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Illustration by Holly Randall
Arizona Daily Wildcat
Thursday, April 29, 2004
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Things you always never wanted to know

  • During the next minute, 100 people will die and 240 will be born. The world's population increases by 140 people per minute.

  • The first president born in the 20th century didn't take office until 1961: John F. Kennedy.

  • A French term for wartime propaganda, "bourrage de crane," means "brain-stuffing."

  • One of the great but little-known treasures of New York City is a 40-acre hemlock forest. The grove stands on the banks of the Bronx River, in the New York Botanical Garden.

  • Lightning strikes Earth a hundred times every second, from the 1,800 thunderstorms in progress at any given moment.

  • Troops returning from Gettysburg restored order in the New York City draft riots of 1863. But by then, 1,200 people had been killed.

  • In early Egyptian history, silver was more valued than gold because silver was less often found in nugget form.

  • In one 10-day period late in his reign, the first Ming Emperor, Hung Wu, had to approve 1,660 documents dealing with 3,391 separate matters.

  • "I am so rich that I just wiped out a hundred thousand francs," said Picasso, after making a new picture he didn't like disappear from the canvas.

  • Pierre and Marie Curie refused to take out a patent on the process of making radium. Radium, they declared, belonged to the world - no one had any right to profit from it.

  • The first contraceptive diaphragms - centuries ago - were citrus rinds, like half an orange rind.

  • Because of a rapidly increasing population, the ancient Romans built tenement houses. They were made cheaply, of a kind of concrete, and usually had three stories.


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