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Doctors claim man has world's largest man boobs
| World's biggest man boobs? |
Chinese doctors claim to have discovered the biggest case of man boobs in the world after a dairy farmer turned up at a specialist chest clinic in Beijing.
Doctor Zhang Lilan at the Jinan Chest Hospital said: "The man is in every way male except for his enormous breasts.
"He is a farmer and says they are extremely uncomfortable as he has to do a lot of manual work and they get in the way of everything.
"He said it has also attracted a lot of attention in the village where he comes from with people turning up to point and laugh at him, so much so that he now has to wear a heavy coat to cover up his figure even in the hottest weather."
The man, Guo Feng, 53, said: "About 10 years ago my chest started to get larger but I didn't think much of it as I was putting on weight all over - but in the last few years it's become unbearable and I have been from one hospital to the other with nobody able to help me.
"I have spent all my money on examinations and tests and am still no nearer a solution - in fact my breasts are now bigger than ever.
"I sometimes think the doctors don't want to help me with this because they find me a medical curiosity."
He says if no one can help him he will cut them off himself and has appealed for doctors to do something before that.
But the doctors say they do not want to act until they have identified what the problem is.
Doctor Zhang Lilan added: "In 30 years of working as specialist here at the chest clinic I have never seen anything like it."
Clinic boss Gaoyong Hong added: "We wondered if he had eaten any poisons or contaminants but have found nothing after testing his blood. His genetic material is also normal. We did an Xray. It is not a cancer. It seems to be fatty tissue - at the most the best we can suggest is that it is the biggest case of man boobs ever."
LINK TO PHOTO
Thief Asks Police For Directions
Suspected Thief Asks Police For Directions
A suspected phone thief is under arrest after he flagged down an Orem police officer and asked for directions.
Orem police say a man walked into a Maverick gas station and asked the attendant if he could use the phone. The employee gave him a cordless phone, but the man claimed it didn't work. The clerk then gave him his cell phone. When the attendant turned around to help a customer, the man left with both phones, leaving behind a paper with an address on it.
A police officer investigating the theft was sent to the address and on his way there he was flagged down by a motorist who asked for directions. It just so happened that the driver matched the description of the alleged phone-jacker and was trying to get to the same location.
Police identified the man as John White. He was arrested, the phones were found along with a stash of marijuana.
LINK TO PHOTO AND VIDEO
Bin Laden warns US
Bin Laden warns US against executing 9/11 mastermind

AFP/File – An undated picture of Osama Bin Laden. Bin Laden has warned Al-Qaeda will kill Americans if the mastermind … by Lynne Nahhas Lynne Nahhas – Thu Mar 25, 3:13 pm ET
DUBAI (AFP) – Osama bin Laden warned that Al-Qaeda will kill Americans if the mastermind of the 2001 attacks on the United States, Khaled Sheikh Mohammed, is executed, in a tape aired on Al-Jazeera on Thursday.
"The White House has declared its wish to execute (Sheikh Mohammed and his co-accused). The day the United States takes such a decision, it would be also taking the decision that any of you falling into our hands will be executed," bin Laden said in the audio message.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, flying with US President Barack Obama to Iowa on Air Force One, did not directly respond to the comments.
But he said: "We see that Al-Qaeda has nothing to spread but hate and that?s why the administration will keep up the pressure to destroy the Al-Qaeda network."
Bin Laden said Obama was "still walking in the footsteps" of his predecessor, George W. Bush, by escalating the war in Afghanistan.
He also condemned Obama for "oppressing our prisoners that you are holding, beginning with the mujahid (holy warrior) hero Khaled al-Sheikh Mohammed."
US politicians, he added, had "oppressed us and still do, especially by backing Israel, which occupies the land of Palestine."
The US-based IntelCenter monitoring service said the tape "appears to be authentic."
"Bin Laden's specific threat serves as a valid indicator of an increased threat of kidnappings targeting Americans in the immediate period and following through the Khalid Sheikh Mohammed trial in the US," it warned in a statement.
"Attempts to kidnap Americans would not be limited to core Al-Qaeda. The group's regional arms such as Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and Al-Qaeda in the Land of the Islamic Maghreb, which has been aggressively targeting Westerners for kidnapping in North Africa, may follow through on bin Laden's threat."
The Kuwaiti-born Sheikh Mohammed is being held in Guantanamo Bay and was subjected to repeated water-boarding, a now banned interrogation technique that simulates drowning, after his 2003 arrest in Pakistan.
He told a military tribunal in 2008 that he did not "want to waste time" and would plead guilty to the terror charges.
The United States is just weeks away from a landmark decision on whether to try him and four alleged co-conspirators in a civilian federal court or in a military tribunal.
The Obama administration had announced it would try them in a New York courthouse just steps from where the World Trade Center that collapsed in the 2001 attacks had stood.
But the plans have met a backlash from Republican lawmakers who introduced legislation to require a military trial, throwing a challenge to Obama months ahead of mid-term elections in November.
Obama made bringing Sheikh Mohammed to a civilian trial a centrepiece of a broader plan to end what he saw as serious abuses of law under Bush and his powerful vice president Dick Cheney.
Bin Laden's latest statement was his first since he issued two in January, one of them claiming responsibility for the botched Christmas Day bombing of a US airliner and vowing further strikes on American targets.
Bin Laden also referred to US support for Israel in the January message.
"God willing, our attacks against you will continue as long as you maintain your support to Israel," he said.
"America should not dream of security until we enjoy it as a reality in Palestine," added the Saudi-born militant who has a 50-million-dollar bounty on his head.
In the other tape released in January, bin Laden blamed major industrial nations for climate change, a statement the US State Department said showed that the Al-Qaeda chief was struggling to stay relevant.
Congress Passes Final Piece of Healthcare Legislation
Congress Passes Final Piece of Healthcare Legislation
Noam N. Levey
Washington DC Bureau
March 25, 2010
After a final surge to overcome Republican opposition, Congressional Democrats Thursday approved the last piece of their health overhaul, sending President Obama a package of changes to the main health bill the president signed Tuesday.
The so-called reconciliation package, which also includes a major reorganization of the federal student loan program, passed the Senate Thursday afternoon 56-43 on a nearly party-line vote after a grueling night and day of roll-call votes during which Republicans sought to derail the bill.
Later Thursday evening, House Democrats approved the same package 220 to 207 and formally concluded Democrats' tortuous 14-month drive to move major healthcare legislation through Congress for the first time in nearly half a century.
"More than 80 years ago, Franklin Roosevelt identified four freedoms: freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom from want and freedom from fear," said Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.), one of the architects of the healthcare overhaul.
"Today in many ways we are fulfilling that last of the great freedoms, the fear that you or your family could suffer a health-care crisis."
The president, who traveled to Iowa Thursday to tout the healthcare overhaul, is expected to the sign the legislation in the next several days.
Paralleling earlier healthcare votes this year, not a single Republican voted for the final package in the House or Senate.
Many GOP lawmakers have criticized the legislation as an unwarranted expansion of federal authority over the healthcare sector. And Thursday, Republicans kept up their call to roll back the legislation, previewing a debate that is expected to only intensify as election day approaches this fall.
"The important thing now … is to replace those who voted for the healthcare bill and to repeal it when we get some new members here," Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) told Fox News Channel's Sean Hannity Thursday.
Three Senate Democrats and 32 House Democrats also voted against the package Thursday, including several facing difficult reelection campaigns in traditionally Republican states such as Arkansas Sen. Blanche Lincoln.
The bill required only a simple majority in the Senate because Democrats used the budget reconciliation process to avoid a filibuster, which requires a 60-vote supermajority to squash.
The 153-page reconciliation package represents a small fraction of the gargantuan healthcare legislation that the House approved over the weekend and the president signed Tuesday.
But it makes several major changes to the main healthcare bill, including expanding subsidies that the federal government will provide to low- and moderate-income Americans starting in 2014 to help them buy health insurance.
The package also scales back a new 40% excise tax on high-end "Cadillac" health plans and delays its implementation until 2018.
It imposes a new tax on couples making more than $250,000, who will pay a 3.8% Medicare tax on capital gains and other investment income for the first time.
The bill boosts federal aid to states to help them expand their Medicaid programs, replacing a provision in the main healthcare bill that singled out Nebraska for special assistance.
And it would gradually close the gap in Medicare drug coverage known as the "doughnut hole," phasing it out completely by 2020.
Together, the healthcare legislation signed by the president and the reconciliation package approved Thursday are expected to cover an additional 32 million Americans by 2019, boosting the percentage of non-elderly Americans with insurance from 83% to 94%, according to estimates by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.
The bill also establishes a broad new framework of government regulation to prevent insurance companies from denying coverage to people who are sick and to require insurers to provide a minimal level of benefits.
The coverage expansion would not be cheap, requiring an estimated $938 billion over the next decade to expand Medicaid, to give tax credits to small businesses to help them cover their employees and to provide insurance subsidies to Americans who do not get benefits at work.
Most Americans will for the first time be required to carry health insurance or pay a penalty.
Because the cost of the expanding coverage is offset by new taxes and cuts in what Medicare will pay insurers, hospitals and other providers over the next decade, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the legislation will actually reduce the deficit slightly by 2019 by an estimated $143 billion.
Republicans have repeatedly criticized the new taxes and Medicare cuts.
And over a day and half of almost continuous voting on amendment, GOP senators tried to get Democrats to remove sections of the bill designed to raise revenue to pay for the legislation.
In the end, however, it was a provision of the bill unrelated to healthcare that almost tripped up the legislation.
The reconciliation bill includes a major change in the way the federal government helps students pay for college, giving the government authority to provide loans directly to students, instead of using private financial institutions as intermediaries. The student loan section of the legislation would use part of the projected savings from this change to expand the federal Pell Grant program for low-income students.
But very early Thursday morning, Republicans successfully objected to a minor provision designed to prevent the Pell Grants from decreasing in periods of deflation. The provision did not reduce the deficit, as required by the budget rules.
That forced Democrats to change the package, which in turn forced the House to take it up Thursday even though the House had approved an earlier version Sunday.
A spokeswoman for the House Education and Labor Committee said Democrats may add the provision to future legislation in the future if there are any signs of deflation.
Boy, 13, charged with robbery
13-Year-Old Charged In Holdup Attempt On Ice Cream Truck
Lafourche Parish Sheriff's Office ABC26 News
March 25, 2010
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Deputies were dispatched to St. Patrick Street in Raceland shortly after 4:00 PM.
The 54-year old female ice cream vendor explained that as she drove in the area of the projects at the end of St. Patrick, a group of juveniles wearing school uniforms approached her truck. As one ordered ice cream, a second juvenile pulled a small caliber handgun, pointed it at her and demanded money. The woman refused and drove away.
Detectives arrived on scene and took three juveniles into custody. Two 14-year old boys from Ayo Street in Raceland identified the 13-year old from Williams Street in Raceland as the gunman. One of the 14-year olds led detectives to a yard on Ayo Street where the gun had been stashed under a tarp. Detectives recovered a .25 caliber pistol.
The 13-year old is charged with attempted armed robbery. The two 14-year old boys were released to the custody of their parents and do not face charges at this time. The investigation is ongoing.
Doctors Remove Boy's 11 Extra Toes And Fingers
3-year-old videotaped smoking pot
Senate's fix to health care law hits a snag
Senate's fix to health care law slowed by snag
By ALAN FRAM
Associated Press Writer
9 AM EST
WASHINGTON – After nine straight hours of beating back Republican amendments, Senate Democrats hit a temporary snag Thursday in their drive to rush through a package of fixes to the big health care law signed by President Barack Obama.
Democratic Senate leaders had hoped to complete work on the fix-it bill by midday Thursday and get it quickly to Obama to avoid prolonging what has been a politically painful ordeal for the party.
But Republicans learned early Thursday they will be able to kill some language in the bill that relates to Pell grants for low-income college students. That means the altered bill will have to be returned to the House for final congressional approval before it can be sent to Obama.
Democrats described the situation as a minor glitch, but did not rule out that Republicans might be able to remove additional sections of the bill.
The president, who signed the landmark legislation into law on Tuesday, was flying to Iowa later in the day for the first of many appearances around the country to sell his health care revamp before the fall congressional elections.
Obama was appearing in Iowa City, where as a presidential candidate in 2007 he touted his ideas for health coverage for all. His trip comes as polls show people are divided over the new health law, and Democratic lawmakers from competitive districts hope he can convince more voters by November that it was the right move.
As an exhausted Senate labored past 2 a.m. on a stack of GOP amendments, Jim Manley, spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, told reporters that Republicans consulting with the chamber's parliamentarian had found "two minor provisions" that violate Congress' budget rules.
Republicans have been hunting for such violations in hopes of bringing down the legislation. Democrats had also been consulting with the parliamentarian, Alan Frumin, and hoped they had written a measure that would not be vulnerable to such problems.
The two provisions are expected to be formally removed from the bill on Thursday. Manley said he expected the Senate to approve the measure without them and send it to the House. He said Senate leaders, after conversations with top House Democrats, expect the House to approve the revised measure.
The Senate scheduled passage of the health bill for Thursday afternoon. Both chambers are hoping to begin a spring recess by this weekend.
Besides reshaping parts of the landmark health overhaul, the legislation transforms the federal student loan program — in which private banks distribute the money — into one in which the government issues the loans directly. That produces some federal savings, which the bill uses in part to increase Pell grants to needy students.
Democratic aides said the problematic provisions deal with safeguarding students from future cuts in their grants if Congress does not provide enough money for them. The provisions violate budget rules because they do not produce savings, one aide said.
The development came as the Senate completed nine hours of uninterrupted voting on 29 GOP amendments to the legislation. Majority Democrats defeated every amendment.
The legislation would change the new health care law by making drug benefits for Medicare recipients more generous by gradually closing a gap in coverage, increasing tax subsidies to help low-income people afford health care, and boosting federal Medicaid payments to states.
It kills part of the new statute uniquely giving Nebraska extra Medicaid funds — designed to lure support from that state's Sen. Ben Nelson — that had become a glaring embarrassment to Democrats. It also eases a new tax on expensive health coverage bitterly opposed by unions and many House Democrats, while delaying and increasing a new levy on drug makers.
As they began pushing the bill to passage on Wednesday afternoon, Democrats ran into a mountain of GOP amendments. Outnumbered and all but assured of defeat, Republicans forced votes on amendments aimed at reshaping the measure — or at least forcing Democrats to take votes that could be used against them in TV ads in the fall campaigns.
"There's no attempt to improve the bill. There's an attempt to destroy this bill," said an exasperated Reid, D-Nev.
"The majority leader may not think we're serious about changing the bill, but we'd like to change the bill, and with a little help from our friends on the other side we could improve the bill significantly," answered Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.
Senators voted on 29 consecutive GOP amendments between 5:30 p.m. Wednesday and 2:30 a.m. Thursday, when they recessed.
By 57-42, Democrats rejected an amendment by Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., barring federal purchases of Viagra and other erectile dysfunction drugs for sex offenders. Coburn said it would save millions of dollars, while Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., called it "a crass political stunt."
Democrats also deflected GOP amendments rolling back the health law's Medicare cuts; killing extra Medicaid funds for Tennessee and other state-specific spending; barring tax increases for families earning under $250,000; and requiring the president and other administration officials to purchase health care from exchanges the statute creates.
The landmark legislation that Obama signed Tuesday would provide health care to 32 million uninsured people, and make coverage more affordable to millions of others by expanding the reach of Medicaid and creating new subsidies. Insurance companies would be forbidden to refuse coverage to people with pre-existing illnesses, individuals could buy policies on newly created exchanges and parents could keep children on their family plans until their 26th birthdays.
The $938 billion, 10-year price tag would be financed largely by culling savings from Medicare and imposing new taxes on higher income people and the insurance, pharmaceutical and medical device industries.
___
Associated Press writer Darlene Superville contributed to this report.
Woman arrested calls 911 from jail to report being trapped
Woman, 'Trapped,' Calls 911 From Police Station
Kristyn Hartman

Naperville Police Dept.
Here's a transcription of the call:
Operator: "Naperville 911, how may I help you?"
Houston: "Hi. I am in, like, I'm trapped in, like, the Naperville 911. So…."
Operator: "You're trapped where?"
Houston: "In the Naperville 911. So…"
After that exchange, Houston, who was in the Naperville detention center, dropped off the line. Her name is Carly Houston.
"And she doesn't want to talk to you," said her mother, who withheld her name.
But she did speak with us about the early March morning her daughter ended up in police custody. She says Houston had been celebrating a friend's 30th birthday.
Police say she was intoxicated when they caught up with Houston at a Naperville gas station. They also say she and her cab driver were at odds.
Naperville Police Sgt. Gregg Bell said, "She was being disruptive, unruly, a little combative."
So they arrested her, brought her to lock up and let her make some calls. That's when they say she dialed 911.
"We'd like to get the message across to people that it is not a game when you dial 911," said Bell.
Houston's mom says it was no joke. She described her daughter's ordeal.
"She was terrified. She didn't know where she was. No one would come and help her," said her mother.
She claims Houston reached out for help the only way she knew how, and now, "It's just one more thing to drag her down."
Another crisis that seemingly involved alcohol.
Five years ago, Houston went with her boyfriend to a Cubs rooftop party. He was intoxicated, fell off a narrow CTA platform and died.
A year after the tragedy, Houston told CBS 2, "I couldn't believe it. In a split second, I lost him."
"It's not something you get over," said her mother.
That tough personal situation doesn't change the current case. Houston has been charged with – among other things – making a false 911 call.
The New Bathroom From Strange to Ridiculous
Threats, bricks and unrest surround health care legislation
Hurled bricks, threats surround health overhaul
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EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS
Associated Press Writer
Unrest over sweeping federal health care legislation has turned to vandalism and threats, with bricks hurled through Democrats' windows, a propane line cut at the home of a congressman's brother and menacing phone messages left for lawmakers who supported the bill.
The FBI is investigating the instances, which include shattered windows at four Democratic offices in New York, Arizona and Kansas. At least 10 members of Congress have reported some sort of threat as of Wednesday, and no arrests have been made.
The brick flung through the window of a county Democratic Party office in Rochester, N.Y., over the weekend had a note attached: "Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice," roughly quoting 1964 Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater.
A New York congresswoman whose office window also was smashed with a brick accused the Republican leadership of failing to denounce attacks against lawmakers who supported the legislation. The vandalism was at Democratic Rep. Louise Slaughter's district office in Niagara Falls early Friday, two days before the House passed the health care overhaul bill.
"It's more disturbing to me that Republican leadership has not condemned these attacks and instead appears to be fanning the flames with coded rhetoric," said Slaughter, a key supporter of the bill.
House Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio said in a statement that while many Americans are angry over the bill's passage, "violence and threats are unacceptable."
"That's not the American way," Boehner said. "We need to take that anger and channel it into positive change."
The FBI and Capitol Police were briefing Democratic lawmakers on how to handle perceived security threats, said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md. Those who feel they are at risk will be "getting attention from the proper authorities," Hoyer said, declining to say whether any are receiving extra security. Normally only those in leadership positions have personal security guards.
At a news conference in Washington, Hoyer said people have yelled that Democratic lawmakers should be put on firing lines and posters have appeared with the faces of lawmakers in the cross hairs of a target.
While not directly criticizing Republicans, Hoyer said that "any show of appreciation for such actions encourages such action."
Gun imagery was used in a posting on the Facebook page of Sarah Palin urging people to organize against 20 House Democrats who voted for the health care bill and whose districts went for the John McCain-Palin ticket two years ago. Palin's post featured a U.S. map with circles and cross hairs over the 20 districts.
Some of the anger over the bill spilled over in a flood of obscenity and threat-filled phone and fax messages to the office of Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich. His office released some of the messages it has received since the health care bill passed, declining to add further comment.
"I hope you bleed ... (get) cancer and die," one male caller told the congressman between curses.
A fax with the title "Defecating on Stupak" carried a picture of a gallows with "Bart (SS) Stupak" on it and a noose attached. It was captioned, "All Baby Killers come to unseemly ends Either by the hand of man or by the hand of God."
The vandalism and threats surprised a researcher at a think tank that monitors extremist groups.
"I think it is astounding that we are seeing this wave of vigilantism," said Mark Potok of the Alabama-based Southern Poverty Law Center.
In Virginia, someone cut a propane line leading to a grill at the Charlottesville home of U.S. Rep. Tom Perriello's brother after the address was posted online by activists angry about the health care overhaul. Perriello also said a threatening letter was sent to his brother's house. The FBI and local authorities were investigating.
Tea party activists had posted the brother's address online thinking it was the congressman's home. The post urged opponents to drop by and "express their thanks" for the Democrat's vote in favor of the sweeping health care reform.
Nigel Coleman, chairman of the Danville Tea Party, said he re-posted the comment that originated on another conservative blog, including the address, Monday on his Facebook page. The posts were taken down after the mistake was discovered.
"We've never been associated with any violence or any vandalism," he said. "We're definitely sorry that we posted the incorrect address."
Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, who has filed a lawsuit challenging the health care overhaul and is a favorite of the Tea Party, said for activists to post an address of Perriello's family shows that things are going too far.
"That is way over the line," he said. "It's not civil discourse, it's an invitation to intimidation and it's totally unacceptable."
Potok compared the online posting of a public official's address to tactics used by hate groups.
"This is what neo Nazi leaders in America do today," Potok said. "They post personal information about their enemies and sit back and wait for somebody else to act."
Lyndsay Stauble, executive director of the Sedgwick County Democratic Party in Wichita, Kan., said a brick was hurled through the party's storefront plate glass window late Friday or early Saturday, landing in her office and gouging her wooden desk.
She said that written in marker on the brick were the slogans, "No to Obama" and "No Obamycare."
"The tone is not surprising, but the aggressiveness is," Stauble said Wednesday. "I'm not shocked that people are not reacting well to a large piece of legislation passed by a president that they don't like."
In Tucson, Ariz., someone either kicked in or shot out a glass door and a side window at the congressional office of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords early Monday, a few hours after the House health care vote. Giffords voted for the bill.
Giffords' press secretary C.J. Karamargin in Tucson said the vandalism left the local congressional staff shaken and worried.
Men disqualified 1 mile from end of 2,500-mile race
Atlantic rowing pair crash into reef ONE MILE from finish after racing 2,500 miles
Daily Mail Reporter
9:05 AM on 23rd March 2010
Two British rowers who spent almost three months racing 2,500 miles across the Atlantic had to be rescued after hitting a reef less than a mile from the finish line.
Phil Pring and Ben Cummings, who had been at sea for 76 days, were disqualified from the Canaries to the West Indies race after they ran aground.
The pair, members of Zennor Gig Club, were picked up by authorities after the incident near the Caribbean island of Antigua on Sunday.
Scuppered: Phil Pring, left, and Ben Cummings were disqualified from the race after running aground
The men were taking part in the Atlantic Rowing Race in their boat Vision Of Cornwall and were in 15th place when they hit the reef.
Falmouth Coastguard said that the two friends, who were raising money for the Cornwall Blind Association, were safe and well.
According to organisers Woodvale Challenge, although Mr Cummings, 36, and Mr Pring, 32, from Falmouth, Cornwall, did not complete the race, they did offcially complete a transatlantic crossing as they had passed the eastern tip of Antigua, the landmark used for such events.
A spokesman said: 'The boat passed over a first reef and narrowly avoided capsizing but despite the efforts of the guys to row clear the breaking surf rolled the vessel which became trapped on the reef.
'It's absolutely gutting - to be so close to the finish line must be very hard to take.
'But they did complete a transatlantic crossing and hopefully that achievement will be enough for them.'
Last month the men said there had been a lot of 'niggling problems' during the voyage in their boat, which was built in a barn near Helston, Cornwall.
As well as having to cope with heat and weight-loss, just two weeks after setting off from the Canary Island of La Gomera on January 4, their drinking water maker failed when a charger from their solar panels broke - resulting in them having to be supplied from a support boat.
LINK TO PHOTO
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1259969/Atlantic-rowing-pair-crash-reef-ONE-MILE-finish-racing-2-500-miles.html#ixzz0j9gdbQEQ

