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The Odd Truth is a collection of strange but factual news stories from around the
stanley cup world compiled by CBSNews s Brian Bernbaum. A new collection of stories is published each weekday. On weekends,
kubki stanley you can read a week s worth of The Odd Truth.Note: Magic Wands Don t WorkBETHLEHEM, Pa. mdash; A woman who says she bought magic wands from a self-described psychic to erase negative thoughts says $5,400 of her money was all that disappeared.Joann Zansky, 57, said she paid a woman who claims to be a psychic $1,800 for each of three wands. She was a terrific actress, Zansky said. I believed her. Zansky said she contacted Bethlehem police Friday after she became suspicious about the effectiveness of the wands. We re investigating, police Lt. Robert Righi said Monday. Possibly it is some violation of consumer fraud. No charges have been filed against the woman named in the complaint. A person who answered the phone at the woman s business said she was unavailable.Woman Sues After Getting Leg In Mail HOUSTON mdash; A woman who was horrified to receive her dead father s leg bones in the mail has sued the Texas DNA-testing lab she says sent the package just before Christ
stanley cup mas.In a federal lawsuit filed Monday in a Galveston court, LaMara Lane of North Pole, Alaska, seeks $1 million in damages from Houston s Identigene Inc.Lane said she thought the package was a LobsterGram, a popular food gift in the Arctic. Instead, she found her father s leg bones and samples of his Lbnh Fall colors 2013
What does 400 tons of pure glass look like At the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art this month, you can find out鈥攖hanks to a new maze designed and built by the artist Robert Morris using 968,902 pounds of one-inch-thick glass. Last week, the Kansas City museum completed work on Morris ; Glass Labyrinth, which took two months to build thanks to its fragile, weighty design. From above, the maze is shaped like a triangle, terminating in an arrow at the center. But from afar, it looks like an optical phenomenon鈥攊f not not for the steel plate that runs along the upper edge of the seven-foot-tall glass plates, it would seem downright ghostly. Here what the 83-year-old sculptor had to say about the piece in
stanley tumbler the Kansas City Star: Getting to the use of glass in constructing labyrinths did not come all at once. After making labyrinths of wood, marble and granite, I wanted to open them up and used stainless steel fencing for one built in Korea. Glass see
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stanley sverige step. If you ;re nearby Kansas City this summer, be sure to check it out. If not, Dan Graham Metropolitan Museum of Art rooftop installation should do the trick. [Nelson-Atkins; MyModernMet] Images: John Lamberton/courtesy of Nelson-Atkins. Labyrinth