You’re right, Crunchy, I got some of my species crossed. The seahorse is the only known animal in which the seahorse incubates eggs. I retract my earlier statements regarding the animal.
A globe of the Earth six feet in diameter has a surface rougher than the actual Earth. A bump representing Mt. Everest would be too small to be felt.
Before 1912, patrons at major league baseball games were required to return foul balls and home runs or face ejection.
It’s estimated that Babe Ruth would have hit 50 more home runs under today’s rules. When Ruth played, a home run did not count if the ball went foul after going over the fence.
You have a belt encircling the Earth with a tight fit at the Equator (a little less than 25,000 miles). You add 3 feet of length to the belt, expanding it equally away from the Earth all around. Will you be able to crawl under it?
Probably, for the average human. At this point the belt will be almost a foot from the ground!
clarification:
the fast race cars you can watch on saturdays and sundays in Winston Cup and Busch series races do not have headlights- they are stickers
…a real car, which inspired Fleming to write his story.
It was not named for the sound it made, but for an off-color WWI-vintage song about getting leave passes (“chits”) and what one then did with the local whores…
The last surviving working vehicle from the movie is available for parties in the UK – and has been given the actual license plate number “GEN11” by the UK equivalent of the DMV so that it will look just like it did in the film.
(See http://www.ChittyChittyBangBang.co.uk.)
Oh, and the opening of the film, with the race car crashing? That was pretty much an accurate portrayal of the end of the real Chitty’s “career”. As I recall, the car used was a fairly accurate reproduction of the original Chitty, too.
Prior to World War II, major league baseball players didn’t bother to bring their gloves in with them when their turn at bat came up. They’d just drop their gloves in the field.
The word “bullshit” is Australian in origin.
The center red line in hockey was invented during World War II to slow the game down, as inexperienced players were being victimized by long passes.
Tonic water is so named because it’s a treatment for malaria.
Tales of UFO abduction were unknown until “Weird Tales” published a horror story about a UFO abduction.
When Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue, everybody knew the world was round. Columbus’s disagreement was that he mistakenly believed the earth is much smaller than it actually is.
Nobody ever said “What’s good for General Motors is good for America.” Actually, what was said was the exact opposite.
Prior to continental simulcast of sports games, it was common for local baseball broadcasts to be completely made up. Announcers would get ticket reports and they’d call the game as if they were there, with assistants making bat and crowd noises.
You can still buy a brand new OLD BEETLE…in kit form.
Search the web for the Mexican plant which makes 'em and they’ll send you the car in a bunch of crates, so you can put it together yourself.
Yes infinity comes in different sizes. Two sets are the same size if it is possible to find a one-to-one map from one set onto the other. Using this definition of size. The integers, the even integers and the rational numbers are all the same size. The reals are strictly larger than the integers.
Sets that are no bigger than the integers are called countable. Sets that are larger than the integers are uncountably infinite.
Given any set (finite or infinite) the set of all subsets is always larger than the given set. There is a lovely diagonal proof of this.
When SECRETARIAT was a yearling Penny Tweedy lost a coin toss to Ogden Phipps over who would get their pick of two horses. Phipps won and picked The Bride who ended up never winning a race. Tweedy lost and had to take SECRETARIAT one of the greatest horses of all time.
Arch Duke Ferdinand’s driver turned down the wrong street, a serbian nationalist pulled out a gun and killed Ferdinand.