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140 YEARS AGO: CURIOUSER AND CURIOUSER
Mathematician Charles Dodgson, 33—a.k.a. Lewis Carroll—publishes Alice's Adventures Under Ground in November 1865. His story, first told to 10-year-old Alice Liddell in 1862, of a girl's capers with such quirky fellows as a hookah-smoking caterpillar and a mock turtle—"deliciously absurd conceptions," says a critic—is an unexpected success. Today, Alice is the world's most quoted book after the Bible and Shakespeare's works. Dodgson dies in 1898 at age 65.
25 YEARS AGO: HOT SHOT
It is the answer to the question of the decade: after eight months of suspense, on November 21, 1980, the world finally learns "who shot J.R." Triggered by TV's most famous cliffhanger, which left J.R. Ewing (Larry Hagman) of prime time soap "Dallas" felled by bullets from an unknown assailant, 83 million Americans, 250 million viewers in 57 other countries—and bookies everywhere—tune in to see sister-in-law Kristin hold the smoking gun. It's TV’s most watched show until the finale of "M*A*S*H" claims the record in 1983.


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