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UNBELIEVABLE FACTS

We will post many facts everyday. So always check our latest posts!

Thursday, June 6, 2013

MOTHERS' DAY OR MOTHER'S DAY??

Beginning in the 1850s, Ann Reeves Jarvis of West Virginia started Mothers' Day Work Clubs in order to teach women proper child-care techniques and sanitation methods. In the years following the Civil War, these same clubs became a unifying force for a country ripped apart by conflict. In 1868, Jarvis and other women organized a Mothers Friendship Day, when mothers gathered with former soldiers of both the Union and Confederacy to promote reconciliation. After Ann Reeves Jarvis died in 1905, it was her daughter Anna Jarvis who would work tirelessly to make Mother's Day a national holiday.

Anna Jarvis, who had no children of her own, conceived of Mother’s Day as an occasion for honoring the sacrifices individual mothers made for their children. In May 1908, she organized the first official Mother’s Day events at a church in her hometown of Grafton, West Virginia, as well as at a Wanamaker’s department store in Philadelphia, where she lived at the time. Jarvis then began writing letters to newspapers and politicians pushing for the adoption of Mother’s Day as an official holiday. By 1912, many other churches, towns and states were holding Mother’s Day celebrations, and Jarvis had established the Mother’s Day International Association. Her hard-fought campaign paid off in 1914, when President Woodrow Wilson signed a bill officially establishing the second Sunday in May as Mother’s Day.

Jarvis’ conceived of of Mother’s Day as an intimate occasion—a son or daughter honoring the mother they knew and loved—and not a celebration of all mothers. For this reason, she always stressed the singular “Mother’s” rather than the plural. She soon grew disillusioned, as Mother’s Day almost immediately became centered on the buying and giving of printed cards, flowers, candies and other gifts. Seeking to regain control of the holiday she founded, Jarvis began openly campaigning against those who profited from Mother’s Day, including confectioners, florists and other retailers. She launched numerous lawsuits against groups using the name Mother’s Day, and eventually spent much of her sizeable inheritance on legal fees.

In 1925, when an organization called the American War Mothers used Mother’s Day as an occasion for fundraising and selling carnations, Jarvis crashed their convention in Philadelphia and was arrested for disturbing the peace. Later, she even attacked First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt for using Mother’s Day as an occasion to raise money for charity. By the 1940s, Jarvis had disowned the holiday altogether, and even actively lobbied the government to see it removed from the calendar. Her efforts were to no avail, however, as Mother’s Day had taken on a life of its own as a commercial goldmine. Largely destitute, and unable to profit from the massively successful holiday she founded, Jarvis died in 1948 in Philadelphia’s Marshall Square Sanitarium.

The sad history of Mother’s Day founder Anna Jarvis has done nothing to slow down the popularity—and commercialism—of the holiday. According to an annual spending survey conducted by the National Retail Federation, Americans will spend an average of $168.94 on Mother’s Day in 2013, a whopping 11 percent increase from 2012. In total, Mother’s Day spending is expected to reach $20.7 billion this year. In addition to the more traditional gifts (ranging from cards, flowers and candy to clothing and jewelry), the survey showed that an unprecedented 14.1 percent of gift-givers plan to buy their moms high-tech gadgets like smartphones and tablets.

Source: History

SUPER PIGGY ON THE MOVE

Jo Ann Altsman suffered a heart attack while vacationing in the North Woods of Presque Isle,Pennsylvania. Jo Ann was unconscious and in desperate need of medical attention. The only other soul with her was Jo Ann’s Vietnamese Pot Bellied Pig LuLu. Realizing her friend needed help, the quick-thinking pig sprang into action.

LuLu ran out of the house. She then ran into the street and laid
down in front of traffic. Several cars just drove around her. Not willing to give up LuLu tried again laying down in the middle of the street and stopping traffic.Finally a man got out of his car to make sure LuLu was not hurt. LuLu got up as he approached her and started towards the house. The concerned citizen followed LuLu to her home finding Jo Ann Altsman unconscious and called 911.

The State then honoured the Pig 'Lulu' with the National Humane Award.

Source: Trivia Mania

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

CHARGE YOUR PHONE IN 20 SECS

An 18-year-old Indian-American girl has invented a super-capacitor device that could potentially charge your cellphone in less than 20 seconds.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

CONQUERED THE ALPHABET

A pangram (Greek: παν γράμμα, pan gramma, "every letter") or holoalphabetic sentence for a given alphabet is a sentence using every letter of the alphabet at least once. Pangrams have been used to display typefaces, test equipment, and develop skills in handwriting, calligraphy, and keyboarding.

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"

This type of sentence is called a pangram. The most widely known pangram is the one that's traditionally been used to test typewriters or keyboards: The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.

The quick-brown-fox pangram, which has been used since at least the late 19th century, was utilized by Western Union to test Telex / TWX data communication equipment for accuracy and reliability, and is now used by a number of computer programs (most notably the font viewer built into Microsoft Windows) to display computer fonts. The German Victor-jagt pangram, used since before 1800, contains all the letters, including the 3 umlaut letters: ä, ö, ü.


Short pangrams in English are more difficult to come up with and tend to use uncommon words, because the English language uses some letters (especially vowels) much more frequently than others. Longer pangrams may afford more opportunity for humor, cleverness, or thoughtfulness. In a sense, the pangram is the opposite of the lipogram, in which the aim is to omit one or more letters. 

Some examples of pangram:

"Crazy Fredericka bought many very equisite opal jewels."

"Amazingly few discotheques provide jukeboxes."

"Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow!"

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A perfect pangram or ultimate pangram contains every letter of the alphabet only once and can be considered an anagram of the alphabet; it is the shortest possible pangram.

The ultimate pangram which is only 26 letters long, containing all 26 letters. This has been done, but only by using words that are so obscure that nobody has ever heard of them:

"Cwm fjordbank glyphs vext quiz."

(cwm, a loan word from Welsh, means a steep-sided valley, particularly in Wales). 

which means "inscriptions in hollow on side of inlet puzzled professor".

Some examples of perfect pangram/ultimate pangram:

"Cwm fjord veg balks nth pyx quiz"

"Jink cwm, zag veldt, fob qursh pyx"


"unky qoph-flags vext crwd zimb"

For more pangrams, go to http://adf.ly/PkzKL

Source: http://adf.ly/PkzP5

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

STILL AIN'T TIRED


Jean Beliveau, a 56-year-old man from Montreal walked the world in 11 years, in an attempt to break the feeling of depression of a middle-aged. He is finally back in Montreal after he was able to realize his dream. 

Beliveau has to walk another 300 kilometers along Lake Ontario before he returned on 16. October to Montreal where he faces his longtime girlfriend Arkambo Luce, who was supported him at all times in an effort to realize his rather unusual adventure. She has even launched a website on which interested people could be informed about the details of his travels. 

He left Montreal on his 45. birthday, 18 August 2000. after the bankruptcy. He decided to walk the world in order to overcome this painful episode in his life. The girl and two children from a previous marriage did not try to prevent him to do what he intended. 

Beliveau started his journey by running to Atlanta, the capital of Georgia states, but then walked 75,000 kilometers through 64 countries. At one point, Arkambo encouraged him during his journey to promote peace and nonviolence on behalf of children and of UNESCO, and what began as an escape from his life actually got some purpose. 

In 11 years, he traveled through the deserts and mountains, he fell in love during the nine days he spent in Mexico, wore a turban and long beard in Sudan, he was eating insects in Africa, dogs in South Korea, snakes in China and in Philippines he was carried out by soldiers. 

Only ones Beliveau got serious illness in Algeria, attacked by two young drunks in South Africa and ended up imprisoned in Ethiopia for no reason, but he was released the next day. 

Also in Ethiopia at one time he felt so lonely that he wanted to stop everything and come home, but his girl convinced him not to do so. 

During the 11 years he slept under bridges, in homeless shelters, met the prison brutality, but often slept and ate with people who have admired him for what he does. 

He left Montreal with 4,000 Canadian dollars. Every year, his girl with whom he was in touch via Skype had sent him the same amount, but mainly he relied on the kindness of strangers. Today he is completely out of money, but he points out that he is richer for the experience he got. 

Beliveau said that he went without anything, but he came back with great knowledge and understanding. He intends to write a book about his experiences and to gives lectures about what he experienced, adding that the most important is the harmony among the people, to listen to each other and accept their differences. 

On the private plane, his love story will have a happy ending. Arkambo said that she is his Penelope, and he is her Odysseus. Every year at Christmas she flew to where Beliveau was located to celebrate this holiday together.