Stolen: A One-Mile Road In Russia

The unorthodox crime was allegedly committed by a 40-year-old Russian resident of Syktyvkar. The road had linked Parcheg with the Vychegda River before the mastermind carried in off in 82 reinforced concrete slabs.

How does one steal a road? NBC News reports:

Police uncovered the highway robbery when they pulled over a convoy of three heavy trucks carrying the slabs, which they said had been removed with a manipulator, an industrial machine that combines a bulldozer and a forklift.

The Interior Ministry valued the slabs at 200,000 rubles, or about $6,095.

The penalty for stealing a road in Russia? Up to two years in the pokey.

[via msnNOW]

Gadling’s Highlights Of The Week: July 28 – August 3

We publish a lot of stories every week on Gadling. Sometimes, you might just miss one or two. Don’t spend your entire weekend combing for the must-read stories. We’ve gathered everything that was popular from the last week. Here’s your one-stop, weekly roundup.

Most Read

Most Nostalgia-Inducing

Most “Aww”-Inspiring

Most Popular on Social Media

Most Made Us Want to Visit Detroit

Most Reminded us of Howard Beale in “Network”

Most Useful if You Have Luggage Issues

Most Read on AOL Travel


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Photo Of The Day: Pre-Flight Libations

Our friends at AOL Travel have covered the gamut the past few days with their Booze Week series. As they wrap it up, they have one final question for Gadling travelers. How many airport bars have you passed through before flights, on layovers and so on?

We’d love to feature your photos and videos on Gadling, so please add them to our Flickr Pool (with Creative Commons licensing!), tag @GadlingTravel on Instagram or email us at OfTheDay@gadling.go-vip.net.

This Week At The Airport Bar In 41 Tweets

While AOL Travel has been exploring the intersection of booze and travel this week, we’ve been eavesdropping on the world’s airport bars. As anyone who’s ever overpaid for a pint while killing a three-hour delay knows, airport bars are curious places. They can be sad and infuriating and lonely. Or places of wonder and serendipity. Sometimes they’re just places where the tipsy and bored tweet.

Also, you just never know who you might meet.

Here then, in 41 tweets, is how the past week looked from the stools of the world’s airport bars.

Are Hassle Free Airlines Truly Possible?

A new airline in Memphis is looking to take the frustration out of flying, letting travelers skip airport security and show up at the airport just minutes before their flight takes off.

Southern Airways Express has been operational for four months and the carrier’s CEO believes it’s the answer to many passengers’ woes.

“You’re going to be able to walk from your car less than 50 yards in most cases to the aircraft without having to go through any TSA security hassles. You only have to get here 20 minutes before the plane departs,” CEO Stan Little told a local TV station.

Right now, the airline serves 10 regional domestic routes, but it’s planning to expand and may even add an international flight later this year.For passengers fed up with the nightmare that air travel has become, it all sounds too good to be true. Just the other day we told you about the disgraceful report card the TSA received following a government audit which found that a number of security screeners were sleeping, stealing and taking bribes on the job. The story prompted many readers to share their own tales of humiliation, frustration, or anger at having to deal with airport security.

The desire for a hassle-free airline is clearly strong, but can such a carrier truly take off in this day and age of global threats and terrorism fears? Southern Airways has managed to bypass TSA checks by flying in and out of smaller regional airports that don’t yet have strict security protocols, and any route expansions would likely involve destinations with similar secondary airports. Still, flying out of alternate hubs might be a small price to pay for travelers who have had enough of body scanners, bag searches and liquid restrictions.

What do you think? Can an airline like this be made to work?