Post some interesting news...

by zagor 12 Replies latest social current

  • zagor
    zagor

    Here is one to start the thread...

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5250470/

    Oregon doctor jailed for billing for sex

    Doctor charged state $5,000 for patient‘s pelvic ‘treatments’

    Updated: 12:39 p.m. ET June 19, 2004

    PORTLAND, Oregon - An Oregon doctor, who had sex with a patient and then charged the state about $5,000 for his “treatments,” has been jailed for 60 days and stripped of his license, officials said on Friday.

    Dr. Randall J. Smith, 50, told the woman that massaging her "trigger points" would ease her pelvic pain. The treatments led to sexual intercourse and Smith billed the Oregon Health Plan for the 45-minute sessions at the Adventist Health Medical Group clinic in Gresham, Ore., near Portland.

    Smith must also perform 200 hours of community service and pay $1,105 in fines and is on probation for 18 months as part of the plea agreement. He also turned in his medical license.

  • zagor
    zagor

    and another ...

    Britney Spears sheds all in support of hurricane relief

    Mon Oct 3, 8:56 PM ET

    Britney Spears is giving her all to help victims of Hurricane Katrina in the US state of Mississippi -- even one of her bra's, the eBay auction site showed.

    The 23-year-old former teen queen, famed for her provocative stage outfits, has donated a treasure trove of personal items -- including a two-piece sofa, a bikini and a jewel-encrusted brassiere -- to be auctioned off to help victims.

    The "white-stone" undergarment, worn by the singer in one of her music videos, sports "a variety of sizes of round white stones and silver-tone beads in this intricately designed bra," according to online auctioneer eBay.

    The sparkling bra, which has already garnered offers of up to 610 dollars in the online auction that began on Saturday and will last a week, however, sports a broken link in the center piece connecting its cups, eBay noted.

    A two-piece, six-seat sofa owned by Spears is also on the block, with 560 dollars in bids so far received, while an oversized daybed had notched up a top offer of 390 dollars.

    A white two-piece swimsuit once worn by the shapely singer has fetched bids of up to 320 dollars.

    Other items include shoes, hats, handbags, a T-shirt, jewellery, a pair of red jeans and a set of bar-stools.

    Proceeds from the sale will go to the Mississippi Hurricane Recovery Fund which on Saturday staged a concert in Mississippi to benefit victims of the storm that struck the US Gulf Coast on August 29, leaving more than 1,000 people dead.

    Spears last month gave birth to her first baby with husband Kevin Federline.

  • zagor
    zagor

    or how about this...

    Chimp no longer has monkey on his back

    Mon Oct 3,10:44 AM ET

    A chimpanzee in a northwest China zoo has quit smoking after 16 years with the help of her keepers, official media reported.

    The staff, worried about her declining health, weaned 27-year-old "Ai Ai" off tobacco by distracting her with entertainment and a tastier diet, Xinhua news agency said.

    "The zoo keepers tried every way to divert the chimp's attention from cigarettes: a walk after breakfast, a music session after lunch and gym after dinner," Xinhua said.

    She also got fried dishes and dumplings, as well as the usual diet of milk, bananas and rice, said one zoo keeper.

    "I also put earphones on her so that she could enjoy some pop music from my walkman," he said.

    "In the first few days, she squealed for cigarettes every now and then, but as her life became more colorful she gradually forgot about them altogether."

    Xinhua attributed Ai Ai's habit to solitude and grief.

    Living in a safari park in Shaanxi province, she had taken up smoking in 1989 shortly after her mate died, it said. Then she had become a chain smoker after her second mate died in 1997 and her daughter was moved to another zoo.

    Xinhua did not say who had first given cigarettes to her or kept supplying them.

    The Xian Evening News said the zoo was trying to find another mate for her.

  • damselfly
    damselfly

    Report: Man Burns Carpet With Static Shock

    Friday, September 16, 2005

    (09-16) 17:04 PDT SYDNEY, Australia (AP) --

    Fire officials evacuated a building in southern Australia after a man triggered a massive shock of static electricity that caused burn marks in the carpet, a media report said Friday.

    Fire officials in southern Victoria state said the man, Frank Clewer, had built up at least 30,000 volts of static electricity in his jacket simply by walking around the western city of Warrnambool, according to a report by the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

    He received his first shock when he walked into a local business Thursday afternoon. "It sounded almost like a firecracker or something like that," Clewer told the ABC. "Within say around five minutes the carpet started to erupt."

    Burns about 0.79 inches in diameter were left on the carpet where he had been standing, the report said. ABC did not mention if Clewer was injured.

    The Country Fire Authority evacuated the building, fearing the incident might trigger electrical problems in the building, but let Clewer go, the report said.

    But when he got in his car, Clewer's problems continued.

    "I actually scorched a piece of plastic I had on the floor of the car," he said.

    Fire officials took Clewer's jacket and said it continued to give off voltage, the report said.

    Calls to the Country Fire Authority rang unanswered Friday evening.

  • zagor
    zagor
    Report: Man Burns Carpet With Static Shock

    LOL, I love that one, maybe there's an idea for new source of electricity alt

  • damselfly
    damselfly

    No need for the electric chair in prisons any more. Just simply outfit the prisoners in this man's tweed jacket and make them shuffle around on the carpet. Must have giant steel pole in center of room for discharge purposes.

    Dams

  • damselfly
    damselfly
    'Martha-mania' hits N.S. town By MELANIE PATTEN

    HALIFAX (CP) - For the past two years, grandfather of four Leo Swinimer has rowed himself to victory in an enormous, hollowed-out pumpkin at the annual Pumpkin Regatta.

    And a little rumoured competition from Martha Stewart isn't scaring Swinimer, 70, from going for his third straight win at this weekend's race in Windsor, N.S.

    In fact, he's talking tough.

    "If she's gonna paddle, hopefully she'll get across (the lake)," Swinimer, a retired police sergeant, said from his home in New Ross, N.S.

    "It's not likely she'll win, though."

    Windsor, a town of less than 4,000 in the Annapolis Valley, has been buzzing since last week, when word came that Stewart and a film crew from her syndicated television show will attend this Sunday's event.

    "We're calling it Martha-mania," said Vanessa Roberts, Windsor's economic development officer

    Roberts said Stewart's representatives called regatta organizers to arrange for the domestic maven to paddle her own pumpkin about 500 metres across Lake Pesaquid, along with 15 or so other competitors.

    The celebrity homemaker is also poised to ride alongside her pumpkin in a parade, right before the regatta.

    Roberts said Stewart's pending visit has resulted in a blitz of phone calls from fans.

    "They want to present her with flowers, they want to make her lunch, they want her to come and see Annapolis Valley artwork," she said.

    "What everybody needs to keep in mind is that she's going to be in town for four hours and 15 minutes."

    Despite the Martha mayhem sweeping Windsor, regatta spokeswoman Diana Dill said organizers aren't planning anything extra, except for picking out a perfect pumpkin that is sure to please Stewart.

    "Nothing too big, nothing too small. We're going to make sure the pumpkin is completely sound so that she doesn't sink," said Dill.

    Dill said Stewart's crew is expected to arrive a day early to decorate the pumpkin "in her colours."

    Swinimer, who raced in a squash weighing about 360 kilograms from a Nova Scotia grower last year, hasn't yet selected his vegetable vessel.

    With a nephew, two nieces and a couple of sisters also expected to participate in the race, Swinimer is hoping for a family victory.

    But he reluctantly admits Stewart could fare well and take the $200 top prize.

    "If she's got a good pumpkin and it goes good for her, then anything's possible," said Swinimer.

    The regatta usually attracts upwards of 7,000 people, but more than 10,000 are expected Sunday to catch a glimpse of the domestic guru.

    Roberts said Stewart's handlers have indicated they've already resolved any issues she could face at the border.

    "As far as we know, all systems are a go," said Roberts.

    Stewart, who is currently on probation, recently served more than five months house arrest and five months in prison for lying about a stock sale.

  • zagor
    zagor
    Exhibit's bare cheek

    A man stripped off naked and declared himself a 'guest exhibit' at one of Germany's most respected museums.

    It happened during an exhibition on antique pictures of Jesus Christ at the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum in Cologne.

    According to visitors, Walter Hofmueller, 58, suddenly removed his clothes and climbed on to a table next to one of the pictures.

    When the police arrived the man was still standing in the same position. He was arrested and charged with exhibitionism and breach of the peace.

    Museum director Dr. Andreas Bluehm called the uninvited addition to his exhibition "regrettable" but added: "At least none of the real artworks were damaged."

    http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_1561598.html?menu=news.quirkies

  • zagor
    zagor

    http://www.sundayherald.com/52035 Torture of Iraqis was for ‘stress relief’, say US soldiers

    By Neil Mackay, Investigations Editor



    FOR the first time, American soldiers who personally tortured Iraqi prisoners have come forward to give testimony to human rights organisations about crimes they comm itted.

    Three soldiers – a captain and two sergeants – from the 82nd Airborne Division stationed at Forward Operating Base (FOB) Mercury near Fallujah in Iraq have told Human Rights Watch how prisoners were tortured both as a form of stress relief and as a way of breaking them for interrogation sessions.

    These latest revelations about the torture of Iraqi detainees come at a time when the Bush administration thought it could draw a line under the scandal of Abu Ghraib following last week’s imprisonment of Private Lynndie England for her now infamous role in the abuse of prisoners and the photographing of torture.

    The 82nd Airborne soldiers at FOB Mercury earned the nickname “The Murderous Maniacs” from local Iraqis and took the moniker as a badge of honour.

    The soldiers referred to their Iraqi captives as PUCs – persons under control – and used the expressions “f***ing a PUC” and “smoking a PUC” to refer respectively to torture and forced physical exertion.

    One sergeant provided graphic descriptions to Human Rights Watch investigators about acts of abuse carried out both by himself and others. He now says he regrets his actions. His regiment arrived at FOB Mercury in August 2003. He said: “ The first interrogation that I observed was the first time I saw a PUC pushed to the brink of a stroke or a heart attack. At first I was surprised, like, ‘This is what we are allowed to do?’”

    The troops would put sand-bags on prisoners’ heads and cuff them with plastic zip-ties. The sergeant, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said if he was told that prisoners had been found with homemade bombs, “we would f*** them up, put them in stress positions and put them in a tent and withhold water … It was like a game. You know, how far could you make this guy go before he passes out or just collapses on you?”

    He explained: “To ‘f*** a PUC’ means to beat him up. We would give them blows to the head, chest, legs and stomach, pull them down, kick dirt on them. This happened every day. To ‘smoke’ someone is to put them in stress positions until they get muscle fatigue and pass out. That happened every day.

    “Some days we would just get bored so we would have everyone sit in a corner and then make them get in a pyramid. We did that for amusement.”

    Iraqis were “smoked” for up to 12 hours. That would entail being made to hold five-gallon water cans in both hands with out-stretched arms, made to do press-ups and star jumps. At no time, during these sessions, would they get water or food apart from dry biscuits. Sleep deprivation was also “a really big thing”, the sergeant added.

    To prepare a prisoner for interrogation, military intelligence officers ordered that the Iraqis be deprived of sleep. The sergeant said he and other soldiers did this by “banging on their cages, crashing them into the cages, kicking them, kicking dirt, yelling”.

    They’d also pour cold water over prisoners and then cover them in sand and mud. On some occasions, prisoners were tortured for revenge. “If we were on patrol and caught a guy that killed our captain or my buddy last week … man, it is human nature,” said the sergeant – but on other occasions, he confessed, it was for “sport”.

    Many prisoners were completely innocent and had no part in the insurgency, he said – but intelligence officers had told soldiers to exhaust the prisoners to make them co-operate. He said he now knew their behaviour was “wrong”, but added “this was the norm”. “Trends were accepted. Leadership failed to provide clear guidance so we just developed it. They wanted intel [intelligence]. As long as no PUC came up dead, it happened. ”

    According to Captain Ian Fishback of the 82nd Airborne Division, army doctrine had been broken by allowing Iraqis who were captured by them to remain in their custody, instead of being sent “behind the lines” to trained military police.

    Pictures of abuse at FOB Mercury were destroyed by soldiers after the scandal of Abu Ghraib broke.

    However, Fishback told his company commander about the abuse and was told “remember the honour of the unit is at stake” and “don’t expect me to go to bat for you on this issue if you take this up”. Fishback then told his battalion commander who advised him to speak to the Judge Advocate General’s (JAG) office, which deals with issues of military law.

    The JAG told Fishback that the Geneva Conventions “are a grey area”. When Fishback described some of the abuses he had witnessed the JAG said it was “within” Geneva Conventions.

    Fishback added: “ If I go to JAG and JAG cannot give me clear guidance about what I should stop and what I should allow to happen, how is an NCO or a private expected to act appropriately?”

    Fishback, a West Point graduate who has served in both Afghanistan and Iraq, spent 17 months trying to raise the matter with his superiors. When he attempted to approach representatives of US Senators John McCain and John Warner about the abuse, he was told that he would not be granted a pass to meet them on his day off.

    Fishback says that army investigators were currently more interested in finding out the identity of the other soldiers who spoke to Human Rights Watch than dealing with the systemic abuse of Iraqi prisoners.

    Colonel Joseph Curtin, a senior army spokesman at the Pentagon, said: “We do take the captain seriously and are following up on this.”

    Fishback has now been removed from special forces training because of the army investigation.

    02 October 2005

  • Mulan
    Mulan

    Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes Expecting Oct 5, 3:25 PM EST

    The Associated Press

    Let the couch-jumping begin: Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are expecting a baby. Holmes' pregnancy was reported Wednesday by People magazine. The couple have been dating since April and became engaged in June.

    "Tom and Katie are very excited, and the entire family is very excited," Lee Anne Devette, Cruise's spokeswoman, told People.

    It would be Holmes' first child. Cruise has two children, Connor, 10, and Isabella, 12, from his marriage to Nicole Kidman.

    No further details were available. Devette added that Holmes, 26, "has never felt better."

    Cruise, 43, is now shooting "Mission" Impossible 3."

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