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#1 |
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I Love Susie
Forum 4000 Club Member
Join Date: Oct 18, 2005
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 4,487
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The first practical lawn mower was invented by Edwin Budding, in 1830.
If a Guernsey cow ate petals from the common St. John's Wort, it would give red milk. Francis Scott Key, best known as the writer of "The Star-Spangled Banner," was only an amateur poet. His real profession was a lawyer. The Dracula legend was inspired by a real person: 15th century Romanian prince Vlad the Impaler. Rita Hayworth and Ginger Rogers were cousins. Ian Fleming, creator of James Bond and The Man From U.N.C.L.E., was a former British spy during World War II. Elvis Presley and Winston Churchill had the same chauffeur, Gerald Peters. Since the fiddle had not been invented yet, Roman emperor Nero did not fiddle while Rome burned. In fact, he wasn't even there. He was at his villa in Antium, 50 miles away. What instrument did he know how to play? The bagpipe. At the age of five, Wolfgang Mozart composed a children's song that is still familiar today: "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star." The top of the Empire State Building was originally designed to be a mooring place for dirigibles. Walter Diemer invented bubble gum in 1928. We all know that Marco Polo brought back spaghetti from China, but who introduced it to the U.S., in 1787? Thomas Jefferson. Before becoming a comedy team, Dan Rowan was a bartender and Dick Martin was a used car salesman. Architect Frank Lloyd Wright called television "chewing gum for the eyes." Famous actress Sarah Bernhardt, who died in 1923, had a strange sleeping habit: she liked to sleep in her coffin. Emperor Shah Jehan had the Taj Mahal built as a tomb for his wife. Abraham Lincoln is the only president to have received a patent. It was for lifting vessels over shoals. Edgar Allan Poe was thrown out of West Point in 1831 ... for showing up for inspection stark naked. Garrett A. Morgan invented two life-saving devices: the gas mask and the electric traffic light. Cartoonist Thomas Nast created the image of Santa Claus as we recognize him today. He also created the Republican party elephant and the Democratic party donkey. At the age of thirteen, Elizabeth Taylor wrote and illustrated a book about her pet chipmunk, "Nibbles and Me." Spanish explorer Cortez introduced the chocolate drink to Europe. It originally came from the Aztecs of Mexico. There are only 12 letters in the Hawaiian alphabet (A, E, H, I, K, L, M, N, O, P, U and W). In 1893, ten years after graduating from Northwestern University, Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, achieved the first successful operation on a human heart. In his youth, "Ol' Blue Eyes" (Frank Sinatra) did some boxing under the name Marty O'Brien. The Hindenberg disaster made news in another way by being the first transcontinental radio broadcast. |
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Last edited by tv star collector; 09-02-2008 at 06:09 PM. |
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#2 | |
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MAN VS SAMMICH.
Forum Star
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Quote:
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__________________
Whether I'm the rose of sheer perfection
A freckle on the nose of life's complexion The Cinderella or the shine apple of its eye I gotta fly once, I gotta try once, Only can die once, right, sir? Ooh, life is juicy, juicy and you see, I gotta have my bite, sir. Get ready for me love, 'cause I'm a "comer" I simply gotta march, my heart's a drummer Don't bring around the cloud to rain on my parade |
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#3 |
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Member
Forum Superstar
Join Date: Dec 16, 2001
Posts: 30,406
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mozart only wrote variations of "twinkle twinkle little star" rather than composed it, although he did compose a few pieces that are still known today (just not very well) at five years old. trivial pursuit is apparently responsible for the misconception.
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#4 |
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I Love Susie
Forum 4000 Club Member
Join Date: Oct 18, 2005
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 4,487
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Sir Winston Churchill, whose father died on Jan. 24, 1895, had expressed a wish to die on the anniversary of his father's demise. Sir Winston died on the
70th anniversary of his father's death--within 90 minutes of the exact hour. The Republican presidential ticket of 1892, with Benjamin Harrison the candidate for President and Whitelaw Reid the nominee for Vice President, is the only one in American history in which both candidates were graduates of the same university. They attended Miami University of Ohio. Benjamin F. Butler was the only man in U.S. history to serve in two cabinet posts simultaneously--for 10 months in 1836 and 1837 he was Attorney General and also Secretary of War. Nicholas Heyendahl (1658-1733) of Walhorn, Belgium, after having been kidnapped by pirates, wandered into a church and witnessed his own funeral. He mother had mistakenly identified the body of a vagrant at that of her own son. General William Compton, royalist commander of Banbury during its siege by Cromwell, never went to bed or even lay down for 14 weeks (July 19-Oct. 26, 1644). A baby born to the Amharas of Ethiopia is given as a name the first word uttered by the mother after the infant's birth. Francis and Mary Huntrodds of Whitby, England, were both born on the same day, Sept. 19, 1600, were married on their birthday--and both died in 1680 on their birthday. In 1939, "Billy," a homing pigeon owned by Hugh Perkins of Summersville, West Virginia, appeared at the window of the boy's hospital room in Philippi ten days after the owner had left home--having traveled 105 miles and located the proper window ledge. A band on the pigeon's leg was positive identification. The entire cost of Abraham Lincoln's nomination for the Presidency of the U.S.--including even the fares of the delegates--was less than $700. Nicholas Heyendal (1658-1733) of Walthorn, Belgium, after having been kidnapped by pirates, wandered into a church and witnessed his own funeral. His mother had mistakenly identified the body of a vagrant as that of her own son. Dr. Theophrast Renaudot was the man who originated newspaper advertising. As publisher of the Gazette de France, in Paris, he added a supplement devoted to merchandise advertising, in 1633. Stephan Gerlach (1546-1612), dean of the University of Tubingen, Germany, could remember almost every line he ever read--yet he constantly forgot his own name. Regina Leininger, kidnapped by Delaware Indians at the age of 10 during the Penn's Creek Massacre of 1755, had forgotten her name and family by the time she was rescued eight years later, but recognized her mother when she sang a hymn familiar from her childhood. Matt Warner (1864-1938) of Utah, after spending three years in prison for manslaughter and a career as a bank robber and cattle rustler, served the last 38 years of his life as a deputy sheriff, detective, policeman and justice of the peace. |
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Last edited by tv star collector; 09-02-2008 at 06:54 PM. |
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