Wikipedia:Today's featured article/December 2008

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December 1

CASP6 target T0281, the first ab initio protein structure prediction to approach atomic-level resolution

tertiary structure predictors available. (more...
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Recently featured: Anglo-Zanzibar WarAngus Lewis MacdonaldPulmonary contusion


December 2

The High Street of the deserted village of Hirta, St Kilda

North Atlantic Ocean. It contains the westernmost islands of the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. The largest island is Hirta, whose sea cliffs are the highest in the United Kingdom. The Gaelic-speaking population probably never exceeded 180 and was never more than 100 after 1851. Although St Kilda was permanently inhabited for at least two millennia, and despite the inhabitants' unique way of life, the entire population was evacuated in 1930. The only residents are now military personnel. The islands are administratively a part of the Comhairle nan Eilean Siar local authority area. The islands' human heritage includes numerous unique architectural features from the historic and prehistoric periods, although the earliest written records of island life date from the Late Middle Ages. The medieval village on Hirta was rebuilt in the 19th century, but the influences of religion, tourism and the First World War contributed to the island's evacuation in 1930. The story of St Kilda has attracted artistic interpretations, including a recent opera. The entire archipelago is owned by the National Trust for Scotland. It became one of Scotland's four World Heritage Sites in 1986 and is one of the few in the world to hold joint status for its natural, marine and cultural qualities. (more...
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Recently featured: Rosetta@homeAnglo-Zanzibar WarAngus Lewis Macdonald


December 3

Amateur radio operators at a fox hunt in Mumbai

Wireless and Planning and Coordination Wing (WPC)—a division of the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology—regulates amateur radio in India. The WPC assigns call signs, issues amateur radio licences, conducts exams, allots frequency spectrum, and monitors the radio waves. In India, the Amateur Radio Society of India (ARSI) represents amateur radio interests at various forums, and represents India at the International Amateur Radio Union. (more...
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Recently featured: St Kilda, ScotlandRosetta@homeAnglo-Zanzibar War


December 4

Zappa in 1977

Mothers of Invention and as a solo artist. His 1966 debut album with the Mothers of Invention, Freak Out!, combined songs in conventional rock and roll format with collective improvisations and studio-generated sound collages. His later albums shared this eclectic and experimental approach, irrespective of whether the fundamental format was one of rock, jazz or classical. He wrote the lyrics to all his songs, which—often humorously—reflected his skeptical view of established political processes, structures and movements. He was a strident critic of mainstream education and organized religion, and a forthright and passionate advocate for freedom of speech and the abolition of censorship. Zappa was a highly productive and prolific artist and he gained widespread critical acclaim. (more...
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Recently featured: Amateur radio in IndiaSt Kilda, ScotlandRosetta@home


December 5

Interstate 70 routed through Spotted Wolf Canyon

Dinosaur Diamond Prehistoric Highway, making I-70 one of the few Interstate Highways to be named a National Scenic Byway. (more...
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Recently featured: Frank ZappaAmateur radio in IndiaSt Kilda, Scotland


December 6

Emmeline Pankhurst

Emmeline Pankhurst (1858–1928) was a political activist and leader of the British suffragette movement. Although she was widely criticised for her militant tactics, her work is recognised as a crucial element in achieving women's suffrage in Britain. She became involved with the Women's Franchise League, which advocated suffrage for women. When that organisation broke apart, she joined the left-leaning Independent Labour Party through her friendship with socialist Keir Hardie. After her husband died in 1898, Pankhurst founded the Women's Social and Political Union, an all-women suffrage advocacy organisation dedicated to "deeds, not words". The group quickly became infamous when its members smashed windows and assaulted police officers. Pankhurst, her daughters, and other WSPU activists were sentenced to repeated prison sentences, where they staged hunger strikes to secure better conditions. Eventually arson became a common tactic among WSPU members, and more moderate organisations spoke out against the Pankhurst family. With the advent of World War I, Pankhurst called an immediate halt to militant suffrage activism, in order to support the British government against the "German Peril". They urged women to aid industrial production, and encouraged young men to fight. (more...)

Recently featured: Interstate 70 in UtahFrank ZappaAmateur radio in India


December 7

Nevada underway in 1944

atomic bombs, she was still afloat but heavily damaged and radioactive. She was sunk during naval gunfire exercise in 1948. (more...
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Recently featured: Emmeline PankhurstInterstate 70 in UtahFrank Zappa


December 8

Elaine Paige

gold and another four multi-platinum. Since 2004 she has hosted her own show on BBC Radio 2 called Elaine Paige on Sunday. (more...
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Recently featured: USS Nevada (BB-36)Emmeline PankhurstInterstate 70 in Utah


December 9

Cathedral of Saint Mary in Miami, Florida

The

Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Miami is a separate non-profit organization operated by the archdiocese. It claims to be the largest non-governmental provider of social services to the needy in South Florida. (more...
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Recently featured: Elaine PaigeUSS Nevada (BB-36)Emmeline Pankhurst


December 10

Messiaen was the titular organist at Église de la Sainte-Trinité in Paris for 61 years.
Messiaen was the titular organist at Église de la Sainte-Trinité in Paris for 61 years.

birdsong fascinating; he believed birds to be the greatest musicians and considered himself as much an ornithologist as a composer. He notated birdsongs worldwide, and he incorporated birdsong transcriptions into a majority of his music. (more...
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Recently featured: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of MiamiElaine PaigeUSS Nevada (BB-36)


December 11

The field of the men's cycling road race at the 2008 Summer Olympics

The

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Recently featured: Olivier MessiaenRoman Catholic Archdiocese of MiamiElaine Paige


December 12

The

2008, the Mana series comprises eight console games and two mobile games, in addition to four manga and one novelization. The Mana series reception has been very uneven, with Secret of Mana earning wide acclaim, such as being rated 78th in IGN's yearly "Top 100 Games of All Time", and being highly praised for its musical score, while the games from the World of Mana series have been rated considerably lower. (more...
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December 13

Albert Speer at the Nuremberg trials, 1946

forced labor. He served most of his sentence at Spandau Prison in West Berlin. Following his release from Spandau in 1966, Speer published two bestselling autobiographical works, Inside the Third Reich and Spandau: The Secret Diaries, detailing his often close personal relationship with Hitler, and providing readers and historians with a unique perspective inside the workings of the Nazi regime. (more...
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December 14

Murrumbidgee River at Balranald, New South Wales

The

Albury and Griffith. Albury and Wagga Wagga are home to campuses of Charles Sturt University, the only local provider of higher education for the region. (more...
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Recently featured:

2008 Men's Olympics road race


December 15

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Recently featured: RiverinaAlbert SpeerMana series


December 16

Lyndon LaRouche

The

tax evasion, was sentenced to fifteen years' imprisonment; he entered prison in 1989 and was paroled five years later. In separate state trials in Virginia and New York, 13 associates received terms ranging from one month to 77 years. The Virginia state trials were described as the highest-profile cases that the state Attorney General's office had ever prosecuted. Fourteen states issued injunctions against LaRouche-related organizations, three of which were forced into bankruptcy after failing to pay contempt of court fines. (more...
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December 17

Lead actor Steve Sandvoss stars as Elder Aaron Davis

Alyson Publications. (more...
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December 18

CEUNPA-supported logo of a UNPA

A

nongovernmental organization. Several proposals for apportionment of votes have been raised to address disparities in UN members' population and economic power. CEUNPA advocates initially giving the UNPA advisory powers and gradually increasing its authority over the UN system. Opponents cite issues such as funding, voter turnout, and undemocratic UN member nations as reasons for abandoning the project altogether. (more...
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Recently featured:

Getting It: The psychology of est


December 19

CEUNPA-supported logo of a UNPA

South Australia in 1900–01 was a Sheffield Shield record for 27 years. His Test cricket career ended in controversy after he was involved in a brawl with cricket administrator and fellow Test selector Peter McAlister in 1912. He was one of the "Big Six", a group of leading Australian cricketers who boycotted the 1912 Triangular Tournament in England when the players were stripped of the right to appoint the tour manager. The boycott effectively ended his Test career. After retiring from cricket, Hill worked in the horse racing industry as a stipendiary steward and later as a handicapper for races including the Caulfield Cup. (more...
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Recently featured: United Nations Parliamentary AssemblyLatter DaysLaRouche criminal trials


December 20

Richard Hawes

George W. Johnson's death at the Battle of Shiloh. Hawes and the Confederate government traveled with Braxton Bragg's Army of Tennessee, and when Bragg invaded Kentucky in October 1862, he captured Frankfort and held an inauguration ceremony for Hawes. The ceremony was interrupted, however, by forces under Union general Don Carlos Buell, and the Confederates were driven from the Commonwealth following the Battle of Perryville. Hawes relocated to Virginia, where he continued to lobby President Jefferson Davis to attempt another invasion of Kentucky. Following the war, he returned to his home in Paris, Kentucky, swore an oath of allegiance to the Union, and was allowed to return to his law practice. (more...
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Recently featured: Clem HillUnited Nations Parliamentary AssemblyLatter Days


December 21

The equipartition theorem allows computation of each component of the kinetic energy of atoms

The

quantum effects are significant, namely at low enough temperatures. (more...
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Recently featured: Richard HawesClem HillUnited Nations Parliamentary Assembly


December 22

The

Second World War and, although the Echo building was undamaged, it was forced to print its competitor's paper under wartime rules. It was during this time that the paper's format changed, from a broadsheet to its current tabloid layout, because of national newsprint shortages. (more...
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Recently featured: Equipartition theoremRichard HawesClem Hill


December 23

Preity Zinta at the Jaan-E-Man (2006)

Kings XI Punjab. (more...
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Recently featured: Sunderland EchoEquipartition theoremRichard Hawes


December 24

Voyager 2 picture of Uranus' rings

The

aerodynamic drag from the extended Uranian exospherecorona. The rings of Uranus are thought to be relatively young, at not more than 600 million years. The mechanism that confines the narrow rings is not well understood. The Uranian ring system probably originated from the collisional fragmentation of a number of moons that once existed around the planet. After colliding, the moons broke up into numerous particles, which survived as narrow and optically dense rings only in strictly confined zones of maximum stability. (more...
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Recently featured: Preity ZintaSunderland EchoEquipartition theorem


December 25

Robert Sterling Yard in Yosemite National Park, 1920

Robert Sterling Yard (1861–1945) was an American writer, journalist and wilderness activist. Yard graduated from Princeton University and spent the first twenty years of his career as a journalist, editor and publisher. In 1915 he was recruited by his friend Stephen Mather to help publicize the need for an independent national park agency. Their numerous publications were part of a movement that resulted in legislative support for a National Park Service in 1916. Yard served as head of the National Parks Educational Committee for several years after its conception, but tension within the NPS led him to concentrate on non-government initiatives. He became executive secretary of the National Parks Association in 1919. Yard worked to promote the national parks as well as educate Americans about their use. Creating high standards based on aesthetic ideals for park selection, he also opposed commercialism and industrialization of what he called "America's masterpieces". These standards caused discord with his peers. After helping to establish a relationship between the NPA and the United States Forest Service, Yard later became involved in the protection of wilderness areas. In 1935 he became one of the eight founding members of The Wilderness Society and acted as its first president from 1937 until his death eight years later. Yard is now considered an important figure in the modern wilderness movement. (more...)

Recently featured: Rings of UranusPreity ZintaSunderland Echo


December 26

Illustration of Thespis by D. H. Friston

burlesque style, considerably different from Gilbert and Sullivan's later works. It was a modest success—for a Christmas entertainment of the time—and closed on 8 March 1872, after a run of 63 performances. It was advertised as "An entirely original Grotesque Opera in Two Acts". The story follows an acting troupe headed by Thespis, the legendary Greek father of the drama, who temporarily trade places with the gods on Mount Olympus, who have grown elderly and ignored. The actors turn out to be comically inept rulers. Having seen the ensuing mayhem down below, the angry gods return, sending the actors back to Earth as "eminent tragedians, whom no one ever goes to see." (more...
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Recently featured: Robert Sterling YardRings of UranusPreity Zinta


December 27

Battle of Shiloh by Thure de Thulstrup

The

United States history up to that time, ending their hopes that they could block the Union advance into northern Mississippi. (more...
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Recently featured: ThespisRobert Sterling YardRings of Uranus


December 28

Elizabeth Needham as portrayed in William Hogarth's A Harlot's Progress

Elizabeth Needham was an English procuress and brothel-keeper of 18th-century London, who has been identified as the bawd greeting Moll Hackabout in the first plate of William Hogarth's series of satirical etchings, A Harlot's Progress. Although Needham was notorious in London at the time, little is recorded of her life, and no genuine portraits of her survive. Her house was the most exclusive in London and her customers came from the highest strata of fashionable society, but she eventually fell foul of the moral reformers of the day and died as a result of the severe treatment she received after being sentenced to stand in the pillory. Nothing is known of her early life, but by the time she was middle-aged she was renowned in London as the keeper of a brothel in Park Place, St. James. Her house was regarded as superior to those of Covent Garden, even to that of the other notorious bawd of the time, Mother Wisebourne. (more...)

Recently featured: Battle of ShilohThespisRobert Sterling Yard


December 29

Thylacinus in Washington DC in 1902
Thylacinus in Washington DC in 1902

The

Water Opossum). The male Thylacine had a pouch that acted as a protective sheath, protecting the male's external reproductive organs while running through thick brush. (more...
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Recently featured: Elizabeth NeedhamBattle of ShilohThespis


December 30

Gunnhild convinces Erik Bloodaxe to kill the Finnish wizards.
Gunnhild convinces Erik Bloodaxe to kill the Finnish wizards.

Jorvik and Denmark. A number of her many children with Erik became co-rulers of Norway in the late tenth century. What details of her life are known come largely from Icelandic sources; because the Icelanders were generally hostile to her and her husband, scholars regard some of the more negative episodes reported in them as suspect. (more...
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Recently featured: ThylacineElizabeth NeedhamBattle of Shiloh


December 31

Joshua Reynolds's "Puck" was painted for Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery
Joshua Reynolds's "Puck" was painted for Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery

The

school of British history painting. Boydell planned to focus on an illustrated edition of William Shakespeare's plays and a folio of prints, but during the 1790s the London gallery that showed the original paintings emerged as the project's most popular element. Boydell decided to publish a grand illustrated edition of Shakespeare's plays that would showcase the talents of British painters and engravers. He chose the noted scholar and Shakespeare editor George Steevens to oversee the edition, which was released between 1791 and 1803. The press reported weekly on the building of Boydell's gallery, designed by George Dance the Younger, on a site in Pall Mall. Boydell commissioned works from famous painters of the day, such as Joshua Reynolds, and the folio of engravings proved the enterprise's most lasting legacy. However, the long delay in publishing the prints and the illustrated edition prompted criticism. Because they were hurried, and many illustrations had to be done by lesser artists, the final products of Boydell's venture were judged to be disappointing. The project caused the Boydell firm to become insolvent, and they were forced to sell the gallery at a lottery. (more...
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Recently featured: Gunnhild, Mother of KingsThylacineElizabeth Needham