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October 18, 2006
Topics models, pictures, girls, newspaper, blonde, plus, oil, weather, model, clothes, job, paper, space, girl, picture and face
A local newspaper in Romania reported that several models are demanding that a local tabloid moves their pictures from page 5 to page 3. The models that work for tabloid Libertatea, also want their pictures to be given more space, 7 Plus reports.
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September 28, 2006
Topics hair, reuters, world, woman, share, oil, spread, skin, pop, real, friends, girls, feet, people and book
A woman with fingernails that are 24 feet 7 inches long has won a spot in the latest edition of Guinness World Records. Lee Redmond, 65, said she soaks her nails in olive oil to take care of them. She told Reuters the effort is worth it. The Utah native will share a center spread with the people who have the world's stretchiest skin, narrowest waist and longest ear hair. Also featured is a woman who can pop her eyeballs 0. 43 inches out of their sockets.
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September 28, 2006
The 2007 Guinness Book of World Records, which comes out Thursday, features two people who have broke the mold when it comes to personal grooming - one with fingernails that are 24 feet and 7 inches long, and another whose hair sticks up 24 inches above her head. Sixty-five-year-old Lee Redmond, from Utah, says keeping up her fingernails takes a lot of care.
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September 20, 2006
In a shocking incident in the Indian state of Rajasthan, the leaders of a village ordered 150 men to dip their hands into boiling oil to prove their innocence after food was stolen from a local school. The Sunday Express reports that the school's principal informed police in late August regarding some rice and wheat being stolen but police did not take any action.
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September 18, 2006
After police failed to respond to a school principal's report of stolen food, the leaders of a village in the Indian state of Rajasthan decided it was up to them to make sure the criminal was brought to justice. To determine who was guilty of stealing the school's rice and wheat, the village leaders ordered 150 men to dip their hands into a cauldron of boiling oil. The council, or panchayat, of Ranpur village, 210 miles south of state capital Jaipur, worked for 10 days to find the thieves. Unable to identify any culprits, it issued what New Delhi's Sunday Express called the "medieval diktat. "
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