An Ohio State freshman might have gotten more than just 12 wings when she ordered from Cluck-U-Chicken on Oct. 5.Jamica S. Turner, an accounting and management information systems major, placed an order at Cluck-U-Chicken, 1605 N. High St. But once it was delivered, she saw the receipt read “make sure you spit in her food” printed clearly on it.”I ate two wings before I realized what the receipt said, then I was really disgusted,” Turner said.Turner, who used her bank card to place the order, realized she needed to change her order after hanging up.”I called right back and they gave me a little attitude about changing my order because I used my bank card and it would make things more difficult for them,” Turner said. “But they changed it for me. I didn’t think it would come to this.” After realizing what the receipt said, Turner called the restaurant and asked why this had happened. A representative from Cluck-U-Chicken said one of the employees was playing a joke on someone he thought lived at Turner’s address during Summer Quarter.Gaby Ezzi, manager of Cluck-U-Chicken, said the names Jane and Mike are still on the ticket for that address from last year’s residents, just as are the words “make sure you spit in her food.””We do not change the name on the ticket unless you tell us. Jane and Mike lived there last year and someone who worked here intended it to be a joke. This was not intended for Jamica,” Ezzi said.”The names `Jane` and `Mike` and `make sure you spit in her food” remark will keep showing up unless we delete it. Obviously the employee who wrote this, who is unknown, did not know that it would keep printing,” Ezzi said.Ezzi said every employee signs in as Tony, so there would be no way to find out who played the joke. He said if he had known who it was, that employee would have been fired on the spot.”We are very busy. We just get the phone number and get the order. We don’t have time to change the name each time,” Ezzi said.Turner said she has ordered food from Cluck-U -Chicken several times since school started and she remembers giving her own name.”I know I gave them my name at the beginning of the year, and this is an all girls floor. How could a Mike have lived here?”According to a representative from OSU Residence Life, two girls, Amanda and Jessica, lived in Turner’s dorm room Autumn, Winter and Spring quarters of last year with the same phone number.Turner thinks it’s possible Cluck-U-Chicken used both the names Mike and Jane thinking that is how to spell “Jamica.””They might of thought that Jane-Mike is how ‘Jamica’ sounds,” Turner said. “Who knows? I don’t think it was intended to be a joke on someone from the last year because there was no one who lived here with a name even close to Jane and Mike, except me. Jessica and Amanda is not similar.””The yearly order was $134. There is no way she has eaten $134 worth of food. This is continued from last year,” Ezzi said.Liane Egle, director of health communications for the Franklin County Health Department, said they have no complaints about Cluck-U-Chicken.”Their last inspection in April revealed no significant violations or areas of concern,” Egle said.Egle said there is acode of regulations followed when looking at a restaurant. They look at how the food is handled, sanitary areas and every step involved with food preparation.”Anyone can call us and register a complaint and it will be followed up within 24 to 48 hours,” Egle said.Jim Hartman, a campus area health inspector, said he has never heard of this before. He has heard rumors, but has never actually gone out on a complaint.”It would be very hard to prove if it actually happened even if you had a sample of food with saliva on it,” Hartman said.Ron Miller, president and general manager of the Better Business Bureau of central Ohio, said the bureau has nothing on Cluck-U-Chicken at this time.”We have no file or report that indicates any complaints or inquires on Cluck-U-Chicken,” Miller said.Miller said, if Turner wants to start a file on Cluck-U-Chicken, all she would need to do is send them a copy of the receipt.”We also would give Cluck-U-Chicken a chance to tell their story,” Miller said. “If it can be proven that this receipt came from their establishment, Turner definitely has a case.”Turner said she plans to consult the Better Business Bureau.”I think this is the most disgusting thing, I don’t think they are clean or professional,” Turner said.Turner said that no matter what the case is or who the words were intended toward, she is disgusted by the whole experience. “This was one of those jokes that was not funny,” Turner said.