I live in Schenectady NY. I discovered that during WWII, a ship by that name was built to carry cargo.
It broke in half and sunk as soon as it was launched.
It was later discovered it had been built with substandard streel. The factory was faking the test data.
The Senate investigated. Harry Truman led the committee and this (and other investigations) was how he came to be known to the general public and eventually was tapped to run as vice president.
turns out that she and The Who’s Keith Moon have two things in common:
They both died at age 32 in the very same bedroom (years apart)
from wiki:
Elliot retired to an apartment in Mayfair at Flat 12, 9 Curzon Place (later Curzon Square), Shepherd Market, Mayfair, London, owned by singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson who allowed her to stay there. Several hours after Elliot left Jack Martin’s cocktail party, she died in her sleep at age 32. According to Keith Simpson, who conducted her autopsy,[35] she died of a heart attack, and there were no drugs in her system.[38][39][40] Four years later, the Who’s drummer Keith Moon died in the same bedroom, also aged 32 years.[41][42][43]
note to self: turn down any offer from Harry for a sleepover …
In another thread, there was discussion about the MGM lion, whose roar is/was heard at the start of MGM movies. Two things which weren’t clear, and evidence wasn’t provided…
The lion is actually yawning. A lion’s mouth doesn’t open that wide when it’s roaring.
The roar is actually a recording of a tiger’s roar. It’s louder than a lion’s.
Any evidence to the above? Comparing YouTube videos of lions and tigers - I think the tiger roar is more accurate.
Living in Southern Africa, I have seen and heard lions roar.
The MGM one seems completely plausible to me.
They are big cats. They need to display authority, or at least identify as a “top cat”. Lions live in packs, so there is some need to say “this is my pack, fuck off”
Tigers, to the best of my knowledge, do not roar.
They live very solitary lives until mating time, which is a extremely quick (pity the lady tigers!)
Speaking of nicknames that are based on appearance, I once read a short biography of Charles P Steinmetz, the pioneering electrical engineer. He was born in Germany as Karl August Rudolph Steinmetz but Anglicized his name when he became an American citizen. The P in his name was for Proteus, the college nickname that he, as a freshman, had recieved from the seniors. Proteus was a character out of Greek mythology that could take any shape, but he always returned to the shape of a hunchback, which Karl was.
You want to know something else that has different sizes in east and west?
Graves. And coffins.
My family transported my grandmother’s body to be buried in her home town, next to her husband (who had died years before).
After a funeral ceremony in the mid-west, the coffin was flown to the east coast.
Nope.
The coffin was too wide to fit in the gravesite. Had to buy a new coffin first.
Another important difference is the same mayonnaise is called Hellmann’s east of the Rockies and Best Foods west of the Rockies. It even says so on the jar.