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Tuesday, November 24 It was 150 years ago today that Charles Darwin saw the publication of "On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection," which explained evolution and made possible another century of scientific advances. Darwin dawdled considerably …Read more. WEEK OF NOVEMBER 23 Monday, November 23 When he was 13, Roald Dahl got a chance to be a taste-tester for a focus group at Cadbury, along with his classmates at Repton in Darbyshire. At the time, Cadbury and Rowntree engaged in bitter corporate espionage. It all …Read more. Saturday, November 21 Ever wondered what happened to Francis Gary Powers? He was the American pilot who crashed into the Soviet Union, deeply embarrassing the Eisenhower administration. He was traded back to the United States in 1962, for a Soviet spy caught in the U.S. …Read more. Saturday, November 21 Ever wondered what happened to Francis Gary Powers? He was the American pilot who crashed into the Soviet Union, deeply embarrassing the Eisenhower administration. He was traded back to the United States in 1962, for a Soviet spy caught in the U.S. …Read more.
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Trivia Bits for October 14

Some odd people accidentally got canonized by the Catholic Church. Saint Josaphat was probably just Buddha. Bacchus, the Greek god of wine, was accidentally canonized in the fourth century. Castor and Pollux were the now de-canonized St. Cosmas and St. Damian. Other Roman gods who got sainted included Diana, Artemis, Helios, Bacchus, Aphrodite, Mercury and Silvanus. And St. Philomena never existed at all. Catholics mistook her for a martyr when the word "lumena" (meaning "dear one") was found on catacomb walls.

Modern devices need patron saints, too. Joseph of Cupertino was picked to be the patron saint of astronauts and air travelers because he could apparently fly. By himself. Claire of Assisi became patron saint of television after she saw visions of a Catholic mass on the wall of her cell.

And Isidore is touted as a patron saint of the Internet because of his maniacal quest to gather the world's information on index cards.

The term "pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis" was coined as a hoax in 1935 as the putative longest word in the English language. Who would get this disease?

A) Divers

B) Farmers

C) Miners

D) Prostitutes

Previous answer: Tang is both a former Chinese dynasty and an astronautical orange-flavored soft drink.

TRIVIA FANS: Send the trivia questions you've always wanted answered, or original TriviaBits ideas of your own, with your full name and hometown, to Paul Paquet at paul@triviahalloffame.com or visit him online at www.triviahalloffame.com.


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Paul Paquet
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