New York Post

Weird BUT true

- Natalie O’Neill, Wires

Members of the Ku Klux Klan are leaving candy on homeowners’ lawns in Pennsylvan­ia as a recruiting strategy — but neighbors aren’t sweet on visits from the racists.

Baggies of candy hearts were stapled to pamphlets made by the Loyal White Knights, a North Carolina branch of the white supremacis­t group.

Several residents of Hatboro called cops to complain.

Animal-rights advocates are roaring mad over this tacky prom stunt.

Christophe­r Columbus High School in Miami brought a tiger to its junglethem­ed prom. Video shows the stressed feline pacing around its small cage as dance music blasts.

School officials apologized, and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission is investigat­ing.

He’ll take her to the altar — and him to the potty.

A Michigan man popped the question to his girlfriend only to be upstaged by her oblivious young son, who began taking a leak behind them as a camera rolled.

Kevin Pryztula had just taken a knee near a fountain in Bay City when little Owen dropped trou. The couple was so caught up in the moment they didn’t even notice.

Pryztula’s girlfriend, Alyssa, said yes. Not wise. The sale of endangered animals is soaring in Sweden, where bandits are selling a great gray owl on the dark Web for $120,000.

Crimes involving protected species have spiked to the highest level the country has seen in a decade. Worth fawning over. A Minnesota man found an incredibly rare set of conjoined baby deer while hunting for mushrooms near the Mississipp­i River.

The two-headed female fawn was stillborn and is likely the first ever to be carried to full-term, according to a University of Georgia researcher. It had two hearts but only one liver.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States