FGDean@aol.com wrote Sun 5/22/11 @10:41 PDT re the injury to Gov-
ernor Mitch of Indiana:
Those out-of-control doors are why I have never gone to a fitness club.
Stephen Yates wrote Sun 5/22/11 @16:21 CDT:
Brittni Colleps is the ugliest of all the teachers sexing young boys so far.
Is she from Terre Haute?
Or Elizabethtown. Here are some more photos, in which she does not look as
bad as she did in her mug shot. And there's a little bit of video here, of her go-
ing to court with her husband, who was standing by his woman. – Editor
Memorial Day will fall on Memorial Day this year, but the 500-Mile Race[courtesy Indianapolis Star; Wikipedia; the Infoplease.com perpetual calendar]
in Indianapolis will fall again on Sunday, the day before the celebration of
Memorial Day on a Monday, Memorial Day. It's the 100th anniversary of
the race, almost, but the first race, in 1911, was held on Memorial Day,
May 30, as were all the 500-Mile races until 1971 except when May 30
fell on a Sunday, in which years the race was held on Monday, May 31.
Congress, after Memorial Day in 1968, moved Memorial Day from May
30 to the last Monday in May (which happens to be May 30 in 2011) and
the 500-Mile Race was moved from May 30 to the Sunday before Mem-
orial Day in 1971. In sum: Never on Sunday until 1971; always on a Sun-
day thereafter; always on Memorial Day until 1971 (unless it fell on a Sun-
day); never on Memorial Day after 1970 (except when May 31 fell on a
Monday and was celebrated as Memorial Day), and, today is not the
100th anniversary of the first 500-Mile Race.
Dumb news from
Kentucky:A 2-year-old girl riding on her father's |
State champion miler Emma Brink,
of Louisville's Sacred Heart Acad- emy, competes for the Karen Car- penter Award. [Aaron Borton, Courier-Journal] |
"People are giving me water, and diapers, and things like that."
– Angie Edwards, tornado
victim in Joplin, Missouri
" . . . as they transition to democracy . . . ."
– President Obama
"You crossed to the dying part of living . . . ."
– first line of a memorial poem to a deceased
loved one published in the classified ads
of the Edmonson News, Brownsville, Ky.
"in real time" – submitted by Fred Dean
"in the wake of" – submitted by Len Zanger
(both contributors pointed out that everything that happens
happens "in real time," and "in the wake of" something else)
Bob Dylan, 70
Annette, Cecile and Yvonne Dionne, 77 (Emelie and Marie are deceased)
Kate Gosselin was court-ordered to pay $10,000 to a marri-
age counselor who said she flew from Pennsylvania to Los
Angeles at the octomom's request in 2009 but didn't get paid.
. . .Watermelons on Hunan growth hormone continued to ex-
plode in China. . . . Events at the Brooklyn Folk Festival will
include a banjo toss (not to be confused with a banjo shoot).
... Kirstie Alley finished second in her Dancing with the Stars
competition (a place better than Bristol Palin finished in hers).
. . . Amtrak threw a woman off the train in Salem, Oregon,
who wouldn't quit yapping on her cell phone. . . . A 15-year-
old girl shot her father with a bow and arrow in Tahuya,
Washington, when he grounded her and took away her cell
phone. . . . A 10-year-old boy dragged a 6-foot alligator
home from a canal in Rockledge, Florida. . . . A bar in Dan-
ville, Iowa, was ticketed for mouse racing. . . . A jail matron
in Polk County, Florida, was charged with producing child
pornography and other crimes for making two girls, aged 10
and 17, strip naked and submit to paddlings with a tawse, vi-
deoing the beatings, and sending the video to a man on line....
MSNBC suspended commentator Ed Schultz for 10 days for
calling Dr. Laura a "right wing slut" on his radio show. . . .
NASCAR's Kyle Busch was ticketed for doing 128 in a 45 in
North Carolina ("How did the deputy pull him over?" an edito-
rial asked?) . . . Princess Beatrice' hat sold for $131,279 on e-
Bay (the winning bidder was not identified).
Is it against the law for a teacher to have sex with her studentsDear Gal:
in a middle college, even if they're over 18?
Maybe Guilty at Gallaudet
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Terry Crow wrote Sun 5/15/11 @10:04 PDT:
You have reported a lot of stupid reasons to call 911. However,
the need for beer is not one of them. That is a real emergency.
Indiana University fans were torn between adopting a bison or a bumpkin
Dennis Ditterline, 38, of Valparaiso, admitted
shooting houses and moving cars with a BB
gun because he was "frustrated with life." . . .
Redistricting left Republican Congressman
Todd Rokita's Indianapolis home 500 yards
outside the 4th district he represents – but
he said he would run for re-election from the
4th district anyway (the Constitution says
nothing about congressional districts). . . .
for a sports mascot. . . .
Governor Mitch took 16 stitches to close a head wound caused by a door
that ran into him at a fitness club.
[courtesy Associated Press]
Devlin Burke shouted "Sieg heil" as a judge found
him guilty of a hate crime for assault outside a gay
bar in Covington, and a woman in the courtroom
yelled, "Mommy loves you!"
[courtesy AP]
A New York man sued the Hunt It All company
of Louisville, complaining that he paid it $28,000
for an 18-day African safari on which he never
saw a lion or a buffalo.
[courtesy Louisville Courier-Journal]
Remember when "junior high school" became "middle school"? We don't,
either. Know what a "junior college" is? We thought we did, too. But now
there will be a "Middle College" in Madison County, Kentucky.
[courtesy Lexington Herald-Leader]
"I’m convinced of an international plot. Everyone knows his weakness
is seduction, women. That’s how they got him."
– Michelle Sabban, a French government
supporter of Dominique Strauss-Kahn
"The world looks at a conflict that has grinded on and on . . . ."
– President Obama
Redundancies
that need a nap: "It is what it is" Birthdays: Al Franken, 60 Borf's weekly BONUS: |
[courtesy Daily Snopes, Obscure.com, AP]
A deputy sheriff called police and demanded to see employees'
driver's licenses when they got his wife's cheeseburger order
wrong at a Burger King in Lakeland, Florida. . . .Marshalltown
High School in Iowa was giving wake-up telephone calls to ha-
bitually tardy pupils. . . . Elsa Sallard, a barista at a Starbucks
in El Paso, Texas, claimed she was fired for being a dwarf (sor-
ry, exact height not given, and no pix released). . . . Brittni Ni-
cole Colleps, a 27-year-old high school teacher in Fort Worth,
Texas, was arrested for having sex with five of her male pupils
– but, they're all 18. . . . A study commissioned by the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops attributed the wave of sexual
abuse by priests to the sexual revolution of the 1960's ("Blame
it on the Stones"). . . . A Chesapeake City, Maryland, man fi-
nally was arrested after dialing 911 for a 17th ambulance ride
to Elkton to buy drugs. . . . A Michigan man who won $2 mil-
lion in the state lottery nearly a year ago was still getting food
stamps. . . . A man in line at a bank in Columbus, Ohio, com-
plied with a request to remove his hood but went ahead and
robbed the bank. . . .The editors of Tabloid Headlines placed
a telephone call to the International Space Station, but the line
was busy.
What do you make of this?Dear Myster Minny:
Mystified in Minneapolis
Not a hottie,
Not a honey,
But here's her beauty:
She's pretty funny.
By the way, that's the April 30 Lu-
ann strip. See April 21 for context: –>
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[courtesy Strange Times]
[courtesy the Globe]
- Riddled by disease
- Had one year to live
Connie Harbeson wrote Sun 5/8/11 @17:50 EDT:
Prince William's bride was commissioned a Kentucky Colonel?
At last a title we can figure out.
But there's another Kate Middleton, from Kentucky, who did not get the
honor. In fact, Facebook took her down as an impostor. – Editor
Publius Leget wrote Sun 8 May 2011 @10:07:36 CDT:
Who are all these weirdos you list as guest speakers at your
Weekly World News Round Table every Sunday?
Unlike most of the spammers listed in "unopened e-mail" of the week,
all the Weekly World News Round Table guests are real people. A
majority are public radio correspondents and reporters (although to-
day's are a professor and one of his graduate assistants). For proof,
and as a service to our readers, we have begun providing links to the
names of guests too obscure for quick recognition. – Ed.
The Fort Wayne Memorial Coliseum was taking bids on curtains to
hide empty seats – nine years after $34.5 million was spent to raise
the roof and add 2,000 seats.
[courtesy Associated Press]
The principal of a Jeffersonville grade school, once opposed to "char-
ter schools" as a threat to public schools, but now removed from her
job because of a drop in her school's standardized-test scores, has an-
nounced plans to form a charter school.
[courtesy Louisville Courier-Journal]
Luxury box fans at the Kentucky Oaks, the day before the Derby at
Churchill Downs, had to wait in line 45 minutes to get mint juleps. . . .
The Sons of Confederate Veterans have applied for Kentucky, which
was a slave state but not a Confederate state, to issue a specialty li-
cense plate bearing the Stars and Bars. . . .
[courtesy Courier-Journal]
A deaf University of Kentucky football fan sued to force the posting of
captions on the stadium scoreboard of all announcements made on the
public address system, including play and penalty calls and lyrics to mu-
sic (similar suits have gained traction against Ohio State University and
the National Football League's Washington Redskins).
[courtesy AP]
A 17-year-old boy shot himself in the leg at a funeral for a 19-year-old
friend who had been gunned down outside a bar in Lexington, when a
.22-caliber pistol he had tucked in his pants discharged accidentally.
[courtesy Lexington Herald-Leader]
"Yes, it improved the way I look, but this surgery was necessary
for medical reasons."
– Bristol Palin
"Our deportation of criminals are up about 70 per cent. Our deportation
of noncriminals are down."
– President Obama
"It's a no-brainer not to take the light rail."
– Sherry Palmer, light rail commuter in Denver, Colorado
"It means you believe in slavery."
– Senator Rand Paul, re belief in public health care
"I will vocally resist this and characterize it for what it is."
– Kentucky State Senator Gerald Neal, re the
proposed license plate with Confederate flag
"Let's just call apples 'oranges'."
– Madry Chlopak
"I will fumingly resist this."
– Jeanetta Girard
Perttu Kivilaakso, 33
Vanessa Williams, 48
Shohreh Aghdashloo, 59
Billy Swan, 69
K. T. Oslin, 70
Lainie Kazan, 70 (or 69 or 71)
Donovan, 65
The Associated Press filed a Freedom of Information Act
request for all photos and video shot in the raid on Osama
bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. . . . Am-
erican Indians objected to the code name Geronimo given
to bin Laden. ... Last year's cholera outbreak in Haiti was
blamed on improper disposal of UN troops' feces. ... Ad-
visers to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad were arrested for sor-
cery in a rift with the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. . . . Two i-
mams were taken off a Delta airliner in Memphis, Tennes-
see, because the pilot found their garb a comfort risk. . . .
A teacher in Memphis who had posted on her Facebook
page the sigh "Teaching high school students what not to
do or how to do it without getting caught :-)" was arres-
ted for having sex with two male students. . . . A boy in
Oak Park, Illinois, was arrested for posting sexual ratings
of girls in his high school on Facebook, and printing and
circulating hundreds of copies of the list at school. . . .Two
13-year-old boys were kicked off the school bus in Canal
Winchester, Ohio, for farting (repeat offense). . . . A man
who would not get off the tracks stopped a train in Madi-
sonville, Ohio, and then mooned it. . . . A British climber
tweeted from the top of Mount Everest. . . . An Australian
soccer player whose gelled Mohawk haircut was ruled a
danger was ousted from the field. . . . A 65-year-old man
called 911 for beer in Bridgeport, Connecticut. . . . A can-
nibal in Kysak, Slovakia,who sought suicide volunteers on
the internet was wounded in a gun battle with police. . . .
Bristol Palin denied that recent jaw surgery, narrowing her
face and raising her cheekbones, was cosmetic. . . . The
Houston Press published a list, with mug shots, of the ten
hottest female sex offenders in Texas. . . . Slutwalking was
sweeping the world.
Magdalena Ivasecko and Sierra Chevy Harris at the first Toronto SlutWalk,
called after a policeman told students they should not dress like sluts if they
did not want to be sexually assaulted. [AP photo]
[courtesy Harper's Weekly, Daily Snopes, Obscure.com, AP]
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FGDean@aol.com wrote Sun 5/1/11 @10:24 PDT re the
Kentuckian who built a car that runs on bourbon:
A giant step forward in the search for alternative, do-
mestic energy sources.
Well, may-be. But that's corn liquor, you know. Have you
heard how "biofuels" are driving up food prices? And now,
more than ever, we fear, the price of whiskey. But at least he
brings fresh meaning to the expression "getting tanked." – Ed.
Dusty Hopkins wrote Thurs 4/28/11 @13:33 CDT:
Who is editing the spelling in Tabloid Headlines?
"Strait and narrow"?
"Strait" is correct. The expression comes from the Sermon
on the Mount: "Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the
way, which leadeth unto life . . ." (Matt.7:14). But that's not
redundant; it's a poetic description of two different things as
narrow, with different words (it's not because it's in the Bi-
ble, as our li'l Baptist chippie Jeanetta would have us believe,
that it's not redundant).
What happened, unfortunately, is that people took the Biblical
passage out of context to create the phrase "the strait and nar-
row," which is redundant. And then some mistook "strait" for
"straight," giving the phrase a whole new meaning (if any), with-
out context or content.
("Strait" as a noun – sometimes "straits," also singular – is a
narrow passage of water connecting two larger bodies of wat-
er – e.g., Bering Strait, Straits of Gibraltar. As an adverb and
adjective, it's a synonym for "narrow," or "confined" or "strict":
"strait-laced," "strait jacket.")
– Editor
Tracy Collins wrote Sun 5/1/11 8:57 CDT:
Thanks for the updates – was having a rough morning and
now I'm feeling ever-so-much better. It's always refresh-
ing to know that no matter how crazy my own life is, there
is some dumb ass out there humiliating himself for my a-
musement.
Senator Richard Lugar said the death of Osama bin Laden was wel-
come news. . . .
A frigid methane lake on Saturn's giant moon Titan was named Lake
Freeman after the northern Indiana lake where one of the moon lake's
discoverers, NASA's Robert Brown, vacationed as a child.
[courtesy Associated Press]
Rosie Napravnik (right), jockey aboard Pants on Fire,
did not win the Kentucky Derby. . . .
Governor Stevie caught hell from fellow Democrats,
including prominent African-Americans, for not wel-
coming President Obama to Fort Campbell, which
the President visited to welcome troops home from
Afghanistan in the wake of the slaying of Osama bin
Laden. The Governor instead kept the annual tradi-
tion of attending the Kentucky Oaks, a race for fil-
lies the day before the Kentucky Derby. . . .
Laurie LaPenta (right), wife of the owner of Derby
favorite Dialed In (who didn't win), won first prize in
the prettiest horsey woman at the Derby and Kirstie
Alley lookalike contests.
[courtesy Louisville Courier-Journal]
Jordin Sparks, 2007 American Idol winner, desecrated the National Anthem at the
Derby – but not as sorrily as Christina Aguilera did at the Super Bowl. . . .
Senator Rand Paul praised the Bush and Obama administrations for hunting down and
killing Osama bin Laden.
[courtesy AP]
Kate Middleton was commissioned a Kentucky Colonel.
[courtesy Lexington Herald-Leader, St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times]
University of Louisville Marching Band percussionists Andrew Edel (left) and Peter
Anderson at Kentucky Derby Festival's Pegasus Parade.
[photo by Matt Stone, Courier-Journal]
"If this means there is one less death in the future, then I’m glad for that; but I just can’t
find it in me to be glad one more person is dead, even if it is Osama bin Laden."
– Harry Waizer, a 9/11 survivor
"We shouldn't revel in revenge."
– Tom Brokaw
"Revenge is sweet to the tongue, but bitter to digest."
– Tarzan
"The report of my death was an exaggeration."
– Mark Twain
"The report of Eleanor Roosevelt's death is an exaggeration."
– John E. Stempel, late Indiana
University journalism professor
"The report of Elvis' death is an exaggeration."
– commentators and impersonators too numerous to list
"The report of Princess Diana's death is an exaggeration."
– modern journalists and philosophers
"The report of my death was an exaggeration."
– Osama bin Laden, on a re-
cording soon to be released
"With my rifle, I will fight for my country."
– Muammar Qaddafi (sp.?)
" . . . focus on, among other things . . . ."
– Steve Inskeep, National Public Radio
Mary Hopkin, 61
Stella Parton, 62
Bob Seger, 66
Willie Mays, 80
The FBI removed the name of Osama bin Laden from its list
of 10 most wanted fugitives. ... The New York Times, which
normally calls everybody "Mr.," referred to the deceased as
merely "Bin Laden." . . . A high school teacher in a Houston,
Texas, suburb was suspended for asking a Muslim student if
she was grieving because her uncle had died. . . . A flag flew
at half-staff at a Hampton Inn in Springfield,Ohio, because of
a broken rope inside the pole; and two dozen town residents
called to complain, including a woman who asked if the own-
ers were from Iraq, Iran or Pakistan (not). . . . A 19-year-
old man was found in his bedroom in Charleston, West Virgi-
nia, in bra and panties with a neighbor's dead goat. . . . A ju-
venile petition was filed on a 6-year-old boy in Grant County,
Wisconsin, who had played "butt doctor" with a 5-year-old
girl and grabbed his teen-aged baby sitters' breasts. . . . The
Large Hadron Collider was reported to have found the "God
particle." . . . Daniel Day-Lewis will play Abe and Sally Field
will play Mary Todd in a Spielberg film about Lincoln. . . . A
10-foot alligator chomped a Sheriff's cruiser in Gainesville,
Florida (and, there's video). . . . Vigilantes in Oklahoma City
tattooed "RAPEST" on the forehead of an 18-year-old retar-
ded man they believed to be preying on little boys. . . . Jim
McGreevey, who had resigned as governor of New Jersey in
2004 saying he had cheated on his wife with a man, was turn-
ed down for the Episcopal priesthood – not for being gay, an
insider said, "but for being a jackass." . . . India and Pakistan
both allowed transsexuals to list themselves as "other" on iden-
tity cards, and Pakistan created a distinct category for eunuchs.
. . . A crack customer in North Charleston, South Carolina, di-
aled 911 when he was short-changed (he was arrested, but the
dealer got away). . . . An Oregon woman woke up from oral
surgery with a British accent. . . .Mikey Poland, 18, was arres-
ted for disorderly conduct for floating down the river on an ice
floe in Fairbanks, Alaska, while talking on a cell phone.
[courtesy Harper's Weekly, Daily Snopes, Obscure.com, AP]
Paul Mallia, 55 (right), and Donald Poe, 68, were arrested for armed robbery at a McDonald's drive-through in Palmetto, Florida. [Sarasota Herald-Tribune] |
Is Osama bin Laden really dead?Dear SIS:
Scared in Sacramento
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- Druggie,
- Stripper,
- Cross-dresser
- and more
Bruce Mitchell wrote Sun 4/24/11 @14:32 PDT:
From the pitture at my church I knowd that Jesus was blond,
but how come ten of the twelve apostles shown in your pitture
of the last supper are blond? That ain't right. Them was Jews.
Two bodies wrapped in plastic were found in a 10-foot-high pile of
horse manure at a stable in Gary. . . .
Coyotes kidnapped a pet miniature pinscher in St. John, also in Lake
County. . . .
Forty starving llamas and forty llama carcasses were found on a farm
in Huntington County. . . .
A woman trying to get to the Horseshoe Casino on the flooded Ohio
River drove around a barricade and into water up to the roof of her
car (she was rescued).
[courtesy Associated Press]
A Bardstown man built a car powered by bourbon.
[courtesy spyce.com]
The Louisville "dance rock band" Uh-Huh Baby Yeah! entered the
competition to open at Hard Rock's Battle of the Bands 2011 in
London (i.e., London, England).
[courtesy Louisville Courier-Journal]
"I want to see the original long-form certificate of Donald Trump's
Republican registration."
– Senator Rand Paul
"It's the worst name in the world. The only person that had a dumber name
than me was the Fresh Prince."
– Kid Rock
"It really forces the insurgents to resupply theirselves."
– Lt. Col. James Vizzard, U.S. Army
battalion commander in Afghanistan
"There is empirical data . . . ."
– Alan Kaplinsky, attorney for the American Bankers Association, at the Supreme Court
Uma Thurman, 41
Bobby Rydell, 69
Duane Eddy, 73
Phoebe Snow, 60
Hazel Dickens, 75
A "Don't say gay" bill, making it illegal for teachers to discuss"The dog ate my homework" department:
any sexual behavior other than hetero before the ninth grade,
cleared a state senate committee in Tennessee. . . . Husband-
and-wife teachers in Huntington Beach, California, aged 62
and 59, were arrested for diddling a 17-year-old boy. . . .Li-
Lo was bailed out in hours. . . . A Philadelphia pornography
purveyor acquired the rights to more than 1,700,000 toll-free
telephone numbers including 1-800-CADILLAC and 1-800-
WORSHIP. . . . President Obama published the "long form"
of his birth certificate (the story gathered 40,278 user "com-
ments" on Yahoo! news in less than 24 hours) – but "birthers"
still had questions. . . . New York led the states in 2010 in
government benefits per capita; West Virginia was second....
A 7-foot alligator surprised a woman in her bathroom in Pal-
metto, Florida, after gaining access to the house by a doggie
door. . . . An 18-year-old man walking on all fours in a cow
costume shoplifted 26 gallons of milk at a Wal-Mart in Staf-
ford, Virginia. . . . A vacant house in distress called 911 in
Marblehead, Massachusetts. . . .A man walked into a Chris-
tian radio station in Orlando, Florida, masturbated, and sex-
ually assaulted the announcer as she read morning prayers
(her listeners called 911). . . .Governor Perry called for three
days of prayer to end a drought and wildfires in Texas.
A police sergeant convicted of exposing himself at a Sears in
Cincinnati, Ohio, said he had unzipped in an attempt to deter-
mine who would advise him that his zipper was down.
[courtesy Los Angeles Times, U.S.A. Today, AP, Harper's
Weekly, Daily Snopes, Obscure Store Reading Room]
I am 9 years old. I'm just starting to use the inter-Dear LC:
net, and I don't understand some of the terms. I
know what "BFF" and "LOL" mean, but what is
"WTF"?
Little Clara
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