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Curses, Foiled Again
nA man who robbed a gas station in Aurora, Ind., tied up the clerk and then ran out the door with a carton of cigarettes. The robber stopped, however, when he realized he’d forgotten the bag of money. Police said he tried to re-enter the store but couldn’t because the door was equipped with an electronic lock.
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n• Police responding to the theft of an ATM in Leavenworth, Kan., found the battered machine at the bottom of a 50-foot wooded embankment and the 49-year-old suspect trapped inside. Police Chief Patrick Kitchens told The Kansas City Star the thief used a stolen skid loader to pry the ATM loose from a credit union and then drop it down the embankment to bust it open. Instead, the ATM, skid loader and the thief all tumbled downhill together. “It makes it easier when you let go,” Kitchens pointed out. “That way you don’t go with it.”
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n Race Cards
nConnecticut lawyer James O. Ruane filed a motion to suppress breathalyzer test results showing his client had a blood-alcohol content more than twice the legal limit because, Ruane insisted, breathalyzers are “racist machines.” The sobriety standards of the Intoxilyzer 5000, used by Connecticut state and most local police, don’t take into account that the lung capacity of a black man is 3 percent smaller than a white man, Ruane explained, declaring, “They are KKK in a box.”
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Prominent black community members in Danville, Ill., accused high school boys basketball coach Gary Tidwell of racial profiling after he cut at least eight African-American players from the team. Tidwell is white. All of the players remaining on the team are black.
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Ottawa’s Carleton University voted to withdraw from a Canada-wide fund-raiser for cystic fibrosis research and treatment because, according to a motion by the Carleton University Students Association, the fatal, genetic disease “has been recently revealed to only affect white people, and primarily men.” The student council explained that its fund-raising “strives to be inclusive.”
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n Incendiary Devices
nA British coroner’s inquest ruled that a disabled pensioner died after a cigarette he was smoking set fire to his incontinence pants. The Essex Chronicle reported that when George “Bill” Martin, 71, set the cigarette down on his lap, it melted the garment’s outer cover and ignited the cotton pads, which turned into molten globules that burned him to death at his Southminster home.
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An explosion that blasted a German schoolboy out the window of his bathroom resulted when he accidentally ignited the air freshener he had sprayed moments earlier. “I began fiddling with a lighter my dad left in there, and suddenly there was this big orange whoosh of flame,” said Dennis Bueller, 13, of Recklinghausen. “I woke up outside with my clothes burned off me and smelling like a barbecue.”
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n Next Time, Try Doughnuts
nPolice in Evansville, Ind., reported that while arresting Angelo J. Cooper, 32, for being drunk and disorderly, he offered to buy the arresting officers dinner if they would let him go. When the officers declined, Cooper then offered them $10 and a toaster. “This offer was also rejected,” the police report noted.
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n Bionic Woman
nTanya Vlach, 35, a San Francisco artist who lost her eye in a 2005 car accident, announced on her blog that she wants to replace the missing eye with a camera that can dilate with changes of light and allow her to blink to control its zoom and focus. The eye cam could allow her to record her entire life or even shoot a reality television show from her eye’s perspective. “Nothing too exploitative,” Vlach told New York’s Daily News. “There are amazing possibilities.”
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nNoting spy cameras designed to fit into inconspicuous places already exist, mobile computing expert Roy Want, an engineer at Intel, told the Daily News, “It is possible to build a wireless camera with the dimensions of the eyeball.” He explained that the camera, which would be encased in Vlach’s existing acrylic prosthetic eye to avoid moisture, could link wirelessly to a smart phone, which could send power to the camera wirelessly and relay the camera’s video feed by cell phone network to another person, a TV studio or a computer.
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n God Bless America
nA charity in Roanoke Rapids, N.C., rebuffed a man who tried to make a donation in person because he refused a staffer’s request to remove his religious headwear. “She said, ‘Sir, you have to take your turban off. This is the United States,’” said Gary Khera, who pointed out to WRAL News that he is a Sikh and a U.S. citizen. “We have a policy, and he didn’t want to abide by it,” said the Rev. Ron Weeks, executive director of the Union Mission, noting the facility requires that men remove any head coverings indoors. He said the mission would welcome Khera’s donation if he mailed it or had his wife bring it in.
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n Slightest Provocations
nAfter a 16-year-old boy shot his father in the head and then turned the gun on himself at their home in Galveston County, Texas, sheriff’s investigators reported the incident occurred after an argument started when the boy returned from a fast-food restaurant with the wrong order. Both the boy and the father, Robert Lee Mueller, 59, were hospitalized in critical condition. Characterizing the Mueller family as “very reclusive,” neighbors told the Houston Chronicle they found it odd that Mueller’s wife would walk half a mile to the local Target store instead of driving.
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nCompiled from the nation’s press by Roland Sweet. Submit items, citing date and source, to P.O. Box 8130, Alexandria VA 22306.