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Veronika Oleksyn

Tuesday, Feb 23, 2010 1:01 PM UTC2010-02-23T13:01:27Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Sex at the museum: Swingers in Vienna art hall

An Austrian night club has incorporated a sex club into its Klimt exhibition

In the name of art, an Austrian landmark is encouraging visitors to confront their sexual inhibitions by having them walk through a swingers club to reach one of Gustav Klimt’s masterpieces.

The Secession — a world-renowned venue for contemporary art in downtown Vienna — has temporarily incorporated a sex club named “Element6″ as part of a project by Swiss artist Christoph Buechel.

The swingers are not there during the day, but their mattresses, erotic pictures, bar and whirlpool are.

Secession spokeswoman Urte Schmitt-Ulms said Buechel hoped to spark a stir reminiscent of the scandal Klimt caused when his “Beethoven Frieze” was first exhibited in 1902. Now considered one of the Austrian painter’s key pieces, it was once thought of as obscene and pornographic because of the way women’s bodies were depicted.

While the club only opens at night long after the art hall closes, daytime visitors aged 18 and older pass through its dimly lit rooms on their way to see the Klimt painting.

The room where the frieze is exhibited is locked at night for security reasons. But it too has its share of mattresses, surrounded by fake tropical plants and a life-size stuffed lion.

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Monday, May 30, 2011 5:59 PM UTC2011-05-30T17:59:07Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

E. coli vegetables kill 11 in Germany

Austrian officials inspect supermarkets for contaminated food as suspicions focus on Spanish produce

Austria Contaminated Vegetables Europe

A man sweeps discarded salad vegetables from the floor at a food market in Vienna, Austria, on Monday May 30, 2011. Vegetables from Spain are suspected of carrying the dangerous E.coli bacteria, which is suspected of killing some people in Germany and has caused many hundreds of people to become ill across Europe. Austria has moved to ban the sale of cucumbers, tomatoes and eggplants that originated from Spain, although Spanish authorities said there is no proof that they are the source of the outbreak.(AP Photo/Ronald Zak) (Credit: AP)

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Austrian officials inspected supermarkets on Monday for Spanish vegetables suspected of contamination with a potentially fatal bacteria that has sickened hundreds of Europeans. In Germany, the death toll from the outbreak rose to 11.

Spain, meanwhile, went on the defensive, saying there was no proof that the E. coli outbreak has been caused by Spanish vegetables.

Spain’s Secretary of State for European Affairs, Diego Lopez Garrido, said Madrid might take action against those pointing fingers at his southern European nation.

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Monday, Aug 30, 2010 4:44 PM UTC2010-08-30T16:44:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Gunman kills seven, wounds 15 in Slovakia

The unidentified attacker kills self; motive remains unknown

A gunman went on a rampage in Slovakia’s capital on Monday, killing seven people and wounding 15, then committed suicide, officials said.

Five of the fatalities were members of a Roma family who lived in an apartment where the man began his attack with a machine gun and two pistols, said Interior Minister Dusan Lipsic. Roma, also known as Gypsies, often face discrimination in eastern Europe, but Lipsic and police chief Jaroslav Spisiak said the unidentified gunman’s motive was not known.

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  More Nadia Rybarova

Monday, Jul 19, 2010 4:36 PM UTC2010-07-19T16:36:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Clinton, Gates: Fight AIDS more efficiently

Ex-president says aid should go directly to local health groups. Microsoft founder urges better business practices

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Two heavy hitters on the world health stage — Bill Clinton and Bill Gates — called Monday for a more efficient fight worldwide against the AIDS virus.

In separate speeches at an international AIDS conference in the Austrian capital, the former American president railed against spending too much money on reports that just sit on shelves and urged that funds directly target AIDS sufferers. Gates, the founder of Microsoft Corp., said health groups must adopt better business practices that deliver more bang for the buck.

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Wednesday, Feb 24, 2010 1:46 PM UTC2010-02-24T13:46:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

UN watchdog issues warning about date-rape drugs

International Narcotics Control Board urges governments to prevent predators from procuring drugs

Governments around the world must step up their efforts to limit access to “date-rape drugs,” sedatives that are secretly added to a person’s drink to reduce their ability to resist sexual assault and remember it later, a watchdog said Wednesday.

Sexual predators can easily procure such date-rape drugs, despite existing efforts to curb their misuse, the International Narcotics Control Board said in its annual report.

Governments should quickly adopt measures to limit illegal access to such drugs, and increase public awareness about the risks of leaving food and drinks unattended at public events such as parties, the board said. They also must do a better job of analyzing urine samples in suspected cases and be consistent about compiling and sharing statistics.

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