Uncle John's Bathroom Reader Attack of the Factoids (43 page)

BOOK: Uncle John's Bathroom Reader Attack of the Factoids
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…to be protected by the Secret Service:
Grover Cleveland.

…to ride in an armored car:
Franklin Roosevelt. After the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941, he began using a Cadillac that had been seized from Al Capone after his income tax evasion conviction. It had inch-thick bulletproof glass and 3,000 pounds of armor.

…born in the United States:
Martin Van Buren, in 1782. The seven before him were born before the Revolution, when the future states were still colonies of England.

…who actually shook hands with people:
Thomas Jefferson. His predecessors preferred a slight, dignified bow.

…to coin an advertising slogan:
Teddy Roosevelt. When he was visiting the Maxwell House Hotel in New York City, he complimented the coffee as being “good to the last drop.” When the hotel began selling the coffee in stores, they used the phrase as their slogan.

…to install an indoor toilet in the White House:
John Quincy Adams, in 1825.

…born in a log cabin:
Andrew Jackson, in 1767.

The World's Greenest Burgs

GREEN POWER TO THE PEOPLE

Cities put an enormous strain on the environment: They use more than 75 percent of the world's energy and release more than 75 percent of the world's carbon dioxide and other pollutants into the environment. More than half the people on earth (over 3.5 billion) live in cities, and by 2050, that number is expected to reach 70 percent. The future could be bleak: more lung disease from more pollution, increased global warming, mountains of waste, and concrete everywhere. But the people who live in the world's greenest cities are pioneering a future that's very different.

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK

Population:
1.2 million

How green is it?
Copenhagen has been addressing environmental issues for decades. The result is that the water in its harbors and canals is so clean that people actually swim in them. There are also more than 186 miles of bike paths in the metro area, and there are places where residents and tourists can borrow bikes for free. (Really.) Some major streets even have a “green wave” system so bike riders can speed through intersections without stopping—they hit timed green lights the entire way. The result is that nearly 55 percent of Copenhageners bike to work or school.

The city is already filled with parks, but plans are in the works to guarantee that by 2015 at least 90 percent of Copenhagen's population will be within walking distance of a park or beach. About 20 percent of the city's electric power comes from wind turbines, hydroelectric power, and biomass (energy from organic matter like wood, straw, and organic waste), but the goal is to stop using coal altogether. The city is encouraging residents to buy electric-and hydrogen-powered cars and is investing more than $900 billion so that, by 2025, Copenhagen will have reduced its coal and oil pollution to zero.

VANCOUVER, CANADA

Population:
603,000

How green is it?
Often called the greenest city in Canada, Vancouver has more than 200 parks in a region that's surrounded by spectacular beaches, forests, and mountains. The city leads the world in the production of hydropower, which supplies 90 percent of its electricity. And one of Vancouver's most famous innovations is the use of solar-powered trash-compactor bins on public sidewalks: The bins can hold five times the amount of conventional trash cans, so they need to be emptied only once a week instead of every night, which saves on the need to use the city's gas-powered fleet of garbage trucks.

Vancouver has also been adding new streetcar lines and bike lanes, and it has constructed nearly 250 miles of “greenways,” special corridors for pedestrians and cyclists that connect parks, nature reserves, historic sites, neighborhoods, and shopping areas. And 40 percent of commuter and tourist day trips in Vancouver involve walking, biking, or using public transportation.

REYKJAVIK, ICELAND

Population:
120,000

How green is it?
In the 1970s Iceland relied on imported coal for 75 percent of its energy. Today all of its electricity is produced from hydroelectric and geothermal power. The hydropower source is flowing water from melting ice that turns turbines to make electricity. The geothermal power uses the heat and steam of Iceland's volcanoes to do the same. The only fossil fuel the city uses is for its cars and fishing fleets.

But Icelanders even consider that to be too much: To get down to zero use of fossil fuels, Reykjavik is working on a changeover to cars and ships fueled mainly by electricity and hydrogen. In 2003 Shell opened its first hydrogen filling station in Reykjavik to service hydrogen-powered public buses. By the mid-21st century, Iceland plans to have most of its fishing fleet running on hydrogen and all of its cars and buses powered by alternative fuels.

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA

Population:
805,000

How green is it?
San Francisco was the first city in the United States to pass a mandatory recycling law, and the first to ban the use of plastic bags. Meant to lessen the amount of garbage that goes into landfills, those 2009 edicts have worked so well that San Franciscans now recycle 77 percent of their waste. (All that recycled garbage weighs about twice as much as the Golden Gate Bridge!) New laws also mean cleaner air: Public transportation runs on 20 percent biodiesel fuel (made from used cooking oil), and a green taxi law has resulted in 92 percent of the city's cabs running on alternative fuels.

Even though it's famous for its fog, San Francisco has proved that solar can work in overcast locales: The 60,000-square-foot solar system on the city's convention center generates enough electricity to power the entire center during events, and 24,000 solar panels atop a reservoir provide electricity for city buildings, including a hospital, the airport, and police and fire stations.

CURITIBA, BRAZIL

Population:
3.5 million

How green is it?
Curitiba is the capital of the Paraná state in Brazil, and despite facing severe poverty and overcrowding, it consistently wins recognition as one of the most beautiful, livable, and green cities in the world. In 1968 the city had less than 10 square feet of greenery per person, but careful urban planning—minimizing urban sprawl, planting trees, and protecting local forests—has turned that into 500 square feet for each inhabitant. Curitiba now boasts 16 parks, 14 forests, and more than 1,000 green public spaces.

Curitiba is also internationally famous for its Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) system. Reliable and cheap, the BRT vehicles run as often as every 90 seconds in dedicated bus lanes. Eighty percent of the residents use the buses—that's more than two million riders a day. Also famous for its garbage disposal system, the city provides an alternative for low-income families who don't have garbage pickup: They can bring in bags of trash or recycling, and exchange them for bus tickets, food, school supplies, or toys. The result: A clean city where the poor live better and more than 70 percent of the waste is recycled.

GREENSBURG, KANSAS

Population:
900

How green is it?
It's not a big city, but the small town of Greensburg embodies the spirit of environmentalism. In May 2007 a tornado demolished 95 percent of the town. When the residents rebuilt, they decided that their new buildings would meet internationally recognized standards that would make their town as energy-efficient and environmentally friendly as possible. The winds that once almost destroyed the town now power a wind farm that provides electricity to all of Greensburg's homes and businesses. This incredible comeback has made the town a center for environmental businesses and ecotourism, and young residents who once vowed to go away to college and never come back now say there's no place like home. In 2011
Budget Travel
magazine put Greensburg on its top 10 list of the “Coolest Small Towns in America.” And we think that's pretty cool.

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DID YOU KNOW?

      
•
    
Roller derby, sometimes known as pro wrestling on wheels, was invented in Chicago in 1935 by sporting promoter Leo Seltzer.

      
•
    
Jerry Greenfield met his Ben & Jerry's ice cream partner Ben Cohen in gym class while running laps.

      
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Bald eagles aren't really bald; they have a head of white feathers. They got their name because the word “bald” used to mean “gleaming” or “white.”

      
•
    
In 2009, a group of English scientists built a snowman that was smaller than the width of a human hair.

      
•
    
Taken literally, “à la mode” has nothing to do with ice cream or pie. It's French for “in the fashion.”

Mayhem on Ice

Hockey gets its name from the same root word as croquet and crochet—a Middle French term pronounced regionally as
hoquet
and meaning “shepherd's crook.”

In Japan, the movie
Slapshot
was called
Roughhouse Hockey Players Who Curse a Lot and Play Dirty
.

Professional hockey pucks are kept in a freezer before games because warmer pucks bounce too much on the ice.

The world's largest hockey stick and puck reside in Duncan, British Columbia, Canada.

In 1923 hockey announcer Foster Hewitt was the first to shout into a microphone, “He shoots! He scores!”

Despite the game's Canadian roots, the United States had the first pro hockey league.

The first U.S. hockey franchise to win a Stanley Cup was the New York Rangers, in 1928.

In 1987 Philadelphia Flyer Ron Hextall became the first NHL goalie to shoot a puck into the other team's net from the opposite side of the rink. Two years later, he did it again.

Some Like It Hot

India is the world's largest producer, consumer, and exporter of chili peppers.

In 400 BC, Hippocrates recommended black pepper for women's reproductive complaints. A century later, Theophrastus prescribed it as an antidote to hemlock poisoning. (Neither really did much good.)

Since 1868, the hot peppers for Tabasco have been grown and processed on Avery Island, Louisiana.

Christopher Columbus was one of the first Europeans to eat chilis, and he gave them the name “pepper” because their effect resembled that of black pepper. Yet, black pepper is not related to chili peppers.

Portuguese sailors spread hot peppers and seeds around the world.

The blindness and burning of pepper spray, which is made from peppers, can last for 30 minutes.

One red bell pepper contains 148 milligrams of vitamin C.

Jalapeño jellybeans really do have a little of the pepper inside.

The chemical compound that makes peppers so hot is called capsaicin.

Researchers go through multiple pairs of latex gloves when handling Trinidad Moruga Scorpion chili peppers because the capsaicin penetrates the latex.

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ANIMAL ANTICS

• Hippos can't float and are lousy swimmers, so they rarely leave shallow water. If they end up in deep water, they leap like chubby porpoises along the bottom.

• African bush babies have “toilet claws” on their hind feet that they use just for grooming.

Hedgehogs

Hedgehogs are spiny and look like porcupines, but the two animals are not closely related.

The average hedgehog has 7,000 spines. (A porcupine, in comparison, has 30,000, but they're longer.)

When a hedgehog is born, its spines stay under a skin-like membrane that dries up and shrinks within 12 hours.

Hedgehogs roll up into a protective, spiked ball when threatened.

Hedgehogs were among the first mammals to appear on earth, and they haven't changed much in 20 million years.

Hedgehogs communicate with squeals, snuffles, and grunts.

In 2006 McDonald's in England changed the shape of their McFlurry containers because hedgehogs, trying to lick out the last remains in discarded cups, were getting their heads stuck in them, sometimes fatally.

Hedgehogs are lactose-intolerant.

Toad Suck, Arkansas

The name for a person from Arkansas can be either Arkansan or Arkansawyer.

Why stop in Dover, Arkansas? Well, there's the Booger Hollow Trading Post, a souvenir shop that serves up “Boogerburgers” and offers seats in its self-proclaimed “World's Only Double-Decker Outhouse.”

On August 10, 1936, Ozark, Arkansas, recorded the state's highest temperature of 120°F.

On the Arkansas River northeast of Little Rock lies the Toad Suck Ferry Lock and Dam. Legend has it that back in the 1800s, river men stopping at the local saloon would suck down so much beer they would swell up like toads.

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