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Uncle John’s Curiously Compelling Bathroom Reader

Page 30

by Bathroom Readers' Institute


  End hunger: Eat a little snack.

  THINK THIS CAR’S TOO DIRTY? THEN YOU WASH IT.

  Am I living happily ever after yet?

  Don’t believe everything you think.

  My child was inmate of the month at the county jail.

  4 out of 3 people have trouble with fractions.

  Blessed are the flexible. They never get bent out of shape.

  Don’t make me release the flying monkeys!

  Don’t tailgate me or I’ll flick a booger on your windshield.

  I have no idea where I’m going.

  Carrot-toon character: The variety of carrot that Bugs Bunny munches is a “Danvers.”

  TAKING THE LOW ROAD

  What makes people do the sleazy things they do? Beats us. Here’s our non-salute to some really bad behavior.

  NAME: Matthew Shaner of Rostraver, Pennsylvania

  BACKGROUND: Shaner, 21, was driving down Route 981 when he struck 15-year-old Sean Cossell, who was riding his bike along the road.

  HOW LOW CAN YOU GO? According to witnesses, Shaner got out of the car and started yelling profanities at the kid he’d just hit—telling him to get off the hood of his car. When the injured Cossell rolled off the hood, Shaner jumped into his car and sped off. He was arrested a short time later. Cossell was treated for multiple (but not life-threatening) injuries at a local hospital and released.

  NAME: Julie E. Hunt of North New Portland, Maine

  BACKGROUND: Three middle-school girls brought some homemade cookies to their teacher.

  HOW LOW CAN YOU GO? They were suspended from school because the cookies had Ex-Lax in them. The teacher didn’t eat them—she gave the cookies to other students, four of whom became ill. Where does Julie E. Hunt fit in the picture? She’s the mother of one of the girls who gave the “treats” to the teacher, and, according to her affidavit, actually taught the girls how to make them. She was arrested and charged with misdemeanor assault.

  NAME: Gary C. Jones of Missouri

  BACKGROUND: In October 2004, Jones, a Hazard Mitigation Counselor for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), was sent to Brevard County, Florida, to assist with hurricane relief. While there, 72-year-old Diane Greco called Jones’s office for help with her home in Melbourne Beach, which had a damaged roof as well as a mildew problem.

  HOW LOW CAN YOU GO? Instead of helping Greco fix the problems, Jones bought the house—for $250,000 (its true value was estimated at nearly $1 million). In March 2005, Tony Pipitone, an investigative reporter from Orlando’s Local 6 News, got a tip about the sale and questioned Jones at his home in Missouri, but Jones denied working for FEMA. When the station confirmed his employment, Jones said that Greco had set the price. When Pipitone contacted Greco, she confirmed setting the $250,000 price, based on a scant memory of an appraisal years earlier. “I thought it was fair,” she told Local 6. “Now I guess I’m finding out otherwise.” She filed a civil suit against Jones—who by then had moved into the house with his family—demanding he void the contract and return her house, which she and her husband had built in 1971. Her son, Marcus Greco, said Jones “100 percent took advantage” of his mother. The lawsuit is still pending.

  Shouldn’t this be in Marrrrrrch? September 19 is National Talk Like a Pirate Day.

  NAME: Anthony Mesa, 22, of Deland, Florida

  BACKGROUND: In 2006 Mesa was “playing practical jokes” with a co-worker in the Pix convenient store where he worked.

  HOW LOW CAN YOU GO? One of the “jokes” Mesa played: he urinated in a bottle of Mountain Dew and put it back in the refrigerator. An unsuspecting customer…well, let’s just say he later sued the store for an undisclosed amount of money. Mesa was arrested and sentenced to six months in prison.

  NAME: Nicholas Buckalew, 18, of Morrisville, Vermont

  BACKGROUND: In April 2005, Buckalew wanted to make himself a creative and unusual “bong” (large marijuana pipe).

  HOW LOW CAN YOU GO? Buckalew went to a cemetery, broke into an above-ground tomb, and took the skull from an interred body, along with the eyeglasses and bow tie that were with it. Police said he told friends he was going to bleach the skull and make a pipe out of it. In 2006 Buckalew pleaded guilty to “intentionally removing a tombstone and intentionally carrying away the remains of a human body.” He was sentenced to one to seven years in prison.

  * * *

  Celebrity Coincidence: While filming an action scene for the movie Troy in 2004, actor Brad Pitt tore his Achilles tendon. The character he was playing: Achilles.

  According to surveys, the average American 12-year-old gets $9.58 in weekly allowance.

  WHY YOUR MOM SAYS, “WASH YOUR HANDS!”

  Here’s a little science experiment to remind you that Mom was right—you really should wash your hands before you eat. One note before you start: If you’re a kid, you’ll need adult supervision and assistance. (And if you have a germ phobia, skip this story and read something else.)

  WHAT YOU’LL NEED

  1. Hands that haven’t been washed for several hours.

  2. A pair of rubber gloves.

  3. Cotton balls and rubbing alcohol.

  4. Masking tape or labels, and a pen.

  5. A vegetable peeler and a paring knife that can be boiled.

  6. Two apples and a dish to set them on. (If you don’t have apples handy, you can substitute potatoes, pears, or any other fruit or vegetable that can be peeled.)

  7. Two glass jars with screw-top lids, each large enough to hold cut pieces of apple.

  8. A cutting board.

  WHAT TO DO

  1. Wearing the rubber gloves, wash the jars, lids, dish, and cutting board in warm soapy water. Dry them off with a clean dish towel, then rub them inside and out with a cotton ball soaked in rubbing alcohol.

  2. Boil the vegetable peeler and the paring knife in a pot of water, then drain and let them cool to room temperature before handling them.

  4. Label the jars. Write “Jar 1—Unwashed Hands” on the label for the first jar, and “Jar 2—Washed Hands” on the second jar.

  5. Now, still wearing the rubber gloves, wash both apples in warm, soapy water. Rinse them with clean water and set them on the dish.

  6. Remove the gloves. Pick up one of the apples and peel it with the apple peeler. When you finish, cut the apple into pieces small enough to fit inside one of the jars. Now rub your unwashed hands all over the pieces of apple. When finished, put them in the jar marked “Jar 1—Unwashed Hands” and screw the lid on tight.

  Good girl! Tia, an English mastiff, gave birth to a world-record 24 puppies in one litter in 2004.

  7. Wash your hands thoroughly in soap and water for at least 30 seconds. Wash the potato peeler, paring knife, and cutting board, too, so that the second apple isn’t contaminated by anything that touched the first apple.

  8. Now that your hands are clean, peel the second apple and cut it into pieces just like you did with the first apple. Rub your clean hands all over the pieces of apple, then put them in the jar marked “Jar 2—Washed Hands” and screw the lid on tight.

  9. Put the jars in a warm place and let them sit there for a week; then come back and see what they look like. Notice any difference in the two jars? That’s why your mom wants you to wash your hands before you eat.

  EXPLANATION

  If you did a good job cleaning your equipment and your hands were good and grubby when you peeled the first apple, you should see plenty of mold growing on the first apple and noticeably less on the second apple, even after a week has passed. The mold growing on the apples started out as invisible mold spores on the skin of your hands.

  Mold is only the beginning—there’s plenty of other stuff, including bacteria and possibly cold and flu viruses, on your unwashed hands, too. Washing your hands thoroughly removes the things you can see…and the things you can’t.

  HANDS-ON SCIENCE

  If you find the results of this experiment fascinating, try another. How does washing your hand
s for 5, 10, or 15 seconds compare to washing for 30? How does washing with regular soap compare to washing with antibacterial soap? What happens if you wash, but don’t use any soap? How dirty are your hands one hour after washing them? After six hours? After 24 hours? Keep going. You’ll learn a lot and—who knows?—if the sight of all those moldy apples kills your appetite, maybe you’ll even lose a few pounds.

  One isn’t enough? Two rivers in Florida are named Withlacoochee.

  THE GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO, PART II

  What happened when a “ham” radio operator put a microphone in front of a record player? Modern radio was born. Here’s Part II of our story (Part I is on page 77).

  MORE THAN JUST MUSIC

  Radio offered numerous advantages over phonographs in the 1920s: Listeners weren’t limited to the records in their own collections, and they didn’t have to get up every five minutes to flip the record over and wind the record player back up. (Long playing, or “LP,” records, which had about 30 minutes of playing time on each side instead of four and a half minutes, weren’t introduced until 1948.) Even better: radio broadcasts were free. Yet as early as 1926, opinion polls began showing that listeners were hungry for something to listen to besides music. The networks responded by developing a variety of shows for every member of the family.

  WHAT WAS ON

  Comedies: Comedy shows were some of the earliest hits on radio—it was easy for vaudeville stars like Jack Benny, Eddie Cantor, and the husband/wife team of George Burns and Gracie Allen to move their acts to the new medium. At first these comedians did their usual standup routines, but over time they pioneered the “situation comedy” format that’s still being used on TV today: A situation is set up at the beginning of the episode—Jack Benny has to go to the doctor, for example—and then it’s milked for jokes for the rest of the show.

  Kiddie Shows: These shows were on in the afternoon when kids got home from school, in the early evening, and on Saturday mornings. Established movie and comic-strip characters like Superman and Little Orphan Annie were quickly adapted for radio. In later years the trend reversed itself, as characters created for radio—like Captain Midnight, Sergeant Preston of the Yukon, and Jack Armstrong, the All-American Boy—moved on to comic books, movies, and eventually television.

  Only English-speaking country in Central America: Belize.

  Soap Operas: Soaps appealed primarily to housewives, and dominated the daytime. The soap-opera format came about only by chance in 1932, when NBC moved a show called Clara, Lu ’n’ Em from its evening time slot to the middle of the day because that was the only place for it in the schedule. Clara, Lu ’n’ Em was more of a satire than a soap, but it did so well that NBC began programming other shows for women during the day. Soaps proved to be the most popular shows; by 1940 the four networks offered more than 60 hours of soap operas a week.

  Dramas: One of the nice things about radio is that you can transport the listener anywhere using only sound effects. You want to tell a story about space colonists on Mars? About cops in L.A.? Maintaining order in Dodge City, Kansas? You don’t need fancy costumes or sets—you just need the right background sounds. Police and detective shows came early to radio. They were easy to produce because they were dialogue-heavy, filled with characters who spent a lot of time standing around trying to solve crimes. And they were popular with audiences.

  Surprisingly, science fiction shows and Westerns targeted at adults appeared relatively late in radio and never really caught on. All four networks introduced science fiction series for adults in the 1950s, but only two of them, 2000 Plus (Mutual, 1950–52) and X Minus One (NBC, 1955–58) lasted longer than two years.

  Gunsmoke, the first adult-themed Western, didn’t appear until 1952, but it fared much better than the science fiction shows. It became one of the most popular programs on the air and ran until the summer of 1961. (The TV version ran for 20 years, from 1955 to 1975, making it the longest-running drama in history.)

  SIGNING OFF

  What ended the Golden Age of Radio? TV, of course. In retrospect it’s amazing that radio lasted as long as it did—both NBC and CBS began making experimental television broadcasts from their New York stations in 1939, and both stations were issued commercial licenses in 1941. Were it not for World War II, TV might have swept the country over the next few years. But when the United States entered the war, further development was halted as the stations cut their broadcasts back to almost nothing and TV manufacturers switched over to making electrical equipment for the war effort.

  Animal sounds: Apes gibber, deer bell, hippos bray.

  AS SEEN ON TV

  When World War II ended in 1945, fewer than 10,000 American households had a television, and most of the sets were in the New York City area. The industry got a big boost in 1947, when the World Series was broadcast on television for the first time. It’s estimated that of the nearly 4 million people who watched the game, at least 3.5 million of them watched it on sets in their neighborhood taverns. Many of these patrons then went out and bought TVs for their own homes—and when curious neighbors came over to watch, they wanted TVs too. The TV craze was on.

  By 1951 television broadcasts were available coast to coast and six million homes had TVs. People were buying them as fast as manufacturers could make them. By the end of the decade more than 60 million homes had TVs, and as Americans abandoned their radios in favor of television, so did the advertisers, and so did the stars. The most successful radio shows like Gunsmoke and The Jack Benny Show moved to TV (Gunsmoke stayed on the radio for a time as well); less successful shows just went off the air.

  As the big advertising dollars left radio, big-budget shows became impossible to air. Many radio stations with hours of programming to fill and very little money to do it with went back to what radio had been in the very beginning: a single person, sitting alone in a booth, playing records for anyone who happened to be listening.

  THEY’RE BAAACK

  Today the classic shows of the Golden Age of Radio are largely absent from AM and FM radio, but thanks to satellite radio and the Internet, they’re more widely available now than they’ve been since they originally aired. Both XM Radio and Sirius offer channels that play classic radio shows 24 hours a day; and you can buy collections of old shows in bookstores or download them on iTunes. If you’ve never heard them, you’re in for a treat.

  For a list of our favorite shows, check out

  “Audio Treasures” on pages 298 and 451.

  If your cat snores, or rolls over on his back to expose his belly, it means he trusts you.

  STATE V. BIG HAIR

  Names of actual court cases tried in the good old U.S. of A.

  Friends of Kangaroo Rat v. California Dept. of Corrections

  U.S. v. Pipe on Head

  United States of America v. 2,116 Boxes of Boned Beef, Weighing Approximately 154,121 Pounds, and 541 Boxes of Offal, Weighing Approximately 17,732 Pounds

  Schmuck v. Dumm

  Jones v. God, Jesus, Others

  Julius Goldman’s Egg City v. United States

  Pam-To-Pee v. United States

  Klink v. Looney

  United States ex rel. Gerald Mayo v. Satan and His Staff

  Lexis-Nexis v. Beer

  Muncher v. Muncher

  People v. Booger

  Short v. Long

  State of Indiana v. Virtue

  United States v. $11,557.22 in U.S. Currency

  Advance Whip & Novelty Co. v. Benevolent Protective Order of Elks

  Fried v. Rice

  United States v. 1,100 Machine Gun Receivers

  Plough v. Fields

  Frankenstein v. Independent Roofing & Siding

  Big v. Little

  Ruff v. Ruff

  State v. Big Hair

  Hamburger v. Fry

  I am the Beast Six Six Six of the Lord of Hosts in Edmond Frank MacGillevray, Jr., et. al. v. Michigan State Police

  Louisiana is the only state that still refers to the
Napoleonic Code in its state law.

  IRONIC, ISN’T IT?

  There’s nothing like a good dose of irony to put the problems of day-to-day life into perspective.

  ANIMAL IRONY

  n 2005 Bob Schwartz, crime advisor to the governor of New Mexico, authored a law that would allow felony charges to be brought against any owner of a dangerous dog involved in a vicious attack. A few months after the law passed, Schwartz was in his backyard when his own dog attacked him, biting both of his arms and sending him to the hospital. (Schwartz recovered but was not arrested.)

  • John Fleming was riding his motorcycle on a road in Canberra, Australia, when a kangaroo hopped onto the road and collided with him. Fleming’s job: making road signs that warn people about kangaroo crossings.

  • A building in Dundee, Scotland, was overrun by mice. “They’ve been eating biscuits in our cupboard,” says Johanna Girling, who works in the building. “One of our staff even got an electric shock because the mice had bitten through wires and left them bare.” But what the mice were feasting mostly upon was cat food—the building is home to the Cat Protection League, and houses dozens of stray cats. (The cats didn’t take care of the problem—there were too many mice—so an exterminator was called in.)

  ENVIRONMENTAL IRONY

  Greenpeace’s flagship, Rainbow Warrior II, travels the world’s waterways trying to protect them. In October 2005, while studying the effects of global warming on a fragile underwater coral reef in the Philippines, the ship accidentally ran aground on the reef, causing it significant damage. The environmental organization was fined 384,000 pesos ($6,800).

  CELEBRITY IRONY

  • Before becoming an actor, Margaret Hamilton was a kindergarten teacher. In fact, she wanted to devote her life to children. But after she played the role of the Wicked Witch of the West in 1939’s The Wizard of Oz, most kids were afraid of the mere sight of her. Even as an old woman, Hamilton was repeatedly asked by kids why she was “so mean to poor little Dorothy.”

 

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