10 things we didn't know last week

Snippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.
1. Pizza was known as “Italian Welsh rarebit” in 1950s Britain.
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2. Using a gas-fired patio heater for just one hour can waste enough energy to make 400 cups of tea, according to Friends of the Earth.
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3 Laurence Olivier and Tintin's creator Herge were born on the same day.
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4. A swarm of bees can ground a Boeing 737.
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5. On the first day of filming Star Wars in the deserts of Tunisia, the country experienced its first major rainstorm in 50 years and a rest day had to be called.
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6. Sharks have virgin births.
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7. Articles of 50,000 words - parliamentary reports in particular - were common in the Times in the early 1890s, just as the first tabloid newspapers came into being.
8. Japanese whalers in the 17th Century buried the foetuses of the pregnant whales they caught in a special graveyard facing out to sea.
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9. One in four house sales fall through.
10. Captive elephants often don’t know how to look after their young because they don’t work on instinct – in the wild, calves are looked after by the herd and this is how young females learn mothering skills.
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(Sources, where not linked: 7. A Tabloid is Born, BBC Four, 23 May; 9. Which? online.)
Seen 10 things? Send us a picture to use next week. Thanks to Angela Murton for this week's picture of 10 limpets at Aberdour Bay, Scotland).




With the bank holiday weekend looming, opportunities to siphon off a little work time into more frivolous pursuits are proving irresistible. Not wishing to disappoint, the Monitor is reviving – ever so briefly – a cherished old strand: the Friday Challenge.



MM: Pitiful apologies have been squeezed out of the journalist responsible for cropping this picture. The Monitor is happy to present the image in its full, un-edited, Director's Cut proportions.



