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[WowMailz] HUMONGOUS HUMANS DINESH VORA

 

 
IT'S YOUR WORLD
 
 

HUMONGOUS HUMANS DINESH VORA  

[A]      HUMAN BODY

[1]      A human being loses an average of 40 to 100 strands           of hair a day. [2]      A cough releases an explosive charge of air that           moves at speeds up to  60mph. [3]      Every time you lick a stamp, you consume 1/10 of a           calorie. [4]      A fetus acquires fingerprints at the age of three           months. [5]      A sneeze can exceed the speed of 100 mph. [6]      Every person has a unique tongue print. [7]      According to German researchers, the risk of heart           attack is higher on Monday than any other day of the           week. [8]      After spending hours working at a computer display,           look at a blank piece of white paper. It will probably           appear pink. [9]      An average human drinks about 16,000 gallons of           water in a lifetime. [10]    A fingernail or toenail takes about 6 months to grow           from base to tip. [11]    An average human scalp has 100,000 hairs. [12]    It takes 17 muscles to smile and 43 to frown. [13]    Babies are born with 300 bones, but by adulthood,           we only have 206 in our bodies. [14]    Beards are the fastest growing hairs on the human           body. If the average man never trimmed his beard, it           would grow to nearly 30 feet long in his lifetime. [15]    By age sixty, most people have lost half of their           taste buds. [16]    By the time you turn 70, your heart will have beat           some two-and-a-half billion times (figuring on an           average of 70 beats per minute). [17]    Each square inch of human skin consists of twenty           feet of blood vessels. [18]    Every human spent half an hour as a single cell. [19]    Every square inch of the human body has an average           of 32 million bacteria on it. [20]    Fingernails grow faster than toenails. [21]    Humans shed about 600,000 particles of skin every           hour – about 1.5 pounds a year. By 70 years of age,           an average person will have lost 105 pounds of skin. [B]     HUMAN LUNGS [22]    At rest, a person breathes about 14 to 16 times per           minute. After exercise it could increase to over 60            times per minute. [23]    New babies at rest breathe between 40 and 50 times           per minute. By age five it decreases to around 25           times per minute. [24]    The total surface area of the alveoli (tiny air sacs in            the lungs) is the size of a tennis court. [25]    The lungs are the only organ in the body that can            float on water. [26]    The lungs produce a detergent-like substance which            reduces the surface tension of the fluid lining,            allowing air in. [C]     HUMAN HEARTS [27]    Your heart is about the same size as your fist. [28]    An average adult body contains about five quarts of           blood. [29]    All the blood vessels in the body joined end to end           would stretch 62,000 miles or two and a half times           around the earth. [30]    The heart circulates the body's blood supply about           1,000 times each day.

 

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[WowMailz] FANCY CLOCKS DINESH VORA

[WowMailz] Ronald Reagan's Top Movie Roles

 

 
 

As a politician, the 40th American president was a superb performer, but for his earlier career in Hollywood,
the reviews are mixed.

by Richard Corliss
Ronald Reagan in Hollywood Ronald Reagan's film career would ultimately be just one colorful chapter in the biography of the 40th President of the United States. But he did devote two prime decades to the minor if alchemic art of movie acting. And film work offered some returns on his investment. It lent Reagan the status of a marketable commodity. It landed him two actress-wives: the first, Oscar-winner Jane Wyman; the second, Nancy Davis, who would be his and America's First Lady. Film acting schooled Reagan in the hortatory oratory of movie dialogue — speeches crafted to sell an ideal or an emotion, and still sound like the purveyor of plain-spoken common sense — techniques he used so dynamically in politics. And it created the image of a part-real, part-fictional personage: "Ronald Reagan," an amalgam of the man, the actor he became and the roles he was given to play.
Love Is In The Air, 1937 On June 1, 1937, a 26-year-old with no professional acting experience strode into a $200-a-week contract at Warner Bros. Four months and a day later, his first feature was released. Reagan's visible attributes: a golden smile and a long, strong frame. His previous job: announcing baseball games on the radio. Dark Victory, 1939 "No, no," studio boss Jack Warner famously said when he heard the actor was running for governor of California. "Jimmy Stewart for Governor. Ronald Reagan for Best Friend." Warner saw Reagan in a supporting role because that's how he'd cast the actor in his early years at Warners: as the boy next door to the male lead. Best friend. Genial loser. In the 1939 Dark Victory, above, he played the bon-vivant alcoholic who loses Bette Davis to George Brent and a brain tumor.
Murder In The Air, 1940 Reagan made 33 films in his first five years at Warners, or an average of one every eight weeks.
Million Dollar Baby, 1941 Before the war he got a few chance to prove himself in A material, and one was in this fluffy comedy (unrelated to Clint Eastwood's 2005 Oscar-winner). Reagan plays Peter Rowan, a rebellious composer who says he has "a sour disposition and a mouth to match"
Kings Row, 1942 One of those naughty novels that Hollywood did handsprings to sanitize, the Warners version of Henry Bellamann's best-seller touches, daintily, on all manner of small-town foibles
Desperate Journey, 1942 Warners had one more role for its budding star — an RAF pilot in Desperate Journey, again supporting Errol Flynn — before Reagan entered World War II as a stateside soldier. Kept out of action because of poor vision, he was assigned to the First Motion Picture Unit, making propaganda films for the armed forces. Storm Warning, 1951 Many stars, Clark Gable and James Stewart among them, returned from World War II to reclaim their eminence. Reagan was not of their wattage, and he was also eclipsed by his soon-to-be-ex-wife Jane Wyman, who in 1949 won an Oscar for her role as a deaf-mute in Johnny Belinda.
The Killers, 1964 Long ensconced as the host of TV's General Electric Theatre and Death Valley Days, Reagan made his last film appearance as an out-and-out villain. It's a bit of a cheap thrill to watch Reagan play a crime heavy — the liberal notion of a corrupt businessman who sums up his ethical code by saying, "I approve of larceny; homicide is against my principles."
 
Pramod Ambady
            Romeo Never Dies           
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