Try both, after workout and a bit for breakfast :)
Printable View
Try both, after workout and a bit for breakfast :)
1. In 2000, a baby girl named Astha was chosed to mark the billionth baby in India. Her birth meant the country joined China as the only nation to exceed the billion mark for population. :eek:
2. In 2003, a student lost his driving licence after drink-driving a scooter wearing just a thong and fluffy tiger slippers, with 'kiss this' written on his bottom in lipstick. :rotfl: This is not meant to entice anybody on here to do the same :nono:
3. In 1935, Alcoholics Anonymous was founded in Ohio.
1. A mole can dig a tunnel 300 feet long in just one night. :eek:
2. Ancient Egyptians slept on pillows made of stone. :eek:
3. Every time you lick a stamp, you're consuming one tenth of a calorie. :p
1. In 1878, the trademark for Vaseline was registered by Robert A. Chesebrough. He was said to have eaten a spoonful every day. :sick: :eek:
2. In 1985, the first McDonald's restaurant, in Illimois, became the first museum of fast food. :p
3. In 1996, a German tourist was thrown off his flight home from Brazil for smelling too bad. :eek:
1. A Staffordshire couple had their baby christened in a pub because they didn't want a church service. The venue used was called The Polite Vicar. :D
2. The human thigh bone is stronger than concrete. :eek:
3. In 1808, a duel was fought from two hot-air balloons over Paris. :eek:
1. In Brussels, two men had been stealing mobile phones from beautiful women and demanded a kiss before they would return them. :p
2. Dolphins sleep with one eye open. :cool:
3. The world's oldest piece of chewing gum is more than 9,000 year old. The ancient equivalent of a Wrigley's Spearmint has been prised from the ground by a British archaeology student digging in Finland. The lump of birch bark tar dates back to Neolithic times and comes complete with Stone Age tooth prints. :eek: I guess it has lost its minty flavour by now though :D
1. The first wheel clamps were introduced in Britain. They were adopted by Kensington, Chelsea and Westmister councils in London. :angry:
2. In 2001, a law firm specialising in divorces caused outrage by putting posters in clubs and bars encouraging people to dump their useless other halves. :rotfl:
3. In 1934, female players were allowed to wear shorts at Wimbledon for the first time. :ninja:
1. More people use blue toothbrushes than red ones. :p
2. Recycling one glass jar saves enough energy to watch TV for three hours. :thumbsup:
3. A Russian police station had to be evacuated after an elderly woman walked in with a handbag filled with hand grenades. She wanted to get rid of some of the weapons that her late husband had kept under their bed. :eek:
1. Bill Clinton objected to being placed 53rd in a list of the century's top news stories. He particularly objectd to being placed after the invention of plastic, saying: "I don't recall a year of 24-hour-a-day saturation coverage on the miracle of plastic". :cartman:
2. In 1988, the first gathering of alien abductees took place in Boston. :ninja:
3. Fulham Football Club was formed by two clergymen looking for something to entertain the congretation and is the only club in Britain to have been managed by two different men with the same name. Bill Dodgins Snr and Bill Dodgins Jnr have both been in charge of the club.
1. More Monopoly money is printed in a year than real money :eek:
2. In 2000, it was announced that Charles Darwin would replace Charles Dickens on the £10 note because his bushier beard made it harder to forge. :thumbsup:
3. Nose prints are used to identify dogs. :cool: