Smelly feet in library – the final chapter ?

Charles Davis Passed along
This One

the guy who drove people away from the University of Delft
library by taking his shoes off on repeated visits.

He refused to put them back on and returned to the library
despite officials banning him from the building.

Teun later created commotion at his trial by taking his
shoes off in court.

After being given the 250 euro fine, the 39-year-old told the
Gelders Dagblad newspaper he would apply for political
asylum in Germany, adding: \”People are against me
because I prefer to walk barefooted.\”

A month ago he wrote to the German chancellor Gerhard
Schröder after seeing him posing in a German magazine
seated on a bench next to a barefooted woman. He wrote:
\”I\’m happy to see that you are not so shortminded as the
Dutch people.\”

As part of his trial, judges ordered Teun to take part in a
smell test. His feet were examined alongside other
volunteers in an unusual identity parade to see if they did
smell much worse.

After an earlier interview with Teun, another journalist
reported that he had to hold his nose during the interview
and compared the smell to a bag of rotten potatoes that
had been kept in a cupboard for two weeks.

Charles Davis Passed along
This One

the guy who drove people away from the University of Delft
library by taking his shoes off on repeated visits.

He refused to put them back on and returned to the library
despite officials banning him from the building.

Teun later created commotion at his trial by taking his
shoes off in court.

After being given the 250 euro fine, the 39-year-old told the
Gelders Dagblad newspaper he would apply for political
asylum in Germany, adding: \”People are against me
because I prefer to walk barefooted.\”

A month ago he wrote to the German chancellor Gerhard
Schröder after seeing him posing in a German magazine
seated on a bench next to a barefooted woman. He wrote:
\”I\’m happy to see that you are not so shortminded as the
Dutch people.\”

As part of his trial, judges ordered Teun to take part in a
smell test. His feet were examined alongside other
volunteers in an unusual identity parade to see if they did
smell much worse.

After an earlier interview with Teun, another journalist
reported that he had to hold his nose during the interview
and compared the smell to a bag of rotten potatoes that
had been kept in a cupboard for two weeks.