Wednesday, January 8, 2025
Weird Stuff

Weird News – Santa Maria Sun


In January, a baby was born to Canadians Kathy Witterick and David Stocker, but seven months later, they still have not revealed to family or friends whether little “Storm” is a boy or a girl. The couple is intending to raise Storm free of gender-specific cultural stereotypes (i.e., such things as domesticity, aggressiveness, preferences for arts or mathematics) because society tends to overvalue “boy” norms. On a larger scale, in Stockholm, according to a June Associated Press dispatch, the 33 Swedish preschoolers at the Egalia school socialize in daily environments scrubbed of all gender references. For example, boys and girls alike play with kitchen toys and building materials, and when playing “family,” parental roles are interchangeable. Critics say the children will be left unprepared for the “real” world.
 
That’s the entrepreneurial spirit!
“The streets of 47th Street are literally paved with gold,” said one of New York City’s gold wranglers, as he, down on all fours and manipulating tweezers, picked specks of gold, silver, and jewels that had fallen off of clothing and jewelry racks as they were rolled from trucks into stores. The man told the New York Post in June that he had recently earned $819 in redemptions for six days’ prospecting.
 
New, on the News of the Weird food cart
Grasshopper tacos (at San Francisco’s La Oaxaquena Bakery, but pulled in June by local health authorities, who were concerned that the bakery was importing Mexican insects rather than using American ones); (2) cicada ice cream (at Sparky’s Homemade in Columbia, Mo., but also yanked off sale by local health authorities in June); and (3) maggot-melt sandwiches (which are just what you suspect—cheese and dead maggots—at the California State Fair in July).
 
Need something to wash all that down?
In June, scientists at China’s Agricultural University in Beijing announced that they had produced human breast milk from genetically modified dairy cows and expect supplies to be available in supermarkets within three years. Employing technology once used to produce the sheep “Dolly,” researchers created a herd of 300 modified cows, which yielded milk that was reported as “sweeter” and “stronger” than typical cow milk.
 
Civilization in decline
A loaded handgun fell from the pocket of a kindergarten student in Houston in April, firing a single bullet that slightly wounded two classmates and the “shooter.”
Searching for butterflies: Fish and Wildlife Service proposes placing the monarch butterfly on endangered species list
By Libbey Hanson
LAFCO approves SLO County’s takeover of Oceano fire services
By Samantha Herrera
Santa Barbara County supervisors approve path for wine business improvement district
By Camillia Lanham
Turn around: A peek back at 2024 in northern Santa Barbara County
By Sun Staff
Santa Barbara County supervisors approve path for wine business improvement district
By Camillia Lanham
Board of Supervisors extends senior mobile home park protections as overlay develops
By Taylor O’Connor
Restoring resources: While repairing damage from Lake Fire suppression efforts, the Forest Service and the Chumash protect Indigenous cultural sites
By Taylor O’Connor
Lompoc Planning Commission supports new land use standards to increase housing density
By Caleb Wiseblood

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