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Redwoods Treehouse Restaurant in Auckland, New Zealand

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Here’s the first look at the newly built Redwoods Treehouse Restaurant on a site 45 minutes north of Auckland, New Zealand. The Redwoods Treehouse Restaurant was designed by architects Peter Eising and Lucy Gauntlett from Pacific Environments Architects. Fine dining, corporate entertaining or simply a private party, this is one of the most striking, memorable and exclusive venues in all of New Zealand.

The Redwoods Treehouse was commissioned as part of a marketing campaign by Yellow in 2008. The result is a striking pod-shaped structure built ten metres high in a Redwood tree near Warkworth. Access to the Treehouse is provided by an elevated tree – top walkway which was built using Redwood milled on site. Redwoods Treehouse is a versatile space as a corporate venue for private functions and events. The pod itself holds 30 guests either at seated tables or casual stand up. Experience Group Travel has a dedicated 32 seat coach available to facilitate transfers to and from the venue.

From canapés to petit fours, the catering at the Redwood’s Treehouse is provided exclusively by Gatting’s. The team at Gatting’s has a passion for food and a total commitment to excellence. They have a very loyal, dynamic and longstanding team with a wide breadth of experience, qualifications and skills who are dedicated to the Gatting’s ethos of providing great food and fantastic service. The Redwood’s Treehouse menus are fresh and seasonal, and allow the ability for clients to tailor the offering to suit any style of event.

Photos by Lucy Gauntlett.

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9 Tips On Buying A Second Home

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monopoly house

Buying a second home before selling the first is a scary proposition. But some move-up buyers living in tight real estate markets have little choice if they want to land their dream home in their desired neighborhood.

It's a seller's market in areas such as the metro Boston area, Texas and northern California, where homes are receiving multiple offers.

If you think this optionis a luxury you can't afford, you're wrong. If you have a low ratio of debt to income, there are surprising things you can do to prepare before taking the plunge.

With record-low interest rates, it's a great time to take advantage of buying more house for less.

Here are nine savvy ways to prepare before you venture into the land of double mortgages:

1. Get preapproved. This seems a no-brainer, but some buyers aren't preapproved by their lender before they start house shopping, said Joe Parsons, a senior loan officer at PFS Funding in Dublin, Calif. This stamp of approval is essential for buyers to understand how much they can borrow for the new place and how much cash they need to close while still owning their first home.

2. Take out a home equity line of credit. You can't borrow money to buy real estate unless it's secured against another asset, so why not borrow from your home? If you're planning to move, now is a good time to think about a home equity loan. Interest is deductible, and when you're ready, the cash can be used toward a down payment on your new home, said Amy Tierce, a regional vice president at Fairway Independent Mortgage in Needham, Mass. Some caveats: Most lenders don't like to hear you'll be using it for another home, so keep that to yourself. If you pay it off within a year there will likely be penalties up to $500. You have to pay this money back, so don't borrow more than you need.

3. Check into a blanket or cross-collateralization loan. This option isn't available in all parts of the country and tends to be more popular with smaller chartered or community banks. These loans cover two or more pieces of real estate. The lender will place liens against both homes and release the lien against the first home once it's sold.

[InvestingAnswers Feature: Mortgage Calculator for Fixed-Rate Mortgages]

4. Borrow against a 401(k) plan. You can typically borrow up to half of your balance, with no penalties, and don't have to repay it for years (unless you get fired or quit your job).

5. Don't plan on taking out another FHA loan. Federal Housing Administration loans have become more restrictive and expensive. They are the loan program of last resort for people who might not qualify for other loans. Tierce said if you already have one, you won't be allowed to have two.

6. Plan for a smaller down payment. Conventional loans don't require a 20% down payment. Low interest rates could make a 5% payment more palatable. This also provides a cushion if the house you're buying appraises for less than the sale price, a common occurrence when multiple bids ensue.

[InvestingAnswers Feature: 5 Secrets to Surviving the Mortgage Process]

7. Consider a second mortgage. Second mortgages garner nearly double the interest rates (about 6.5%) as first mortgages, but they're still cheaper than a credit card. You could plan to pay off this mortgage from sale proceeds of the first home or take the tax deduction and invest the money elsewhere.

8. Forget the contingency. These days, few sellers will agree to sell their home based on the sale of your home. Don't even ask.

9. Go rental. If your house doesn’t have the fancy upgrades that draw multiple offers or the market is soft in your area, consider renting it for a few months until you can sell. The income will cover the mortgage and you can still deduct the interest on your taxes.

Double home ownership isn't for everyone, but with the right plan and some savings you could be moving into your dream home sooner than you think.

The Investing Answer: Before making an offer on your dream home, talk to your lender to see if you can afford two mortgages. Stash at least six months of cash reserves in case your home doesn't sell right away.  Don't buy more house than you can afford.

Karen Nielsen knows something about double mortgages. She currently owns two homes, but her North Texas home has received multiple offers and she hopes to put an end to that soon.

See Also: 12 stellar homes you can buy for less than $150,000 >

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Brad Pitt for Chanel No. 5

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Actor Brad Pitt has become the first male face for the iconic perfume Chanel No. 5. For Joe Wright, the director of the new advertising campaign for N°5, the scent is “a phenomenon that continues to invent and reinvent itself.”

“What’s important to remember about Chanel N°5 is how revolutionary this fragrance is; when it was introduced, it broke all the rules,” Brad said. “N°5 has always been the most iconic women’s fragrance. That’s what I see being the appeal of this campaign; it goes beyond the abstract of emotion or beauty to evoke what is timeless: a woman’s spirit.”

Chanel sees the ad campaign as a new direction, saying that the perfume “has to go where we are not expected.”

Brad reportedly is being paid $7 million for his efforts in the Chanel ad.

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Some Political Factors To Consider Before Moving To A Foreign Country

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greece greek athens protest fight police battle riot

I wrote recently of a “tip”, a suggestion, to consider when choosing a nation for relocation. Here are two more.

As always, keep in mind that these are my personal preferences and may not be relevant to you, but I think they are at least worthy of consideration when you set out to relocate outside your home nation.

Civil Wars – I mean civil wars that led to many deaths and usually years before ending. In such a nation, I prefer that it be 40 (even better, 50) years since the ending of the civil war. Why?

Most civil wars are fought by young men, often in their late teens and twenties. Let’s use 20 as an example for one individual. Ten or twenty or thirty years later, you are 30 or 40 or 50.

Yes, the civil war is long over, but the memories may never be over. To have seen your best friend shot and killed before your eyes or your father taken away by armed men, never to be heard from again, is a traumatic event. You never forget that and it can be very, very difficult, if not impossible, to forgive that. Now you are middle-aged and you are able to work with someone who you know was on the “other side back then” in a professional and superficially friendly manner, but can you ever trust him?

In societies where this is the case, this factor can be very significant, although “hidden” to the eyes of a foreigner. Because it is so heavily charged with emotion, it can pervert relationships and lead to very unpleasant results if you accidentally say or do the “wrong thing” innocently.

In choosing business partners, should that be the case, this can be an important factor. You may have an excellent personal relationship with each of two other local people and decide to bring them together to work with you on a project. You need to be sensitive to their backgrounds and personal histories. Just because they get along fine with you is no indication they will be able to get along well with each other.

That’s on an individual level, but it can happen on a societal level as well. A political issue that seems pretty ordinary to you may lead to some very powerful conflict around you. This may be an issue that somehow reminds the society of one of the reasons they had a civil war in the first place. This is another very good reason to steer clear entirely of local and national politics. It’s good to do that under all circumstance to the extent possible, but especially so of nations that have torn themselves apart in war.

I sympathize with these folks. I have had middle-aged professionals reduced to tears as they described the horrors they witnessed during “the war” and it is a moving experience. However, sympathize as I do, I still prefer societies where this is not likely to be an issue. Forty or fifty years later, “the war” is still a primary issue for some, but now they are old enough to be moving aside and younger generations, even though they have heard the stories, are far more likely to assign all that to history and deal with each other directly in a far more constructive manner, and you too, indirectly.

Left/Right – I prefer nations that do not have a “far left” and a “far right” that are substantial in size, well-funded, highly vocal, and in perpetual conflict. In those societies, serious political conflict is a given factor, day and night. Since I only live in democracies (I have had my fill of military governments, one-party states, and the like), there is the real possibility that an election will lead to a near-complete reversal in domestic and foreign policies. This can cause endless problems for everyone as they struggle to keep track of what is allowed and what is not allowed. Plus the continuous barrage of extremist insults from both sides can leave many people frozen into inaction, fearing that one or the other group will gain power and suddenly change the rules of the game.

This can be especially a problem for “foreigners” like you and me. In domestic politics, foreigners are much easier and safer targets than local people who vote. In the 24 hours of an Election Day, you can go from being a welcome addition to their nation to something akin to the spawn of Satan! That legal agreement you signed last year can be torn up, now that a new government is in power. And people who treated you as a friend may suddenly be very distant or worse. This is one more thing that I have experienced and can do without. I can handle it (I had no choice on some professional assignments) for a short period, but I am talking about my new home and that is an entirely different story. It is an extreme example of the old saying about New York City, “It’s a great place to visit, but I wouldn’t want to live there.”

That covers two of the “political” issues that concern me in choosing a nation for relocation. In my next post, I will discuss the importance of employment – both the employment situation for the local people and the employment situation for you. They are not one and the same, obviously, but you may be surprised that your situation is not necessarily the most important to successful relocation.

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Eric Clapton Sells Abstract Painting For A Record $34 Million

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richter

Rock star Eric Clapton sells an abstract painting by German artist Gerhard Richter for £21.3m – a new record amount for a living artist.

A high gloss was applied to the results of last week’s contemporary art auctions in London when a luxuriant abstract painting by Gerhard Richter established a new record for a living artist, selling at Sotheby’s for £21.3 million. Rock star Eric Clapton, who bought it for one tenth of the price in 2001, timed the sale well. In the past four years, Richter’s decorative abstract paintings, of which there are hundreds, have become status symbols among the world’s super rich – Roman Abramovich and Lily Safra, who gave hers to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, being among the top buyers at auction.

The latest Richter record price is thought to have been paid by a Russian buyer, and crowned a triumphant week for the octogenarian German artist, in which all 15 of his paintings that were offered sold for a total of £28 million – accounting for more than 25 per cent of the week’s sales. But rest of the story, while it had its moments, was not quite so rosy; the other five contemporary art auctions all fell short of pre-sale expectations.

At Phillips, more than 30 per cent of works offered were unsold, including a view of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange by the artist photographer Andreas Gursky, valued at £400,000. Gursky prices peaked last year at a record $4 million (£2,490,000) for a photographic work, but sellers hoping to capitalise on that last week were disappointed. Two further substantial works by Gursky at Christie’s were also unsold.

Another notable casualty at Christie’s was Californian artist Paul McCarthy. While his dealers, Hauser & Wirth, claimed the first sale of the Frieze Art Fair with a large, Disneyesque sculpture by McCarthy for over a million dollars, two slightly lewd, cartoon-style sculptures in a similar price bracket found no buyers. Unlike Richter’s abstracts, McCarthy’s discomforting social critique is not to everyone’s taste, and the number of potential buyers is limited. It was also apparent that Spanish buyers were, perhaps due to the state of the national economy, out of the equation, and works by Spanish artists were either unsold or snapped up by non-Spanish buyers at soft prices.

The stars of the Christie’s sale were the eccentric German artist, Martin Kippenberger, whose rare self portrait sold for a record £3.1 million to Hauser & Wirth, bidding for a client, and a group of works by young British artists from the Saatchi collection which were prominently placed to catch the attention of the type of collector of new art roaming the aisles of the Frieze Art Fair. A lumpy sculpture of a woman’s legs by Rebecca Warren sold to an American buyer for £109,250; a triptych of blurred photographs by Idris Khan sold for £181,250; and a huge, Photorealist painting of an aircraft wreck by Jonathan Wateridge sold for £313,250 to a Russian collector – all record prices and above estimates.

Saatchi had less of an impact at Sotheby’s, though his painting of a pair of gymnast’s rings by Gerhard Richter’s wife, Isa Genzken, did sell for a record £265,250 to art advisor Jorg Bertz. Here at the main evening sale, there was a more historically classical selection, made perhaps to catch the audience at the new Frieze Masters fair for older work. Apart from the record Richter, there was, for instance, a 1960s blue sponge relief by Yves Klein which sold to the Swiss-based collector Dimitri Mavromatis, above estimate for £3.7 million. Such sales, normally reserved for the higher-value auctions in February and June, gave Sotheby’s the edge.

However, closer analysis again revealed a certain fragility in the market as over half the lots sold either on below their estimated price guides. A granite sculpture by Anish Kapoor sold below estimate for £361,250, less than the price it fetched five years ago, and an early coloured drawing of a dead chicken by Lucian Freud found no buyers at £400,000.

The outstanding result for young artists was reserved for the next morning, when an inkjet-printed painting of black-and-white blocks of colour by Wade Guyton, currently enjoying a survey exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, sold for a record £421.250.

When the Frieze Art Fair started 10 years ago, London’s Frieze week auctions brought a modest £6.5 million, and last week’s £101 million is a measure of the impact the fair has had. Now with Frieze Masters thrown into the mix, the trend is likely to see even higher value sales next year.

SEE ALSO: The 10 Most Expensive Works Of Art Ever Sold

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The World's Newly Rich Are Snapping Up Traditional British Butlers

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The Savoy butler

PAOLO GABRIELE was Pope Benedict XVI's butler. But he breached his trade's cardinal rule: discretion. On October 6th an Italian court found him guilty of aggravated theft, after he leaked documents to a journalist (though a pardon is thought to be pending).

Despite a trickle of scandals involving talkative ex-butlers, demand is soaring. So is the complexity of the job. A birthday in Venezuela organised by Anthony Seddon-Holland, a British soldier-turned-butler, involved three planeloads of guests and security, and booking an entire hotel, plus rock band and film stars.

Bespoke Bureau, a London agency, has placed 345 butlers this year--twice as many as in all of 2011. The five-week training courses Mr Seddon-Holland runs at his Guild of British Butlers, which he set up in 2007, are booked until 2013. Demand increases by around a fifth every year. He is considering launching new courses in New York and sees Latin America as a potentially "monstrous" market.

Old-money aristocrats are no longer the main employers. Chinese, Russian and Middle Eastern plutocrats are taking their place. Of Bespoke Bureau's placements 80% were abroad, says its boss, Sara Vestin Rahmani. Of the remainder in Britain, half went to foreign employers.

Hollywood films and the success of television shows like "Downton Abbey" that depict butlers as discreet, resourceful and quintessentially English have helped. Britain's class system is a factor too, especially for customers from republican countries such as Russia and China where the newly rich hanker after old aristocratic glitz. Clients are paying for British traditions, hierarchy and experience, Ms Vestin Rahmani says. Below the surface, the skills are closer to those of a manager than a servant: for an (unnamed) Russian oligarch, Mr Seddon-Holland managed properties on several continents and organised 60 permanent staff.

A world-class butler can earn up to £150,000 ($240,000) plus bonus, separate living accommodation and all expenses. If a wealthy client finds you indispensable, Mr Seddon-Holland says, a butler can "demand almost anything" to stay put.

Employers may need some help in learning to make the most of their expensive new toy. Rick Fink of the Butler-Valet School in Oxfordshire encourages employers to take his £8,000 four-week course too: that helps them avoid misunderstandings about port (passed only to the left, regardless of rank) and the vital semantic differences between a formal dessert (fruit, nuts and sweets) and pudding (a course cooked by the chef). Just like their butlers, employers ought to get everything right.

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SEE ALSO: Step Inside The Most Marvelous Hotel Suite In The Middle East

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5 Bars Where You Can Get Top Shelf Quality On A Budget

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the california clipper chicago party earth bars

American bars tend to stick to extremes, with watered-down dives on one end and swanky VIP lounges with bottle service on the other.

But not every night calls for suits or stilettos. Sometimes, it’s nice to drop the pomp and circumstance and get seriously sloshed without busting your budget.

Here at Party Earth we’re happy to remind everyone—from blueblood nobility to the blue-collar crowd—that a cheap drink doesn’t have to be a weak one. So take a look at some of our favorite U.S. drinking dens from down and dirty bars in D.C. to cheap and easy dives in San Francisco that more than make up in liquor for what they may lack in luxury.

This story was originally published by Party Earth.

New York City: Mehanata Bulgarian Bar

Hipsters, hookahs, and beat-heavy polka unite at Mehanata Bulgarian Bar, a Lower East Side hotspot that effortlessly puts the “rad” back into comrade.

It’s as unapologetically raucous as you might expect a proud Soviet-themed bar to be: naked mannequins, mouth-shaped urinals, and the “Get naked, get a free shot” sign that somehow hasn’t put them out of business (yet). But the real draw at Mehanata is the infamous Ice Cage, which is basically a giant walk-in fridge lined with over fifty bottles of premium vodka.

It costs around $20 to enter the Cage, but the price includes free use of authentic Soviet military uniforms, which patrons don before pounding a half-dozen shots of whichever vodkas they choose in under two minutes.

Mehanata Bulgarian Bar
113 Ludlow Street
New York, NY 10002



Washington, D.C.: Dan's Cafe

The first thing to remember about Dan’s Café is that it looks like an abandoned little building with a boarded-up front and a ramshackle sign that would earn a quick “F” in any fifth grade art project.

Inside, the stuffy single room isn’t much better (we’re pretty sure the ferns hanging from the ceiling died sometime before the Cold War), but perceptive patrons will notice a lot of rowdy regulars wielding what appear to be ketchup bottles—which wouldn’t be weird save for the fact that there’s no food in this Café.

The large squeeze bottles, in fact, are loaded with hard alcohol, either pre-mixed with a favorite chaser or straight as the day the grain was born. And nearly all the squeeze bottles are priced less than $20. After doing the math, downing an entire bottle by yourself comes out to less than $2 a shot.

Dan’s Café
2315 18th Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20009



Chicago: The California Clipper

Although it’s well-removed from the city’s bigger bar scene, The California Clipper is still one of the best bars in Chicago and has been going strong since the 1930s.

The consensus on its welcoming vibe has no doubt aided its success, along with the free board games that fill the void between the free live jazz on weekends. Sure, there are rumors the venue is haunted, but its popular Purple Martin cocktail is sure to bring back even the most phantasm-phobic, time and time again.

Of course, if a mixture of fake grapes, rum, and lemon reminds you more of a desperate last call at a frat party, this cozy neighborhood lounge offers a host of budget-friendly classics, from champagne cocktails and Rusty Nails to a California egg cream so good you won’t even remember to ask how they got cream out of a chicken’s egg in the first place.

The California Clipper
1002 North California Avenue
Chicago, IL 60622



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The Spooky Stories Behind 10 Of America's Most Famous Haunted Houses

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McPike Mansion Illinois Haunted

Creaking floors, inexplicable cold drafts and eerie sounds usually don’t top the list of dream house features.

Unless, of course, we’re talking about dream haunted house features.

It’s October, and we’re forgoing the usual roundup of eye candy in favor of some cobweb-draped places most people wouldn’t dare put a down payment on.

Tales of horror, glimpses of ghosts and a bevy of cobweb decor — it’s all here.

Click here to see the haunted mansions >

Winchester House: San Jose, CA

It’s as if original owner Sarah Winchester wanted her home to be haunted.

The eccentric widow of William Winchester, founder of Winchester rifles, held nightly seances to gain guidance from spirits and her dead husband for the home’s design.

The end result? A maze-like structure that took 38 years to build and includes twisting and turning hallways, dead ends, secret panels, a window built into a floor, staircases leading to nowhere, doors that open to walls, upside-down columns and rooms built, then intentionally closed off  — all to ward off and confuse evil spirits.

Source: Zillow.com 



Gardette-LaPrete House: 716 Dauphine St, New Orleans, LA

This Greek revival home was the site of the one of the grisliest murders in New Orleans‘ history.

A Turkish merchant, renting the home, was buried alive in the backyard and his harem entourage murdered.

Years later, the French Quarter home is still said to be the site of the merchant’s wanderings, and on certain nights, exotic music and incense from ancient parties waft from the home.

Source: Zillow.com 



Hampton Lillibridge: 507 E Julian St, Savannah, GA

This historic home was moved to its current location in Savannah by a local restoration expert.

As work began on the house, workers reported odd noises and a male presence.

Early on, they discovered a crypt on the building site half filled with water and covered it.

Despite the rumors of hauntings, the home was finished and was last on the market for $2.2 million in 2011. Although it’s off the market now, there’s no word of a buyer.

Source: Zillow.com 



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Eden Hotel’s Batman Suite

Justin Bieber Can't Live Without These Things

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Justin BieberIf you know anything about Justin Bieber, you're probably aware that he was discovered by R&B star Usher, dates Selena Gomez and drives an electric car that has chrome for a paint job. But even Justin's biggest fans probably can't name the snacks that get him through the day, the animated show he watches the most or his favorite celebrity baby name. So Popdust asked him. Here are his exclusive answers to these and other key questions. Now you know everything!

VICES
1. Favorite Ice Cream Flavor: Cookies and Cream
2. Favorite Junk Food: Swedish Fish or apples dipped in caramel

Related: Does Justin Prefer His Fondue Sweet or Savory?


ENTERTAINMENT
3. Favorite Animated Show: Family Guy
4. Favorite Celebrity Baby Name: Blue Ivy
5. Favorite Sports Team: Toronto Maple Leaves
6. Favorite Song: Kanye West, Big Sean, and Jay-Z, "Clique"
7. Favorite Celebrity: Chuck Norris

Photo: Blue Ivy Carter Shows Us Her Cheeks

TECHNOLOGY
8. Favorite Website: Twitter
9. Favorite Headphones: Beats by Dre

Related: Justin's Twitter Showdown With Guy Who Stole His Computer

MISCELLANEOUS
10. Favorite Animal: Porcupine
11. Favorite Person in the World: My Mom and Dad

Click Here For the Rest of Justin's 20 Favorite Things > 

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The Lesser-Known Facts About E-Waste Recycling

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The Internet revolution might have revolutionized how we live and communicate, but it’s also had a rather more insidious effect on our environment. Strange as it might sound, our rush to buy new laptops and phones – while chucking our old ones into the trash – has led to a new eco disaster in the making.
 
Yes, while we all pride ourselves on a commitment to a clean, green planet, our actions say otherwise. Robert Barham of Phone Shop UK says " All those old cell phone chargers you chucked into a bin, the old monitor you just threw away, and the ancient printer that you dumped are all in a landfill somewhere, polluting our planet." Yes, around 14,000,000 junked mobile phones (weighing over 65,000 tonnes) reach our nation’s landfills each year – releasing an astounding 80,000 lbs of highly toxic lead.
 
And if they aren't being buried, polluting our land and water, they’ll be sent to a developing nation, where workers will, in unsanitary conditions, risk their health in trying to extract precious materials from your old E-waste – did you know that mobile phones contain high amounts of poisonous elements and materials like chromium, mercury, and arsenic?
 
It’s not just poisonous trash we’re throwing away – cell phones and other electronic items contain high amounts of precious metals like gold or silver – each year, we dump cell phones containing worth over $60 million in gold and silver.
 
This environmental time bomb is not just fueled by our old and discarded cell phones. Most – around 85% - of computers end up in a landfill. This becomes even more serious and old TVs and CRT monitors contain over 4 lbs of toxic lead. In all, over 2% of the trash found in America’s landfills is E-waste! And, here’s an ever more striking statistic for you to ponder over – E-waste makes up 70% of all toxic waste!
 
That’s a stunning level of waste – and with more people in developing nations now joining the mobile revolution, it’s only bound to increase. Sixty one per cent of the planet’s population has a cell phone, and this number is rising with every passing day.
 
The key to this is to recycle. Most people use a cell phone for less than a year, and if those us planning on buying a shine new iPhone or Galaxy S3 can be convinced to recycle our old phones, we’d be doing the planet a huge favor. Our old phones can not only be used by others, but the cash we get from selling them can help fund our next purchase. At the same time, by selling or donating an old phone, we’re keeping it from adding to the rubbish in our landfills, and also enabling someone else to obtain an affordable phone. Hence, if you aren’t already practicing it, you should take an initiative to recycle old cell phones and other e-waste in your household.
 
Look around your home – you’re bound to have some old electronics (especially cell phones) that you no longer use. You might have put off donating or selling them off, but let’s face it – an old laptop, tablet or cell phone you haven’t used in a year is hardly likely to be of use! Recycle, and save the environment.

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European Wine Prices Are About To Spike

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Wine Bottles Row

BRUSSELS (AP) — Winemaker Cherie Spriggs had watched the bad weather over southern England's vineyards all season long. It just wasn't good enough for Nyetimber, her award-winning sparkling wine.

"I have never seen a situation like this before," Spriggs said as the grapes failed to deliver. She was left with only one option and the company decided to forego the 2012 harvest.

Few have gone as far as Nyetimber but drought, frost and hail have combined to ravage Europe's wine grape harvest, which in key regions this year will be the smallest in half a century, vintners say.

Thierry Coste, an expert with the European Union farmers' union, said Wednesday that France's grape harvest is expected to slump by almost 20 percent compared with last year. Italy's grape crop showed a 7 percent drop — on top of a decline in 2011.

"Two big producing nations, France and Italy, have not known a harvest so weak in 40 to 50 years," Coste said. "All the major producing nations have been hurt."

France's Champagne and Burgundy regions were hard hit by weather conditions that particularly affected the prevalent Chardonnay grape, used to make the world's most famous sparkling wine and the luxurious whites from those regions. Nyetimber also depends on Chardonnay.

In places where vintners were already facing a small margin of profit, many could be facing survival problems, said Coste of the Copa-Cogeca union.

"In certain regions, there will be many vintners in big difficulties because of the collapse of the harvest," he said.

The European wine harvest automatically has a global impact since it accounts for some 62 percent of the worldwide wine production.

It won't mean any immediate drought for consumers since retailers typically offer a wide range of vintages. And taste often wins when yields are small.

In Europe, about 2.5 million families live off the wine sector. It makes the dependency on the vagaries of weather a sometimes cruel business.

Drought hit the Mediterranean rim hard this year, Coste said. As a cooperative leader in southern France's Herault region, he should know.

"First and foremost, climate change or not, we see that we have ever more dry spells," he said. Making matters worse is that even winter was dry this time. "It was almost zero (degrees Celsius) in the south."

In the northern wine regions, it was the inverse, with cold and wet weather wreaking havoc. Hail in particular hurt the crops.

"Natural phenomena happened all at the same time to make sure the harvest is so small," Coste said.

French figures show that in Champagne the harvest could decline by up to 40 percent, with Bourgogne Beaujolais expected to decline 30 percent. Bordeaux would get away lightly with a drop of 10 percent.

Coste said there may be an upside to the bad harvest — it is not a bitter one when it comes to taste. The quality of the wine produced will be good as it is expected to be more concentrated.

"When it comes to quality, we are looking at a good year," Coste said.

While some price increases were on the cards, Coste hoped they could be contained along the long chain from hillside picking to supermarket shelves.

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The Pursuitist In New York

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The Pursuitist is jet-setting to New York City for the next few days, and we’re staying at The Ritz-Carlton New York, Central Park. Dinner reservations are set for the top rated Michelin and Zagat restaurants in New York, including Eric Ripert’s Le Bernardin, Thomas Keller’s Per Se and Daniel Humm’s Eleven Madison Park. We’re visiting amazing shops, from Hermes, Louis Vuitton to Ladurée. For live updates of our luxe visit to NYC, follow us on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/pursuitist

While on our New York adventures, new stories on The Pursuitist will be limited, but catch the latest on Twitter.

Sincerely,
Christopher Parr

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Why So Many Chinese Billionaires Were Born In The Year Of The Rabbit

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white rabbit hotot

LAST month we published a chart showing that a disproportionate number of China’s billionaires were born in the year of the rabbit, according to the Chinese zodiac. We did not attempt to argue why this is so. Hurun, a Shanghai-based luxury publishing and events group, has spotted a similar anomaly in almost all the years since 1999, when it first began publishing its annual list of China’s richest people.

The chart was, of course, silly, as many of our readers pointed out. To John Wagner Givens of the University of Louisville, it was “thoughtlessly silly”. Fortunately, he has offered a thoughtfully sensible explanation for the rabbit anomaly on the Huffington Post website. Echoing a point made by a number of our commenters, he shows that in 1963, a rabbit year, birth rates surged in China as it recovered from the devastating famine that followed Mao’s Great Leap Forward. Thus, he argues, there is not a surprising number of rabbit billionaires, but a disproportionate number of rabbits among Chinese aged 40-60, the prime age group for billionaires in China.

It might be added that those born around 1960 are also in the prime age for taking over China’s most powerful political posts in a decade’s time. The two politicians most commonly tipped for positions at the very top after Xi Jinping steps down in 2022 (if all goes to plan) are Hu Chunhua, who is party chief of Inner Mongolia, and Sun Zhengcai, who heads the party in Jilin province. (See this description in the Financial Times of how they are being groomed.) Both, as it happens, were born in the year of the rabbit.

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10 Things "Call Me Maybe" Singer Carly Rae Jepsen Can't Live Without

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At this point, it's scientifically impossible to be in the same place for an hour an not hear Carly Rae Jepsen's "Call Me Maybe." After Justin Bieber tweeted of the song's stick-in-your-head-in-a-good-way factor, Jepsen became an overnight sensation, eventually outselling the hand that fed her. The 26-year-old Canadian has had quite a year, and we believe her star is only starting its rise. She may never tell you what she wishes in wells (don't ask her), but she did tell us some of her favorite things. You'll learn something new, no "maybes" about it.

Vices

1. Favorite Pick Up Line: "Hey! I just met you."
2. Favorite Reality TV Star: Jillian Harris from Canadian "Bachelorette"
3. Favorite Tweeter: Ellen DeGeneres (@TheEllenShow)

Related: Carly Rae Jepsen Introduces Herself, "Call Me Maybe" To American TV Audiences

Entertainment
4. Favorite Actor: Ryan Gosling
5. Favorite Celebrity Baby Name: Gwyneth Paltrow named her baby Apple. I kinda like it.
6. Favorite Justin: Bieber!

Related: Carly Rae Jepsen Took a Trip to 90210

Other Favorites
7. Favorite App: Instagram
8. Favorite City: London
9. Favorite Vacation Spot: Italy
10. Favorite Store: Anthropology

For the rest of Carly Rae's 39 Favorite Things, click here!

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The 7 Foxiest Moms and Dads of Pop Stars

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Pop culture crushes don't always have to be relegated to the talented performers who thrive onstage, especially if their parents can make you weak in the knees. Father's and Mother's Day come but once a year, which is why we're taking the time to recognize the beautiful men and women shepherding their talented children from behind the scenes. From Justin Bieber's MILF-y mom, to Mr. Malik's own interpretation of Ththe Harry Styles swoop, enjoy our selection of the hottest moms, dads and maybe, just maybe, grandpas of our favorite pop stars. They're not all single, but you can dream. (And, after you're done reading, vote for your favorite pop-star parents right here!)

1. Justin Bieber's mom, Pattie Mallette

As a young, single mom raising the boy who would become the biggest star in the pop world by 2012, Pattie donated all of her time to helping support Justin Bieber's amateur YouTube work and dreams of stardom

2. Selena Gomez's mom, Mandy Teefey

Selena Gomez's mother has a smile made for the stage and cheeks you just want to pinch.

3. Harry Styles' mom, Anne Cox

As the one and only mum to One Direction's Harry Styles, Cox is responsible for bringing life to that unmistakable swoop. Her youthful appearance makes her a dead ringer for one of her son's devoted Directioners!

Click here for the full list of 23 foxy pop star parents!

4. Taylor Swift's dad, Scott Swift

A local golden boy who might as well be the stand-in for a fair-haired Cary Grant, it's no wonder Taylor Swift holds all her boyfriends to such high standards.

5. Justin Bieber's dad, Jeremy Bieber

Jeremy Bieber is the total package: He loves music, is great with kids and possesses an awesome set of abs.

6. Jessica Simpson's mom, Tina Simpson

The longstanding stage mom to both Jessica and Ashlee has done a good job of letting her famous children shine in their own spotlight.

7. The Jonas Brothers' mom, Denise Jonas

The success of her talented children has only allowed her more opportunities to dress up and flaunt her youthful bod—as well as her parenting skills, thanks to Kevin's reality show.

To see all 23 of the foxy pop star parents (including one grandpa!), click here!


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Europe's Princes And Princesses Are Jetting To Luxembourg For A Royal Wedding This Weekend

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luxembourg prince guillaume stephanie de lannoy

LUXEMBOURG (AP) — The Grand Duchy of Luxembourg doesn't get a lot of turns in the spotlight.

It's an independent country tinier than Rhode Island, the smallest U.S. state, and it would fit inside Germany, its neighbor to the east, 138 times with room to spare. It won no medals at the 2012 London Olympics — in fact it hasn't won a medal at the summer Games since 1952.

But this week is Luxembourg's turn to shine. Prince Guillaume, the heir to the throne — the grand duke-to-be — will marry Belgian Countess Stephanie de Lannoy.

It will be a two-day affair, including fireworks, concerts, a gala dinner at the grand ducal palace, and two marriages between the betrothed — a civil wedding Friday afternoon and a religious ceremony Saturday morning.

A glittering array of European royalty has been invited. The guest list for the religious ceremony includes kings, queens, princes and princesses from European countries including, among others, Belgium, Norway, Sweden, Lichtenstein, Denmark, the Netherlands, Romania and Britain, which is sending Prince Edward, Queen Elizabeth's youngest child, and his wife, Sophie.

Non-European royalty will be attending, as well, from Morocco, Japan and Jordan and elsewhere.

With all those royals coming to Luxembourg, can international attention be far behind?

"It's good for Luxembourg," said Nadine Chenet, a 46-year-old street cleaner who was picking up cigarette butts with pincers in front of the grand ducal palace. "Many people will come now."

Besides, she just plain likes the royal family, she said: They give a good impression of the country.

That's a sentiment common in Luxembourg. To all appearances, the bride and groom are a lovely couple. He is 30, with dark hair and an immaculate beard. She is 28, blonde and smiling. In public appearances, including at the London Olympics, they have appeared besotted with each other.

According to biographies distributed by the royal court, each has an array of interests befitting those who are to the manner born.

Guillaume speaks four languages, has studied international politics, is a lieutenant colonel in the Luxembourg army (a force of 900 soldiers), and has been engaged in humanitarian work in other countries, including Nepal. The duchess-to-be has studied the influence of German romanticism on Russian romanticism, plays piano and violin, swims, skis, and says she reads three books at a time.

In the language department, she already speaks French and German — two of Luxembourg's three official languages — and, perhaps more importantly, is studying the third, which is called Luxembourgish. She plans to renounce her Belgian citizenship in order to become, eventually, Luxembourg's grand duchess.

Luxembourg is a linguistically complicated country, a reflection of its complicated past. It began as a Roman fortress. It has, at one time or another, fallen under the control of Spain, France and Austria. In 1839, it gained its independence from the Netherlands, but lost more than half its territory to Belgium, which now has a province of the same name. In the 20th century, Germany swept through Luxembourg twice despite its protestations of neutrality.

Luxembourgish is related to German, but it is primarily a spoken language. In the country's schools, elementary students take all their classes in German. When students reach their teens, gradually all classes are converted to French. And English is studied the entire time.

But the language dearest to their hearts is Luxembourgish. As 71-year-old retired engineer Rene Ries — a typical Luxembourger, with a French first name and a German last name — said, Luxembourgish is generally spoken in the home. When there is a complaint, the police file their reports in German. Then the lawyers litigate the case in French.

Asked in which language he felt most comfortable, Ries replied without hesitation that it was Luxembourgish. But he admitted he had trouble writing it. Under duress, he could write his daughter a postcard, he said, but the language is most commonly spoken, not written.

Luxembourg, an important financial center and home to the world's largest steel manufacturer, continues to prosper despite Europe's economic trouble. The country has the second-highest gross domestic product per capita in the world, more than $80,000 — though its population of about 510,000 people is still smarting from having lost the No. 1 spot to Qatar. The capital city has 80,000 inhabitants and 120,000 jobs.

For that reason, more than 43 percent of the people in Luxembourg are foreign nationals, compared to a European Union average of 6.4 percent. When he greets people in the public square, Ries speaks not German, not French, not English, but Luxembourgish. It is not to shame the others. It is to show he is a genuine Luxembourger.

Natives of the Grand Duchy, heavily influenced by Catholicism, are very proper and can be dour.

"When we say, 'It's not too bad,'" Ries said, "we mean it's good."

But above all, they are proud. Proud of their multilingualism. Proud of their grand duchy. And proud of their royal family. The current grand duke, Henri, who is 57, is popular. People can greet him on the street without bowing down before him. His 31-year marriage to Grand Duchess Maria Teresa appears to be very happy. Showcasing the royal family, as the country will do this week, allows Luxembourg to put its best foot forward.

For, as Ries emphasized more than once, the Luxembourgish royals — in contrast to some others — do not sunbathe topless. And for him, that is a source of pride, one he is happy to share with the rest of the world.

"It is a good family," he said.

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Don Melvin can be reached at —http://twitter.com/Don_Melvin.

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Revel is Built to Inspire Discovery

The Five A's of Fractional Jet Ownership

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The skies are starting to brighten for private jet ownership. According to the most recent data available, year-over-year industry sales are up 14 percent among the top fractional program providers. At Flexjet, we are pleased that our fractional jet sales are up 45 percent, with a 25 percent market share.

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