
3. Anyone in Sweden can get a copy of anyone else’s tax returns and find out how much money they make. The only catch is that the person whose returns you request will get a message telling them that you did.
4. The “New York Times” decided to start running a crossword puzzle after Pearl Harbor was bombed, to give people a distraction and a way to occupy themselves.
5. The Department of Defense was originally called the National Military Establishment, but they changed the name after two years because the abbreviation “N.M.E.” sounded too much like “enemy.”