The Signal

NEWS OF THE WEIRD

- COPYRIGHT 2018 ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATIO­N

Something to sing about

The Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts in Switzerlan­d has a new course of study for scholars to pursue: a bachelor's or master's in yodeling. Beginning in the 201819 academic year, students will be able to major in the traditiona­l form of singing, which was used by Swiss herdsmen to communicat­e with each other in the mountains. The BBC reported that prize-winning yodeler Nadja Rass will lead the courses, which will also include musical theory and history. "We have long dreamed of offering yodeling at the university," gushed Michael Kaufmann, head of the school's music department.

Names in the news

Police in Logansport, Indiana, finally caught up with the thief who had been targeting churches in the area since Jan. 16: Christian J. Alter, 22, of Kewanna, was charged with breaking into five houses of worship and stealing cash, according to the Logansport Pharos-Tribune. Alter was apprehende­d Jan. 23 just moments before the fifth burglary, at Rehoboth Christian Church, was discovered by police. He was being held in the Cass County Jail.

The continuing crisis

Birds nesting near natural gas compressor­s have been found to suffer symptoms similar to PTSD in humans, according to researcher­s at the Florida Museum of Natural History, and noise pollution has been named the culprit. The Washington Post reported the team studied birds in the Rattlesnak­e Canyon Habitat Management Area in New Mexico, which is uninhabite­d by humans but does contain natural gas wells and compressio­n stations that constantly emit a low-frequency hum. The steady noise was linked to abnormal levels of stress hormones, and the usually hardy western bluebirds in the area were found to be smaller and displayed bedraggled feathers. "The body is just starting to break down," explained stress physiologi­st Christophe­r Lowry.

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