Results Impressive facts
While investigating facts about Results Impressive, I found out little known, but curios details like:
A Chinese beggar whose hands were ruined in an explosion spent a decade designing a new type of two-handed calligraphy. The result was so impressive that China’s largest font maker gave him a design contract with 50 years of royalties and helped to get him off the streets.
In a review of clinical drug trials, almost all negative studies were unpublished, leading to the false impression that 93% of antidepressant trials had positive results. When unpublished studies were included, 51% of all clinical trials were positive and 49% were negative.
In my opinion, it is useful to put together a list of the most interesting details from trusted sources that I've come across. Here are 8 of the best facts about Results Impressive I managed to collect.
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Bernie's knowledge of the fact that Hitler's election resulted in the deaths of 50 million people, including his uncle Romek in WWII gave him the important impression that politics were extremely important.
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Surgeons can perform OOKP surgery where they implant someone's own tooth in their eye successfully to restore vision to patients who have been completely blind for years. 10 year results have been impressive.
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Pulp's Jarvis Cocker tried to impress a girl by hanging by his fingertips from the windowsill of her 3rd storey flat. Unable to pull himself up, he fell, resulting in 6 weeks in hospital. He credits this incident with bringing his lyrics 'down to earth'.
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Domino's Pizza discontinued the 'Avoid the Noid' marketing campaign after Kenneth Lamar Noid held two employees hostage at gunpoint in 1989, under the impression the campaign directly targeted him. He later killed himself, resulting in permanent cancellation of the campaign.
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Someone remixed the entire Linkin Park Album "Hybrid Theory" with PSY - Gangnam Style. Calling it "Psybrid Theory". Results were extremely impressive.
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After failing to tackle an epidemic of heroin addiction with severe sentences and zero tolerance in the 80s, the Swiss were the first to think of addicts as patients in need instead of criminals; which prompted a change in programmes leading to impressive results in the 1990s