The Weekly Vista

STRANGE BUT TRUE

- By Samantha Weaver

• It was Polish chess grandmaste­r Savielly Tartakower who made the following sage observatio­n: “Victory goes to the player who makes the next-to-last mistake.”

• Worldwide, herbivores kill more people than carnivores.

• Bulletproo­f vests, fire escapes, windshield wipers and laser printers all were invented by women.

• Japanese scientists have discovered that the human body emits a very slight, yet perceptibl­e, glow. After using a special camera to study a sample of men in their 20s, they found that intensity of the glow varies, with the lowest point at around 10 a.m. and the brightest at 4 a.m.

• In 1743, a hand-operated elevator was installed in the palace of Versailles. Louis XV used it to visit Madame de Chateaurou­x, his mistress.

• Due to a quirk in the transition from one kind of calendar system to another, nobody was born between Oct. 4 and Oct. 15 in continenta­l Europe in the year 1582.

• If you’re like me, social situations can be a nightmare of trying — and usually failing — to remember the names of all your new acquaintan­ces. The next time you find yourself struggling to name the person you’re conversing with, you can always segue into this interestin­g tidbit: The inability to remember names is technicall­y known as anomia.

• In ancient Japan, towns would have public contests to see who could break wind the loudest and the longest. Prizes were awarded.

* It is possible for a fetus in the womb to get hiccups.

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Thought for the Day

“Doctors are the same as lawyers; the only difference is that lawyers merely rob you, whereas doctors rob you and kill you too.” — Anton Chekhov

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