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RC1D2C44C280 The flip flops of Papua New Guinea table tennis player Gasika Sepa can be seen under a table as he practices at a Beijing-funded facility in central Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea, November 19, 2018. Picture taken November 19, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC1C4BC102B0 The flip flops of Papua New Guinea table tennis player Gasika Sepa can be seen under a table as he practices at a Beijing-funded facility in central Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea, November 19, 2018. Picture taken November 19, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray
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RC1A9F2864A0 The flip flops and feet of Papua New Guinea table tennis player Gasika Sepa can be seen under a table as he practices at a Beijing-funded facility in central Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea, November 19, 2018. Picture taken November 19, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray
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RC1322D57EE0 The flip flops of Papua New Guinea table tennis player Gasika Sepa can be seen under a table as he practices at a Beijing-funded facility in central Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea, November 19, 2018. Picture taken November 19, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray
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RC1FE9B81850 A couple relaxes as they sit on a table on the peak of Mount Saentis (2502 metres/8209 feet above sea level) during sunny autumn weather near Schwaegalp in the eastern Swiss Alps, Switzerland November 9, 2017. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC17D1151F30 A couple relaxes as they sit on a table on the peak of Mount Saentis (2502 metres/8209 feet above sea level) during sunny autumn weather near Schwaegalp in the eastern Swiss Alps, Switzerland November 9, 2017. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
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D1BETHKOETAA Guests sit at tables suspended from cranes at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKMOMAA Guests sit at tables suspended from cranes at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKMKSAA Ten tables, accommodating a total of 220 guests, are suspended from cranes at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKMGSAA Guests sit at tables suspended from cranes at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKLXSAB Guests sit at tables suspended from cranes at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKLSRAA Ten tables, accommodating a total of 220 guests, are suspended from cranes at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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D1BETHKLLIAB Ten tables, accommodating a total of 220 guests, are suspended from cranes at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKLEHAA Guests sit at tables suspended from cranes at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKJPMAA Guests sit at tables suspended from a crane at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKJBCAA Guests sit at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKISJAB Guests sit at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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D1BETHKILKAB Three of the ten tables, accommodating a total of 220 guests, are suspended from a crane at a height of 40 metres in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) high structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, as part of the 10th anniversary of the event known as "Dinner in the Sky", in Brussels, Belgium June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman
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GF20000083182 The home of Brent Nicholson, where police officers confiscated thousands of guns, is pictured in Pageland, South Carolina, November 10, 2015. Inside Brent Nicholson's house, guns were everywhere: rifles and shotguns piled in the living room, halls and bedrooms; handguns littering tables and countertops. Outside, when sheriff's investigators rolled up the door on the pre-fab metal garage, more arms spilled out at their feet. The question of how one man amassed such a stockpile of guns arises just as there is renewed American soul-searching over the widespread availability of firearms in the wake of a series of mass shootings. To match Insight USA-GUNS/STOCKPILE Picture taken November 10, 2015. REUTERS/Jason Miczek
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GF20000083179 Thousands of rounds of ammunition are seen after being found in the home and garage of Brent Nicholson in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, November 10, 2015. Inside Brent Nicholson's house, guns were everywhere: rifles and shotguns piled in the living room, halls and bedrooms; handguns littering tables and countertops. Outside, when sheriff's investigators rolled up the door on the pre-fab metal garage, more arms spilled out at their feet. The question of how one man amassed such a stockpile of guns arises just as there is renewed American soul-searching over the widespread availability of firearms in the wake of a series of mass shootings. To match Insight USA-GUNS/STOCKPILE Picture taken November 10, 2015. REUTERS/Jason Miczek
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GF20000083178 Chesterfield County Sheriff's lieutenant David Lee removes rifles from a shipping container as he and other officers sort through thousands of guns found in the home and garage of Brent Nicholson, in Pageland, South Carolina, November 10, 2015. Inside Brent Nicholson's house, guns were everywhere: rifles and shotguns piled in the living room, halls and bedrooms; handguns littering tables and countertops. Outside, when sheriff's investigators rolled up the door on the pre-fab metal garage, more arms spilled out at their feet. The question of how one man amassed such a stockpile of guns arises just as there is renewed American soul-searching over the widespread availability of firearms in the wake of a series of mass shootings. To match Insight USA-GUNS/STOCKPILE Picture taken November 10, 2015. REUTERS/Jason Miczek
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GF20000083177 Chesterfield County Sheriff's deputy Carolyn King removes rifles from a shipping container as she and other officers sort through thousands of guns found in the home and garage of Brent Nicholson in Pageland, South Carolina, November 10, 2015. Inside Brent Nicholson's house, guns were everywhere: rifles and shotguns piled in the living room, halls and bedrooms; handguns littering tables and countertops. Outside, when sheriff's investigators rolled up the door on the pre-fab metal garage, more arms spilled out at their feet. The question of how one man amassed such a stockpile of guns arises just as there is renewed American soul-searching over the widespread availability of firearms in the wake of a series of mass shootings. To match Insight USA-GUNS/STOCKPILE Picture taken November 10, 2015. REUTERS/Jason Miczek
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GF20000083176 Stacks of guns are seen in a shipping container belonging to Brent Nicholson in Pageland, South Carolina, November 10, 2015. Inside Brent Nicholson's house, guns were everywhere: rifles and shotguns piled in the living room, halls and bedrooms; handguns littering tables and countertops. Outside, when sheriff's investigators rolled up the door on the pre-fab metal garage, more arms spilled out at their feet. The question of how one man amassed such a stockpile of guns arises just as there is renewed American soul-searching over the widespread availability of firearms in the wake of a series of mass shootings. To match Insight USA-GUNS/STOCKPILE Picture taken November 10, 2015. REUTERS/Jason Miczek
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GF20000083175 Chesterfield Country Sheriff Jay L. Brooks inspects a rifle as officers sort through thousands of guns found in the home and garage of Brent Nicholson in Pageland, South Carolina, November 10, 2015. Inside Brent Nicholson's house, guns were everywhere: rifles and shotguns piled in the living room, halls and bedrooms; handguns littering tables and countertops. Outside, when sheriff's investigators rolled up the door on the pre-fab metal garage, more arms spilled out at their feet. The question of how one man amassed such a stockpile of guns arises just as there is renewed American soul-searching over the widespread availability of firearms in the wake of a series of mass shootings. To match Insight USA-GUNS/STOCKPILE Picture taken November 10, 2015. REUTERS/Jason Miczek
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GM1EA6S1JU501 People eat at a table lifted 50 meters (160 feet) above the ground on a hazy day in Pudong financial district of Shanghai June 28, 2014. The restaurant planned to serve 14 rounds on the table of 22 seats in the air over three days in Shanghai. REUTERS/Aly Song (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY FOOD)
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GM1EA6S1JP201 People eat at a table lifted 50 meters (160 feet) above the ground on a hazy day in Pudong financial district of Shanghai June 28, 2014. The restaurant planned to serve 14 rounds on the table of 22 seats in the air over three days in Shanghai. REUTERS/Aly Song (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY FOOD)
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GM1EA6S1JGR01 People eat at a table lifted 50 meters (160 feet) above the ground on a hazy day in Pudong financial district of Shanghai June 28, 2014. The restaurant planned to serve 14 rounds on the table of 22 seats in the air over three days in Shanghai. REUTERS/Aly Song (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY FOOD TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)
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GM1E9BD15TG01 The bare feet of a student are pictured below a table in a flooded classroom in Lopang Domba Elementary School in Serang, Indonesia's Banten province November 13, 2013. The school has faced annual floods due to heavy rains during the monsoon season for more than seven years, according to school principal Munawaroh on Wednesday. REUTERS/Beawiharta (INDONESIA - Tags: DISASTER EDUCATION ENVIRONMENT)
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GM1E9A115ND01 Table decorations are seen inside a room during a press preview at Wine Apartment in Tokyo September 30, 2013. For those who have trouble finding the space to store big wine collections, the new apartment block in Japan with an in-house cellar and a visiting sommelier could be the perfect place to live. The aptly named Wine Apartment, a 10-storey building in Tokyo's posh Shibuya district, features a temperature- and humidity-controlled room in the basement for 10,000 bottles. Each of the 18 units comes with a wine fridge for 26 bottles and a rack for glasses. Monthly rents for the apartments of 42 to 46 square metres (452 to 495 square feet) run from 239,000 yen to 258,000 yen ($2,400 to $2,600), about 30 percent above the market price in the area. Picture taken September 30, 2013. To match story JAPAN-WINE/APARTMENT REUTERS/Issei Kato (JAPAN - Tags: SOCIETY REAL ESTATE BUSINESS)
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GM1E9670DN501 Guests enjoy a "Dinner in the Sky" on a platform hanging near the Brussels' Grand Place at sunset in Brussels June 6, 2013. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 45 metres (148 feet). REUTERS/Francois Lenoir (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT FOOD SOCIETY TRAVEL TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)
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GM1E9670DEG01 Guests toast as they enjoy a "Dinner in the Sky" on a hanging platform in Brussels June 6, 2013. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 45 metres (148 feet). REUTERS/Francois Lenoir (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT FOOD SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E9670DDH02 Guests enjoy a "Dinner in the Sky" on a hanging platform in Brussels June 6, 2013. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 45 metres (148 feet). REUTERS/Francois Lenoir (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT FOOD SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E9670DBO01 Guests enjoy a "Dinner in the Sky" on a platform hanging near the Brussels Town Hall (L) June 6, 2013. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 45 metres (148 feet). REUTERS/Francois Lenoir (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT FOOD SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E9670DAO01 Guests enjoy a "Dinner in the Sky" on a hanging platform in Brussels June 6, 2013. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 45 metres (148 feet). REUTERS/Francois Lenoir (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT FOOD SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E9670D8401 Guests enjoy a "Dinner in the Sky" on a hanging platform in Brussels June 6, 2013. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 45 metres (148 feet). REUTERS/Francois Lenoir (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT FOOD SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E9670D5J01 Guests enjoy a "Dinner in the Sky" on a platform hanging near the Brussels' Grand Place at sunset in Brussels June 6, 2013. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 45 metres (148 feet). REUTERS/Francois Lenoir (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT FOOD SOCIETY TRAVEL TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)
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GM1E9670D2J01 Guests enjoy a "Dinner in the Sky" on a platform hanging near the Brussels Town Hall June 6, 2013. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 45 metres (148 feet). REUTERS/Francois Lenoir (BELGIUM - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT FOOD SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E8BF1DOH01 Fan Ling (R) plays soccer with fellow students at a school in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 14, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. Picture taken November 14, 2012. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DL701 Fan Ling uses his computer with his foot at a school dorm in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 14, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. Picture taken November 14, 2012. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DKO01 Fan Ling (R) and rides a bike with a friend at school in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 14, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. Picture taken November 14, 2012. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DKK01 Fan Ling plays badminton at school in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 14, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. Picture taken November 14, 2012. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DKD01 Fan Ling writes calligraphy with his feet at a school dorm in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 14, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. Picture taken November 14, 2012. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DK801 Fan Ling touches the screen of his mobile phone using his foot at a school dorm in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 14, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. Picture taken November 14, 2012. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DJU01 Fan Ling brushes his teeth with his foot at a school dorm in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 15, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DJQ01 Fan Ling holds up a towel using his feet at a school dorm in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 15, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DJK01 Fan Ling completes homework with his foot at school in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 15, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DJH01 Fan Ling (L) walks amidst flowers with a fellow student at school in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 15, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DJB01 Fan Ling plays table tennis with his feet at school in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 14, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. Picture taken November 14, 2012. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DJ701 Fan Ling uses his computer with his foot at a school dormitory in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 15, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DJ401 Fan Ling eats dinner with his feet at a school cafeteria in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 14, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said. Picture taken November 14, 2012. REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM1E8BF1DJ001 Fan Ling holds a pen with his foot as he studies at a school in Fuzhou, Fujian province November 15, 2012. Fan, 22, a sophomore at Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, lost his arms and an ear after an electric shock accident at age six. Supported by his family, he started daily feet exercises and gradually became familiar with activities like eating, writing, using the computer and mobile phone, and won prizes during high school for sports. This fall, Fan was on the reality show "China's Got Talent", which he auditioned for by playing table tennis with his feet, local media said.REUTERS/Sheng Li (CHINA - Tags: SOCIETY SPORT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
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GM2E86E0KQX01 Daredevil Nik Wallenda signs autographs and meets with the public as he is surrounded by the media at Table Rock Visitor's Center, adjacent to the brink of the falls in Niagara Falls, Ontario, June 13, 2012. Wallenda, 33, a seventh-generation member of the famed "Flying Wallendas" family of circus performers, is set to walk a 2-inch (5 cm) cable strung 1,800 feet (550 meters) across Niagara Falls gorge on June 15 - the first such tight rope feat between the United States and Canada in more than a century. REUTERS/Doug Benz (CANADA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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GM2E86E0KQT01 Daredevil Nik Wallenda (L) speaks to the media at the Table Rock Visitor's Center, adjacent to the brink of the falls in Niagara Falls, Ontario, June 13, 2012. Wallenda, 33, a seventh-generation member of the famed "Flying Wallendas" family of circus performers, is set to walk a 2-inch (5 cm) cable strung 1,800 feet (550 meters) across Niagara Falls gorge on June 15 - the first such tight rope feat between the United States and Canada in more than a century. REUTERS/Doug Benz (CANADA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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GM2E86E0KGE01 Daredevil Nik Wallenda greets workers at Table Rock, adjacent to the brink of the falls in Niagara Falls, in Ontario June 13, 2012. Wallenda, 33, a seventh-generation member of the famed "Flying Wallendas" family of circus performers, is set to walk a 2-inch (5 cm) cable strung 1,800 feet (550 meters) across Niagara Falls gorge on June 15 - the first such tight rope feat between the United States and Canada in more than a century. REUTERS/Doug Benz (CANADA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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GM2E86E0KGA01 Daredevil Nik Wallenda walks to the site of his wire rigging at Table Rock, adjacent to the brink of the falls in Niagara Falls, Ontario, June 13, 2012. Wallenda, 33, a seventh-generation member of the famed "Flying Wallendas" family of circus performers, is set to walk a 2-inch (5 cm) cable strung 1,800 feet (550 meters) across Niagara Falls gorge on June 15 - the first such tight rope feat between the United States and Canada in more than a century. REUTERS/Doug Benz (CANADA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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GM2E86E0KG501 Daredevil Nik Wallenda poses for a photograph at Table Rock, adjacent to the brink of the falls in Niagara Falls, Ontario, June 13, 2012. Wallenda, 33, a seventh-generation member of the famed "Flying Wallendas" family of circus performers, is set to walk a 2-inch (5 cm) cable strung 1,800 feet (550 meters) across Niagara Falls gorge on June 15 - the first such tight rope feat between the United States and Canada in more than a century. At rear is the high wire. REUTERS/Doug Benz (CANADA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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GM2E86E0K3R01 Daredevil Nik Wallenda takes a phone call during a public meet and greet at Table Rock Visitor Center, adjacent to the brink of the falls in Niagara Falls, Ontario, June 13, 2012. Wallenda, 33, a seventh-generation member of the famed "Flying Wallendas" family of circus performers, is set to walk a 2-inch (5 cm) cable strung 1,800 feet (550 meters) across Niagara Falls gorge on June 15 - the first such tight rope feat between the United States and Canada in more than a century. REUTERS/Doug Benz (CANADA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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GM1E8530IOC01 A woman walks past a pool table inside a restaurant flooded by the Rio Negro, one of the two main tributaries of the Amazon River, in Manaus May 2, 2012. As the water level of Rio Negro approaches its historic maximum level of 29.3 metres (96 feet) in 2009, Brazilian Geological Service estimates this year's flood to pass it by nearly one metre (3.28 feet) to break a new record. According to Brazil's Civil Defence, about 50,000 families have already been displaced by the flood. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly (BRAZIL - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY)
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GM1E78J1F6G01 A couple chat as they drink coffee at Juan Valdes cafe in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1EZ301 A piece of raw emerald is displayed at the Emerald Museum in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1EOA01 A tourist looks at a piece of raw emerald embedded in rock at the Emerald Museum in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1EHZ01 Women walk past sculptures by Colombian artist Fernando Botero at the Botero Museum in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1EDV01 A woman walks past a sculpture by Colombian artist Fernando Botero at the Botero Museum in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1E6V01 A man walks past a painting by Colombian artist Fernando Botero named "La Carta" at the Botero Museum in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1E1801 People drink coffee at a cafe in Bogota August 16, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 16, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1DP501 A poporo, a container used to store powdered lime, is displayed in the Gold Museum in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1DI501 A woman looks at a display containing gold artefacts at the Gold Museum in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: TRAVEL SOCIETY)
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GM1E78J1D0701 A view of the Monserrate church on a hill in Bogota August 18, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: TRAVEL SOCIETY)
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GM1E78J1COX01 A view of a street in La Candelaria colonial neighborhood in downtown Bogota August 18, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: TRAVEL SOCIETY)
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GM1E78J1CCK01 A view of Bogota city from its eastern mountains August 18, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY TRAVEL)
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GM1E78J1DAV01 A pre-Columbian gold mask is seen at the Gold Museum in Bogota August 17, 2011. Colombia's capital city lures tourists with its mild year-round weather, booming nightlife and its museums about gold, emeralds and the artist Fernando Botero. Once sleepy streets buzz with crowds at outdoor tables and modern art graces courtyard cafes. Wildlife from the tropics spills into the city, 8,612 feet (2,635-metres) high. The Bogota area harbors hundreds of bird species. Nearby valleys grow a dizzying array of fresh produce sent to local restaurants. Picture taken August 17, 2011. REUTERS/Fredy Builes (COLOMBIA - Tags: TRAVEL SOCIETY)
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GM1E7540OKS01 The world's longest cigar that stretched 268 feet 4 inches (81.8 metres), or most of the length of a football field, is seen in Havana May 3, 2011. Resting on tables, it sprawled through El Morro, an old Spanish fort overlooking Havana Bay, where Cuba is holding its annual International Tourism Fair. The cigar, once it is officially accepted by Guinness World Records in London, will eclipse the previous record cigar of 148 feet 9 inches (45.38 metres), both rolled by Jose Castelar Cairo, better known as "Cueto". REUTERS/Desmond Boylan (CUBA - Tags: SOCIETY IMAGES OF THE DAY)
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GM1E7540M9R01 People look at the world's longest cigar that stretches 268 feet 4 inches (81.8 metres), or most of the length of a football field, in Havana May 3, 2011. Resting on tables, it sprawled through El Morro, an old Spanish fort overlooking Havana Bay, where Cuba is holding its annual International Tourism Fair. The cigar, once it is officially accepted by Guinness World Records in London, will eclipse the previous record cigar of 148 feet 9 inches (45.38 metres), both rolled by Jose Castelar Cairo, better known as "Cueto". REUTERS/Desmond Boylan (CUBA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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GM1E7540M1001 The world's longest cigar that stretched 268 feet 4 inches (81.8 metres), or most of the length of a football field, is seen in Havana May 3, 2011. Resting on tables, it sprawled through El Morro, an old Spanish fort overlooking Havana Bay, where Cuba is holding its annual International Tourism Fair. The cigar, once it is officially accepted by Guinness World Records in London, will eclipse the previous record cigar of 148 feet 9 inches (45.38 metres), both rolled by Jose Castelar Cairo, better known as "Cueto". REUTERS/Desmond Boylan (CUBA - Tags: SOCIETY IMAGES OF THE DAY)
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GM1E69G1KF901 Belgian cooks look on at an event known as "Dinner in the Sky" as they are seated around tables that are lifted by a crane in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) tall structure and its nine spheres were built for the 1958 World Fair, in Brussels September 16, 2010. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 26 people suspended from a crane at a height of 50 metres. REUTERS/Yves Herman (BELGIUM - Tags: SOCIETY ODDLY FOOD)
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GM1E69G1K4G01 Belgian cooks toast at a event known as "Dinner in the Sky" as they are seated around tables that are lifted by a crane in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) tall structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 World Fair, in Brussels September 16, 2010. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 26 people suspended from a crane at a height of 50 metres. REUTERS/Yves Herman (BELGIUM - Tags: SOCIETY ODDLY FOOD)
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GM1E69G1JZP01 Belgian cooks toast at a event known as "Dinner in the Sky" as they are seated around tables that are lifted by a crane in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) tall structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 World Fair, in Brussels September 16, 2010. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 26 people suspended from a crane at a height of 50 metres. REUTERS/Yves Herman (BELGIUM - Tags: SOCIETY ODDLY FOOD)
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GM1E69G1JRN01 Belgian cooks toast at a event known as "Dinner in the Sky" as they are seated around tables that are lifted by a crane in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) tall structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 World Fair, in Brussels September 16, 2010. "Dinner in the Sky" accommodates 26 people suspended from a crane at a height of 50 metres. REUTERS/Yves Herman (BELGIUM - Tags: SOCIETY ODDLY FOOD)
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GM1E69G1JF601 Belgian cooks toast at a event known as "Dinner in the Sky" as they are seated around tables that are lifted by a crane in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) tall structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 World Fair, in Brussels September 16, 2010. "Dinner in the Sky" is hosted at a table that accommodates 26 people around tables suspended at a height of 50 metres by a crane. REUTERS/Yves Herman (BELGIUM - Tags: SOCIETY FOOD ODDLY)
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GM1E69G1J3L01 Belgian cooks toast at a event known as "Dinner in the Sky" as they are seated around tables that are lifted by a crane in front of the Atomium, a 102-metre (335 feet) tall structure and its nine spheres, built for the 1958 World Fair, in Brussels September 16, 2010. "Dinner in the Sky" is hosted at a table that accommodates 26 people around tables suspended at a height of 50 metres by a crane. REUTERS/Yves Herman (BELGIUM - Tags: SOCIETY FOOD)
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GM1E6611RKP01 The feet of a child with cerebral palsy are seen at the Palsigunung rehabilitation homestay in Jakarta June 1, 2010. Palsigunung homestay, founded in 1975 by Sophie Sarwono, can house about 30 patients. It treats children with cerebral palsy, a physical and mental disability, by providing them with sensory-motor therapy, and physical and speech trainings five days a week. Physical training is important as patients have limited body movements, and it could be fatal if they were to remain inactive.REUTERS/Beawiharta (INDONESIA - Tags: SOCIETY HEALTH)
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GM1E65Q1OZL01 A pair of shoes for bound feet sit on a table at Wah Aik Shoemaker shop in Malaysia's tourist town of Malacca, 200 km (124 miles) southeast of Kuala Lumpur May 22, 2010. Wah Aik Shoemaker is run by the Yeo brothers, who are the third generation of shoemakers in the family business that started in 1918 and who say that foot-binding was not practised by the substantial locally born Chinese population that started settling here in the 15th century. Picture taken May 22, 2010. To match Reuters Life! MALAYSIA-FEET/ REUTERS/Bazuki Muhammad (MALAYSIA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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GM1E65Q1OZC01 A nearly completed shoe for bound feet sits on a table at the Wah Aik Shoemaker shop in Malaysia's tourist town of Malacca, 200 km (124 miles) southeast of Kuala Lumpur May 22, 2010. Wah Aik Shoemaker is run by the Yeo brothers, who are the third generation of shoemakers in the family business that started in 1918 and who say that foot-binding was not practised by the substantial locally born Chinese population that started settling here in the 15th century. Picture taken May 22, 2010. To match Reuters Life! MALAYSIA-FEET/ REUTERS/Bazuki Muhammad (MALAYSIA - Tags: SOCIETY)
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BM2E6570XM401 Soldiers of the Swiss Army return from a march at the barracks in the town of Aarau west of Zurich May 7, 2010. Some 57 soldiers took part in a 90-minute march to test a new model of socks for the Swiss armed forces on Thursday. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann (SWITZERLAND - Tags: MILITARY SCI TECH)
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BM2E6570XIV01 A soldier lies on a table at the barracks of the Swiss Army before his feet are measured by a physiologist in the town of Aarau west of Zurich May 7, 2010. Some 57 soldiers took part in a 90-minute march to test a new model of socks for the Swiss armed forces on Friday. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann (SWITZERLAND)
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GM1E62I1OXD01 Workers prepare to change drilling pipes on the rotary table of a natural gas drilling rig near Towanda, Pennsylvania, February 3, 2010. Energy companies drilling for natural gas in Pennsylvania?s Marcellus Shale would have to pay a wellhead tax under a proposal unveiled on Tuesday by Gov. Ed Rendell. Rendell wants to charge drillers 5 percent of the value of gas at the wellhead plus 4.7 cents per 1,000 cubic feet of gas taken from the ground, starting July 1. The plan would raise $160.7 million in the first year and $1.8 billion over five years. Photo taken February 3. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer (UNITED STATES - Tags: ENERGY BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT)
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GM1E62I1OX301 Workers change drilling pipes on the rotary table of a natural gas drilling rig near Towanda, Pennsylvania, February 3, 2010. Energy companies drilling for natural gas in Pennsylvania?s Marcellus Shale would have to pay a wellhead tax under a proposal unveiled on Tuesday by Gov. Ed Rendell. Rendell wants to charge drillers 5 percent of the value of gas at the wellhead plus 4.7 cents per 1,000 cubic feet of gas taken from the ground, starting July 1. The plan would raise $160.7 million in the first year and $1.8 billion over five years. Photo taken February 3. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer (UNITED STATES)
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GM1E62I1OWQ01 Workers add drilling pipes on the rotary table of a natural gas drilling rig near Towanda, Pennsylvania, February 3, 2010. Energy companies drilling for natural gas in Pennsylvania?s Marcellus Shale would have to pay a wellhead tax under a proposal unveiled on Tuesday by Gov. Ed Rendell. Rendell wants to charge drillers 5 percent of the value of gas at the wellhead plus 4.7 cents per 1,000 cubic feet of gas taken from the ground, starting July 1. The plan would raise $160.7 million in the first year and $1.8 billion over five years. Photo taken February 3. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer (UNITED STATES - Tags: ENERGY BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT)
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GM1E62I1OWF01 A worker waits for the signal to change a drilling pipe on the rotary table of a natural gas drilling rig near Towanda, Pennsylvania, February 3, 2010. Energy companies drilling for natural gas in Pennsylvania?s Marcellus Shale would have to pay a wellhead tax under a proposal unveiled on Tuesday by Gov. Ed Rendell. Rendell wants to charge drillers 5 percent of the value of gas at the wellhead plus 4.7 cents per 1,000 cubic feet of gas taken from the ground, starting July 1. The plan would raise $160.7 million in the first year and $1.8 billion over five years. Photo taken February 3. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer (UNITED STATES - Tags: ENERGY BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT)
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GM1E6291UCU01 Workers add drilling pipes on the rotary table of a natural gas drilling rig near Towanda, Pennsylvania, February 3, 2010. Energy companies drilling for natural gas in Pennsylvania?s Marcellus Shale would have to pay a wellhead tax under a proposal unveiled on Tuesday by Gov. Ed Rendell. Rendell wants to charge drillers 5 percent of the value of gas at the wellhead plus 4.7 cents per 1,000 cubic feet of gas taken from the ground, starting July 1. The plan would raise $160.7 million in the first year and $1.8 billion over five years. Photo taken February 3. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer (UNIED STATES - Tags: ENERGY)
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GM1E61L0KDZ01 Belgian doctor Patrick van de Voorde from Gent speaks to a young Haitian girl who lost both feet before treating her wounds on a table at a makeshift hospital run by B-FAST (Belgian First Aid and Support Team) in Port-au-Prince January 20, 2010. A new earthquake shook the devastated Haitian capital on Wednesday morning, creating panic among survivors of last week's devastating quake camped out in the streets but apparently causing no new destruction. The table had been used half an hour before for the birth of a baby boy. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay (HAITI - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT HEALTH)
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GM1E5C31QTC01 Prosthetic feet and limbs rest on a manufacturing table at the Aawas International personalised prosthetic limb clinic and manufacturer in Nagoda, 40km (25 miles) south of Colombo, December 3, 2009. REUTERS/Andrew Caballero-Reynolds (SRI LANKA HEALTH SOCIETY)
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GM1E4C31DP401 Midget performers Zhou Tai'an (center L) and Wen Congjin (center R) play mahjong with their neighbours after their performance in Dalian, Liaoning province December 2, 2008. A group of 4 midgets with an average height of 1.2 meters (3.9 feet) performs around the province daily, with each of them earning 4,000 yuan ($581) a month, local media reported. Picture taken December 2, 2008. REUTERS/Stringer (CHINA). CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA.
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GM1DWKNCYWAA Kitchen staff cut a 560 metre (1,837 feet) long lasagna on tables that surround a hotel in Singapore October 21, 2007. The record-breaking attempt is also a charity event with net proceeds benefitting the Spastic Children's Association of Singapore. REUTERS/Tim Chong (SINGAPORE)
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GM1DWKNCVRAA An official (C) from the Singapore's Book of Records measures a 560 metre (1,837 feet) long lasagna on tables that surround a hotel in Singapore October 21, 2007. The record-breaking attempt is also a charity event with net proceeds benefitting the Spastic Children's Association of Singapore. REUTERS/Tim Chong (SINGAPORE)
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GM1DWKNCSPAA A kitchen staff lays out part of a 560 metre (1,837 feet) long lasagna on tables that surround a hotel in Singapore October 21, 2007. The record breaking attempt is also a charity event with net proceeds benefiting the Spastic Children's Association of Singapore. REUTERS/Tim Chong (SINGAPORE)
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GM1DWKNCNKAA A kitchen staff lays out part of a 560 metre (1,837 feet) long lasagna on tables that surround a hotel in Singapore October 21, 2007. The record breaking attempt is also a charity event with net proceeds benefiting the Spastic Children's Association of Singapore. REUTERS/Tim Chong (SINGAPORE)
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GM1DUSJPPXAA Tourists have lunch near Morocco's most famous waterfall, Cascades D'Ouzoud, near Marrakesh, March 1, 2007. The Cascades D'Ouzoud are 100 metres (328 feet) high and are visited by thousands of tourists every year. REUTERS/Rafael Marchante (MOROCCO)
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GM1DUROJOGAA Austria's Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer's feet are seen as he is reflected in a glass table during a meeting with Hungary's Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany during the Hungarian Socialist Party congress in Budapest February 25, 2007. Hungary's Socialists elected Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany as party president on Satur day, confirming their support for his policies despite budget cuts which triggered anti-government riots last year. REUTERS/Laszlo Balogh (HUNGARY)
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GM1DTSPERCAA Lebanese pop singer Dana performs during Ramadan night at Sheraton hotel in Beirut October 14, 2006. Dozens of Lebanese sit at tables piled with Mediterranean appetisers, putting on sleek golden water pipes and tapping their feet to an Arab pop singer. This typical Ramadan night scene at crowded seaside cafes and restaurants in central Beirut suggests that at least some Lebanese are determined to enjoy themselves despite the recent ordeal of Israel's 34-day war with Hezbollah guerrillas. Picture taken October 14, 2006. TO MATCH FEATURE LEBANON RAMADAN REUTERS/Khalil Hassan (LEBANON)
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