Are news outlets giving veterans a slap, asks Grumpy Editor.
WILL DROUGHT TALK CONTINUE? Precipitation over the last year (May 2018 to April) in the United States sets a record. An average of 36.2 inches fall over the Lower 48, the first time it tops 36 inches during a 12-month period in more than 120 years of record-keeping.
COIN MYSTERY. Two coins, one minted in Madrid in 1660 and the other made around the 1200s, are found on the ground at Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah. Their presence in the desert remains unexplained while other artifacts could remain in the area.
TYPO ON 46 MILLION BILLS. An Australian radio station notices a typographical error on 46 million $50 bills printed by the Reserve Bank of Australia last year. Seems "responsibility" is incorrectly spelled on about $1.6 billion worth of currency.
WALMART PAYS ABOVE MINIMUM WAGES. Walmart, the nation’s largest employer, pays its U.S. store managers an average of $175,000 a year. A company report says its one-million-plus U.S. workers earn more than the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, with the average wage for full-time hourly workers at $14.26.
MAJOR NEWSPAPER'S STAFF GONE WITH SALE. The Times-Picayune, top newspaper in New Orleans --- founded in 1837 --- is sold to its major rival, the New Orleans Advocate. The deal results in the layoff of every member of the Times-Picayune staff. But some of those may wind up at the Advocate.
BEVERLY HILLS PLANS BAN ON TOBACCO. Beverly Hills, Calif., home to the rich and famous, may be the nation's first to outlaw the sale of tobacco products everywhere except a few cigar lounges and via concierge or room service in the city's luxury hotels. The Beverly Hills City Council is slated to vote on the measure May 21.
ALLIGATOR IN WOMAN'S PANTS. A Florida woman pulls a small alligator out of her pants during a highway traffic stop in Punta Gorda. When an officer asks "Do you have anything else?" 42 striped mud turtles and one softshell turtle are found in the woman's vehicle. Florida is home to more than a million gators, protected under state law.
WALL STREET JOURNAL BOOSTS POLITICAL TEAM. Preparing for the 2020 elections, The Wall Street Journal is expanding its political team with the hiring of three reporters who will focus on national politics, the White House and Congress.
WAITER FINDS BIG CHECK ON TABLE. Clearing off a table at Patsy’s Pizzeria in Manhattan's East Harlem neighborhood, a waiter finds an envelope containing a $424,000 cashier's check left behind by a customer. The restaurant's owner contacted the Daily News which helped locate the mystery woman, a 79-year-old retired social worker from Manhattan. The waiter refused a tip for his efforts.
MORE MILLENNIALS LIVE AT HOME. Zillow, a housing research firm, finds student loan debt, rising rents and stagnant wages result in more millennials living at home with their parents than at any other point this century. It tallies 22% of millennial Americans are either staying home or returning to childhood bedrooms.
NEW REGULATIONS IN TV PITCHES. In a move to improve transparency in health-care costs, new regulations will require TV pitches for prescription drugs to include list prices. The disclosures will appear in TV commercials within a few months.
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