Fast Facts


Arizona Daily Wildcat
Monday, November 7, 2005

Things you’ve always never wanted to know

  • Alcoholics are twice as likely to confess a drinking problem to a computer than to a doctor.

  • “Soldier’s disease” is a term for morphine addiction. The Civil War produced more than 400,000 morphine addicts.

  • Levi Hutchins of Concord, N.H., invented the first alarm clock in 1787. It only rang at 4 a.m. because that’s what time he got up.

  • President Ulysses S. Grant was once arrested during his term of office. He was convicted of exceeding the Washington speed limit on his horse and was fined $20.

  • When commercial telephone service was introduced between New York and London in 1927, the first three minutes of a call cost $75.

  • In the 1936 Swathing Cup Match in table tennis, Alex Ehrlich of Poland and Paneth Farcas of Romania volleyed for two hours, 12 minutes on the opening serve.

  • On a hot afternoon, the atmosphere draws up 5.5 billion gallons of water an hour from the Gulf of Mexico.

  • The striped skunk can fire its musk stream accurately for up to 12 feet — even farther if there’s a cooperative downwind.

  • The junk mail Americans receive in one day could produce enough energy to heat 250,000 homes.

  • Most of the 3,500 known species of cockroaches flee from danger, often exceeding a scale 200 mph. One species can roll up into a ball when threatened.

  • Muhammad Ali was the composer of numerous self-admiring verses — “Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.” He was once invited to lecture on poetry at Oxford University.

  • An average snake is capable of eating an animal four times larger than the width of its own head.

  • Attila the Hun was a dwarf. Aesop, Gregory of Tours, Charles III of Naples, Pasha Hussain and Pepin the Short were all less than 3 1/2 feet tall.

  • A fully loaded supertanker traveling at a normal speed of 16 knots needs at least 20 minutes to stop.