Police spontoons

I was checking up on the appearance of electronic anklets and came across this nice Chinese site.

bq. China national Jiangsu Province Jingjiang City Anhua Police Equipment Factory is specializing in producing police equipment. It’s main products of more than 30 varieties include handcuffs,fetters, plastic PE spontoons,spontoons, extension spontoons, electric spontoons, electric torches, traffic batons, rainproof, reflector coats, body armor,bayonet-proof coats, crash helmets,police belts, stop sign,police rope, portable road-blocks, peltate plates, test device for alcoholicity, tear-gas device, net-ejection device, hand metal locator, police rope and police whistle.

The test for alcoholicity seems worth preserving. Spontoons made it into Wikipedia too.

bq. A Spontoon is type or European lance that came into being after the pike-man craze, coming into play in the middle of the 17th century. Also called the European half pike, this very much resembled a pike that had a much shorter staff; usually no more than 7 feet long. The spontoon is remembered for being more of a signaling weapon than a polearm of war.

Misguided ideas about the law / Rechtsirrtümer

Why Germans who book loungers with their towels are not in the right.

I must have forgotten to recommend Ralf Höcker’s Lexikon der Rechtsirrtümer, an interesting paperback for those who want to read some legal German. Interesting and not trivializing or joky.

Now the Neues Lexikon der Rechtsirrtümer has appeared.

The Guardian has an article on this:

bq. A new German book of popular legal errors seeks to end years of Anglo-German holiday bickering over the rights and wrongs of bagging the best sun loungers with the strategic deployment of towels.
Furious British tourists have gained an unlikely ally in the form of German lawyer Ralf Höcker, who told the Guardian that his research into Spanish and German law had revealed that leaving towels on loungers was not legally binding.

bq. “A British tourist would be quite within their legal rights to ignore the reservation implied by the towels if there is nobody there,” said Cologne-based Mr Höcker, 34.

(Via eric haber’s blog)

Law firm gets 24-hour drinks licence / Kanzlei oder Kneipe?

Clifford Chance has succeeded in getting a 24-hour alcohol licence for its Canary Wharf Building, according to the Independent Online.

bq. A Clifford Chance spokes-woman said the firm had applied for the licence so it could serve drinks to clients at any time of day. “Often our lawyers will be working through the night on transactions with clients and will need refreshment,” she said. “And then there will be celebrations when a deal is concluded in the small hours.”

I’m a bit ignorant on the law – I would have assumed it was OK to keep a few cases of champagne on hand – but I suppose they’re selling it.

Papal hill / Papsthügel

In my excitement about host wafers I overlooked the information that a papal hill is being created for the Weltjugendtag in Cologne.

Papsthügel / papal hill photos. More here:

bq. Auf dem Papsthügel wird der Altar errichtet, der Himmel muß noch hochgezogen und an den Stützpfeilern befestigt werden. Danach wird die Beleuchtung installiert, die den Himmel in Form einer Wolkenmuschel in bläulich-weißem Licht erstrahlen lässt.

There will be an altar under a huge canopy, and lighting that makes the canopy look like a blue sky with clouds. It should finish up a bit like the real stable at Bethlehem in The Life of Brian. Hundreds of people are visiting it hourly even now.

(Via KerLeone, originally via Malorama)

Electronic anklet / Elektronische Fußfessel

(Image removed re malware, 2017!)

This is a curious image for electronic tagging / monitoring. Surely the purpose of ringing a pigeon is different from the purpose of ringing Martha Stewart?

It appears that Ms Stewart, who is poised to relaunch her career with two television shows, has been cheating a little on the rules of her confinement. The result of this: the home confinement stage of her original sentence will no longer end on 8 August and has instead been extended by three weeks.

(The Independent)

Interview with Henry Pavlovich on chartered linguists

Céline has posted an interview with Henry Pavlovich from the latest edition of The Linguist. He mentions the criteria being discussed.

As this is an achievement and mark of approbation for the profession of linguists as a whole, membership of any ONE approved professional body in the language field (eg IoL, ITI, AIIC) will be sufficient.

This still begs the question of why a charter should be granted to the profession of linguist, which I take to mean language teacher, translator or interpreter (in the USA it would be taken to mean a specialist in linguistics too).

Those who think it would be good to be a chartered translator still think it odd that the IoL should have the charter, since the ITI came into existence, apparently, because the IoL thought the translators’ group in the IoL was getting a bit above itself.