Wikipedia:Recent additions/2007/August
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This is a record of material that was recently featured on the Main Page as part of Did you know (DYK). Recently created new articles, greatly expanded former stub articles and recently promoted good articles are eligible; you can submit them for consideration.
Archives are generally grouped by month of Main Page appearance. (Currently, DYK hooks are archived according to the date and time that they were taken off the Main Page.) To find which archive contains the fact that appeared on Did you know, go to article's talk page and follow the archive link in the DYK talk page message box.
Did you know...
31 August 2007
- 20:42, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that French artist Antoine Berjon's variations on flower painting included a still life with a shark's head (pictured)?
- ...that from 1937-1942?
- ...that a sports complex?
- ...that Charles K. Landis attracted residents to his new city of Vineland, New Jersey to clear land and grow grapes, which were purchased by Thomas Bramwell Welch, founder of Welch's, to make "unfermented wine"?
- ...that James W. Parker spent nine years in the Comancheria searching for his family?
- ...that the Kentucky General Assembly responded to unpopular rulings by Justice William Owsley by dissolving the Court of Appeals on which he served?
- ...that the 1940s experimental aircraft Vought V-173 featured an unorthodox "all-wing" design consisting of a flat, somewhat disk-shaped body with a pair of three-bladed propellers?
- 12:27, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Ladoga Canal (pictured) was constructed at the behest of Peter the Great and was one of the first canals created in Russia?
- ...that Crystal Grottoes is the only show cave in the U.S. state of Maryland?
- ...that U.S. President Gary S. Becker and baseball player Joe Garagiola were all School Safety Patrolmembers?
- ...that John Paul IIprior to his 1984 visit to Canada?
- ...that the Sovereign Order of Malta?
- ...that Mormon abstinence from drinking caffeinated beverages goes back to a 1918 Improvement Era article by Frederick J. Pack?
- ...that Thalassina anomala, a mud lobster found in Indo-Pacific mangrove swamps, is used in Thailand in powdered form or steeped in alcohol as a remedy for asthma?
- 06:23, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Thomas J. Ryan (pictured) was the prosecutor at the court-martial of American naval officer Charles B. McVay III, who had been his friend for 25 years?
- ...that the Deaf community for its fight against an anti-American Sign Language state bill endorsed by Alexander Graham Bell?
- ...that Eastern school whiting caught along the coast of Queensland are frozen whole, shipped to Thailand for processing and then sold in Japan?
- ...that the George III of the United Kingdomin 1769?
- ...that the first labor investigations by a United States government body were prompted by , during the mid-nineteenth century?
- ...that August 1991?
- ...that Noble Threewitt worked for 75 years training Thoroughbred racehorses before retiring on his 96th birthday?
30 August 2007
- 23:51, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the 1905 Great Seimas of Vilnius (program pictured) was the first national congress in Lithuania, which attempted to outline Lithuania’s autonomy within the Russian Empire?
- ...that according to the 2R hypothesis, the genomes of modern vertebrates are the result of two rounds of genome duplication hundreds of millions of years ago?
- ...that the banning of the Gautama Buddha led to civil unrest which toppled Ngo Dinh Diem's regime?
- ...that on the death of Governor George Madison, Kentucky lieutenant governor Gabriel Slaughter was refused the title of "governor" by a hostile state legislature and was referred to as "acting governor" for the duration of his three-year administration?
- ...that Edwin Sherbon Hills, a well-known Australian geologist, had at first chosen undergraduate courses with the idea of becoming a chemist and took geology as a suitable ancillary?
- ...that McGregor Lake, a man-made reservoir in Southern Alberta, receives most of its water from canals linked to the Bow River despite being in the Oldman River drainage basin?
- ...that the Markonahalli Dam across the River Shimsha in India had to be partly demolished in order to prevent excess water from flooding the villages?
- 17:35, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that James Turner Morehead (pictured) was the first Governor of Kentuckyto be born in that state?
- ...that Orator Hunt's presentation of the first petition in support of women's suffrage was received in Parliament with ribald laughter?
- ...that the Merina monarchy of Madagascar?
- ...that popular Turkish fusion band Yansımalar has recorded an album with Erkan Oğur, the inventor of the first fretless classical guitar?
- ...that in 1995 Charlotte Observer?
- ...that Isaac Goodnow, a Free-Stater from New England, helped combine two settlements in Kansas Territory to form a new town named 'Boston', which was later re-named Manhattan?
- ...that a rock-cut basin may eventually form a circular holed stone, and passing through the hole was considered to have healing properties according to legend?
- ...that during the ?
- 10:20, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Squilla mantis (pictured) is the only native stomatopod to be fished for on a commercial scale in the Mediterranean Sea?
- ...that Michelle Rocca, longtime girlfriend of singer Van Morrison, was the first woman to appear on one of Morrison's album covers since his then-wife Janet Minto in 1971?
- ...that Mormonsentiments?
- ...that Raymond of Saint-Gilles in the Tower of Davidand was then escorted out of the city with his bodyguard?
- ...that the Florida Everglades?
- ...that coins?
- 03:55, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Singapore Power Building (pictured) was influenced by Gerhad M. Kallmann's Boston City Hall and Le Corbusier's Sainte Marie de La Tourette?
- ...that ping pong ballsin case of a crash at sea?
- ...that despite declines in production in recent years, Victoria still produces almost 19.5% of Australia's crude oil?
- ...that actress, writer and producer Exes and Ohs without an agent?
- ...that brahmins whose origins are said to be outside India?
- ...that far right ideologues, has been put to trial for the Piazza Fontana bombing, which was originally believed to have been perpetrated by anarchists?
- ...that before Rhône River with his Carthaginian forces to battle the Gauls, he sent a detachment under Hanno, son of Bomilcar to cross at a different point upriver for an ambush?
29 August 2007
- 21:26, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that painter Thomas Luny (example of his work pictured) created over 2,000 artistic works during the last 30 years of his life despite suffering from arthritis in both hands?
- ...that Federal Farmerpamphlets?
- ...that 2001 XFL Draft, the only draft the league ever held?
- ...that sand dunes?
- ...that 1904–1905season?
- ...that the Prussian Nicola Marschall was the designer of the Confederate States of America's first flag, the Stars & Bars?
- ...that Houston for the purpose of building the first private space station, to be called the Industrial Space Facility?
- ...that a week before Charles Dickens, Jr?
- 08:28, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Grand Choral Synagogue (pictured) in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1880, at a time when most Russian Jews were forced to live in the Pale of Settlement?
- ...that Jane Storms was the first female war correspondentin American history?
- ...that the Dead Sea scrolls accused the "Wicked Priest" of neglecting to circumcisethe "foreskin of his heart"?
- ...that the Egyptian Pyramid of Sahure and surrounding complex contained an estimated 10,000 m2 of fine relief carving?
- ...that Admiral tactical nuclear weapons during the Second Taiwan Strait Crisis opposed American military intervention in Vietnam?
- ...that British India to denote soldiers of the Indian Army in the South-East Asian theatre of World War II?
- ...that the Muslim enemy in the Holy Land?
- 02:27, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the museum of the long-demolished Memel Castle, Lithuania (pictured) is located in an underground chamber?
- ...that Baron Fleet Admiral and Chief of the Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff in the pre-war Imperial Japanese Navywithout ever having actually commanded a ship?
- ...that Charles Scott served as chief of intelligence for George Washington during his later campaigns in the American Revolutionary War?
- ...that Holbeach House served as the theatre for the final battle of the conspirators of the Gunpowder Plot, in which the conspirators undid themselves after they accidentally detonated their gunpowderstore?
- ...that Bargil Pixner's identification of the biblical location of Bethsaida was based on artifacts found in trenches used by Syria in the Six-Day War?
- ...that the piaohao and the qianzhuang were financial institutions in ancient China?
- ...that 12th-century troubadour Raimon Vidal de Bezaudun wrote a grammatical manual for Occitan poetry that influenced Dante Alighieri's De Vulgari Eloquentia, justifying the use of Italian vernacular?
28 August 2007
- 20:27, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Kiev Pechersk Lavra (pictured) are among the Seven Wonders of Ukraine?
- ...that Miran, an ancient oasis town in the Taklamakan Desert in present day Xinjiang, was also a thriving centre of Buddhism on the Silk Road, with many monasteries and stupas?
- ...that the Kirby Smith during the American Civil War?
- ...that one of the oldest captive alligators in Europe was named Čabulītis, which means sweet and tender creature in Latvian?
- ...the first and last verses to the song "twelve bar blues?
- ...that a controversy about whether the real name of the first Fourth Republic was Evan or Evans Enweremled to his removal from office?
- 12:25, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that a zibellino (pictured), the jewelled pelt of a marten or sable, is a women's fashion accessory popular in the later 15th and 16th centuries?
- ...that Kentucky governor Christopher Greenup was one of Kentucky's first two Congressmen and was an original trustee of Transylvania University?
- ...that during the ?
- ...that the ?
- ...that Endangered Species Act?
- ...that a survey in 2001 of the New South Wales- Queensland border in Australia found an error of 200 metres (656 ft) in the original survey, indicating that the town of Jennings, New South Wales should actually be in Queensland?
- ...that soon after German reunification, the Greifswald Nuclear Power Plant in the former East Germany was shut down due to conflicting technical requirements with the West?
- 06:03, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the ship breaking (pictured) industry in Sitakunda began when a 20,000-ton ship was accidentally beached by a tidal bore in 1965?
- ...that during his administration, Kentucky governor William J. Fields forbade drinking alcohol and dancing in the Governor's Mansion?
- ...that University of Oregon athletic director Leo Harris gained the right to use Donald Duck as the school's mascot through an informal handshake deal he made with Walt Disney in 1947?
- ...that 20th century attorney Los Angeles that he earned the nickname"Mr. Los Angeles"?
- ...that in 1835, Warren A. Cowdery, an early leader in the Latter Day Saint movement, accused a local Quorum of the Twelve of neglecting their fund-raising activities while serving as Mormon missionaries?
- ...that the Red Summer of 1919?
- ...that influential fashion shows?
27 August 2007
- 23:10, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that to make space for passenger seats in the racing cars used in the TVR Tuscan Challenge(pictured), the fuel tank has to be moved from the driver's side to the rear of the car?
- ...that Héctor López was the first Panamanian-born Major League Baseball player to play in the World Series with the New York Yankees?
- ...that before the 17th century, it was believed that all organisms grew from miniature versions of themselves that had existed since the beginning of creation?
- ...that Italian Mare Nostrum, as by 1942 Italy controlled nearly two-thirds of the sea's area?
- ...that African American to sit on the Kentucky Supreme Court, injured himself playing basketball on Election Day in 1983 with future NBA star Allan Houston?
- ...that the northernmost miles of pavement of the Kettle Moraine Scenic Drive in Wisconsin were part of the original track circuit for Road America?
- ...that the 2006 Japanese film Hula Girls is set in the coal mining town of Iwaki in the 1960s when a Hawaiian spa resort was built to resolve the community's faltering fortunes?
- ...that the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the Northwest, a precursor to the modern day Big Ten Conference, survived for only two seasons of college football competition before disbanding?
- 16:41, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that male Shortnose sturgeon (pictured) breed annually and live to age 30, while females breed triennially and live to age 67?
- ...that Puerto Rican third baseman Félix Torres, who only played three Major League seasons, topped the home run charts in the 1960 Caribbean Series?
- ...that the automatic tide signalling system at Irvine harbour, North Ayrshire, invented and patented by its harbourmaster Martin Boyd, is probably unique?
- ...that the dialogue Desiderius Erasmus, involves Pope Julius II trying to convince Peter to allow him into heaven by threats of armed force and excommunication?
- ...that Palestinianpopular heritage?
- ...that after the British took control of the Kannada literature?
- ...that the Brazil's 1838 Balaiada uprising was named after the job of one of its leaders, a basketmaker?
- ...that Edward A. Halbach was the first official president of the Astronomical League?
- ...that in his 1915 Augustus O. Stanleyadvocated a one dollar tax for every dog a person owned?
- ...that Jagannath Temple in Puri?
- ...that the ?
- 08:24, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that of the twenty signatories of the Act of Independence of Lithuania (pictured) in 1918, six were sent to prison or executed, and six died in exile?
- ...that a pub in Old Whittington was the shelter for three men in 1688 who were plotting the replacement of James II of England with a Protestant foreigner?
- ...that 1965 Records was founded by James Endeacott, who also originally discovered The Libertines and The Strokes?
- ...that Sir Cecil Hunter Rodwell was awarded the Queen's South Africa Medal for bravery in the Second Boer War and went on to serve as Governor of Southern Rhodesia?
- ...that W. H. Auden's poem "In Praise of Limestone" has been called topographic, sui generis, and a "postmodern pastoral"?
- ...that the Silpathorn Award is given to significant living Thai contemporary artists and that the name of the award means "upholder of art"?
- ...that Catholic priest witch trialsin early modern Europe were not required as witchcraft didn't exist?
- ...that Joseph "Blueskin" Blake, accomplice of notorious 18th century thief Jack Sheppard, grievously wounded the self-styled "Thief-Taker General" Jonathan Wild outside the courtroom where he was subsequently convicted of burglary and sentenced to death, hastening Wild's fall from power?
- ...that children up to the age of five can find it difficult to distinguish between television programmes and toy advertising campaigns?
- 02:16, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Queen Elizabeth II?
- ...that prior to the development of binoculars, bird collections, collections consisting of birds and parts of their anatomy, were the dominant method of bird observation and study among ornithologists?
- ...that a picture of Mary Ann Bevan, "the ugliest woman in the world", featured on a birthday card until a complaint led to its withdrawal?
- ...that Eid ul-Fitr?
- ...that Sooriyakanda mass grave is alleged to contain 300 bodies of school children but only few were recovered?
- ...that Kazys Lozoraitis was independent Lithuania's first ambassador to the Holy See and to the Sovereign Military Order of Malta?
- ...that the plural marriage?
- ...the oldest stud farm in India, Kunigal stud farm, was used by Tipu Sultan for breeding horses for cavalry regiments to fight the British?
- ...that the communist Poland?
26 August 2007
- 20:01, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Howe Yoon Chong played a key role in establishing Singapore's Mass Rapid Transit system, Changi Airport (pictured) and public housing?
- ...that in 1973, Civil Service, from closure?
- ...that after publishing his Three Days Before the Shooting?
- ...that Father Milwaukee Archdiocese and Michał Kruszka?
- ...that main characters?
- ...that in 1967, a group of Dictator Novelgenre?
- ...that Charles Chilton was the first person to be awarded a D.Sc. degree in New Zealand?
- ...that hurricane since Hurricane Davidin 1979?
- 13:46, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that a Saint Aphrodisius, a semi-legendary saint said to have come from Egypt?
- ...that North Dakota's location in the Upper Midwest allows it to experience some of the most extreme weather in the United States?
- ...that the name Flying fox refers to bats as well as a freshwater algae-eating aquarium fish?
- ...that CEO of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer from 1972 until 1982, was wounded at the Battle of the Bulge and received a Purple Heartfor his injuries?
- ...that after spending seven years traveling across the Robert Rundle was allowed to establish a missionin 1847, only to be forced to leave a year later due to health issues?
- ...that the common namesin the aquarium trade?
- ...that the 13th-century ?
- ...that the closing pitcher for the 2004 Major League Baseball season, despite the fact that Nathan only had converted one savein five opportunities?
- ...that the leader of the Dick Cheney protests at Brigham Young University refused an offer to appear on The Daily Show, out of a concern that the show would poke fun at the university?
- 01:33, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that during Louis Gonzaga Mendez, Jr. (pictured) parachuted behind enemy lines to lead an attack that captured the town of Prétot, Franceleading the main Plaza of the town to be named "La Place du Colonel Mendez"?
- ...that USA?
- ...that members of Sub-Carpathian Reformed Church were persecuted by communists in the Soviet Union and were sent to Gulag labour camps in Siberia?
- ...that the Rugia, maintained their native paganism, its ritual, temple, and priesthood, well into the twelfth century?
- ...that Second World War, having shot down eight German aircraft, including three during one mission?
- ...that the 14 remaining children of the in November of 1942?
25 August 2007
- 16:20, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Nobel Peace Prize recipient Jane Addams was born in the house at the John H. Addams Homestead (pictured)?
- ...that the uniformly fine quality of surviving Lysippean bronze Hermes Fastening his Sandalindicates that it stood high in Roman esteem?
- ...that the neo-Nazi German Alternative party was banned in 1992 after the group was associated with an arson attack on an asylum seekerrefuge?
- ...that , was sunk in 1943?
- ...that in the Celts, a fairy path is a route taken by these supernatural beings, usually in a straight line and between sites of traditional significance, such as Stone Agemonuments?
- ...that in 1989, some 300,000 people created a 300 Act Zluky?
- ...that the rubber?
- 10:21, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Salvadoris known as the "Golden Church", because its interior, from floor to ceiling, is covered with intricate gold-leaf carvings?
- ...that social activism?
- ...that the Bosnian Serb from Dubrovnik, Sava Vladislavich?
- ...that during the battalions, later known as "Bulfin's force," that was instrumental in stopping the Germanadvance?
- ...that the tribes to Omaha, Nebraska?
- ...that Fr. St. Phillip Neri church bombingonly to disappear a week later?
- ...that the site of the hermitage of Ginés de la Jara retained its reputation for holiness even during Spain's Moorish occupation?
- ...that the popular Happyslip to her Filipino mother's mispronunciation of half slip?
- 03:16, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that loose wheel nut indicators (pictured) are fitted to vehicle lug nuts to allow mechanics to identify loose nuts before the wheel falls off?
- ...that Stalinist purgein 1949?
- ...that British body snatchers, alerting the authorities while claiming to be getting change for a £50 note?
- ...that a Justine Ezarikviewed more than 3 million times?
- ...that Waddams Grove was the first settlement in Stephenson County, Illinois?
- ...that Malcolm X, James Brown, and the current President of Brazil Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva all worked as shoeshiners when they were young?
- ...that the medieval kingdom of Alania controlled the most practicable route through the Greater Caucasus?
- ...that Oswald Tesimond, involved in the Gunpowder Plot, escaped severe punishment by stowing away on a cargo ship ferrying dead pigs to Calais?
24 August 2007
- 19:32, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Shushanik Kurghinian (pictured) was the first revolutionary female poet in Armenian literature?
- ...that German leaders of the World Confederation of Labour were sentenced to Nazi concentration camps in the 1930s for their political opposition to the growth of authoritarian governments in Europe?
- ...that largest loss of historic buildings ever from the National Register of Historic Places?
- ...that the S.S. Christopher Columbus, the only whaleback passenger liner ever built, carried 1.8 million passengers to and from the World's Columbian Expositionin a single season?
- ...that the Romanian politician and socialite Pantazi Ghica was identified as the "black-faced, hunchbacked and greedy" person depicted, alongside other liberals, in one of Mihai Eminescu's most famous poems?
- ...that when Democratic congressman A. Jeff McLemore opposed President Woodrow Wilson over the United States' entry into World War I, the Texas legislature redrew the state's congressional districts in 1917 to force him to run against another incumbent?
- 06:23, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the , which were marketed as "Gourmet Elixirs"?
- ...that the Vladimirka, a road by which convicts marched to the Siberian katorga, is mentioned in the works of Herzen, Nekrasov and Dostoevsky?
- ...that ?
- ...that post office was built in his hometown of Hyde Park?
- ...that Song Dynasty?
- ...that despite being Queen Victoria, John Partridge's career plummeted after a dispute with Ramsay Richard Reinagle over altering one of his paintings?
23 August 2007
- 23:11, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that public support for the revitalization of Esther Short Park (pictured), located in Vancouver, Washington, increased in 1997 after the mayor was attacked by a transient in the park?
- ...that The Atlantic Monthly when publisher David G. Bradley purchased poniesfor Goldberg's children?
- ...that although an Iron Workers union member planted the dynamite in the 1910 Los Angeles Times bombing, the 21 people who died in the explosion and fire were all workers and not managers?
- ...that Benjamin F. Butler?
- ...that Major League Baseball relief pitcher Ramón Peña, younger brother of All-Star catcher Tony Peña, allowed no home runs to any of the 88 batters he faced despite 6.00 career earned run average?
- ...that raids on South Vietnam's Buddhist pagodasas a pretext to crush protests over religious discrimination?
- 17:00, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Arkhyz is the site of a former world's largest telescope and the oldest functioning church (pictured) in Russia?
- ...that protein sequence data to reconstruct the evolutionary history of hemoglobin and called this the first "hard evidence of Darwinianevolution"?
- ...that American musician Wade Mainer is credited with bridging the gap between old-time mountain music and Bluegrass?
- ...that the Young Christian Workers movement, founded by Joseph Cardijn, had 2 million members in 69 countries at the time of his death?
- ...that during the war correspondencecovering the on-going naval battles?
- ...that the Austrian army?
- ...that the Rhinebeck, New York?
- ...that the song "I Am a Child of God" is related to a phrase used in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as a declaration of a basic belief of Mormonism?
- 08:58, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that approximately 10,000 people were sent to an emergency field hospital at a quarantine station on Ninoshima (pictured), an island near Hiroshima, following the atomic bombing in 1945?
- ...that the open habitat of grassy balds in the forested Appalachian Mountains may be relicts of grazing pressure from Pleistocene megaherbivores?
- ...that Eleanor Davies-Colley was the first woman admitted as fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England?
- ...that Apartheid predates the traditional demarcation of the National Party's1948 rise to power?
- ...that Al Hopkins and his group The Hill Billies originated the term "hillbilly music", and were the first to play country music for a United States president and the first to play country in a film?
- ...that as an Illinois State Senator James M. Strode introduced legislation authorizing a loan used to begin construction on the Illinois and Michigan Canal?
- ...that the Major League Baseball pitcher Carl Zamloch was also a professional magician?
- ...that a ditch excavated to fend off marauding Maratha soldiers, was filled up when the city was never attacked, to form a road from Shyambazar's five-point crossing?
- 02:55, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the façade?
- ...that organ transplantation?
- ...that Les Chouans, Honoré de Balzac's novel about royalist forces in France, was the first book he published without using a nom de plume?
- ...that in the PeopleSupport gave their employees job titlessuch as gladiator, crusader, and marketing mechanic?
- ...that the book botanist Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius, was described by E. J. H. Corneras "the most magnificent treatment of palms that has been produced"?
- ...that 159 soldiers of the Malay Regiment fought against a 13,000-strong Japanese force to defend a hill position in Singapore’s Kent Ridge Park?
22 August 2007
- 20:41, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Pestarella tyrrhena (pictured) has been used as baitby fishermen for over 200 years?
- ...that while the first union was founded in 1927, Tanzania did not have a significant labor movement until the 1940s?
- ...that several universities now offer courses on the politics of Harry Potter?
- ...the first edition of Patience and Sarah, winner of the 1971 Stonewall Book Award, was self-published and all copies sold by the author after six publishers rejected it for not being marketable?
- ...that in group theory, a word is any written product of group elements and their inverses?
- ...that the ?
- 13:32, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Thomas Wilson (pictured), a whaleback freighter, was the last such freighter built without hatch coamings?
- ...that the construction of the Rondout-West Strand Historic District?
- ...that Takakia is a genus of moss first discovered in the Himalayas in 1861, but no fertile plants were known until collected in 1993 in the Aleutian Islands?
- ...that Spanish-American War, were authorized by the U.S. Congress to fight in France in 1917, but President Woodrow Wilsonrefused?
- ...that African American village ever founded in Nebraska, existed for only 29 years?
- 06:28, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Kentucky lieutenant governor John W. Stevenson (pictured) ascended to the governorship following the death of sitting governor John L. Helm just five days into his term?
- ...that Armenian Genocide, the subject of his 1921 book In the Land of Blood and Tears?
- ...that the first customer of the NBC's Today Show, crashed into a pole in the parking lot?
- ...that the Deutschland class pre-dreadnought battleships?
- ...that while , uses it?
21 August 2007
- 22:26, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the famous portrait "Thomas Lawrence depicts poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning's aunt?
- ...that 62 people died in a fire on the sets of the ?
- ...that A Tragedy by singer and composer Theo Marzials is frequently referred to as the worst poem ever written in the English language?
- ...that six months after his nomination James W. Stephenson was forced to withdraw from the 1838 election for Governor of Illinois?
- ...that the Japanese science fiction film I.K.U. was the first pornographic film ever screened in the Sundance Film Festival?
- ...that African-Americansand catered primarily to an African-American clientele?
- 13:16, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Central Fells, a group of hills in the English Lake District (Eagle Crag pictured), are generally lower than the surrounding hills?
- ...that Indian state of Karnataka?
- ...that office of Governor of Illinois?
- ...that under English criminal law, intoxication is technically not a defence, but can negate the mens rea for specific intent offences?
- ...that ?
- ...that MP in British history, represented Bishop Aucklandfor 92 days?
- ...that gamma ray bursteffects?
- 06:03, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that before the Chamber of Deputies used various meeting places, including a primary school in the town of Ettelbruck?
- ...that the problems?
- ...that 6th Bavarian Reserve Division during World War I?
- ...that a clock tower added to the old Washington County Courthouse in 1891 did not have a working clock?
- ...that the August 2004, 54 percent of Crawford County, Kansassuffered from bites?
- ...that in 1945, Congregationalist minister Geoffrey Nuttall became only the second nonconformist theologian to become a Doctor of Divinity at Oxford?
20 August 2007
- 22:31, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the heart of Buddhist monk Thích Quảng Đức (pictured) remained intact after his self-immolation in response to the religious policies of South Vietnam's Ngo Dinh Diem, leading Buddhists to regard him as a bodhisattva?
- ...that militia company commander John Giles Adams may have been killed by his own men during the 1832 Black Hawk War as he tried to order them to battle?
- ...that asking for legal settlementsfrom children as young as nine years old for copyright infringement through file-sharing?
- ...that the Free French after the Allied Invasion of North Africain 1942?
- ...that licensedand unlicensed versions?
- 15:35, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that following the militia victory at the 1832 Battle of Horseshoe Bend (battlefield pictured) men under Colonel Henry Dodge scalped the eleven dead Kickapoo warriors?
- ...that licensed by the MLB?
- ...that the 42nd Infantry Division was formed in 1912, fought both on the Eastern and Western Fronts of World War I, and was the last regular division created in the Imperial German Army?
- ...that when John Kuester became head men's basketball coach at Boston University, he was the youngest head coach in NCAA Division I?
- ...that Oscar Monnig donated one of the largest private collections of meteorites to Texas Christian University?
- ...that the location of William D. Brown's Lone Tree Ferry landing, which prompted the founding of Omaha, Nebraska, was lost to historians until 2004?
- ...that Maria Longworth Nichols Storer became the first American woman to found a music festival when she planned and raised money for the now annually celebrated Cincinnati May Festival?
- ...that in 1991 Oradour-sur-Glane massacre of 1944?
- 08:08, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the tower of Paul Rudolph's The Concourse (pictured) is octagonal in plan, as the number "8" is associated with prosperity in Chinese culture?
- ...that the early settlers of Savanna, Illinois fended off a Native American attack in a bloodless battle known as the Plum River raid?
- ...that football team Stoke Cityfor a period of 17 years, having previously played for the club for 14 years?
- ...that Erik Chisholm, former dean and director of the South African College of Music at the University of Cape Town, was a Scottish musician often known as "Scotland’s forgotten composer"?
- ...that advisers signed off, wrongly believing that Kennedy had already approved?
- 01:14, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Malinta Tunnel (pictured), a bomb-proof bunker on the island of Corregidor in the Philippines, was constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and lined with concrete bought from the Japanese?
- ...that the Zip to Zap, originally intended as a 1969 spring break alternative in Zap, North Dakota, was the only riot quelled by the National Guard in the history of North Dakota?
- ...that Albert F. A. L. Jones, awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1987 for his services to astronomy, is an amateur astronomer in New Zealand?
- ...that causing a stack buffer overflow is one of the oldest and most reliable methods for hackers to gain unauthorized access to a computer?
- ...that William Joseph Snelling, one of the first American realists, wrote the earliest accurate literary portrayal of the lifestyle of Plains Indians?
19 August 2007
- 13:59, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Lutgardis (pictured) is reported as having levitated and dripped blood from her forehead when entranced?
- ...that Stillman Creek became ironically known as "Stillman's Run" following the 1832 Isaiah Stillman-led debacle at the Battle of Stillman's Run?
- ...that matron literature is also known as hen lit, a play on the notion that it is chick lit for older women?
- ...that under women priests and to allow divorceesto remarry in church?
- ...that, despite being relatively small compared to other members of its genus, the ?
- ...that ?
- 05:21, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that, in annexation of Korea by Japan?
- ...that as a result of the 1832 Sinsinawa Mound raid the residents of Platteville, Wisconsin nearly fled to Galena, Illinois?
- ...that the Bulldog Bash, one of the largest motorcycle festivals in Europe, was originally organized by the Hells Angels motorcycle club for bikers?
- ...that Sir Arthur Wellesley referred to the Battle of Sabugalas "one of the most glorious that British troops were ever engaged in"?
- ...that Lakeridge Health Whitby was the first combination medical hospital and psychiatric hospital in North America?
- ...that Socrates, the last defender of orality in ancient Greece, denounced writing as 'inhuman' because it weakened the mind, the memory and the prospects for finding truth through dialogue?
18 August 2007
- 22:54, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Sir Winston Churchill(example pictured)?
- ...that dead bodies in corpse roads?
- ...that the ?
- ...that the Black Hawk Tree in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin was so revered that it grew from the middle of a road without being cut down?
- ...that the lament of Jheronimus Vinders on the death of Josquin des Prez has been used for a computer game in modern times?
- ...that the Spanish Paralympic basketball team were stripped of their gold medals from the 2000 Sydney Games because ten of their players did not have a disability?
- 16:01, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that train robbers?
- ...that the ?
- ...that the first Festival of the Flowers in Medellín, Colombia took place in May in 1957 but was moved to August the following year to celebrate the independence of Antioquia?
- ...that the 2007-08 season?
- ...that 19th-century American poet Thomas Holley Chivers accused his former friend Edgar Allan Poe of plagiarizing "The Raven" and "Ulalume" from his own work?
- 07:57, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the landscape architecture design projects of Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. (pictured) read like a guide to the National Park Service-managed sites of Washington, D.C.: National Mall, Jefferson Memorial, White House grounds, and Rock Creek Park?
- ...that plants?
- ...that the Germansupport?
- ...that 19th-century Thomas D. English had an ongoing feud with Edgar Allan Poe, which inspired "The Cask of Amontillado"?
- ...that in Member of Parliament(MP) to vote against a Labour government?
- ...that Sarasvati?
- 05:22, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that, in 1964, Lord Mayor of Oxford?
- ...a four-year-old boy Hindus, sought blessingsfrom him?
17 August 2007
- 20:46, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Letters Written in Sweden, Norway and Denmark?
- ...that with Calcutta developing in the 18th century, the Janbazar neighbourhood was gradually taken over by the Portuguese, Armenians, half-castesand others, to become a grey area between Black and White Towns?
- ...that Salvation Army officer Sir Arthur McIlveen was known for playing a phonograph in the battlefields of World War II, and was the unofficial padre to many brigades?
- ...that the Apple River Fort near Elizabeth, Illinois was completed in about one week during the Black Hawk War of 1832?
- ...that Susan Kiefel is only the third woman appointed to the bench of the High Court of Australia?
- ...that opera companies to tour the United States, stayed behind for love, rather than continuing on to Cuba?
- ...that the Amman Message was a statement issued by King Abdullah II of Jordan calling for tolerance and unity in the Muslim world?
- 12:19, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that American pool player Jimmy Wetch (pictured) gave up life as a road playerand went pro after he was robbed of his winnings at gunpoint in 1993?
- ...that the six permutations of the vector (1,2,3) form a hexagon in 3d space, the 24 permutations of (1,2,3,4) form a truncated octahedron in four dimensions, and both are examples of permutohedra?
- ...that repertoryin India that is sponsored by the government?
- ...that the Protector lock, a lock design by A. C. Hobbs, which was said by Hobbs himself to be impossible to crack, was defeated only one or two years after its patenting?
- ...that Vasanta Habba, an annual cultural event organised by Nrityagram in Bangalore, is considered to be the classical Woodstock of India?
- ...that Seirawan chess, which features two new pieces to the chess: elephant and hawk?
- ...that Balfour, Orkney was built in 1782 to house tenants evicted to make way for the house now called Balfour Castle, then partly demolished later to improve the castle's view?
- ...that Visigothic count who had defended the peninsula from the Byzantine navya decade or so earlier?
- 00:43, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that ?
- ...that Ion Calvocoressi won an immediate Military Cross in Libya in 1942, and was married to the sister of Ludovic Kennedy for over 60 years?
- ...that Epiphanius, Bishop of Pavia from 466 to 496, often influenced and changed the tides of war as a result of his negotiations with numerous war leaders?
- ...that advocates for pregnant patients' rights in the United States urge that a pregnant woman be allowed the company of her partner, friends, and/or family for emotional support during labor and delivery?
- ...that Czech amateur astronomer Kamil Hornoch has discovered over 40 extragalactic supernovae?
16 August 2007
- 18:18, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Golden Mile Complex (pictured), which was designed as an avant-garde building with a stepped terrace structure, was once described as a "vertical slum" by a Singapore Nominated Member of Parliament?
- ...that epistemology questions how we know, while agnotology questions why we do not know?
- ...that the use of Congreve rockets during the bombardment of Fort McHenry led to the line, "And the rockets' red glare, the bombs bursting in air" in the "The Star-Spangled Banner," the national anthem of the United States?
- ...that fairytale Cinderellaover 1000 times since 1977 and that a few artists have acted in each of those performances?
- ...that according to Allied military intelligence, the 27th Infantry Division was one of the very best German divisions in World War I?
- ...that amygdalohippocampectomy is the removal of the hippocampus and amygdala?
- 11:53, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that as part of a plan to surprise the Austrians there?
- ...that Robert E. Murray, a partial owner of Crandall Canyon Mine, which recently collapsed trapping six workers, says he was himself once trapped in a collapsed mine for 12 hours?
- ...that the ?
- ...that in his Pulitzer Prize-winning career as a foreign correspondent for the Los Angeles Times, William Tuohy covered the Tet Offensive, the Fall of Saigon, The Troubles in Northern Ireland, and the fall of the Berlin Wall?
- ...that in order to nuclear attack on the Communist north?
- 01:10, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the only Newburgh, New York's Old Town Cemetery?
- ...that Battle of Gallipoli, was later commissioned to write an official report on the effectiveness of British staff officers during World War I?
- ...that Howard Judd developed objective measures of the hot flushes experienced in menopause, which were later used to assess the effectiveness of hormone replacement therapy?
- ...that Rwandan Genocide led him to become the first African-born winner of the Pulitzer Prize?
- ...that the perpetrators of the lottery tickets, in the hope of winning back even more than they had stolen?
- ...that the social reform organization Islamic" by upper caste Muslims?
- ...that the 1st century CE in Constantinople, housed over 80 statues of important historical figures like Aristotle, Homer, Plato and Julius Caesar?
- ...that the first trade union in Botswana was not recognised by the ruling Bechuanaland Protectorate until 1964, 16 years after its formation?
15 August 2007
- 19:01, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Orthodox cathedral, and a statue of Alexander Pushkin?
- ...that British military engineer tanks during his service with the Royal Engineers?
- ...that S.J. Warmington had several supporting roles in Alfred Hitchcock films in the 1930s and was killed when the German Luftwaffe bombed Londonin 1941?
- ...that Spaniard named Sinibaldo de Masin 1841?
- ...that the Solar Sentinels, a NASA spacecraft designed to study the Sun, will have to survive at distances from the Sun only one-quarter of Earth's distance?
- ...that the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board has made rainwater harvesting mandatory to address a critical water shortage?
- ...that Cornelius Canis was the music director at the imperial chapel of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V?
- ...that the annual horse race where riders charge down a 225-foot (70m) slope at a 62-degree angle into and through the Okanogan River?
- 12:10, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Hazlitt lectured at the short-lived Surrey Institution (pictured), where Goldsworthy Gurney won recognition for work on blowpipes?
- ...that astronomer Russell M. Genet founded the first totally automatic robotic observatory?
- ...that the tai chi chuan?
- ...that Andrew Clemens designed hundreds of elaborate sand bottles from 1880–1886 some of which are valued at more than US$25,000 today?
- ...that family baronetcyin 1941, aged 8?
- ...that the first match between the NCAAcompetition?
- ...that Jatindramohan Tagore, a theatre enthusiast, music and art-lover, and philanthrophist, was the first Indian to be a member of the Royal Photographic Society in 1898?
- ...that the dioptic lens at Start Point lighthouse was the first of this kind to be used by Trinity House?
- 03:21, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that rebels from the escaped through a tunnel in an attempt to evade capture?
- ...that African Americanslaves?
- ...that Edward Filene, the American entrepreneur who built Filene's department store and Filene's Basement, also founded the 87-million member US credit union system in 1907?
- ...that Boston?
- ...that Oregon's National Wild and Scenic Riveralong its entire length?
- ...that the Jamaica Association of Local Government Officers lost 8,000 of its 15,000 members when Jamaica restructured local government services in 1984?
- ...that the Roman emperor Augustus prevented Vedius Pollio from feeding a slave to his lampreys as punishment for breaking a glass?
14 August 2007
- 20:04, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Lheidli T'enneh First Nations?
- ...that Bunocephalus is the most species-rich and widespread genus of the South American banjo catfishes?
- ...that Minnie D. Craig, the first female speaker of a legislative body in the US, was elected to the North Dakota House of Representatives just three years after gaining suffrage?
- ...that the 30-mile (50-km) section of Interstate 15 in Arizona through the Virgin River Gorge was the most expensive section of rural freeway by mile?
- ...that when 400 RNs unionized with the Pennsylvania Association of Staff Nurses and Allied Professionals on July 19, 2007, it was the largest successful organizing effort among nurses in the state since 2000?
- ...that an Nanochondria could allow someone to exhale a Utility fog, in effect allowing them to breathe out a needed tool?
- 08:31, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Reformed Church of America?
- ...that South America's eyeless Micromyzon akamai is the smallest species of banjo catfish?
- ...the South side of Chicago hosted a Black Renaissance that paralleled the Harlem Renaissance?
- ...that pitcher Scott Bailes finished the 1997 MLB season with a career-best earned run average of 2.86 despite having not played in the Major Leagues for four seasons?
- ...that the Metabolist Movementof the 1960s?
- ...that Karnataka Khadi Gramodyoga Samyukta Sangha, in the city of Hubli, is the only unit in India authorised to manufacture and supply the national flag?
- ...that Ophelia in Hamlet?
- ...that the Snake River Bridge, in the U.S. state of Washington, was originally built in one location, completely dismantled, and reassembled in its current location?
- 02:30, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the capital assets in 19th-century Moscow?
- ...that Richard I's army of Crusaders encountered Saladin's archers, tarantulas, and heat exhaustion on their march to the Battle of Arsuf?
- ...that the scientists when it was first described in 1860?
- ...that 141 buildings in Těrlicko Dam?
- ...that to finance the musical Jelly's Last Jam, producer Margo Lion used a nude sculpture by Henri Matisse, which she inherited at age 18 when her parents died in a plane crash in Egypt, as collateral?
- ...that metalwork accessories were the clearest indicator of high-ranking persons in early medieval European dress?
- ...that Sir Ian Anstruther, 8th Baronet held three separate baronetcies?
- ...that the foam blocks used to lessen the impact of crashes at Flemington Speedway led to the development of the SAFER barrier?
13 August 2007
- 17:07, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Philippine folklore?
- ...that before turning to acting, communist side of the Berlin Wall?
- ...that the impresario Ernesto de Quesada invented an imaginary partner when he founded a classical music management agency in Berlin?
- ...that Around the World is the oldest magazine still published in the Russian language?
- ...that the introduction of treatment of schizophrenia in the 1950s?
- ...that residential building in Singaporewhen it was completed in 1976?
- ...that the once flourishing Indian port of Saptagram faded out as a result of river silting?
- ...that Bahraini runner Tareq Mubarak Taher lost his medals from the 2005 World Youth Championships and the 2006 World Junior Championships because he competed with a falsified age?
- 07:48, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that (pictured) consists of eleven trees representing Naka's eleven grandchildren?
- ...that the Reincarnation Application?
- ...that epidemiologist and science activist Naturestudy as the number 7 science blog out of 46 million blogs studied?
- ...that the race movies"?
- ...that after his mother's death from diabetes, Giuseppe Moscati began experiments using insulin to treat the disease?
- ...that the 2007 Brooklyn tornado was the strongest tornado on record in New York City and the first in Brooklyn since 1889?
- ...that the song Chocolate Rain by Tay Zonday has received more than five million views on YouTube and has generated thousands of covers, remixes, and parodies?
- ...that literary critics credit William Shakespeare's Hamlet as a significant contributor to Sigmund Freud's idea of the Oedipus complex?
- ...that Jamaican labor leader Helene Davis-Whyte was anti-union before being elected a delegate in her union?
- 01:29, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the ?
- ...that Thomas William Bowlby (1818 - 1860), a British correspondent for The Times was captured and imprisoned by the Tartar General Sengge Rinchen whilst on correspondence in Tongzhou, Beijing?
- ...that the fashion in Europe between 1100 and 1200?
- ...that the as punishment?
- ...that, in his book Mauve Gloves & Madmen, Clutter & Vine, Tom Wolfe famously called Jimmy Carter a "Missionary lecternpounding Amenten-finger C-major chord Sister-Martha-at-the-Yamaha keyboard loblolly pineywoods Baptist"?
- ...that Jay U. Gunter, professor of pathology, devoted his life to astronomy after he retired?
- ...that the Dacia ripensis contained eight fortresses developed by Trajan?
12 August 2007
- 18:31, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the elderberryshrubs, where females lay their eggs on the bark and larvae hatch and burrow into the stems?
- ...that the Elagabalium was the center of a controversial religious cult established by the Roman emperor Elagabalus?
- ...that 1997-98 AHL season for the Portland Pirates, where he averaged 4.5 penalty minutes a game and still holds the club record?
- ...that by 1608, performances of William Shakespeare's plays had become popular enough that his playing company was able to act indoors, in the Blackfriars Theatre?
- ...that the Best Indian Filmof 1971?
- ...that Dr. Confederate Army during the American Civil War, later established a college for African-Americans known today as Prairie View A&M University?
- 07:53, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that The Sortie Made by the Garrison of Gibraltar, 1789(pictured) "the finest picture [he] had ever seen painted on the northern side of the Alps"?
- ...that the highest ft)?
- ...that Red Cross into believing the Jewswere being well cared for?
- ...that the Indian Wars?
- ...that Dharmapalaerected it in the 8th century?
- ...that Manuel Benito de Castro assumed the Presidency of Cundinamarca, with the condition that he would be allowed to leave Congress at a certain time to feed his dog?
- ...that South Korean actress Jang Jin-young was only the second winner of two Blue Dragon Film Awards for Best Actress, having won in 2001 for Sorum, and again in 2003 for Singles?
- 01:21, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Bengaliaristocracy?
- ...that Elihu Embree published the first newspaper in the United States devoted to abolishing slavery until his death in 1820?
- ...that Feliks Kon started the Polish language section at Radio Moscow, had a Russian ship named in his honor, and the only member of the Provisional Polish Revolutionary Committee to die naturally?
- ...that the Helsinki Fair Centre and Cirrus, the tallest high-rise building in Finland?
- ...that the residents of the suburb of speedway?
- ...that Alexander Eugen Conrady abandoned his native Germany in disgust, settled in England, and there designed optical instruments used by the British in World War I?
- ...that the forthcoming ?
- ...that German artist and cartographer Augustin Hirschvogel is the first person known to have used triangulation in surveying?
11 August 2007
- 18:15, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Buddhist library and is unique in that it is neither an association nor a temple?
- ...that Italian-American to play Major League Baseball?
- ...that a report of high school students laughing during Holocaustsurvivor?
- ...that while other nations have marine aviators, only the United States Marine Corps has their own dedicated aviation arm?
- ...that Coptic Church and the Church of Antioch?
- ...that Edgar Award and the Private Eye Writers of America Shamus Awardfor best first novel?
- ...that Syādvāda is a JainDoctrine of Postulation which provides the teaching or instruction from which a postulate or axiom is provided to determine the truth of the matter?
- 07:05, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Eighteenmile Island (pictured) is the only privately owned island in the Columbia River?
- ...that on his hand?
- ...that one of the stories of the Buddhist monksto leap into a vat of hot oil for killing his nephew?
- ...that 2004 Pulitzer Prize winner David Leeson was once shot in the face in Panama while covering the 1988 ousting of Manuel Noriega?
- ...that in the peak days of Iranian migration to Japan, Iran Air flights to Tokyo were fully booked several years in advance?
- ...that Caspar David Friedrich's Wanderer above the Sea of Fog was one of several of his paintings that were based upon the concept that self-expression was to be bonded with physical and spiritual isolation?
- ...that federalemployees?
- ...that despite two centuries of exploration nobody has found evidence of the legendary silver mine of Jonathan Swift?
10 August 2007
- 23:11, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Brig "Mercury" Attacked by Two Turkish Ships (pictured) was one of over 3,000 seascapes painted by Russian artist Ivan Aivazovsky?
- ...that the largest score and winning margin between the Westpac Stadiumin 2007?
- ...that the Jewishcitizens?
- ...that at the 1832 Chief Black Hawk'swarriors with the assistance of the nearby settlement's women?
- ...that after beheaded, dismembered, and his head displayed in a metal cage?
- ...that Tekka Mall is the first and largest modern shopping mall in Singapore's Little India?
- ...that towns across the United States and Australia have memorials dedicated to the birth of their first white child?
- 16:46, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Aztecbelief?
- ...that The Great Day of His Wrath, an oil-on-canvas by John Martin, is based on Revelation 6:12-17 in the Bible, which vividly describes the end of the world?
- ...that Liang Wern Fook, a pioneer of Singapore's xinyao movement, has composed over 200 songs?
- ...that the football (soccer) stadium at Tehelné pole, in Bratislava, was the largest in the former Czechoslovakia?
- ...that the motorcycle racing couple of Jagat and Anita Nanjappa once completed a rally in which Anita sat on the bike's petrol tank to reduce the weight on the flat rear tyre?
- ...that the M/T Independenţaburnt for weeks in 1979 after colliding with a freighter?
- ...that Japanese-American in the U.S. Army Air Force to serve in combat operations in the Pacific during World War II?
- ...that Mother Frances Hospital, a part of Trinity Mother Frances Health System, opened a day early in 1937 due to the explosionof a nearby school?
- ...that the band of Potawatomi that carried out the Indian Creek massacre kidnapped and ransomed two teenage girls during the attack?
- 08:54, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Churche's Mansion (pictured), Nantwich, United Kingdom, one of the few buildings to survive the Great Fire of 1583, bears a carved salamander, a traditional protection against fire?
- ...that the song "See See Rider" was first recorded in 1924 by Ma Rainey and reached the top of the rhythm and blues charts twice in versions by Bea Booze and Chuck Willis?
- ...that Football club Stoke City F.C.?
- ...that Joshua Reynolds' Colonel Acland and Lord Sydney: The Archers recently sold for £2.5 million (US $4.4 million) despite the artist's limited success during his lifetime?
- ...that then-President of the United States Franklin Pierce and all of his cabinet attended the second wedding of playwright Anna Cora Mowatt?
- ...that lyric poem "Tears, Idle Tears" is written such that readers often don't notice its lack of rhyme?
- ...that the Santa Fe courthouse ghost, the video of which got more than 80,000 hits on YouTube, appeared to be a bug?
- 03:07, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Bonaparte Crossing the Alps (pictured) was commissioned to Paul Delaroche after he criticised Jacques-Louis David's version for being unrealistic?
- ...that Colne Cricket Club is the oldest club in the Lancashire League?
- ...that sport of Saskatchewan?
- ...that British Royal Familyduring a cruise?
- ...that Dax Holdren and Stein Metzger never won a domestic AVP event as partners despite winning silver at the 2003 Beach Volleyball World Championships?
- ...that Mozart composition for voice and piano to celebrate the Great Siege of Gibraltar during the American Revolutionary War?
- ...that autoimmune and other lymphoproliferative disorders?
- ...that although Plunketts Creek in Pennsylvania was named for a suspected Loyalist during the American Revolution, by 1838 his name was so controversial that Plunketts Creek Townshipwas named for the creek instead?
9 August 2007
- 20:38, 9 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that fan?
- ...that the Jack of the President of Polandwas originally intended only for usage on naval vessels in the presence of the commander-in-chief?
- ...that 24 1951 Gillingham bus disaster, setting a new British record of fatalities in a road accident?
- ...that the Sangam poems, an important source of ancient Tamil history, were composed by a total of 473 poets over a period of a few centuries?
- ...that the title of ‘Rs. 100,000 in 1906 for the National Council of Education which later became Jadavpur University?
- ...that African Americanstudents?
- ...that Buffalo Grove was the first settlement in Ogle County, Illinois?
- 14:44, 9 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus (pictured), was a member of the Lithuanian World Community, which seeks to unite the Lithuanian diaspora?
- ...that some rocks at the ?
- ...that Joe Hauser was the first player ever to hit 60 or more home runs in a season twice in a professional baseball career?
- ...that the 457 visa is the most common way for employers to temporarily sponsor skilled overseas workers to come to Australia?
- ...that Constantine Possiet was the first Russian minister to support the project of a Trans-Siberian Railway?
- ...that legend has it that Benjamin I of Alexandria was escorted to heaven by Athanasius of Alexandria, Severus of Antioch, and Theodosius I?
- ...that Coluccio Salutati, Chancellor of Florence during the War of the Eight Saints, disseminated Republican propaganda throughout the Papal States?
- ...that snail races usually start with the words "Ready, Steady, Slow!"
- 04:53, 9 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Hull Maritime Museum of Kingston upon Hull, England, houses the largest collection of scrimshaw artwork (example pictured) in Europe?
- ...that the 1979 arrest of Raymond Lee Harvey and Osvaldo Ortiz for being part of an alleged plot to assassinate President Jimmy Carter drew parallels to the name of Lee Harvey Oswald?
- ...that Uncle Tupelo singers Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy got into several physical altercations during the promotional tour for Anodyne?
- ...that the first tamaya, built in 1599 in the Toyokuni Shrine in Kyoto for Toyotomi Hideyoshi, was destroyed by the Tokugawa?
- ...that election sejm of 1632?
- ...that in 1989, the Nissan GTP ZX-Turbo was the first race car to overcome Porsche's seven-year dominance of the IMSA GT Championship's GTP category?
- ...that the trolley believed to have been used in the film A Streetcar Named Desire is housed at the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum?
8 August 2007
- 22:37, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the member states?
- ...that in his rookie year, , which still stands 121 years later?
- ...that Japanese writer Makoto Oda wrote a book on his travels through Europe and Asia on a budget of a dollar a day?
- ...that Michelle Morgan, a child abuse victim murdered by her stepmother at age four, was featured on an episode of Cold Case Files?
- ...that Vitalian of Capua refused to return to his post as bishop after being thrown into the Garigliano River in a leather bag?
- ...that at 34 months, Georgia Brown became the youngest ever female member of Mensa?
- ...that the Polish uprising in Krakow in 1944 to complement the Warsaw Uprising?
- 16:29, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Kunstnernes Hus (pictured) is an early Functionalist structure from 1930, built by and for Norwegian artists to showcase their work?
- ...that Marion Harris was the first widely known white singer to sing jazz and blues songs?
- ...that Cambridgefor biting a policeman's nose?
- ...that in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth tried various Westernmilitary innovations and strategies for the first time?
- ...that the elephants Castor and Pollux were shot for food during the Siege of Paris in 1870 and their trunks sold as a delicacy?
- ...that Ardencaple Castle is used as a navigational aid for shipping on the Firth of Clyde?
- ...that Mary Wollstonecraft was born the same year that Voltaire's Candide and Adam Smith's The Theory of Moral Sentiments were published?
- 05:27, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the uplandcontain some 200 caves?
- ...that ballot measure?
- ...that Polish-American bishop, died after just a year in office?
- ...that the urban villages found in some of China's major cities are inner city slums with Chinese characteristics?
- ...that Major-General Andrew Gilbert Wauchope was killed by the opening shots of the Battle of Magersfontein?
- ...that literary work of Nicaragua?
- ...that the pitch notation developed by Hermann von Helmholtz for his work on acoustics and is one of two main systems for describing musical pitch?
- ...that the Banner of Poland, despite its 1000-year old history, is not an official national symbol?
7 August 2007
- 23:16, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Swedish director Ingmar Bergman's (pictured) film directing debut was on Torment, a 1944 film about a sadistic Latin teacher?
- ...that the former head of the King George V?
- ...that the Swiss Vetterli rifles, a series of Winchester-derived repeating rifles, were Europe's most advanced service rifles at the time of their introduction in 1869?
- ...that the Andreas Miaoulis during a civil warin 1831?
- ...that through 1981, Arizona's silver mining industry had produced a cumulative total of 490 million troy ounces of silver?
- ...that two people died outside of 1934 Bloody Thursday Riots?
- ...that novelist Amelia Barr's most successful body of work is called the "Cherry Croft novels", after the summer house where she wrote them?
- ...that Umayyad conquest of Hispania?
- ...that Perth, Australia?
- 16:48, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the 1869 collapse of the 2,500-foot-long only major waterfall on the Mississippi River?
- ...that Francis Julius LeMoyne built the first crematory in the United States and was its third crematee?
- ...that cyclone known as The Perfect Storm?
- ...that the RevoPower motorized bicycle kit was inspired by a visit to a bicycle taxi manufacturer?
- ...that in 1904, U.S. college championship and the gold medal-winning United States Olympic golf teams?
- ...that Filipino Ilustrados originally demanded that the Philippines become a province of Spain instead of independence?
- ...that Major Derek Cooper and his wife, Pamela, assisted with refugee relief efforts from the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 to the Siege of Beirut in 1982, and established the charity Medical Aid for Palestinians in 1984?
- ...that novelist vagabond, and probably died in a Nazi concentration camp?
- 09:12, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the creators of stage musical Furry Tales (pictured) were inspired by Anthrocon, the world's largest furry convention?
- ...that and endowed it with farms to provide its patients with food?
- ...that it has not rained at the ?
- ...that the 850-ton Belle Tout lighthouse was pushed 17 metres (56 feet) away from a cliff face to save it from coastal erosion?
- ...that the first reference to toilet paper was made in the year 589 AD by the Chinese scholar Yan Zhitui?
- ...that the sample of the song "Searching for Soul" by funk band Jake Wade and the Soul Searchers?
- ...that Soviet diplomat Tsar Nicholas IIand his family?
- ...that high levels of Platysaurus broadleyi, a type of lizard in the Cordylidaefamily, indicate dominance over other males?
- 03:08, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Éva Gauthier (pictured) was the first classically trained singer to present the works of George Gershwin in concert?
- ...that humans have lived near Nevada's Swan Lake Nature Study Area since 400 AD?
- ...that Joaquín Camacho, an agitator for the Independence of Colombia, was executed by firing squad when he was 50 years old, blind, and paralyzed?
- ...that over 15,000 men of the battle-hardened 10th and 11th Divisions of the Imperial German Army were demobilised following World War I?
- ...that Polish legal system?
- ...that Dunottar Castle transported Winston Churchill, Frederick Russell Burnham, Robert Baden-Powell, and Lord Roberts, among others, to and from Cape Colony, South Africa?
- ...that in place of execution, Saint Cerbonius was exiled after the bear brought in to kill him instead licked his feet?
- ...that complete Slavic translation of the Bible?
6 August 2007
- 20:58, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that one of the survivors of the fort was overtaken by the Menominee?
- ...that an image of Tesslynn O'Cull, a child abuse victim who was murdered by her stepfather at the age of two, was used in the Stop the Abuse poster for Oregon?
- ...that St. Paul Roman Catholic Church in St. Paul, Oregon is the oldest brick building in the Pacific Northwest?
- ...that while working for the Department of Justice attorney Jacob Tanzer worked on the case that led to the movie Mississippi Burning?
- ...that there are 59 conjectured reconstructions of the Olympia Master's work on the East pediment of the Temple of Zeus?
- ...that some species of the catfish genus Cetopsis are only known by a single specimen?
- ...that Hutti Gold Mines Limited, located in the state of Karnataka, is the only company in India that produces gold by mining and extracting it from its ore?
- 14:48, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Jordan Park (pictured), set up in 1889 as Kraków's first public playground, gave free meals to children?
- ...that following the Battle of Waddams Grove members of the Illinois militia returned to Galena with the scalps of two Sauk warriors?
- ...that the Yangzhou riot of 1868 almost led to a Sino-British war because many Chinese believed that English missionaries were stealing children?
- ...that 17.5% of the murders in prostitutes?
- ...that the New England Seamount chain was once at or above sea level off the Massachusettscoast?
- ...that Queen Elizabeth'ssuitors?
- 10:52, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that timber cinemaknown as The Empire in 1927?
- ...that Murderer's Row" of the New York Yankees championship teams of the 1920s?
- ...that Henry Wallis' The Stonebreaker shows a dead labourer who appears to be resting?
- 08:28, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the French lawyer and historian Nicolas Chorier was also a writer of erotic fiction (work pictured)?
- ...that 3D interactive chemical structuresreplicating printed figures?
- ...that the Polish Army in France continued to fight in the Battle of France despite Pétain’s call for armistice and demobilization?
- ...that Nalvadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar, king of Mysore, set up a factory to manufacture Mysore Sandal Soap because World War I prevented any export of sandalwood?
- ...that Pee Deewith 563 burials?
- ...that the four catfish species of the genus Pseudolithoxus are only found in the Amazonas and Bolívar states of Venezuela?
- ...that in Puerto Rico alone, about two people die and 25 more are injured each year from celebratory gunfire?
- ...that even though Jefferson Smith had been Blue Mounds Fort?
- 02:26, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Weston-super-Mare's Birnbeck Pier has the longest lifeboat slipway (pictured) in England?
- ...that in Kim Jong-il for trading fake aphrodisiacs?
- ...that Russian émigré Jerzy Bulanow captained the Poland national football teamthrough the 1920s and early 1930s?
- ...that Colonel Johnston de Peyster raised the first U.S. flag over Virginia's Capitol Building since the state's secession in 1861?
- ...that Novgorod was not appointed to his post, but was elected by the popular assembly?
- ...that Senator William Griesbach?
- ...that two Italian towns competed over who would receive pieces of Saint Paternian — one ultimately receiving a finger, while the other took the rest?
5 August 2007
- 20:39, 5 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that when the roof of as building material?
- ...that James Watsonannouncing its discovery?
- ...that the 1758 British construction of Calcutta?
- ...that folktales claim that 19th century Menelik II of Ethiopiainto sending money for a proper funeral?
- ...that professional wrestler Norvell Austin was part of the first mixed race bad guy tag team in the Southern United States?
- ...that, when playing the lead in Alexander's father in the Battle of Lipitsa?
- 11:37, 5 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that in 1899, Sir Samuel Gillott (pictured) lost the mayorship of Melbourne by one vote?
- ...that the term Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes?
- ...that African Americans?
- ...that the hansystem of government?
- ...that the Chester Roman Amphitheatre was the largest amphitheatre in Roman Britain, seating over 8,000 people?
- 02:04, 5 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that St. Petersburg Conservatory?
- ...that during the Siege of Rome, the defenders used the statues from the Mausoleum of Hadrianas missiles?
- ...that Wally Tatomir, head equipment manager of the Carolina Hurricanes, holds four patents on ice hockey-related equipment?
- ...that while the majority of forced labourcontinues?
- ...that despite being heavily outnumbered, civiliansto escape?
- ...that the group who buried the only casualty of the Buffalo Grove massacrewere killed the following day?
- ...that John Singleton Copley's oil-on-canvas The Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar, September 1782 is one of Britain’s largest oil paintings?
4 August 2007
- 11:30, 4 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the U.S. state of Utah built the Wendover Cut-off (pictured) across the Great Salt Lake Desert in the early 1920s to force motorists to Southern California to take the Arrowhead Trail and remain in that state for about 200 miles (300 km) more?
- ...that Jacques de Morgan in 1887-89 unearthed 576 ancient graves around Alaverdi and Akhatala, near the Tiflis-Alexandropol railway line?
- ...that Jack Jonesin the first contest in the history of the position?
- ...that 19th century cartoonist and artist Edward Jump gained a status of renown in the U.S. states of California and Washington, D.C. for his satirical caricatures?
- ...that the childhood home of painters, is open to the public today as a museum known as Emily Carr House — and still contains the family Bible?
- ...that lawsuitsbeing filed by both parties?
- ...that Bob Massie set a world record by being the first player to take 16 wickets on his Test debut in 1972?
- 01:08, 4 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Bull Stone House property (pictured) in New York, is home to the only surviving New World Dutch barn?
- ...that ballooningfeats?
- ...that the Jersey Shore shark attacks of 1916 killed four people and inspired Peter Benchley's novel Jaws (1974)?
- ...that the pinhole camera model is an ideal camera without lensing aberrations?
- ...that the West End Street Railway fired Cyrus S. Ching in 1901 after he was nearly electrocuted on the job, only to appoint him manager two months later?
- ...that the movie theatre?
- ...that Psalm 83 is cited by the Jehovah's Witnesses as a proof of Jehovah being God's personal name?
- ...that the Boot Monument at Saratoga National Historical Park donated by John Watts de Peyster is the only American war memorial that does not bear the name of its honoree?
3 August 2007
- 14:49, 3 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Polish First Army, destroying most of the city?
- 05:47, 3 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that St James' and St Paul's Church, Marton (pictured) in Cheshire, England, is one of the oldest timber-framed churches in Europe?
- ...that it has been suggested that using andenes) again, would solve the malnutritionproblems of the modern Andean peoples for many decades?
- ...that Old College, the first building on Northwestern University'scampus, stood for over 100 years, despite being built as a temporary structure?
- ...that fetal movement begins as early as seven weeks after conception?
- ...that the character of Master of Revels in William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, may have been created as a way to poke fun at play censorship?
- ...that Georgia Governor Carl Sanders declared May 16, 1964 to be George C. Griffin day, because of his service to Georgia Tech?
- ...that the Norwegian cuisine?
2 August 2007
- 22:34, 2 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Asia Insurance Building (pictured) in Singapore was the tallest building in Southeast Asia when it was completed in 1954?
- ...that Congressman Houston, Texasin 1961?
- ...that controversy with the Spanish governmentover the rights to the treasure?
- ...that at the age of 10, Golden Horse Award?
- ...that during the American Civil War John Breckinridge Castleman was sentenced to death for spying, but his execution was suspended by Abraham Lincoln?
- ...that the genus Prietella includes two threatened species of eyeless, unpigmented catfish adapted to living in caves?
- ...that the Trent Codices are the largest single music manuscript source of the entire 15th century?
- ...that the Profane Oaths Act 1745, which criminalised "profane cursing and swearing" in the United Kingdom, was not fully repealed until 1967?
- 07:03, 2 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Canadian sculptor John Hooper (sculpture pictured) previously lived in England, China, India, and South Africa, and was a captain in the British Army?
- ...that while labor movements, the anarcho-syndicalist General Confederation of Labour was not only the largest but the only union in post-World War I Portugal?
- ...that any two friends who live together more than three years may be legally considered partners in an adult interdependent relationship in Alberta, just like spouses in a common-law marriage?
- ...that Alberto Villamizaragainst kidnappings in that country?
- ...that the Former Singapore Badminton Hall was marked as a historical site by Singapore's National Heritage Board in 1999, as it held two Thomas Cup tournaments and was the vote counting station for a landmark 1962 referendum?
- ...that the Makuleke region of Kruger National Park is a natural history area with almost 75% of the diversity of the whole park?
- ...that the April 1920 Bolshevik Russia?
- 01:14, 2 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that there is a Hampshire County Lunatic Asylum(pictured)?
- ...that a galloping horse must breathe with every stride, due to the movement of the gut contents pushing forward and back on the diaphragm?
- ...that Eastern Roman Empire, and became involved in a plot against Emperor Justinian I?
- ...that the famous black-and-white striped shirts of Juventus were based on the kit of English Notts County, replacing the club's initial pink and black colours in 1903?
- ...that the Victoria, is located on land known from 1937 until 1962 as the Janefield Colony for the Treatment of Mental Defectives?
- ...that Thomas Creede printed ten editions of William Shakespeare's plays, several of them poorly-written bad quartos?
- ...that even though the beginning?
1 August 2007
- 16:20, 1 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that Xerxes' expedition to Greece?
- ...that south Louisiana and lived in the swamp?
- ...that the proposed underground car park at the northern end of Calcuttaand is located in a heritage zone?
- ...that the launch of the protected cruiser Chitose in 1898, one of the few ships in the Imperial Japanese Navy built by the United States, was filmed by Thomas Edison?
- ...that syndicalist One Big Union kept itself alive for some time by running an illegal lotteryin its weekly bulletin?
- ...that the planned S$2.5 billion for the 5-kilometreroute?
- ...that United States Indian Agent Felix St. Vrain had his head, hands, feet and heart removed during the St. Vrain massacre?
- ...that the writer and actor, Polish Jews"?
- ...that demolishing an opponent in a debate?
- ...that Hindu priesthood in Bali?
- 05:50, 1 August 2007 (UTC)
- ...that the Cambodian clothing by strictly prohibiting brightly colored clothing and forcing all Khmer people to wear a checkered krama(pictured)?
- ...that the St. Eugene Mine in Moyie, British Columbia produced ten million dollars worth of ore between 1895 and 1905 and was considered to be the most important silver–lead mine in Canada?
- ...that Admiral Louis R. de Steiguer was a legendary disciplinarian and martinet whose funeral instructions directed his former flag secretary to bury him with his hindquarters facing the Pentagon?
- ...that the Treaty of Yandaboo?
- ...that the siege of Yakut Revolt and the Russian Civil War?
- ...that singer Larry Stewart originally moved to Nashville, Tennessee in search of a career in baseball, but instead ended up as the lead singer of country-pop band Restless Heart?
- ...that the coach in which National Coach Museum in Lisbon?