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The place where the world comes together in honesty and mirth.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.


Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Stray dogs to be trained and pressed into service as guards

Stray dogs roaming around Central Delhi, India, may soon find themselves attending grooming school with the New Delhi Municipal Council planning to adopt and train them as guard dogs.
The civic body will enlist the services of police dog trainers in an attempt to train the dogs and press them into service. Accompanied by in-house home guards, also a new initiative by the civic body, the dogs and the men will share the mandate of keeping the area safe and secure.
“If these dogs are going to roam the area, they might as well work,” NDMC chairman Jalaj Shrivastava said on Friday. “Our plan is to adopt these strays and train them as guard dogs.”
The civic body has, in the past, constituted committees and worked with the Animal Welfare Board to sterilize and keep the numbers of stray dogs under check after repeatedly receiving complains about incidents of dog bites. This initiative is meant to address two issues: take the strays off the streets, thereby tackling the dog menace, and make the city safer for residents, added Mr. Shrivastava.

Animal Pictures

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

The Daily Drift

 True dat ..!
 
Carolina Naturally is read in 200 countries around the world daily.   

African Elephant ... !
Today is  - Elephant Day
 
Don't forget to visit our sister blog: It Is What It Is

Some of our readers today have been in:
The Americas
United States - Cuba - Colombia - Canada - Puerto Rico - Brazil - Mexico - Argentina
Europe
Spain - Ukraine - Switzerland - Italy - Belarus - Norway - Poland - Iceland - Serbia - Romania - Denamrk 
Malta - Russia - England - Ireland - Macedonia - Bosnia and Herzegovina - France - Latvia
Asia
Sri Lanka - Indonesia - Malaysia - Saudi Arabia - Mauritius - India - Iran - Oman - China - Hong Kong  Iraq - Taiwan
Africa
Zambia - Algeria - Egypt - Nigeria
The Pacific
Philippines - Australia

Today in History

1099 At the Battle of Ascalon 1,000 Crusaders, led by Godfrey of Bouillon, route an Egyptian relief column heading for Jerusalem, which had already fallen to the Crusaders.
1687 At the Battle of Mohacs, Hungary, Charles of Lorraine defeats the Turks.
1762 The British capture Cuba from Spain after a two month siege.
1791 Black slaves on the island of Santo Domingo rise up against their white masters.
1812 British commander the Duke of Wellington occupies Madrid, Spain, forcing out Joseph Bonaparte.
1863 Confederate raider William Quantrill leads a massacre of 150 men and boys in Lawrence, Kansas.
1864 After a week of heavy raiding, the Confederate cruiser Tallahassee claims six Union ships captured.
1896 Gold is discovered near Dawson City, Yukon Territory, Canada. After word reaches the United States in June of 1897, thousands of Americans head to the Klondike to seek their fortunes.
1898 The Spanish American War officially ends after three months and 22 days of hostilities.
1908 Henry Ford's first Model T rolls off the assembly line.
1922 The home of Frederick Douglass in Washington, D.C. is dedicated as a memorial.
1935 President Franklin Roosevelt signs the Social Security Bill.
1941 French Marshal Henri Philippe Petain announces full French collaboration with Nazi Germany.
1961 The erection of the Berlin Wall begins, preventing access between East and West Germany.
1969 American installations at Quan-Loi, Vietnam, come under Viet Cong attack.
1972 As U.S. troops leave Vietnam, B-52's make their largest strike of the war.
1977 Steven Biko, leader of the black consciousness movement in South Africa, is arrested.
1977 Space shuttle Enterprise makes its first free flight and landing.
1978 Tel al-Zaatar massacre at Palestinian refuge camp during Lebanese Civil War.
1979 Massive book burnings by press censors begin in Iran.
1981 Computer giant IBM introduces its first personal computer.
1985 Highest in-flight death toll as 520 die when  Japan Airlines Flight 123  crashes into Mount Takamagahara.
1992 The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is concluded between the United States, Canada and Mexico, creating the world's wealthiest trade bloc.
2000 Russian Navy submarine K-141 Kursk explodes and sinks with all hands during military exercises in the Barents Sea.
2005 An LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) sniper mortally wounds Sri Lanka's foreign minister, Lakshman Kadirgamar, at the minister's home.
2012 Summer Olympics come to a close in London.

Non Sequitur

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How Many Countries Are Currently at War?

While some conflicts tend to lead the headlines on a daily basis, other countries are at also at war, in more places than might be imagined.

Which Six Countries Hold Half The World's Population?

As of this month, the world's population is now 7.2 billion, according to the United Nations. Also according to the U.N., half of the people around the globe (3.6 billion) live in just a half-dozen countries.
China has the world's largest population (1.4 billion), followed by India (1.3 billion). The next most-populous nations - the United States, Indonesia, Brazil and Pakistan - combined have less than 1 billion people.

Weight Loss and Happiness


Losing weight won’t make you happy

Weight loss significantly improves physical health but effects on mental […]

Diabetics Live Longer


Study shows type 2 diabetics can live longer than people without the disease

A commonly prescribed diabetes drug could offer surprising health benefits […]

‘Knockout Game’ Attacker Asked Man If He Had A Gun Before Punching

‘Knockout Game’ Attacker Asked Man If He Had A Gun Before Punching
A teenager playing “knockout game” punched a man in the face after he made certain that the victim was not carrying a gun, a Florida man told police.
According to a witness who saw the attack unfold, a teenager approached a man who was walking alone on Neptune Beach on July 31, the Florida Times-Union reported Friday.
According to the victim, the teen, who was with three accomplices, asked him if he had a “glock.”
While Glock is a weapons manufacturer, the term “glock” is also used generically to describe any type of handgun.
After the man said that he did not have a weapon, the teen punched him in the face.
Instances of the “knockout game” have been widely reported in cities across the country over the last several years. Carried out most often by teenagers — usually in groups — the goal of the so-called game is to knock a target unconscious. Several people have died during the attacks.
Fearing that outcome, the victim pulled out a folding knife that he was carrying and pretended it was a gun, according to the Florida Times-Union.
The attackers fled down the beach but were soon apprehended. The victim identified his attacker, who turned out to be 15-years old.

Man accused of stealing bicycle had own bike stolen on day he was due to appear in court

A father-of-one caught pushing a stolen bicycle past a Dublin garda station had his own bike taken on the morning he was due in court in a moment of "poetic justice", a judge said. Declan Martin had been cycling his own bike while pushing the stolen one despite suffering from reduced lung capacity, when he caught the attention of a garda. Dublin District Court heard he had not stolen the bicycle but accepted it as "collateral on a loan" and was taking it home when he was caught.
He locked his own bike up before his court case but someone else stole that. Judge Conal Gibbons gave him an eight-month suspended sentence. Martin, 41, pleaded guilty to handling stolen property on April 1. Garda Niall Kenny told the court he was leaving Pearse Street Garda Station when he saw the accused cycling one bicycle while pushing the other alongside him. The garda stopped him because he was curious as to where he was going and was "not satisfied he was the owner" of the second bike.
When questioned, Martin told the garda that he had paid €40 for the bicycle, which was worth €1,000. On checking, it was established that the bike had been stolen a week earlier, where it had been locked up. Martin had given a loan of €40 to a man and took the bike as "collateral". "He accepts it was very reckless," his lawyer said. The accused had been in a fire around four years ago and was left suffering from pleurisy and emphysema.
Judge Gibbons said it was a wonder Martin had been able to cycle anything, let alone two bikes at once. "It is nigh on impossible to protect a pushbike in Dublin," he remarked. "It's a shocking state of affairs that you can't leave a bike by the side of the road in Dublin. You have to wrap it up in chains and even a bike that was secured in this way was still stolen by somebody and delivered to the accused." "My own one was stolen this morning," the accused said. The judge replied: "You have often heard of the expression poetic justice. There is a touch of poetic justice in this." He suspended Martin's sentence for a year.

Ziggy

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9 Ridiculously Awesome Amsterdam Houseboats That You Can Actually Stay In

As the old saying goes, if the house is a rockin', it's probably because you're staying in one of these houseboats and there's a slight eddy in the water. But that doesn't mean you have to go without all the luxuries of land. Here are nine Amsterdam houseboats that blow everything else out of the water.

28 Breathtaking Photos Of Lighthouses That Have Stood The Test Of Time

The lighthouse is a near-universal symbol of safety and guidance that has helped mariners find their way home since ancient times. Although they are gradually outliving their usefulness, they are still epic monuments to human ingenuity and to their own resilience.
Most lighthouses currently still standing are marvels of practical architecture and engineering, brushing off the worst that the seas have to offer. While their guiding beacons may soon cease to sweep across the coastal night sky, we can still appreciate how beautiful and epic these wonderful buildings look.

Archaeology News

The skeletal fragment is about 8,000 years old and may have once belonged to an infant or a small child.
Some have nicknamed the ancient skeleton Noah, since the man had survived a great flood that may have later inspired the Biblical story.
A 6,500-year-old skeleton was found in the basement of the Penn Museum. See photos.
Some ancient road hazards are unearthed at Romano-British settlementm outside of Exeter, U.K.
Although the mausoleum had been plundered, archaeologists found that it still contained more than 10,000 artifacts.

Daily Comic Relief

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Red Tide

The biggest red tide bloom seen in Florida in nearly a decade already has killed thousands of fish, and may pose a public health threat.

Training an army to save the African elephant from illegal poachers

After a 22-month pregnancy, an African elephant calf is nearly inseparable from its mother. If the calf is a female, …

After a 22-month pregnancy, an African elephant calf is nearly inseparable from its mother. If the calf is a female, it may stay with her for life. (CLICK FOR SLIDESHOW on Africa's poaching problem)
When it comes to wildlife preservation, the first thing people often think of are sad television commercials featuring a ballad from a folk singer that is uncannily good at choking viewers up.
But for anti-poaching activist and forestry expert Rory Young, his passion for saving the African elephant from deadly poachers involves a detailed field manual and arming local teams with firearms to combat what he calls, “well-armed, ruthless and experienced gangs of poachers.
Young says it's possible that if the poachers aren't contained, they could effectively wipe out the African elephant population by 2020.
“A large percentage of rangers across Africa have rudimentary training at best,” Young said in an interview with Yahoo News. “The majority of countries do not have a comprehensive anti-poaching doctrine, standard operating procedures, or training systems.”
But at the same time, Young said more and more individuals are being forced into duty to combat the recent rise in poaching.
Young is part of an organization called Chengeta Wildlife that is raising money to train these wildlife protection teams. Although many African countries have worked to create sanctuaries for their elephant populations, illegal poaching has surged in recent years. And at the same time, most of these nations do not have the resources to combat the poachers, who are often trained and heavily armed former soldiers being paid large sums of money to slaughter the elephants for their ivory tusks.
To counter the shortage of resources, Young and Chengeta have published a field manual that explains the poaching problem and offers a step-by-step solution to combating it.
“We have developed a structured and comprehensive ‘doctrine’ and have recently written ‘A field Manual for Anti-Poaching Activities,’" Young said. “This small book is the first of its kind and outlines the doctrine and shows how the poaching processes work and explains the strategies, processes, skills and techniques necessary combat poaching and deter it.”
Less than 100 years ago, there were an estimated 3 to 5 million African elephants. After massive poaching and land development threatened extinction, there is now ample evidence showing that in areas where the elephants are protected, the numbers are recovering.
But in China, there is still a huge demand for the ivory taken from elephant tusks, even though the trade was banned back in 1989. Worse yet, the vast majority of ivory taken from the dead elephants is used for essentially worthless trinkets and other small items like chopsticks.
A team of American designers recently created an original graphic to help Young’s organization raise money. “The True Cost of Ivory Trinkets” was created by Robin Richards, Joe Chernov, and Leslie Bradshaw to highlight the cruel ways poachers kill the elephants, including poisoning their water supply and hacking off the tusks while the elephants are still alive, leaving them to slowly bleed to death.
An infographic created to show the true costs of illegal elephant poaching (Chengeta)
An infographic created to show the true costs of illegal elephant poaching
Bradshaw said the team was moved to assist Young after a graphic about shark killings that they created in 2013 quickly shot to the top of Reddit and other social media sites. A study released this week showed that the demand for shark fins in China had dropped by more than 50 percent since an awareness campaign was launched there.
“There is way too much complaining and hurling of insults at China,” Young said.
“Most of the people there do not really understand the brutality and the devastation caused for the ivory to end up as a letter opener or chopstick. I believe that the Asian youth if shown exactly what is happening would not accept it.”
Young said that by the end of 2014 he will have trained more than 150 team members on anti-poaching procedures. But he says there is an estimated need for 50,000 individuals at all levels, from top-level bureaucracy to armed men in the jungle to fully contain the illegal poaching trade.
“Both the African elephant and the more endangered Forest elephant can both be saved and their numbers increased again, but only if we move immediately and decisively,” he said.

Woman saved pet bearded dragon with CPR

A woman from Salem, Oregon, saved her 3-year-old pet bearded dragon by performing CPR after finding him blue and floating unconscious in his pool on Tuesday.
Sherrie Dolezal, 62, performed chest compressions on the lizard, hung him upside down to clear water from his mouth and blew air into his mouth. Soon, he opened his eyes and started to move.
Dolezal, who calls herself a reptile rescuer, keeps nearly two dozen other lizards at her home. The one she saved with CPR is named Del Sol.

Dolezal said she put Del Sol in his pool but had forgotten to put rocks in it so he could climb out. She'd been having a crazy day with errands and pet care, and when she returned to find Del Sol, she said she thought he was dead but tried CPR anyway.

Police capture cat-eating python

Police in Port St. Lucie, Florida, responded to reports of an extremely large snake that people believe has been feasting on neighborhood cats on Friday morning.
Sgt. John Holman arrived on the scene and found a dead cat in an empty lot. Holman waded into waist-high brush and spotted an approximately 12-foot, 120-pound Burmese python. "Once I saw the size of it, I called for a few more officers," Holman said. "I'm not going to do that by myself."
Denise Keel said she's not surprised that police found the python next door to her home. "I wondered what happened to all the little animals," Keel said. "Some of the neighbors had a couple of snakes that they kept in one of those aquarium things, and they've moved."

Holman recognized that the python is one of the snakes that has been banned in Florida. Holman has identified a third party who currently has a license and is permitted with Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to house the snake.

Peacocks In Flight

It's Quite The Sight
You may have been lucky enough to have encountered a peacock or two in your time. Yet few people have seen one take to the air - and many assume that the three species are flightless.
Although the sheer mass of feathers precludes any avian marathon, peacocks can and do take flight, normally to get to their chosen spot for the evening. It may be a roof or a tree, but somewhere safe from most predators.

Animal Pictures


Monday, August 11, 2014

Non Sequitur

The Daily Drift

 True dat ..!
 
Carolina Naturally is read in 200 countries around the world daily.   

Now there's a Whiz-Bang idea ... !
Today is  - Practical Joke Day
 
Don't forget to visit our sister blog: It Is What It Is

Some of our readers today have been in:
The Americas
United States - Canada - Colombia - Trinidad and Tobago - Brazil - Argentina - Uruguay - Chile
Puerto Rico
Europe
Russia - Poland - Romania - Germany - Denmark - Italy - Netherlands - England - Spain - Serbia - Ireland
Moldova - Iceland - Norway - France - Bosnia and Herzegovina
Asia
Singapore - Mauritius - Iran - Sri Lanka - Pakistan - India - Malaysia - Indonesia - Saudi Arabia - Burma
Africa
Tunisia - Algeria - South Africa - Egypt - Zambia
The Pacific
Philippines

Today in History

991 Danes under Olaf Tryggvason kill Ealdorman Brihtnoth and defeat the Saxons at Maldon.
1492 Rodrigo Borgia is elected to the papacy as Pope Alexander VI.
1792 A revolutionary commune is formed in Paris, France.
1856 A band of rampaging settlers in California kill four Yokut Indians. The settlers had heard unproven rumors of Yokut atrocities.
1862 President Abraham Lincoln appoints Union General Henry Halleck to the position of general in chief of the Union Army.
1904 German General Lothar von Trotha defeats the Hereros tribe near Waterberg, South Africa.
1906 In France, Eugene Lauste receives the first patent for a talking film.
1908 Britain's King Edward VII meets with Kaiser Wilhelm II to protest the growth of the German navy.
1912 Moroccan Sultan Mulai Hafid abdicates his throne in the face of internal dissent.
1916 The Russia army takes Stanislau, Poland, from the Germans.
1929 Babe Ruth hits his 500th major league home run against the Cleveland Indians.
1941 Soviet bombers raid Berlin but cause little damage.
1942 The German submarine U-73 attacks a Malta-bound British convoy and sinks HMS Eagle, one of the world's first aircraft carriers.
1944 German troops abandon Florence, Italy, as Allied troops close in on the historic city.
1965 A small clash between the California Highway Patrol and two black youths sets off six days of rioting in the Watts area of Los Angeles.
1972 The last U.S. ground forces withdraw from Vietnam.
1975 US vetoes admission of North and South Vietnam to UN.
1978 Funeral of Pope Paul VI.
1984 Carl Lewis wins four Olympic gold medals, tying the record Jesse Owens set in 1936.
1988 Al Qaeda formed at a meeting in Peshawar, Pakistan.
1989 Voyager 2 discovers two partial rings around Neptune.
1990 Troops from Egypt and Morocco arrive in Saudi Arabia as part of the international operation to prevent Iraq from invading.
1999 A tornado in downtown Salt Lake City, Utah, kills one person.
2003 Temperatures rise to 112 degrees Fahrenheit (44 degrees Celsius); over 140 people die in the heat wave.
2003 NATO assumes command of the international peacekeeping force in Afghanistan, its first major operation outside Europe.

Medical marijuana patients suing San Diego as driving to dispensaries will increase air pollution

Marijuana patients have claimed in court that San Diego and the California Coastal Commission will foul the air, snarl traffic and force people to grow marijuana indoors, wasting energy and increasing global warming, because of their wrongheaded decision to allow no more than 36 marijuana co-ops in the city. The Union of Medical Marijuana Patients sued the Coastal Commission and San Diego on August 1, in San Diego County Court.
The rather technical complaint challenges the Coastal Commission's June 11 approval of a San Diego city ordinance of March 25, which authorized medical marijuana co-ops in the city. The zoning-oriented ordinance allows medical marijuana co-ops only in certain industrial and commercial zones, and requires buffer zones between co-ops and residential areas. "The ordinance caps the total number of cooperatives at 36 and places a limit of four per Council District," the Los Angeles-based Union of Medical Marijuana Patients says in the lawsuit.
But because of the zoning restrictions, the union says, only 30 pot stores are "even possible" under the law. This "extremely restrictive approach" will require "thousands of patients to drive across the City of San Diego to obtain their medicine because cooperatives are only allowed in certain limited places in the city, which will create traffic and air pollution," the lawsuit states. It claims that the Coastal Commission, which had to approve the City Council ordinance under the California Environmental Quality Act, "failed to analyze the reasonably foreseeable consequences of increased indoor cultivation of medical marijuana" because of the restrictive zoning.
The union claims that it is "reasonably foreseeable" that indoor pot gardens will increase due to the restrictive ordinance. This will increase wastewater, biowaste and electrical consumption, environmental impacts "which the Commission failed to appreciate." The union also claims the defendants failed to conduct an adequate environmental assessment of their plan, which is required by CEQA, and it wants the approval of the plan set aside until it complies with CEQA, and costs.

Given mankind's body of knowledge, ignorance is a choice

Debunking the myths about immigration: Ronald Reagan, Central America and everything Ted Cruz doesn't understand

If we want to understand the immigration crisis, we need to revisit Reagan and the violence we brought the region 
There seems to be a general consensus that we should be addressing not only the symptoms, but also the "root causes" of rising emigration from Central America. But what are they? On the right, the influx of children from the region is said to be the predictable result of our allegedly lenient immigration policy; mass deportation, therefore, is supposedly the obvious solution. "[I]mmediately deport these families, these children," demands Rep. Raúl Labrador, R-Idaho, in "plane loads," specifies Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. Closer to the center, the causes of immigration from the region are typically said to be rising gang violence, the drug trade and the drug war and - to a lesser extent - poverty.
With the exception of our immigration policy, it's obvious these factors are playing a major role in encouraging emigration from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. But if we are to speak of true "root causes," we have to look deeper still: first, to the gross inequality from which these social maladies arise, and second, to the political forces that have maintained and enforced this economic status quo, decade after decade. The implications of Thomas Piketty's "Capital" for the developed world have been much discussed, but the meaning of inequality for poor countries is no less: The crisis of Central American immigration, I would argue, is a crisis of inequality, tragically manifested.
Clearly, inequality in Central America has been, to some degree, the brutal legacy of colonialism. Yet even today, the countries of Central America are among the most unequal not only in the hemisphere, but also on the globe: Honduras is the eighth most unequal country worldwide, and Guatemala isn't far behind. Income distribution aside, Central American nations are also the most impoverished in Latin America. Using a multidimensional index, the U.N. estimates that 79.9% of children in Guatemala, 78.9% in El Salvador and 63.1% in Honduras live in poverty (compared to 31.8% in Venezuela and 15.7% in Chile). In Honduras, rates of malnutrition reach 48.5% in rural areas, while almost half of Guatemalan children are moderately or severely stunted in growth. Superimposed on this poverty has been a devastating wave of gang violence. El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras have some of the highest homicide rates in the world.
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But why is the region so underdeveloped, why is poverty so entrenched, and why has the colonial legacy of inequality proven so resistant to social and political change? Though the situation is admittedly complex, the dismal state of affairs in Central America is in no small part the result of the failure of social democratic and left-of-center governments to maintain power and enact socioeconomic change; this failure, in turn, is sadly (in part) the consequence of the ironic "success" of U.S. foreign policy.

The 4th Amendment - who is REALLY interpreting it

The Fourth Amendment to the constitution of the United States of America reads: 

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized
.

Ziggy

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Gerrymandering ...

... not the original intent for our democracy

From Founding Father Quotes
The Government ought to possess not only 1st the force but 2nd the mind or sense of the people at large. The Legislature ought to be the most exact transcript of the whole Society. Representation is made necessary only because it is impossible for the people to act collectively. The opposition was to be expected he said from the Governments, not from the Citizens of the States.
.
James Wilson, as recorded in James Madison’s notes on the Constitutional Convention, June 6, 1787
When one party wins the popular vote for the House of Representatives by over a million votes, but the other party still ends up with a majority, do we have the most exact transcription of the whole society?

School teacher has been absent for 23 years of her 24-year career

An Indian state school says one of its teachers has been absent for 23 years of her 24-year career. Sangeeta Kashyap was recruited as a biology teacher in the central state of Madhya Pradesh in 1990. School authorities say they do not know when she was last paid a salary, but she is still listed as an employee.
State education officials said the teacher would be removed her from the post. She is thought to have set an Indian record for staff absenteeism. Ms Kashyap spent her first year teaching in a school in the town of Dewas, after which she took three years of leave. In 1994, she was transferred to a school in the city of Indore but then applied for maternity leave and has never turned up for work.
Letters sent by the school to her address have remained unanswered, Sushma Vaishya, principal of the Government Ahilya Ashram School in Indore, said. An education department official said they had written to education authorities in the state capital, Bhopal, to have Ms Kashyap removed from her post. "I have no idea why nothing was done. We are writing to them again to remove her," Sanjay Goel said.
The school is allowed to have three biology teachers, but only two are filled - with the third held by the absentee teacher. Absenteeism is a pervasive problem in government-run schools in India. A World Bank study in 2004 found that 25% of teachers were absent from school, and only about half were present during unannounced visits to government primary schools. Ms Kashyap's whereabouts remain unknown. It is also not clear why she did not return to work or if she has been working elsewhere.

Thief with a conscience sent $2 and handwritten letter of apology for taking extra piece of chicken

In his 39 years in the chicken business, it was a first for Rocky Rasmussen, owner of KFC in North Platte, Nebraska. The letter in the envelope containing $2 mailed to his restaurant was unsigned. “This $2 is for the piece of chicken I brought home with me on Tuesday,” the letter read. “That’s stealing. Sorry!”
“It seems as if her conscience got the best of her,” Rasmussen said. “There was no return address on the envelope. I really wish I knew who it was. I would buy them a few meals.” The handwriting is a bit spidery, perhaps indicating that the writer is older and probably female. “I took more on my plate than I could eat and I knew it would get thrown away there because it couldn’t get put back on the buffet, so I put it in my purse and brought it home,” the letter read.
“I do love your chicken!” Rasmussen is used to people trying to take advantage of the buffet. “People don’t pay for everyone in the family or will fill the last plate and it goes into a plastic bag in a purse,” he said. “It’s an ongoing problem.” To have someone own up to the theft demonstrated that there are good and honest people in the world, he said.
“It just makes your faith in people come back a little more,” Rasmussen said. “Whoever it was probably doesn’t have a lot of money. To send a couple bucks back to us is pretty remarkable. It’s very touching.” The writer admitted to a crisis of faith over the piece of chicken. “Anyway,” the letter reads. “God has forgiven me and I hope you will too. I will not be so quick to take so much next time.”

Man arrested after directing traffic while doing the robot

An man from Evansville, Indiana, was arrested on Saturday night after police said he tried to direct traffic with the art of dance.
An Evansville Police Department officer watched at around 6pm as 39-year-old Sylvester Clark ran into traffic on Green River Road near the Lloyd Expressway, according to an arrest report.
Traffic was heavy and was thrown into “chaos” when Clark ran into the road, according to police. In the middle of the traffic, Clark stopped and began performing the “robot,” while “vehicles were moving all around him,” according to police.
Clark then started to direct the traffic while doing the “robot.” He was arrested and booked into the Vanderburgh County Jail on preliminary charges of disorderly conduct. Bail was set at $50. According to police, Clark did not appear to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

Man fined for pretending to be ghost in cemetery

A man has been fined for pretending to be a ghost in a cemetery. Anthony Stallard, 24, had been out drinking when he went to Kingston Cemetery in Portsmouth, Hampshire. While there with friend Martin Collingwood, Stallard was seen kicking a football at graves before making ghostly noises within earshot of people visiting graves. He was reported to police, who arrested him and charged him with using threatening or abusive words or behavior likely to cause distress. Prosecuting at Portsmouth Magistrates’ Court, Tim Concannon said: "While the football was going on they were shouting and this defendant was effectively singing loudly and being disrespectful in among the graves. He was throwing himself backwards, waving his arms about and going 'wooooooo'. I’m assuming he was pretending to be a ghost." Stallard accepted at a previous hearing that his behavior could cause distress to grieving relatives and had pleaded guilty.
Defending Denise Saunders said: "He has accepted that his behavior, if it had been outside of a cemetery would not have been inappropriate, but inside a cemetery while people are grieving for their loved ones it might be." She added: "He is apologetic as demonstrated by his early guilty plea." The court heard that Stallard had committed the offense while subject to a 12-month conditional discharge, which he had received for a charge of harassment in January. He was also in breach of a suspended sentence for an offense of assault, which he had committed in August last year.
Ms Saunders argued that Stallard had complied well with his previous sentence of supervision and he was being tested for autism, which could have meant he did not understand the consequences of his actions. Stallard, of Southsea, was fined £35 and made to pay a £20 victim surcharge and £20 in court costs. An extra three months was added to his suspended sentence, which will now run for 15 months instead of the previous 12. If he commits a further offense that breaches this suspended sentence, he will face 12 weeks imprisonment. Charges of causing damage to the gravestones caused when the pair were playing football were dismissed due to lack of evidence when neither witness showed at court. The case against Mr Collingwood, 36, of Portsmouth, was discontinued.

Daily Comic Relief

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Motorist killed and passenger wounded when hunter mistook their car for a wild boar

A short-sighted hunter who shot a car driver dead and wounded his passenger after mistaking them for wild pigs is facing 5 years in jail.
Zbigniew Kowalski, 60, from the town of Leczyca in central Poland, had been out hunting in a nearby forest when he spotted the car containing victims Lukasz Nowakowski, 21, who survived, and Josef Kuchar, 23, who later died. Mistaking the car for a wild boar he had let off a volley of shots, hitting Kuchar in the neck and Nowakowski in the chest.
Prosecutor Krzystof Kopania said: "The two men were wounded, but the driver Josef Kuchar, who later died, managed to drive them both to his home where his parents immediately called an ambulance. "But by the time he got to hospital it was too late. We identified the hunter, he was immediately detained and he confirmed that he had mistakenly shot at the car.
"He realized his mistake when the 'wild boar' started its engine and drove off, but because whoever had driven off had clearly been alive he assumed he had missed the vehicle." Kowalsk later said he had not called police as a result and had carried on hunting. It was only when police cars turned up that and he was questioned by officers did he realize he had indeed hit somebody in the car. Police confirmed that he will now be charged with manslaughter.

Elderly lady injured in mishap with pony-drawn wheelchair

An 87-year-old woman was injured on Tuesday after hitching her wheelchair to the back of a pony in Bavaria, Germany.
The owner of the pony, a 52-year-old acquaintance of the injured woman is now facing legal proceedings after the illegal tour of Schwarzenbach am Wald, police said on Wednesday. The woman in the wheelchair had been hitched up to the pony using a standard carriage harness, but instead of a carriage, it was hooked on to the wheelchair.
The trio of pony owner, senior and pony then toured the Bavarian town without incident until they stopped to take a photo. It was then that the pony spooked, took off, dragging the hapless octogenarian behind it. The terrifying ride came to an end when the animal jumped a kerb, throwing the woman out of her wheelchair. She was taken to hospital and discharged after being given treatment for a head injury.

Police spokesman Harald Schnabel said that the incident is now before the courts, as it is considered a traffic accident, "with, of course, an unusual sort of vehicle". It has not been decided yet what action will be taken against the pony owner for the illegal carriage ride. The woman is now back at home recovering. Schnabel added: "She will probably stay away from the back end of horses for the rest of her life." The pony was uninjured in the incident.

Crocodile vs Shark

Tourists on a wildlife cruise exploring Australia’s Adelaide River on Monday were stunned to see a crocodile chomping down on a large bull shark.

Mother and daughter in fear of their lives after violent murder of rock and roll dancing rabbit

A mother and daughter are living in fear after intruders broke into their home in the Paralowie suburb of Adelaide, Australia, and killed their pet rabbit in a callous attack. June Dyer says she fears further attacks after her nine-year old daughter found their pet bunny Roxy crumpled with a broken neck and paws in the back yard of her home last Friday. “We came home and I said to my daughter, we’ve got some spare strawberries, go give some to Roxy, and next minute I just heard a deathly scream, she just called out ‘Mum, come out here’,” Ms Dyer said.
“I came out and saw what had happened and started crying and said straight away ‘oh no, we’re next’, that’s what came straight to my mind. My daughter went straight into a rage because it was her baby, Roxy was the first pet that she’s had in her life.” Ms Dyer said her daughter would take Roxy for walks to school on a lead and the one-year old bunny was popular among members of the rock and roll club she was a member of. “We taught it to dance, you put the music on and it would dance around your feet, it was such an intelligent little thing,” she said.
“He was the only rabbit I know in Adelaide that walked on a lead and danced to rock and roll music.” Ms Dyer said Roxy had been trained to use a kitty-litter tray and slept on her daughter’s bed some nights. She said her daughter and other students had undergone counseling over the devastating attack. “We are scared for our lives, my daughter has to sleep in my bed and she has been diagnosed as suffering depression,” she said. Ms Dyer said she had received death threats and harassing phone calls over the past year but was unsure of who would go to such lengths to target her.
“It must be someone that’s very sick in their mind, because I work in mental health I would have to say that person is delusional and totally dangerous, if you’re going to kill an innocent rabbit, what is next? Why would you do that to an innocent animal, it’s just totally wrong.” Ms Dyer and her daughter buried Roxy in a small grave in their back yard, and said they were planning on adopting another baby rabbit to train. She said her home had been the subject of vandal attacks in recent months, but was shocked that anyone would go to such violent lengths to target her. A spokesman for SA Police said investigations into the matter were continuing and urged anyone with information them.

Old Sharks

Nuclear bomb testing from the 50s and 60s had at least one perk: it's enabling scientists now to learn that many sharks are much older.

Animal Pictures