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[personal profile] captain_slinky
No, I won't try to "Get You" today. I'm just no good at it, and always come up with some weird crap like "Don't look now, but YOUR SHOES ARE ON FIRE!!!"

Suprising how that one rarely works over the internet :(

Anywho, I'm more a fan of CHALLENGE! Listed below are 63 "Strange But True" facts, but only 3 of them are actually true. Can you pick them out? And no fair Googling for the answers!

===========================================================

* Molecularly speaking, water is actually much drier than sand.

* The term "bank teller" originated in the wake of the 1929 stock
market crash, when banks began hiring low-paid workers to "tell"
throngs of frantic depositors that their money was gone.

* The brand name "Jelly Belly" was created in 1982 after Nancy
Reagan made a much-publicized quip about her husband's
20-pound weight gain.

* The Internal Revenue Service audits 87 percent of women who
claim breast implants as tax deductions.

* Scandinavian berserkers used to cut out their eyes before
battle to spare themselves the sight of the carnage they
invariably wrought.

* Human tonsils can bounce higher than a rubber ball of similar
weight and size, but only for the first 30 minutes after they've
been removed.

* Comic duo Cheech and Chong were originally known as Spic and
Span before changing due to pressure from Chicano organizations.

* The city of Slaughter, Texas (population: 11,284), has never
had a homicide occur within its boundaries.

* Rubbing Tabasco on one's upper lip before bedtime is
an effective temporary cure for sleep apnea.

* British pop singer Baby Spice is the great-great-great-great-
great-great-grandniece of Archduke William Pinkley-Hogue of
Standishfordshire, making her 103rd in line for the throne
of England.

* The curved shape of a hockey stick is a throwback to prehistoric
use of mastodon tusks in a similar game.

* A Native American tribe in South Dakota collects bottle caps
left by campers, using them as currency. Several banks in
the area now recognize the caps as legal tender.

* Fish have "dandruff" caused by flaking skin, and it is
impossible to filter all traces of it from drinking water.

* Moths are unable to fly during an earthquake.

* The first case of the common cold was diagnosed in 1611
in Stratford, England. The patient? John Common, who
coincidentally gave his cold to William Shakespeare who
said the new malady exacerbated his lovesickness, thereby
inspiring several of his most fondly remembered sonnets.

* "Hello Kitty" began as part of a covert propaganda campaign
originally proposed by Prime Minister Tojo during World War II.

* When in heat, female hippopotami secrete an oil with a flavor
similar to strawberries. Kalahari bushmen use the oil to make
flat-bread treats for children.

* If an average human scrotum were stretched until all its
wrinkles were smoothed out, it could hold a basketball.

* Ingesting small doses of ink over an extended period of time
will change your eye color slightly.

* To commemorate ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920,
U.S. playing card manufacturers replaced "staffs" with "hearts"
as the fourth suit in the deck. The world soon followed.

* In 1960, a then-unknown Dan Rather auditioned for the voice
of cartoon character Dudley Do-Right but was turned down by
animator/director Jay Ward.

* When subjected to an electric current of at least 50 volts,
a cat's tail always points toward the north.

* If the current trend continues, by the year 2215 midgets will
outnumber "normal-sized" people.

* Scientists estimate that sleep lost due to daylight saving time
reduces the average lifespan by nearly two full months.

* In the late '90s, Microsoft secretly developed its own version
of Linux, but shelved it after quality control researchers
deemed it "too stable."

* No NCAA basketball team from a school located in its state's
capital has ever won the national championship.

* The African black rhinoceros excretes its own weight in dung
every 48 hours.

* The top three names for female babies born in China last year
were Huan Yue, Jia Li and -- unlikely as it seems -- Buffy.

* Peter Maas, creator of the character Serpico, got his
character's name from an ultra-expensive, highly-prized
Malaysian liqueur made from fermented viper venom.

* Shortly before his execution, Timothy McVeigh constructed
a scale model of the Lincoln Memorial with soda crackers.

* There have been four documented cases of humans who have
hibernated through an entire winter.

* Strains of bacteria similar to E. coli have been found in
spent printer cartridges -- but only in the cyan ones.
Scientists have no explanation.

* The four different people who, at various times, tried --
and failed -- to become the Guinness Book of World Records'
"Human Milkshake Volcano" by drinking five gallons of milk
and then riding the Six Flags Screaming' Eagle roller coaster
all shared the same birthday: September 18, 1970.

* The Australian aborigine language has over 30 words for "dust."

* Anyone convicted of animal cruelty in Sedalia, Missouri, is
sentenced to a month's confinement in the county animal shelter.

* Fewer divorces occur in families in which the children wake
their parents before 6 a.m. on Saturdays.

* A futuristic automobile designed by Ford for the movie
"Blade Runner" was produced and sold in limited quantities
as the "Ford Harrison."

* John F. Kennedy was an accomplished ventriloquist.

* A bad case of laryngitis forced Abraham Lincoln to lip-sync
the Gettysburg Address. The speech was actually delivered
by an aide hidden beneath the stage.

* A prominent organization of anthropologists has predicted that
by the year 5000, humans will have two rectums, but only one
nostril.

* For over a decade, the number of drive-by shootings has been
directly proportional to increased gas prices.

* Two-thirds of all the world's coriander comes from a single
valley in Italy.

* As the sheer volume of Internet traffic has increased, the
friction of the electrons passing around the planet has
increased the overall global temperature by .07 degrees.

* Contrary to popular belief, the white is not the healthiest
part of an egg. It's actually the shell.

* A comprehensive multi-year study using pattern-recognition
software determined that Millard Fillmore is the most common
identifiable U.S. president seen in cloud formations.

* Baking soda and vinegar will make your scrambled eggs fluffier.

* The first prototype defibrillators delivered 1,200 joules of
electrical energy instead of the now standard 360, occasionally
causing dead bodies to sit upright momentarily as though they
were still alive.

* Ancient Egyptians used molted cobra skins as condoms.

* Using its anal sphincter muscle, the Mongolian tapir is capable
of creating high-pitched tones that can be heard by dogs
nearly 30 miles away.

* Customs officials have dogs that are trained to distinguish
between Cuban cigars and all other cigars.

* Archimedes' screw was the basis for Max Factor's invention
of the twisting lipstick holder.

* A Tokyo inventor has developed a laptop computer whose battery
is recharged by energy generated from the movement of the user's
mouse, yet Sony lawyers have successfully blocked every attempt
to produce a product using the technology.

* Female black cats can actually see their shadows at night.

* Ballpoint pens were invented by a Michigan scientist attempting
to reduce the number of birds killed for their quills.

* Glamorous movie star Brad Pitt once had a summer job posting
warning signs at coal mine entrances.

* The National Weather Service will pay $30 for the rights
to any original photograph of lightning.

* U.S. Army medics in World War I knew of the germ-fighting
properties of rodent saliva and carried hamsters in their
medical bags to sterilize wounds in the field.

* An early draft of the Declaration of Independence included
a line by Benjamin Franklin inviting King George to "kisse
our collective arse."

* Nearly three percent of the ice in Antarctic glaciers is
penguin urine.

* The sound made when a duck passes gas is the precise acoustic
opposite of its quack; if it does both simultaneously, there's
no audible sound.

* Contrary to their popular image as spinsters, the average
librarian has 5.9 random sex partners per year.

* The rhesus monkey is the only animal that can be taught to hum
a tune.

* With the exception of a small 200-square-mile section of
Antarctica, every single square kilometer of dry land on
the planet has been walked on by at least one human being.
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