The Daily Planet-July
3, 2016 Superman's Girlfriend Lois Lane Dies
Minnesota-born Noel Neill's ambition was
to be a journalist like her father, the editor of a Minneapolis newspaper.
However, she was hired by Bing Crosby to sing at the Turf Club at the
race track in Del Mar, California (Crosby was one of the owners). Shortly
thereafter, in 1941, she was signed to a contract by Paramount Pictures.
She
got early experience in television by hosting and performing on several
experimental programs broadcast locally in Los Angeles in the late 1940s, and
it was around that time that she began appearing in serials, first at Columbia
and then for Republic.
While she is best known for
playing Lois Lane in the TV series Adventures of Superman (1952) beginning in the second
season in 1953. She actually first played Lois in the 1948 serial Superman (1948). She replaced Phyllis Coates in the part on the TV series when
Coates was offered a leading part in another TV series and left the show. When the series ended in
1957, Neill retired from the industry.
George Reeves (January 5, 1914 – June 16, 1959) was an American actor. He is best known for his role as Superman in the 1950s television program Adventures of Superman
His death at age 45 from a gunshot remains a polarizing topic; the official finding was suicide, but some believe that he was murdered or the victim of an accidental shooting…according to Noel, Reeves did not die by his own hand as he was too happy and was in the process of planning a new TV series to update the Superman franchise and so the mystery lives on.
Penelope Ann Miller
Miller left her native Los Angeles, when she was age 18, and
moved to New York, where she studied acting at HB Studios under Herbert Berghof. Two
years later, Miller got her big break on Broadway, when she originated the role
of "Daisy Hanningan" in Neil Simon's
Tony Award-winning play, "Biloxi Blues". Later, she would reprise her
role in Universal's film version, directed by Mike Nichols.
Things you’ll
find useful [share with your mates]
Stop
what you’re doing and look at your hands.
Is
your ring finger longer than your index finger?
If
so, you were likely exposed to higher levels of testosterone while you were in
your mother’s womb.
Is
your index finger longer than your ring finger?
Then
you were exposed to lower levels of T as a fetus.
So
what?
Well,
while it might sound like hokey palm reading, researchers are finding that the
ratio between the length of your ring and index fingers may in fact correlate
to your prenatal exposure to T, and have a significant influence on your body,
brain, and behavior well into adulthood.
How
strong is this correlation and what exactly does it foretell? I’ve dived deep
into all the available research to sort myth from fact, and present this
comprehensive look at what digit ratio really means for your masculinity.
Penis
Length
A
recent study
out of South Korea found a correlation between 2D:4D ratio and penis length.
Men with lower 2D:4D ratios tend to have longer penises when flaccid, while men
with higher 2D:4D ratios have shorter penises. The researchers called for more
studies on penis length and 2D:4D ratio in men from other countries.
Dr.
Manning has been at the forefront of researching and curating research about
correlations between 2D:4D ratios and a wide variety of traits like
aggressiveness, math ability, and even sperm count. His book Digit
Ratio
highlights much this research.
The
website Finger Digit Ratio News posts a lot of the research coming out of the world
of digit ratio studies.
For
insights about the T surge that happens prenatally, I found True Nature and Testosterone: Action, Deficiency, and Substation extremely useful.
More Resources to share...
The Elby e-bike will
blow you away for 90 miles (Yahoo Finance): "When it comes to ground
transportation, you pretty much know the options: Walk, bike or drive. Each
offers a different balance of speed, exercise, cost, comfort and pollution.
You could argue, though, that there’s room for another mode, one that
fills in an important empty spot on that spectrum: the electric bike."
When
job searching for a new job the ones you see advertised aren't all that is
available. Knowing how to find these 'hidden' jobs can save you time and
potentially get you the job you want.
What
the Yuck
Contact me - Bruce ‘the Retro Guy!
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