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Nebraska born Gerry Thomas was a marketing executive for CA
Swanson and Sons of Omaha, Nebraska in the early 1950's when his company
faced a turkey problem. Gerry's employer, then a leading wholesaler
of poultry, had a 270 ton surplus of post-Thanksgiving turkey sitting in
10 refrigerated railway box cars. | ||
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(1976.11.06-2004.04.22) NFL football player; U.S. Army Ranger.
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(1906.02.04-1997.01.17) Astronomer, discoverer of Pluto. As a 22 year old amateur astronomer, Clyde submitted drawings of planets which he had done using his home made telescope to the Lowell Observatory for comment. The observatory's director was so impressed that he offered the young astronomer a job at Lowell. Clyde's job would be to man a camera searching for an elusive planet X. Years earlier, the observatory's founder Percival Lowell (1855-1916) had compared the observed and calculated positions of Uranus. Lowell came to believe that the discrepancy pointed to an undiscovered planet beyond Neptune. On February 18, 1930, Clyde found a speck of light on photographic plates he was examining. The speck moved in successive plates exactly as a planet beyond Neptune should. In March, 1930, the Lowell Observatory announced the discovery of the planet which would eventually be named Pluto. | ||
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(1933.02.25- ) Fictional sidekick of The Lone Ranger According to an NPR story on The Lone Ranger, the name for the ranger's sidekick was inspired by the Tonto Basin, an area in Gila County, near the geographic center of Arizona. Tonto did not appear on the first Lone Ranger radio shows. It soon became apparent that the ranger needed someone to whom to talk since he was by definition, alone. It was radio after all, and without dialog there would be little to broadcast. Fran Striker, writer of The Lone Ranger radio program, decided to introduce a sidekick. To come up with a name, he opened up the Atlas and found a place called the Tonto Basin in Arizona. He said, "Gee, I like that first name, Tonto. It's hard, it's fast, it's quick, it's easy to remember." Unfortunately, it's also Spanish for "idiot." On February 25, 1933, the Lone Ranger's faithful sidekick Tonto made his first appearance on the radio show. | ||
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(1939- ) Singer, historian, author, teacher.
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(1958.10.10- ) Singer, author. Tanya Tucker was born in Seminole, Texas, but grew up in Wilcox. Her family moved to Phoenix in 1967. When she was just 14--after the family had moved to Las Vegas via St. George, Utah--she hit the big time with the song "Delta Dawn" (1972). She sang adult songs ("You Ain't Woman Enough") with an adult voice when she was barely a teen. When she was 21, she had a much publicized affair with singer Glen Campbell who was then over twice her age. She published her autobiography, Nickel Dreams, in 1997. |
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(1966.06.30- ) Heavyweight champion.
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