(As I mentioned before, NotW isn't currently copyrighted, at least not these articles which appeared in the June LA Reader. So, here they are. mes) News of the Weird Lead Story Paul LaSalle, twenty-six, was killed near Mt. Pleasant, N.Y., in March. He lost control of his car when he pulled alongside a driver and began to berate him for having just cut LaSalle off. Government in Action Debra Gadsen, nineteen, was released early from her five year sentence i a Hampton, Va., prison (received for having allowed her newborn child to die in a dormitory closet, wrapped in plastic bags) because she was discovered to be pregnant again. The U.S. Air Force announced that an MX missile accidentally dropped seven inches in its silo in Wyoming last June. The cause was faulty glue. Repairs will cost $4,780,000 -- or $683,000 per inch. A February report from Finland's Health Ministry, concerned about declining population and a high incidence of stress among workers recommended that people should take "sex holidays" from work. The proposal was immediately endorsed by a Lutheran church official in Finland. In February the Environmental Protection Agency inspector general told a congressional committee that its toxic waste cleanup program is so badly managed that the agency hired contractors as telephone receptionists for $30 an hour. Patrick Kennedy (son of Senator Edward Kennedy) spent $8,000 for the 1,324 votes ($66 per vote) he received in last year's primary for the part time Rhode Island legislature seat he eventually won. San Francisco official accused two cities of intentionally "dumping" mental patients in their city by buying them one-way plane tickets there. The director of the city's mental health program said, "San Francisco is identified as the city of the crazies. We do much more than other cities and counties. " Last fall during a public budget confrontation determining how Franklin County (Ohio) libraries would receive funds, the director of the Columbus Public Library slapped the director of the Bexly Public Library, who retaliated with a punch. Police Blotter Larry Tubbs, twenty-nine, was sentenced to thirty days in jail in Lawrence, Kan., for a November incident in which he bit a woman on the leg and stomach during a church service. In Prague, a 506 pound man identified as Zbynek M., aged fifty-two, was sentenced to twelve years in prison for stealing $120,000 worth of food. Salt Lake City police found a pair of severed legs, each wearing a different colored sock, in a garbage can behind a grocery store. Marlene T. Sipes, a Columbia S.C. lawyer, was suspended for a year in March by the state supreme court on charges that she pocketed $1,819 in 1986 from her daughter's Girl Scout troop cookie fund. Los Angeles police Daryl Gates suspended officer Juan Gomez in December for having broken wind in the faces of two arrestees in September. Gomez blamed the problem on indigestion, but his supervisor called Gomez "feloniously flatulent." One arrestee accused Gomez of preceding one blast with the words, "Check this out." Willie Carrol Williams, thirty-seven, was arrested in Sarasota, Fla., for bank robbery in December. According to police, he had no getaway car but hailed a taxicab outside the bank and paid the driver to take him to local malls for a Christmas shopping spree. After police trapped him an hour later, the taxi driver quoted Williams as saying, "When you've got the money, you might as well spend it." -- Maurice Suhre {decvax,ucbvax}!trwrb!suhre
(From the "Rest" of RHF)