What I Learned From Magazines This Week

 

At least ten people have been shot by their dogs since 2004, usually in hunting accidents.
(AARP Bulletin, January February 2016)

By: Holley And Chris Melton

 

If somebody phones you claiming to be with the IRS, it’s a scam. The real IRS will only open communications with a taxpayer via the U.S. Postal Service.
(AARP Bulletin January/February, 2016)

 

Due to a delivery mix-up, a man recently received a FedEx package containing a tumor instead of a Kindle.
(Time, January 25 2016)

By: Windell Oskay
By: Windell Oskay

 

 

 

2016 is United Nations International Year of Legumes.
(AARP Bulletin January/February 2016)

legumes

When boxing pro Alicia Napoleon was the only girl on her high school wrestling team, the other schools circulated a petition asking to have her kicked off the team because she beat the boys and make them cry.
(New York Magazine, January 11, 2016)

A Kentucky man was arrested last July for shooting down an anonymous drone that was hovering over his daughters in the sky above his back deck.
(The Atlantic, November, 2015)

drone

Groups of couples rarely engage in electrifying dinner party talk.
(Town and Country, February 2016)

Within a few decades, spaceflight could make it possible for international travelers to get from New York City to Tokyo in 90 minutes.
(The Atlantic, November 2015)

Charles Schultz’s favorite character to draw? Linus.
(The Atlantic, November 2015)linus

 

Giraffes sleep just 20 minutes a day.
(Reader’s Digest, February 2016)

giraffe

 

Hospital staffers sometimes place bets on patients. Guess the Blood Alcohol is a common game, as is predicting the injuries of patients arriving via ambulance, and betting on the outcomes of risky procedures.
(Reader’s Digest, February 2016)

Cartoonist Al Capp described the Peanuts characters in the early, more freewheeling days of the strip as “good mean little bastards eager to hurt each other.”
(The Atlantic, November 2015)

If humans were to live on their own on Mars for centuries, scientists believe that they’d evolve to become taller, with weaker hearts, less body hair and smaller teeth.
(The Atlantic, November 2015)mars

When asked by an interviewer in 1976 if she was “waving the flag for women’s lib,” Glenda Jackson replied, “Waving it? I’ll poke it in your eye if I have to.”
(Entertainment Weekly, Special Oscar Guide

According to boxing pro Alicia Napoleon, knocking another person out is “the most beautiful, electrifying feeling. Imagine being in love, and so happy, and then times that by a million.”
(New York Magazine, January 11, 2016)

(Roz Warren is the author of OUR BODIES, OUR SHELVES: A COLLECTION OF LIBRARY HUMOR.)

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6 thoughts on “What I Learned From Magazines This Week”

  1. Gee, now I know why I don’t get invited to dinner parties. I always figured it was because I’d be the extra woman among couples. Now I know it’s because my conversation is too electrifying!

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