The Weekly Vista

Strange BUT TRUE

- By Lucie Winborne

• The shamrock, called the “seamroy” by the Celts, was considered a sacred plant that symbolized the arrival of spring. According to legend, St. Patrick used it as a visual guide when explaining the Holy Trinity. By the 17th century, it had become a symbol of emerging Irish nationalis­m.

• There’s a doughnut shop in Clare, Michigan, that’s owned entirely by cops.

• A long-haired tortoisesh­ell cat named Towser holds the Guinness World Record for catching mice — an estimated 28,899 in 24 years — as

the pest control expert at the Glenturret whiskey distillery in Scotland.

• Between 1912 and 1948, Olympic medals were given out for sporting-inspired masterpiec­es of architectu­re, music, painting, sculpture and literature.

• Subaru WRX owners are the most likely in the U.S. to have a prior speeding citation.

• The average energy expended during the ladies Wimbledon tennis final match adds up to 1.56kWh, which is enough power to keep an iPhone charged for a year.

• Hackers were prevented from stealing nearly $1 billion after misspellin­g the word “foundation” as “fandation” on a payment transfer. However, they were still able to swipe roughly $80 million before their typo tipped off the banks.

• Nineteen-year-old Shayla Wiggins, of Wyoming, found a man’s corpse in a river while she was playing Pokemon Go.

• In 2014, South Korea produced an alternativ­e version of their national anthem “Aegukga,” which was two keys lower in order to make it easier for kids in school, especially boys going through puberty, to sing.

• When actor Dwayne Johnson was in high school, his height of 6-foot-4 and weight of 225 pounds had some of his classmates suspecting he was an undercover cop.

••• Thought for the Day: “One who knows how to show and to accept kindness will be a friend better than any possession.” — Sophocles

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