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Dutch mystic Dr
Bart Hughes declared
in 1962 that having a hole drilled through through the cranium
enabled people to reach a higher state of consciousness. The operation
was known as trepanning. Dr Hughes was committed to a mental hospital
but visited the UK in 1966 to spread his ideas. He was extradited
from the country by the Home Office and banned as an undesirable
alien.
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In
Burma, Padaung tribeswomen
amour their necks in
brass coils which weigh about nine kilograms, signaling elegance,
wealth and position. Loops of a brass rod a centimeter in diameter
are worked around a girl's neck at about five years of age by a
medicine man. Additional loops are added periodically. After years
of being straitjacketed in brass, the neck muscles atrophy. Constrained
from drinking in the usual head-back position, a ring-wearer leans
forward to sip through a straw. And the voices of wearers sound
as if they were speaking up the shaft of a well. |
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The
US Customs Service
regularly confiscates planes used by drug dealers and sells them
at auction for prices way below their market value. The biggest
customers for these aviation bargains are drug smugglers.
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In March
1962 Bill Gales died
in Broadmoor Prison aged 87. He had been incarcerated there in 1886
at the age of 11. A Broadmoor spokesman said, "He got on well with
everyone. He was never any trouble and knew the daily routine so
well that he often corrected new nurses if they did not keep strictly
to the timetable". He spent his first five years in the women's
wards as a child and then was allowed to enter the men's wards to
live with murderers and rapists. Bill's crime: he had set fire to
a haystack. |
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Montpelier,
Vermont plays
host every year to the American Rotten Sneakers Contest. |
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Drinking
a toast at
a formal occasion derives from early Greece where the host at a
gathering would sip his drink first to prove that it was not poisoned.
The Romans adopted the custom adding toasted bread to their wine
to reduce its acidity. |
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The
International astronomical union recently
named four asteroids in outer space John, Paul, George and Ringo.
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Screaming
Match A Polish
woman out-screamed 300 rivals from four countries to defend her
title as champion screamer. The screaming contest, which took place
in the northern Polish town of Goldap, pitted about 300 contestants
from Poland, the United States, Austria, and the Czech Republic.
Organizers of the screamfest say the event is "the only such contest
outside of Japan." Dagmara Stanek, from the Baltic resort of Sopot,
won the women’s division for the second year in a row with a scream
measuring 126.1 dB, about as loud as a jackhammer. The best male
screamer, Pawel Dabrowski, also defended his title. But Dabrowski,
with only a 125.3 dB scream, could not out-scream the female winner.
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