The Manila Times

Strange BUT TRUE

- By Lucie Winborne

• Andrew Jackson’s parrot was kicked out of his funeral for swearing.

• In 1947, The New York Times opined that “the pizza could be as popular a snack as the hamburger if Americans only knew more about it.”

• Buzz Aldrin’s mother’s maiden name was Moon.

• When pirate Richard Worley, captain of the New York’s Revenge, captured his second ship, he named it the New York Revenge’s Revenge.

• Wisconsin is known as the Badger State because the area’s lead miners used to spend winters in tunnels burrowed into hills — like badgers.

• Jim Carrey was the first actor to have three number one movies in one year.

• The Palais Ideal in France was built entirely of stones that a postman named Ferdinand Cheval picked up on his mail route.

• Honey hunters in Mozambique use special calls to recruit the services of birds known as honeyguide­s. The birds lead the humans to bees’ nests, and in return, they get the leftover beeswax.

• In 1964, a pre-fame 17-year-old David Bowie was interviewe­d on the BBC program “Tonight” as the founder of The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Long-Haired Men.

• Thomas Edison nicknamed two of his kids Dot and Dash after the Morse code signals.

• Army ants that misinterpr­et the scent trails left by other ants will sometimes break from the crowd and march in circles. If enough ants join them, they can form massive “death spirals.”

• John Quincy Adams was an avid skinny-dipper who included dips in the Potomac River as a regular part of his exercise regimen.

• Crayola came from the words for “oily chalk.”

• The U.S. Senate’s Rule XIX states that U.S. senators cannot insult their colleagues.

***

Thought for the Day: “Leaders can let you fail and yet not let you be a failure.” — Stanley McChrystal

© 2024 King Features Synd., Inc.

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