Bear crashes in runaway car

(Reuters Life!) – A black bear attracted by the smell of a peanut butter sandwich managed to open the door of a car, climb in and got stuck, knocking the gear stick into neutral and sending the car rolling down a slope into trees.

The blare of the car horn alerted the members of the Story family who realized 17-year-old Ben’s Toyota was no longer parked in the driveway of their home in Larkspur near Denver.

When they went to explore they discovered the car and trapped culprit at the bottom of the hill — a giant bear with teeth bared and claws tearing through the car’s interior.

The bear was trapped inside the car for two hours before police were able to release the animal who ran off into nearby woods.

Ben and his sister Becky said the bear was likely lured into the car by a certain scintillating scent.

“There was a peanut butter sandwich in the back seat,” Ben told reporters, adding that his car was ruined.

(Reporting by Katharine Jackson of Reuters Television, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)

78yr-old bachelor chases away 2 burglars with a bugle!

London, Mar 27 (ANI): A 78-year-old man chased away two burglars with a bugle, when they tried to rob his house.

Alex Wade, a bachelor who lives alone in Coventry, West midlands, did not know that his idea of keeping a bugle by his pillow incase of an emergency would come handy one day, as it helped him chase away two young burglars with it.

Wade revealed that the burglars broke into his house through a window at about 2:40 am, but had to run away empty-handed when he sounded the bugle on the face of one of the burglars.

“I was lying in bed and heard the front window smash and heard people talking. At first I thought I was dreaming. I keep a bugle by my pillow in case anything like this happens so I reached over and grabbed it. I went to my bedroom door. I yelled into the hallway ‘who’s there?’ and then the two little scoundrels started talking among themselves,” the Telegraph quoted Wade as saying.

“I opened my door and walked into the hallway and blew the bugle as loud as I could into one of the lad’s faces. He looked absolutely startled and they both panicked and raced out the front door,” he added.

The police of West Midlands have applauded Wade for his daring act.

“This was an instinctive action from the man which has caused the offenders to flee the scene,” Detective Inspector Bob Petipher, of West Midlands Police, said.

“It prevented any more possessions being taken from the house and they were swiftly arrested,” he added.

Wade, who made the bugle from an old-fashioned car horn after a spate of break-ins in his neighborhood, is happy with the instrument, which proved very helpful.

“It’s is the best burglar alarm a man can have. Now the neighbors will always know if I’m in trouble,” he said. (ANI)

Laughing gas’ pain-relieving effect can be enhanced via hypnosis

Washington, Jan 10 (ANI): Scientists from University College London have revealed that pain relieving effect of nitrous oxide, popularly known as laughing gas, can be enhanced by suggestions or hypnosis in dental patients.

The study showed that people are more suggestible under the influence of gas. This suggests that dental patients may benefit from being coached to relax while undergoing sedation.

A number of dentists have been trained in hypnosis and find that their patients respond well to being spoken to in a quiet, hypnotic manner.

For the study, the researchers recruited thirty participants, who took part in two sessions. They were given a mask from which they breathed in air or 25 per cent nitrous oxide. The mask was scented to disguise the sweet smell of the laughing gas.

During each session, participants were given a series of mental imagery tests and were asked to rate their response according to a scale of 1-7, where 1 was ‘as clear and vivid as the real thing’ and 7 was ‘no image present at all’.

The participants were asked to close their eyes and imagine tasting oranges or smelling roast beef, feeling linen or hearing the honk of a car horn.

The volunteers were also put through a series of ‘imaginative suggestibility’ tests based on suggestions given to them while under the gas.

The participants were asked to experience hallucinated sensations.

For instance, they were told to imagine a sour taste in their mouth, and were told that after a while they would actually begin to experience a sour taste in their mouth, and that this would become stronger and stronger.

If the participant responded well to the suggestion, he/she would answer some of the questions that the hallucinated voice had asked.

The researchers found that the nitrous oxide boosted imaginative suggestibility by approximately 10 per cent.

“Many dentists use laughing gas to relieve discomfort in their patients, but our study suggests that combining the gas with instructions and suggestions to help them to relax and become absorbed in imagery, for example, might enhance the pain-relieving effect,” said Dr Matthew Whalley, Honorary Research Fellow at UCL.

“Our findings are preliminary, however, so it would be helpful to do a larger scale study to confirm our results and explore the best ways in which to use and combine nitrous oxide and suggestion,” he added. (ANI)