Uncle John's Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader
Page 22
According to surveys, 57% of Americans shower daily, 17% sing in the shower, 4% shower with the lights off, and 3% clean their pets by showering with them.
(About what?) According to doctors, babies dream in the womb.
THE WORLD’S WORST…
We were going to do a page of “bests”—but worsts are funnier. So put on a happy face and read about the worst…
…TRAFFIC CONGESTION A 2002 study found that traffic moved through central London at an average speed of 2.9 mph—slower than walking.
…VIEW The Grand Banks of Newfoundland, Canada, are blanketed by heavy fog for an average of one out of every three days—often for weeks at a time.
…CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER In 1971, the London Times included this word in one of its daily puzzles: honorificabilitudinitatibus.
…REJECTION When King Harald Grenske of Norway proposed marriage to Queen Sigrid Storrada of Denmark in 996, she had him executed.
…MOVIE According to a nationwide poll conducted by the Hastings Bad Cinema Society, the worst movie of the 20th century was John Travolta’s Battlefield Earth.
…VOTING “ERROR” In the 1928 Nigerian presidential election, Charles King beat Thomas Faulkner by 600,000 votes. One problem: Nigeria only had 15,000 registered voters.
…CONSTRUCTION PROJECT Workers spent 90 years building the Church of Corcuetos in Spain. The day after it was finally completed in 1625, it collapsed.
…TOURISTS According to a survey by the online travel service expedia.com, “Britons are the rudest, meanest, and worst-behaved holidaymakers in the world.”
…HANDS IN FOOTBALL Quarterback Warren Moon fumbled the ball 161 times during his 17-year career.
…CAR Click and Clack, the Car Talk guys, polled listeners to find the lousiest make of car ever produced. The winner…er, we mean, loser: the Yugo.
A stone weighs slightly less at the equator than it does at the North Pole.
JUST JOSHING
Josh Billings was the pen name of humorist Henry Wheeler Shaw,
born in 1818 in Massachusetts. In 1860 Shaw started writing
homespun philosophies using rural dialect. In his day, Josh Billings
was better known than his contemporary Mark Twain. Here are
a few bits of Billings’s “wizdum” in their original dialect. (By
the way, the term “joshing” comes from…Josh Billings.)
“Thare iz nothing that yu and I make so menny blunders about, and the world so few, az the aktual amount ov our importance.”
“Yung man, set down, and keep still—yu will hav plenty ov chances yet to make a phool ov yureself before yu die.”
“He who reads and don’t reflekt, iz like the one who eats and don’t exercise.”
“We read that Esaw sold out hiz birth rite for soup, and menny wonder at hiz extravegance, but Esaw diskovered arly, what menny a man haz diskovered since, that it iz hard work tew live on a pedigree.”
“Whi iz it that we despize the man who puts himself in our power, and are quite az apt to respekt him just in proporshun az he iz out of our reach.”
“Wize men go thru this world az boys go tew bed in the dark, whistling tew shorten the distance.”
“Genius after all ain’t enny-thing more than elegant kommon sense.”
“Too mutch branes iz a hindrance to a bizzness man.”
Q: “How fast duz sound travel?”
A: “This depends a good deal upon the natur ov the noize yu are talking about. The sound ov a dinner horn, for instance, travels a half a mile in a seck-oned, while an invitashun tew git up in the morning I hav known to be 3 quarters ov an hour giong up two pair ov stairs, and then not hav strength enuff left tew be heard.”
“About the best that enny ov us kan do iz tew konceal our phailings.”
“It takes a smart man to conceal from others what he don’t kno.”
“The man who never makes enny blunders seldum makes enny good hits.”
Poll result: It takes the average American 2.6 days to feel relaxed on a vacation.
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT?
Uncle John actually fell in love at first sight. So smooth
and shiny. Those perfect proportions. That beautiful
white…porcelain. You thought we were talking
about Mrs. Uncle John? Oh, yeah. Her too.
HERE’S LOOKING AT YOU
You’re looking around a crowded room, and your eyes meet the eyes of another. Pow! A shock runs through your whole body! Are you in love? Maybe. Read on to find out. That jolt isn’t imaginary. Scientists say that part of your brain actually perks up when you exchange looks with a person you consider attractive.
And just how did they discover that? British researchers used a special helmet to scan the brains of 16 volunteers (8 men and 8 women). Wearing an fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) helmet, each volunteer looked at 160 photos of 40 complete strangers.
In some photos, the strangers were looking directly at the camera—which made them appear to be looking directly at the volunteer. In others, the stranger’s eyes were turned away.
As the photos went flashing by—one every 3.5 seconds—the helmets recorded which part of the volunteer’s brain was active. After the brain scan was finished, the volunteers went back to the pictures and rated each one for attractiveness. The results of the experiment were published in 2001 in Nature magazine.
REAL SPARKS
Every time a volunteer saw an attractive person looking right at them, the volunteer’s ventral striatum lit up—that part of the brain is linked to the anticipation of a reward. But when the stranger in the photo was looking away, the magic didn’t happen; there was much less brain activity, no matter how attractive the person in the photo. The researchers attributed that to disappointment—the volunteer had failed to make eye contact with an attractive face.
An average apple contains about six teaspoons worth of sugar.
The brain response happened fast—in just nanoseconds. Researchers think this means that it’s automatic, that we’re all wired for that kind of reaction.
EYES OF THE BEHOLDER
Does this mean that everybody responds to certain kinds of looks? The leading researcher, Dr. Knut Kampe of the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience in London, commented that we all might naturally respond to people who look strong and healthy. That could be connected with survival. But Kampe said that each of the volunteers defined attractiveness in different ways, and conventional beauty wasn’t the only important thing. Some looked for cheerfulness, others for a face that seemed to show empathy. Some even looked for motherliness.
IS IT LOVE?
So does it mean that love at first sight is real? Can we expect to instantly recognize our perfect mate? Probably not. Consider the following:
• Seeing a certain someone can get your brain buzzing—but so can seeing food when you’re hungry. The ventral striatum that responded to the photos is the same area that lights up in hungry lab animals who think they’re about to get fed. Gamblers and drug addicts have the same kind of reaction to the objects of their desire. That part of your brain gets excited when it expects any kind of reward.
• The brain’s quick response helps explain why we make snap judgments about people we meet. But first impressions can be wrong.
• The same brain area lit up for any attractive face—no matter whether it was the opposite sex or the same sex as the volunteer. Researchers think that’s because attractiveness often gets associated with social status. So maybe your brain assumes that hanging out with attractive people could improve your position. (In the case of monkeys, bonding with an animal higher up in the pecking order brings increased social status.)
So if you’re expecting a future with someone based on the jolt you got when your eyes met—slow down. You’ll have to engage some other part of your brain to find out whether the two of you actually get along.
The name “Ann” is used as a middle name 10 times more often than as a
first name.
Q&A: ASK THE EXPERTS
More random questions, with answers
from the nation’s top trivia experts.
TOUCHY SUBJECT
Q: Will you spread poison ivy if you touch the blisters?
A: “Good news: you can’t spread poison ivy by touching (or even breaking) the blisters. The belief that poison ivy spreads through the bloodstream is equally false.
“Why do blisters appear on different parts of the body days after the first signs? It probably wasn’t just your skin that came in contact with the plant—it was also your clothing, gardening tools, etc. If it isn’t washed off, the oil or resin from the plant can last almost indefinitely. If you’re unaware you’ve encountered poison ivy (it takes two to four days for the first red spots to show), the resin could have been spread.
“Is there anything you can do to stop the spread? Yes. If you know you’ve just walked through a patch of poison ivy, wash the resin off immediately with soap and water. This also holds true for poison oak and poison sumac.” (From Old Wives’ Tales, by Sue Castle)
I YAM WHAT I YAM
Q: I always thought yams and sweet potatoes were the same thing. However, when I asked for the yams at a recent family gathering, I was informed by one of my snotty cousins that no yams were on the menu.
A: “Sorry, but your cousin is right. Contrary to what some grocery store produce guys may think, yams and sweet potatoes are unrelated vegetables, though in both cases you’re eating the root of a tropical vine. Sweet potatoes, Ipomoea batatas (batata is the original Taino name, whence ‘potato’), are an American plant of the morning glory family, whereas yams are of the genus Dioscorea. Yams, which are rarely seen in the United States and Canada but are a staple in tropical regions, can grow up to seven feet in length. The name is thought to derive from the West African word nyami, ‘to eat.’” (From The Straight Dope, by Cecil Adams)
Cheap date: Sea urchins reproduce via a process called fissiparity—they split themselves in two.
ROLL THE DICE
Tired of reading palms? Sick of tea leaves? Ouija bored? Uncle John predicted that you would be. If you have a pair of dice lying around, here’s another way to tell your fortune.
ASTRAGALOMANCY
Have you ever played Yahtzee or rolled dice in a bar? In Victorian England, people known as “dicers” told fortunes by tossing dice from a small cup held in their left hands. Telling fortunes with two dice is known as astragalomancy. (Using three dice is cleromancy.)
Give it a try! Tossing a pair of dice around is good for a few minutes of fun even if you aren’t a true believer.
HOW TO DO IT
• Draw a circle about 12 inches in diameter on a piece of paper.
• Decide on a question that you want answered and ask it either silently or aloud as you shake the dice in your hand or in a cup. Then throw the dice into the circle, either one at a time or both at the same time.
• Add up the numbers on both dice to get the answer to your question. Sometimes the answer is precise, sometimes it’s vague. (What did you expect? This is fortune telling, after all.)
ANSWERS
2— The answer is no.
3— If you act cautiously in the coming days, you can expect a pleasant surprise.
4— You will have good luck when you expect it least.
5— Your question will be answered in a surprising way.
6— Some form of divine intervention will provide you with an answer.
7— You will win.
8— You already know the answer to your question (so stop playing with dice and find something better to do).
9— If the answer is yes, it’s only because of a twist of fate.
10— Count on success!
11— Stay calm, be prepared, know that fate is on your side.
12— Regardless of what happens, you will feel content about it.
Most widely used herb in the world: parsley.
CIRCULAR LOGIC
How many of your dice fell within the circle? That’s part of your fortune, too:
• One die outside the circle means that you’re likely to get the answer you want eventually but only “after your own thoughts set your wishes into motion.”
• Two dice outside the circle: You’ll get the answer you want, sooner than you think.
YES AND NO
Now here’s where using dice to tell your fortune can get confusing:
• Let’s say you ask the question, “Will I make a million dollars?” You want the answer to be “yes,” but your roll adds up to two, so the answer is “no.”
• But both dice land outside the circle, which means you’ll get the answer you want—“yes” (instead of the “no” you just rolled), and you’ll get that “yes” sooner than you think. But wait a minute—you just rolled a “yes” and a “no.” What’s that supposed to mean? Does it mean maybe? Do you roll the dice again?
• Uncle John solved the problem by asking the question, “Does fortune telling with dice really work?”
He rolled a two. You’re on your own.
MORE WAYS TO TELL A FORTUNE
Ailuromancy: Observe how a cat jumps.
Sycomancy: Write a question on a leaf, leave the leaf in the sun. “If the leaf shrivels quickly, the answer is no.” Otherwise the answer is yes.
Keriomancy: Study the flickering flame of a candle.
Aleuromancy: Read messages in baked balls of dough.
Oomancy: Crack an egg into a glass of water and study the shapes the egg white forms in the water.
Scrying: Study “crystals, mirrors, bowls of water, ink, blood, flames, or other shiny objects.”
Ceromancy: Drop some melted wax into water and study the shapes that are formed.
The 13th step of the state capitol in Denver, Colorado, is exactly one mile above sea level.
D.C. FOLLIES
Some people say the best comedy is on TV. We say it’s in Washington, D.C.
DON’T QUIT YOUR DAY JOB
“Concerned that ‘the pickup owners of this nation might get screwed in all this gas-guzzler talk about SUVs and vans,’ Zell Miller (D-Ga.) introduced an amendment to keep pickup fuel economy requirements at 20.7 mpg. He also co-wrote, sang, and recorded ‘The Talking Pickup Truck Blues.’
“A sample of the lyrics: ‘Sure, an SUV is classy travel, / But it ain’t much good for haulin’ gravel, / Or hay or seed or bovine feces. / So please, don’t make my pickup truck an endangered species.’”
—Fox News
SHAMELESS EXPLOITATION
“A controversy started September 11 when Brian Kerns (R-Ind.) gave the Indianapolis Star a harrowing account of watching a hijacked plane slam into the Pentagon during his commute on George Washington Memorial Parkway. ‘I’m in shock,’ he said. ‘I still can’t believe it. I drove into the office and told my staff to go home.’
“The Indianapolis Star reported, however, that the plane in question never flew over that parkway. And an American Legion official said he remembers being in Kerns’s office with the congressman when networks reported the Pentagon attack. Kerns’s response when pressed on whether he was mistaken about what he saw: ‘Who knows?’”
—Associated Press
TOOT-TOOT
“Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) was accused of causing $28,000 in damage to a rented yacht on a Y2K booze cruise. He later appeared at a political roast dressed in a sailor suit and capped off the evening by singing ‘Patrick the Sailor Man.’ At the same roast, the admitted former cokehead joked about Senator Lincoln Chafee (R-R.I.), another admitted former cokehead: ‘Now when I hear someone talking about a Rhode Island politician whose father was a senator and who got to Washington on his family name, used cocaine, and wasn’t very smart, I know there is only a 50-50 chance it’s me.’”
—Mother Jones
Bess Truman is the only First Lady to have a hurricane named after her.
TAKE YOUR CHILD TO WORK DAY?
“An
swering questions about whether his recent election was helped by nepotism (after receiving $1 million from the Republican Party’s coffers), Bill Shuster (R-Pa.), son of Pennsylvania representative Bud Shuster, insisted ‘This is about Bill Shuster…and Bill Shuster standing on his own two feet.’ Maybe. We wonder if Solicitor of the Labor Department Eugene Scalia, son of Antonin; Health and Human Services Inspector General Janet Rehnquist, daughter of William; FCC chair Michael Powell, son of Colin; and President George W. Bush feel the same way.”
—Roll Call
ROCKET MAN
“In September 1996, Mickey Kalinay (D) was defeated in the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate in Wyoming…despite his tantalizing proposal to make the space program more efficient by constructing a 22,000-mile-high tower so that space stations can be accessed by electromagnetic rail cars.”
—News of the Weird
SOME THINGS NEVER CHANGE
“The last time former Vice-President Dan Quayle (R) lived in Washington, his words were parsed almost as closely as the current president’s. He still lets off the occasional zinger; during an appearance on MSNBC’s Hardball, as he tried to ‘set aside the Middle East peace situation’ from the war on terrorism, he asked: ‘How many Palestinians were on those airplanes on September 9? None.’”
—Salon.com
WHAT!?!