Here's the joke, in full: "So Einstein dies. He finds himself in heaven, and he has his violin. He's overjoyed. He loves his violin more than physics. Even more than women. He's excited to find ...
Einstein had a birthday ... Albert liked doing puzzles, reading books about nature, and playing violin. He was fascinated by the invisible magnetic force that makes compasses work.
Like a student cramming for an examination, Scientist Albert Einstein shut himself up in a room of Adolph Lewisohn’s New York home one afternoon last week and practiced three hours on his violin.
Einstein played the violin. At 5 years old, his mother signed him up for lessons. At first, he didn't enjoy playing at all, according to the American Nuclear Society. But after discovering Mozart ...
Einstein wasn’t always considered a genius ... but I do know that I get most joy in life out of my violin.” 26. “One thing I have learned in a long life: that all our science, measured ...
“A table, a chair, a bowl of fruit and a violin,” remarked Albert Einstein, who surely would have enjoyed fantasy football if it was around in the 1930s. “What else does a man need to be happy?
Mundaka; Molecules (Dr. Einstein's Spin Movement I); Rainbows (Dr. Einstein's Spin Movement II); The Expanse (Dr. Einstein's Spin III); The End of the Internet. Peter Sprague: guitars; Bob Magnusson: ...
Einstein also developed an interest in music. Encouraged to pick up an instrument by his mother (who was a pianist), he started playing the violin when he was six, though he didn’t start to ...