German paper prints only good news on Xmas

Published: 26 December 2004 y., Sunday
Dropping its daily diet of stories on crime, corruption and evil wrongdoing, Germany's top-selling Bild newspaper printed only good news in its Christmas issue. "No parking tickets today - traffic wardens have day off!" the newspaper with 12 million readers wrote. The paper turned a scandal involving the opposition Christian Democrats on its head, cheering a generous severance payment of 52,000 euros that the disgraced general secretary, Laurenz Meyer, received after quitting under pressure on Wednesday. "Merry Christmas! Fantastic severance pay package for Laurenz Meyer," Bild wrote, days after it led the attack on Meyer for taking payments from another former employer, which sparked the public outrage that led to his resignation. German share prices and the euro's value versus the dollar hit record highs, consumers are spending more, health insurers are lowering fees, and the number of millionaires rose to 1.6 million from 1.1 million in 1998, Bild said on page one. "That's the conflicting aspect of our time - that it keeps producing bad news and puts horror on the assembly line even though we are all craving good news," wrote Bild columnist Peter Bacher. "But the good is never completely lost." The daily even found positive news from overseas. An Israeli scientist had developed a laser treatment against bad breath and a mugger in Zagreb who was always polite to his victims was finally captured by police.
Šaltinis: abc.net.au
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Veteran athlete plans to swim 100 miles at the age of 61

For Diana Nyad, it’s a second chance. On August 15th 1978 after nearly 50 hours of non-stop swimming, Nyad had to call it quits on her dream - to swim between Cuba and the United States. more »

The latest in world records

The world's smallest cow and longest canine tongue are included the 2011 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records. more »

Pre-Viking find in Norway mountains

Archaeologists discover pre-Viking artefacts in Juvfonna ice field in the mountains of Norway, as climate change causes ice to thaw in northern Europe's highest peaks. more »

Trapped Chile miners' soccer support

33 workers trapped underground in Chile cheer as they watch the national soccer team take to the field, the players wearing emblems of support for the miners. more »

Trapped elephant calf rescued

A baby elephant stuck in marshy wetland in northeastern India is rescued by forest officials. more »

Edible roses enjoy consumption spike

Ecuador farms explore a market in organic edible roses, increasingly utilized by high-end restaurants in search of novelty dishes. more »

Mexico breaks longest taco record

Mexico City residents break the record for the longest taco ever, measuring 40.9 metres. more »

Indian woman breastfeeds calf

Indian villager Chouthi Bai takes an unusual step to save an orphaned calf’s life, breastfeeding the animal. more »

New Titanic exploration

Now a crew of scientists and archaeologists have begun capturing the first three dimensional, high definition pictures of the Titanic - using sonar and a remote camera. more »

UK's biggest freshwater fish dies

Anglers mourn the death of Two Tone, Britain's largest known freshwater fish. more »