US family welcomes 12th son in a row

Lucky number 13?

Lucky number 13?

A couple from Grand Rapids, Michigan, has welcomed their twelfth son, Tucker – yet again failing to break the gender streak that has made the family famous.

Jay and Kateri Schwandt believed that their twelfth child may be a girl, as Kateri went nine days over her due date, something that had not happened with any of their previous 11 boys. However, Kateri – known as Teri – gave birth to another boy, Tucker, who weighed in at 3.52kg, at a Grand Rapids hospital.

Teri, 38, told The Associated Press: “Of course. There was a chuckle in the whole room. I looked at my husband, and we exchanged a knowing smile. When they say it’s a boy, I think, OK, no problem. I’ve got this. We know what we’re doing.”

The family now has 12 boys aged between 21 and newborn. Devout Roman Catholics who don’t believe in using birth control, the Schwandts come from large families themselves – Teri has 13 siblings and has a sister who is mother to 10 children, all of whom are also boys.

Dr. Bob Barbieri, chairman of obstetrics and gynecology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, told the news source: “That’s amazing. This is a miracle. It appears there is some type of genetic determination in some families that have a lot of girls or a lot of boys. It’s not well understood. It’s more than a statistical oddity.”

 

Unidentified object ‘falls from sky’ in US

An illustration of the first flight by Professor Jacques Charles, December 1, 1783. His choice of travel must have looked quite mysterious to onlookers.

An illustration of the first flight by Professor Jacques Charles, December 1, 1783. His choice of travel must have looked quite mysterious to onlookers.

A “mystery object” fell from the sky in Norfolk, Virginia, last week, sparking much excitement among residents, the vast majority of whom do not believe police claims that the item was nothing more than a “weather balloon”.

The mystery object fell into a residential neighbourhood in the suburb last Tuesday night, after which time the immediate area was cordoned off and residents were evacuated from their homes.

Reportedly, military personnel, police officers and government operatives arrived in the area to carry out investigations into the object, and eyewitnesses were said to be reporting that it resembled a balloon or had a “structure similar to styrofoam”.

Initial contact with the object was carried out via robot, and following that, there was consultation with NASA experts, The Register reported. The object was then loaded onto a government vehicle and removed from the neighbourhood, and residents were allowed to return to their homes.

Official spokesman, Battalion Chief Julian Williamson, said at a press conference: “Investigators made contact with the package and determined it to be…a weather balloon.”

Mr Williamson also offered guidance on what to do if another such object fell to earth: “Do not investigate on your own. Just call the authorities,” he said.

 

Towns of Dull and Boring visited by residents of Bland Shire

Dullsville.

Dullsville.

The mundane monikers of the Scottish village of Dull – twinned with the US town of Boring – and the Australian region of Bland Shire have been celebrated this week with a visit from residents of one area to another.

Residents of the Bland Shire district in New South Wales, Australia, Dot McCaskie and Gail Platz, paid a visit to Dull in the Perth and Kinross region of Scotland in an attempt to link the three towns with such mundane names.

According to the Central Scotland News Agency, the village of Dull and the Oregon town of Boring were twinned last year in a bid to lure in tourists and create links between the communities. Politicians in Oregon have also planned to create an official “Boring and Dull Day” every year on 9 August – the anniversary of the twinning of the towns – which would celebrate everything that is dull.

Bland Shire is now hoping to get in on the tourist action, thanks to its name – which honours the founder of the Australian Medical Association, William Bland.

The visiting pair were welcomed by Dull-based wildlife tour operators, Julie and Donald Riddell. Julie told the publication: “Their slogan goes ‘Bland by name but not by nature’ and if their friendly personalities are a taste of how things are back in their home town, then I would say they are totally right. Dot said Bland was just a bit tired of being made fun of and when someone spotted the Dull and Boring twinning they thought they’d make it a threesome.”