SACRAMENTO, June 10 (UPI) -- A California woman and a Maryland man have reported discovering $250,000 lottery tickets in separate incidents.
The Price George's County, Md., man, whose name was not released, said he found his Mega Millions ticket in his jacket pocket, where it had resided for nearly a month and a half, WBAL-TV in Baltimore reported Tuesday.
"I was lucky to wear the jacket that day. I probably wouldn't wear it for the rest of the season," the winner said.
Meanwhile, Candy Tyree of Sacramento, Calif., said she was about to throw away an old recliner when her husband told her he had stuffed a week-old Mega Millions ticket in the chair, KCRA-TV in Sacramento reported Tuesday.
She said she retrieved the ticket from the recliner, which had already been taken outside, and looked up the winning numbers from the drawing.
Tyree said the ticket turned out to be worth $249,050.
Her husband Jim said the incident has caused his wife to reconsider tossing the old recliner.
"It could be the lucky chair now," he said.
Trump visits mom's birthplace in Scotland
STORNOWAY, Scotland, June 10 (UPI) -- U.S. developer Donald Trump, on a trip to Scotland to lobby for his proposed golf resort, stopped off at the island cottage where his mother grew up.
Trump's private jet dwarfed everything else on the runway at Stornoway Airport on the Isle of Lewis, The Scotsman reported. Trump, his sister, Maryanne Trump Barry, a federal appeals judge, and a retinue of security guards and PR people traveled to the cottage Monday in a four-car convoy.
Mary Macleod was born on Lewis in 1912, the daughter of a crofter. In 1936, she married Fred Trump, who later became one of New York's foremost developers, in New York City.
The cottage where the Macleods lived in the hamlet of Tong 4 miles from Stornoway is still occupied by two cousins, Willie and Alastair Murray.
"It was a bit of a scrum, right enough, but he was terrific and he enjoyed the trip to Tong," Willie Murray said of the visit.
Trump denied that his side trip to Lewis was a publicity stunt in aid of his plans for the east coast of Scotland. He said his $2 billion project is a chance to do "something historic" for the country where his mother was born.
Man 'lucky' after nail pierces skull
SHAWNEE, Kan., June 10 (UPI) -- A Shawnee, Kan., man said he evaded serious injury when a rogue nail fired from a nail gun embedded itself in his skull.
George Chandler said he was building a lattice with a friend when the nail gun hose became tangled and fired off a nail, KCTV, Kansas City, Mo., reported Tuesday.
Chandler said he and his friend initially did not know where the nail had landed, but soon found the 2 and a half inch piece of hardware had gone into his skull on the top of his head.
"It was just like a maybe like a sting, bite or something, you know," Chandler said.
He said there was no blood around the wound and he was alert when an ambulance arrived and took him to a hospital. He said a doctor requested a very special instrument for his treatment.
"'Does anybody have a hammer, a claw hammer.' I thought he was teasing at first, but then he says, 'No. It went in like that. We can pull it out like that,'" Chandler said.
Doctors told Chandler's family that he could have faced paralysis or serious injuries to his eyesight or ability to speak if the nail had entered his skull a fraction of an inch lower.
"Well I feel very lucky, very, very lucky," Chandler said.
Trial aborted after jurors play Sudoku
SYDNEY, June 10 (UPI) -- An Australian drug trial was aborted after three months when it was discovered that jurors were playing Sudoku in the jury box.
Judge Peter Zahra of District Court in Sydney released the jury after the forewoman admitted that she and four other jurors had spent a large amount of their time during the trial playing the popular game, the Sydney Morning Herald reported Tuesday.
Defense lawyers Adam Morison and Michael Coroneos filed to have the jury discharged after the two men accused in the trial said they saw the jury forewoman playing the game during one of the defendants' testimony. The forewoman admitted to spending about half of her time in the jury box playing the game.
Morison said it was "extraordinary that 105 witnesses, including 20 police, had been in the witness box and not seen what was happening."
Zahra verbally reprimanded the Sudoku players, but provincial laws do not allow for the prosecution of inattentive jurors.
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