oddly enough
oddly enough
Police: Steven Tyler not really doing a strawberry farm show
WEST WINDSOR, N.J.
Police have alerted residents of a New Jersey township that Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler will not be performing at a small pick-your-own strawberry farm.
NJ.com reports the rock star and “American Idol” judge was listed on concert websites ReverbNation and Eventful as performing a Saturday morning show at Windsor Farm & Market.
Farm owner Wayne Kalinowski says he was tipped to the problem when a woman from Hightstown wanted to know more about the venue.
After Kalinowski reported the issue, West Windsor police sent an email alert Wednesday telling residents Tyler wasn’t coming.
Lt. Robert Garafolo says there does not seem to be criminal intent.
No one from either website can be reached to comment.
A message on a social media account for Tyler hasn’t been returned.
Ohio man posts message on his SUV: ‘Got kidney? I need 1’
COLUMBUS,
A man in need of a kidney donor is taking his search on the road in unusual fashion, with bright yellow letters taped to the rear window of his SUV.
The message on Neal Raisman’s silver-blue vehicle reads: “Got kidney? I need 1.” It includes a phone number for interested callers.
The Columbus Dispatch reports a similar message is taped on an SUV belonging to Raisman’s daughter, who lives not far from her father’s home in the Columbus suburb of Bexley.
They took the SUV-ad approach after Raisman’s relatives were ruled out as donors because of diabetes and other medical reasons.
“If the sign doesn’t work in one way, perhaps it will in another,” said Raisman, a former college president with expertise in the written word and in marketing. “The more front-facing I can get the issue, the greater the possibility that someone will be a donor, not only for me.”
The connections between kidney patients and their donors are sometimes thin: a friend of a friend from church, an old high- school friend reunited on Facebook or even a stranger, said Robin Petersen-Webster, living-kidney donor coordinator at Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center.
“I’ve heard a story about a man standing on exit ramps with a sandwich board for his wife,” Petersen-Webster said.
The 67-year-old Raisman says he has heard from a few people, including one offering – illegally – to sell him an organ, but there’s no matching donor yet.
Associated Press
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