Logo

A Pennsylvania woman has been fighting City Hall for a decade over a lawn sign featuring a peach holding a newspaper with the headline: “Peachy News. Jesus is Alive.”

Now, one of the highest courts of the land says she has a case.

Officials in York have said the 3-by-5-foot sign – which was, until recently, planted in Sybil Peachlum’s front yard – violates zoning rules.

She says the ban violates her right to free speech.

A lower court had dismissed her claim, but the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has reinstated it.

And you thought Manhattan traffic was utterly maddening.

Nigeria’s traffic officials have started ordering psychiatric tests on traffic offenders accused of “insane” driving in Lagos, where horrendous jams are driving people crazy.

Drivers trying to circumvent the traffic have been jumping curbs and driving down the wrong side of the street, leading the Lagos Traffic Ministry to order police to arrest offenders, impound their vehicles and give them mandatory psychiatric evaluations.

An Austrian man literally put his foot in his mouth when he cut off his toes, fried them up and ate them between two slices of bread after getting high sniffing butane gas.

When ambulance workers arrived, the 35-year-old offered to share his meal with them, passing over a toe and saying: “It tastes like chicken, do you want some, there’s a few still left over.”

Now that’s fast food.

A woman faces child-endangerment charges for trying to breast-feed her daughter while driving from Detroit to Pittsburgh.

Catherine Donkers, 29, was nursing her 7-month-old on the Ohio Turnpike when she was spotted by a truck driver, who called the state Highway Patrol.

“It’s not like I’m trying to change a diaper while I’m driving, she pretty much just lays there on the pillow in my lap,” said Donkers after cops pulled her over at a toll booth.

Comments
anonymous profile image
Powered by RoundtableBuilt on infrastructure designed for real-time media. Learn more at RTB.io.© Roundtable 2026. By using this site you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy