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Giants walk Berlin's streets for Unity Day celebrations


Big-city Berliners will be turned into Lilliputians as a French theatre company marches its massive marionettes through the streets as part of German Unity Day celebrations this weekend.

After months of planning, the Royal de Luxe group is ready to begin their grand-scale show that will take place across the German capital starting on Friday.

Click here to see the routes the giants will take from October 2 - 4.

The marionettes are suspended on an apparatus that allows puppeteers to move limbs, mimic facial expressions and even lick a gigantic ice cream.

Based in France, the puppets have already strolled through the streets of Iceland, Cameroon and Chile. In those locations, no details were given of events ahead of time. But for the celebration for the anniversary of German reunification, Royal de Luxe is giving those in Berlin the chance to be at the right place at the right time.



Click here for a photo gallery of the giants.

According to the Berlin daily Der Tagesspiegel, the marionettes will be taking their size 237 shoes through German capital’s most iconic places. The festival kicks off in front of Berlin’s red-brick city hall on Friday with an eight-metre marionette moving from east to west via the Gendarmenmarkt and Bebelplatz.

On Saturday, a giant dressed in a full diver’s suit will emerge from the Humboldthafen in front of Berlin’s main train station. A smaller second puppet will run through the Brandenburg Gate to greet him. The smaller one can just barely fit through the 26-metre high gate.

Others routes will take them throughout the city, while one massive puppet will catch a good night’s sleep on the Museum Island on October 3.

Finally, the marionettes will hold a parade on October 4 down the Straße des 17. Juni to board a ship near the Moltebrücke to wave good-bye to the city.

The event is being hailed as the biggest spectacle in Berlin since the Reichstag installation by artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude wrapped the then-unused parliament building in 1995.

External link: The official Giants website »

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Acts of generosity inspire others in Dixie Hollins GED class

By Emily Nipps, Times Staff Writer


KENNETH CITY — Peg Roberts had just returned from summer vacation when one of her GED graduates walked into her classroom.

Derek Wilson, a 37-year-old late bloomer who recently passed the GED test and immediately enrolled at St. Petersburg College, wanted to thank her.

He handed her $70.

Roberts started to refuse. Teachers can't take money from students.

No, Wilson told Roberts. It's a donation for a student who can't afford the $70 GED fee.

Roberts wanted to cry.

"It blew me away," said the Dixie Hollins Adult Education Center teacher. "I've been here for 11 years and no one has ever done anything like that."

She sat down and wrote a letter to theSt. Petersburg Times: "Because of Derek's selfless generosity another student can take his/her GED test and move forward with life."

But she left out an important part of the story.

• • •

Wilson was confused. A reporter wanted to interview him for what?

"Don't get me wrong," he said. "I think it's a wonderful thing that my $70 is going to help someone. But it's not like I pulled a drowning kid from a pool."

Wilson understands the significance of finally getting a diploma. As an "120-pound Irish kid" attending high school in a rough part of south Baltimore, Wilson found himself getting picked on constantly. Fights were a regular part of his day. By 16, he'd had enough, and his teachers had had enough of him. He was kicked out his junior year.

"I had a full-time job less than 24 hours after leaving," Wilson said. "And I never looked back, never even thought about it."

He worked various handyman jobs, mainly specializing in heating and air-conditioning. In the last year, he started getting ideas about going to college and changing careers. He thought it would be good for him and his girlfriend to start fresh. Florida seemed like a good place for an air-conditioning specialist.

But Wilson found jobs were scarce in St. Petersburg. So he poured himself into school. He tried taking the General Educational Development test years ago but failed the math portion. He signed up for Roberts' class in April and took the test in May.

His diploma arrived in the mail over the summer and he enrolled at St. Petersburg College, aiming for a degree in emergency management. Maybe he could work for FEMA or homeland security.

When fall classes began, Wilson took a copy of his diploma to Roberts so she could display it on her wall with the others. He also took $70 for her, an act of kindness he had no idea would set off a series of thank-you letters from the school, tears, calls from a local newspaper.

"To be honest, this just seemed like good manners," Wilson said. "I can't believe I'm the first student to ever do this."

And besides, Wilson said, he got the idea from watching Roberts.

"She's your story," Wilson told a reporter. "Not me."

• • •

Roberts loves her job. In her students, most people see high school dropouts. She sees bright people who work hard to pay bills but never quite had the support they needed as kids.

So it breaks her heart when they come to her class, ask for help, study, are ready for the test, and then … their car breaks down. Or an electric bill is overdue. Or some other expense forces them to put off the $70 test.

For a month, Wilson watched Roberts pleading with students not to delay taking the test. Some qualify for financial aid, but many do not. Wilson said he often heard Roberts talking quietly to a student, asking: "Maybe if you can get your mom or uncle to lend you $50?" or "Maybe your mom can talk to your dad?"

But often Roberts would reach into her wallet. Wilson said he saw her give at least seven students money.

"All GED teachers do it," said Kathy Paeplow, a Dixie Hollins adult center administrator. "It's not uncommon for a student to be just $10 or $12 short, and it's a big reason students put it off and put it off."

It seems like a small price to help someone's future along. But they've never had a former student do it.

• • •

Crystal Rioux grew up with her mom and sister, who moved around a lot because of "money and personal issues," she said. She went to 12 elementary schools and six middle schools, and she thinks that may be why she was never very good at math and spelling.

When she was 16, she got her first job at Auntie Anne's Pretzels at Tyrone Square Mall. She began losing interest in school and began working there full time. Her mother and mother's boyfriend were struggling to pay the bills so she moved in with a family friend.

She dropped out of school in the middle of her senior year. "I just lost my drive," she said. She still works at Auntie Anne's Pretzels at 19 going on 20.

She doesn't love her job, she said. She doesn't like the mall and she doesn't like pretzels.

She'd really like to be a pastry chef, but first needs a high school diploma. She has been attending Roberts' GED classes for about a month and is ready to take the test. But between her Jeep payment and other bills, coming up with the testing fee will be tough.

So she's going to get Wilson's $70 scholarship, Roberts said. Rioux said she is extremely grateful and plans to take the test this month.

"This young woman is going to make something of herself," Roberts said. But there's something else she hopes Rioux will do.

"I have no doubt," Roberts said, "that she'll come back and pay it forward."

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92-year-old sky diver still finding adventure

By KATHY McCORMACK (AP)


CONCORD, N.H. — Taking a 13,000-foot plunge from an airplane will earn most jumpers a certificate. Instructor Paul Peckham Jr. knew that wouldn't be enough for 92-year-old Jane Bockstruck.

Peckham, a former Air Force combat controller, cut the parachutist wings he had sewn 30 years ago on his own helmet bag and gave them to Bockstruck — who celebrated her birthday this month with a flawless, 120-mph free fall in front of her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

"These silver wings represent courage, and you certainly displayed that today," Peckham told her after the two landed safely Sept. 19 in Orange, Mass., after a tandem dive.

For Bockstruck, it was just another in a string of adventures in her full life. She has traveled around the world, been married seven times and loves to boast that she kidded with John Wayne while working as a seamstress on the set of "True Grit."

Her family is used to her independent spirit but thought she was nuts when she suggested sky diving.

"I don't know what gave me the idea, but I thought, 'I guess I'll jump out of a plane.' Then I stuck with the story and did it," said Bockstruck, who lives in the western New Hampshire town of Swanzey. "But it's scary. It's scary mostly when you get up there getting ready to go out the door."

Peckham said he has seen people much younger balk at the prospect of sky diving.

"She knew exactly what she was doing," he said. "I'm sure she was nervous and anxious and possibly a little afraid. She went ahead and did it. I call that courage."

Their outing lasted roughly 10 minutes. "She was asking, 'Where's the landing area?' I pointed down to the airport," Peckham said. "I pointed out the Quabbin Reservoir and Mount Monandnock and the Berkshire Mountains. She acknowledged they were there; she could see them."

She started waving to her family between 4,000 and 5,000 feet.

"It was nice," Bockstruck said in an interview. "It was quite windy and cold, but we had a lot of clothes on. Of course, if you've got somebody with you, it's a little warmer. You know, two of us."

Bockstruck's son, James Devine II, thinks his mother got her idea after seeing former President George H.W. Bush sky dive in June for his 85th birthday — the same way he celebrated his 75th and 80th birthdays.

"She'll pooh-pooh it, but she did mention, 'Gee, he can do it; I guess I can do it.'

And in my mind, that's when it happened, because I certainly had never heard of it before," Devine said.

Bockstruck quipped about Bush: "I'm older than he is."

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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