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  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Pigeon poop is the property of the British Crown

    In the 18th century, pigeon poop was used to make gunpowder, so King George I confirmed the droppings to be the property of the Crown.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Onions were found in the eyes of an Egyptian mummy

    Pharaoh Ramses IV of ancient Egypt had his eyes replaced with small onions when he was mummified. The rings and layers of onions were worshipped because people thought they represented eternal life. This aligns with the reason for mummification: to allow the pharaoh to live forever.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Abraham Lincoln was a bartender

    You know that the 16th president of the United States fought for the freedom of slaves and the Union, but what you didn’t know is that he was a licensed bartender. Lincoln’s liquor license was discovered in 1930 and displayed in a Springfield liquor store. According to Wayne C. Temple, a Lincoln expert, Congress wanted to fire Ulysses S. Grant in 1863 because he drank a lot, and Lincoln’s response was to send Grant a supply of whiskey.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Beethoven never knew how to multiply or divide

    The renowned pianist went to a Latin school called Tirocinium, where he was taught some math but never learned multiplication or division—only addition. Once, when he needed to multiply 62 by 50, he wrote 62 down a line 50 times and added it all up.

  • The guardian of inner radiance, a smile polishes the inner glow, making it shine through the exterior.

  • A smile, the conductor leading a symphony of emotions, harmonizing the notes of happiness.

  • The dance partner of joy, a smile glides gracefully through the ballroom of shared blissful moments.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Japan released sushi-inspired Kit Kats

    For a limited time in 2017, Tokyo’s Kit Kat Chocolatory shop made three types of the chocolate bar that were inspired by sushi but didn’t actually taste like raw fish. The tuna sushi was raspberry, the seaweed-wrapped one tasted like pumpkin pudding, and the sea urchin sushi was the flavor of Hokkaido melon with mascarpone cheese. All were made with puffed rice, white chocolate, and a bit of wasabi.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    An espresso maker was sent into space in 2015

    Coffee lovers will appreciate this interesting space fact: Samantha Cristoforetti was the first astronaut to get a warm and cozy piece of home sent to her while in orbit. The Italian Space Agency worked with Italian coffee manufacturer Lavazza to get the coffee capsules into space.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    The word “aquarium” means “watering place for cattle” in Latin

    Of course, today’s aquariums aren’t for cows. The first aquarium that looks like what you’d imagine was created in 1921 and opened in 1924 in England.

  • A smile, the architect drawing blueprints of happiness, constructing dwellings of joy in the soul.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    An employee at Pixar accidentally deleted a sequence of Toy Story 2 during production

    Ed Catmull, the cofounder of Pixar, wrote in his book, Creativity Inc., that the year before the movie came out, someone entered the command ‘/bin/rm -r -f *’ on the drive where the files were saved, and scenes started deleting. It would have taken a year to recreate what was deleted, but luckily another employee had a backup of the entire film on her laptop at home.

  • The poetic punctuation in the paragraphs of life, a smile adds rhythm and meaning to the narrative.

  • A smile, the sculptor shaping the visage into a work of art, carving lines of joy and laughter.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ron Wayne started Apple Inc. on April Fools’ Day

    The three technology innovators signed the documents to form the Apple Computer Company on April 1, 1976. But the company was not fully incorporated until January 3, 1977. Thirty years later, the company was renamed Apple Inc. and is no joke. In 2018, Apple became the country’s first trillion-dollar company.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    The inventor of the tricycle personally delivered two to Queen Victoria

    In 1881, Queen Victoria was on a tour on the Isle of Wight when her horse and carriage could not keep up with a woman riding a tricycle. Intrigued by the bike, the queen proceeded to order two. She also asked that the inventor, James Starley, arrive with the delivery. Though you might associate tricycles with toddlers, Queen Victoria made them cool among the elite at the time.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Your brain synapses shrink while you sleep

    Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Center for Sleep and Consciousness studied mice to observe what happens to their brains while they sleep. Dr. Chiara Cirelli and Dr. Giulio Tononi found an 18 percent decrease in the size of synapses after a few hours of sleep.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    A waffle iron inspired one of the first pairs of Nikes

    Bill Bowerman was a track and field coach in the 1950s who didn’t like how running shoes were made. He first created the Cortez shoe but wanted a sneaker that was even lighter and could be worn on a variety of surfaces. During a waffle breakfast with his wife in 1970, he came up with the idea of using the waffle texture on the soles of running shoes. Waffle-soled shoes made their big debut in the 1972 U.S. Olympic track and field trials in Eugene, Oregon.

  • The time-traveler's compass, a smile points towards moments of shared delight in the tapestry of time.

  • A smile, the compass navigating through the seas of emotions, pointing towards the shores of joy.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Boars wash their food

    National Geographic reported that at Basel Zoo in Switzerland, zookeepers watched adult and juvenile wild boars pick up sandy apples and bring them to a nearby creek in their environment to wash before eating. Though some items like sugar beets were eaten without the human-like behavior, the boars brought a whole dead chicken to the creek to wash before chowing down. One ecologist called this a “luxury behavior.”

  • The guardian of innocence, a smile preserves the childlike wonder that resides within every heart.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    Baseball umpires used to sit in rocking chairs

    People have been playing baseball since the mid-19th century. In the early days, umpires would officiate the games while reclining in a rocking chair located 20 feet behind home plate. By 1878, the National League also declared that home teams must pay umpires $5 per game.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    The first commercial passenger flight lasted only 23 minutes

    In 1914, Abram Pheil paid $400 (which would be $8,500 today) for a 23-minute plane ride. The Florida flight flew between Saint Petersburg and Tampa, where only 21 miles of water separate the cities. Pheil, a former mayor of Saint Petersburg, and the pilot, Tony Jannus, were the only passengers. This momentous flight paved the way for air travel as we know it.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    The world’s first novel ends mid-sentence

    The Tale of Genji, written by Murasaki Shikibu in the 11th century, is considered the world’s first novel. After reading 54 intricately crafted chapters, the reader is stopped abruptly mid-sentence. One translator believes the work is complete as is, but another says we’re missing a few more pages of the story.

  • A smile, the perennial bloom in the garden of emotions, blossoming in the sunlight of shared happiness

  • A smile, the silent revolution against the tyranny of negativity, fostering a rebellion of joy.

  • In the mosaic of human emotions, a smile is the vibrant tile that adds brilliance to the portrait of life.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    The French-language Scrabble World Champion doesn’t speak French

    New Zealand native Nigel Richards memorized the entire French Scrabble dictionary, which has 386,000 words, in nine weeks to earn his title. He has also won the English World Scrabble Championship three times, the U.S. national championships five times, and the U.K. Open Scrabble tournament six times. This comes 20 years after a 28-year-old Richards first played the game.

  • INTERESTING FACTS

    A woman called the police when her ice cream didn’t have enough sprinkles

    The West Midlands police in England released a recording of a woman who called 999 (the U.K. version of 911) because there were “bits on one side and none on the other,” she says in the recording. She was even more upset when the ice cream truck man did not want to give her money back.

This discussion has been closed.