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 Text 2                                      
                                          
                    
Exercises                  
Happy Accidents                                  
                   
    Leo                   
  Baekeland increased the amounts of  and  in the                   
   and turned the flame higher than usual.                                   
    During the months of experimentation he had noted that by varying the quantity                
  of each chemical, by changing the intensity of the heat, and by stirring or                
  not stirring, he could obtain mixtures with different properties.  Although         
he could not determine beforehand what kind of mixture he would get, one thing         
was certain: he was on the right                
  track. Eventually 
this process would result in a better varnish.              
                
    Suddenly the mixture began boiling violently, and hot particles were spewed                
  all over the room. Baekeland 
and his assistant dived for cover. As they peered from their shelter, the mixture began to overflow                
  the beaker, gradually stopped boiling, and started to harden.               
                 
    Cautiously Baekeland approached the beaker and turned off the gas. Then he                  
  examined the hard mass that had formed on its sides. Whatever this mysterious                  
  substance was, it was not varnish!                    
    It was a stubborn gray mass. Its very stubbornness, Baekeland realized, was                  
  what would make it valuable. Now a way to shape it had to be found.                    
    Day after day Baekeland and his assistant tried to soften the irregular gray 
mass. But 
regardless of what the used, nothing had any effect on it - neither chemicals, intense heat, pressure,                
  nor electrical current.                     
    Months of unsuccessful experiments followed. Finally a method of molding the                  
  substance was discovered in 1909. The name given this new discovery was ","                  
  and with it began what is one of today's biggest industries:  plastics.                  
                     Leo 
                Baekeland is only one of countless scientists who have set out 
                in search of one thing and through an accident or unforeseen 
                event have discovered something else - often more valuable than 
                what they were seeking.                   
    In 
1754 an English writer by the name of Horace Walpole, coined a word for such 
"happy accidents": serendipity.  It means "the ability to find unexpected things that are often more valuable                
  or agreeable than the things sought after." The word comes from Serendip, the                
  name of a country in the fifth-century fairy tale "The Three Princes of Serendip."                
  In this tale, the three princes were always discovering by chance things they                
  were not seeking.                    
    The history of scientific inquiry is filled with examples of serendipity and                  
  the frontiers of science have been advanced greatly because of it.                    
    Charles Goodyear had spent years trying to find a means of processing rubber                  
  so that it would not turn into  in the summer heat or become stiff and                  
   in the winter cold. By 1839 he knew he was closer to solving the problem                  
  than he had ever been. He was getting fairly good results by adding                  
  to melted crude rubber. But something was still missing.                    
    Then one evening when Charles was showing a bit of rubber to a friend, he accidentally                  
  dropped it onto a hot stove. Disgustedly, Charles dipped a second spoonful of                  
  rubber from the kettle. Then he scraped the "ruined" bit of rubber from the                  
  stove with an iron poker.                    
Suddenly Charles began to dance around the room like a man gone crazy. He dashed                 
  out of the house and thrust the piece of rubber into a snowbank to test it.         
                 
                 
    At last he had found the answer! This 
rubber, mixed with sulphur and then exposed to intense heat, was flexible in 
cold yet firm in heat.                  
The accidental dropping of that bit of rubber led to the development of the                   
  process -  of rubber - which makes thousands of useful rubber                   
  products possible.                     
    One day in the year 1895 an absent-minded professor, Wilhelm von Roentgen,                  
  was working in a laboratory in Germany. When he left the lab, he forgot to disconnect                  
  the electric current to the vacuum tube he had been using in his study of .          
                  
    The professor, whose hobby was photography, had also left an unexposed photographic                  
  plate under a stack of books on a table in the same room. Later he used the                  
  plate to take a picture of some scenery. When he developed the picture, he was                  
  puzzled by a shadow that appeared right in the middle of it. The shadow had                  
  the distinct shape of a key.                    
But how did it get in the middle of the picture? The professor traced his steps                 
  back to the laboratory where he had kept the plate. Oh yes, it had been underneath                 
  that stack of books.                   
    He studied the outline of the key. It was shaped exactly like his office key                  
  which he had misplaced again. Now, where was it this time? Oh, yes. He had used                  
  it as a bookmark.                    
    The professor picked up a book from the table and shook it. Out dropped the                  
  office key.                    
    Then he remembered that the plate had been in the room when the cathode ray                  
  tube had been accidentally left burning.                    
    So, through a series of seemingly unrelated accidents  -- and 
thanks to a very absent-minded professor -- medical science obtained one of its 
most useful tools: X-ray.                   
    In the late 1800's a husband-and-wife team of researchers, Marie and Pierre                  
  Curie, made scientific history with the discovery of radium. This discovery                  
  changed many theories about the atom and the composition of matter. This alone                  
  would have been enough to impress the scientific world and to make the names                  
  of the Curies immortal. Even so, the Curies were not satisfied. True, they had                  
  made a great discovery. But they realized that there was much more to be learned                  
  about this mysterious substance.                    
    One day a friend and fellow scientist came into the Curies’ laboratory and                  
  showed Pierre a burn on his . Radium, he told Pierre, had caused it.                  
  About a week before, he had put a piece of radium in his coat pocket and had                  
  forgotten about it for several hours. The burn had appeared a few days later,                  
  and although it looked as though it should be painful, it did not hurt at all.          
                 
                 
    Why did radium burn the skin? What would happen to skin which had been burned?                  
  Question piled upon question and the Curies had to find the answers. They started                  
  further research which led to the discovery that radium, which could painlessly                  
  burn human flesh, could be used in treating diseases of the skin and body tissue,                  
  especially cancer.                    
    Not only is the history of scientific inquiry filled with stories of such          
"happy accidents" as these, so is the history of the world.                    
Ponce de Leon was looking for  and discovered Florida.         
                 
                 
    Columbus set out in search of a new route to the Indies and discovered North                  
  America.                   
    Even your own life is filled with examples of serendipity. A trip to the beach                   
  - a pleasant thing in itself - could become even more pleasant if while there                   
  you met the person who would eventually become your best friend.                     
                    Serendipity: that Walpole coined a word with such an interesting history is                  
  in itself a very "happy accident."                  
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