Newsquirks | Spelling Counts | News Quirks | Salt Lake City Weekly

Newsquirks | Spelling Counts 

Pin It
Favorite
Curses, Foiled Again
Authorities identified a wanted man because he had his name tattooed on the side of his head. Federal task force officers investigating an unrelated incident at a shelter in Billings, Mont., said they recognized Sterling F. Wolfname, 26, from a Wyoming police description, but he denied he was the suspect until they noticed the tattoo that said “Wolfname.”

• Police chasing a group of boys who stole the donation box from a charity group that cleans portable toilets used by the aged and disabled during this summer’s annual Musikfest in Allentown, Pa., managed to nab all but one. The 14-year-old boy escaped by running into the woods, but police caught up to him after he fell into an open-pit toilet dug by homeless people.

• Benjamin Baker, 27, pleaded guilty to stalking a woman in Victoria, Australia, after he sent her cell phone a video of himself masturbating. The woman received the video while she was at the police station making a complaint against him and showed it to the officer taking her statement.

Spelling Counts
For the second time in 17 months, a dissatisfied customer filed a negligence suit against Chicago’s Jade Dragon Tattoo & Body Piercing for misspelling a word. Last year, a customer complained his tattoo read “Chi-tonw” instead of “Chi-town.” In the latest suit, Alfonse Wingfield, 30, said he wants $30,000 in damages because he paid $250 for a tattoo that turned out “Tommorow Never Promised Today.” Artist Mike Edrington insisted he spelled “tomorrow” the way Wingfield had written it.

• In its July 21 edition, the New Hampshire Valley News misspelled its name on the front-page masthead: “Valley Newss.” The paper acknowledged the error the next day, saying, “We sure feel silly.”

Too Much Fun
A police officer driving through a residential neighborhood in Fort Wayne, Ind., reported seeing a man standing naked in the window of his home. Noting the man’s genitals were clearly visible to those on the street, the officer and another responding officer walked up to the home and found the naked man, Ronald Miller, had moved to the couch and was conducting a lewd act with a claw hammer, plastic bag and motor oil.

Second-Amendment Follies
Retired police officer Robert Myers, 57, told police in Fort Pierce, Fla., he was installing an optical sight on his AR-15 rifle when he inserted what he thought was an empty magazine. Instead, it contained 10 rounds of .223 caliber ammunition. He accidentally fired one round, which struck the water line for fire sprinklers and flooded his apartment with 3 to 4 inches of water.

• Authorities in Jefferson Parish, La., reported that during an argument over $10, Judon McCann, 17, pulled a revolver out of his pants pocket and fired one shot, which missed the intended victim, who fled. As McCann was putting the gun back into his pocket, it accidentally fired, striking him in the left thigh.

Helping Hand
An American porn star visiting Australia to promote her career urged Pope Benedict XVI to let priests watch pornography. Declaring “church clergy are at a crisis,” Belladonna, 27, told the press the Catholic Church’s sex-abuse problems would continue unless the Pope “addresses the sexual needs and desires of clergy.” To help the cause, Belladonna donated 300 of her own X-rated films to the Catholic Church in Australia and offered to help set up a “meaningful set of exercises for priests to help them deal with sexual tension and stress.”

Reality TV
Maryland’s Court of Appeals used an episode of Seinfeld to explain legal reasoning in a contract dispute between author Tom Clancy and his ex-wife, Wanda King. A lower court ruled that Clancy violated his financial responsibility to King by removing his name from a book series that the two entered into. The appeals court decided that the contract couldn’t be harmed out of spite stemming from their separation and eventual divorce and cited dialogue from The Wig Master, where Jerry Seinfeld returns a jacket to the store because, he says, “I don’t care for the salesman that sold it to me.” The store manager tells him he can’t return an item “based purely on spite.”

“In attempting to exercise his contractual discretion out of ‘spite,’ Jerry breached his duty to act in good faith towards the other party of the contract,” the court wrote. “Obviously,” said King’s attorney, Sheila K. Sachs, “the fact that the Court of Appeals cited Seinfeld certainly makes the state’s highest court a force in the modern legal world.”

Democracy in Action
Angela Tuttle was elected constable in Hancock County, Tenn., by one vote—her own. She told the Morristown Citizen Tribune no one was on the ballot for the county post, so she wrote in her name and won because no one else voted in the race.

Animal House
Rodney Scott McLagan, 48, admitted downloading images of an octopus having sex, as well as dogs, ponies, snakes, tigers and children, after authorities found 31,000 sex-related images and video files on his computer. His lawyer, David Barclay, said McLagan wasn’t searching for the child exploitation material, which turned up in his search for bestiality images because he downloaded the files in bulk. Insisting that McLagan “only looked at 20 percent” of the child pornography, Barclay explained his client was drawn to the bestiality images because he suffers from such low self-esteem that he identifies himself as being “some sort of beast.”

Compiled from the nation’s press by Roland Sweet. Submit items, citing date and source, to P.O. Box 8130, Alexandria VA 22306.
Pin It
Favorite

More by Roland Sweet

  • Anchors Away

    Canada's National Defence decided to decommission a 45-year-old navy supply ship without a replacement because mechanics in Halifax were spending a "disproportionate amount of time" keeping the vessel operating ...
    • Jul 29, 2015
  • Ablution Solution

    Spas in Japan now offer ramen-noodle baths. The baths are filled with ramen pork broth and synthetic noodles. Soaking in the broth is said to be good for the skin and to boost metabolism.
    • Jul 22, 2015
  • Milking the System

    The federal Medicare Fraud Strike Force concluded a nationwide investigation into home health-care fraud by charging 243 people, including 46 doctors and other medical professionals.
    • Jul 15, 2015
  • More »

Latest in News Quirks

  • From Cuba, With Love

    • Sep 30, 2015
  • Anchors Away

    Canada's National Defence decided to decommission a 45-year-old navy supply ship without a replacement because mechanics in Halifax were spending a "disproportionate amount of time" keeping the vessel operating ...
    • Jul 29, 2015
  • Ablution Solution

    Spas in Japan now offer ramen-noodle baths. The baths are filled with ramen pork broth and synthetic noodles. Soaking in the broth is said to be good for the skin and to boost metabolism.
    • Jul 22, 2015
  • More »

© 2024 Salt Lake City Weekly

Website powered by Foundation