Feed: Everyday Lifestyle Blog - AggScore: 83.6



Well, found this set of interesting questions at a web site that i was browsing.
I cannot answer more than 50% of the questions! How about u?
And here are the questions!
At some point of life, we might have even ask ourselves these questions.
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1. Why does the sun lighten our hair, but darken our skin?
2. Why can't women put on mascara with their mouth closed?
3. Why doesn't glue stick to the inside of the bottle?
4. Why don't you ever see the headline Psychic Wins Lottery?
5. Why is abbreviated such a long word?
6. Why is a boxing ring square?
7. Why is it considered necessary to nail down the lid of a coffin?
8. Why is it that doctors call what they do practice?
9. Why is it that rain drops but snow falls?
10. Why is it that to stop Windows 98, you have to click on Start?
11. Why is it that when you're driving and looking for an address, you turn down the volume on the radio?
12. Why is lemon juice made with artificial flavor and dishwashing liquid made with real lemons?
13. Why is the man who invests all your money called a broker?
14. Why is the third hand on the watch called a second hand?
15. Why is the time of day with the slowest traffic called rush hour?
16. Why isn't there a special name for the tops of your feet?
17. Why isn't there mouse-flavored cat food?
18. If you throw a cat out of the car window, does it become kitty litter?
19. If you take an Asian person and spin him around several times does he become disoriented?
20. Is it OK to use the AM radio after noon?
21. What do people in China call their good plates?
22. What do you call a male ladybug?
23. What hair color do they put on the driver's license of a bald man?
24. Why do they sterilize the needle for lethal injections?
25. Why do they call it a pair of pants, but only 1 bra?
26. Why is it called tourist season if we can't shoot at them?
27. Why do you need a driver's license to buy liquor when you can't drink and drive?
28. Why isn't phonetic spelled the way it sounds?
29. Why are there Interstates in Hawaii?
30. Why are there flotation devices in the seats of planes instead of parachutes?
31. Why are cigarettes sold at gas stations where smoking is prohibited?
32. Have you ever imagined a world without hypothetical situations?
33. How does the guy who drives the snowplow get to work?
34. If the 7-11 is open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, why does it have locks on the door?
35. You know that indestructible black box that is used on airplanes? Why don't they make the whole plane out of it?
36. If a firefighter fights fire and a crime fighter fights crime, what does a freedom fighter fight?
37. If they squeeze olives to get olive oil, how do they get baby oil?
38. If a cow laughs, does milk come out of her nose?
39. If you are driving at the speed of light and you turn your headlights on, what happens?
40. Why do they put Braille dots on the keypad of a drive-up ATM?
41. Why is it that when you transport something by car it is called shipment, but when you transport something by ship it's called cargo?
42. Why don't sheep shrink when it rains?
43. Why are they called apartments when they are all stuck together?
44. If con is the opposite of pro, is Congress the opposite of progress?
45. If flying is so safe, why do they call the airport the terminal?
It is a relaxing sunday morning and i feel lazy.


Hmm, what happened if the beetle bug car (above) drop into the mouth?
he could certainly drive this around during halloween.




An employee forged medical certifcates issued by a clinic to support his absence from work. He was jailed for one year after he admitted to three counts of forgery for the purpose of cheating. He had forged the certificates by scanning the documents and reproducing copies on his computer. Fifteen other similar charges were taken into consideration by the Court for sentencing.
A woman was jailed 12 months and fined $170,000 for running a pornographic video shop.
A woman splashed urine on the front door of a neighbour's apartment and was fined $1,500. She was caught in the act by a closed-circuit television. She could have been jailed for up to two years.
Preventive detention - drug addicts
A man who had been in drug-rehabilitation centres eight times failed to report for urine tests at a police station. He was jailed for 18 months (9 months jail on each charge, with two terms to run consecutively. Lim could have been fined up to $10,000 and jailed for up to four years on each charge. Once he had been convicted of three or more offences, two sentences had to run consecutively.
He appealed and the CJ increased it to seven years. Lim had a history of convictions for rioting, armed robbery, causing hurt and theft. The CJ exercised his powers under section 216 of the Criminal Procedure Code to keep him in prison for as long as possible.
Nippon Paint introduced its "3-in-1" multi-purpose wall paint in 1995. In 1999, ICI Paint launched a new paint "Supreme 3-in-1". Nippon Paint cried foul and sued ICI for passing off its paint as the original "3-in-1". ICI Paint cans have a colourful and completely distinct and different look and could not be confused with Nippon's. The court dismissed the claim. It held there is nothing inventive, novel or unique in the "3-in-1" expression. It is merely a descriptive term.

In a unanimous verdict that was harshly criticised by the prosecuting attorney and the victim’s family, the judges ruled that the deliberate drinking of alcohol before the crime made Ramon Sosa, 32, behave negligently and without criminal intent.
“We can find no way to understand the reasoning of the court,” prosecutor Eduardo Luis Rodriguez Trejo said. He had asked for a sentence of 15 years in jail and said that he will appeal the ruling handed down Thursday by the court of the city of General Roca.
Sosa received the maximum sentence established by the Penal Code for manslaughter, while the prosecution had initially asked that he be found guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison, considering that the defendant well understood the criminality of what he was doing.
The judges took into account Sosa’s defence, that he told psychiatrists he remembered what happened before and after killing Laura Nahuelcar, 22, but not what happened while he was brutally attacking her.
After committing the crime at his home in General Roca Feb 27, 2008, the man went outside and told a neighbour what happened and before the police arrived tried to commit suicide by slitting his veins.
During the trial the motive of the homicide and the relationship between Sosa and Nahuelcar were never established, since no one in the victim’s family knew who he was, but police who arrested him on the night of the murder said Sosa told them he killed the woman because she had been unfaithful to him.
“This is not justice, this is injustice. You can’t give the same sentence for killing someone as for stealing a bicycle,” said the victim’s father Juan Carlos Nahuelcar, who also intends to appeal the court’s decision.
In Argentina, appeals against acquittals or adverse rulings to the prosecution’s case may be lodged with the Supreme Court of Justice.
Read more: http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/world-news/argentine-who-stabbed-girlfriend-75-times-gets-5-year-sentence_100246776.html#ixzz0WUBttBIt"

Remember, remember the fifth of november. 
From a high of 721 offenders caught in the first month — exceeding the total of 595 caught for the whole of last year — the figure fell to 183 in the second month. In the third month of the crackdown, just 96 were handed Notification of Offence (NOO) slips by train officers.
From July 15, SMRT had beefed up the enforcement of its longstanding rule on no—eating and no—drinking on trains by increasing staff patrols during off—peak hours. It had also said the measures would remain in place until there was a "sharp reduction" in offenders.
A spokesperson said: "We are happy to note the sharp decline in NOOs issued (after the first month), which we believe is a result of greater awareness of the rule."
But is it a case of the message getting across swiftly, or of stricter enforcement fizzling out after an initial blitz?
The spokesman said the number of checks by staff has been "constant". As for whether the latest numbers were low enough for SMRT to consider easing up on patrols, the spokesperson would only say: "We will continue with enforcement efforts and monitor the situation closely."
Commuters said they had noticed fewer people eating on trains, although some bad behaviour persists.
Executive assistant Chen Yan Bin, 23, attributed the drop to the news of enhanced enforcement and commuters ratting on offenders. But she has seen "aunties taking a whole packet of nuts, cracking them and eating them on the train".
Administrative assistant Mas said weekly sightings of people blatantly eating were the norm previously. "These days, there are fewer of them, and most are just popping a mint or sipping water", said the 36—year—old, who takes the train on weekdays between Admiralty and Outram Park.
While she supports the SMRT’s measures, Ms Mas suggested that an SMS service be set up to allow commuters to be the eyes of the operator on board the trains.
"Signs with the text number could be put up, and commuters can then tell SMRT which station and which carriage the offender is at," she said.
Oh my God, another case where the frail bones marry the young. Remember my old post post about an 107 year old woman marrying a 37th year old guy as her 23rd husband?
"My wife is ten times younger than me but we love each other so much and I believe that I can give her the kind of love that not any young man can offer," Ahmed Mohamed Dhore told AFP.
"Married life is about love and passion rather than age and beauty," said the centenarian, whose wedding ceremony in the town of Guriel was attended by hundreds on Wednesday.
"The first time I got married was so long ago I cannot remember and the last time must have been about 75 years ago, I was still a young man," he said.
Dhore would have already been an adult when the nationalist leader "Mad Mullah," Mohammed Abdullah Hassan, who fought the British empire and created the Dervish state died in 1920.
He said the secret to a longevity spanning three different centuries was "healthy food when he was young".
"I'm 112 and can live the life of a youngster... The idea to get married again came from my children and grand-children," he said, explaining that his only other surviving wife was 90 and ailing.
According to statistics by international aid and development agencies, the average life expectancy of a Somali male is 47.
James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher
Or this?
That that is is that that is not is not is that it it is
If you think i am writing crap, think again. Every single phrases above is legitimate statements, with proper noun, grammar and verb order.
In the case of James and John, it was even an test question which was given to the students in 1947
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffalo_buffalo_Buffalo_buffalo_buffalo_buffalo_Buffalo_buffalo
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/That_that_is_is_that_that_is_not_is_not_is_that_it_it_is
And yes, they are working links, not any 404 links.




