Wikipedia:Recent additions/2009/October
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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...
Please add the line === {{subst:CURRENTDAY}} {{subst:CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{subst:CURRENTYEAR}} ===
for each new day and *'''''~~~~~'''''
at the top for the newly posted set of archived hooks. This will ensure all times are based on UTC time and accurate. This page should be archived once a month. Thanks.
31 October 2009
- 19:28, 31 October 2009 (UTC) Halloween hooks
- ... that bodies (example pictured) buried in Chauchilla Cemetery still retain skins and hair?
- ... that the fictional I Walked With a Zombie, and Zombies on Broadway?
- ... that one thousand human sacrifices are required to retrieve a treasure hidden in the Bopath Ella Falls?
- ... that infection by female sex organsin a male?
- ... that hairy black cups use toxic chemicals to kill living things?
- ... that The Haunted House written by Charles Dickens in 1859 is the inspiration for an attraction which can be seen at Chatham in Kent?
- ... that half-Baz's Culture Clash?
- ... that on every Wednesday and Saturday, the demons of Sri Lanka assemble to give an account of their activities to their king?
- 13:00, 31 October 2009 (UTC) Halloween hooks
- ... that the painted suillus (pictured) is not, in fact, the feeding appendages of an underground monster that wants to eat your face?
- ... that Big Max pumpkins are not really pumpkins?
- ... that Guinness World Record for the largest haunted houseattraction?
- ... that the title witch of action game Bayonettacan form giant boots with her hair to attack enemies, but loses some of her clothing in the process?
- ... that the demon Maha Sohona, whose head has been replaced with that of a bear, haunts graveyards and feasts on human flesh?
- ... that so many witnesses saw the spectre of Stephen Decatur appear at a window at Decatur House, one of the haunted locations in Washington, D.C., that the window was walled up?
- ... that The Sunday Business Post praised Fight Like Apes frontwoman MayKay for her "long black hair and bansheewail"?
- ... that Devil's doors allowed the Devil to escape from churches after leaving the souls of newly baptised babies?
- 07:00, 31 October 2009 (UTC) Halloween hooks
- ... that "pumpkin sauce," or inns in New Englandas early as 1704?
- ... that Mycena nargan was so named because its white speckles were like the eyes of the mythical nargun of Australian aborigines?
- ... that people paid to see a skeleton strike a thigh bone against a human skull every sixty minutes?
- ... that the carnivorous monster called a Hidebehind from American folklore cannot be accurately described because it is always hiding behind something?
- ... that the first Canadian musical staged at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival really sucked?
- ... that the Wells and Mendip Museum has a skeleton believed to be that of the Witch of Wookey Hole?
- ... that according to the Testament of Solomon, the one-winged demon Abezethibou is trapped underneath the Red Sea?
- ... that in the children's book I Like Pumpkins, the narrator sees Frankenstein and his pet alligator buying pumpkins?
- 01:00, 31 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Mary Bell (pictured) resigned from the Women's Auxiliary Australian Air Force in 1941 after being passed over as its director in favour of Clare Stevenson, only to rejoin the following year?
- ... that Terrestrial Physics is a sculpture made out of a 1 million volt (low energy) particle accelerator?
- ... that far right Question Timepanel?
- ... that the Seinfeld episode "The Phone Message" was written to replace a script in which one of the main characters bought a handgun, which was considered too provocative?
- ... that semi-professional?
- ... that the Alliance political party claimed in 1998 that the Royal New Zealand Navy ship HMNZS Charles Upham was "doing a passable imitation between a lemon and a white elephant"?
- ... that as special counsel for compliance in the United States Department of Energy, Paul Bloom recovered $6 billion from American oil companies that had overcharged refiners for their "old oil"?
- ... that in the 30 Rock episode "Into the Crevasse", Jack Donaghy redesigns a microwave oven, turning it into the Pontiac Aztek?
30 October 2009
- 19:00, 30 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that streets in the hamlets?
- ... that church services may be held in Serbia under the crown of a zapis, a large oak with a cross inscribed into its bark, sacred for the village at which it is situated?
- ... that noblemen in the mutilated to make them ineligible to be Emperor?
- ... that radio personality Yngvar Ustvedt has written more than seventy books?
- ... that the lyrics in the U2 song "No Line on the Horizon" were inspired by an image of a place "where the sea meets the sky and you can't tell the difference between the two"?
- ... that the Otto, is the oldest dog in the world at one hundred and forty-five dog years?
- ... that during the Seven Years' War, Kolberg was besieged three times?
- ... that the Parks and Recreation episode "Beauty Pageant" was directed by Jason Woliner, who directed Parks star Aziz Ansari in the MTV sketch comedy show, Human Giant?
- 13:00, 30 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in Warsaw (pictured) was inspired by a comment made by Napoleon, and was nearly melted down by Nazi Germany after the Warsaw Uprising?
- ... that Les Cocker, a coach with the victorious England team at the 1966 World Cup, received a winner's medal in June 2009, nearly 30 years after his death, following a campaign launched by his family?
- ... that by the time their lands were ceded to the Kalapuya Treaty of 1855, only 400 Kalapuya Native Americansremained, the rest having died of disease or armed conflict?
- ... that resistant bacterial strains and is under clinical trial as a treatment for infectious diseases such as community-acquired pneumonia?
- ... that the 1919 novel rough collieLad?
- ... that a 2008 study concluded that the magnitude 7 earthquakeand billions of dollars in damages?
- ... that the River class destroyers and served in the Brazilian Navyfor 38 years?
- ... that former Louisiana State Senator Heulette Fontenot wrote legislation to require that disaster preparedness officials also provide for the safety of household pets during evacuations?
- 07:00, 30 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Angammedilla National Park is designated primarily to protect the drainage basin of Parakrama Samudra (pictured)?
- ... that from 1850 until 1872, the Party Processions Act made it illegal to parade in Irelandwith music, flags or banners?
- ... that many congenital malformations in babies share the common life-threatening complication of pulmonary hypoplasia?
- ... that while tortillerias are a long-time fixture in Latin America, they now are becoming common in some areas of the United States?
- ... that when asked if she wanted to focus on Michaelangelohad?
- ... that during the American Civil Rights Movement, Carraway Methodist Medical Center in Birmingham, Alabama, turned away a wounded Freedom rider, but treated the man who blew up the 16th Street Baptist Church?
- ... that despite making his national team debut in 1924, footballer James Mitchell remains the only player to represent England while wearing spectacles?
- ... that it took the U.S. government seven years to design, then two additional years to build, the post officeafter it acquired the land?
- 00:35, 30 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Anjadip Island, under the jurisdiction of Goa, India, formerly under Portuguese rule, is in the vicinity of the Church of Our Lady of Springsbuilt in 1505 AD?
- ... that the head of anti-communist underground?
- ... that American band Cartel took one year to record their third full-length album, Cycles, after spending less than a month in the studio for each of their previous two albums?
- ... that Stephen Barnett was a leading critic of the Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970, arguing that it led to newspaper monopolies and the demise of smaller papers in cities in the United States?
- ... that the U2 song "Fez – Being Born", created by joining the two in-progress songs "Fez" and "Being Born" together, was originally called "Chromium Chords"?
- ... that contraception expert Dr. pill"?
- ... that although United Kingdom law has a principle of "innocent until proven guilty", under parts of the Prevention of Crime Act 1953 the burden is on the defendant to prove his innocence?
- ... that Kentucky judge Benjamin Mills' opinion regarding the rights of slaves brought to the Northwest Territory was cited as a precedent in U.S. courts until the U.S. abolished slavery following the American Civil War?
29 October 2009
- 17:07, 29 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Made in Oregon sign(pictured) originally advertised a brand of sugar?
- ... that as a Seattle School Board member during World War I, German-born Nathan Eckstein bowed to pressure to drop German language classes in Seattle Public Schools?
- ... that Mike Vernon and Pete Wingfield?
- ... that part of the land where the depopulated Palestinian village territory of watermelonstoday?
- ... that Kwame "The Snow Leopard" Nkrumah-Acheampong is the first Ghanaian to qualify for the Winter Olympics?
- ... that local lore in Salem, New York, has it that one of the first people buried in the Revolutionary War Cemetery was an unknown local Indianwho wandered into town and died?
- ... that security chief Różańskiand revealed her fellow soldiers which led to their arrest?
- 10:49, 29 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Diu Fort (pictured) in India was voted one of seven wonders of Portuguese colonialism in an opinion poll in Portugal?
- ... that Germany's wiretapping of physicist Klaus Traube?
- ... that the Phosphorite War is regarded in Estonia as a catalyst that led to the dissolution of the Soviet regime?
- ... that Ritchie Yorke instigated and organized the first political meeting between a pop star and a prime minister, between John Lennon and Pierre Trudeau in 1969?
- ... that the Salem, New York, historic district was the site of one of the earliest churches built in New York north of Albany?
- ... that despite the escalating human-elephant elephants in the dry zone of Sri Lanka has increased, and 211 individuals were counted in Kaudulla National Park?
- ... that PNC Financial Services bought National City Corp using TARP funds only hours after accepting the funds while National City itself was denied funds?
- ... that the annual Emsley Carr Mile was created to encourage athletes to break the four-minute mile, but by the second race in 1954, Roger Bannister had already broken it?
- 04:21, 29 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the earthquake of 226 BC in Rhodes destroyed the Colossus of Rhodes (pictured), one of the seven wonders of the ancient world?
- ... that a minute of silence was held in memory of murdered rugby player Shane Geoghegan at Ireland's 2008 international match against New Zealand?
- ... that Overlook Hospital, founded in 1906 by a 26-year-old entrepreneur, established the first hematology oncology children's clinic in New Jersey, in 1977?
- ... that despite serving as the editor of The Observer for fifty years, Lewis Doxat prided himself on never having written a single article for the paper?
- ... that the constitutions of several U.S. states are enacted in the name of God?
- ... that Joseph G. Aulisi was the costume designer for Die Hard with a Vengeance and Bicentennial Man?
- ... that Hong Kong property developer Henderson Land Development claims to have sold the most expensive apartment in the world at 39 Conduit Road?
- ... that Sir Maurice Amos was the third member of his family to become a legal professor at University College London, after his father and grandfather?
28 October 2009
- 22:00, 28 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Clara Dow (pictured) was one of the last principal sopranos personally trained by W. S. Gilbert at the Savoy Theatre?
- ... that globs are millimeter sized modules in the V4 complex part of the brain where humans and other primates first perceive color hue?
- ... that her own troubled divorce prompted Louisiana State Senator Julie Quinn to work for the law that requires the violator of a protective order to serve at least a 90-day sentence?
- ... that the compressor was driven by the piston engine's turbochargers?
- ... that of the Dancing with the Starsto date, three withdrew from the competition?
- ... that Village Colleges established by Henry Morris in his vision for a better education for country people in Cambridgeshire?
- ... that the exact location of the city of Cialis, where Bento de Góis became convinced in 1605 that Cathay is China, has been a subject of debate among later historians?
- ... that Nephila komaci is the largest web-spinning spider known to date?
- 15:42, 28 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that although the worldwide catchstatistics for the species do not include India?
- ... that in 2003, Judge Sybil Moses ordered the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to release transcripts of employee radio transmissions in the World Trade Center during the September 11 attacks?
- ... that the Melias, an Armenianprince, and settled by Armenians?
- ... that actress Michelle Wild, whose real name is Katalin Vad, changed her name to accommodate to the international distribution of Hungarian pornography?
- ... that the B.R. Ambedkar and Jyotirao Phule?
- ... that the Republic of China, despite the country's lack of professional astronomers?
- ... that in 1944 the Soviet Factory No. 500 began to disassemble the stored Charomskiy M-40 engines to use their components in the closely related Charomskiy ACh-30B engine?
- ... that when the musical Kelly closed after one night on Broadway, a reviewer noted "Ella Logan was written out of Kelly before it reached the Broadhurst Theater Saturday night. Congratulations, Miss Logan"?
- 09:21, 28 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the asymmetrical post office (pictured) is unusual for a five-bay Depression-era post office in the state?
- ... that William Waterhouse considered the rapport between violist Cecil Aronowitz and cellist Terence Weil the special distinction of the Melos Ensemble?
- ... that the Wi-Fi Alliance plans to ease the task of setting up small Wi-Fi networks with their new Wi-Fi Direct standard?
- ... that posthumouslyawarded the Feronia Literary Prize in 2005?
- ... that Emma-gaala Awards?
- ... that special election for the Louisiana State Senatein 2005, despite having led the first round of balloting?
- ... that in spite of the fact that child labour in India is illegal, children as young as five years are employed?
- ... that Federal Railway of Austria?
- 03:00, 28 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that with a TEAMone can see not only atoms, but also chemical bonds between them (see picture)?
- ... that by identifying incunabulum Missale Speciale, a book alleged to pre-date the Gutenberg Bible (c. 1455), Allan H. Stevensonproved it was printed nearly 20 years later?
- ... that the defeat of the US 8th Cavalry Regiment at the Battle of Unsan has been called "one of the most devastating US losses of the Korean War."?
- ... that although Dungeness, Kent?
- ... that cockfighting, nearly two decades after former State Representative Garey Forsterled the initial effort to halt the practice?
- ... that 26 nations have ratified the Treaty of Lisbon since 2007, and only one country, the Czech Republic, has yet to complete the process?
- ... that manga artist Seizō Wataseworked at an insurance company for 16 years before retiring to work on manga full time?
- ... that New Jersey Route 324 is the only state highway in New Jersey where neither of its termini is another roadway?
27 October 2009
- 20:42, 27 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that legends say Blackwell Island Light (pictured) was built by an inmate from an insane asylum?
- ... that in an foreign minister Albert Sylla?
- ... that the proceedings of the British Summary Court were in both English and German?
- ... that Jewish socialist movement, after the invasion of Poland was threatened with arrest by the NKVD and fled to the United States?
- ... that the first golf course in North America was a three-hole course built in 1868 in the village of Sainte-Pétronille near Quebec City, Canada?
- ... that Chinese 'cultbuster' and qigong master Sima Nan has publicly exposed qigong trickery in China?
- ... that Twenty20 Internationals?
- ... that when Swede Anna Bågenholmgot trapped under a layer of ice in a river for eighty minutes, her body temperature decreased to 13.7 °C (56.7 °F) — the lowest survived body temperature ever recorded in a human?
- 14:28, 27 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Swedish painter Richard Bergh (pictured) was established as a portrait painter, although his landscape paintings played an important role in the development of Swedish romantic nationalism?
- ... that Tanco Mine in Manitoba, Canada, is the world's largest producer of caesium?
- ... that reporter Mario Jascalevich "Dr. X" curaremurder trial in 1978?
- ... that the 2009 Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency?
- ... that Judge First Amendment"?
- ... that Lookingglass, Oregon, became nationally famous in the 1970s when a parking meter for horses was installed in front of the general store?
- ... that former New York City Medical Examiner Michael Baden credited Dr. Valentino Mazzia with creating the field of forensic anesthesiology?
- ... that during the Second World War, SS Hispania was detained by the French, seized by the Vichy French, declared a war prize, passed to the Kriegsmarineand eventually sold back to her original owners?
- 08:14, 27 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that astronomer Rodger Doxsey was awarded the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal for "exceptional accomplishments and contributions to the Hubble Space Telescope" (pictured)?
- ... that the national park Paramoecosystem in the world?
- ... that the mayor of radiation sicknessdue to nuclear testing in seeking monetary compensation?
- ... that the Gibe III dam and the associated hydropower plant, currently under construction on the Omo River, are completed?
- ... that as Bergen County, New Jersey prosecutor, Guy W. Calissi obtained murder convictions and death sentences for Edgar Smith and Thomas Trantino, though neither would ever go to the electric chair?
- ... that the fuel consumption test and the speed prize at the 1924 Lympne Light Aircraft Trials, with the aid of interchangeable wings?
- ... that Canadian singer Térez Montcalm's debut album, Risque, saw her nominated for five Félix Awards in 1995?
- ... that Jamaica's Dry River isn't?
- 02:14, 27 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that although the Galidiinae (pictured) resemble mongooses, they are more closely related to other Malagasy carnivorans such as the fossa?
- ... that outfielder Bill Taylor never made an error in his five-year Major League Baseball career?
- ... that there are five main types of gas porosity, shrinkage defects, mold material defects, pouring metal defects, and metallurgical defects?
- ... that Planty Park?
- ... that the Schluchsee, at 930 metres above sea level, is the highest reservoir in Germany and also the largest lake in the Black Forest?
- ... that Louisiana District Judge Stephen J. Windhorst is a former reserve police officer who also served eight years in the Louisiana House of Representatives as an anti-crime advocate?
- ... that in the Knights of Malta?
- ... that Congowas deemed by one reviewer to be remarkable for its frequent use of the word "remarkable"?
26 October 2009
- 20:14, 26 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the windmill Nooitgedacht (pictured) in Veenoord, Drenthe, has been moved three times since it was built in 1732?
- ... that ?
- ... that the U2 song "Stand Up Comedy" was recreated so many times during the No Line on the Horizon sessions that six different songs were written as a result?
- ... that former U.S. Ambassador to Laos G. McMurtrie Godley testified in 1992 to the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs that no POWs remained behind after the end of the Vietnam War?
- ... that after being reported as the site of the alleged murders by "Dr. X" Mario Jascalevich, Riverdell Hospitalclosed in 1981 due to declining numbers of patients?
- ... that the trolley lines through the Connecticut Company?
- ... that after defending American Nazi Party leader George Lincoln Rockwell, attorney David I. Shapiro was told by Rockwell to "listen up, Jewboy ... I'll watch as you and all the other Jews go to the gas chamber"?
- ... that before the domestic prices?
- 14:14, 26 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that General U.S. food policy in occupied Germanywas that "Germans should suffer from hunger and from cold ... to make them realize the consequences of a war which they caused"?
- ... that the Bavarian ministry of education once ordered 75,000 copies of a song book for school children to be destroyed because it contained Biermösl Blosn's Gott mit dir, du Land der BayWa?
- ... that Japanese high school pitcher Yusei Kikuchi could be the first player to bypass a domestic draft and play for a Major League Baseball team?
- ... that a CD by OttomanHebrew sacred music?
- ... that the 1896 Meiji-Sanriku earthquake caused the most devastating tsunami in Japanese history, destroying about 9,000 homes and killing more than 22,000 people?
- ... that Kobaïan is a lyrical language created by French drummer and composer Christian Vander for his progressive rock band Magma?
- ... that reviews for the Married...With Children?
- ... that Bloody Sunday?
- 08:14, 26 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Ahklun Mountains (pictured), located in the Togiak National Wildlife Refuge, support the only existing glaciers in western Alaska?
- ... that Arne Berge and Conrad Vogt-Svendsen, priests at the Norwegian seamen's church in Hamburg, played a central role in the White Buses operation?
- ... that all three former head coaches of the BC Lions already inducted to the Canadian Football Hall of Fame, Annis Stukus, Eagle Keys and Cal Murphy, had losing records coaching this Canadian football club?
- ... that Bernard Lens III was the first English miniaturist to paint on ivory instead of vellum?
- ... that the Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality in San Francisco houses one of the world's most comprehensive libraries of academic sexological and erotological resources?
- ... that in William Blake's poems, Imagination fights Reason in his version of Genesis, Eden, and Exodus while his son later starts revolutions in America, Europe, Africa and Asia?
- ... that in 2008 61-year-old Rosie Swale-Pope completed a five-year 20,000-mile around the world run to highlight the importance of early diagnosis of prostate cancer?
- ... that in 2008, a 49% stake in US$3,500?
- 01:07, 26 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the first winner of the contest to design the Parliament of Norway Buildingwas rejected because it looked too much like a church (design pictured)?
- ... that Miguel Angel Sano received the highest international signing bonus in Minnesota Twinshistory, more than the Twins spent on 70 international prospects from 2006 to 2008 combined?
- ... that the Lulworthiaceae are a family of marine fungi that typically grow on submerged wood or seaweed?
- ... that Communist Party of America in 1919, became a vigorous anti-Communist after his wife was arrested by the NKVD during the Great Purgeof 1937–38?
- ... that Saint Giles's leper hospital at Fugglestone was founded by Queen Adelicia?
- ... that Hawaiian Alfred, Lord Tennyson?
- ... that ?
- ... that the Rugrats episode "A Rugrats Passover" fell under controversy from the Anti-Defamation League over the designs of two characters featured in it?
25 October 2009
- 19:07, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the 1918 Quincy Mine No. 2 Shaft Hoist House (pictured) contains the largest steam hoisting engine in the world, which sits atop the largest reinforced concrete engine foundation ever poured?
- ... that after resigning in 2003 as Harrah's Entertainment Company and lobbied for privatization of the state lottery?
- ... that Queen Victoria was "vastly amused" by a command performance in 1892 of La fille du régiment, presented by the Carl Rosa Opera Company at Balmoral Castle?
- ... that Jake Owen's 2009 single "Eight Second Ride" is a re-recording of a song from his 2006 debut album Startin' with Me?
- ... that Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, Spain?
- ... that Polish government in Exile Szmul Zygielbojm of the outbreak of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising?
- ... that Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet and as a Seattlebanker?
- ... that the copilot of the Tupolev Tu-8 could turn his seat 180° and man a 20 mm (0.79 in) Berezin B-20 cannon in the rear of the pilot's compartment?
- 13:07, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Puerto Rican tenor Antonio Paoli's birthplace, the Casa Paoli (pictured), was a wedding gift to his parents, who already had five children together at the time of their marriage?
- ... that ?
- ... that the ovaries of various grassspecies?
- ... that in 2004, there were only 90 women for every 100 men in the age group 18–29 in the new federal states of Germany?
- ... that the officially TMZ.com following the singer's death?
- ... that one of the most notable actions of Mikołaj Kopernik?
- ... that research in which vertebrates or cephalopods are used in Canada must meet the ethical standards set by the Canadian Council on Animal Care?
- ... that indenturedfarm laborer as a boy?
- 07:07, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that a "white mutiny" by disgruntled officers of the Lord Clive?
- ... that John Ortved was signed to author the book The Simpsons: An Uncensored, Unauthorized History after writing an oral history of The Simpsons for Vanity Fair?
- ... that the French electro-swing band Caravan Palace was formed in 2005 after three of its members were hired by a film production company to provide the soundtrack for silent pornographic movies?
- ... that IUCN?
- ... that once the Hays Code in 1934, it became impossible to re-release Waterloo Bridgedue to its controversial plot?
- ... that the Church of the Sacred Heart was transported via barge from Cambridge to St Ives?
- ... that teenage singer Faryl Smith's upcoming album Wonderland features a digitally produced duet with Luciano Pavarotti, who died in 2007?
- ... that a local resident created a board game based on roundabouts built in front of the Green Oak Village Place shopping mall in Brighton, Michigan?
- 01:07, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the elephants of Mole National Park, Ghana(pictured) do more damage to the economically important trees of the park than to less valuable species?
- ... that the Bolhrad High School in Bolhrad, Ukraine, was founded by the Bessarabian Bulgarian diaspora as the first high school of the Bulgarian National Revival period?
- ... that aviator to cross the Continental Divide of the Americas?
- ... that several groups have managed to add non-natural bases to DNA, while others have added non-natural amino acidsinto the genetic code?
- ... that the sculpture atomic bomb?
- ... that prior to becoming White House Online Programs Director in the Obama Administration, Jesse Lee worked for Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi?
- ... that the Russian paganreferences?
- ... that Werner Heubeck, the managing director of Ulsterbus during The Troubles, was known for personally removing IRA bombs from buses to keep them running on time?
24 October 2009
- 19:07, 24 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the waterfowl breeding areas in North America, and the most productive in Alaska?
- ... that Huitzilopochtli?
- ... that the U2 song "Breathe" is set on 16 June, an intentional reference to James Joyce's novel Ulysses?
- ... that, as a child, Jewish Romanian literary historian Zigu Ornea was persecuted by the antisemitic Ion Antonescu regime, and is said to have made a living selling humming tops?
- ... that Nancy Wexler, who discovered the location of the gene that causes Huntington's disease and created a genetic test for it, is herself at risk as the daughter of a sufferer?
- ... that the Bristol Guild of Applied Art has survived both Second World War bomb damage and a 1974 Provisional IRA attack?
- ... that city councilman before he was elected mayor of Oakland, Californiain 1905?
- ... that some academics believe that the "First Great Debate" in international relations theorynever actually took place?
- 13:07, 24 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the digestive tract?
- ... that the 464 BC earthquake in Sparta, Greece, led to a revolt of helots?
- ... that 43 miners were trapped for five days underground in the 1926 Pabst Mine Disaster in Michigan?
- ... that Asian women have been left traumatised and questioned by police investigating missing two-year-old Aisling Symes in New Zealand?
- ... that tribute album Rufus Does Judy at Carnegie Hall?
- ... that Max Beerbohm's 1922 book Rossetti and His Circle contained caricatures of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood?
- ... that extinct volcano?
- ... that species in the aquatic fungus family Loramycetaceae have spores with gelatinous sheaths thought to act as flotation devices?
- 07:07, 24 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that stand-up comedian Louis CK (pictured) appeared in the Parks and Recreation episode "The Stakeout" as a police officer attracted to Amy Poehler's main character?
- ... that the A,A Light Sculpture by Jim Sanborn at the University of Houston illuminates its surroundings with prose from different languages?
- ... that a complete interactive 3D reconstruction of the 3 mm marine slug Pseudunela cornuta has been accomplished?
- ... that in British Royal Family?
- ... that Katie Piper, a former model who was burnt by acid in an attack arranged by her ex-boyfriend, had her face removed and rebuilt in a single operation, which was the first of its kind?
- ... that the Dictionary of Welsh Biography contains the biography of nearly 5,000 eminent Welsh men and women over seventeen centuries?
- ... that two songs on Scott Miller's 2001 album Thus Always to Tyrants are based on unearthed family letters from the American Civil War?
- ... that theater reporter Sam Zolotow of The New York Times was said to be able to get any information he needed, as long as he had "a corned-beef sandwich, a cigar and a telephone"?
- 01:07, 24 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the 1999 Suzuki Hayabusa (pictured) was named the fastest production motorcycle of the 20th century?
- ... that critic Robert Christgau called The Indestructible Beat of Soweto the most important record of the 1980s?
- ... that Attorney General of Texas, withdrew his nomination for reelection when he learned his opponent was a disabled Confederateveteran with a family to support?
- ... that the ?
- ... that the Salar de Uyuni salt flat in Bolivia is one of the best objects for calibrating Earth observation satellites?
- ... that handover of Hong Kong to China?
- ... that English translation of the Paraphrases of Erasmuswas to be kept in every parish church?
- ... that producer ?
23 October 2009
- 19:07, 23 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that after fighting in six wars throughout Europe and Russia, General Hotze (pictured) was killed within 32 km (20 miles) of his birthplace on 25 September 1799 at the Second Battle of Zurich?
- ... that the eastern segment of Palestinian village of Dayr Ayyub?
- ... that while Tim Greve was editor-in-chief of Verdens Gang it became the largest newspaper in Norway?
- ... that the pink buses of Bermuda are specially designed for the island's roads?
- ... that economics professor Arnljot Strømme Svendsen chaired the board of the Bergen theatre Den Nationale Scene for 31 years, and also chaired the Association of Norwegian Theatres for 22 years?
- ... that The Truth" was "one of those songs that I heard the first time and knew I wanted to cut"?
- ... that Czech jockey Josef Váňa won his sixth Velká pardubická steeplechase at the age of 56?
- ... that Tiber River?
- 13:07, 23 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the acoustics at the South Granville Congregational Church (pictured) in New York are so good that community concerts are often held there despite other churches in the town being larger?
- ... that Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller?
- ... that the book sport utility vehicles?
- ... that a drummer boy in the Legion of Honor for beating the charge during the Siege of Astorgaeven after losing both legs?
- ... that ?
- ... that the British Invincible class were the world's first battlecruisers?
- ... that the alternative country band The V-Roys were originally named The Vice Roys, but were forced to change their name after being threatened with a lawsuit from a Jamaican band?
- ... that some parts of the Royal Assenton 31 July 1974, did not come into force until 1985?
- 07:07, 23 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the cliffs of Hart Mountain tower 3,600 feet above the floor of Oregon’s Warner Valley (pictured)?
- ... that during the Cadex 2009 military training exercises, Sri Lanka Navy cadets trained aboard vessels of the Indian Navy, while Indian cadets got a chance to visit historical places in Sri Lanka?
- ... that James Morrow, "a kind of science fictional Bonfire of the Vanities"?
- ... that in 1681–82?
- ... that until 1950, only descendants of Plymouth colonists could become members of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts?
- ... that long distance runner Zersenay Tadese was the first person from Eritrea to win an Olympic medal in any sport?
- ... that the drug addictwhose phone begins receiving cryptic text messages?
- ... that in a 1933 first-class cricket match, Jack Lee claimed the wicket of his older brother Harry, with the catch being taken by younger brother Frank?
- 01:07, 23 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Orient?
- ... that the Commander Australian Fleet holds full command of all maritime combat forces and operations within the Royal Australian Navy?
- ... that despite being located in Worcester, Massachusetts, the Assumption Preparatory School followed French custom in holding classes on Saturday mornings but not on Thursday or Saturday afternoons?
- ... that the NATO bombing campaignhad caused widespread damage to the city that year?
- ... that the title of the Bob Dylan song "The Wicked Messenger" mirrors a Proverbs passage, which reads "A wicked messenger falleth into mischief; but a faithful ambassador is health"?
- ... that Moroccan alligator wrestler and circus strongman Tahar Douis set a world record by lifting 12 men weighing a total of 1,700 pounds on his shoulders?
- ... that by the time Lyon's Inn was dissolved it was being run by only two of the standard twelve governors, neither of whom had any idea what their duties were?
- ... that Ascomycetes?
22 October 2009
- 14:00, 22 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the John Carroll (pictured) as its first Superior of the Missions?
- ... that Donna Mae Mims, known as the "Pink Lady" of racing, became the first woman to win a Sports Car Club of America national championship in 1963?
- ... that several ethnic Guantanamo Bay prison are amongst the approximately 1,000 Chinese people living in Palau?
- ... that current Chief of Combined Air Operations Centre-7?
- ... that Gabriel Schanche Kielland's summer house Ledaal from the early 1800s later became a royal residence in custody of Stavanger Museum?
- ... that Quakersin America?
- ... that P53, a live album by experimental music group P53, features two classical grand pianists, a turntablist and a real-time sampler/processor?
- ... that A.W. Lawrence, the former Professor of Classical Archaeology at Cambridge University was the brother of 'Lawrence of Arabia'?
- 05:56, 22 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that psalmotoxin is a spider toxin from the venom of the South American tarantula Psalmopoeus cambridgei (pictured)?
- ... that conservative State Senator Dan Morrish broke with the Louisiana Family Forum in 2009 by supporting a law which permits restaurants to levy cover charges for live entertainment and to sell alcohol?
- ... that after the was established nearby?
- ... that after playing Philippine women's national football team, Tony Chua switched to manage a team in the Philippine Basketball Association?
- ... that three Nobel Peace Prizes have led to withdrawal of members of the awarding Norwegian Nobel Committee?
- ... that until ?
- ... that despite being one of the largest malls in the Denver area, Westminster Mallis half-vacant?
- ... that when sailors more than 320 kilometres (200 mi) off the coast of 1755 Cape Ann earthquake, they thought their ship had run aground?
21 October 2009
- 21:56, 21 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the book The Israel Lobby credited the Brookings Institution for having William B. Quandt (pictured) as its Middle East policy expert, citing his "well-deserved reputation for even-handedness"?
- ... that the Colonial Revivalbuilding?
- ... that Monica C. Lozano is the publisher and Chief Executive Officer of the Los Angeles-based La Opinión, the largest Spanish language newspaper in the United States?
- ... that the CALERIE study subjects humans to a 25% reduction in food calories over a two-year period, to determine if calorie restriction prolongs life and reduces the incidence of cancer and cardiovascular disease?
- ... that Kevin Newsome was a two-time state champion hurdler at Western Branch High School before he enrolled at Penn State to play football?
- ... that the shrine at , dating from the early 1100s?
- ... that producer David Aukin has been nominated for two BAFTA Awards for films about Tony Blair?
- ... that pictures featured on Cake Wrecks, a photoblog founded in 2008, include a cake decorated with a sonogram image?
- 13:42, 21 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the tall stone Lhasa Zhol Pillar (pictured), is inscribed with what may be the oldest known Tibetan writing dating back as far as 764 CE?
- ... that in 1990 former Fritz H. Windhorst spoke on behalf of a vetoed bill which would have made abortion a felony punishable by imprisonment?
- ... that many Jews of the local arms factory?
- ... that the Store Wars" was released on DVD with an audio commentary in which the characters discuss events not seen in the episode?
- ... that a 36-cell jail is located on the twelfth floor of the Oakland, California City Hall?
- ... that Winter Olympics?
- ... that at a 2004 public demonstration, Segway inventor Dean Kamen drank his own urine after it had been passed through a Slingshot?
- 05:42, 21 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that in 1999, an by crashing an ATR 42 (pictured) into, and destroying, the airline's fleet at Gaborone's airport?
- ... that in the book United States Ambassador to Laos J. Graham Parsons who he felt "drastically misconceived the situation" in Laos?
- ... that the song "Fuiste un Trozo de Hielo en la Escarcha" performed by Puerto Rican singer Chayanne was written by a member of the Spanish band Mecano?
- ... that items from the collection of Mark Samuels Lasner relating to Aubrey Beardsley, Oscar Wilde and other writers and artists of the 1890s have provided the basis for numerous publications and exhibitions?
- ... that B. Dalton, once the second-largest bookstore in the U.S., was founded in 1966 by the Dayton's department store chain?
- ... that in a 1981 case, Judge battered woman defensein a spousal killing?
- ... that the 15th-century Ancient Priors in Crawley had hidden rooms reached by pulling meat-hooks to open a trapdoor and twisting a wall-carving to move a fireplace?
- ... that Basketball Hall of Fame coach Ernest Blood led the Passaic High SchoolHilltoppers to a 200–1 record over ten seasons, and started the team on a U.S. record 159-game winning streak?
20 October 2009
- 21:42, 20 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the ritual baton called a and other notes?
- ... that Thomas Trantino spent 38 years in the prison system for the murder of two Lodi, New Jersey, police officers, making him the longest-serving prisoner in the state as of his parole in 2002?
- ... that China's Northern Handynasty?
- ... that Santa Cruz in the footsteps of Ferdinand Magellan?
- ... that the name of the Black Abbey is based on the fact that the Dominicans were often referred to as Black Friars, because of the black cappa or cloak which they wear over their white habits?
- ... that the former carjackers?
- ... that although Saint-Thomas once was the largest tobacco producer in the province of Quebec, Canada, it no longer is cultivated there?
- ... that the skills of Zoltan Mesko were discovered in seventh grade gym class when he knocked out a light during a kickballgame?
- 13:42, 20 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Viedma Glacier (pictured) is part of the huge Southern Patagonian Ice Field, the third largest expanse of continental ice after Greenland and Antarctica?
- ... that although the Christians?
- ... that Bournemouth whilst still a student at secondary school?
- ... that of the three semi-deck lenticular truss bridges known to have been made, the Hadley, New York, Bow Bridge is the only one that still exists?
- ... that forty-eight District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico allow the courts of other jurisdictions to ask for answers to certified questionsof unsettled law?
- ... that Konawaena High School's 18th place finish in the 1990 World Solar Challenge was the basis for the 1996 film Race the Sun?
- ... that the Accurate News and Information Act, passed in 1937 by the Legislative Assembly of Alberta, gave a committee of legislators the authority to compel a newspaper to reveal its sources?
- ... that Alfred Newman Gilbey arranged that Fisher House, Cambridge would only be demolished, quite literally, over his dead body?
- 05:42, 20 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that according to nether world?
- ... that Hall of Fame jockey Jorge Velásquez won the Young America Stakes four times; in 1978 with Spectacular Bid, in 1979 with Koluctoo Bay, in 1980 with Lord Avie and in 1987 aboard Firery [sic] Ensign?
- ... that family members living overseas with members of the military courts?
- ... that after two consecutive games in which Florida Panthers centre Nathan Horton scored goals in overtime, the Miami Herald called him the "King of Overtime"?
- ... that the Commissioner's House of the cast-ironstructural supports?
- ... that Oakwood Cemetery in Troy, New York, is the resting place of the progenitor of Uncle Sam, Samuel Wilson, financier Russell Sage, and educators Emma Willard and Amos Eaton?
- ... that the 7th Earl of Pembroke was convicted of murder but pardoned by King Charles II?
19 October 2009
- 21:42, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the three caducei on the Flag of Brisbane (pictured) represent Hermes' role as the protector of commerce, and not their more familiar meaning of being associated with medicine?
- ... that the 2009 film Heart of Stone is the story of Weequahic High Schoolbeset by gangs, and its principal working with Black and Jewish alumni and gang members to restore its glory prior to 1960?
- ... that that SS Empire Bay was sunk by bombs dropped from a Dornier Do 217 of 8 Staffeln, Kampfgeschwader 2 in 1942?
- ... that the philanthropist, and politician George Strake, Jr., was among the benefactors in the restoration of the World War II vessel, USS Cavalla (SS-244)?
- ... that the sinking of the Romanian-flagged crude oil carrier MT Unirea was classified by Lloyd's List as the world's largest ship accident of 1982?
- ... that sailor Thomas Bourne won the Medal of Honor for actions during the 1862 Battle of Forts Jackson and St. Philip in which he "remained steadfast at his gun" despite heavy fire his ship was taking?
- ... that some copies of Greek singer Chrispa's new album Mehri Edo accidentally contained church hymns instead of her songs?
- ... that in his response brief in Beck v. Eiland-Hall, attorney Marc Randazza cited the U.S. Supreme Court case Hustler Magazine v. Falwell?
- 10:00, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that one of the two extant buildings from the gasholder houses (pictured) in the Northeast?
- ... that Judge George C. Pratt blamed Angelo Errichetti for luring U.S. Senator Harrison A. Williams to accept Abscam bribes, with Pratt describing Errichetti as "the center of a cesspool of corruption"?
- ... that the British passenger liner RMS Persiawas the largest ship in the world at the time of her launch in 1855?
- ... that under , car dealers and retail shops?
- ... that homosexual novelist Myron Brinig wrote several novels about homosexuality, yet he was closeted all his life?
- ... that the song "Full Circle", from The Byrds' 1973 reunion album, was not released as a single in the United Kingdom until August 1975, more than two years after The Byrds' reunion had come to an end?
- ... that The British Museum Friends recently provided funding to help the British Museum acquire twelve Greek papyri from the Oxyrhynchus Papyri?
- ... that Nikolai Menshutkin discovered in 1890 a chemical reaction which is still used to study the effect of solvent on reaction rate?
- 02:00, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that 19th-century West Tarring's St Andrew's Church(pictured)?
- ... that consumption of the Psilocybe argentipesby mice who compulsively bury marbles significantly inhibits this behaviour?
- ... that Dar Lyon was the only English cricketer involved in the 1924 Test Trial match not to go on to represent England at Test cricket?
- ... that Protestantrebellion, but died after only a year in office?
- ... that in 1924 the Texas historian Rupert N. Richardson became one of the founders of the West Texas Historical Association?
- ... that the jail wing at the old Warren County courthouse in Lake George, New York, has an unusual structural system in which the second floor is supported by steel rods suspended from the roof trusses?
- ... that Kerala's Angadipuram Laterite is formed from the weathering of many rock types, including charnockite, anorthosite and gabbro?
- ... that the Little Green House on K Street in Washington, D.C. was where the Ohio Gang hatched such schemes as the Teapot Dome scandal?
18 October 2009
- 18:00, 18 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Hamiltonian cycle?
- ... that the Continuity of Government Commission in 2003 recommended a constitutional amendment to ensure that vacancies in the U.S. House were filled quickly in the event of a massive attack?
- ... that champion?
- ... that various expense claims, including a £1 charity donation to UNICEF?
- ... that the community center?
- ... that the genus name of the commonly grown Australian garden plants Dianella caerulea and D. tasmanica is derived from the goddess Diana?
- ... that , newspaper before he started college?
- ... that the Japanese Manga de Dokuha series published a controversial manga version of Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler?
- 10:00, 18 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Spotted Seal (pictured) has a narrow snoutlike that of a dog?
- ... that the yacht Adele served with the Royal Australian Navy in both world wars—as HMAS Franklin in the first and HMAS Adele in the second?
- ... that Gilberto Zaldívar's New York City-based Repertorio Español, called "a national treasure ... unmatched by any other Spanish-language theater company", has staged over 250 productions in 40 years?
- ... that in the last hundred years some of the commercially fished Hawaiian stocks have decreased by 80–85%?
- ... that Leonie Pray House hosted recitals by Liberace and Risë Stevens and served as the home of Patrick Swayze's character in Donnie Darko?
- ... that Le Vélo's impassioned reporting of the Dreyfus affair led indirectly to the creation of the Tour de France?
- ... that Puerto Rican singer Chayanne received a Grammy Award nomination for his self-titled 1988 album?
- ... that Robert Walpole, father of England's first Prime Minister, holds the record for the longest overdue librarybook at 288 years?
- 02:00, 18 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... the current flag of Bhutan (pictured) was introduced after it was noticed the previous square version didn't flutter like the Indian flag?
- ... that The Heartland Series, produced by a Knoxville, Tennessee, TV station, has been called "the nation's longest-running sociological video repository"?
- ... that the majority of the traditional dishes of the cuisine of Dorset originated in the 17th and 18th centuries?
- ... that Alberta Social Credit Leaguethat his house was once bombed?
- ... that the mushroom Entoloma austroprunicolor of Tasmania's wet forests changes from bluish-purple, to reddish purple, to purplish grey as it ages?
- ... that Prirazlomnaya oil platform on the Prirazlomnoye field is equipped with the topsides of the former Hutton oilfield's platform Hutton TLP, which was the first Tension Leg Platform ever built?
- ... that United States national rugby union team?
- ... that the 1937 Social Credit backbenchers' revolt was resolved by a government bill for which all members of government disavowed any responsibility?
17 October 2009
- 17:42, 17 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that while the rest of ?
- ... that in March 1997, Lucia Newman became the first United States journalist in twenty-seven years to be based in Cuba?
- ... that the Mussabini Medal sought to celebrate the coaches of British sportspeople who had achieved outstanding success on the world stage?
- ... that Josh Turner was "elated to discover that he wouldn't have to do any acting" in the music video for his single "Why Don't We Just Dance"?
- ... that the bark of the Caribbean tree Canella winterana can be used as a spice similar to cinnamon?
- ... that USA have partnered with phone sex providers in traffic pumping arrangements that earn them millions of dollars in phoneconnection fees?
- ... that one of Boomerang, includes a private cinema that at one time could seat 200 people?
- ... that the Brandenburgian prince-electors to touch Pomeranianflags?
- 09:42, 17 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Canadian soldier who died in the Battle of Williamsburg in the American Civil War?
- ... that since 2007, Alien Resident Certificates issued to foreign residents in Taiwan have included an integrated circuitcontaining personal information?
- ... that Sydney Rippon, father of a UK Cabinet minister, played in a first-class cricket match under an assumed name so that his employer, the Inland Revenue, would not find out?
- ... that 300 civilians living in Ostrach survived in their cellars while 70,000 Austrians and French battled overhead in March 1799?
- ... that the 2.44-mile (3.93 km) long Iowa Highway 107 consists of two segments wholly within Meservey and Thornton, Iowa?
- ... that a recently rediscovered Union Jack presented to James Clephan after the Battle of Trafalgarin 1805 is the only surviving flag from the battle?
- ... that the creation of the Berlin Lichtenberg proved controversial, being perceived as disadvantageous to the Party of Democratic Socialism?
- ... that during a professional wrestler Rhett Titus had the face of female professional wrestler Daizee Hazeairbrushed onto his ring gear?
- 01:42, 17 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the basement of Seattle's Temple De Hirsch (pictured) was the site of Jimi Hendrix's first professional gig?
- ... that during Second World War having ended several days previously?
- ... that a benefit concert taking place in Dublin tonight will be broadcast live to an audience in Gaza City?
- ... that the Georgia Marble Company supplied the marble used to build the statue of Lincoln at the Lincoln Memorial?
- ... that after Larry Niven's first attempt at writing a Star Trek: The Animated Series screenplay was rejected, Gene Roddenberry suggested he adapt one of his short stories which became "The Slaver Weapon"?
- ... that the yellow-green mushroom Entoloma rodwayi of wet forests in Tasmania turns a vivid blue-green upon drying?
- ... that geophysicist for AmocoOil Company?
- ... that Irene Vilar's memoir Impossible Motherhood was rejected 51 times before it was successfully published?
16 October 2009
- 17:28, 16 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the post office (pictured) had one of the most elaborate lobbiesin the state when it was opened in 1910?
- ... that bankrupt in the Fleet debtors' prison?
- ... that although the teeth of the Lund's Amphibious Rat, it is probably more closely related to marsh rats?
- ... that the floods, relocated, and thereafter closed for financial reasons?
- ... that in 1913 Great Lakes region?
- ... that the Franklin Borough School District in rural New Jersey had a baseball field said to have been designed by Babe Ruth and local engineers to match the dimensions of the original Yankee Stadium?
- ... that lawyer Mario Jascalevich?
- ... that Alexander the Great was one of the greatest supporters of Homonoia?
- 09:28, 16 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Swedish figure skater men's individual figure skating competition(pictured) even though he was skating on an injured knee?
- ... that the distribution of galaxy types found within the Eridanus Group provides evidence for the theory of cold dark matter?
- ... that Englishman Bob Bootland, who was the first foreigner to coach a football club in India, arrived in the country on holiday and never left?
- ... that Kordian, a romantic drama by one of Poland's Three Bards, Juliusz Słowacki, is a polemic with Dziady, an earlier work by another of the Three Bards, Adam Mickiewicz?
- ... that 1948 Arab-Israeli War?
- ... that the September 1988 unemployment statistics for the United Kingdom were briefly over-recorded due to the 1988 United Kingdom postal workers strike?
- ... that the Van Buren Street Bridge in Oregon is the last movable-span truss bridge constructed by the pin connection method located on the West Coast?
- ... that drag?
- 03:28, 16 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the executions, and as the site of speeches from three Presidents of the United States?
- ... that in 1882, almost a century after the Polish colony in Cameroon?
- ... that Rear Admiral Ellis M. Zacharias, who had been deputy chief of Navy intelligence in World War II, later narrated the NBC Cold War docudrama Behind Closed Doors, titled after one of his own books?
- ... that the Korean Painting of the Eastern Palace, is actually of two royal palaces to the east of Gyeongbokgung palace?
- ... that an annual award for "outstanding state legislators" presented by the National Bar Association is named for Louisiana State Representative Pinkie C. Wilkerson?
- ... that from 1946 to 1991, Ordnance Survey International provided a central survey and mapping organisation for British colonies and protectorates?
- ... that the destruction of 1948 Arab-Israeli war was condemned by Count Bernadotte?
- ... that in the case Coleman v. Schwarzenegger a three-judge panel gave the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation two years to cut prison populations to 137.5% of capacity?
15 October 2009
- 21:28, 15 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that during a rouge test (example pictured), an experimenter places a colored dot on a child's nose to assess self-recognitionwhen looking in the mirror?
- ... that in 1906 Ernest Archdeacon commissioned an Aéromotocyclette (propeller driven motorcycle) which achieved 79.5 kph?
- ... that the Microsoft data loss of 2009 has been described as the biggest disaster to affect the concept of cloud computing?
- ... that Billboard Touring Awardsfor Top Package Tour?
- ... that Judge Theodore Trautwein jailed a New York Times reporter for 40 days for refusing to turn over notes in a murder trial, saying that the reporter put his own rights above those of the defendant?
- ... that the Seven Sisters women's magazines include five of the ten largest circulation magazines in the United States?
- ... that Salathé Wall in Yosemite Valleyin 1961?
- ... that the song created for The Coca-Cola Company's marketing campaign Open Happiness peaked at the number one spot on record charts in China?
- 15:28, 15 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Gideon Putnam Burying Ground (pictured) is the only extant remnant of the founder of Saratoga Springs, New York?
- ... that Hugo Raudsepp, one of Estonia's greatest comedic playwrights, became a "non-person"?
- ... that the Delos Archaeological Museum, began excavating at Delosin 1872 and is still excavating the area today?
- ... that Porgy and Bess earned a "landmark place in theater history" when Douglas Watt encouraged producer Cheryl Crawford to create a second run on Broadway after a disappointing 1935 debut?
- ... that thoroughbred horse Lord Avie, bought for $37,000 in 1980, was put to stud after retiring in 1981 and by 2002 had sired 578 starters, including 429 individual winners with total earnings of $35 million?
- ... that several Norway and the European Unionis put on the agenda?
- ... that after footballer Barrie Thomas transferred from Scunthorpe United to Newcastle United in January 1962, attendances at Scunthorpe's home games dropped by 20%?
- ... that one scene of the Going to Australia" was filmed on a set that was physically falling apart as the camera was rolling?
- 09:28, 15 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Provost Marshal General (flag pictured) supervises all aspects of law enforcement within the United States Army, reporting to the Army Chief of Staff?
- ... that in the Polish–Muscovite War of 1577–1582, Muscovy failed in its attempt to gain access to the Baltic Sea?
- ... that Emmy Award-winning 1979 film Friendly Fire starring Carol Burnett?
- ... that the Czech Republic hosts more than fifty international music competitions in 2009?
- ... that a Canadians?
- ... that the interbellum but largely lacked representation outside Bessarabia?
- ... that American economic historian John Ulric Nef was the co-founder of the University of Chicago's Committee on Social Thought?
- ... that Baseball Rubbing Mud, used by every team in Major League Baseball to give baseballs a rougher texture, originates from a secret location on the Delaware River?
- 03:28, 15 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Amblyrhiza and the cat-sized Megalomys desmarestii?
- ... that single vineyard labelingin the state?
- ... that in his account of "Christian expeditions" into China (first published in 1615), Matteo Ricci strongly criticized feng shui practices?
- ... that the Bosworth fracture is named after the first non-Japanese to be awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure, American David M. Bosworth?
- ... that Takthok Monastery is the only monastery of the Nyingma sect of Tibetan Buddhism in Ladakh?
- ... that Roman Catholic missionary Aengus Finucane often flew with Mother Teresa while delivering food supplies to Bangladesh?
- ... that the Hiram Charles Todd House was the very first property in Saratoga Springs, New York, to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places?
- ... that a Polish railway worker, Wojciech Najsarek, was one of the first victims of World War II?
14 October 2009
- 21:28, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Perth, Western Australia, is expected to be completed in 2009, almost 80 years after expansions were halted due to the Great Depression?
- ... that medical student, coached the North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team as well as future Governor of North Carolina Luther H. Hodges?
- ... that the East Roman army?
- ... that W.I.B. Crealock designed a yacht that was inducted into the American Sailboat Hall of Fame?
- ... that the new Utah towns of Bryce Canyon City, Hideout, and Independence were incorporated under a controversial, short-lived state law?
- ... that HMS Pinaforein 1878?
- ... that Hakgala Strict Nature Reserve is an important and isolated cloud forest, however its small size and isolation is jeopardizing its long term survival?
- ... that during World War II, James Hill captured two Italian tanks using only his revolver but was wounded while attempting to capture a third?
- 09:28, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Disciotis venosa, Hygrophorus subalpinus, Mycena overholtsii, Plectania nannfeldtii, Ramaria botrytis, and Clitocybe glacialis (pictured) are all mushrooms that grow in or near snowbanks?
- ... that a juvenile poem about the pleasure palace, Hero's suicide, the jilted Ariadne, a diary with a calendar, poetic feasts, a masque, nymphs, and a deadly love affair?
- ... that Benjamin Britten composed many viola parts for Cecil Aronowitz, a co-founder of the Melos Ensemble?
- ... that France–Asia relations span more than two millennia, and have involved numerous alliances between France and Asian countries?
- ... that in 1961, a year before he died, turn-of-the-century racecar driver Gus Monckmeier recreated his 1911 1,000-mile run around Lake Michigan?
- ... that the people of Pachucacall the city the "Cradle of Mexican Soccer"?
- ... that some historians believe that Edith Rogers was left out of the Alberta cabinet in 1935 because she was a woman?
- ... that the soldiershad to walk in circles all night to keep from freezing?
- 03:28, 14 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the first two movie theatres in historic district, and by 1914 six of the 13 buildings housed movie theatres?
- ... that his fine Leonid Kharitonov from a poor villager in Siberiainto a renowned singer performing all around the Soviet Union?
- ... that ?
- ... that Judge Peter T. Farrell presided over the trial of bank robber Willie Sutton, who claimed to have stolen millions from banks in his career, and sentenced him to 30–120 years in Attica State Prison?
- ... that the completely destroyed during the Second World War?
- ... that in 1989, Carlos D. Ramirez led a group that purchased El Diario La Prensa, the oldest Spanish-language newspaper in the United States?
- ... that director Filmfare Best Director Award for his 1970 film Safar?
- ... that Lithuanian Chief of Defence Arvydas Pocius was freestyle wrestling champion of Lithuania in junior, youth and adult groups?
13 October 2009
- 21:28, 13 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that fossil record?
- ... that AIDS?
- ... that Palestinian nationalist movement made up of Arab citizens of Israel?
- ... that the late B-17 bomber?
- ... that by 1984, less than 40 years after his death, Mori Koben had more than 2,000 descendants, who were Micronesians of Japanese descent?
- ... that GM executive Harlow Curtice turned down a generalship during World War II, and was Time magazine's Man of the Year for 1955?
- ... that Anders Haugen, one of the 104 medalists at the 1924 Winter Olympics, was awarded his bronze medal in ski jumping fifty years after the games ended?
- ... that explorer Christina Dodwell was initiated into manhood by the crocodile people of the New Guinealowlands?
- 15:28, 13 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that lots on the West Side (houses on Washington Street, pictured) of Saratoga Springs, New York, were so uniformly narrow that even bungalowswere built with their sides facing the street?
- ... that French indie rock band Stuck in the Sound got their name from the fact that when the group formed, the four band members locked themselves in a basement with their music?
- ... that the Meadowlands Rail Line can transport 10,000 fans per hour to and from events at Giants Stadium and other venues in the Meadowlands Sports Complex?
- ... that the popularity of Sunday night repeats of the 1967 clergymen?
- ... that 'Asta Bowen's novel wolves relocated from Pleasant Valley, Montana, to Glacier Parkin 1989?
- ... that remains of glyptodonts?
- ... that World War II RAAF fighter ace John Waddy later became a Minister of the Crown, while British Army paratrooper John Waddy went on to command the SAS?
- 09:28, 13 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Women Superstars Uncensored?
- ... that patient activist Rose Kushner is credited with helping to end the practice of treating breast cancer by performing both a biopsy and a mastectomy as a one-step surgical procedure?
- ... that the first six of Do As Infinity's studio albums from Break of Dawn to Need Your Love reached the top 5 of the Japanese Oricon albums chart?
- ... that in order to register themselves as a political association according to Bund of Bukovinahad to limit its membership to male Austrian citizens?
- ... that video game Jungle Strike was accused of jingoism?
- ... that although a yellow fever epidemic forced the team to play the final month of the season on the road, Otto Williams batted .278 and helped the New Orleans Pelicans win the 1905 pennant?
- ... that the Quebec, Canada is named after Edwin Crabtree, whose paper millled to the town's development?
- ... that Irish international sporting brothers Louis Magee and James Magee both had the middle name Mary?
- 03:28, 13 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that when the steamer SS Myron (pictured) sank in 1919, she defied the adage that “Lake Superior seldom gives up her dead” when 17 of her crew were found frozen to death wearing their lifejackets?
- ... that the work of Russian famine of 1921, was mentioned in the writings of Leon Trotsky?
- ... that although Spottail pinfish are known from both south Florida and the Gulf of Mexico, there are no confirmed reports of them from the West Indies?
- ... that Baltimore Sunnewspaper, used pony express routes, telegraphy, steamships, and even carrier pigeons to gather the news more quickly?
- ... that the Hotel D’Angleterre?
- ... that twin brothers Nashville Volunteers baseball team's batteryin 1920 and 1921?
- ... that the Abir Congo Company was once described as "the black spot on the history of Central African settlement"?
- ... that John Hyson published articles on the history of the toothbrush, George Washington's dentures, and one entitled "Did You Know A Dentist Embalmed President Lincoln?"?
12 October 2009
- 21:28, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that due to scarcity of iron in Puerto Rico, the Spanish government contracted for the Arenas Bridge (pictured) to be built by a Belgian firm in 1894, and shipped to be assembled in place?
- ... that Dr. ultrasound imaging?
- ... that the star attraction of the Westminster Pit, a Victorian blood sport arena, was a dog named "Billy", who was reportedly able to kill 100 rats in five minutes?
- ... that marketing executive Edward Gelsthorpe, who introduced Ban roll-on deodorant and Manwich sloppy joe sauce, earned the nickname "Cran-Apple Ed" after developing the juice drink for Ocean Spray?
- ... that two , on 12 September 2009?
- ... that David Davies was transported to Australia for his part in the Rebecca Riots, an uprising that saw the mob leaders cross-dressing as women?
- ... that the Quarter pony horse breed was developed from horses that did not meet the American Quarter Horse Association's original height requirement of 14.2 hands(58 inches, 147 cm) high?
- ... that Yehuda Hiss has been the chief pathologist at Israel's National Institute of Forensic Medicine since 1988?
- 15:28, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Mandarin, Florida, to help educate emancipated slaves, which she wrote about in a memoir named Palmetto Leaves(pictured)?
- ... that La Parka is the second man to wrestle under this ring name?
- ... that the East Side Historic District of Saratoga Springs, New York, contains 379 structures including 82 buildings formerly used by Skidmore College?
- ... that Giuseppe Giulietti, a leader of the Italian seamen's union, once hijacked a ship that was transporting weapons to the White movement in Russia?
- ... that a team of archaeologists has recently discovered the remains of a 5000-year old circle of bluestone monoliths, about 1 mile (1.6 km) from Stonehenge?
- ... that U.S. Army All-American Bowlteam?
- ... that the historic Streamline Moderne Greyhound Bus Depot in Columbia, South Carolina, is now the office for a plastic surgeon?
- ... that the illegal Muño Peláezin 1121 was considered a "den of robbers and bandits" by contemporaries, and was soon razed?
- 09:28, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Lingais venerated?
- ... that the King Gustavus Adolphus of Swedenin 1631?
- ... that the Norwegian-British-Swedish Antarctic Expedition (1949–1952) found evidence that suggests a portion of Antarctica was once joined to southern Africa?
- ... that the architect John Douglas designed a pair of houses at 31 and 33 Dee Banks, Chester, Cheshire, England, one for his own use and the other probably as an investment?
- ... that there are 1,000 species and subspecies of eucalypts at South Australia's 32 ha (79 acres) Currency Creek Arboretum?
- ... that Heinrich Roller invented a popular shorthand system in 1875 after having been sued unsuccessfully for publishing a popular textbook on Leopold Arends' shorthand system?
- ... that the Kodaikanal–Munnar Road in Tamil Nadu and Kerala was built by the British in 1942 as an evacuation route in preparation for a possible Japanese invasion of South India?
- ... that the platform of Reichsrat, has been called "a sort of half-hearted Zionism"?
- 03:28, 12 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the spiny puffball (pictured), an edible fungus, can inhibit the growth of several bacteria pathogenic to humans?
- ... that Baseball Hall of Famer Eddie Collins in college, and Collins later hired Lauder to coach the Chicago White Sox?
- ... that the 1979 Abbotsford landslip was the biggest landslide ever in an urban area in New Zealand?
- ... that Lee Robins "pioneered the field of psychiatric epidemiology" and "played a key role in determining the prevalence of mental problems in the United States and the world"?
- ... that 600 BCE?
- ... that it is claimed that in 1888 Victorian medium Robert James Lees led police to the home of Jack the Ripper?
- ... that the deaths of coal and iron miners in the Forest of Dean are commemorated by an 11 feet (3.4 m) sculpture at New Fancy?
- ... that Karl Wilhelm Scheibler, the "Cotton King" of Łódź, sold his stock at triple the price after the American Civil War broke out?
11 October 2009
- 21:28, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Nikolai Militov and Makary Ivanov of the Alaskan natives against smallpox?
- ... that Stephanie Okerekewent back to acting and directing her own films after her car accident in 2005?
- ... that the people of Scilla spent the night on the beach after the first shock of the 1783 Calabrian earthquakes sequence only to be caught by the tsunamicaused by the second?
- ... that Jesuit Louis J. Gallagher, who brought to Rome the relics of Andrew Bobola which were rescued from the Bolsheviks by Edmund A. Walsh, later published books about both men?
- ... that Archduke Charles personally led his Hungarian Grenadiers in a charge against the French line at the Battle of Stockach in 1799?
- ... that banker confectioner in Budapest?
- ... that realising the many sexual and drug pressures facing young people, a student association in Morocco encourages their youth to seek Answers, Solutions and Knowledge?
- ... that in 1991, Victor Erlich, the grandson of Stalin’s orders, had been "rehabilitated"?
- 15:28, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the Encyclopaedia Hebraica (pictured), which Bracha Peli started in 1946 with her son, Alexander supervising, issued its final volume 50 years later?
- ... that Lucas Murray, who was born blind, is one of the first British people to learn to visualise his surroundings using a technique similar to bats and dolphins, called echolocation?
- ... that Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA, was founded by Jonas Gilman Clark in 1887?
- ... that Indigenous Australian artist and illustrator Bronwyn Bancroft was the first Australian fashion designer invited to show her work in Paris?
- ... that, having begun as an affiliate of the communist regime as an openly homosexualdissident?
- ... that Mary of Woodstock, daughter of Edward I of England, travelled widely as a nun despite a papal travel prohibition?
- ... that the on crops?
- ... that Konk"?
- 07:28, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Cantharellus lateritius (pictured) may typically be distinguished from other chanterelles by its smooth under surface?
- ... that in 1493, 150 landlords confirmed the Treaty of Pyritzby oath?
- ... that Maria Gulovich sheltered Jews, worked for the anti-fascist underground, and was awarded the Bronze Star for saving the lives of OSS agents during World War II?
- ... that the Tuvan People's Revolutionary Party was admitted as a "sympathizing party" in the Communist International in 1935?
- ... that Per Arne Watle, current chairman of Hurtigruten and former CEO of Widerøe, was also president of the European Regions Airline Association?
- ... that nēnēwere raised?
- ... that more than 4,000 people died in 1933 on Nazino Island in the Soviet Union, many of whom were deported there only because they did not have an internal passport?
- 01:28, 11 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the double-decker sight-seeing boat Jalakanyaka (pictured) sank on 30 September in Thekkady, Kerala, killing 45 tourists?
- ... that in 941 CE, the Rus'fleet of 1,000 ships?
- ... that Marie Wadley helped to introduce legislation to establish the Five Civilized Tribes Museum in Oklahoma and later served as its first president?
- ... that the naturalizedplayers?
- ... that the television series Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends was nominatedfor thirty-one awards throughout its run?
- ... that Michał Klepfisz, a hero of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, saved his comrades' lives by throwing himself on a German machine gun?
- ... that Konbaung Burmese forces led by Thado Minsawin 1784?
- ... that if a tree falls on seedlings of the Walking Palm its stilt roots allow it to re-root in a different location?
10 October 2009
- 19:28, 10 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that De Hoop (pictured), located in Norg, Drenthe, is the only windmill in the Netherlands still equipped with Bilau sails?
- ... that the Indian Army during World War II was the largest volunteer army in history, rising to over 2.5 million men in August 1945?
- ... that according to the book ChiPittsarea?
- ... that in the ?
- ... that for a record 13th consecutive year?
- ... that Vilna, and became a folk hero in the Jewish workers’ movement, with poems and dramas written about him in Yiddish?
- ... that William Michael Crose was the first Governor of American Samoa styled as such, the previous ones holding the title "Governor of Tutuila"?
- ... that the teenage Prince Johann Ernst of Saxe-Weimar's music collection had a long-term influence on the musical style of Johann Sebastian Bach?
- 13:22, 10 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the name of the village Kannada language?
- ... that to avoid being hit by Allied bombers during the British Indian Armycarried orange umbrellas?
- ... that the leader of the Stalin’s orders, which provoked an international outcry of protest?
- ... that Lord Nuffield rejected the first designs for the buildings of Nuffield College, Oxford by the architect Austen Harrison, saying that they were "un-English"?
- ... that Marie Haupt, Josephine Schefsky and Friederike Grün each premiered a character in Richard Wagner's first Ring cycle at the Bayreuth Festspielhaus in August 1876?
- ... that Mexican state of Campeche?
- ... that the Primetime Emmy Awardfor "Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming One Hour or More)" in 2009?
- ... that spurge closely related to the poinsettia, is sometimes used as a treatment for cancer?
- 06:29, 10 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that magnitude and mechanism of an earthquake?
- ... that Antonio Frasconi spent ten years creating an artwork that shows the people who disappeared during the dictatorships in Uruguay?
- ... that Atlantic tropical cycloneon record?
- ... that Guinness World Record for the largest ever book signing by signing 1849 copies of his self-help book Golden Apples on 16 April 2005 in Easons, O'Connell Street?
- ... that the first known Japanese settlement in the Federated States of Micronesiadates back to 1890?
- ... that the Belgian-born Dutch politician Second World War?
- ... that the chicks of the down and are fed by regurgitationby both parents?
- ... that the Sholes and Glidden typewriter was the first commercially successful typewriter?
- 00:28, 10 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that a church in Worthing, England (pictured), has the world's only known replica of the Sistine Chapel ceiling, hand-painted at two-thirds scale by an untrained artist?
- ... that under electronic books or ebooks?
- ... that The Other Economic Summit (TOES), founded in 1984, was a counter-summit to the G7 meetings, held each year for the next two decades in the G7 host country?
- ... that Napoleon's coronation involved two orchestras with four choruses, numerous military bandsand over three hundred musicians?
- ... that risk management firm Verisk Analytics raised $1.9 billion in its October 7, 2009 initial public offering, making it the largest IPO in the United States to date in 2009?
- ... that nine years before being cast as J. Homer Bedloe on CBS's Petticoat Junction, Charles Lane appeared as a hard-nosed newspaper editor in Peter Lawford's short-lived NBC sitcom, Dear Phoebe?
- ... that the engine house of the Pinchbeck Engine, Pinchbeck, Lincolnshire, England, is a Scheduled Ancient Monument?
- ... that Luise Jaide created two roles in Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen opera cycle?
9 October 2009
- 18:28, 9 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the discovery of geometrical body Gömböc (pictured) in 2006 helped understanding the body shape of turtles?
- ... that Discovery Channel called Ardi, "The evidence that Darwin could only have dreamed of"?
- ... that Mimi Weddell, whose acting career started in her mid-sixties, was named as one "The Most Beautiful New Yorkers" by New York magazine in 2005 at age 90?
- ... that "Papa" De Hem's oyster-house in Soho was patronised by poets, spies and rock-stars?
- ... that Bernard Madoff, stopped accepting students in 2008 as part of a planned closure due to declining grades?
- ... that Anna Deinet created the role of Brangäne in Richard Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, the first of two Wagner characters she premiered?
- ... that in U.S. Supreme Court held that under the ADA, a disability includes limitations in a "major life activity", but excludes limitations in specific job-related tasks?
- ... that the termite Globitermes sulphureus uses autothysis, a form of suicidal altruism, to entangle intruder ants in a sticky substance?
- 12:28, 9 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that by the 17th century, the Norman church of St James the Less (pictured) in Lancing, West Sussex was so dilapidated that birds were nesting and pigeons were breeding inside?
- ... that Eugenio Pacelli's (future Pope Pius XII) 1936 visit to the United States was planned, in part, to investigate and silence Catholic priest and New Deal opponent Charles Coughlin?
- ... that for the score of the Prince of Persia, composer Inon Zur combined classical orchestral music with Arabic flutes and the woodwind duduk?
- ... that following the capture of 1948 Arab-Israeli war, its inhabitants were expelled by the Israel Defense Forceson three separate occasions in 1949?
- ... that John Martin Poyer was appointed Naval Governor of American Samoa after he had retired from active duty?
- ... that "Stop Lasnamäe!" was one of the slogans of the Estonian Singing Revolution?
- ... that the remains of Melanie Hall who went missing in 1996 were discovered by the M5 motorwayin October 2009?
- ... that the Seinfeld writers, attempting to produce a "Quentin Tarantino version of a sitcom", included the title character’s death in a dream sequence in "The Baby Shower"?
- 06:28, 9 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the 1863 stone arch bridge in Minnesota?
- ... that journalist journalistic freedom?
- ... that in 1644, during the King Charles I's troops?
- ... that Clark Daniel Stearns was removed from command of the USS Michigan for allowing the sailors under his command to organize advising committees?
- ... that it is uncertain whether the extinct oryzomyine rodent Megalomys audreyae came from Barbuda or Barbados?
- ... that W. Horace Carter won a 1953 Pulitzer Prize for anti-KKK reporting, "waged on their own doorstep at the risk of economic loss and personal danger" that led to the conviction of over 100 Klansmen?
- ... that in June 2004, the only businesses in operation at anchor storesand a restaurant?
- ... that First World War, and was never again able to head the ball?
- 00:28, 9 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that most attacks on humans by the blacktip reef shark (pictured) consist of people being bitten on their legs or feet while wading in shallow water?
- ... that the selection of Ernie "Indian Red" Lopez for the California Boxing Hall of Fame led to his discovery in a Texas homeless shelter after being missing for 12 years?
- ... that during filming of The Emperor Waltz in Jasper National Park, director Billy Wilder had California pines planted on location because he was unhappy with the look of the native trees?
- ... that Likir Monastery in Ladakh contains a statue of Avalokiteśvara with 1000 arms and 11 heads?
- ... that before becoming an ICC commissioner, James D. Yeomans helped manage two railroads and ran a stock farm?
- ... that potbelly sculpture is a crude non-Maya sculptural style distributed along the Pacific slope of southern Mesoamerica and dating to the Preclassic Period?
- ... that some of the intrusions, while others are cut by them?
- ... that Catholic Relief Act 1829?
8 October 2009
- 18:28, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that while naval attaché in Tokyo, future four-star admiral Frederick J. Horne (pictured) became the first United States Navy officer to be decorated by the Empire of Japan?
- ... that in 2008 over two-thirds of all prisoners in Switzerland were non-Swiss nationals?
- ... that Isaac Baker Brown was an English surgeon who in 1867 was expelled from the Obstetrical Society of London for performing clitoridectomies without his patients' consent?
- ... that Pindus National Park is one of three areas in Greece that hosts populations of bears?
- ... that William J. Calhoun's report on the death of an American in Cuba persuaded President McKinley that war against Spain was advisable?
- ... that Faiz Ahmed Faiz was suspected of involvement in the first of several military coup attempts in Pakistan?
- ... that Misterioso, Jr.'s nickname translates as "the King of Yogurt"?
- ... that autism Normal People Scare Me?
- 12:28, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the former Union Mill Complex (pictured) in Ballston Spa, New York, was built to manufacture textiles, but later produced paper bags and, even later, chocolate?
- ... that old houses in England saw an increased number of visitors in the 1840s due to published lithographs depicting architecture and historical scenes in them drawn by Joseph Nash?
- ... that Barkhor, Lhasa?
- ... that Governor of Guam, also published the island's first locally owned newspaper?
- ... that the Yiddish languageliterature, theater and culture?
- ... that Raymond B. West developed a new standard of double exposure photography while directing a 1917 film in which one actress played two sisters?
- ... that a feud between Pierre de Cros fueled the outbreak of the Western Schism?
- ... that the Riverside International Automotive Museum in Riverside, California, houses the largest and most comprehensive collection of Maserati road cars in the United States?
- 06:28, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the three high crosses at Monasterboice—including Muiredach's High Cross (pictured)—have been described as possibly Ireland's greatest contribution to European sculpture?
- ... that despite the efforts of fledgling writers Norman Lear and Larry Gelbart, Celeste Holm bombed after only eight episodes in her 1954 CBS sitcom Honestly, Celeste!?
- ... that the biography Van Morrison: Too Late to Stop Now concludes the influence of religion on Morrison's music may be his most lasting contribution?
- ... that 29 years after his defection to the Soviet Union, American Victor Norris Hamilton was discovered in a mental hospital?
- ... that Llandovery Bank, established in Wales in 1799, was known locally as the "Black Ox Bank" because it issued banknotes bearing a black ox?
- ... that Tacchi Venturi, the personal liaison between Mussolini and the popes, was the architect of the Lateran Treaty, which created Vatican City and made Catholicismthe state religion of Italy?
- ... that the 1976 crash of aviation accident in Turkey?
- ... that Truman C. Everts was lost for 37 days while exploring what would become Yellowstone National Park?
- 00:28, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the brilliantly-coloured blue and black Blue banded bee?
- ... that the Escoffery and Lecesnewhen he said they wanted to "sheath their daggers in the breasts of their white inhabitants"?
- ... that the Ministry of TransportRegions of the Future competition in 2000?
- ... that one of the tenants of Bloomington, Illinois' Eastland Mall had operated a store in town since 1892?
- ... that The Coronas had to be escorted out of the building after being mobbed by their fans following a performance at The Music Show in 2008?
- ... that the three of the 1870s?
- ... that George Washington and James Fenimore Cooper visited the springs at Brookside, an early resort in Ballston Spa, New York?
- ... that the Punch of the Hamburg Police has educated children in road traffic safety since 1948?
7 October 2009
- 18:28, 7 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that The Atlanta Constitution wrote that William S. Hart's face (pictured) was "the synonym for power and manliness" in its review of the film Wagon Tracks?
- ... that artist?
- ... that in May 2007 alone, 987,000 unique visitors tried Starfall, a free website that helps children learn to read?
- ... that the museum of Epidaurus has a reconstruction of part of the entablature of a Temple of Artemis, dated to 370–310 B.C.?
- ... that in the 2003–04 AHL season, Binghamton Senators defenceman Andy Hedlund went 17 games without scoring a goal following his game-winning shot against Syracuse?
- ... that Cuban poet Cintio Vitier published his first book of poetry in 1938, at the age of seventeen?
- ... that English actress Maxine Audley was married four times?
- ... that the deadliest aircraft incident in Russia occurred because one air traffic controller fell asleep on the job?
- 11:35, 7 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that in the Tsushima Incident Japanese warships (pictured) failed to repel a Russian naval intrusion and had to be helped by Britain's Royal Navy?
- ... that the Inmos microprocessor factory in Newport was the first building in Wales designed by Richard Rogers?
- ... that one driver was Suzuka Circuitwhen he was struck by another car just after he exited his stricken car?
- ...that Archbishop Leon Tourian was assassinated in a Manhattan church on Christmas Eve, 1933, for his refusal to publicly support independent Armenia?
- ... that English author Selina Davenport, in an attempt to support herself and her two daughters after separating from her husband, ran both a coffee house and a dance school?
- ... that the library in Michigan's Calumet and Hecla Industrial District originally housed public baths in its basement?
- ... that medieval English bishop Alexander of Lincoln was patron of the chronicler Geoffrey of Monmouth, who dedicated his Prophecies of Merlin to the bishop?
- ... that the Jensen Arctic Museum in Monmouth, Oregon, is the only museum on the West Coast other than in Alaska that focuses solely on Arctic culture?
- 05:35, 7 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that silent film star Clara Williams (pictured), known for her "forty famous frocks", appeared in more than 100 films between 1910 and 1918?
- ... that the Gautama Buddha?
- ... that over 19 days, the magnitude-6 1703 Apennine earthquakesprogressed southwards 36 km and killed an estimated 10,000 people?
- ... that Polish territories annexed by Nazi Germany?
- ... that the 58-foot (18 m) motor yacht Sundowner, manned by Charles Lightoller, his son Roger, and a Sea Scout called Gerald, evacuated 130 men from Dunkirk?
- ... that C. Gardner Sullivan, once named among the ten greatest contributors to the motion picture industry, has four films in the U.S. National Film Registry?
- ... that Elia Kazan's 1947 film Boomerang!, about a murder defendant whose innocence was proven by the prosecutor, was based on the true story of Harold Israel?
- ... that George Osbaldeston was twice Master of the Quorn?
6 October 2009
- 23:35, 6 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Cranbury Park (pictured) near Winchester, England, was the home of Sir Isaac Newton?
- ... that husband and wife Heinrich and Therese Vogl portrayed the incestuous lovers Siegmund and Sieglinde in Richard Wagner's Die Walküre on June 26, 1870?
- ... that in 1900 alone the Eastern German provinces lost about 1,600,000 people due to Landflucht?
- ... that amateur telescope maker Robert E. Cox helped make the first live coverage of a solar eclipse?
- ... that "hit single by a Spanishrock band?
- ... that Bank Indonesia Governor J. Soedradjad Djiwandono was not officially informed of his dismissal from office in 1998 until six days after President Suharto's decree?
- ... that the writers of the title track to Toby Keith's 2009 album American Ride told him he was "the only guy in the world that could get away with cutting" that song?
- ... that pimp for American sailors in the Port of Amsterdam?
- 16:42, 6 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Tutinama is a collection of 52 Persian stories narrated through a parrot to prevent his owner (pictured) from committing adultery while her husband was away?
- ... that silent film comedian Shorty Hamilton died in 1925 when his automobile crashed into a steam shovel in Hollywood?
- ... that ?
- ... that Peter Rosted served as chief judge at Inderøy District Court for 46 years, from 1733 to 1776?
- ... that the sculptor Emile Norman's largest and most famous work is a four-story high endomosaic window in the lobby of the Masonic Memorial Temple in San Francisco?
- ... that Paul L. Foshee, who served in both houses of the Louisiana State Legislature, holds a patenton an airplane mount bracket?
- ... that the 1914–1944 Japanese presence in the Marshall Islands resulted in about 10% of the present-day islanders having some Japanese ancestry?
- ... that Hagbard Emanuel Berner founded the Norwegian Association for Women's Rightsin 1884?
- 10:42, 6 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that images from the 1965 book A Child Is Born were sent into space aboard the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 space probes (replica pictured)?
- ... that as a child, poliomyelitisby his father, a physician?
- ... that Spinellus fusiger is a pin mold that parasitizes several species of mushrooms?
- ... that Grammy-winning music historian Elijah Wald is the son of prominent biologists Ruth Hubbard and Nobel laureate George Wald?
- ... that the French Church in Bucharest, Romania, is topped by a Gallic rooster?
- ... that Rabbi Wolfe Kelman prepared the way for the rabbinic ordination of women in Conservative Judaism and his daughter Naamah Kelman was the first woman in Israel ordained by the Reform Judaism movement?
- ... that Horkstow Bridge in North Lincolnshire, completed in 1836, is the only suspension bridge designed by Sir John Rennie, builder of London Bridge?
- ... that more than 6,000 fans of Michael Jackson attended at a memorial service at U.S. Steel Yard in Gary, Indiana?
- 04:42, 6 October 2009 (UTC)
I Didn't Raise My Boy ...
|
- ... that "pacifist song of World War I?
- ... that the Vienna-born historian Saul K. Padover wrote definitive biographies of figures as diverse as Karl Marx and Thomas Jefferson?
- ... that forced draught system that was used on the Lusitania and Mauretania?
- ... that the married Western Ukrainian Clergybecame a hereditary caste that dominated western Ukrainian society?
- ... that intensive care for smoke inhalationwhile in college?
- ... that the Wootton Bassettin just 63 years?
- ... that the monogram of King ?
5 October 2009
- 22:41, 5 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the 1915 film The Italian tells the story of an immigrant played by George Beban (pictured) who goes to America in search of fortune but finds a "Darwinian jungle" on New York's Lower East Side?
- ... that the cryptographic primitives CAST-128, CAST-256, Grain, and HAVAL were all designed using bent functions for cryptographic security?
- ... that former Nicolae Pleşiţă, notorious for his dealings with Carlos the Jackal, admitted dragging dissident writer Paul Gomaaround his cell by his beard?
- ... that the new world's record for the largest formation of women skydivers was organized by the daughter of Lamb Chops puppeteer, Shari Lewis?
- ... that although Members of Parliament, he became Leader of the UK Conservative Partyafter both of the frontrunners simultaneously withdrew?
- ... that the recording of "Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart?
- ... that CAN$250,000 of his own money in 1914 and 1915 to establish over 20 branches of Rotary Internationalon three continents?
- ... that people used home-made balloons and submarines to escape across the inner German border between East and West Germany during the Cold War?
- 12:28, 5 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that a legend ties the name of the late Roman Elenska Basilica (pictured) in west central Bulgaria to deer sacrifice which predated its construction?
- ... that Archuleta v. Hedrick was a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus brought by an insanity defense acquitee, hospitalized against his will?
- ... that while being a member of the Spanish colonial guardia civil, Francisco Carreón also served as a member of the Philippine Revolutionary group Katipunan?
- ... that Byne's disease is not actually a disease, but a chemical reaction that attacks shells in storage or on display?
- ... that Football Leaguedebut, but never played another League match?
- ... that the last recorded sighting of the Knob-billed Duck, now thought to be extinct in Sri Lanka, occurred in Lahugala Kitulana National Park?
- ... that the American progressive rock/avant-jazz group The Muffins were influenced by the English Canterbury scene?
- ... that women complained when celebrity chef Food & Wine photo shoot alongside a bikini-wearing model and a plate of food?
- 06:28, 5 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the 1916?
- ... that despite Muammar al-Gaddafi called for Switzerland's dissolution in September 2009?
- ... that the with a time gap of at least 500 million years between the two formations?
- ... that the term "Moonie" was first used by American media sources to refer to members of Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church in 1974, during church events at the Madison Square Garden?
- ... that one of the French ships captured at the Battle of Cape Ortegal in 1805 went on to serve the Royal Navy for 144 years?
- ... that the 1974 floods along the Finke River in Australia's Northern Territory resulted in the dramatic spread of the introduced Athel Tamarisk (T. aphylla) through the desert?
- ... that French politician Jean Fontenoy, initially a communist, later became a fascist?
- 00:28, 5 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that black lung disease, accidental amputation, and death by smothering or crushing while working in coal breakers?
- ... that John Cantius, patron saint of the Jagiellonian University, is buried in the Church of St. Anne, Kraków?
- ... that the Byzantine chapel of the Theotokos of the Pharos at Constantinople housed a huge collection of holy relics, many of which were acquired by Louis IX of France for his Sainte-Chapelle?
- ... that referee Johnny LoBianco awarded boxer Roberto Durán a 1972 knockout despite his apparent low blow, with sportswriter Red Smith stating "anything short of pulling a knife is regarded indulgently"?
- ... that the Classic Period Mesoamerican archaeological site of Bilbao on the Pacific coastal plain of Guatemala, features a significant amount of sculpture with ballgame imagery?
- ... that the Australian town of Acland, once host to Queensland's oldest and smallest continuously worked coal mine, now has a population of one?
- ... that Lucy Vodden was John Lennon's inspiration for the song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"?
4 October 2009
- 18:28, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that before taking Charles Darwin to South America as captain of HMS Beagle, Robert FitzRoy visited the Galápagos Islands a decade earlier as a midshipman aboard HMS Owen Glendower (pictured)?
- ... that Freddy Bienstock was the designated song screener for Elvis Presley?
- ... that E. A. Sothern, who did not appear in either?
- ... that the peace treaty in 815 with the Bulgarians?
- ... that francophone women writers, is the first woman president of Brooklyn College?
- ... that Abba Garima Monastery, located near Adwa, Ethiopia, contains the crown of the Emperor Zara Yaqob of the Solomonic dynasty?
- ... that during the horse stall?
- 12:28, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that people of Gibraltar?
- ... that ?
- ... that people of Philippine Islands using balangays, which were eventually used to trade with the Srivijayanempire?
- ... that Jean de La Forêt was the first French ambassador to the Ottoman Empire in 1534, and that he negotiated in 1536 a Franco-Ottoman treaty of alliance?
- ... that the electronic version of the Encyclopedia of Chicago was the second extensive Internet encyclopedia dedicated to the history of a U.S. city?
- ... that the Nana Palsikar?
- ... that A-10 Thunderbolt II?
- ... that Tate Gallery in London?
- 06:28, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Gachala Emeraldpictured)?
- ... that Gary Lakes became an opera singer because a cracked vertebra sustained as a high school football defensive tackle derailed his plans for a sports career?
- ... that some of the mallees in the Australian Inland Botanic Gardens may be up to 2,500 years old?
- ... that library science?
- ... that the Lhasa Brewery Company, which produces Tibetan beer is the highest commercial breweryin the world?
- ... that Finnish chemist Edvard Hjelt organized the training of a infantry unit later used in the Finnish Civil War in 1918?
- ... that Women of the Sun was the first Australian television series to portray the lives of Aboriginal women in 19th-century Australia?
- ... that Grand Dragon, was arrested at least 142 times?
- 00:28, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the spined pygmy shark (head pictured), dwarf lanternshark and pygmy ribbontail catshark are candidates for being the smallest shark in the world, all maturing at under 20 cm (8 in) long?
- ... that the read?
- ... that Wong Fu Productions does not make a profit from the short films it produces?
- ... that the Klamath Diversion in the 1960s would have involved diverting the entire Klamath River to the Central Valley and Southern California?
- ... that the snack food producer in Scandinaviain the 1970s?
- ... that the Stone Bridge near Hart Mountain in Lake County, Oregon, is completely underwater?
- ... that Kingdom of Poland, was instrumental in preventing the marriage between Jadwiga of Poland and William, Duke of Austria?
- ... that Bernard Madoff, but promised he would continue making charitable donations even if he had "to sell apples on the street"?
3 October 2009
- 18:28, 3 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the golden-green carpenter bee(pictured) defends its nesting burrow by blocking the entrance with its abdomen?
- ... that trial by jury in Austria?
- ... that the Distomo Archaeological Collection of Greece has an exhibition of photographs related to the Distomo massacre in 1944 by Nazi troops?
- ... that BBC traffic reporter Sally Traffic has also narrated poetry albums for the blind?
- ... that the Christian music industry was the fastest growing segment of the music industry in the 1990s?
- ... that in 2007, Rachel Robinson, the wife of Jackie Robinson, was the first non-player to be presented with Major League Baseball's Commissioner's Historic Achievement Award?
- ... that 51 Ophiuchi has a disk of dust and gas that is likely a planetary system in the late stages of formation?
- ... that the biography Van Morrison: No Surrender discusses the musician's spiritual exploration of Gestalt therapy, Jehovah's Witnesses, mysticism, Rosicrucianism, and Scientology?
- 12:28, 3 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Dutch Golden Age painter Adriaen Coorte, who signed still lifes(example pictured) from 1683 to 1707, was almost completely forgotten until the 1950s?
- ... that the newspaper and radio of Italian government?
- ... that in 1833, romantic poet Panagiotis Soutsos envisioned the revival of the ancient Olympic Games, 63 years before the first International Olympics?
- ... that the Abraham Glen House, now the Scotia branch of the Schenectady County, New York, public library, is a rare surviving Dutch Colonial heavy timber frame house in the Capital District?
- ... that after World War II, designs of the London Transport brand were simplified to reduce manufacturing and maintenance costs?
- ... that historian ?
- ... that successful repair of both cruciate ligaments in a human knee was first reported in 1903?
- ... that prior to writing the episode "The Apartment" of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld, writer Peter Mehlman had "barely written any dialogue in [his] life"?
- 06:28, 3 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the eastern Australiais covered with orange-brown fur?
- ... that author Penn Station?
- ... that a series of measures taken by Romanian Prime Minister Ion Gigurtu, including official persecution of Jews, failed to sway Adolf Hitler from his demand that Romania cede Northern Transylvania to Hungary?
- ... that Don Larsen won the 1956 World Series Most Valuable Player Award after pitching the only perfect game in World Series history?
- ... that Ernst Märzendorfer was the first conductor to record the complete symphonies of Joseph Haydn?
- ... that "series 30 Rock, is the highest-rated episode of the series to date?
- ... that besides serving as famine food, the tree Balanites aegyptiaca can be used to make furniture, cooking oil, snail repellent, and glue, and provides raw materials for making birth control pills?
- ... that Jewish member of an Israeli government?
- 00:28, 3 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that six new species of marine slugs in the genus Phyllodesmium (pictured) have been described in the last two years?
- ...that the post office was one of the last to be built in the state under Depression-era relief programs?
- ... that British Government compensated him for his illegal exile from Jamaica?
- ... that the posthumous This Is Itwill include a spoken word poem by Jackson titled Planet Earth?
- ... that disabled veteran street vendors have been exempt from certain municipal regulations in New York state since 1894?
- ... that Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto?
- ... that the only operable mid-air collisionon 22 September 2009?
- ... that professional wrestler World Wrestling Entertainment veteran Steve Lombardi at a "Toys for Tots" event hosted by the United States Marines?
2 October 2009
- 18:28, 2 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that Rear Admiral Bradley A. Fiske patented the aerial torpedo (example pictured) in 1912, and said it could be used against an enemy fleet in its own harbor?
- ... that despite establishing the mandate that Carcavelosto be used by Port producers?
- ... that Edward Fokczyński knew that Poland had solved Germany's Enigma ciphers, but kept the secret even while being worked to death at Sachsenhausen?
- ... that epic poems that describe: human sacrifices, murderous Hindu demons, evil sorcerers, a Goth rapist, and a violent maid?
- ... that personal injury lawyers mapped the sidewalks of New York City for defects, rendering the city liable for $600 million in judgments between 1997 and 2006?
- ... that myeloma in 2007 and is in remission after stem celltransplants?
- ... that the decision in Gyles v Wilcox established the legal precedent of fair abridgement, which later evolved into the modern concept of fair use?
- ... that director Paul Weiland, whose credits include Mr. Bean, 66 and more than 500 television commercials, owns an 18th-century country estate in Wiltshire, England?
- 12:28, 2 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the ?
- ... that American opera singer Margaret Harshaw portrayed more Wagnerian heroines on stage at the Metropolitan Opera than anyone else in the opera's history?
- ... that Bucelas in London after he discovered it while fighting in the Peninsular War?
- ... that the post office was once located in an opera house?
- ... that baseball player Cromartie High - The Moviebecause the (fictitious) school was portrayed as full of thugs and delinquents?
- ... that the mural by Leon Kroll in the Worcester Memorial Auditorium was the largest in the United States when completed?
- ... that Don King, and 2 days in the Valley?
- ... that during one of several British airborne operations in North Africa, an officer knocked unconscious was heard to ask a waiter for fish?
- 04:19, 2 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the ancient city of Tikal (pictured) in Guatemala was one of the most powerful kingdoms of the ancient Maya civilization?
- ... that during the First World War Edwin Flavell was awarded the Military Crossthree times?
- ... that grape varieties?
- ... that the Wilsonville railroad bridge in Oregon does not need to be painted?
- ... that in 1953, former Jews?
- ... that the designers of the proposed Vigilant Eagle system hope to be able to create an invisible protectant dome around an airport to block a missile?
- ... that ?
- ... that at one point in the history of the rightful champion?
1 October 2009
- 20:42, 1 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the National Bottle Museum in Ballston Spa, New York, was evicted from the historic Verbeck House (pictured) by its parent organization?
- ... that Irish folk-singer Reno?
- ... that Japanese settlement in Palau dates back to the 19th century?
- ... that "the crime of the century"in 1983?
- ... that the confidential academic paper more commonly known as the "Cornell Paper", which detailed an abortive 1965 coup d'état attempt in Indonesia, was eventually published in 1971 to avoid any misconception of its contents?
- ... that Milwaukee's first underground parking garage was built in 1927 in the basement of George Brumder's Germania Building?
- ... that an exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1980 argued that "everything we know as Hollywood traces to Wilfred Buckland", film innovator and Hollywood's first art director?
- ... that scenes from the 2009 "?
- 12:42, 1 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that the restoration of Jal Mahal (pictured) plays an important role in improving the tourist industry of Jaipur in Rajasthan?
- ... that Michael Lockett, a British sergeant who was killed by a roadside bomb, was the first British soldier awarded the Military Cross to die in Afghanistan?
- ... that Abraham Lincoln High Schoolto win a Nobel?
- ... that in 1960, excavations uncovered the remains of a medieval fort from the Hussite Wars at the bottom of a lake in Záběhlice, Czech Republic?
- ... that Kent Blazy, co-writer of Garth Brooks' "If Tomorrow Never Comes," has had a cut on all but one of Brooks' albums?
- ... that despite tensions between Pakistan and India, a village called Pakistan in India's Bihar state was named in honour of its former inhabitants?
- ... that Essex cricketers Frank Vigar and Peter Smith shared a club record 218-run last-wicket stand in 1947?
- ... that the Eureka Diamond, the first diamond discovered in South Africa, was used as a toy by the boy who discovered it, given away for free by his mother, and sent by mail to a mineralogist in an ordinary paper envelope?
- 04:42, 1 October 2009 (UTC)
- ... that railway bridges in England?
- ... that supporters wore yellow as a sign of respect for Corazon Aquino who died a week prior to their first basketball game of the 2009 season?
- ... that the Palestinian village of Bayt 'Itab was situated on a rocky knoll identified as the biblical Rock of Etam, within which Samson hid after burning the grain of the Philistines?
- ... that Melos Ensemble?
- ... that the ancient wall paintings in Coombes Church in West Sussex include a man grimacing as he holds up the 30-inch (76 cm)-thick chancel arch?
- ... that Emmy Award-winning director Dearbhla Walsh described one scene in Talk to Me where a teacher commits adultery with her 15-year-old pupil as "not so much about sexas about love"?
- ... that W.S. Gilbert's plays at Marie Litton's newly christened Royal Court Theatre?
- ... that an argument between a Catalan woman and a soldier over a chicken helped inflame the Revolt of the Barretinas against the Spanish government?