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World vignettes -- These beauties lift weights too
Kathy Mosely, girlfriend of UK hostage Paul Wells (left) and Julie Mangan, wife of Keith Mangan (centre) talk with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in Islamabad on Wednesday to seek help to trace their kin.
These beauties lift weights too
THAILAND: It wasn't over when the fat lady sang. That was just the talent
portion of a beauty contest held yesterday in which the contestants came in
two sizes: big and bigger. In blistering holiday heat, thousands of people
came to a private zoo 30 km west of Bangkok to watch the heavyweight contest
among about 30 women for the title of ``jumbo queen.'' The contestants
showed off their singing and dancing talents, and lifted heavy weights.
Valaya Tonsak, 32, of Bangkok walked off with the $1,000 top prize. A mere
70 kg, she bested opponents weighing as much as 160 kg. The competition was
preceded by a jumping crocodile show and a historical costume epic in which
elephants were the stars. After the beauty contest, humans and animals alike
went off to a generous banquet meal.
Gay law
HOBART: Australia's only state that banned homosexuality has repealed the
law, bowing to a campaign by gay activists that had reached the United
Nations.
The parliament of Tasmania state yesterday passed a bill to strike down a
generation-old ban on homosexuality and anal sex, which carried a maximum
penalty of 21 years in prison.
The upper house of parliament approved the bill with a voice vote
yesterday. The lower house had passed it earlier. While no one had been
prosecuted under the law for years, gays said it was a symbol of repression
and inconsistent with federal sexual privacy laws passed in 1994 following
an appeal by gay activists to the United Nations Human Rights Committee.
A destructive and unnecessary criminal stigma has been removed, that burden
has been lifted from our shoulders,'' said Tasmanian gay and lesbian rights
group spokesman Rodney Croome.
Smallest pyramidp
CAIRO: Mycerinus, the smallest of the three great pyramids at Giza, has been
closed for six months of restoration work. The pyramid, which was closed
yesterday, is visited by an average of 5,000 tourists a day who clamber down
to the burial chamber. The water vapour in their breath has caused salt to
leach through walls and ceilings, creating cracks. Zahi Hawass, chief
archaeologist at Giza, said a special ventilation system will be installed
during the closure.
The great pyramids were built at Giza, on the western edge of Cairo, for
three Pharaohs who ruled Egypt some 4,500 years ago.
Cheops, the largest of the pyramids with a height of 137 meters underwent
renovations in 1990. The pyramid of Chephren, Cheops' son, was reopened to
the public last August after ten months of restoration work.
Copyright © 1997 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
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