It’s an odd world

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

By wire sources

Cyprus drops gambling charges against 98-year-old woman

NICOSIA, Cyprus — Cyprus’ attorney general has dropped gambling charges against about 40 elderly women, including a 98-year-old, whose weekly poker-and-bridge party had been raided by police.

The women, mostly in their 70s, had became a local cause celebre after receiving a court summons this week. Interviews with 98-year-old Eftychia Yiasemidou appeared in several media outlets.

An assistant for Attorney General Petros Clerides said Friday the official had been unaware of the case and only found out about it through media reports.

Gambling in Cyprus is punishable by up to six months in jail or a $1,000 fine. The ladies were playing at home with small amounts of cash during their weekly afternoon get-together in November 2009 when police raided the house.

Colo. gov. accidentally calls lt. gov. ‘sex star’

DENVER — Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper’s flattering comments about Lt. Gov. Joe Garcia turned into a bit of a flub.

The governor mistakenly referred to Garcia as a “rising sex star” Wednesday. He made the remark while introducing him at a childhood literacy event attended by about 40 children at a Denver elementary school.

Hickenlooper routinely introduces Garcia as a “rising star” and a “rock star” at public events. The Democrat immediately caught his slip, which was recorded by radio station KOA. The Denver Post reported the comments Thursday.

According to the tape, Hickenlooper says, “Now I get to introduce that rising sex star — symbol. I mean, symbol — not star.”

After some awkward laughter, he deadpanned that it might go down as one of his most difficult news conferences.

Faint barking leads to dog stuck in Pa. cistern

WAYNESBURG, Pa. — Four days of faint barking finally led neighbors to a dog trapped in an unused cistern under a house in southwestern Pennsylvania.

Finally, on Monday, Matthew Burris told the Observer-Reporter of Washington, Pa. that he located the source of the barking in his Waynesburg neighborhood and contacted the Greene County Humane Society.

Jane Gapen, the group’s director, said the dog apparently pushed through the lattice under a porch and fell through some rotted boards into the cistern below. Police said the home’s owner had lived there more than 20 years and didn’t even know there was an unused cistern under his front porch.

Officials believe the beagle mix might have been chasing a squirrel or rabbit before falling 10 feet into stagnant water. They say the dog appeared unhurt.

By wire sources