Tags Stuff

British University Offering Masters Degree In Robin Hood Studies

Nottingham University is offering a masters degree in Robin Hood studies to provide students an "exciting opportunity on the origins and development of England's most enduring legendary figure."

According to a BBC report, the course will be available to students in October of next year. The course will span a time period of one year, and students will work with 15th century manuscripts looking at the outlaw's place in the English society.

Indonesian Police Protect Mystical Tree

Indonesian police have cordoned off a banyan tree after a Muslim youth group attacked the tree to challenge its alleged mystical powers.

Reuters quotes Susi Marsitawati, of Jakarta's park agency, as saying that, "The city government tried hard not to cut the tree when we built a bus lane. It is more than 100 years old and it is important for the environment."

Frat Boy Falls Three Stories After A Night Of Drinking - And Lives

A college student has survived a fall from a third story window, after he was sleepwalking at his fraternity house at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

The student broke eight ribs, bruised his lung, shattered a kidney, and injured his spleen in the fall.

So-Called "Electric Man" Electrocuted In Vietnam

Hanoi, Vietnam (AHN)-In an ironic twist of fate, officials say a Vietnamese man who once appeared on national television to demonstrate his ability to resist electric shocks has been electrocuted while repairing a generator.

Nguyen Van Hung, who was in his early 40s, was killed in Tay Ninh province near the Cambodian border while repairing the generator without first cutting the power supply, with a local official telling Reuters, "When alive, he used to demonstrate at our office how he would insert two fingers into the electrical plughole without problems."

"Flower Bandit" Leaves "Thank You" Note

A couple from a historic neighborhood near downtown Des Moines is trying to be positive about the theft of flowers from his 1880s-era home. The reason - a note left by a courteous thief thanking the owner of the flowers.

Jason Jasnos told the to Des Moines Register that he found the note in his garden Sunday, a day after he caught two women clutching a bunch of posies picked from his garden.