Read Disinformation Book of Lists Online
Authors: Russ Kick
LIST 42 | 9 Visitors Who Died at Disneyland Barbara and David P. Mikkelson, Urban Legends Reference Pages [ |
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1
May 1964:
Mark Maples
, a fifteen-year-old Long Beach, California, resident, was killed when he tried to stand up on the Matterhorn Bobsleds. Maples (or his companion) foolishly unbuckled his seatbelt and attempted to stand up as their bobsled neared the peak of the mountain. Maples lost his balance and was thrown from the sled to the track below, fracturing his skull and ribs and causing internal injuries. He died three days later.
2
June 1966:
Thomas Guy Cleveland
, a nineteen-year-old Northridge, California, resident, was killed when he attempted to sneak into Disneyland along the Monorail track. Cleveland scaled the park's sixteen-foot high outer fence on a Grad Nite and climbed onto the Monorail track, intending to jump or climb down once inside the park. Cleveland ignored a security guard's shouted warnings of an approaching Monorail train and failed to leap clear of the track. He finally climbed down onto a fiberglass canopy beneath the track, but the clearance wasn't enoughâthe oncoming train struck and killed him, dragging his body 30 to 40 feet down the track.
3
August 1967:
Ricky Lee Yama
, a seventeen-year-old Hawthorne, California, resident, was killed when he disregarded safety instructions and exited his People Mover car as the ride was passing through a tunnel. Yama slipped as he was jumping from car to car and was crushed to death beneath the wheels of oncoming cars.
4
June 1973:
Bogden Delaurot
, an eighteen-year-old Brooklyn resident, drowned trying to swim across the Rivers of America. Delaurot and his ten-year-old brother managed to stay on Tom Sawyer Island past its dusk closing time by climbing the fence separating the island from the burning settlers' cabin. When they decided to leave the island a few hours later, they chose to swim across the river rather than call attention to their rule-breaking by appealing to cast members for help. Because the younger brother did not know how to swim, Delaurot tried to carry him on his back as he swam to shore. Bogden Delaurot went down about halfway across the river. The younger boy remained afloat by dogpaddling until a ride operator hauled him aboard a boat, but Bogden was nowhere to be found. His body was not located by searchers until the next morning.
5
June 7, 1980:
Gerardo Gonzales
, a recent San Diego high school graduate, was killed on the People Mover in an accident much like the one that had befallen Ricky Lee Yama thirteen years earlier. Gonzales, in the early morning hours of a Grad Nite celebration, was climbing from car to car as the People Mover entered the SuperSpeed Tunnel adjacent to the former America Sings building. Gonzales stumbled and fell onto the track, where an oncoming train of cars crushed him beneath its wheels and dragged his body a few hundred feet before being stopped by a ride operator.
6
June 4, 1983:
Philip Straughan
, an eighteen-year-old Albuquerque, New Mexico, resident, also drowned in the Rivers of America in yet another Grad Nite incident. Straughan and a friendâcelebrating both their graduations and Straughan's eighteenth birthdayâhad been drinking quite heavily that evening. They sneaked into a “Cast Members Only” area along the river and untied an inflatable rubber maintenance motorboat, deciding to take it for a joyride around the river. Unable to adequately control the boat, they struck a rock near Tom Sawyer Island, and Straughan was thrown into the water. His friend traveled back to shore to seek help, but Straughan drowned long before his body was finally located an hour later.
7
January 3, 1984:
Dolly Regene Young
, a 48-year-old Fremont, California, resident, was killed on the Matterhorn in an incident remarkably similar to the first Disneyland guest death nearly 20 years earlier. About two-thirds of the way down the mountain, Young was thrown from her seat into the path of an oncoming bobsled, her head and chest becoming pinned beneath its wheels. An examination of Young's sled revealed that her seatbelt was not fastened at the time of the accident, but because she was riding alone in the rear car of a sled no one could determine whether or not she had deliberately unfastened her belt.
8
December 24, 1998:
In a tragic Christmas Eve accident, one Disneyland cast member and two guests were injured (one fatally) when a rope used to secure the sailing ship
Columbia
as it docked on the Rivers of America tore loose the metal cleat to which it was attached. The cleat sailed through air and struck the heads of two guests who were waiting to board the ship,
Luan Phi Dawson
, 33, of Duvall, Washington, and his wife, Lieu Thuy Vuong, 43. Dawson was declared brain-dead two days later and died when his life-support system was disconnected.
This accident resulted in the first guest death in Disneyland's history that was not attributable to any negligence on the part of the guest (it was the result of a combination of insufficiently rigorous ride maintenance and an insufficiently experienced supervisor assuming an attraction operator's role) and prompted a movement for greater government oversight of theme park operations and safety procedures.
9
September 5, 2003:
A 22-year-old man,
Marcelo Torres
of Gardena, California, died, and several other guests were injured, when a locomotive separated from its train along a tunnel section of Big Thunder Mountain Railroad. Torres bled to death after suffering blunt force trauma to the chest.
Corporate Quote #2
“I don't know that smoking causes lung cancer. It may. It may not. Certainly I conceded the point that smokers are more likely to develop some diseases than non-smokers.”
âGareth Davis, chief executive officer of Imperial Tobacco, February 4
, 2004
(yes, he actually said this, not in 1954, but in 2004).
LIST 43 | 32 Cigarette Additives |
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The complete list of substances added to cigarettes, as compiled by the Indiana Prevention Resource Center at Indiana University, contains 599 entries. Below are some of the more interesting onesâ¦.
1.
ambergris tincture
2.
ammonia
3.
amyl butyrate
4.
apple juice concentrate, extract, and skins
5.
benzoic acid
6.
1-butanol
7.
caffeine
8.
carbon dioxide
9.
carrot oil
10.
chocolate
11.
civet absolute
12.
coffee
13.
cognac white and green oil
14.
dimethyltetrahydrobenzofuranone
15.
ethyl alcohol
16.
fig juice concentrate
17.
guaiac wood oil
18.
hexyl phenylacetate
19.
honey
20.
hops oil
21.
maple syrup and concentrate
22.
2-methoxy-4-vinylphenol
23.
2-methylheptanoic acid
24.
beta-napthyl ethyl ether
25.
nutmeg powder and oil
26.
phosphoric acid
27.
rum
28.
skatole
29.
1,5,5,9-tetramethyl-13-oxatricy clo(8.3.0.0(4,9))tridecane
30.
urea
31.
vinegar
32.
yeast
LIST 44 | 55 Companies Reportedly Doing Business With Enemy Nations |
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According to government, media, and investor reports, the following companies do business with at least one of the countries deemed by the US to be an enemy state: Libya, Cuba, North Korea, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Liberia, the Balkans, and Burma (Myanmar). It should be noted that in a lot of these cases, the transactions appear to be legal, either because a non-US subsidiary of the company is dealing with the rogue state or because the Treasury Department granted a special license. In other cases, though, the corporations have been fined for their activities.
1.
AAA Travel
2.
Alcolac International
4.
American Express Bank
5.
American Type Culture Collection
6.
Axel Electronics
7.
Baker Hughes
8.
Bank of America
9.
Bank of New York
10.
Bank One
11.
Barclays Bank
12.
Bechtel
13.
Canberra Industries
14.
Carl Zeiss, Inc.
15.
Caterpillar
16.
Cerberus
17.
Chevron Texaco
18.
Citibank, N.A.
19.
Conoco-Phillips
20.
Consarc
21.
Deutsche Bank
22.
Dow Agrosciences
23.
Dupont
24.
Eastman Kodak
25.
Electronic Associates
26.
ESPN
(Entertainment & Sports Network)
27.
Exxon Mobile
28.
EZ Logic Data Systems
29.
Finnigan MAT (US)
30.
Four Seasons Hotels
31.
General Electric
32.
Halliburton
33.
Hewlett-Packard
34.
Honeywell
35.
Hyundai Group
36.
International Computer Systems
37.
JP Morgan Chase
38.
Leybold Vacuum Systems
39.
New York Yankees
40.
Pepsi Cola Co.
41.
PetroCanada
42.
PetroChina
43.
Playboy Enterprises
44.
Rockwell
45.
Samsung
46.
Semetex
47.
Siemens
48.
Spectra Physics
49.
Sperry Corp.
50.
Standard Chartered Bank
51.
Tektronix
52.
TI Coating
53.
Unisys
54.
Wal-Mart
55.
Wells Fargo Bank
LIST 45 | Top 100 Corporations Laying off US Workers Due to NAFTA |
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When the North American Free Trade Agreement was passed, we were assured that it would create at least 200,000 jobs in the US. Showing that politicians live in a Bizzaro world where everything is reversed, that's approximately the number of jobs the US
lost
due to NAFTA, either because companies move their facilities to Mexico or Canada, or because cheaper imports from those countries have forced the closing of US facilities.
Workers who lose their jobs because of NAFTA are eligible to receive special benefits. Toward the end of 2003, the famously non-partisan Congressional Research Service tallied the number of workers that US companies signed up for these benefits from the implementation of NAFTA (on the first day of 1994) to September 24, 2002.
The list below represents the 100 companies giving the boot to the most workers. The total comes to 201,414, and would be even higher if companies beyond the top 100 were included. In the ranked list below, the number of workers follows the name of each corporation.
1.
Vanity Fair or VF
16,095
2.
Levi Strauss and Co.
15,676
3.
Burlington House & Industries
total: 9,679
4.
Motorola, Inc.
7,347
5.
Tyco
5,751
6.
General Electric
total: 5,674
7.
Fruit of the Loom
Texas - 5,352
8.
Russell Corporation
3,630
9.
Lucent Technologies
3,416
10.
Honeywell, Inc.
2,754
11.
Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation
2,600
12.
Lexington Fabrics
2,461
13.
Anchor Glass Corporation
2,419
14.
Brown Group
2,400
15.
Louisiana Pacific
2,397
16.
Dana Corporation
2,306
17.
Emerson Electronic Connector Components
2,246
18.
Stroh Brewery Company
2,222
19.
Trinity Industries
2,203
20.
Sarah Lee
2,124
21.
Viasystems Technologies
2,100
22.
Eaton Corporation
2,052
23.
TRW/Auto Electronics Group of North America
2,050
24.
Thomas and Betts Corporation
1,987
25.
Nokia
1,980
26.
Oxford Industries
1,960
27.
Solectron Corporation
1,932
28.
United Technologies Corporation
1,899
29.
Allied Signal, Inc.
1,883
30.
Henry I. Siegel
1,857
31.
Autoliv ASP
1,720
32.
Haggar Clothing Co.
1,717
33.
Hewlett Packard
1,683
34.
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company
1,671
35.
AMP, Inc.
1,654
36.
Thomaston Mills
1,649
37.
Kemet Electronics
1,631
38.
Freightliner, LLC
1,595
39.
Lockheed Martin
1,584
40.
Tultex Corporation
1,547
41.
Hasbro Manufacturing Services
1,531
42.
Exide Technologies
1,470
43.
PL Industries and Subsidiary
1,446
44.
FCI USA, Inc.
1,436
45.
Kimberly Clark Corporation
1,415
46.
Woodward Governor Company
1,390
47.
Ithaca Industries
1,359
48.
Regency Packing Company
1,334
49.
Al Tech Specialty Steel Corporation
1,330
50.
Master Lock
1,324
51.
Square D Corporation
Group Schneider - 1,322
52.
Newell Manufacturing
1,308
53.
Aalfs Manufacturing
1,276
54.
Mattel Operations
1,259
55.
Borg-Warner Automotive Diversified Trans
1,259
56.
Sola Optical USA, Inc.
1,252
57.
Federal Mogul Wiper Products
1,201
58.
Household Products
1,200
59.
Plaid Clothing Group
1,180
60.
L.G. Philips Display
1,163
61.
Magnetek
1,160
62.
John Deere Consumer
1,150
63.
Copper Range Co.
1,133
64.
Sunbeam
1,130
65.
Sony
1,126
66.
Scientific Atlanta
1,121
67.
Lear Corporation
1,120
68.
Champion Products
1,116
69.
KLH Industries
1,100
70.
SMTC Manufacturing Corporation of Wisconsin
1,085
71.
Zenith Electronics Corporation
1,057
72.
Crown Pacific Limited Partnership
1,050
73.
Flexel, Inc.
1,050
74.
Hamilton Beach/Proctor Silex, Inc.
1,046
75.
Johnson Controls, Inc.
1,036
76.
Gulford Mills
1,032
77.
United States Leather
1,011
78.
Monon Corporation
1,000
79.
Ametek total:
1,000
80.
Singer Furniture
1,000
81.
J.R. Simplot Company
995
82.
Flextronics International
991
83.
Greenwood Mills
991
84.
Georgia Pacific West
966
85.
Celestica Corporation
965
86.
Seton Company
960
87.
Kraft Foods North America
955
88.
Bassett Furniture Industries
954
89.
Grove US, LLC
950
90.
C-Cor.Net
930
91.
Jeanerette Mills
926
92.
Boise Cascade Corporation
918
93.
Strick Corporation
912
94.
Xerox
893
95.
A.O. Smith Electrical Products
878
96.
Smith Corona Corporation
874
97.
Siemens
874
98.
Mitsubishi Consumer Electronics America
870
99.
The Budd Company
868
100.
Cross Creek Apparel
863
Worker Safety Priorities, part 2
From 1982 to 2002, number of governmental investigations of workers' deaths: 1,798
Number of those cases referred to federal or state prosecutors: 196
Number of convictions: 81
Number of convictions resulting in jail time: 16