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- Newsgroups: alt.gorets
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!newstand.syr.edu!rsholmes
- From: rsholmes@rodan.syr.EDU (Rich Holmes)
- Subject: Re: V.P.-Elect Al Goret
- Message-ID: <RSHOLMES.92Nov21145410@rodan.syr.EDU>
- In-reply-to: tgrupe@watnxt11.ucr.edu's message of 18 Nov 92 21:54:36 GMT
- Organization: Syracuse University
- References: <24031@galaxy.ucr.edu>
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 92 15:08:37 EST
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <24031@galaxy.ucr.edu> tgrupe@watnxt11.ucr.edu (Todd E. Grupe) writes:
-
- >Is there any truth to the rumor that the future Vice-President changed his
- >name from Albert Goret to avoid the obvious negative connotations?
-
- No, it's more complicated. In 1938 International Business Mammals
- introduced the Model 991 General Operational Rodent, Electronic, or
- GORE, answering the need on the part of American businesses to have a
- family pet that could be used to back up multi-megabyte disk drives
- (which did not yet exist, nor would they for quite some time; this was
- not the last time IBM made the mistake of relying on vaporware.) In
- 1976 they introduced the smaller Multitasking Gorette, later shortened
- to Goret. After only 37 hours on the market the goret was recalled and
- all inventory destroyed, for reasons never made clear by IBM's Gore
- Division chief, Hiram Braxalt, who died in 1977 in a tragic accident
- involving a 15-ton fork lift and several bowls of grape Jell-O.
- Several units were never recovered, however, and the rest is history.
- But as for the VP-elect: his father, Eddie Albert, named his son Gore
- because he looked like an IBM GORE as an infant (and still does, but
- that's another story). Upon entering politics, Gore Albert changed his
- name to Albert Gore to fend off association with Eddie Albert, then
- embroiled in the so-called "Tennesee gerbil incident" that nearly cost
- him his career.
-
- The above is paraphrased from the book I'VE CREATED A GORET: THE
- INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MAMMAL STORY by Prince.
-
- --
- - Rich Holmes
- "In general, the dance music of P.D.Q. Bach -- although we have no
- documentary evidence of this -- suggests that one of his legs was
- shorter than the other." -- Prof. Peter Schickele
-