Donut Shaped World Theory
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[[Category: Glossary]]The theory that the earth is in fact, shaped like a donut. Proved wrong by cosmonauts in 1975. | [[Category: Glossary]]The theory that the earth is in fact, shaped like a donut. Proved wrong by cosmonauts in 1975. | ||
- | [[A.W. Slippers]] proposed this theory in such works as [[The Shipping Lane Aside]] and it gained currency among prisoners, Unitarians, the insane and 27 members of the U.S. Congress. | + | [[A.W. Slippers]] developed this theory in such works as [[The Shipping Lane Aside]] and it gained currency among prisoners, Unitarians, the insane and [[27]] members of the U.S. Congress. |
- | One follower, [[Johannssen Messerschmidt]], urged people to spread the word. He was arrested one night walking around Philadelphia clad "with only a donut circl'd about that member which should not be mentioned in these halls," as it was put so eloquently by [[Senator Locust B. Burley]] of Vermont, when the matter of Slippers' proposal to vogage to the center of the hole in the Earth was discussed in the Senate. | + | One follower, [[Johannssen Messerschmidt]], urged people to spread the word. He was arrested one night walking around Philadelphia clad "with only a donut circl'd about that member which should not be mentioned in these halls," as it was put so eloquently by [[Senator Locust B. Burley]] of Vermont, when the matter of Slippers' proposal to vogage to the center of the hole in the Earth was discussed in the Senate. Burley was opposed to the venture and dismissed Slippers as a "charlatan....a flim-flam man of the lowest order...his theories are balderdash." |
Revision as of 23:00, 9 Oct 2004
The theory that the earth is in fact, shaped like a donut. Proved wrong by cosmonauts in 1975.
A.W. Slippers developed this theory in such works as The Shipping Lane Aside and it gained currency among prisoners, Unitarians, the insane and 27 members of the U.S. Congress.
One follower, Johannssen Messerschmidt, urged people to spread the word. He was arrested one night walking around Philadelphia clad "with only a donut circl'd about that member which should not be mentioned in these halls," as it was put so eloquently by Senator Locust B. Burley of Vermont, when the matter of Slippers' proposal to vogage to the center of the hole in the Earth was discussed in the Senate. Burley was opposed to the venture and dismissed Slippers as a "charlatan....a flim-flam man of the lowest order...his theories are balderdash."