10 things we didn't know last week
Snippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.
1. Police are not required to clean up a crime scene once evidence has been gathered.
2. Networks of sensors are embedded in road surfaces to beam back information to councils on ice, rain, wind and temperatures.
3. Japan's justice ministry surveys ex-cons on topics such as whether they liked the design of their prison-issue pyjamas.
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4. Raila Odinga's first name means "stinging nettle".
5. Immunity to norovirus the annual winter vomiting bug, is only short-lived.
6. Britons are keenest on fast food, more so than even Americans.
7. It's the first time in 50 years that neither the president nor his deputy will be seeking re-election in the United States.
8. The Royal Marsden was the first hospital in the world to be dedicated to cancer when it was founded in 1851.
9. Victorians believed smoking cleared the lungs - and struck off Dr Thomas Allinson, who founded the bakery of the same name, for describing nicotine as a "foul poison" and advocating healthy eating.
10. Malaysian hotel rooms may be fitted with CCTV.
Sources, where not linked: 4: The Times, 1 January. Seen 10 things? . Thanks to Theresa Bubbear for this week's picture of 10 oranges halved and waiting to be squeezed for Bucks Fizz on Christmas Day.