai: Dubai’s Department of Tourism and Marketing,http://www.dubaitourism.ae.

Jonathan Finer is a Washington Post reporter currently on assignment in Baghdad.

original story at http://http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/13/AR2006011300579.html?sub=AR

i don’t see what the big deal is…

Wednesday, December 28th, 2005

Grandma, let me play that video game!

i don’t see what the big deal is! i’ve been fighting my grandparents for the video game consoles since i was little! one time when my grandparents came to visit us and were bored (’cause they can’t really go out without my parents who worked), we introduced them to those japanese video games (“11083091 games in ONE!”). they were hooked! i remember being called down to the basement while i was supposed to be practicing piano so i could solve a banana (who remembers that game?!) level for them. they equated smarts with the ability to beat video games (yay! that may have been the only time in my life they considered me smart) and i remember my grandpa lecturing me, while playing video games, on the need to keep the mind sharp by exercising it often.

when they went back to taiwan, they bought their own console and played all the time. when i went back to taiwan to visit them when i was 18, my grandparents excitedly told me to go upstairs to this room – their gaming room! my grandma complained that there were days that my grandpa wouldn’t even leave that room and that she’d have to bring him up his meals!

even my mom would get hooked on the games. i remember some summer nights staying up til 2-3am playing tetris with my mom!

Grandma, let me play that video game!

Wednesday, December 28th, 2005

Wednesday, December 28, 2005; Posted: 10:28 a.m. EST (15:28 GMT)

SHALERSVILLE, Ohio (AP) — A 69-year-old grandmother has become the heroine of young video-game fans and the star of a Web log created by her grandson.

Barbara St. Hilaire plays video games 10 hours a day and spends a good part of her Social Security check on games.

St. Hilaire thinks the blog and media attention she’s gotten is funny but doesn’t quite understand it. However, she appreciates the free games showered on her by video game makers who want to share in the reflected glare of publicity.

And there are the bloggers she has met online. “I guess this is my form of traveling the world,” she told the Akron Beacon Journal.

MTV profiled St. Hilaire, hired her as a video game correspondent and offered to screen her interview requests. It’s all been, as her 22-year-old grandson Timothy St. Hilaire put it, a bit head-spinning.

“Well, last weekend was hell, but it’s over,” the grandson told his grandmother’s fans on his blog http://oghc.blogspot.com/external link. The blog is named for her moniker, Old Grandma Hardcore — as in hardcore video game player.

Grandma, who lives with her daughter and four grandchildren, moved with them last weekend from Shalersville in northeast Ohio to nearby Mantua and a more specious house that gives Grandma her own game room.

“We’re in the new house, Grandma’s game room is coming along, although there was some scratching of some furniture if you know what I mean,” her grandson reported on the blog.

As for interviewing Grandma, “My head is spinning off my neck trying to make everybody happy with scheduling resolutions (it would be a funny sort of thing if it didn’t hurt so much) and I want to help as much as I can, but we just moved; so things are tough for the moment.”

With the new living quarters, Grandma’s busy interview schedule and the Christmas holiday approaching, the St. Hilaire family holiday cards ran late. Besides, Timothy St. Hilaire said Grandma was busy breaking in a new video game, “Dragon Quest VIII.”

Business Week, The Washington Post and the “CBS Evening News” all did stories on St. Hilaire and ABC’s “Good Morning America” and The Associated Press called to line up interviews.

Along the way, Germany’s influential Der Spiegel did a piece, and the Akron Beacon Journal weighed in with the assurance that her sudden fame was “completely logical in the present state of popular culture.”

According to the trade group Entertainment Software Association, 19 percent of computer and video game players are 50 years old or older. The senior-citizen share was 9 percent in 1999.

Video games can be useful in maintaining eye-hand coordination as people grow old, said Linda McNeal, a Columbus consultant who works on recreation and activities issues for nursing homes and rehabilitation hospitals.

“It’s also very good mental stimulation,” according to McNeal, who said nonstop television watching can dull the mind.

Paul Alandt, who runs the 12 Golden Age Centers of Greater Cleveland, said seniors visiting the day centers spend a lot of time playing video games on computers.

“They are really loving it,” said Alandt, who estimated one in five center visitors use the computers for games.

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

from: http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/fun.games/12/28/granny.gamer.ap/index.html

Russian squirrel pack ‘kills dog’

Monday, December 12th, 2005

for wayne, though this is somewhat nasty…….

Squirrels have bitten to death a stray dog which was barking at them in a Russian park, local media report.

Passers-by were too late to stop the attack by the black squirrels in a village in the far east, which reportedly lasted about a minute.

They are said to have scampered off at the sight of humans, some carrying pieces of flesh.

A pine cone shortage may have led the squirrels to seek other food sources, although scientists are sceptical.

The attack was reported in parkland in the centre of Lazo, a village in the Maritime Territory, and was witnessed by three local people.

A “big” stray dog was nosing about the trees and barking at squirrels hiding in branches overhead when a number of them suddenly descended and attacked, reports say.

“They literally gutted the dog,” local journalist Anastasia Trubitsina told Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper.

“When they saw the men, they scattered in different directions, taking pieces of their kill away with them.”

Mikhail Tiyunov, a scientist in the region, said it was the first he had ever heard of such an attack.

While squirrels without sources of protein might attack birds’ nests, he said, the idea of them chewing a dog to death was “absurd”.

“If it really happened, things must be pretty bad in our forests,” he added.

Komosmolskaya Pravda notes that in a previous incident this autumn chipmunks terrorised cats in a part of the territory.

A Lazo man who called himself only Mikhalich said there had been “no pine cones at all” in the local forests this year.

“The little beasts are agitated because they have nothing to eat,” he added.

thanks ann for finding the article! from: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4489792.stm

No Couch Potato Left Behind

Thursday, December 8th, 2005

I was torn… is this regular news? Or amusing news? I cracked up when I read this, but then I realized it wasn’t a joke

The Inalienable Right to a Remote

By George F. Will

Thursday, December 8, 2005; Page A33

Feeling, evidently, flush with (other people’s) cash, the Senate has concocted a novel way to spend $3 billion: create a new entitlement. The Senate has passed — and so has the House, with differences — an entitlement to digital television.

If this filigree on the welfare state becomes law, everyone who owns old analog television sets — everyone from your Aunt Emma in her wee apartment to the millionaire in the neighborhood McMansion who has such sets in the maid’s room and the guest house — will get subsidies to pay for making those sets capable of receiving digital signals.

If you think America is suffering an entitlement glut, you may have just hurled the newspaper across the room. Pick it up and read on, because this story illustrates the timeless truth that no matter how deeply you distrust the government’s judgment, you are too trusting. Here, as explained by James L. Gattuso of the Heritage Foundation, is the crisis du jour: The nation is making a slow transition from analog to digital television broadcasting.

Why is this a crisis? Because, although programming currently is broadcast in both modes, by April 2009 broadcasters must end analog transmissions and the government will have auctioned the analog frequencies for various telecommunications purposes. For the vast majority of Americans, April 2009 will mean . . . absolutely nothing. Nationwide, 85 percent of all television households (and 63 percent of households below the poverty line) already have cable or satellite service.

What will become of households that do not? Leaving aside such eccentric alternative pastimes as conversation and reading, the digitally deprived could pursue happiness by buying a new television set, all of which will be digital-capable by March 2007. Today a digital-capable set with a flat-screen display can be purchased from — liberals, please pardon the mention of your Great Satan — Wal-Mart for less than $460. But compassionate conservatism has a government response to the crisis.

Remember, although it is difficult to do so, that Republicans control Congress. And today’s up-to-date conservatism does not stand idly by expecting people to actually pursue happiness on their own. Hence the new entitlement from Congress to help all Americans acquire converter boxes to put on top of old analog sets, making the sets able to receive digital programming. All Americans — rich and poor; it is uncompassionate to discriminate on the basis of money when dispersing money — will be equally entitled to the help.

The $990 million House version of this entitlement — call it No Couch Potato Left Behind — is (relatively) parsimonious: Consumers would get vouchers worth only $40 and would be restricted to a measly two vouchers per household. The Senate’s more spacious entitlement would pay for most of the cost — $50 to $60 — of the converter boxes. But there is Republican rigor in this: Consumers would be required to pay $10. That is the conservatism in compassionate conservatism.

Now, the hardhearted will, in their cheeseparing small-mindedness, ask: Given that the transition to digital has been underway for almost a decade, why should those who have adjusted be compelled to pay money to those who have chosen not to adjust? And conservatives who have not yet attended compassion reeducation camps will ask: Why does the legislation make even homes with cable or digital services eligible for subsidies to pay for converter boxes for old analog sets — which may be worth less than the government’s cost for the boxes?

Gattuso says defenders of this entitlement argue that taxpayers will not be burdened by its costs because the government’s sale of the analog frequencies will yield perhaps $10 billion. Think about that: Because the government may get $10 billion from one transaction, taxpayers are unburdened by government’s giving away $3 billion with another transaction. Such denial that money is fungible fuels the welfare state’s expansion.

What oil is to Saudi Arabia — a defining abundance — cognitive dissonance is to America. Americans are currently in a Founding Fathers literary festival. They are making bestsellers out of many biographies of the statesmen who formulated America’s philosophy of individualism and self-reliance and who embodied that philosophy — or thought they did — in a constitutional architecture of limited government. Yet Americans have such an entitlement mentality, they seem to think that every pleasure — e.g., digital television — should be a collective right, meaning a federally funded entitlement. Clearly, Americans’ civic religion of reverence for the Founders is, like most religions, more avowed than constraining.

georgewill@washpost.com

from: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/07/AR2005120701891.html

Idaho town to change name to Secretsanta.com

Tuesday, December 6th, 2005

Wednesday, November 23, 2005; Posted: 10:27 a.m. EST (15:27 GMT)

SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) — Officials in the northern Idaho town of Santa, Idaho, have voted to rename the 115-person hamlet Secretsanta.com to hype an online gift exchange management service.

Last-minute legal wrangling left unclear whether the water board for Santa, the town’s only official body, had the authority to approve a new moniker. Even so, the board voted in favor of becoming Secretsanta.com in exchange for an undisclosed sum from a planned documentary on the name change.

Santa is the latest in a lengthening list of rural communities to agree to bear the brand of a company or service. Clark, Texas last week changed its name to Dish to promote EchoStar Communications Corp.’s Dish Network.

In 2000, Halfway, Oregon agreed to call itself Half.com after an Internet retailer later purchased by eBay Inc.

The towns are following a tradition established in 1950 when Hot Springs, New Mexico changed its name to Truth or Consequences after a radio program that became a TV game show.

Gidget McQueen, the Santa official spearheading the re-christening, said the deal with Secretsanta.com — a Web site that group gift exchange planning — is too good to pass up for a village that is otherwise not on the map.

The expected re-dubbing of Santa with ceremonies planned for December 9 is the brainchild of marketing guru Mark Hughes, chief executive of Buzzmarketing and the architect behind Halfway, Oregon’s name change.

Halfway, Oregon officials say being known for one year as Half.com brought the city $75,000 and 20 computers for its schools. “Even to this day, we still have people come through and talk about Half.com,” said Ralph Smead, member of the area’s chamber of commerce.

Copyright 2005 Reuters. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

from: http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/11/23/idahotown.santa.reut/index.html