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・ Sydney Nicholls
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Sydney Omarr
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・ Sydney Packet (1826–37)


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Sydney Omarr : ウィキペディア英語版
Sydney Omarr
Sydney Omarr (5 August 1926 – 2 January 2003), born Sidney Kimmelman in Philadelphia was an American astrologer and an astrology consultant to the rich and famous. His daily ''Sun Sign Horoscope'' column appeared in more than 200 newspapers and his annual forecast books for each sign of the zodiac sold over 50 million copies.〔

== Early life ==
Omarr was born into a middle class Jewish family. His father worked as a grocer. At elementary school, he had a strong interest in magic performances, and he performed at talent shows and magic shops.
Omarr decided to change his name when aged 15, he saw a movie called "Shanghai Gesture" starring Victor Mature who portrayed a character named Omar, with one "r." He had a strong interest in numerology, which led him to change Sidney to Sydney, and add an extra "r" to Omarr.〔 From this interest in numerology he wrote several books, including ''Thought Dial,'' on the topic, but was unable to earn a living as a numerologist so he pursued to astrology.〔
During World War II, Omarr aged 17, joined the Army, he claimed he chose April 4, 1944 as the day to sign due to the numerological benefit of a date composed of 'all fours.' Approximately a year later he was transferred to the Air Force at a base located in Ontario, California, approximately 35 miles east of Los Angeles and referred to as 'Camp Hollywood.' Omarr's claims that he was posted to Okinawa within a year of joining the Army, are contradicted by the history of the Battle for Okinawa, which began in April, 1945, and lasted until mid-June 1945 after massive casualties at the Battle of Okinawa. There was no "base" on Okinawa for any Armed Forces Radio Programing until Japan had surrendered. Therefore, his claims that he was able to specialize in astrology with his weekly Armed Forces Radio Program ''Sydney Omarr's Almanac'', broadcast throughout the Pacific Theatre are highly suspect. He attempted to predict the results of various sporting contests and events. After gaining transfer to Camp Ontario in April 1945, Omarr was profiled by ''Wings'', the Air Force's official counterpart to ''Stars and Stripes''. In this semi-satirical profile, Omarr is quoted as predicting the Japanese defeat in "mid-August, 1945." Although the author of this piece subsequently stated that though this quote was apocryphal and was part of the general satire, Omarr subsequently used it to promote his astrology career, ultimately gaining an influential column at the ''Los Angeles Times''. Omarr also claimed he wrote the horoscope column for the U.S. Army's ''Stars and Stripes'' newspaper. .

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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