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  1. #26
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    BBC News - The Queen sends first tweet to launch Science Museum gallery


    That was the Queen's first tweet - sent through the @BritishMonarchy account - heralding the launch of a major new exhibition at London's Science Museum.

    Three years in the planning, the exhibition is one of the most ambitious projects the museum has undertaken.

    Alongside historic objects, visitors can enjoy interactive experiences.

    The Information Age gallery, opened by the Queen this morning, takes visitors on a journey through the history of modern communications from the telegraph to the smartphone.

    https://twitter.com/hashtag/TheQueenTweets?src=hash
    Last edited by S Landreth; 25-10-2014 at 06:27 AM.
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  2. #27
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    The Information Age gallery, opened by the Queen this morning, takes visitors on a journey through the history of modern communications from the telegraph to the smartphone.
    One would have thought Her Majesty was a Times reader.

  3. #28
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Regretful California robber returns cash

    Police in Northern California say a man robbed a gas station only to return hours later to give the money back and apologize.

    Eureka Police Sgt. Steve Watson said Sunday that 23-year-old Cyle Warren Abbott Jr. told officers he needed cash to leave town for a fresh start, but then realized his mistake.

    Watson says Abbott first entered the gas station demanding cash with what the clerk believed was a semi-automatic handgun.

    He says the clerk gave Abbott some cash, and Abbott left, also taking two bottles of beer.

    Watson says three hours later Abbott returned, giving back most of the cash and saying he was sorry. He says the weapon turned out to be a BB gun, which officers haven't found.

    Abbott was booked into jail on $50,000 bail.

  4. #29
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Robbers dig 125-feet tunnel to loot bank in Haryana - Hindustan Times

    Robbers tunnelled through 125 feet of earth and concrete to break into a nationalised bank’s strong room and loot cash and valuables worth crores of rupees in Haryana’s Gohana township.

    Though the robbery was discovered on Monday morning, police said the gang committed the crime between Saturday night and early Monday.


    The audacious robbery – with shades of a similar crime shown in the hit Bollywood movie Dhoom -- was one of the biggest in the country in recent times and matched the sensational Chelambra bank robbery in Malappuram district of Kerala in 2007.

    The branch manager Davinder Malik said the robbers managed to break open 90 lockers out of 360 at the strong room.

    Gohana is in Sonepat district and around 200 km from capital Chandigarh.

    The 2.5 feet width tunnel was dug from an abandoned building located across a lane of the Punjab National Bank branch at the old bus stand locality of the town.

    Police found two rooms in the abandoned building filled with earth removed from the tunnel.

    The robbers had also blocked the building’s windows with cardboard to hide their activities from the outside world.

    Police said that the crime was planned and executed over many days, probably stretching for more a month.

    Gohana deputy superintendent of police Rajeev Deshwal said they were studying CCTV footage in the bank to indentify suspicious persons in the past few weeks.

    Banks, however, do not install CCTV cameras inside strong rooms.

    With news of the heist becoming the talk of the town, people flocked the PNB branch throughout the day though no one was allowed inside by police.

    In the Chelambra bank robbery too, robbers had drilled through the floor of the South Malabar Gramin Bank – located on the second floor of a building – to enter the strong room and loot 80 kilograms of gold and cash, the value of which was estimated to be Rs. 80 million.

    Police had, however, cracked the case within a short time and arrested four of the robbers including the kingpin. The looted gold and cash were also recovered.

    The kingpin had confessed to have been inspired by the Hrithik Roshan-starrer Dhoom which featured a similar heist by drilling through the floor of a bank.

  5. #30
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Look away now! Girl's leg is MUMMIFIED and blackened after gruesome snake bite
    THIS horrific photo shows a teenage girl's black and rotten leg after she was bitten by a venomous snake.

    The bite caused the premature death of cells – a process known as necrosis.

    The tissue in her leg then died, giving it a mummified appearance and leaving it black and rotten.

    The unidentified 13-year-old is reportedly from a tribe in a remote area of Venezuela and was not treated properly for a month.

    She was eventually taken to Caracas for medical treatment after local remedies failed to control the poisoning.

    Dr Arun Ghosh, a privates GP in Liverpool, told the MailOnline that while the limb would need to be amputated, the girl could still die.

    "Snake venom is very complicated and depends on the species of snake," he said.

    "But the picture shows clearly severe tissue necrosis that will need amputation, though she still may die from this due to the nature of the poison.

    "The whole lower leg is black, it’s spreading up. Looking at the rest of her body she’s showing signs of muscle wastage from the poison. Her other leg is thin. It's likely she will still die."

    The girl may have been bitten by a bothrops species – common in Venezuela.

    Snake bite causes girl's leg to mummify and blacken in Venezuela | Latest News | Breaking News UK and Newspaper content | Daily Star


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  6. #31
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Amelia Earhart Plane Fragment Identified : Discovery News


    A fragment of Amelia Earhart's lost aircraft has been identified to a high degree of certainty for the first time ever since her plane vanished over the Pacific Ocean on July 2, 1937, in a record attempt to fly around the world at the equator.

    New research strongly suggests that a piece of aluminum aircraft debris recovered in 1991 from Nikumaroro, an uninhabited atoll in the southwestern Pacific republic of Kiribati, does belong to Earhart’s twin-engined Lockheed Electra.

    According to researchers at The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR), which has long been investigating the last, fateful flight taken by Earhart 77 years ago, the aluminum sheet is a patch of metal installed on the Electra during the aviator’s eight-day stay in Miami, which was the fourth stop on her attempt to circumnavigate the globe.


    The patch replaced a navigational window: A Miami Herald photo shows the Electra departing for San Juan, Puerto Rico on the morning of Tuesday, June 1, 1937 with a shiny patch of metal where the window had been.

    “The Miami Patch was an expedient field repair," Ric Gillespie, executive director of TIGHAR, told Discovery News. "Its complex fingerprint of dimensions, proportions, materials and rivet patterns was as unique to Earhart’s Electra as a fingerprint is to an individual."

  7. #32
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Fat bastards


    Crash-test dummies are undergoing a makeover to reflect the thicker waistlines and larger rear ends of Americans.

    “Studies show that obese drivers are 78 percent more likely to die in a car crash,” said Chris O' Connor, CEO of Humanetics, the only U.S. producer of the dummies.

    O’Conner said crash-test dummies are now typically modeled after a person who weighs about 167 pounds with a healthy body mass index. His company is designing new dummies based on the measurements of a 270-pound person with a BMI of 35, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as other health groups, consider morbidly obese.

    O’Conner said seat belts, air bags and other safety features are designed for thinner people and don’t fit heavier people the same way.

  8. #33
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    China's latest fashion craze: Smog masks


    TREND ALERT: Air pollution may make the air in Beijing gray, odorous, and sickening — but that doesn’t mean their fashion has to be! This week Beijing hosts China Fashion Week, and fashion designer Yin Peng’s pollution-inspired face masks are almost as hot as the ones worn by Beijing’s marathon runners.

    China’s top models donned masks ranging from the traditional mouth-to-nose piece to a futuristic full-face, welding mask-like design to the always sexy and ultra-protective head-bag known as the facekini. Peng’s designs are versatile, light-weight, and (naturally) breathable. Reuters fashion correspondent reported from the runway on this season’s hottest accessory:

    The models looked determined not to let the conditions of the city … get to them.

    The masks varied from full-face cover, as with a fencing mask, to angular lightweight mouth-covering designs to compliment running gear

    The designs also included more casual pieces — rounded masks to go with slouchy hooded designs, safety goggles for men, and futuristic full-on gas masks with bright pink mouthpieces.


    So far, Grist fashion experts are mum on when mod masks will hit stateside smog/fashion hotspots like southern California and New York City. But given that every season just keeps getting hotter, it’s only a matter of time before we all get hauter, too.


  9. #34
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    BBC News - Nik Wallenda: Tightrope walker makes Chicago crossings


    US tightrope walker Nik Wallenda has successfully completed back-to-back high-wire walks above the city of Chicago, watched by thousands of people.

    The 35-year-old achieved the two skyscraper crossings without a safety net or a harness.

    He first walked up a steep incline between buildings either side of the Chicago River.

    Then, blindfolded, he crossed between the two Marina City towers.


  10. #35
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    'Eaten Alive': N.J. naturalist Paul Rosolie becomes lunch for anaconda


    Wyckoff-raised naturalist Paul Rosolie will be eaten alive by an Amazonian anaconda in a Discovery Channel special set to air in December. To which we here in New Jersey say, "So what's for dinner?"

    Rosolie earned a bachelor's degree in environmental studies from Ramapo College of New Jersey, runs the conservation tourism company Tamandua Expeditions and released a book about his adventures, "Mother of God: An Extraordinary Journey into the Uncharted Tributaries of the Western Amazon," earlier this year.

    He will be featured in the Dec. 7 special called, reasonably enough, "Eaten Alive," in which he dons a specially-designed suit (with a cord on top, presumably so he can be pulled free) and offers himself up to the giant snake. The special has already drawn fire by activists concerned about the welfare of ... the anaconda?


  11. #36
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Woman who had no pulse for 45 minutes makes full recovery; doctors call miraculous


    Ruby Graupera-Cassimiro had gone 45 minutes without a pulse when doctors called her family into the operating room and told them there was nothing more they could do.

    A team of more than a dozen doctors and nurses had been working desperately to revive her. But now they'd lost hope that the 40-year-old Deerfield Beach woman, whose heart had given out without warning after a routine C-section at Boca Raton Regional Hospital, was going to make it.

    Devastated, Graupera-Cassimiro's husband, mother and sister said goodbye to her just hours after they'd welcomed a healthy baby girl. The medical team stopped all lifesaving procedures. They watched a heart monitor, preparing to record a time of death.

    And then the impossible happened: A blip of a heartbeat showed up. Then another, and another.

    Within a few hours, Graupera-Cassimiro, a human resources manager and now a mother of two, was tugging at the breathing tube on her face and scribbling notes to family.

  12. #37
    Thailand Expat helge's Avatar
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    Not possible
    Sorry

  13. #38
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    Quote Originally Posted by helge View Post
    Not possible
    Sorry

    True. She would be long brainded before that. The brain cannot tolerate extended lack of oxygen.

  14. #39
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    They are saying that she received CPR for 45 minutes before her heart started beating on its own.

    Pumping oxygen into the lungs and manually manipulating the heart is designed to pump oxygenated blood around the body until the patient can do that on their own.

    Either of you ever done a First Aid course?

  15. #40
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Divorce to cost Harold Hamm nearly $1 billion

    Continental Resources Inc. CEO Harold Hamm must pay his ex-wife nearly $1 billion to resolve their long-running divorce case, an Oklahoma County judge ruled Monday.

    Observers had speculated the divorce could be the largest in U.S. history, given Hamm’s position as Continental’s majority shareholder, but the judge decided only a fraction of his stock’s value qualified as marital property.

    District Judge Howard R. Haralson awarded about $2 billion in marital property to Hamm, while his ex-wife, attorney Sue Ann Hamm, received assets worth about $25 million.

    The judge ruled Harold Hamm must pay half of the difference between the marital asset awards, which works out to about $995 million.

    _______________

    Close Sisters Bras


    Once a year, lingerie manufacturer Triumph designs a special bra that highlights social trends in Japan. The company shows off each year’s version at a press event, which always has two models, despite the fact that the bras they’re wearing have always been identical.

    This year, though, the two-model system is more than just a way of upping the glamorous eye-candy quotient, since the patterns and color on the 2014 bras miraculously change when they’re close to each other.

    Last edited by S Landreth; 12-11-2014 at 06:50 AM.

  16. #41
    Lord of Swine
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    They are saying that she received CPR for 45 minutes before her heart started beating on its own.

    Pumping oxygen into the lungs and manually manipulating the heart is designed to pump oxygenated blood around the body until the patient can do that on their own.

    Either of you ever done a First Aid course?

    CPR has been shown to be ineffective after a few minutes and a general waste of time in most cases.

    After defibrilation and a few minutes of cpr Dr's would have called it, not gone on for 45 minutes.

  17. #42
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Necron99 View Post
    After defibrilation and a few minutes of cpr Dr's would have called it, not gone on for 45 minutes.
    What a load of tosh. Cardiac failure or arrest stops the circulation; you can do CPR as long as you want, as long as you are pumping blood and oxygenating it.

    It doesn't mean the heart can be restarted if it's stopped, but not doing CPR will cause certain death.

    Dr. Sam Parnia, who runs the resuscitation research program at New York's Stony Brook University Medical School, wrote about the science of resuscitation in his new book, "Erasing Death." He said that death really isn't a moment, but a process that can be interrupted and often reversed, with the help of new techniques.

    One of the reasons, Dr. Parnia told CBS' "Sunday Morning," is that emergency workers sometimes quit CPR too soon.

    "It's harder than your tough workouts in the gym," he said. "And if you do this for a while it gets very, very tiring. People get out of breath. So imagine trying to do it for an hour."

    Compression machines can carry on for an extended time, because longer is often better.

    "A lot of doctors will stop compressions after about 20 minutes," said Dr. Parnia. "But we know from research that if you go on for 40 minutes to an hour, your chances of bringing someone back to life is much, much higher."
    And that's why you learn in First Aid that if another trained First Aider is present, you take it in turns to do CPR.

    Now, as a First Aider you are trained to continue CPR until a medical professional arrives.

    In this case she was in a hospital surrounded by a team of doctors and nurses, so I'm not entirely sure why people disbelieve it.

  18. #43
    Lord of Swine
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Necron99 View Post
    After defibrilation and a few minutes of cpr Dr's would have called it, not gone on for 45 minutes.
    What a load of tosh. Cardiac failure or arrest stops the circulation; you can do CPR as long as you want, as long as you are pumping blood and oxygenating it.

    It doesn't mean the heart can be restarted if it's stopped, but not doing CPR will cause certain death.

    Dr. Sam Parnia, who runs the resuscitation research program at New York's Stony Brook University Medical School, wrote about the science of resuscitation in his new book, "Erasing Death." He said that death really isn't a moment, but a process that can be interrupted and often reversed, with the help of new techniques.

    One of the reasons, Dr. Parnia told CBS' "Sunday Morning," is that emergency workers sometimes quit CPR too soon.

    "It's harder than your tough workouts in the gym," he said. "And if you do this for a while it gets very, very tiring. People get out of breath. So imagine trying to do it for an hour."

    Compression machines can carry on for an extended time, because longer is often better.

    "A lot of doctors will stop compressions after about 20 minutes," said Dr. Parnia. "But we know from research that if you go on for 40 minutes to an hour, your chances of bringing someone back to life is much, much higher."
    And that's why you learn in First Aid that if another trained First Aider is present, you take it in turns to do CPR.

    Now, as a First Aider you are trained to continue CPR until a medical professional arrives.

    In this case she was in a hospital surrounded by a team of doctors and nurses, so I'm not entirely sure why people disbelieve it.


    Google and you will find a hundred similar articles.
    CPR is Hollywood magic most of the time.

    CPR: Less Effective Than You Might Think - Intelihealth

  19. #44
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Patek Philippe pocket watch sells for record $21.3M

    A gold watch billed as the most expensive – and most complicated – in the world fetched a record $21.3 million (17.1 million euros) when it went under the hammer in Switzerland on Tuesday, the Sotheby's auction house involved said.

    The sale of the Patek Philippe "Henry Graves Supercomplication", a handcrafted timepiece named after its original owner, a New York banker who ordered it in 1925, was the main event at a jewel and watch auction held in Geneva.

    The watch, which weighs more than half a kilo and comprises 900 separate parts, had been estimated to go for a lower amount, $15 million. But frenzied bidding pushed the price up higher, and the final amount paid was "a new world record," the auctioneer said.

  20. #45
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    If I had the money to spare I confess I might buy it. A wonderful piece of craftsmanship.


  21. #46
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Necron99 View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Necron99 View Post
    After defibrilation and a few minutes of cpr Dr's would have called it, not gone on for 45 minutes.
    What a load of tosh. Cardiac failure or arrest stops the circulation; you can do CPR as long as you want, as long as you are pumping blood and oxygenating it.

    It doesn't mean the heart can be restarted if it's stopped, but not doing CPR will cause certain death.

    Dr. Sam Parnia, who runs the resuscitation research program at New York's Stony Brook University Medical School, wrote about the science of resuscitation in his new book, "Erasing Death." He said that death really isn't a moment, but a process that can be interrupted and often reversed, with the help of new techniques.

    One of the reasons, Dr. Parnia told CBS' "Sunday Morning," is that emergency workers sometimes quit CPR too soon.

    "It's harder than your tough workouts in the gym," he said. "And if you do this for a while it gets very, very tiring. People get out of breath. So imagine trying to do it for an hour."

    Compression machines can carry on for an extended time, because longer is often better.

    "A lot of doctors will stop compressions after about 20 minutes," said Dr. Parnia. "But we know from research that if you go on for 40 minutes to an hour, your chances of bringing someone back to life is much, much higher."
    And that's why you learn in First Aid that if another trained First Aider is present, you take it in turns to do CPR.

    Now, as a First Aider you are trained to continue CPR until a medical professional arrives.

    In this case she was in a hospital surrounded by a team of doctors and nurses, so I'm not entirely sure why people disbelieve it.


    Google and you will find a hundred similar articles.
    CPR is Hollywood magic most of the time.

    CPR: Less Effective Than You Might Think - Intelihealth
    I'm not disputing that CPR will not save a life most of the time (90%+), but try telling the ones it's saved that it is pointless.

    Anyway, at least we've established the nearest you've come to a first aid course is Google.

  22. #47
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    THE SINGING COMET


    “This is exciting because it is completely new to us. We did not expect this and we are still working to understand the physics of what is happening,” says Karl-Heinz.
    Rosetta’s Plasma Consortium (RPC) has uncovered a mysterious ‘song’ that Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko is singing into space. RPC principal investigator Karl-Heinz Glaßmeier, head of Space Physics and Space Sensorics at the Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany, tells us more.

    RPC consists of five instruments on the Rosetta orbiter that provide a wide variety of complementary information about the plasma environment surrounding Comet 67P/C-G. (Reminder: Plasma is the fourth state of matter, an electrically conductive gas that can carry magnetic fields and electrical currents.)

    The instruments are designed to study a number of phenomena, including: the interaction of 67P/C-G with the solar wind, a continuous stream of plasma emitted by the Sun; changes of activity on the comet; the structure and dynamics of the comet’s tenuous plasma ‘atmosphere’, known as the coma; and the physical properties of the cometary nucleus and surface.

    But one observation has taken the RPC scientists somewhat by surprise. The comet seems to be emitting a ‘song’ in the form of oscillations in the magnetic field in the comet’s environment. It is being sung at 40-50 millihertz, far below human hearing, which typically picks up sound between 20 Hz and 20 kHz. To make the music audible to the human ear, the frequencies have been increased by a factor of about 10,000.

  23. #48
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    Another tin foil moment for ENT to savour....

    Space probe Philae is actually a UFO attempting to make contact with humans, conspiracy theorists are claiming.

    Ufologists claim the European Space Agency's (ESA) craft, which on Wednesday completed the extraordinary feat of landing on a speeding comet, is of alien origin.

    An email published on the website UFOSightingsDaily.com claimed the agency had joined forces with NASA to "cover-up" the celestial body's true extra-terrestrial nature.

    The email, purportedly written by a secret whistle-blowing ESA employee of the ESA, reads: “Do not think for ONE MOMENT that a space agency would suddenly decide to spend billions of dollars to build and send a spacecraft on a 12-year journey to simply take some close-up images of a randomly picked out comet floating in space.”

    “Comet 67P is NOT a comet.

    “Some 20 years ago Nasa began detecting radio bursts from an unknown origin out in space.

    "It would later be known that these had likely come from the direction of the now named comet 67P.

    "It does show signs on its outside of machine like parts and unnatural terrain.”

    Ending on an ominous note, it adds: “Whatever this object is, it did not ask to be found or scrutinised.”

    Ufologist Scott Waring said he believed the signals being emitted from the comet were a “greeting” to humans.

    He added: “If it was a warning, they would not allow the ESA craft to have landed.

    “I believe the landing of the ESA craft was the equivalent of a first handshake.

    "They will make another move soon probably.

    "Alien structures are on the comet.

    "I don’t believe it’s natural.”

    ESA has confirmed that the comet is emitting a "mystery song" - however, this has only fuelled theories that it is a UFO attempting to make contact with Earth.

    Mr Waring added: “In my opinion this is not a code.

    "It is how a species of aliens communicate to one another without speaking.

    "A form of telepathy put into primitive radio signals.

    "It's the only way this species can communicate to us.

    "This is their thoughts.

    "They don’t talk.”

    He concluded: “Getting a copy of the full message and then translating it should be of utter importance.

    "Is it a message of greetings?

    "Or is it a warning of what’s to come?

    "We, the people of the world, need to find out.”

    The £173million European space agency (Esa) probe, which has already sent back detailed pictures, made history by landing on two-and-a-half-mile-wide 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko after a 10-year voyage on the Esa's Rosetta satellite.
    UFOs: Rosetta mission comet 'is ALIEN craft attempting to make contact with humans' - Mirror Online

  24. #49
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    Quote Originally Posted by Takeovers View Post
    If I had the money to spare I confess I might buy it. A wonderful piece of craftsmanship.

    Just a beautiful piece of craftsmanship

  25. #50
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post

    Anyway, at least we've established the nearest you've come to a first aid course is Google.
    Numerous courses and certificates and was a St John Ambulance volunteer for some years. Most of the time the only reason we did it was because as an Ambo you are not legally allowed to declare someone dead.....

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