Lucas Jatoba will leave his city of Barcelona after living there for 3 years. He came up with an awesome random act of kindness to say goodbye.
Two young girls were seriously injured when an inflatable castle, set up for a birthday pasty, flew away in a sudden gust of wind. The incident, which occurred in Arizona, involved 9-year-old and 11-year-old sisters. They were playing in the party castle a sudden burst of high wind lifted the castle away. Both girls were ejected from the party attraction.
The castle traveled 100 feet in the air and landed on the roof of a neighboring house. Both girl sustained head injuries. They were treated at a local hospital, but are now recuperating at home.
So this is a crowded market in Bangkok. There is an active train line that goes through it. The vendors move all of their merchandise when it pulls through, but the clearance is pretty small.
S.M. Krishna spoke before the United Nations about poverty and social unrest, reading from the text of a speech. Too bad it wasn’t his speech. Krishna actually was reading the Portuguese foreign minister’s prepared remarks. Once Luis Amado finished speaking, Krishna picked up a circulated copy of Amado’s speech and began speaking. He noted, with pleasure, how great it was to have two Portugese-speaking countries at the same event. India loves the Portugese language after all.
Admittedly, Amado ditched the prepared remarks for his speech and spoke extemporaneously. How confusing! The mistake was only realized when the speech referred to the need for strengthened relations between the European Union and the UN. No India in the EU. As a defense, several analysts remind us that speeches before the UN often reference broad themes and speak in generalities. They obviously never took public speaking classes!
DJ Scott Mills traveled to Uganda for a BBC on being gay in that country— routinely cited as one of (if not the least) tolerant places in the world. For much of the documentary (available on YouTube), he does not openly disclose his sexuality, fearing people would not speak to him if they knew the truth. In one part, though, he meets a witch doctor who attempts to cure him of “being gay,” since people in Uganda believe it is a lifestyle choice.
The “ritual” consisted of having a live chicken rubbed over Mills’ back, then having a flame extinguished over his head. It didn’t appear that he was taking it too seriously.