Dewey Coulson couldn’t believe it when he flushed out a burglar in his Whitefish Bay, Wis., home.
Coulson had gotten up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom – and found a stranger sitting on the toilet.
“I think I caught him off-guard,” Coulson said.
Arkansas couple Michelle and Jim Bob Duggar have 14 children with names beginning with the letter “J” – and are expecting a 15th later this month.
“I’m either expecting or nursing,” said mega-mom Michelle, 37, whose brood includes Joshua, Jana, John, Jill, Jessa, Jinger, Joseph, Josiah, Joanna, Jedadiah, Jeremia, Jason, James and Justin.
The coming distraction will be called Jackson.
The hills are alive – not with the sound of music, but with rabbits. Just ask British actress/comedian Caroline Quentin.
She was shooting a TV drama based on “The Sound of Music” near Salzburg, Austria – in the meadow where Julie Andrews famously danced and twirled – when one of her legs got caught in a rabbit hole.
Quentin is now using crutches – and like the note “fa,” filming now has “a long, long way to go.”
Bob Opple of Bellevue, Wash., never forgot his days at sea on the USS Razorback, the first sub he served on after enlisting in the Navy more than 40 years ago.
So when he heard it was destined for a scrapheap in Turkey, he went into action and talked the folks in Arkansas – home of the Razorbacks – into raising money to save the World War II-era diesel-powered submarine.
Opple is now aboard a tugboat that’s towing the sub across the world to its new home – an inland maritime museum in North Little Rock.
Some are behind bars for cooking the books, others for icing an adversary – so it’s not surprising that French prisoners have gotten together and published a cookbook.
The recipes, the best 100 of 600 submitted by convicts across France, include “solitary salad” and “jail-style apple pancakes.”
Instructions from one inmate note: “This recipe takes time. But time is not really scarce in here.”