Robbers steal 250 boxes of chewing gum in S. Russia

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Monday, December 28, 2009 | | 0 comments »

Three thieves have stolen 250 boxes of chewing gum estimated at over 1.7 million rubles ($57,500) from a truck in southern Russia's Stavropol Territory, a police source said on Monday.

"Three unidentified assailants entered a parking lot, threatened the watchman with bodily harm, and tied him up. Then they stole 250 boxes of chewing gum estimated at 1.7 million rubles from the Mercedes truck and disappeared," the spokesman said.

In the beginning of December, a chemistry student from the northern Ukrainian city of Konotop was killed when a stick of chewing gum exploded in his mouth.

A forensic examination established that the chewing gum was covered with an unidentified chemical substance, thought to be some type of explosive material.

Police questioning revealed that the student had a bizarre habit of chewing gum after dunking it into citric acid. On his table, police found both citric acid packets and a similar-looking unidentified substance, believed to be some kind of explosive material.

Investigators believe that the student simply confused the packets, and put the gum, covered with explosive material, into his mouth.

RIA Novosti

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Man who sue Satan and his Staff ... for real ! In USA

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Thursday, December 24, 2009 | | 0 comments »
United States ex rel. Gerald Mayo v. Satan and His Staff, 54 F.R.D. 282 (W.D.Pa. 1971), was a court case in which a man attempted to sue Satan and his servants in United States District Court. It was dismissed on a technicality.

Gerald Mayo filed a claim before the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania in which Mayo alleged that "Satan has on numerous occasions caused plaintiff misery and unwarranted threats, against the will of plaintiff, that Satan has placed deliberate obstacles in his path and has caused plaintiff's downfall" and had therefore "deprived him of his constitutional rights". This is prohibited under several sections of the United States Code. Mayo filed in forma pauperis - that is, he asserted that he would not be able to afford the costs associated with his lawsuit and that they therefore should be waived.

In his decision, U.S. District Court Judge Gerald J. Weber first noted that the jurisdictional situation was unclear. While no previous cases had been brought by or against Satan and so no official precedent existed, there was an "unofficial account of a trial in New Hampshire where this defendant filed an action of mortgage foreclosure as plaintiff", a clever reference to the short story "The Devil and Daniel Webster". Judge Weber suggested that the defendant (who had claimed in that story to be an American), should he appear, might have been therefore estopped from arguing a lack of personal jurisdiction.

Judge Weber also noted that the case was certainly appropriate for class action status, and it was not then clear that Mayo could properly represent the interests of the entire (immense) class. Ultimately, though, the Court refused the request to proceed in forma pauperis due to the fact that the plaintiff had not included instructions for how the U.S. Marshal could serve process on Satan.

credited to wikipedia

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Baby seal found in garden

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Thursday, December 24, 2009 | | 0 comments »
A seal pup found by a family in their back garden 18 miles inland has been nicknamed Rudolph.

The animal was spotted by Harriet Dwyer, 24, sitting in the snow at the house in Benenden, Kent, on Monday. Her father, Professor Tim Dwyer, said: ''It was bizarre, really.

"My daughter was out with our dog Jack in the snow when she came in and said 'There's a seal in the garden'. I said 'No, it must be an otter'. We all went out and under the hedge was a seal looking quite chirpy and slithering around in the snow.''

It is thought the pup, which is just under a year old, emerged from the tiny stream at the bottom of the garden after swimming up the River Rother which leads out to the English Channel.

Prof Dwyer, who works at London South Bank University, said: ''I went back indoors and rang the RSPCA and police. The seal made its way across the garden into the pond, where it sat happily staring out of the pond in an enchanting way with its eyes just above the water.''

The family tried to contain the seal with the aid of collie Jack before assistance arrived.

Prof Dwyer, 51, said: ''He was very good and, as collies do, he has a rounding instinct. The dog was quite happy to keep it in one place.

''My daughter, not very inventively, called it Rudolph, which seemed appropriate as it was sitting around in the snow.''

The pup was eventually coaxed into an animal crate and taken to the RSPCA's Mallydams Wood Wildlife Centre in Fairlight, Hastings, East Sussex, where it has been renamed Gulliver after its fondness for travelling.

credited to telegraph.co.uk

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"Star Trek" The Most-Pirated Film Of 2009

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Thursday, December 24, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Paramount's worst fears are confirmed: "Star Trek" was the most pirated film of 2009, according to a new report.

In October, the studio told the Federal Communications Commission that "Star Trek" had become a hot commodity in piracy circles. Illegal file-sharing had advanced from "geek to sleek," Frederick Huntsberry, the studio's chief operating officer, told officials.

Now, according to data from TorrentFreak, "Star Trek" was downloaded nearly 11 million times this past year, just edging "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" (10.6 million). The films were among the biggest of the year at the box office

At the other end of the box-office scale, "Sherlock Holmes" director Guy Ritchie's "RocknRolla" ranked No. 3. It grossed less than $26 million worldwide.

Interestingly, for all the fuss about the "Wolverine" leak, the film came in at No. 9 with 7.2 million. The FBI earlier this month charged a man with violation of federal copyright law, alleging he uploaded the film to the Web last spring.

The list was rounded out by "The Hangover" (No. 4), "Twilight" (No. 5), "District 9" (No. 6), "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" (No. 7), "State of Play" (No. 8), and "Knowing" (No. 10).

postchronicle

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Santa Tracker 2009 Live: Where is Santa Claus?

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Thursday, December 24, 2009 | , | 0 comments »
Today is Christmas Eve 2009 and is the day when Santa Claus begins his long journey. For those who wish to know where the guy in the big red suit is, then NORAD has that covered for you with their Santa Tracker service. You will be able to visit the website and follow Saint Nick on his travels.

NORAD has been working with Google Earth to give you real-time tracking, the service is now live. Children around the world will be able to watch out for Santa, but you have to make sure that you are in bed before he gets to your hometown, otherwise you will not get a visit.

Santa has not left the North Pole just yet, he has been checking his list to see who he has to deliver too, He has now done that and is checking all the toys to make sure that they are all there, some are still coming off the assembly lines, so the Elves are leaving things to the last minute.

Once Santa gets in his sleigh and begins his journey, that is When NORAD comes in, working with Google Earth and the Santa Cam to know exactly where he his. His first stop will be around Kiwi and Australia, with America being one of his last stops.

Visit Santa Tracker or use Google Earth to follow Father Christmas.

OnlyKent

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Dog Gets Swine Flu - Health Experts Are Shocked

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, December 23, 2009 | , | 0 comments »
A swine flu dog case has taken medical experts by surprise, as previous information indicated that there is no evidence humans can transmit swine flu to their pets.

However, a 13-year-old dog in New York has apparently contracted swine flu from his owner. And while both of them are recovering, the science community is scrambling to reassure pet owners that such cases are rare, reports the startribune.com.

The dog, who began experiencing breathing problems, was taken to a Bedford Hills, NY veterinary clinic on Dec. 13, reports the paper. The doctor, who knew the owner had swine flu, decided to have the dog tested for the virus.

The dog was found to be infected with the same strain of the disease as his owner.

He is now recovering along with his owner, who refused to speak with reporters.

According to the ASPCA website, there is an extremely low risk of cross-infection between humans and their cats and dogs, although they do offer guidance for pigs and other swine farm animals.

If your pet demonstrates any signs of influenza, including a fever, runny nose, cough, or trouble breathing, take them for a visit to the vet as soon as possible. Keep your hands and face clean, and don't let your pets lick your face to be on the safe side.

postchronicle.com

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Man eat rare tiger and sentenced to 12 year in jail

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, December 23, 2009 | | 0 comments »
A man who killed and ate what may have been the last wild Indochinese tiger in China was sentenced to 12 years in jail, local media reported on Tuesday.

Kang Wannian, a villager from Mengla, Yunnan Province, met the tiger in February while gathering freshwater clams in a nature reserve near China's border with Laos. He claimed to have killed it in self-defense.

The only known wild Indochinese tiger in China, photographed in 2007 at the same reserve, has not been seen since Kang's meal, the Yunnan-based newspaper Life News reported earlier this month.

The paper quoted the provincial Forestry Bureau as saying there was no evidence the tiger was the last one in China.

A local court sentenced Kang to 10 years for killing a rare animal plus two years for illegal possession of firearms, the local web portal Yunnan.cn reported. Prosecutors said Kang did not need a gun to gather clams.

Four villagers who helped Kang dismember the tiger and ate its meat were also sentenced from three to four years for "covering up and concealing criminal gains," the report said.

Kang was also fined 480,000 yuan ($70,000).

The Indochinese tiger is on the brink of extinction, with fewer than 1,000 left in the forests of Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand and Myanmar.

Reuters

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A Magnificent Fir Tree for Moscow‘s Holidays

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, December 23, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Russia's festive holiday fir tree for the New Year and Christmas holidays, which will adorn Cathedral Square in Moscow's Kremlin, is more than a century old and is 28 meters high. It comes from a forest near the town of Mozhaisk, planted about 103 years ago. A special committee was set up back in September to choose the perfect one for the occasion from among hundreds of trees in Moscow forests.

An elaborate ceremony was held with traditional Russian entertainment shows, including Grandfather Frost – the Russian version of Santa Claus. Many other wonderful, colorful characters were also present at the ceremony.

The Russian Santa Claus is called Ded Moroz. “Ded Moroz” translates to “Grandfather Frost” in English. He is unmistakably Russian in appearance and attitude. He is typically shown in a long, Russian-style coat in the colors of red, icy blue, silver, gold, or another color appropriate to the season, which is lined or trimmed with white fur.

Ded Moroz wears a rounded Russian cap trimmed with fur. His clothing is richly decorated with embroidery. Traditionally shown as a tall and slender older gentleman, Ded Moroz cuts an elegant figure on Christmas cards wishing the receiver Happy New Year. Ded Moroz carries a staff and wears a long white beard. He protects his feet from the cold by tall valenki or leather boots. The three horses of the Russian troika offer enough power and speed to get Ded Moroz to where he needs to go – the Russian Santa has no need for any reindeer!

Ded Moroz delivers gifts on New Year's Eve rather than on Christmas Eve. He is accompanied by Snegurochka, the Snow Maiden. In the legend of Ded Moroz, she is said to be his granddaughter. Instead of the North Pole, the Russian Santa Claus officially makes his home at an estate in the Russian town of Veliky Ustyug. Children can write their letters to Ded Moroz and send them to Veliky Ustyug in hopes of having their holiday wishes granted. Those who visit Veliky Ustyug can have their photo take with Ded Moroz, ride in a troika, and enjoy wintertime activities.

The tree arrived in the Kremlin on Saturday. It entered through the Spasskiye Gates that opens only once in four years: that is on Russian president's inauguration day. The tree will be mounted on a pedestal and some 2000 decorative items of all sorts – ribbons, Christmas balls and bells – will adorn the tree. A kilometer-long sash, painted with the colors of the Russian flag, will festoon the giant festive tree.

The longtime tradition of having a New Year tree dates back to the 18th Century. Russian Emperor Peter the Great was touring Europe as a young man, and there he picked up the tradition of having a Christmas tree. He adopted it in his country, which was then a religious Orthodox one, and in which Christmas was the main holiday. Then everyone started to have the trees in their homes for the holidays.

Lisa Karpova

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Tune in Your Radio to Hear Voices of the Dead

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, December 22, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Horror films are more than popular. Those who like to feel the rush of adrenaline in their blood are especially fond of horror films that are allegedly based on real events. Communicating with the dead has been one of the most popular horror themes for decades. There is a separate branch in the theme – when a film character communicates with ghosts via radio signals. The phenomenon has a scientific name – the electric voice phenomenon (EVP).

There are plenty of online resources dedicated to this phenomenon. The most distinctive movie of the genre, White Noise, describes a miserable widower who traces radio interferences day and night and discovers messages from the other world once in a while.

Many scientists tried to establish a connection with the other world using various technical devices. In 1920, Thomas Edison put forward an idea that our ego, transferring to the other world, had to preserve its ability to affect matter even from there. If this is the case, then sensitive equipment would be able to register these effects, it just has to be invented. This original idea was used as the epigraph for White Noise.

Friedrich Jürgenson, a Swedish documentary film maker, is one of the most famous researchers of EVP. He accidentally tape-recorded the voices of his diseased relatives. Dr Konstantin Raudive, a Latvian psychologist, was Jürgenson’s supporter and follower. They conducted numerous experiments together, and Raudive soon realized that the best results can be achieved when the recording process is accompanied by white noise. He believed that the dead are somehow using this noise transforming it into sounds of their voices.

The sound of electronic voices usually vibrates at high frequency. The phrase rhythm of electronic voices is also unusual and supernatural. The tempo of speech is generally faster than normal.

Another typical feature of these voices is monotony. The most intriguing part of the phenomenon is that a person who encounters EVP recognizes the voices of her diseased relatives without fail, provided the record is of good quality.

Is it self-deception or reality? A simple experiment will help to find out. All you need is a recording radio with AM/FM reception and headphones to hear electronic voices.

Take a clean audio cassette, insert it in the radio and put your headphones on. Then turn on the radio and look for empty frequencies. You need to find a space between two radio stations when you can clearly hear static but cannot hear radio stations.

Try to relax, press the “record” button and ask those who are dead to talk to you. Do not try to hear the voices while you are recording, it will not happen.

Three to five minutes later, stop the recording and rewind. Start listening with the level of the volume at 20%. Then regulate the volume to a more comfortable level. Concentrate on the sounds of static, get used to them so you can tell the moment when the homogeneity of the sounds is slightly disturbed. Be attentive.

When you listen to it for the first time, notice the timing of the unusual sounds. When you listen to it again, carefully study these moments. Then rewind and listen again, paying particular attention to the most “suspicious” moments.

You will notice a strange thing. The more you listen to the recording, the more clear the “suspicious” moments will sound, as if they are developing. However, do not make premature conclusions since these sounds may have explainable origins, e.g., neighbors’ voices or other noises.

Naturally, such experiments require certain persistence and courage, especially considering the ill fate of White Noise main character.

pravda.ru

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Woman calls police to stop son playing video game

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, December 22, 2009 | | 1 comments »
A frustrated Boston woman called police to say she couldn't get her 14-year-old son to stop playing video games and go to sleep.

Police spokesman Officer Joe Zanoli said Monday the mother called for help around 2.30am local time Saturday to say that the teenager also walked around the house and turned on all the lights.

Two officers who responded to the house persuaded the child to obey his mother.

Zanoli says the mother's police call over video game obsession "was a little unusual, but by no means is it surprising - especially in today's day and age when these kids play video games and computer games."

The Boston Herald first reported the police call, saying the boy was playing the popular Grand Theft Auto game.

stuff.co.nz

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When government needs to tell you that tomato is a vegetable, not a fruit

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, December 22, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Nix v. Hedden, 149 U.S. 304 (1893), was a case in which the United States Supreme Court addressed whether a tomato was classified as a fruit or a vegetable under the Tariff Act of March 3, 1883, which required a tax to be paid on imported vegetables, but not fruit. The case was filed as an action by John Nix, John W. Nix, George W. Nix, and Frank W. Nix against Edward L. Hedden, Collector of the Port of New York, to recover back duties paid under protest. Botanically a tomato is a fruit. The court, however, unanimously ruled in favor of the defendant, that the Tariff Act used the ordinary meaning of the words "fruit" and "vegetable" – where a tomato is classified as a vegetable – not the technical botanical meaning.

At the trial the plaintiffs' counsel, after reading in evidence definitions of the words 'fruit' and 'vegetables' from Webster's Dictionary, Worcester's Dictionary, and the Imperial Dictionary, called two witnesses, who had been for 30 years in the business of selling fruit and vegetables, and asked them, after hearing these definitions, to say whether these words had "any special meaning in trade or commerce, different from those read."

During testimony, one witness testified that in regard to the dictionary definition:

"[the dictionary] does not classify all things there, but they are correct as far as they go. It does not take all kinds of fruit or vegetables; it takes a portion of them. I think the words 'fruit' and 'vegetable' have the same meaning in trade today that they had on March 1, 1883. I understand that the term 'fruit' is applied in trade only to such plants or parts of plants as contain the seeds. There are more vegetables than those in the enumeration given in Webster's Dictionary under the term 'vegetable,' as 'cabbage, cauliflower, turnips, potatoes, peas, beans, and the like,' probably covered by the words 'and the like.'"

Another witness testified that "I don't think the term 'fruit' or the term 'vegetables' had, in March 1883, and prior thereto, any special meaning in trade and commerce in this country different from that which I have read here from the dictionaries."

Both the plaintiffs' counsel and the defendant's counsel made use of the dictionaries. The plaintiffs' counsel read in evidence from the same dictionaries the definitions of the word tomato, while the defendant's counsel then read in evidence from Webster's Dictionary the definitions of the words pea, egg plant, cucumber, squash, and pepper. Countering this, the plaintiff then read in evidence from Webster's and Worcester's dictionaries the definitions of potato, turnip, parsnip, cauliflower, cabbage, carrot and bean.

The court unanimously decided in favor of the defense and found that the tomato was classified as a vegetable, based on the ways in which it is used, and the popular perception to this end. Justice Horace Gray, writing the opinion for the Court, stated that:

"The passages cited from the dictionaries define the word 'fruit' as the seed of plants, or that part of plants which contains the seed, and especially the juicy, pulpy products of certain plants, covering and containing the seed. These definitions have no tendency to show that tomatoes are 'fruit,' as distinguished from 'vegetables,' in common speech, or within the meaning of the tariff act."

Justice Gray cited several different Supreme Court cases (Brown v. Piper, 91 U.S. 37, 42, and Jones v. U.S., 137 U.S. 202, 216) and stated that when words have acquired any special meaning in trade or commerce the ordinary meaning must be used by the court. In this case dictionaries cannot be admitted as evidence, but only as aids to the memory and understanding of the court. Gray acknowledged that, botanically, tomatoes are classified as a "fruit of the vine", nevertheless they are seen as vegetables because they were usually eaten as a main course instead of being eaten as a dessert. In making his decision, Justice Gray mentioned another case where it had been claimed that beans were seeds — Justice Bradley, in Robertson v. Salomon, 130 U.S. 412, 414, similarly found that though a bean is botanically a seed, in common parlance a bean is seen as a vegetable. While on the subject, Gray clarified the status of the cucumber, squash, pea, and bean.

Nix has been cited in three Supreme Court decisions as a precedent for court interpretation of common meanings, especially dictionary definitions. (Sonn v. Maggone, 159 U.S. 417 (1895); Saltonstall v. Wiebusch & Hilger, 156 U.S. 601 (1895); and Cadwalder v. Zeh, 151 U.S. 171 (1894)). Additionally, in JSG Trading Corp. v. Tray-Wrap, Inc., 917 F.2d 75 (2d Cir. 1990), a case unrelated to Nix aside from the shared focus on tomatoes, a judge wrote the following paragraph citing the case:

"In common parlance tomatoes are vegetables, as the Supreme Court observed long ago, see Nix v. Hedden 149 U.S. 304, 307, 13 S.Ct. 881, 882, 37 L.Ed. 745 (1893), although botanically speaking they are actually a fruit. 26 Encyclopedia Americana 832 (Int'l. ed. 1981). Regardless of classification, people have been enjoying tomatoes for centuries, even Mr. Pickwick, as Dickens relates, ate his chops in 'tomata' sauce."

In 2005, supporters in the New Jersey legislature cited Nix as a basis for a bill designating the tomato as the official state vegetable.

credited to wikipedia

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Kansas 'Superman' rescues girl

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, December 22, 2009 | | 0 comments »
A US mother is praising a neighbour as "Superman" after her 6-year-old daughter told her he somehow found the strength to lift a car off her.

The girl in Kansas escaped with minor injuries after she and neighbour Nick Harris said she was pinned under the vehicle.

"He really is Superman," Kristen Hough, the child's mother, said Friday of Harris, the man she said saved her daughter, Ashlyn.

Harris, 32, said he doesn't know how he managed to lift the Mercury sedan off the child. The 5-foot-7, 185-pound Harris said he tried later that day to lift other cars and couldn't.

"But somehow, adrenaline, hand of God, whatever you want to call it, I don't know how I did it," he said.

Harris was dropping off his 8-year-old daughter at school last week when he saw a driver backing her car out of a driveway and over the child, Harris said.

"I didn't even think. I ran over there as fast as I could, grabbed the rear end of the car and lifted and pushed as hard as I could to get the tire off the child," he said.

He realized the little girl was Ashlyn, a friend of his daughter's. Harris carried the screaming first-grader to the sidewalk and was going to get his phone to call 911, but Ashlyn said she wanted him to stay with her.

He told people nearby to get the child's mother, who lives a block away.

There were no witnesses to confirm what happened. But Ottawa police Lt. Adam Weingartner said, "I don't have anything to dispute it."

Hough said Ashlyn told her Harris lifted the car off her, Weingartner said.

Weingartner, the first officer at the scene, said Harris "was amped up pretty good. The first words out of his mouth were, 'I lifted the car off the girl.'"

He said it appeared Ashlyn wasn't pinned under the car long enough to be seriously hurt, Weingartner said.

Hough said her daughter was released from the hospital that afternoon with a concussion and some scrapes.

"She is my little walking miracle right now," Hough said. "He truly is a superhero in the family's eyes."

Harris also visited Ashlyn later that day and was greeted with a big hug.

"I don't consider myself a hero at all," Harris said. "To me, it was payment enough when she gave me that huge hug and said, 'Thanks, Superman.'"

stuff.co.nz

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Michael Jackson death date popular in Spain's El Gordo lottery

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Friday, December 18, 2009 | | 0 comments »
The day Michael Jackson died - 25609 - has become one of the most popular numbers in Spain's Christmas lottery, dubbed "El Gordo", which is billed as the world's richest.

The ticket, corresponding to June 25, 2009, "is one of the most requested" this year, according to a statement from Ventura24.es, a website for lottery ticket sales.

The combination 66666 "charged with superstitious and demoniac symbolism", is also a very popular choice, as it has been in past years, the statement said.

El Gordo - The Fat One - is a national institution, with millions glued to their television screens on December 22, watching the old-fashioned ritual of schoolchildren chanting in Gregorian-style the numbers and prize amounts.

According to national statistics, 80 per cent of Spaniards play El Gordo, using half their annual lottery spending on the festive draw.

The Spanish lottery gave out over two billion euros in prize money last year, nearly twice the amount distributed in 1995.

Although other draws around the world have bigger individual top prizes, lottery experts rank El Gordo as the world's richest lottery for the total sum paid out.

credited to telegraph.co.uk

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Happy Christmas honey - here's a divorce voucher

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Friday, December 18, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Stuck for Christmas gift ideas? Is your marriage or a friend's going through a rocky patch? How about a divorce voucher?

In an unusual take on the season of giving, a London law firm is offering Christmas gift vouchers for divorce advice.

The firm, Lloyd Platt & Company, which normally charges 325 pounds ($530) an hour, said it had been swamped with enquiries since it launched the vouchers early last week.

So far, more than 60 have been sold -- a snip at 125 pounds for a half hour session with a divorce lawyer.

The firm's founder, Vanessa Lloyd Platt, said she had been amazed at the response to the vouchers. "They seem to appeal to an enormously widespread spectrum of people looking for that 'must have' gift for Christmas," she said.

A spokesman for the Church of England called the vouchers sad.

"Divorce is a very personal matter and not really suitable for the idea of gift vouchers which are presents from other people," he said.

Demand for the vouchers could soar over the next few weeks.

Christmas tends to be a particularly stressful time for families, with a huge rise in people seeking advice each January, Lloyd Platt said.

credited to News Yahoo

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Model Brutalized in Downtown Moscow for Being Too Glamorous

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Friday, December 18, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Moscow police officers have brutally disfigured a photo model who got drunk and made a scene at a Moscow restaurant. The model’s career is destroyed, and her mother threatens to destroy the careers of those who have brutalized her daughter.

According to Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper, the victim never had encountered the police before. The 28-year old woman was disfigured so badly that she has been staying in a hospital for several months. She will have to forget about her modeling career.

So far, the offenders got off with a scratch – they were issued a warning. However, the victim’s mother Alexandra Rashel, a plastic surgeon and ex-wife of lawyer Berezovsky, is very open about her intentions to continue her struggle for fairness and punish the presumptuous law enforcement officers.

The conflict occurred in September, and since then Alexandra Rashel has been trying to bring charges against the officers to no avail.

That night, on September 13, 2009, Svetlana Kirmusova accompanied by her friends went to a posh establishment on Tverskaya Street in downtown Moscow. She was upset because she was told earlier that her boyfriend was cheating on her.

She got very drunk, and decided that a woman sitting at the next table was the one her boyfriend cheated on her with. Svetlana threw a couple of crystal glasses at her and was taken out of the restaurant by the security. The woman did not calm down outside and broke the glass entrance door, cutting her hand.

When the police and ambulance arrived, the woman did not let the doctor examine her and seized him by his hair, the newspaper reports. She was thrown into the patrol car and handcuffed.

Later Svetlana said that the officers severely beat her in the car first and then at the police department. They video recorded the beating. Only a few hours later Svetlana was able to call her family.

Alexandra Rashel came to the police department and took her daughter to a hospital. Svetlana was diagnosed with a concussion and nose fracture. She also had a wounded hand and alcohol poisoning.

Now Rashel is trying to put Svetlana back on her feet and make her pretty again. She would have to wait at least a year for a rhinoplasty.

"They broke my daughter's very expensive Vertu phone. She also had a 50,000-dollar watch that night, not to mention diamonds and other knick-knacks," the model's mother said.

The mother and daughter appealed to the Moscow Central Prosecutor’s Office to investigate the actions of the police officers. They were told that the officers would not be charged since “according to article 13 of the Federal law, police officers are entitled to apply physical force when the arrested show resistance.”

Recently, Russian Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliev said that he would recommend fighting back when police officers beat you. It was a verbal recommendation that has no legitimate power. The example of Svetlana Kirmusova shows that even elite girls can expect to be beaten in a police department.

Kirmusova is still staying at a neurological clinic.

The police have a different opinion about the incident. “Kirmusova committed a violation of public order” and therefore, deserved the brutal beating.

In the official comments, a representative of the Moscow Ministry of Internal Affairs stated that the actions of the police were deemed lawful, and charges would not be brought.

Alexandra Rashel is going to continue looking for justice and revenge for her daughter.

Moskovsky Komsomolets

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In France, horse falling off restaurant menus

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Friday, December 18, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Many people love horses and traditionally, many French people have loved them even more with a side of salad.

That passion, however, has slowed to a trickle in the last couple of years as crisis-hit French consumers buy less meat and years of campaigning by animal rights groups take effect.

Looking to ram home their advantage, campaigners have launched a pre-Christmas blitz in Paris featuring posters of riding school ponies and graceful yearlings aimed at rending the hardest of hearts.

"Every year in France, riding school horses like Caramel are sent to the abattoir," says one poster by the Fondation Brigitte Bardot, featuring a photo of a perky grey pony reflected in a knife blade.

"It disturbs us that people continue to eat horses at all and we are going to go on campaigning until people stop eating it altogether," said Constance Cluset, a spokeswoman for the animal welfare group created by the former actress.

Last year, 15,820 horses were killed for their meat in France, of which over 7,000 were imported from abroad.

The group, whose campaign was timed to coincide with a horse fair, is pushing for a legislative bill to modify horses' legal status to companion from production-type animals such as sheep.

While horse meat is traditionally cheaper than other animals, the financial crisis has only pushed consumers to buy more chicken, according to French agriculture ministry figures.

Consumption of horse meat has fallen 12 percent in the last two years and currently makes up less than 1 percent of all meat consumed in France, the ministry said in a report.

And while only a few years ago horse meat was relatively easy to find, now it takes more time to track it down.

"Horse is indeed a French dish, but you'd be very hard-pressed to find it in any restaurants now," said the chef at restaurant Le Central in Paris, adding: "There's so much publicity against it."

Accounts vary on how France first took to eating equines.

Some historians say the country's appetite for horse meat dates from the Battle of Eylau in 1807, when the chief surgeon of Napoleon's army advised famished soldiers to feast on fallen horses on the battlefield.

The story adds that the cavalry cooked the trusted steeds using their breastplates as cooking pans.

credited to Moneycontrol

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Guinness Book: Best Records of the Decade

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Thursday, December 17, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Guinness World Records are searching for the people's choice of the decade. Having shortlisted a top 100 from every record set in several categories during the past 10 years they now want the public to vote online for the best.

1. The most rattlesnakes held in the mouth by their tails is 11 by Jackie Bibby. He held the snakes for 10 seconds on a German TV show in December last year


2.The ultimate in tattooing is represented by the chainsaw juggling, unicycling, sword-swallowing Lucky Diamond Rich (Australia, born New Zealand), who has spent over 1,000 hours having his body modified by hundreds of tattoo artists


3. The highest shallow dive measures 10.87 m (35 ft 8 in) and was achieved by Darren Taylor at the LA County Fairgrounds (FAIRPLEX), California, United States on 20 March 2009


4. Record for the heaviest vehicle pulled over a level 100 ft (30.48 m) course weighed 57,000 kg (125,680 lb) and was set by Rev. Kevin Fast (Canada) in Cobourg, Ontario, Canada, on 12 May 2007


5. The most push-ups using the backs of the hands in one hour is 1,940 and was set by Paddy Doyle at Stamina's Boxing Self Defence Gym in Erin Go Bragh Sports Centre, Birmingham, UK, on 8 November 2007


6. The man with the most body piercings is John Lynch a.k.a. 'Prince Albert', who was counted as having 241 piercings, including 151 in his head and neck, in Hammersmith, London, on 17 October 2008


7. Melvin Boothe has the longest fingernails on a pair of hands, with a combined length of 9.85 m (32 ft 3.8 in), when measured in Troy, Michigan, USA on 30 May 2009


8. The largest commercially available hamburger is 84.14 kg (185.8 lbs) and is available for US$499 (£302.84) on the menu at Mallie's Sports Grill & Bar in Southgate, Michigan, USA, as of 30 May 2009


9. The longest distance travelled on a pogo stick. Ashrita Furman of Jamaica, New York, USA set a distance record of 37.18 km 23.11 miles in 12hr 27min on June 22, 1997 at Queensborough Community College Track, New York


10. The largest playing card structure. Bryan Berg constructed a free-standing house of cards that measured 7.86 m (25 ft 9.44 in) tall. It was completed on 15 October 2007 as part of the State Fair of Texas, in Dallas


11. He Ping Ping, the world's smallest man and Svetlana Pankratova, the woman with the longest legs in the world pose in Trafalgar Square, London on 16th September 2008


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There's something wrong with redheads?

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Thursday, December 17, 2009 | | 0 comments »
An ad for a TV dating show has been banned for suggesting that redheads are unattractive, Britain's advertising watchdog said on Wednesday.

Virgin Media's newspaper advert for the program "Dating in the Dark" included the text: "How do you spot a ginger in the dark?"

Virgin said the premise of the show was to challenge people's perception of attractiveness and to encourage decisions based on personality as well as looks.

However the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) agreed with three complainants that the ad was likely to cause serious offence and should not be used again.

"We considered the text was likely to be interpreted ... as a statement that reflected a choice between looks and personality ... being a suggestion that people with ginger hair were unattractive," the ASA said in a statement.

"We considered the ad was unlikely to be interpreted to be light-hearted in tone and was instead likely to be seen as prejudicial against people with ginger hair."

Other adverts in the series used to promote the show had included the tagline: "When the lights come on I just hope I haven't been kissing Shrek."

On Tuesday, Britain's biggest retailer Tesco apologized and said it had withdrawn a Christmas card which showed a child with red hair sitting on the lap of Santa Claus under the banner: "Santa loves all kids. Even ginger ones."

reuters.com

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Pigs can’t fly – and neither can planes

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, December 16, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Pigs may not be exactly flying in Zimbabwe yet, but they are certainly forcing aircraft to duck and dive.

Wild pigs living around Harare’s international airport were struck by a plane last week, just a month after causing the crash of a just-airborne aircraft there .

The SAA aircraft hit two of the pigs .

The incident came after an Air Zimbabwe carrier ran into a wild pig in November , bringing the aircraft down, but causing no loss of life.

There were no further details of the latest incident, except that national parks rangers were called in to capture the pigs.

Nearby residents say pigs are abundant on farms surrounding the airport and easily burrow under the fences meant to keep them out.

Sapa-DPA

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World's smallest mama pregnant again

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, December 16, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Stacey Herald, 35, is just 2ft 4ins tall, and her new son will already be half her size when he is born. By the time he is one, the baby boy will dwarf her, The Sun wrote...

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Flashing breasts big traffic hazard

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, December 16, 2009 | | 0 comments »
An Invercargill woman literally stopped traffic when she flashed her breasts at motorists, causing a car to run into her.

Cherelle May Dudfield, 18, appeared before Judge David Holderness in the Invercargill District Court yesterday charged with disorderly behaviour.

She admitted the charge.

Police prosecutor Sergeant Rob Mills said Dudfield had stood in the middle of the road flashing her breasts at passing motorists on September 27, but the fun went awry when one of the vehicles crashed into her.

Dudfield attempted to run from its path, but rolled over the bonnet, cracking the windscreen, he said. She had not suffered any injuries.

She told police she flashed the drivers after being "egged on" by her friend, Mr Mills said.

Duty solicitor John Fraser said while Dudfield's actions had been "stupidity in the extreme", there was a question of whether the driver could have been more careful. However, Mr Fraser conceded the driver could have been "distracted".

Judge Holderness said Dudfield's behaviour had been dangerous and she was lucky the consequences were not more severe.

He fined her $275.

credited to stuff.co.nz

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Russian bank rejects loan over smiley face signature

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, December 16, 2009 | | 0 comments »
A Russian man was turned down for a loan from his bank in Moscow after he used a smiley face symbol for his signature on the paperwork.

Vladimir Kirlov, 34, said: "It's been accepted in my passport and on my ID card - I don't see why the bank won't accept it."

But Oleg Pavlovich, a spokesman for the bank, said: "A smiley is a drawing and not a signature."

The name of the bank was not revealed.

source: Telegraph.co.uk

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Court splits jackpot between rival gamblers

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Wednesday, December 16, 2009 | , | 0 comments »
A French court has split the jackpot from a casino slot machine between the woman who put in the money and the man who pulled the lever, ending months of argument between the two.

Marie-Helene Jarguel walked off with over 2 million euros ($2.91 million) in March after a bet of 50 euros on a one-armed bandit, only for her gambling partner Francis Sune to contest her gain based on the fact that he activated the machine.

A court in the southwestern city of Montpellier ruled on Tuesday that Jarguel should keep 80 percent of the earnings while the rest should go to Sune, a judicial source said.

The ruling was a legal innovation. The judges noted that there was "no judicial definition of the winner in a slot machine game."

credited to Reuters

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Moscow Underground River Neglinnaya

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, December 15, 2009 | | 1 comments »
The Neglinnaya River , also known as Neglimna, Neglinna, Neglinka, is a 7.5-km long underground river in the central part of Moscow and a tributary of the Moskva River. It flows in the tunnels under Samotechnaya Street, Tsvetnoy Boulevard, Neglinnaya Street and Alexander Garden and Zaryadye. Neglinnaya discharges into Moskva River in two separate tunnels near Bolshoy Kamenny Bridge and Bolshoy Moskvoretsky Bridge.

Neglinnaya River in its natural state used to flow openly from the northern parts of Moscow to the south across the very center of the city. Moscow Kremlin was built on a hill west of Neglinnaya, using the river as a fortress moat. The moat did not stop foreign invasions, but slowed down development of territories west of Kremlin; initially, the city grew eastward, into Red Square and Kitai-gorod. When Muscovites began settling on the western side, territories around Neglinnaya remained vacant due to frequent flooding.

Muscovites constructed a number of dams, creating a chain of six interconnected ponds, used for firefighting, with watermills, forges, workshops and public baths (Moscow's two best-known public baths, Central and Sandunovsky, built in 1890s, are still located on Neglinnaya Street). There were four bridges across the Neglinnaya River: Voskresensky Bridge (its fragments unearthed during a 1994 excavation), three-span Kuznetsky Bridge, Troitsky Bridge and Petrovsky Bridge (the remains of the latter discovered during the reconstruction of the Maly Theatre).

The first plans to rebuild Neglinnaya River, presented in 1775, materialized in 1792. A new masonry canal, one sazhen (2.13 m) wide, was laid parallel to the Neglinnaya; after diverting water into the tunnel, builders filled the old river bed with earth. After the Fire of Moscow (1812), the canal was so polluted that the city cleared it and covered with a masonry vault, creating the first Neglinnaya Tunnel (1817-1819). This also formed present-day Neglinnaya Street and Theatre Square. Before centralised city sewage (1887), the tunnel doubled as a sewer, dumping the refuse into the Moskva river.

The first reconstruction of Neglinnaya Tunnel (1910-1914) replaced part of the tunnel with a larger pipe, but was terminated by World War I. This new pipe, designed by engineer Schekotov (Schekotov Tunnel), was adequate by any standard, and could suffice, if completed in full length. Narrow cross-section of old pipe could not accommodate the volume of water, especially during high water and freshets, flooding central streets; most recent catastrophic floods occurred in 1965 (twice) and 1973 (also twice).

In 1966, the city built a second arm for the Neglinnaya River (length - 1 km, width - 4 m), cutting the path under Zaryadye. In 1974-1989, after the 1973 flood, the city built a completely new 4-kilometer tunnel, 3.47 meters high and 4.90 meters wide, from Durova Street to Metropol Hotel (where the tunnel forks into two branches). The old tunnel was re-used as a pipe and cable conduit.

Present-day ponds on Manezhnaya Square (1996) are not Neglinnaya River, but an imitation. The real river runs too deep to be properly displayed. The area is dotted with diminutive statues on subjects taken from the Russian fables designed by Zurab Tsereteli.

credited to wikipedia

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Most popular names of 2009

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, December 15, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Do you know a child named Aiden or Madeline? Chances are someone will as they are the top names in North America for boys and girls in 2009, while Jacob and Emma were the most popular of the decade.

"We've seen more spelling variations of both of this year's top names than we imagined possible - Aiden has also been Ayden, Aidyn, Aden, and Aaden and Madeline can be spelled Madeleine, Maddelin, and Madalen," said Candace Alper, the creator/executive producer of the musical web site nameyourtune.com.

"Parents like the sound of traditional names, but they also want to show the individuality of their children. Parents realise that the name they give their child will become part of the child's identity," Alper said.

New Zealanders will have to wait till next year to learn our most popular names - the Department of Internal Affairs releases names for children born in 2009 in first week of January next year.

However, last year, it was Jack that topped the New Zealand list for boys (for the fourth year in a row) while Sophie was the top choice for girls. There has been a tussle going on between four girls names for years - Emma, Ella, Charlotte and Sophie have all topped the list over the last five years.

Meanwhile, Alper said that variations on the name Aiden are also dominating both boys and girls names, such as Jayden, Brayden and Hayden, because the names are gender-neutral and can be spelled so many ways.

Her prediction for the next decade is that there will be more Edwards and a lot more Bellas being born due to the success of the Twilight film franchise.

Rounding out the top names for boys in 2009 were Matthew, Owen, Ethan, Jackson, Evan, Braden, Noah, Jack and Zachary.

For girls it was Madison, Emma, Hannah, Olivia, Audrey, Isabella, Grace, Taylor and Emily.

Top boy names of the decade were Jacob, Michael, Ethan, Christopher, Jack, Daniel, Aiden, William, Joshua and Ryder.

Top girl names of the decade were Emma, Madison, Emily, Hannah, Olivia, Samantha, Ashley. Ava, Elizabeth and Madelyn.

credited to stuff.co.nz

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Million-Year-Old Antarctic Lake To Unveil Billions of Secrets

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, December 15, 2009 | | 0 comments »
Antarctic ice drilling that would allow scientists to get to Lake Vostok (East) hidden for millions of years, will become one of the most important scientific events equal to the launch of the Large hadron collider. Scientist can only guess what can be found there. Pravda.Ru interviewed Andrey Balashev, a member of the Institute of molecular genetics, to find out what scientists expect to find.

Lake Vostok is located under the surface of the central Antarctic ice sheet 4,000 meters (13,000 ft) thick. It has been isolated from the surrounding world for millions of years, so scientists expect to find a unique ecosystem that has no analogies on Earth.

Vostok is the largest of 140 subglacial lakes found under the surface of Antarctica. It covers the area of over 14,000 km2 (nearly 6,000 mi2). Despite the high pressure created by ice, the lake can be populated by microorganisms since the water is warm enough (approximately 50F) and oxygen concentration is high.

In order to obtain preliminary data about habitants of Lake Vostok, the scientists research other hidden bodies of water in Antarctica that are smaller and located under thinner layer of ice. Despite the fact that most of these bodies of water are covered with ice nine months of the year, there is still life in them.

Antonio Alcami, a Spanish scientist, and his colleagues from the National Research Council examined water samples from Antarctica's Limnopolar Lake and discovered several thousand species of microorganisms many of which were not previously known to science.

The findings included numerous viruses from 12 different families. Some of them were found and described for the first time.

Viruses are very important for closed ecosystems with only a few microbiological predators. They are capable of controlling the number of organisms and preventing their excess.

Unfortunately, these viruses are difficult to study in a lab since they do not grow in artificial conditions. However, the technology of allocating and decoding genome allowed scientists to learn many new facts about the biological role of viruses.

Antonio Alcami said that many of the scientific concepts about viruses were wrong. This made the scientists reconsider their thoughts about viruses and the role they play in microbiological systems.

Spanish scientists think that the information about larger variety of species in the Antarctic region is the main result of their research. Multiple unique microorganisms prepared to survive in extreme conditions live in subglacial lakes.

Besides, the scientists discovered that population of viruses in Antarctic lakes depends on a season. As the lakes freeze, only the smallest viruses stay in their liquid areas while bigger species fall into anabiosis in thick ice.

In summer, when a part of the ice melts, large viruses come back to the lakes. Virtually, the lakes are different bodies of water with different water composition in summer and in winter.

The reasons for this are yet unknown, but it is suggested that the number of microweeds in water has something to do with it. Most likely, large viruses wake up when microorganisms start breeding. They infect them and fall asleep again.

Pravda.ru talked to Andrey Balashev, Doctor of Biological Science, a member of the Russian Institute of molecular genetics, to find out what is hidden under the Antarctic ice.

“Lake Vostok and other bodies of water located in Antarctic are unique areas of alien flora and fauna on Earth. Such ecosystems have been isolated from the rest of the world for a long time, and their evolution took its own unique path.

At the moment the drilling is suspended. The scientists are concerned that terrestrial microorganisms that would get into the closed ecosystem of the lake would kill everything alive.

At the same time, we have no idea what is hidden under the ice. It is obvious that the pressure of over 300 atmospheres leaves no opportunity for discovering large multi-celled creatures, but there are many microorganisms and viruses.

By the way, we cannot rule out that the viruses of Lake Vostok might be adaptable to life outside of the lake, but we might not be able to co-exist with them. The researchers have a lot to think about prior to resuming the drilling of the ice above Lake Vostok.”

credited to pravda.ru

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Little Girl Bites Her Baby-Sister to Death While Parents Sleep

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, December 15, 2009 | | 0 comments »
The police of Russia’s Saratov region are investigating a bizarre death of a newborn girl. Most likely, the baby girl was killed by her own sister, who was just three years old. The tragedy happened while the parents of the two girls were sleeping.

Forensic experts have already determined that the little girl had died a violent death, the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper wrote.

The victim was only 22 days old. The baby arrived at the hospital of the town of Engels, the Saratov region, in a critical condition. Paramedics were horrified to find bites and bruises all over the child’s body.

Medics took lifesaving efforts, but four hours of struggle for the girl’s life did not help. A forensic expert said that the baby died of a closed cranial injury and a blunt head trauma. It looked like someone was slamming the child’s head onto the floor.

A pathologist later determined that the bites had been made by a three-year-old baby, the victim’s own sister.

The mother of the killed child told the police that she and her husband had drunk alcohol together and fallen asleep. When they woke up, they saw the elder girl playing with her little sister on the floor. The baby was not moving, nor was she showing any reaction to anything. The woman called the ambulance.

Most likely, the suspected killer perceived her baby sister as a doll, not as a human being, the police believe. The little child was most likely screaming during the awful game, but the parents did not hear anything while sleeping.

An expert said that the girl might have killed the baby deliberately, out of jealousy, since the parents started paying more attention to her after birth.

credited to Pravda.ru

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A President for less than an hour

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Monday, December 14, 2009 | | 0 comments »

Pedro José Domingo de la Calzada Manuel María Lascuráin Paredes (Mexico City, May 8, 1856 – July 21, 1952 in Mexico City) was both Mexico and the world's briefest-ever serving president.

He served as Mexico's foreign minister for two terms and was the director of a small law school in Mexico City for 16 years.

Lascuráin received a law degree in 1880 from the Escuela Nacional de Jurisprudencia in Mexico City. He was mayor of Mexico City in 1910 when Madero began his antireelectionist campaign against Díaz. Lascuráin was a supporter of Madero, and after the later was elected president to replace Díaz, Lascuráin served twice as foreign secretary in Madero's cabinet (April 10, 1912 to December 4, 1912 and January 15, 1913 to February 18, 1913). In between the two terms he was again mayor of Mexico City. As foreign minister he had to deal with the demands of U.S. Ambassador Henry Lane Wilson, who was later involved in planning Huerta's coup.

On February 18, 1913, General Victoriano Huerta overthrew President Madero. Lascuráin was one of the individuals who convinced Madero to resign the presidency when Madero was being held prisoner in the National Palace, claiming that his life was in danger if he refused.

To give the coup d'état an appearance of legality, Huerta had Lascuráin assume the presidency. Huerta had ousted both Vice-President José María Pino Suárez and the attorney general as well, and under the constitution the foreign minister stood third in line for the presidency behind the vice president and attorney general. Lascuráin then appointed Huerta to be his interior minister—fourth in line for the presidency and promptly resigned, thus handing the office of president over to Huerta. Lascuráin was thus president for less than one hour - sources quote figures ranging from 15 to 55 minutes. This makes his presidency the shortest in world history, above that of Venezuelan politician Diosdado Cabello.

Huerta called a late-night special session of Congress and under the guns of Huerta's troops the legislators endorsed his assumption of power. A few days later, Huerta had Madero and Suárez killed. The coup and the events surrounding it became known as la decena trágica ("the tragic ten days").

Huerta offered him a post in his cabinet, but Lascuráin declined. He retired from politics and began practicing again as a lawyer. Lascuráin was the director of the Escuela Libre de Derecho, a conservative law school, for 16 years, and he published extensively on commercial and civil law.

credited to wikipedia

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