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Welcome back to this month’s edition of Things I Learned, after a one-month hiatus (during which I was occupied working on my dissertation).
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Things I learned
- The founding date of the University of Oxford is unknown (source)
- The prime launch angle to shoot a shotput is 36-38 degrees. The prime launch angle to hit a home run is 28-30 degrees (source and source)
- James Madison was the last president to personally lead troops into battle in his role as Commander In Chief.
- In the US, 34% of husbands and wives are within 1 year of each other. Just 14% of wives are more than 1 year older than their husbands.
- Philippa Foot, the influential contemporary philosopher who first proposed the trolley problem, was the grandaughter of Grover Cleveland (source)
- One penny costs more than three pennies to make and distribute (source)
- The word “ok” originated as a comical mispelling of “oll korrect” (all correct). (source)
- The US Government pays $3 billion per day in interest expenses (source)
- There are a total of two escalators in Wyoming (source).
- Sales of the “honey deuce” drink — a beverage sold only at the US Open — account for 2% of all annual revenue made by the United States Tennis Association (source)
- Humpty dumpy is never explicitly described as being an egg. (source)
- Kareem Adbul-Jabbar, the player with the second most points of any NBA player in history, made a total of one three-point shot in his career. (source)
- Wampum shells — beads made from shell of quahog clams — were legal tender in America and were used as currency for more than 100 years (source).
- The title “Your Majesty” is typically reserved for the King or Queen; “Your Highness” is reserved for additional members of the royal family (e.g. prince/princesses). (source).
Reflections on the Previous Blog Post
- I always appreciate feedback from my readers, including — as last month — when a number of readers reached out after last month’s blog post to offer corrections on some of the facts. To formally correct the record:
- A panenka is not any kick to the center of a goal (as I had written), but rather a specific type of kick where the ball is chipped quite softly to the center. (I also learned that there a number of eponymous soccer goals including a Trivela (when you bend it with the outside of your foot mimicking the effect of when you’d curl it with the opposite foot) and an Olimpico (goal directly off of a corner kick)/
- The purple dye after which Phoenicia is named does not come from the shell of the murex snail (as I had written) but in fact come from the mucus membrane and glands.