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- Chapter 12
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- PEOPLE
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- Within seven levels of acquaintance almost any two people in
- America are associated. Chances are you have a friend who has a
- friend who has a friend.... that knows the President, Cher,
- Johnny Carson, Connie Chung, and Michael J. Fox.
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- The scientist, Louis Pasteur, used to sneak a microscope into
- friends houses under his coat and then examine the food they were
- about to serve to make sure it was safe from germs.
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- It appears that Adolf Hitler may not have died from suicide
- as people used to believe. He could still be alive in hiding. A
- scientist has tried to match dental records from the corpse in the
- bunker that was supposed to have been Hitler and found that the
- dental features don't match photos taken of Hitler when his mouth
- was open.
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- Ex-First Lady Nancy Reagan was in a high school play (in
- 1939) in which she had only one line: "They ought to elect the
- First Lady and then let her husband be President."
-
- The ex-husband of the columnist Ann Landers started Budget
- Rent-A-Car with $5,000 and turned it into a big company which he
- later sold for $10 million.
-
- Charles Darwin, the evolutionary theorist, cured his snuff
- habit by keeping the snuffbox in the basement and the key for the
- snuffbox in the attic.
-
- After Felix Bloch was accused of spying and suspended from
- the U.S. State Department, he was bothered by news reporters and
- FBI agents who followed him constantly. But he could do something
- they would find difficult. He can walk 25 miles at a time. And he
- did so, much to the dissapointment of those tailing him.
-
- The FBI was considering that Albert Einstein was possibly a
- communist spy and was possibly involved in the kidnapping of the
- Lindbergh baby. They accumulated a 1500 page file on the
- professor.
-
- One time Albert Einstein was jotting down some notes about
- his thoughts while attending a banquet. Everyone rose in a
- standing ovation and were applauding, so Dr. Einstein rose and
- clapped his hands too. He didn't realize the ovation was for him.
-
- In 1952, Albert Einstein was nominated for presidency of
- Isreal.
-
- Ellen Bloudreaux is blind, has an IQ of around 40, and cannot
- talk, yet she has totally memmorized hundreds of songs and can
- sing them while playing the piano. She has not had any musical
- training.
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- When the Prince of Wales visited Niagara Falls he tried to
- talk people into letting him ride across the falls on a high wire
- in a wheel barrow. Evidently the local authorities refused.
-
- When the scientist Nikola Tesla started messing around with
- the newly discovered X-rays, he considered them beneficial for the
- human brain, and spent sessions of as long as 40 minutes x-raying
- his head.
-
- Royal Prince Mom Teparit of Thailand has created the iron
- buffalo for his people, an eight-horsepower rototiller like
- tractor that can pull farm instruments through rice paddies seven
- times faster than water buffalo. He has also created a way to seed
- clouds in the orient. This not only improves crop yield by
- diminishing droughts but also can used to defuse typhoons before
- they hit land. He also invented irrigation systems and many more
- tools and techniques of agriculture. He is now working with an
- idea to use electricity to separate hydrogen from sea water. The
- hydrogen can be burned to create electricity, a portion of which
- will be used to separate more hydrogen. The profit will be extra
- electricity. In the course of his work he has lost complete
- hearing in one ear and partial loss in the other, he has lost two
- fingers and his spleen and gall bladder due to exposure to
- hazardous chemicals and machinery.
-
- Thomas Edison was kicked out of school because his teachers
- thought he was learning disabled. They said he was a "dreamer."
-
- The Smithsonian Institution was founded by James Smithson, an
- Englishman who never visited America.
-
- The explorer Lafayette's full name was Marie Joseph Paul Yves
- Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette."
-
- Leonardo da Vinci could draw a sketch with one hand, and
- write with the other hand simultaneously.One of the things
- Leonardo da Vinci was most famous for during the time he lived was
- his weight-lifting ability. He was well- known for his
- accomplishments as a strongman.
-
- The French had a man like our Ben Franklin, but this man's
- life was more complicated. Pierre Beaumarchais was a well-known
- playwright who invented an important gadget that all mechanical
- clocks required called the escapement, the part that ticks. He
- was a secret agent for the King and taught his daughter to play
- the harp, he wrote operas including the Marriage of Figaro, and
- was Voltaire's editor. Like Ben Franklin he used considerable
- ambassadorial skill to put together financial backing for the
- American Colonies in their fight for independence. Unlike
- Franklin, he spent many years in jail, charged with treason and
- fraud. He acted as his own attorney.
-
- When Blaise Pascal was a boy he figured out Euclidian
- geometry by himself. Nowadays, many kids have trouble with this
- subject even with the help of a teacher and text books.
-
- Show Business
-
- John Wilkes Booth was one of the most famous actors of his
- time, before he shot Abraham Lincoln. After that he was ever more
- famous, but people didn't like him anymore. He used to get over
- 100 fan letters every week.
-
- If anyone in this century were to attempt to produce a show
- like the freak show of P.T. Barnum, the world would be outraged.
- He included in the show at various times: a bearded lady, a man
- who was totally blue due to an industrial accident, a woman who
- was completely covered with tattoos, a man with a two-inch thick
- skull that people could smash things over harmlessly, a rubber
- man, a woman with a paralyzed face, a midget, a man who looked
- like a dog, a "skeleton dude," a woman who looked like a monkey,
- and a person who was so distorted by congenital defects that no
- one could identify exactly what he was.
-
- W.C. Fields used to open savings accounts everywhere he
- went. He put over $1 million in 700 different banks. He couldn't
- remember where many of his accounts were.
-
- Bob Ford, the outlaw who killed Jesse James, later starred in
- a play called "How I Killed Jesse James".
-
- Hollywood was founded in 1888 by Horace Wilcox. It was to be
- a model city of people who did not drink alcohol. There were only
- 500 residents until the movie industry came to town.
-
- Tom Mix, the movie star had special tires made for his
- Rolls-Royce which had the initials TM imprinted into the tread.
- Whenever he drove on dirt roads, he left long trails of his
- initials.
-
- Abbott and Costello had an insurance policy to cover them
- financially in the event of an argument between themselves.
-
- The movie, Quo Vadis had over 30,000 people on its payroll.
-
- Johnny Carson charged Sears Roebuck $1,000,000 for a single
- show in October, 1984.
-
- Remember the cartoon, Flintstones? Pebbles' voice was done
- by Sally Struthers who played Gloria in All in the Family.
-
- Some Celebrities' Real Names
- Alan Alda - Alphonso D'Abruzzo
- Woody Allen - Allen Steward Konigsberg
- Alice Cooper - Vincent Furnier
- Redd Foxx - John Sanford
- (remember the show, Sanford & Son?)
- Judy Garland - Vicki Lester
- Donna Summers - LaDonna Gaines
- Elton John - Reginald Dwight
- Martin Sheen - Ramon Estevez
-
- Siegfield and Roy have had 3274 consecutive sellouts since
- they opened in Las Vegas in 1981. At 200 seats a night, that's
- 6,548,000 people. That's one out of every 38 people in America.
-
- The name of the Star Wars Robot, R2D2 came from technical
- moviemaking terminology: "Reel 2, Dialogue 2.
-
- When Henry Winkler started on Happy Days, he was paid $750
- per episode. By 1982 he was making $80,000 for each show.
-
- If you paid average eighteen-year-old Americans minimum wage
- for all the hours of television they have watched, they would each
- get $50,000.
-
- Only three out of every ten Americans remembers what life was
- like before television.
-
- There are at least one tv set for every two Americans. There
- is at least one telephone for every two and there are at least one
- and a half radios per person in the United States.
-
- An American three-year-old child spends an average of 30
- hours per week watching tv. Some kids spend less time, some more.
- This means some kids spend more time watching tv than their
- parents spend working every week.
-
- In the country of Cyprus there is one movie theater per every
- eight people.
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- Music
-
- When Beethoven was ready to write music, he would start by
- pouring ice cold water over his head to excite his brain.
-
- At the age of two, Mozart could hear sounds and tell what
- pitch they were. There is a story that he heard a pig oink and
- yelled "G-sharp!" Someone duplicated the pitch on a piano, and
- discovered that it was G-sharp.
-
- Here's an easy one, see if you can remember: What are the
- names of the four musicians who composed the Beatles? I'll tell
- you later.
-
- The Beatles have sold over 1 billion copies. If you stacked
- up all these records and tapes, the pile would be almost 2000
- miles tall.
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- The Beatles are still popular, they sold over 10 million
- copies in 1988.
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- Michael Jackson owns most of the Beatles copyrights.
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- Answer: John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Ringo
- Starr.
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