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
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.
The most popular articles
Pablo Picasso's 'Jeune Fille Endormie' is one of the artist's most celebrated paintings. This summer, the portrait of Picasso's lover, Marie-Thérèse, will go under the hammer at Christie's auction house in London.
more »
The poor, West African country of Togo is not the first place that springs to mind when considering the science of robotics, but one aspiring scientist is on a mission to change public perception.
more »
Fifty-four of the world's best baristas descended on Bogota, Colombia for the 12th annual World Barista Championship.
more »
Fifty-four of the world's best baristas descended on Bogota, Colombia for the 12th annual World Barista Championship.
more »
Operators at the radioactive Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant say they are unable to rescue stray pets wandering the grounds.
more »
Using high speed x-ray video, scientists at Harvard University have shown that dogs - like cats - use an innate knowledge of physics to drink.
more »
She's only four years old and not even in school, yet Aelita Andre has just opened her very own art exhibition in New York City.
more »
A 17-year-old high school student from southern China sells one of his kidneys to buy an iPad and iPhone.
more »
The students at the University of Pennsylvania have been working on a robot, named, Graspy.
more »
An australian micro-brewery has joined forces with a space engineering firm to produce the first beer for consumption in space.
more »