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Loud snorer wins siesta championship

floorfilla

Alfrescian
Loyal

Loud snorer wins siesta championship


AP
Published oct 24 2010


A 62-year-old Ecuadorean man managed to ignore the uproar of a teeming Madrid shopping centre and snore long enough to win what was billed as Spain's first siesta championship. Organizers on Saturday proclaimed unemployed security worker Pedro Soria Lopez the champion for sleeping 17 minutes. They said he not only slept soundly but his snoring on Tuesday also registered 70 decibels - roughly the equivalent of the noise of someone talking loudly. That earned him extra points and enough to defeat the runner-up who had slept for 18 minutes.

siesta.jpg


Curious onlookers watch the contestants sleeping and snoring on sofas

"Oh I am so happy to be the first champion," said a laughing Quito-born Soria Lopez, who sported a handsome paunch and a drop-bar black mustache. He said he was a regular siesta taker, and it looked as if was telling the truth. "My wife made me do this, but then they couldn't wake me up. Naturally, the lunch I had before with the 7 euros they had given me helped," he said before collecting the euro1,000 winning check. The somewhat tongue-in-cheek 9-day contest that ended Saturday was organized by the recently formed National Association of Friends of the Siesta and was sponsored by a shopping mall in Madrid's working class Carabanchel district.

Its aim? To promote a revival of this timeless custom so identified with Spain but which some believe is in danger of vanishing because of the pressures of modern times. "People are so stressed out they can't take siestas any more," said spokesman Andres Lemes. "Studies show it's a healthy practice that recharges your batteries." Each of the 360 sleepers that took part in the contest got just one shot. There also were individual prizes for snoring, odd sleeping positions and wearing striking pajamas.

Contestants in groups of five were given 20 minutes to lie down on garish blue couches and timed by a doctor with a pulse-measuring device to determine how long they spent snoozing. A judge perched on an umpire's seat awarded points for position, snoring ability and apparel. "It's not a scientific study, obviously," said Peruvian Dr. Lila Chuecas, who monitored the contestants. "The idea is to encourage people to practice a healthy habit."


 
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