TOP 5 weird, funny and sizzling world news of current week
Man found CATERPILLAR in his cheeseburger after taking a bite
A disgusted burger bar customer got more than he bargained for while tucking into what he thought was a delicious cheeseburger. The 28-year-old, who didn't want to be named,
was chowing down on a meaty treat when he was confronted by "something from a nightmare".A wriggling caterpillar crawled out from the lettuce nestled in between the beef and bread, reports the Newcastle Chronicle. After complaining to restaurant staff at Ed’s Easy Diner, in Gateshead MetroCentre, he claimed he was told the meal would be on the house. He said: “I put the burger down for a drink and there was something funny. “I looked down and I saw a caterpillar crawling out of the burger.“I was sick later that evening.
was chowing down on a meaty treat when he was confronted by "something from a nightmare".A wriggling caterpillar crawled out from the lettuce nestled in between the beef and bread, reports the Newcastle Chronicle. After complaining to restaurant staff at Ed’s Easy Diner, in Gateshead MetroCentre, he claimed he was told the meal would be on the house. He said: “I put the burger down for a drink and there was something funny. “I looked down and I saw a caterpillar crawling out of the burger.“I was sick later that evening.
Man digs 25-foot snow tunnel from house to car
SUMMERSIDE, Prince Edward Island, Feb. 25 (UPI) -- A Canadian man said it took him about 6 hours to dig a tunnel through the snow from his Prince Edward Island front door to his driveway. Marcel Landry, 26, of Summerside, said he found himself snowed into his home after a Valentine's Day weekend storm dumped 3 feet of snow on top of the already significant snow around his house, so he decided to try digging his way out using a hockey stick and a broken plastic shovel. Landry said it took him about six hours to tunnel the 25 feet to his car. He said his fiancee would periodically use the key remote to honk the car horn to he could ensure he was headed in the right direction. "I was coming in every now and then to get her to use the car keys to beep the horn and I'd go back in the tunnel to listen and see a light flashing and know in which direction to dig and then I'd probe the hockey stick to see if I was getting close as the horn got louder," he told ABC News. "Finally I found the first car, 25 feet in." Landry said it took an extra week to actually get the cars out of the driveway.
Crossing guard in Scotland banned from high fiving children
A crossing guard in Scotland has been banned from high-fiving kids and parents are livid.Nkosana Mdikane, 74, who works outside two primary schools in Dumbarton and has become known as “Scotland’s happiest lollipop man,” was asked last week by the local council to stop giving the children the greeting. In a statement, the council said, “All patrollers are instructed when crossing children over a road to remain static with one hand on their stick and the other stretched outwards. This ensures that they can be seen and effectively provides a barrier between school pupils and traffic.”David Dutton, a father of three didn’t waste time setting up a Facebook page - Save The High Fives - to get the council to reverse its decision. The page has received more than 14, 000 likes and a petition on change.org has been signed by more than 10,000 people.On the Facebook page, one person posted: “What a lovely man: it is this type of person who should be a model for our kids rather than the pernickety sumph in the council who tires (sic) to squash it.” Dufton told the Telegraph that the man affectionately known as Smiley is “out there in all weathers. It's a bit unjust. I've never heard any one ever complain about him. Nkosana always puts a smile on people's faces."
Stash of cash wrapped in drapes ends up in N.S. thrift store donation
A "large sum of money" withdrawn nearly a decade ago ended up in a Nova Scotia thrift store, wrapped in drapes, after someone donated the belongings of a loved one who died earlier this year.Police in Halifax declined to say exactly how big the stash was, only that it was "several thousands of dollars."An employee at the thrift store in Halifax found the money, which was contained in several sealed envelopes with evidence it had been taken out at a bank in Guysborough County in 2006.After cops appealed to the public to try to find the rightful owner, a woman got in touch to say she'd donated the drapes along with other personal belongings of a loved one who'd passed away in January. Police verified her claim and have turned the money over to the deceased's next of kin.
Man Caught on Camera Stealing Surveillance Cameras
Police say a thief was caught on camera – on the very cameras he was stealing. The man is accused of stealing video surveillance cameras attached to the outside of a Long Island motel in October.•VideoWatch: Anything Can Be Sexy with Dakota JohnsonAfter taking the cameras, the man fled from the Heritage Motel in Port Jefferson in a white Chevrolet four-door pickup truck with a male passenger, police said.Anyone who may have seen the man is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 800-220-TIPS.