The Weekly Vista

Strange BUT TRUE

- By Samantha Weaver

• It was French playwright Albert Guinon who made the following sage observatio­n: “There are people who, instead of listening to what is being said to them, are already listening to what they are going to say themselves.”

• You may not be surprised

to learn that, according to a poll conducted by The Associated Press, Americans hate math twice as much as any other subject.

• A study published in 2008 showed that the price of a pain medication had an effect on its efficacy. In the study people were given placebo pills, some at the regular price and some at a discounted price. Those who paid full price for the medication reported more relief than those who paid less.

• During Elizabetha­n times, it was customary in England for a wife to wear her wedding ring on her thumb.

• It seems no one can adequately explain the reason why women tend to strike matches away from themselves, while men tend to strike them toward themselves.

• Dominique Bouhours, a Frenchman who lived in the 17th century, was a priest, an essayist and a grammarian. The love of language may have been closest to his heart, though; it’s been reported that the final words he uttered on his deathbed were, “I am about to — or I am going to — die; either expression is used.”

• Those who study such things say that sea slugs have 25,000 teeth.

• The town of Waco, Texas, has an entire museum dedicated to the popular soda Dr Pepper.

Even more surprising is the fact that it gets more than a hundred visitors a day, on average.

•••

Thought for the Day:

“It’s hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerate­d by bolts of lightning.”

— Bill Watterson

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