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Showing posts with label World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World. Show all posts

Some Facts from Guinness Book of Records

The longest dog ears. .




The longest dog ears and see the size 34,9 34,2 cm-right and left,
respectively, measured on September 29, 2004 They belong Tiggeru (Tigger),
Jr., whose owners Brian and Christine Flessner (Bryan and Christina
Flessner) lived in the city of St. Joseph, Illinois.

The highest paid attraction in slow decline.


The highest attraction slow fall called "Sky Jump" (Leap from the sky) and
is located in the tower and entertainment center crossovers Macau. Fall
begins with a 61-level towers at a height of 233 m. over land, and continues
for 17-20 seconds. Solemn leap committed A. J. Hackett (A. J. Hackett) from
New Zealand on August 17, 2005

An old man, who committed lowering a rope.


The oldest person spustivshimsya a rope from a height of more than 30
metres. a britanka Doris Long (Doris Long), which on June 10, 2006 has
descend from the building Millgate House-60 m. from the roof to the ground,
at the age of 92 years and 24 days (she was born on May 18, 1914). The
building is located in an area of St. George in the city of Portsmouth,
England.

The largest mirror ball.

The largest mirror ball is 5.01 m. in diameter. Imaginate Events. His boat
Nigel Burrows (Nigel Burrows) from the company Imaginate Events. Shaer was
demonstrated in the city of Reading, England, October 13, 2006
The biggest leap riding on a lion.



The biggest leap riding on a lion to a distance of 2.3 m. Askold committed
and Edgar Zapashnye (both Russian) - Russian State Circus performers, the
circus scene Perm July 28, 2006

The largest number of concrete blocks, broken karatistom one minute.



Ninety concrete blocks for one minute broke his arm Norwegian Narve Laeret
on televisions transfer "Senkveld" television TV2 on November 9, 2006 in
Oslo.

The largest number of snakes gremuchih held in his mouth.



American Jackie Bibby (Jackie Bibby) was able to hold in his mouth without
assistance 10 gremuchih snake tails for a period of 10 seconds on the Day
Guinness World Records on November 9, 2006

The longest fingernails on both hands.


Nelvin Feyzel Booz (Nelvin Feizel Boothe) from the city of Pontiac,
Michigan, not strig nails 25 years, bringing the total length of 1910
amounted to 931 nails see

The strongest vypuchivanie eye.


Kim Gudmen the United States can vypuchit eye of the eye of 11 mm. This
fact was recorded in the television show "Guinness World records :
Praymtaym" June 13, 1998

The biggest pick-up.




Height truck Bigfoot 5 is 4.7 m height tires-3 pm-weight 17,236 kg. This is
one of the 17 pickups such established Bob Chandler (Bob Chandler) from the
city of St. Louis, Missouri. It was built during the summer of 1986, he is
now permanently berthed in the city of St. Louis and occasionally appear on
the local festivities.

Longest jet of milk produced from the eye.

Ilker Yilmaz (Ilker Yilmaz) from Turkey issued a strict eye milk 279.5 see
Record was recorded on September 1, 2004 at the Hotel Armada Hotel in
Istanbul, Turkey.

World Records


This church's wonky steeple, in Suurhusen, northern Germany, is now the most leaning tower in the world. It even beats the famous Leaning Tower of Pisa in Italy.

World Records day 2007


These two record-breaking pups met up to mark Guinness World Records day 2007. At 107cm high, Gibson, a harlequin great Dane, is the world's tallest dog, while Boo Boo the long-haired Chihuahua is the world's smallest, at just 10.16cm tall.

Guiness Book of Records longest fingernails grown after 27 years


A US woman who has been growing her fingernails since 1979 has made the Guiness Book of Records. Lee Redmond, 65, from Utah, qualified for entry in the 2007 edition after her nails reached a combined length of 24.6 feet (7.5 metres).


Mrs Redmond treats her nails daily with warm olive oil and nail hardener and says she can do most household chores without a problem, including shaving her husband.


She’s going to have them all removed by laser on November 22nd this year.

World Record : Giant Man Lives in Ukraine

At age 33, Leonid Stadnik wishes he would stop growing. He’s already 8 feet, 4 inches

Recent measurements show that Stadnik is already 7 inches taller than Radhouane Charbib of Tunisia, listed by the Guinness Book of World Records as the tallest living man.


He’s also gaining on the 8-11 Robert Wadlow, the tallest man in history. Yet for Stadnik, the prospect of becoming a record-holder would be little comfort.


“My two-year-old suit’s sleeves and pants are now 30 centimeters (12 inches) shorter than I need,” said Stadnik. “My height is God’s punishment. My life has no sense.”


Stadnik’s height keeps him confined to this tiny village 130 miles west of the capital, Kiev.



“Taking a public bus for me is the same as getting into a car’s trunk for a normal person,” he said.
Stadnik’s unusual growth began after a brain operation at age 14, which is believed to have stimulated his pituitary gland. Since then, life just keeps getting harder.
Although he once was able to work as a veterinarian at a cattle farm, he had to quit three years ago after his feet were frostbitten because he wasn’t able to afford proper shoes for his 17-inch feet.
This month, he finally got a good pair, paid for by some local businessmen. Their $200 cost was the equivalent of about seven months’ worth of the tiny pension that Stadnik receives in the economically struggling country.
Stadnik sleeps on two beds joined lengthwise and moves in a crouch through the small one-story house that he shares with his mother Halyna.
His weight of about 440 pounds aggravates a recently broken leg, and he suffers from constant knee pain.
Despite his aches, he tries to keep himself busy with the usual routine of country life. He works in the garden, tends the family’s cows and pigs, and helps neighbors with their animals.
To relax, he cultivates exotic plants and pampers his tiny, blue and yellow pet parakeet with his huge hands.
Bronyslav, a neighbor who refused to give his last name, described Stadnik as the “most unselfish, diligent man of a pure soul.”
His friends, in turn, treat him with the same sort of soft good humor. They’re trying to organize a trip for him to the Carpathian Mountains to show him that “there’s something in the world taller than you,” Bronyslav said.

Worlds oldest person


A supercentenarian (sometimes hyphenated as super-centenarian) is someone who has reached the age of 110 years or more, something achieved by only one in a thousand centenarians (based on European data). Furthermore, only 2% of supercentenarians live to be 115.


The term has been around at least since the 1970s (as one citation, Norris McWhirter editor of the Guinness Book of World Records, used the word in correspondence with age claims researcher A. Ross Eckler, Jr. in 1976), and was further popularized in 1991 by William Strauss and Neil Howe in their book entitled Generations. Early references tend to mean simply "someone well over 100," but the 110-and-over cutoff is the accepted criterion of demographers

World's Most Bizarre Statues

Optimus Prime (Southern China)















(Oslo, Norway)
Car park markings continue up the wall of the building where a Morris Mini is parked. The head- and taillights light up at night.


The "Magic tap" (found in "Aqualand" of Cadiz, Spain), which appears to float in the sky with an endless supply of water. Actually, there is a pipe hidden in the stream of water that holds the whole structure.
(Prague)







7 Unbelievable Lottery Stories

He escaped from a derailed train, a door-less plane, a bus crash, a car into flames, another 2 car accidents... then won a million dollar lottery

Here's the story of how the world's unluckiest man turned his fate upside down. Frane Selak, born in 1929, is a Croatian music teacher who used to be famous for his numerous escapes from fatal accidents:

In January, 1962, Selak was traveling via train from Sarajevo to Dubrovnik. However, the train had suddenly derailed and plunged into an icy river, killing 17 passengers. Selak managed to escape, and only suffered a broken arm and minor scrapes and bruises.
The following year, while traveling from Zagreb to Rijeka when the door blew away from the cockpit, forcing him out of the plane. Although 19 others were killed, he suffered only minor injuries and had miraculously landed in a haystack.
In 1966, he was riding on a bus that crashed and plunged into a river. Four others were killed, but Selak managed to escape unharmed.
In 1970, he managed to escape before a faulty fuel pump engulfed his car into flames.
In 1973, another of Selak's cars caught fire, forcing fire through the air vents. He suffered no injuries save the loss of most of his hair.
In 1995, he was hit by a city bus, but once again suffered minor injuries.
In 1996 he escaped when he drove off a cliff to escape an oncoming truck. He managed to land in a tree, and watched as his car exploded 300 feet below him.

But then, in 2003, the heavens seemed to review his case: he won $1,000,000 dollars in the Croatian lottery!
"I know God was watching me over all these years." he said, and has reputedly refused to fly to Australia to air on a Doritos commercial, saying he "didn't want to test his luck." Frane also said that he can either be looked as "the world's unluckiest man, or the world's luckiest man," and prefers the latter.


Woman googles husband, finds he won the lottery but never told her

On 2007, Donna Campbell became suspicious of her husband, Arnim Ramdass, when he started to keep the television turned off and disconnected the phone line. Her suspicions rose when she found a postcard about a new home purchase.
But Campbell was unaware that her husband was hiding a $10.2 million secret from her until she Googled her husband's name and lottery number. She found a Florida lottery press release that named 17 airline mechanics who won the jackpot, her husband was one of them.
The group of mechanics opted for the lump-sum payment of $10.2 million, meaning each of the 17 winners would receive about $600,000 before taxes. Since the winning, Ramdass took a leave of absence from work, according to his co-workers. He hasn't shown up at the couple's home and servers can't find him to hand him the lawsuit papers: she wants half the money and out of the marriage.

Doubled his share of the jackpot... by mistake!

When Derek Ladner next suffers from absent mindedness, he may think twice before cursing his poor memory. For the 57-year-old's forgetfulness has landed him an amazing double lottery win.
He and his wife Dawn were elated when their six regular numbers came up on the midweek draw on 2007. They were quick to claim their £479,142 share of the £2,395,710 jackpot split between five winners. But, incredibly, a week later Mr Ladner remembered he had bought another ticket with the same numbers for the same draw.
That gave him two of the five shares of the jackpot on July 11, doubling his winnings to £958,284. A spokesman for lottery operator Camelot said it was the first time a player had won twice in the same draw! Mr Ladner's forgetfulness cost the other three winners almost £120,000 each. Had he not bought the extra ticket, they would have split the jackpot four ways instead of five and won £598,927 a person.

Run over by a truck, hours after his win
On 22 January 2004, 73-year-old Carl Atwood of Elwood, Indiana, who won $73,450 in an Indiana lottery game taped for television, died scant hours later. He was knocked down by a truck and expired shortly thereafter in an Indianapolis hospital.
That evening he had been walking to the grocery store that had sold him a winning ticket when a pickup truck rounded a corner and struck him. (The store was located one block from his home.) "It was at an unlighted intersection, and Mr. Atwood had dark clothing on, so the driver did not see him before he hit him," Elwood Police Chief Toby R. Barker said.

Won $16.2 million... got sued by everyone, went broke and died

William "Bud" Post won $16.2 million in the Pennsylvania lottery in 1988 but now lives on his Social Security. "I wish it never happened. It was totally a nightmare," says Post.
A former girlfriend successfully sued him for a share of his winnings. It wasn't his only lawsuit. A brother was arrested for hiring a hit man to kill him, hoping to inherit a share of the winnings. Other siblings pestered him until he agreed to invest in a car business and a restaurant in Sarasota, Fla., - two ventures that brought no money back and further strained his relationship with his siblings. Post even spent time in jail for firing a gun over the head of a bill collector. Within a year, he was $1 million in debt.
Post admitted he was both careless and foolish, trying to please his family. He eventually declared bankruptcy. Now he lives quietly on $450 a month and food stamps. "I'm tired, I'm over 65 years old, and I just had a serious operation for a heart aneurysm. Lotteries don't mean (anything) to me," said Post. He died on Jan 15 of respiratory failure.

Won the lottery twice after a dream

Many successful lottery entrants have said their winning combinations came to them in dreams; that they awoke with five or six numbers dancing in their heads, jotted the combinations down, played them, and won. Sometimes the dreamed-of numbers paid off right away, and sometimes the dreamers played those combinations for years before hitting the jackpot. So, that 86-year-old Mary Wollens of Toronto won the Ontario Lottery on 30 September 2006 after seeing "a lotto ticket and a large cheque" in a dream a couple of days before the drawing wasn't all that unusual — the remarkable part was that her prophetic dream enabled her to win the same lottery twice.
You see, Mary had already purchased a lottery ticket with the combination she later dreamed about, but her vision instilled her with such confidence that she went out and bought a second ticket with those same numbers. Now, some people would consider purchasing a duplicate ticket be a foolish waste of money (because if your numbers lose, you're needlessly out an extra dollar, and even if you hit the big jackpot, you don't necessarily get any extra credit for winning twice), but not Mary — and good thing, too, because she happened onto one of those occasions when having a second ticket paid off big. As things turned out, someone else had also correctly picked all six numbers for that week's draw, so instead of having to split the $24 million jackpot evenly with another winner, Mary was able to claim a two-thirds share and take home $16 million!

Committed suicide because he mistakenly believed his lotto numbers had come up the one week he didn't play them
In April 1995 Timothy O'Brien committed suicide by shooting himself in the head because his half-share of a five-week ticket on Britain's (then) new National Lottery had expired just before the draw he thought would have made him a multi-millionaire.
The truth is, even if he'd held a valid ticket for his usual numbers, O'Brien wouldn't have won. The numbers that came up would have entitled the ticketholders to a prize of 47 pounds, not the 3.2 million he thought he and his partner had missed out on. And why? Because only four of the six numbers matched those drawn.

Joke of the day

Quote of the day