home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 14
-
- POLITICS
-
- Here is some trivia from the world of politics:
-
- As everyone knows, George Washington was the first President
- of the United States. Wrong! The first was John Hanson of Maryland
- who served for one year before George Washington.
-
- George Washington grew marijuana on his plantation. In his
- time, pot was a legal crop. It was not used for smoking, but
- instead the stalks of the plant were used to make ropes, canvas
- and paper.
- If you have a book in your house older than 1883, there is a
- 75% chance it is made out of marijuana. So far, there has not yet
- been discovered a better natural material for ropes and nautical
- material in terms of strength and weather resistance. It can also
- be used as a good fiber in clothing. Properly utilized, marijuana
- stalks, called hemp in this application, yield fibers up to twenty
- feet long and they could be made into all sorts of industrial
- materials ranging from paper to two-by-fours.
- Smoking pot did not become particularly fashionable until it
- was made illegal starting around 1938. In 1971 it was listed as a
- narcotic that cannot even be legally prescribed by any doctor who
- might find it beneficial to patients. Then, smoking marijuana
- suddenly became very fashionable among young people who felt a
- need to test the bounds of society. Smoking pot is becoming less
- interesting even to those people today who need to do something
- "naughty" because we are finding out that it does have long
- lasting negative effects on our bodies.
- Some day soon, people who are hooked on pot will seem stupid
- to everyone else. But it will make a comeback, not as a drug, but
- as a cash crop that will save the worlds old-growth forests and
- will even make a good substitute for gasoline. In Brazil over one
- million cars and trucks are running on methanol, made from corn.
- Pot yields up to forty times more methanol than corn.
-
- President James Garfield could do a neat trick: He could
- write Greek with one hand while at the same time writing Latin
- with his other hand.
-
- President Grover Cleveland, before he was the president,
- escaped the military draft by hiring someone else to take his
- place.
-
- You do not put a period after the S in Harry S Truman's name.
- This is because his middle name was S, this was not an
- abbreviation.
-
- Eugene Debs was a candidate who ran for the office of
- President of the United States from within jail. At least one out
- of every fifty elegible voters voted for him.
-
- The President of the United States gets 20,000 letters a day.
- Most of the corespondents probably expect a personal reply. If the
- President took only two minutes to answer each letter, he would
- have to work 82 days to answer a single day's letters.
-
- In 1957, a senator, Strom Thurmond, made a speech that lasted
- 24 hours, 19 minutes.
-
- When Ripley's Believe it or Not reported that the Star
- Spangled Banner (which was originally called "Defense of Fort
- McHenry") was written to the music of a "rousing tavern ballad"
- from a popular songbook, 5 million Americans wrote letters to
- "Washington."
-
- Although he was not a skeleton in the closet of America,
- David Rice Atchison was a president who served for only one day.
- He was leader of the Senate on a Sunday when James Polk, the
- President of the United States' term ended. There was a law that
- the new President, Vice-president Zachary Taylor, could not be
- sworn in on a Sunday, so that left Mr. Atchison officially in
- charge of the country. He neglected to do any president-like
- things that day because he never knew that he was the boss. He
- didn't find out until a long time after it was over.
-
- One snowy night in 1967 George and Barbara Bush arrived in
- Washington, D.C. The moving van arrived near midnight and the
- movers unloaded the bedding first, but were having trouble with
- the snow storm. The Bushes told the movers to take it easy - quit
- until morning - and invited them in to spend the night.
-
- The record for shaking hands may belong to Theodore Roosevelt
- who shook the hands of 8,513 people in one day, January 1, 1907.
-
- The government owns 34 percent of all the land in America.
-
- Until the work of Richard Nixon (who despite his screw-ups
- was a great president) which opened relations with Mainland China,
- it was illegal for U.S. citizens to collect Chinese stamps.
-
- Ex-U.S. President Gerald Ford had his name changed when he
- was younger. He was born Leslie King, Jr.
-
- The United States imports 22 metal ores that are crucial to
- self-sufficiency such as chrome, manganese, cobalt and platinum.
- If we were involved in a war and our supply of these metals was
- cut off, our increasingly high-tech industry would be unable to
- make the things we are used to ranging from televisions to cars.
- Scientists are working to find synthetic replacement materials.
-
- In 1989 President George Bush shook the hands of 25,000
- people, or about one out of every 10,000 Americans. He traveled
- well over one-tenth of a million miles, more than enough to circle
- the globe five times, and he spoke 3 million words to Americans.
-