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Austrian incest cellar to be filled with concrete
AMSTETTEN, Austria (AP) — The liquidator of Josef Fritzl's estate says the basement of the house where Fritzl imprisoned and repeatedly raped his daughter for 24 years will be filled up with concrete. Walter Anzboeck says the move is to ensure the...Tags: Building Material, Metal and Mineral
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Free trade does not kill jobs
Charles Campbell argues U.S. jobs are destroyed by free trade ("What's killing jobs?" Aug. 27). While some jobs are destroyed by free trade, overall the jury is in, and he is wrong. The United States was as trade-open in the Clinton years when we...Tags: Trade Policy, Trade Dispute
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When the music stops, the missions begin
PARIS -- You can't have music without rests, and musicians without rests don't sound so great either, so after six straight nights of concerts, the members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra finally got a day off to set out on various quests.
The last...Tags: Hotel and Accommodation Industry, Travel, Dmitri Shostakovich, Music, Paul Hindemith
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Freed Chimps Hug, Laugh After 30 Years Of Lab Experiments [VIDEO]
pix11.comTouching video shows a group of chimpanzees -- locked away for 30 years undergoing medical experiments -- emerging into the sun for the first time Tuesday, and appearing to hug each other and wave. According to the Daily Mail, the 38 chimps who...Tags: Television Industry, Health, Genes and Chromosomes, Diseases and Illnesses, AIDS
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Kurt Sanderling dies at 98; admired conductor under Soviets
Kurt Sanderling, who led the Leningrad Philharmonic and the East Berlin Symphony Orchestra under Soviet rule and won admirers in the West later in his career as a guest conductor for orchestras in London, Los Angeles and elsewhere, has died. He was 98....Tags: Johannes Brahms, Saint Petersberg (Russia), Music, Hungary, Germany
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World War II flier: 'We figured we'd be safer with the Russians'
First of two parts
Donald E. Miller graduated from Emmaus High School in 1940 and worked at a knitting mill until he was drafted.
A flight engineer in the Army Air Forces, he trained with a B-17 crew that went to England in the summer of 1944 and flew...Tags: Italy, World War II (1939-1945), Explosions, Photography, Hungary
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Great gruner, surprising rieslings distinguish Austria
Just one sip is all it takes. That first swallow explodes with flavors not usually attributed to the grape: Arugula, sugar snap peas, moss, heather, lentils. There is a bracing and refreshing minerality, plus a weight on the palate that belies its...Tags: Czech Republic, Alcoholic Beverages, Hungary, Germany
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World War II flier: 'It was from hell to ecstasy'
Last of two parts
THE STORY SO FAR: Donald E. Miller bails out of a stricken B-24 over the Austria-Hungary border in March 1945. He and two others from the crew walk to an Austrian town as German troops are retreating from the Red Army. The fliers decide...Tags: Firearms, World War II (1939-1945), Explosions, Topton, U.S. Army
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Wine of the Week: 2004 Weingut Bründlmayer St. Laurent 'Ried Ladner'
When I invited a new friend to dinner last week and asked her to bring a wine, she asked about the menu. And evidently she listened, because she came up with the most brilliant match for the Hungarian goulash: this St. Laurent, a close relative of Pinot...Tags: Chicken, Wines, Entertainment Events, Foods and Beverages
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New brands from New Zealand offer cornucopia of summer fruits
New Zealand has long been known for its tangy Sauvignon Blancs that explode on the palate in a riot of pink grapefruit, but some new brands have entered the market that offer a true cornucopia of summer fruit, and vegetables. Mohua Sauvignon Blanc 2010,...Tags: Grapefruit, New Zealand, Seafood, Lifestyle and Leisure, Maryland
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Rutten: The end of American optimism
It's sometimes useful to see ourselves as others do, and reports this Independence Day weekend in a couple of English-speaking newspapers usually sympathetic to the United States are sobering. Britain's Daily Telegraph — a conservative paper and...Tags: Regional Authority, Newspapers, South Africa, The New York Times, Career and Workplace
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Thieves steal 21 tons of mustard and ketchup
STOCKERAU, Austria (AP) — Austrian police say thieves have made off with an unusual heist — 21 tons of mustard and ketchup. The loot was in a semitrailer parked in a lot over the weekend northwest of Vienna. Police say the truck driver showed...Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Theft, Crimes, Mustard
Aug 12, 2011
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Aug 29, 2011
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Sep 2, 2011
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Sep 7, 2011
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Sep 19, 2011
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Nov 10, 2011
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Sep 29, 2011
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Nov 11, 2011
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Oct 20, 2011
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Jul 28, 2011
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jul 6, 2011
|Column| Los Angeles Times
Jul 18, 2011
|Story| WSBT-TV
Original site for Austria topic gallery.