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Reply To: | BP - Dwell time 5 minutes. |
Date: | Thu, 11 Feb 1999 16:01:06 -0500 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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Could this be used in restoration project?
---------------------- Forwarded by Pam Blythe on 02/11/99 04:05 PM
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What is Silly Putty and where did it come from?
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Most kids know about Silly Putty, that stretchy, bouncy stuff that
comes in a hollow plastic egg. It's a mixture of boric acid and
silicone oil, originally invented in 1945 by engineers at General
Electric as a substitute for rubber.
The strange, new stuff, first known as "gupp," was not a very good
rubber replacement because it was too soft and sticky. No one quite
knew what to do with it, but it was cool to play with, so some of the
scientists took some home or kept a lump on their desk at GE.
It was not until 1949 that an unemployed advertisement writer named
Peter Hodgson discovered a lump of "gupp" at a toy store in New Haven.
The store's owner had gotten it from a GE engineer, but wasn't
interested in marketing it.
It was packaged by Hodgson as "Nutty Putty" and then renamed "Silly
Putty." Now it's everywhere -- it's even been to the moon.
Hodgson said, "Silly Putty appeals to people of superior intellect":
http://www.sirds.com/sillyputty/
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