"Auld Lang Syne" is sung or played at New Year's celebrations, but the traditional tune is used around the world for other purposes. The original is Scottish, and few of us know the original words -or even the modern English words. Here's a video that tells you everything you need to know about "Auld Lang Syne."  
Comments (3)
If I remember biology, extra leaves in a clover is a recessive trait. Dominant traits such as normal leaves well affect the plant more than the extra leaves trait. If you breed two plants with extra leaves, the trait stays with the offspring so it also has extra leaves. Keep doing this, and eventually you will get a plant with a lot of leaves.
Not confirmed because that family member ate the 27-leaf clover.
p.s i would like to see more pictures.
That's hw I found this page; I was checking the web to see if I had a world record on my hands. Sadly not. By a LONG way!
56 leaf clover grown by the same Japanese farmer!!
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/05/photogalleries/week-in-news-pictures-130/photo4.html
~Shay