Daily Mail

Lee’s slice of true horror

- Compiled by Charles Legge

QUESTION Did actor Christophe­r Lee witness the last public execution by guillotine in France?

YES, a teenage Christophe­r Lee did witness France’s last public execution by guillotine in 1939.

Eugen Weidmann was born in Frankfurt in 1908 and embarked on a career as a petty criminal at an early age.

He moved to Paris in 1937 and became involved in a kidnap extortion ring that led to the deaths of several people, including American tourist and dancer Jean de Koven, 22; a governess; a chauffeur; a publicity agent; an estate agent and a man Weidmann had met as an inmate in a German prison.

The lowly station of many of the victims suggests money was not the motive. Each was dispatched by Weidmann with a single shot to the back of the neck.

He and his three accomplice­s were tracked down and following their trial, Weidmann, as the leader, was sentenced to death. On June 17, 1939, he was beheaded outside the prison Saint Pierre in Versailles.

Christophe­r Lee was 17 and staying in Paris with a friend of his family.

In his autobiogra­phy Lord Of Misrule, he relates: ‘The war correspond­ent Webb Miller took me to see the beheading of the murderer Eugen Weidmann in Versailles because he thought it important, with the war clouds gathering, that I see something of the world.

‘ They rushed Weidmann to that extraordin­ary structure, so that his feet came off the ground. His hands were tied behind him and his head was held back.

‘They set him down by the plank and punched him in the stomach so that he fell forwards on to it, a strap went over his back, the plank tilted forward and the man they called The Photograph­er adjusted his head. In that instant the knife fell, and I thought I would die myself.’

The Photograph­er was France’s chief executione­r, Jules-Henri Desfournea­ux.

Rather then react with solemn observance, the crowd rowdily jeered and shouted, with many using their handkerchi­efs to dab up Weidmann’s blood as Scare story: Dracula star Christophe­r Lee saw France’s last public execution souvenirs. The newspaper Paris- Soir denounced the crowd as ‘disgusting’, ‘unruly’, ‘jostling, clamouring, whistling’.

Unknown to the authoritie­s, photograph­s were taken and a film of the execution was shot from a private apartment next to the prison.

The behaviour of the spectators was so scandalous that French president Albert Lebrun immediatel­y banned public executions. They were carried out behind prison walls until the death penalty was abandoned in France in 1981.

Jacob Reiss, London SW16.

QUESTION Who devised the three-word address system, and how were the words chosen and distribute­d?

THE what3words system divides the world into a grid of 3m x 3m squares, with each assigned a unique three-word address. The idea is that this is far simpler for emergency services and delivery vehicles to decipher than a string of numerical co-ordinates.

As an example, the torch of the Statue of Liberty is at ‘ backs.pill.keen’ while ‘soak.whips.loving’ is the entrance to the Ducksoup restaurant in London’s Soho. These can be entered into the what3words app on a smartphone or computer to find a location.

The idea was conceived after concert organiser Chris Sheldrick struggled to get equipment and bands to events on time due to inadequate addresses. With a group of friends, he launched what3words in July 2013.

The what3words language uses a list of 25,000 English words to cover the world’s landmass (40,000 words are required for land and sea). They are sorted by an algorithm that takes into account word length, distinctiv­eness, frequency and ease of spelling and pronunciat­ion.

Similar groups of words are not placed close to each other. For instance, ‘tables. chair.lamp’ is an address in the suburbs of Minneapoli­s, Minnesota in the U.S., while ‘table.chair.lamp’ is just south of Sydney, Australia.

Tom Brookshaw, Reading, Berks.

QUESTION What is the Pareto principle?

THE Pareto principle, also known as the 80/20 rule, states that 80 per cent of failures stem from just 20 per cent of possible causes. The catchphras­e for this is ‘the vital few, not the trivial many’.

For example, in an exam paper, 80 per cent of the incorrect answers are likely to come from just 20 per cent of the questions. If you can identify those 20 per cent of questions, you can improve teaching and the way exam questions are written.

The principle can be used to identify problems in industry by analysing if something is wrong with the production line machinery, raw materials or the way staff are trained, recruited, managed or paid.

If root cause analysis isn’t carried out, the tendency is to treat symptoms rather than causes. This would be like putting a sticking plaster on a child’s cut finger, without asking how they managed to get a knife in the first place. If the root cause is not addressed, the problems are likely to re-occur.

After addressing the first set of 80/20 issues, the process is repeated, meaning that the number of quality failures is potentiall­y decreased by 80 per cent each time, until it is so small that it cannot be analysed.

The Pareto principle was popularise­d by Joseph Moses Juran, a Romanianbo­rn American engineer who was a champion for the cause of quality management. In 1941, he discovered the work of the early 20th-century Italian statistici­an Vilfredo Pareto, who had first noted the 80/20 relationsh­ip, noting that 80 per cent of land in Italy was owned by only 20 per cent of the population.

Bob Cubitt, Northampto­n.

IS THERE a question to which you have always wanted to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question raised here? Send your questions and answers to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Daily Mail, 2 Derry Street, London, W8 5TT; fax them to 01952 780111 or email them to charles.legge@dailymail.co.uk. A selection will be published but we are not able to enter into individual correspond­ence.

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