Fastfacts


Arizona Daily Wildcat
Friday, March 12, 2004

Things you always never wanted to know

  • St. Francis, who founded the Franciscan religious order in 1209, had no theological training. He was a layman, born rich. But when he gave away all his possessions and embarked on a career of charity and good deeds, his father disowned him.

  • In 1900, the U.S. Treasury showed a surplus of nearly $47 million in income over expenditures. The last time the Federal Budget was balanced was in 1969.

  • The American explorer Richard Byrd, the first man to fly over the North and South Poles, once spent five months alone in Antarctica.

  • The Parisian underground includes a system of pipes 600 miles long that furnishes compressed air to homes and businesses. It serves many purposes, but it was originally built to operate clocks and elevators.

  • In 1852, police estimated that 10,000 abandoned, orphaned and runaway children were roaming the streets of New York City.

  • Fra Filippo Lippi, a Carmelite monk and one of the master painters of the Renaissance, used a nun he ran off with as a model for his famous "Madonna and Child." He also wrote a racy and humorous romance.

  • "Buffalo Bill" Cody claimed he killed 4,862 bison in one season, including 69 in one day alone.

  • Between the mid-1860s and 1883, the bison population in North America was reduced from an estimated 13 million to a few hundred.