A boy called Riquelme Wesley dos Santos, saved a baby Andriele , 1 year old, from a fire , last Thursday , in Palmeira, Santa Catarina State. Riquelme, wearing spider-man’s clothes enter over the fires, caught the baby from her crib and get out without any injuries, and is now a national celebrity.†No one could do that, the fire was very intense”, said the baby’s mom amazed with the fact. Many Brazilians expressed interest on sending an award for the5 years old Spiderman, but he refused any money so far. The local Chief of the Fire department said in a press conference; this boy had brave attitude, everyone is amazed, but no one should try ever doing that again, Riquelme exposed himself a high level of risk.
How Viagra is advertised in Arabic countries
America buys into Cowboys
From the LA Times . . .
You might not call them “America’s Team,” your friends might not call them “America’s Team” and maybe not a single person you know would call them “America’s Team,” but make no mistake, the Dallas Cowboys are clearly “America’s Team.”
How do we know this? Follow the money.
According to a Harris Poll last month, the Cowboys are No. 1 among adults who follow professional football. (The Colts, Steelers, Packers and Bears follow).
And you thought the Patriots were America’s Team? What have they done lately, besides win three Super Bowls in the last six years and go undefeated so far this season? (Yes, the Cowboys haven’t won a Super Bowl since 1996).
But this “America’s Team” thing, it’s all about the ka-ching.
The NFL Shop, which is the NFL’s online merchandise store, lists the Cowboys first in memorabilia sales, ahead of the Bears and the Steelers.
The No. 9 jersey of Cowboy quarterback Tony Romo is the top-selling jersey this year.
If you don’t believe the cash register, maybe you’ll believe your eyeballs. When you take the five most-watched regular season games on television in the last 20 years, the Cowboys played in four of them.
One Big Catfish
In this photo released by World Wildlife Fund-National Geographic, two Thai fishermen show a 293-kilogram (646-pound) giant catfish they caught from the Mekong River in Chiang Khong district of Chiang Rai province, northern Thailand in mid-May, 2005.