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Neil Armstrong’s hair was sold in 2004 for $3,000

The lucky buyer, John Reznikoff, holds the Guinness World Record for the largest collection of historical celebrity hair, according to NBC

He clearly did not tolerate pearls. When his secretary wore pearl jewelry one day, he made her go home

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Nikola Tesla hated pearls

Thomas Edison is the reason you love cat videos

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Edison was able to record and view moving images for the first time. But the real stars of these early videos are boxer cats he filmed in a boxing ring around 1894

They were given to Henry Abrams and kept in a safe deposit box. Abrams was Einstein's eye doctor

Albert Einstein’s eyeballs are in New York City

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As bananas ripen, chlorophyll begins to break down. This pigment is the element that makes bananas glow or fluoresce under ultraviolet light and appear blue

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Bananas glow blue under black lights

Like some people, adult cats do not have enough lactase enzyme to digest lactose from milk, causing them to vomit, have diarrhea or gas

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Adult cats are lactose intolerant

National Toy Hall of Fame included the wand in their collection of amazing toys as perhaps the oldest toy ever

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The world’s oldest toy is a stick

One-handed player scores the winning goal at the first World Cup

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Hector Castro, who accidentally cut off his right forearm as a teenager using an electric saw, In the last game between Uruguay and Argentina, Castro scored the winning goal in the final minute of the game

The Pope can’t be an organ donor

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According to the Vatican, the Pope's entire body should be buried intact because his body belongs to the universal Catholic Church

At higher temperatures, the gas molecules inside the ball expand, causing the ball to bounce higher. Cooler temperatures cause the molecules to shrink and the ball bounces lower

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Wimbledon tennis balls stored at 68 degrees Fahrenheit

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