
|
August 7, 2006
Topics bar, china, restaurants, restaurant, emotions, stress, pain, owned, sun, dress, job, men and people
A bar in eastern China is allowing its customers to release their anger, frustration or pent up emotions by hitting its staff. The China Daily says the "Rising Sun Anger Release Bar" located in Nanjing, eastern China allows customers to smash glass and even hit the restaurant's specially trained workers.
|
August 1, 2006
Topics elephant, water, magic, houses, medicine, pain, doctors, house, man, buffalo, hospitals, wives, elephants, sleep, happy, blood, female, health and couple
In rural Cambodia where doctors and hospitals are scarce, poor villagers are turning to a magic elephant which is believed to cure illnesses ranging from typhoid to high blood pressure. A few times a month, Yey Proheu, a 70-year-old female elephant goes around to villages to offer relief to the sick with mahout, Pang Hy, and his assistants.
|
|
|
July 26, 2006
A man who survived after being hit by lightening said he will save the shirt he was wearing that day for it was "lucky" for him. Although he is suffering from headaches and chest pain, he said he was glad to be a survivor. Jason Ward was working in a New Rochelle masonry yard on Friday. He had one hand touching a truck and the other holding a pole when the lightning hit, throwing him seven feet away.
|
|
June 30, 2006
Topics beach, college, woman, navy, vacation, fashion, pain, shoes, summer, dress, foot, bad, schools, doctors, book, young, office, reuters and women
U. S. style gurus are warning that flip-flops, worn to work by more and more women, might damage women's careers. Thousands of young woman look at the casual footwear as must-have fashion accessories for the summer. An online survey held by Gap and Old Navy showed that college high schools students rated flip-flops as the number one on the list of items to wear to work.
|
|
June 29, 2006
A Pakistani prisoner woke up last weekend to find a glass light bulb in his anus. Fateh Mohammad, said he could not explain how the bulb got in there. He says, "When I woke up I felt a pain in my lower abdomen, but later in hospital, they told me this. "
|
|  |
|