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Charlotte Lowe - The Utterly, Completely, and Totally Useless Fact-O-Pedia: A Startling Collection of Over 1,000 Things Youll Never Need to Know

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Charlotte Lowe The Utterly, Completely, and Totally Useless Fact-O-Pedia: A Startling Collection of Over 1,000 Things Youll Never Need to Know
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The Utterly, Completely, and Totally Useless Fact-O-Pedia: A Startling Collection of Over 1,000 Things Youll Never Need to Know: summary, description and annotation

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Improve your small talk and sharpen your conversational skills with this giant collection of ridiculously useless but endlessly fascinating facts.Did you know that cats were once used to deliver mail in Belgium? That the huddle in football became popular after a deaf player began using it to prevent other teams from reading his sign language? That the average American eats 30 pounds of cheese in a year? Organized from A to Z, there are over 1,000 trivia tidbits for you to peruse. Start off with little-known facts about Aristotle and Barbie, and continue until youve discovered hidden gems about zombies, zippers, and more! Did you know that Levi Strauss originally intended to sell canvas tents to miners in California but ended up using the fabric to make what the prospectors really neededpants? Or that a chicken in Colorado had its head cut off and managed to live for another two years? Did you know that if Americans were to switch just 10 percent of their total mileage to scooters, we would consume 14 million gallons less fuel and reduce CO2 emissions by 324 million pounds in just one day? Or that on May 15th, 1950, Coca-Cola became the first product ever to appear on the cover of Time magazine? 50 black-and-white illustrations

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Table of Contents Acknowledgments Id like to thank my friends and family - photo 1
Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Id like to thank my friends and family for all their contributions, opinions, and patience. Id also like to extend my gratitude to Shannon Kerner for her valuable support. Above all, thank you to my editor Jeannine Dillon, who provided relentless commitment around the clock to both me and this project.

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Ridpath, Ian, ed. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Universe. New York. Watson-Guptill Publications. 2001.


Rubenzer, Steven J. and Faschingbauer, Thomas R. Personality, Character, and Leadership in the White House: Psychologists Assess the Presidents. Dulles. Potomac Books, Inc. 2004.


Schott, Ben. Schotts Miscellany: 2008 . New York. Bloomsbury. 2007.


Schott, Ben. Schotts Original Miscellany. New York. Bloomsbury. 2003.


Sears, George Washington. Woodcraft and Camping. New York. Dover Publications, Inc. 1963.


Stefaniuk, Walter. 501 Things You Really Should Know. Toronto. West-End Books. 2005.


Stein, Melissa, ed. The Wit and Wisdom of Women. Philadelphia. Running Press. 1993.


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Tansey, Geoff and DSilva, Joyce. The Meat Business: Devouring a Hungry Planet. Basingstoke. Palgrave Macmillan. 1999.


Thieret, John W., et al. National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Wildflowers, Eastern Region, Rev. Ed . New York. Alfred A Knopf. 2001.


Turnball, Stephen and Noon, Steve. The Great Wall of China 221 BC-AD 1644. New York. Osprey Publishing. 2007.


Wallechinsky, David, et al. The Book of Lists: The Original Compendium of Curious Information: The Canadian Edition . Toronto, Ont. Alfred A. Knopf Canada. 2005.


Zimmerman, Michael E., et al. Environmental Philosophy: From Animal Rights to Deep Ecology. Englecliffs. Prentice-Hall. 1993.

A
Acrobatics
Initially referred only to tightrope walking acrobatics is a blanket term for - photo 3

Picture 4 Initially referred only to tightrope walking, acrobatics is a blanket term for nearly any performance or sport which involves full-body activityespecially in short, highly controlled bursts.


Picture 5 Generally, a wire over 20 ft high will be regarded as a high-wire act.


Picture 6 Stephen Peer, a seasoned tightrope walker, died on June 22, 1887 when he fell into Niagara Falls after drinking with some friends.


Picture 7 In China, approximately 100,000 students are currently studying at schools dedicated to the art of acrobatics. High honor is conferred upon those skilled enough to become acrobats because of the unusual and difficult nature of the feats involved.


Picture 8 Seeking a career in the performing arts, Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Lalibert toured Europe as a folk musician and street performer after quitting college. By the time he returned back home to Canada in 1979, he had learned the art of fire breathing and by 1983, the Quebec government granted him 1.5 million Canadian dollars to host the first Cirque du Soleil production.

Airplane
In February 1992 Israeli air force reserve major Ishmael Yitzhaki was - photo 9

Picture 10 In February 1992, Israeli air force reserve major Ishmael Yitzhaki was convicted of stealing a WWII Mustang fighter plane and flying it to Sweden, where he sold it for $331,000. How did he manage it? He removed the plane from the air force museum by saying it needed painting.

In a 2008 interview on The Today Show Kareem Abdul-Jabbar revealed that he - photo 11

Picture 12 In a 2008 interview on The Today Show , Kareem Abdul-Jabbar revealed that he was once asked on a European flight to sit in the cockpit during takeoff just so the crew could say they flew with his character Roger Murdoch from the film, Airplane .


Picture 13 A Boeing 747 has six million parts and half of them are fasteners.


Picture 14 Records indicate that mans first attempt at flying dates back to 1020 when an English monk named Oliver of Malmesbury strapped a pair of wings to his body and attempted to soar the air from Malmesbury Abbey. Consequently, he fell and broke both legs.

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