Faith
April 3rd, 2008He leapt onto the large reptile’s back, gouging at its eyes with his fingers trying to free his wife.
BBC News
Man Wrestles Croc (…)
He leapt onto the large reptile’s back, gouging at its eyes with his fingers trying to free his wife.
BBC News
Man Wrestles Croc (…)
We’re inundated with requests to ban all sorts of things from our trains - personal music players, mobile phones, food and drink and even children are the most common suggestions. And I’m sorry, but we have to say no to all of them for the same reasons.
Nicholas Drury
TfL Central Customer Services
Hundreds of listeners have contacted BBC Radio 4 after newsreader Charlotte Green dissolved into giggles while reading a bulletin on Today.
Green’s hysterical outburst started after a studio member remarked that the 1860 recording of a woman singing the French song Clair de Lune sounded like a “bee buzzing in a bottle”.
Holga-mania is sweeping the internet as fans use blogs and photo-sharing sites such as Flickr to extol the virtues of their deficient cameras (…)
It began with three girls who were stricken with bouts of uncontrolled laughter for hours on end. Eventually nearly half the 159 school boarders were affected, laughing for up to 16 days at a time. The school was closed and the children sent home but this resulted in further spread of the condition throughout communities and to other schools. Attempts to reopen the school were disastrous. In the two-year period that the gelastic epidemic lasted, 14 boarding schools and entire villages and towns were affected round the eastern shore of Lake Victoria.
When blessed silence returns, I can listen to the butterflies that flutter inside my head. To hear them, one must be calm and pay close attention, for their wing beats are barely audible. Loud breathing is enough to drown them out. This is astonishing: my hearing does not improve, yet I hear them better and better.
In San Pedro Cutud, a hamlet that has become well known for its crucifixions, there was a festive atmosphere. Hawkers sold beer, ice cream and souvenir whips to those watching the bloody spectacle.
Living in England is like living in a cabbage.