Tell me how wrote: » You'd do well to find a 6ft nun.
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » Tough folks the Japs. Had a code of honour for a warrior/soldier who was about to be captured. They were supposed to fall on their sword or put the last round into their head. This is why Allied soldiers were treated so badly in their POW Camps. Cowards in their culture.
sbsquarepants wrote: » Or it could be the much more plausible scenario of outies being hideous freaks of nature, best avoided?
Graces7 wrote: » First nun I ever met was well over 6 ft. She opened the door which was at the top of a flight of steps.. Anglican in the UK..
the purple tin wrote: » Luciano Pavarotti was an accomplished cross country runner in his youth.
Adyx wrote: » Tonic water glows under a UV light.
py2006 wrote: » Brian Blessed is an extraordinary man. He is a actor known for his booming voice but not everyone is aware that:
Shemale wrote: » Quinine is the Greek work for ejaculate
storker wrote: » Just one omission...he's a bit bonkers.
Candie wrote: » So sort of like Polo without the sticks or helmets, but with more blood and serious injury.
cdeb wrote: » Was literally only watching it yesterday; it features in David Attenborough's The First Eden. Small world! Looks almost as lethal as hurling
Wibbs wrote: » The best kinda bonkers. If that's bonkers who'd want sanity?
mzungu wrote: » Including Art as a discipline raised a few eyebrows. The thinking behind it came from Baron Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the IOC, from which the modern Olympics emerged in 1896. He believed that there was a strong link between sports and the arts and his idea of the true Olympian was somebody skilled in both. The idea faced resistance, unsurprisingly the main opposition to it was that sporting achievements can be measured in easily to understand metrics such as time and distance, but judging the arts is subjective. Furthermore, under the rules, all pieces of art had to be centered around sport and this led to a constant stream of similar works (images of athletes, reference to sporting achievement etc). The plug was pulled in 1948 due to a lack of interest.