ODDLY ENOUGH


ODDLY ENOUGH

Artist looking to set record for world’s largest paper airplane

FITCHBURG, Mass.

Residents of a Massachusetts city are hoping to set a world record for the largest paper airplane.

The Revolving Museum of Fitchburg revealed a 64-foot-long plane at the Fitchburg Municipal Airport on June 12.

There was no plan to fly the nearly 1-ton contraption.

Fitchburg artist Jerry Beck tells the Sentinel & Enterprise he wanted to break the world record for the largest paper airplane to take flight but the hangar it was built in was too small to accommodate a wide enough wing span to support the glue-shallacked plane.

A construction crane held the plane aloft.

Two people measured the plane at 64 feet and 6 inches long, which Beck says makes it is the largest of its kind.

He’s asking Guinness World Records to add a new category.

‘Dead’ husband returns after police in Japan send the wrong body

TOKYO

A Japanese wife has told police the body she thought was of her missing husband belonged to a stranger after her spouse turned up alive a year later.

Tokyo police acknowledged June 13 that the body found in a river in eastern Tokyo in June 2017 was of another man reported missing at around the same time.

Police apologized for the mix-up and said the remains would be returned to the right family.

Police initially believed the body was of a man in his early 40s reported missing by his family three days earlier, and handed it over to them after “positive” identification by the wife and two relatives. The body had been already cremated.

The family earlier this month notified police that the man came home alive in May. Police refused to say where he was or what he was doing.

The body, of another missing man in his late 30s, might have been misidentified because both men were about the same height and age, Tokyo’s metropolitan police said.

Bodies that are deemed unrelated to crime are usually returned to the families only after their visual inspections and without additional tests.

The metropolitan police said they regretted the mistake and promised to take preventive measures.

Associated Press