The Regiment of Losers Marches On
Here are some more tales of people who didn’t made it into the top
99 percent.
SOME THINGS ARE WORSE THAN ANTS
I am a medical student currently doing a rotation in toxicology at the
poison control center. Today, this woman called in very upset because she
caught her little daughter eating ants. I quickly reassured her that the
ants are not harmful and there would be no need to bring her daughter into
the hospital. She calmed down, and at the end of the conversation
happened to mention that she gave her daughter some ant poison to eat in
order to kill the ants. I told her that she better bring her daughter in
to the ER right away.
PLEASE DON’T RESCUE ME
Seems that a year ago, some Boeing employees on the field decided to steal
a life raft from one of the 747s. They were successful in getting it out
of the plant and home. When they took it for a float on the Stilliguamish
River, they were quite surprised by a coast guard helicopter homing in on
the emergency locator that is activated when the raft is inflated.
SMOKING IS BAD FOR PETS
A carpet layer had just finished installing carpet for a lady. He stepped
out for a smoke, only to realize he’d lost his cigarettes. In the middle
of the room, under the carpet, was a bump. “No sense pulling up the
entire floor for one pack of smokes,” he said to himself. He proceeded to
get out his hammer and flattened the hump. As he was cleaning up, the
lady came in. “Here,” she said, handing him his pack of cigarettes. “I
found them in the hallway.” “Now,” she said, “if only I could find my
hamster.”
YEAH, THAT WOULD BE A PROBLEM
Steve Thompson, wildlife biologist at Yosemite National Park,
telling the New York Times in November that the cause of the 600
car break-ins by bears in 1997 mostly was food left in the seat:
“My problems start when the smarter bears and the dumber visitors
intersect.”
KEEP YOUR HAT ON
In March, a 24-year-old man was struck and killed in the fast lane
of I-80 in Vallejo, Calif., when he ran across the highway to
retrieve a baseball cap that had blown off his head. Two weeks
earlier, a 20-year-old Guatemalan sailor, riding on a crewboat on
the Mississippi River near New Orleans, drowned after jumping
into treacherous waters to retrieve his baseball cap.
NOT A PERFECT DISGUISE
At Ft. Bragg, NC, a soldier decided to rob a mobile pizza truck. As part
of his disguise, he wore a nylon stocking over his face – and his army
field jacket – complete with his last name embroidered in big, black
letters across the top of his pocket.
DON’T CALL ME, I’LL CALL YOU
In Hampden County, Massachusetts, a person was tried and convicted for
bank robbery. He had written his hold-up note on the back of his phone
bill.
BAD TIMING IS TWELVE YEARS
A fourth-year dental student and his friends decided to rob a bank. When
they arrived at the bank with their masks and guns, the police and FBI
were already there. Someone had tried to rob the same bank a half hour
earlier. He did twelve years in Walpole, Massachusetts’ maximum security
pen.
LUCY RICARDO LIVES
In November, it took rescuers an hour to
cut through the fangs in the statue of the Jaguar at Alltel Stadium
in Jacksonville, Fla., to free Andy Wilkinson, 9, who had stuck his
head in the statue’s mouth and couldn’t get it out.
IT MUST BE YOURS, IT DOESN’T BELONG TO US
When Virginia Broache got home from the Bon Secours St.
Mary’s Hospital in Richmond, Va., in January, just after having had
her cancerous bladder removed, her nurse was unpacking for her
and discovered that among the “personal effects” the hospital had
sent home with her was the actual bag-encased, just-removed
bladder. Said a hospital staffer, “We apologize.”
BUT IT FELT SO GOOD
In December 1996, Phillip Johnson, then 32, of Johnson Bottom,
Ky., shot himself in the left shoulder with his .22-caliber rifle, “to
see how it felt,” he told ambulance personnel. On October 2, 1997,
an ambulance crew was again called to Johnson’s home, where
Johnson was bleeding from another left-shoulder shot fired by a
.22-caliber rifle. A source told the Inez Mountain Citizen
newspaper that Johnson said the December shooting “felt so good,”
he had to do it again.
This page was last updated July 5, 1998.
Some material taken from
News of the Weird,
some comes from faithful readers.