Eve Taylor – the 81-year-old company founder who won’t retire

Eve Taylor – the 81-year-old company founder who won’t retire

Great-grandmother Eve Taylor founded her family-run cosmetics company in 1968 and has been working for the British brand ever since. She talks to Radhika Sanghani about 7.30am starts and the Asian export market. Eve Taylor, founder of Eve Taylor cosmetics company specialising in aromatherapy oils Photo: MARTIN POPE

By Radhika Sanghani

12:46PM GMT 25 Nov 2013

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It was the moment one Christmas when Eve Taylor had just ironed two dozen grey school shirts for her five sons that she realised something had to change. She was in her early thirties; feeling trapped in a man’s world. She put down the iron, signed up for beauty classes, and went on to found an aromatherapy and skincare company. Read more of this post

Hit the high notes: Lessons on business innovation from soprano singer Tania de Jong

Caitlin Fitzsimmons Online editor

Hit the high notes: Lessons on business innovation from soprano singer Tania de Jong

Published 26 November 2013 11:28, Updated 26 November 2013 16:02

In this world of rapid change and cut-throat competition, all businesses need to innovate. The problem is that it is easier said than done. Soprano singer Tania de Jong is both executive producer and keynote speaker at this week’s Creative Innovation conference in Melbourne. She is also founder of Creative Universe and social enterprise Creativity Australia. Tania de Jong believes creativity and the arts don’t always go together. Here are de Jong’s tips for how business can foster creativity and innovation. Read more of this post

TV sports broadcasts as a language-learning tool

TV sports broadcasts as a language-learning tool

BY MARK SCHREIBER

SPECIAL TO THE JAPAN TIMES

NOV 24, 2013

Another exciting grand sumo tournament ended yesterday, and brought back memories of my first encounter with sumo, in Okinawa back in September 1965. Within a couple of weeks after my arrival there, I was enrolled in Basic Japanese classes at the University of Maryland’s Far East Division and making my first awkward efforts to learn the language. In addition to my beginner’s textbook and a newly purchased 和英辞典 (waei jiten, Japanese-English dictionary), I had two supplementary learning materials: The Okinawa Morning Star, the local daily English newspaper; and our old monochrome TV set. Read more of this post

When Superstition Works; Some superstitions increase the illusion of control—and can even boost performance. In one recent study, golfers sank 35% more putts when playing with a ball they were told was ‘lucky.’

When Superstition Works

Some boost the illusion of control and can even boost performance

ANGELA CHEN

Nov. 25, 2013 7:16 p.m. ET

Even if you scoff at Friday the 13th and aren’t wary of black cats, you’re probably still superstitious. Angela Chen takes a look at the research to prove people are superstitious, and whether superstitions can actually be beneficial. Photo: Getty Images. It starts when people try something different—Pepsi instead of Coca-ColaKO -0.15% a blue tie instead of the old red one—and find that something good happens. Read more of this post

Mockingjay and IFRS 10/FRS 110 in Asia 2014: Changing Balance Sheet and The Rebellion Year for Accounting Frauds?

The following article is extracted from the Bamboo Innovator Insight weekly column blog related to the context and thought leadership behind the stock idea generation process of Asian wide-moat businesses that are featured in the monthly entitled The Moat Report Asia. Fellow value investors get to go behind the scene to learn thought-provoking timely insights on key macro and industry trends in Asia, as well as benefit from the occasional discussion of potential red flags, misgovernance or fraud-detection trails ahead of time to enhance the critical-thinking skill about the myriad pitfalls of investing in Asia at the microstructure- and firm-level.

The weekly Bamboo Innovator Insight series brings to you:

  • Mockingjay and IFRS 10/FRS 110 in Asia 2014: Changing Balance Sheet and The Rebellion Year for Accounting Frauds? Nov 25, 2013 (Moat Report Asia, BeyondProxy)

Rebellion

Dear Friends and All,

Mockingjay and IFRS 10/FRS 110 in Asia 2014: Changing Balance Sheet and The Rebellion Year for Accounting Frauds? 

“Fire is catching! And if we burn, you burn with us!” 
― Katniss Everdeen in Mockingjay, series #3 of The Hunger Games

When you’re in the arena … you just remember who the enemy is.”

– Haymitch in Catching Fire, series #2 of The Hunger Games

Audit firms that show up year after year to express their “true and fair” opinion on the financial statements to be free of material misstatements run the risk of getting complacent and, worse still, in cahoots with their clients in their chemical dependence on the comfortable audit fees, like the victors of previous Hunger Games who show up annually at the event and spend the rest of their time in the relative comfort of the Victor’s Village in each district. Last week on Nov 19, an arrow struck into the client-auditor nexus that perpetuates frauds in Asia: The Seoul Central District Court ordered Samil-PwC, the largest auditor in Korea, to pay a $13 million fine to a group of 137 shareholders for failing to conduct its audit in Kosdaq-delisted software firm Forhuman with due care. The shareholders filed the lawsuit to claim compensation for their losses after the company was delisted from the Kosdaq exchange over embezzlement and accounting fraud scandals. Lee Yong-hee, the company’s CEO, was ordered to pay more than $23 million on charges of embezzling $9.4 million. Forhuman was listed on the Kosdaq market in 2002. From 2008 to 2010 it recorded $15.5 million of net losses. However, the software developer forged its accounting records, recording $39 million of net profit instead. During that period, Samil-PwC consistently gave Forhuman high evaluation scores.

This is the first time that a court has ruled to hold big accounting firms such as Samil-PwC responsible for poor auditing, whether in Korea or in Asia. And this ruling came despite the financial regulator defending Samil-PwC, arguing that it would be wrong if an auditor should assume responsibility for what was perpetrated by a client company. Both retail and institutional investors in Asia have frequently fallen prey to the negligence of auditors in terms of their duties or collusion with companies, as has been seen in the savings banks and Tongyang Group scandals which prompted the unprecedented ruling in Korea. Over the last three years in Korea, accounting firms had to pay a total of only $3.2 million for partial responsibility and settlements in accounting scandal cases. Incorporated accounting companies also came up with clever ways to escape responsibility over charged of negligence. The ruling against Samil PricewaterhouseCoopers was the second decision made by the same court in the same month that an accounting firm is responsible for negligence. The Seoul Central District Court ruled on Nov 9 that BDO-Daejoo is partially responsible for compensating investors of the failed Samhwa Mutual Savings Bank.

Accounting fraud has long been a prevalent and deep-seated problem. There had been various measures to tackle it, but fraudulent practices continue. In Hunger Games, the mockingjay bird becomes a symbol of rebellion in the second series Catching Fire. Hopefully, the Forhuman is the “mockingjay” symbol that can spread throughout Asia to unravel more accounting frauds with the various colluders from auditors to financial advisors/dealmakers with the company’s insiders. The S-chip (or Singapore-listed Chinese companies) scandals have also cases of auditor partners directly or indirectly involved, such as Ziwo in which the Deloitte Singapore audit partner was advertised to have invested in the company as one of the largest shareholders. As explained in our series on Detecting Accounting Frauds (Part 1 and Part 2), Ziwo is a typical case in employing the capex inflation (“Grand Capex”) and consolidation trick in accounting by using balance-sheet items in the “Subsidiary”, “Amount Due from Subsidiary” and “Prepayment/Advances” accounts (“Roll-Away Loans or Advances”) to generate artificial sales and mask possible acts of tunneling and expropriation of cash and assets. Since the media blitz which includes the audit partner’s investment, the all-expense-paid IR trip and bullish sell-side research piece, share price of Ziwo is down nearly 90% from S$0.42 to S$0.05.

Like Ziwo, the fraudulent accounts of Korea’s Forhuman are detected via their affiliate overseas business partners in Japan. These are all part of the related-party transactions atypical of Asian firms. Noteworthy for Forhuman, Ziwo and Prince Frog is that if their hidden “related-party” entities (subsidiaries, associates, SPEs/VIEs (special purpose entities/ variable interest entities), JVs, pool arrangements, financial assets/instruments) are consolidated into the balance sheet as they ought to be, a far clearer picture on the financial health, particularly the hidden liabilities and debt, of the group (of companies) can be analyzed and evaluated. Value investors would be able to observe the explosion in the hidden debt and liabilities for Korea’s Forhuman at the group level once the Japanese affiliated entities are consolidated into their balance sheet and not be misled by the nice quant numbers of just the listed vehicle at the company level.

IFRS10

What are the implications of the new IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements (the outgoing IAS 27), effective for annual periods beginning on or after Jan 1, 2013 but delayed in Singapore to allow more time for implementation. In Singapore, the FRS 110 will be effective for annual periods beginning on or after Jan 1, 2014. The power of control is one of the most difficult questions to answer in accounting since it involves subjective judgment, leading to diversity in practice related to consolidation. What is the impact on family business groups such as Jindal, Jaypee/Jaiprakash, Essar, Adani, JSW, GMR, Lanco, Videocon, and GVK? Or the chaebols in Korea such as Doosan, Dongbu, Hanjin and Kolon? Or to the REIT/real estate/construction industry and shipping industry? Yet, all these accounting standard changes are not impactful if the auditors are not held accountable for any material misstatements and fraud revelation. Hence the importance of the mockingjay symbolized by the court ruling case for delisted Kosdaq tech firm Forhuman last week. The auditors are now in the fire. What are the 4 key Bamboo Innovator takeaways?

It’s complicated: Management thinkers disagree on how to manage complexity

It’s complicated: Management thinkers disagree on how to manage complexity

Nov 23rd 2013 |From the print edition

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THERE can be few better places to talk about complexity than Vienna. This was the capital of the most complicated political organisation yet seen: the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was also the centre of some of the most convoluted cold-war spy games. On November 14th and 15th hundreds of management enthusiasts converged on the Austrian capital to debate the subject. They had little interest in the complexities of the Habsburgs or the cold war. They were preoccupied instead by two points: that business is more complicated than ever before; and that managing complexity is at the top of businesspeople’s agenda. Read more of this post

‘Overworked people become hopelessly inefficient’

November 24, 2013 1:58 pm

Unfair demands on your free time

By Rhymer Rigby

We all know that the line between work and personal time has become blurred. But how do you cope with a boss or organisation that makes constant demands on time that is clearly yours?

Where do I begin? 
First, you need to be on solid ground. “If you’re doing an outstanding job, you’ll be able to say ‘I’m going home on time because I’m hitting all my targets,’” says Fergus O’Connell, author of The Power of Doing Less. Jane Barrett, founder of the Career Farm coaching consultancy, adds: “Do a bit of due diligence – are these hours the norm in your industry?” Read more of this post

The leader as a driver in the great race for good results; Gone is the time-wasting focus on why something happened and finding who is responsible. When something isn’t going well, a “high-octane leader” will probably completely skip the “why” and root cause analysis, and instead ask and get answers to a series of questions that keep the race car (team) moving forward and adjusting their approach as the car continues. Everything is about what can and will be done

The leader as a driver in the great race for good results

James Engel
senior executive director and director
 
The Centre of Excellence at The APMGroup.
November 25, 2013 1:00 am

Let’s have a race – a race for business results. The winner gets increased profits, market-share and growth in the Asean Economic Community (AEC) marketplace; the loser, a lot less. You, as a leader, are the driver. Your team is the car. The racetrack is your strategy. The finishing line is achieving your key performance indicators (KPIs). Now imagine that the “fuel” is supplied by your mouth and ears. Remember, you can have the best race car in the world, but without fuel, you’re going nowhere.  Read more of this post

Blood, sweat and tears; How the Napoleonic wars made Britain

Blood, sweat and tears; How the Napoleonic wars made Britain

Nov 23rd 2013 |From the print edition

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Britain against Napoleon: The Organisation of Victory, 1793-1815. By Roger Knight. Allen Lane; 678 pages; £30. Buy from Amazon.co.uk

THE role of Britain in the world was transformed by the Napoleonic conflict. By the time France declared war in 1793 the British empire was in decline; it had lost its North American colonies a decade earlier. But after Napoleon’s defeat at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 Britain emerged as the world’s pre-eminent superpower. How did it overcome its previous setbacks to inflict a crushing defeat on Napoleon’s France? Historians have tended to explain this in terms of military and naval strategy. But “Britain against Napoleon”, a new book by Roger Knight of the University of Greenwich, argues that Britain was just far better at organising its war effort. Read more of this post

Clarity of purpose, values vital for leaders

Updated: Monday November 25, 2013 MYT 7:14:58 AM

Clarity of purpose, values vital for leaders

BY WONG WEI-SHEN

PETALING JAYA: The Iclif Leadership and Governance Centre aims to help individuals find their purpose in life and values, among others, at the upcoming Leadership Energy Summit Asia 2013 (LESA). “I strongly believe that genuine leadership transformation is only possible when there is clarity of purpose and values together with a deeper understanding of human consciousness,” said Iclif chief executive officer Rajeev Peshawaria in an e-mail interview with StarBiz. Read more of this post

From Tickle Me Elmo to Big Hugs Elmo: nearly two decades of Christmas toy dominance

From Tickle Me Elmo to Big Hugs Elmo: nearly two decades of Christmas toy dominance

By Roberto A. Ferdman @robferdman

November 22, 2013

Christmas time is Elmo time. The lovable red monster from Sesame Street has been one of the most popular gifts in the US nearly every year since 1996. And his dominance reveals a lot about the state of the American toy industry. Each year’s Elmo is a different interactive incarnation. The latest, Big Hugs Elmo, has been declared one of this year’s hottest toys on every list known to US moms: Toys R Us’sTarget’s, etc. It follows in the steps of, to name just a few, Rock ‘n Roll Elmo, Chicken Dance Elmo, Hokey Pokey Elmo, TMX Elmo, Let’s Rock Elmo, and the bestselling Elmo of all time, Tickle Me Elmo. Read more of this post

Meet the accountant behind Yogurtland who is bringing California’s frozen yoghurt craze to Australia

Nassim Khadem Reporter

Meet the accountant behind Yogurtland who is bringing California’s frozen yoghurt craze to Australia

Published 25 November 2013 09:42, Updated 25 November 2013 11:58

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Yogurtland Australia chief executive Paul Siderovski: “The Australian market’s ripe to adopt the US frozen yoghurt craze.”

It was only a matter of time before Australians jumped on board with California’s frozen yoghurt food craze. Yogurtland, the frozen yoghurt company that started in Fullerton, California in 2006, came to Australia in January. The international franchise chain of frozen yoghurt stores now has more than 200 locations across Australia, the US, Guam, Mexico and Venezuela. The company’s target is to expand beyond 550 stores by 2015 and 1000 stores by 2017. Read more of this post

How Larry Bird built the Pacers into a title contender

How Larry Bird built the Pacers into a title contender

Phil Richards, USA TODAY Sports2:05 p.m. EST November 22, 2013

In 2004, the Pacers appeared poised a title run with a young, talented nucleus. Then came the brawl. But Indiana is back. Larry Bird and Donnie Walsh tell the inside story of the rebuild.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Indiana Pacers President Larry Bird rebuilt franchise in wake of 2004 brawl, fractured roster

Hall of Fame player’s biggest moves came in 2010, 2011, in adding Paul George and others

Bird had help in veteran executive Donnie Nelson, and both look back on how it happened here

Larry Bird’s gut told him it was time. The Indiana Pacers had lost seven of their past eight games, but that wasn’t the stretch Bird was looking at. He was looking ahead. He saw a stretch of 10 games and figured coach Jim O’Brien could win at least seven of them. Read more of this post

How Martin Gilbert, the City’s original bogeyman, pulled it out of the fire again; You wouldn’t bet against Aberdeen’s controversial chief executive Martin Gilbert

How Martin Gilbert, the City’s original bogeyman, pulled it out of the fire again

You wouldn’t bet against Aberdeen’s controversial chief executive Martin Gilbert

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9:00PM GMT 24 Nov 2013

If Martin Gilbert had a personal share price, it would have wrong-footed the best money managers in the world. Last week the boss of Aberdeen Asset Management nimbly snapped up Scottish Widows Investment Partnership (SWIP) for £660m, his 40th acquisition since founding the group 30 years ago. As a result, Aberdeen will leap-frog the 200-year-old Schroders to become not only Britain’s biggest fund manager but the largest investment house outside America. The shares leaped too; Aberdeen, which only joined the FTSE100 last year, is up 41pc in 12 months. Read more of this post

Keynes’s new heirs: Britain leads a global push to rethink the way economics is taught

Keynes’s new heirs: Britain leads a global push to rethink the way economics is taught

Nov 23rd 2013 |From the print edition

FOR economists 2008 was a nightmare. The people who teach and research the discipline mocked by Thomas Carlyle, a 19th-century polemicist, as “the dismal science”, not only failed to spot the precipice, many forecast exactly the opposite—a tranquil stability they called the “great moderation”. While the global economy is slowly healing, the subject is still in a state of flux, with students eager to learn what went wrong, but frustrated by what they are taught. Some bold new projects to retune economics aim to change this. Read more of this post

All about Adam: A furious—and political—debate about the origins of mankind

All about Adam: A furious—and political—debate about the origins of mankind

Nov 23rd 2013 |From the print edition

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THAT old-time religion is strong in America. To take just one measure, for decades more than 40% of all Americans have consistently told Gallup pollsters that God created humans in pretty much their current form, less than 10,000 years ago. They are embracing an account of man’s origins promoted by Young Earth Creationists who lean on a painstakingly literal reading of the Scriptures, swatting aside the counter-claims of science (fossils are a relic of Noah’s flood, they argue, and evolution is a myth peddled by atheists). In a recent poll 58% of Republicans and 41% of Democrats backed creationism. The glue that underpins such faith is the principle of Biblical inerrancy—a certainty that the Scriptures are infallibly and unchangingly true. Read more of this post

The shared genius of Elon Musk and Steve Jobs; what Musk and Jobs really have in common is a rare form of design thinking powered by unfettered conviction

The shared genius of Elon Musk and Steve Jobs

By Chris Anderson  @FortuneMagazine November 21, 2013: 1:36 PM ET

Yes, these two iconoclasts have disrupted multiple industries, but TED curator Chris Anderson goes much deeper and argues that what Musk and Jobs really have in common is a rare form of design thinking powered by unfettered conviction.

When future historians report human progress during the 21st century, they may conclude that one of the key moments took place a year ago in Elon Musk’s bedroom. His eureka!moments happen every few months. Sometimes during his morning shower, sometimes late at night before sleep, sometimes, as on this occasion, waking at 2 a.m. This is how he described that moment to me: “I realized that a methane-oxygen rocket engine could achieve a specific impulse greater than 380.” Read more of this post

The Secret Science of Stock Symbols

November 14, 2013

The Secret Science of Stock Symbols

Posted by Adam Alter

Between the beginning of October and early November, the following eight companies were among more than twenty that began trading on the New York Stock Exchange: OCI Partners, Springleaf Holdings, Brixmor Property Group, Essent Group, 58.com, Mavenir Systems, Midcoast Energy Partners, and Twitter. They’re a diverse group of tech, energy, property, and finance companies, valued at their respective I.P.O.s between three hundred and sixty million dollars (Mavenir Systems) and $24.5 billion dollars (Twitter). Read more of this post

Bill Gates-backed history course now free online

Bill Gates-backed history course now free online

PUBLISHED: 0 HOUR 8 MINUTES AGO | UPDATE: 0 HOUR 0 MINUTES AGO

TIM DODD

The Big History Project, the story of the past on the largest possible canvas, is now available as a free online courseBig History was originally a university course taught at Macquarie University by its inventor, historian David Christian. It spans the history of the universe from the big bang until now, explaining how galaxies, stars and planets came to be, and then how life evolved and eventually led to humanity. It also glimpses into where our future history may be heading. Five years ago, when Bill Gates heard about it, he paid for the development of a big history high- school course, which is now being piloted in schools in Australia and the US. His support has led to this MOOC, which is pitched at a level suitable for junior high school and older. It takes six to eight hours to complete. Read more of this post

Tony Hsieh’s Brilliant Strategy For Hiring Kind People

Tony Hsieh’s Brilliant Strategy For Hiring Kind People

MAX NISEN NOV. 22, 2013, 2:14 PM 9,229 6

With all of the focus on finding technology talent and bridging the skills gap, it’s easy for small business owners to forget the most important thing is hiring good, kind people you enjoy spending time with. A great lesson on how to do that comes from Zappos, which is already well known for the lengths it goes to maintain its focus on customer service and a positive company culture. It even designed its new headquarters in Las Vegas with its culture firmly in mind. Read more of this post

Japan Looks for Ways to Say It’s Cool

Japan Looks for Ways to Say It’s Cool

ATSUKO FUKASE 

Nov. 22, 2013 7:14 p.m. ET

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Figures of manga character Doraemon, Japan’s first ‘anime ambassador,’ displayed in Tokyo in September. Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

TOKYO—During Japan’s rapid-growth heyday, the country’s powerful trade ministry famously pushed exports of cars and semiconductors. As the country seeks a 21st-century-style postindustrial comeback, bureaucrats Monday are launching a new project aiding global promotion of Japanese culture, from animation to fashion, to the broader notion of “Japanese hospitality.” Read more of this post

Want to get rich? Read fiction; 5 financial lessons from Dickens, Tolstoy, Eliot, and other novelists

Nov. 23, 2013, 7:55 a.m. EST

Want to get rich? Read fiction

5 financial lessons from Dickens, Tolstoy, Eliot, and other novelists

By Jeremy Olshan

In times of money trouble, smart people turn to a financial adviser — or, if the creditors, repo men and SEC are already pounding at the door, a spiritual one, perhaps. I read books.

By this I don’t mean anything like “The Science of Getting Rich,” “The Automatic Millionaire,” or the countless similar titles adorning many an Ikea bookshelf. No, I’m talking about fiction. Novels. Nineteenth century novels, mainly. Dickens is my financial adviser. I’d rather spend an hour with Edith Wharton than with any graduate of Wharton. Read more of this post

The Brain’s Ways of Dealing With Friends and Strangers; In a new book, Harvard psychologist Joshua Greene shows how different parts of the brain are active in different social situations.

The Brain’s Way Of Dealing With ‘Us’ and ‘Them’

Nov. 22, 2013 7:20 p.m. ET

A tribe of shepherds brings its sheep to graze at a common field. Every shepherd limits the size of his herd to avoid overgrazing the commons—except for one selfish guy who doesn’t care. What should be done to solve this problem? Now consider two rival tribes of shepherds being forced to share the same field. In one tribe, the herd is communally owned, while the second tribe would divide the field into fenced plots belonging to each individual. What should be done to reconcile these two different views? Read more of this post

Yuri Milner: billionaire investor on leaving Russia, investing in Twitter and Facebook, and turning scientists into celebrities.

Weekend Confidential: Yuri Milner

The billionaire investor on leaving Russia, investing in Twitter and Facebook, and turning scientists into celebrities

ALEXANDRA WOLFE

Nov. 22, 2013 7:33 p.m. ET

As a young dropout from a Ph.D. program in physics, Yuri Milner had no special ambitions to start a technology company in his native Russia. He worked in finance for a few years before coming across a 1999 report by Morgan Stanley MS +1.46% analyst Mary Meeker, describing the tech boom in the U.S. and how the industry was starting to grow in Europe. Read more of this post

Despite the doubters, Doctor Who celebrates its 50th birthday, strengthening its claim to be the most successful show in the history of the BBC

November 22, 2013 7:50 pm

The Doctor regenerates into global cashcow

By Henry Mance

Mary Whitehouse called it “teatime brutality”; a television executive said it had “no redeeming features” and some parents worried it was becoming too sexy. Yet despite the doubters, Doctor Who celebrates its 50th birthday on Saturday, strengthening its claim to be the most successful show in the history of the BBC. Scrapped by the broadcaster 24 years ago before being relaunched in 2005, it is at the forefront of efforts to sell BBC content to the world.

Read more of this post

A colorful entrepreneur named Andrew Paulson wants to turn chess into the world’s next mass-market spectator sport, complete with commentators who dissect the action and show potential moves

November 23, 2013

For Chess, a Would-Be White Knight

By MATT RICHTEL

If chess were storytelling, Andrew Paulson would be the undisputed world champion, the Bobby Fischer of raconteurs. Not a moment of his rich life is not made richer by Mr. Paulson’s recounting, whether it be working in a science lab at Johns Hopkins University at age 11; his decision to come out at Yale, which he says inspired other gay students to do the same; the brutal murder of two colleagues in Russia who he says he suspects were KGB officers; the playwrights he has inspired; and, of course, his hard-fought business successes, as an American who became a Moscow media personality and pioneer. Read more of this post

Backpacker of 30 years says KL is most dangerous place he has ever been to

Backpacker of 30 years says KL is most dangerous place he has ever been to

Stomp | Thu, Nov 21 2013

A backpacker from the United Kingdom has visited countries like Africa and Yemen, but picks Kuala Lumpur as the most dangerous place he has ever been to. Dave Ramsay had related his experience about being stabbed and mugged in the city on travel site Virtual Tourist. The incident took place near Hard Rock Cafe in Jalan Sultan Ismail on Oct 5. Dave was stabbed in the chest and then slashed across the arm with a knife, before the robber fled with his bag. Dave said there was no regard for his life since he was attacked before being robbed, instead of the other way round. However, his ordeal did not end there. Not only did it take 30 minutes to reach a hospital as most taxis did not stop for him after seeing blood, police were also ineffective and inefficient. According to Dave, security at local venues did nothing. Tourist police also did not ask anything about the robber and only produced a report for an insurance claim, making the victim feel they had no interest in pursuing the criminal. Dave even called the tourist police office a “conveyor belt of victims coming in”. “This place needs avoiding big time. I have travelled to Africa, Yemen, and SE Asia for nearly 30 years and I am not a squeamish person but I genuinely believe this to be the most dangerous place I have been to, due to the vast number of incidents and the frequency of them. It’s epidemic,” wrote Dave.

Woman seeks fame with a face like Chairman Mao

Woman seeks fame with a face like Chairman Mao

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Sunday, November 24, 2013 – 07:45

Reuters

MIANYANG, China – Chen Yan waves at a crowd of onlookers bemused at seeing China’s late helmsman, Mao Zedong, brought back to life by a middle-aged woman. Chen, 51, from Mianyang, in China’s southwestern province of Sichuan, has been dressing up as Mao since she was discovered on a local TV show in 2005 impersonating another actor who had played Mao in movies. Read more of this post

The entrepreneurs who are making money from muck; Three entrepreneurs have tapped into the UK’s waste pipeline and are generating incredible returns by turning trash into treasure

The entrepreneurs who are making money from muck

Three entrepreneurs have tapped into the UK’s waste pipeline and are generating incredible returns by turning trash into treasure.

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Elemental Digest was founded last year to help abattoirs turn all their left over blood and bone into something useful: fertilizer.

By Rebecca Burn-Callander, Enterprise Editor

12:01AM GMT 22 Nov 2013

Where there’s muck, there’s brass, or so the old saying goes. And given that we generate about 177 million tonnes of waste every year in England alone, that’s a lot of brass. Read more of this post

Remembering the Gettysburg Address: Why was Lincoln’s famous speech overlooked for so long?

NOVEMBER 21, 2013, 12:17 PM

Remembering the Gettysburg Address

By JOSHUA ZEITZ

John Hay woke with a severe hangover on the morning of Nov. 19, 1863. As one of Abraham Lincoln’s closest White House aides, Hay had spent the previous evening drinking copiously with the disparate crew of journalists and politicians who converged on the small town of Gettysburg, Penn., for the dedication of a new national cemetery later that day. A bystander remembered seeing the presidential party arrive after a long train ride from Washington, “a straggled, hungry set. Lincoln, with that weary smile … Seward, with an essentially bad hat; John Hay, in attendance upon the president, and much to be troubled by the correspondents, handsome as a peach, the countenance of extreme youth.” Read more of this post