Wikipedia:Recent additions/2004/July#11 July 2004
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Did you know...
= 30 July 2004 =
- ...that the death toll from the 1942 Sook Ching Massacre is unknown, but probably lies between 25,000 and 50,000?
- ...that the casque of the Tarictic hornbill is hollow and made of keratin?
= 29 July 2004 =
- ...that Colin Pitchfork was the first person to be convicted using DNA fingerprinting?
- ...that in Pac-Mania Pac-Man has the ability to jump?
- ...that the larvae of the Cameraria ohridella moth destroy
- ...that Danielle Reyes finished second place on the American version of Big Brother in 2002?
- ...that in the United States, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and its Republican counterpart promote the election of members of their respective parties to Congress?
- ...that the IBM 350 was the first important milestone in early IBM disk storage?
- ...that in the presence of risk, subjective expected utility is a valuable method used in economic decision theory?
= 27 July 2004 =
- ...that Stella McCartney, the fashion designer daughter of Beatle Paul McCartney, studied at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design?
- ... that the U.S. Trade Representative tried to stop Singapore from hosting the first World Trade Organization ministeral meeting because of the caning of Michael P. Fay?
- ...that according to Buys-Ballot's law wind travels counterclockwise around low pressure zones in the Northern Hemisphere?
- ...that the extreme points of the United Kingdom include Out Stack as the northernmost, Rockall as the westernmost, The Lizard as the southernmost and Lowestoft Ness as the easternmost?
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= 26 July 2004 =
- ...that the Dog Rose was often planted in victory gardens during World War II?
- ...that the Malmédy Massacre Trial is often used in extreme right-wing German propaganda?
= 25 July 2004 =
- ...that the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey was responsible for American weights and measures from 1836 until the establishment of the National Institute of Standards and Technology in 1901?
- ...that Youppi of the Montreal Expos was the first mascot to be thrown out of a major league baseball game?
- ...that the creator of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups once worked as a dairyman for famed chocolatier Milton S. Hershey?
- ...that enharmonic scales are the third genus of musical scales?
- ...that no admiral has ever served as Commander-in-Chief of the Swedish Armed Forces?
- ...that many of Ford Motor Company's car makes are based on the same automobile platform?
= 24 July 2004 =
- ...that Cairine Wilson was Canada's first female senator?
- ...that the Fifth and Sixth Crusades were turned back by Al-Kamil, a nephew of Saladin?
- ...that actuarial notation uses a halo system with superscript or subscript symbols placed before or after the main letter?
- ...that script breakdowns are the intermediate step between script and production in theater, film, television and comic books?
= 23 July 2004 =
- ...that Chidiock Tichborne wrote his only known poem on the eve of his execution for treason?
- ...that sidewinding is unique to caenophidian snakes like vipers?
- ...that Kolkota, India is called the City of Palaces because of its abundance of European-style buildings?
- ...that seven countries have more than one capital city?
- ...that in basketball technical fouls are rule violations that occur outside the play of the game?
= 22 July 2004 =
- ...that Jane Avril was the inspiration for Nicole Kidman's character in the film Moulin Rouge!?
- ...that bond convexity is a measure of the sensitivity of bond prices to interest rate changes?
- ...that Chetham's Library in Manchester, England is the oldest public library in the English-speaking world?
- ...that Dunash ben Labrat, a medieval Jewish writer, introduced Arabic language poetic meter into Hebrew poetry?
- ...that blue boxes used for phreaking were also called Spiros, which was a reference to disgraced U.S. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew?
- ...that, according to legend, one of the Holy Nails used in the crucifixion of Jesus Christ was incorporated into the Iron Crown of Lombardy?
- ...that a forage harvester is used to create silage feed for livestock?
- ...that Norman architecture is a form of the Romanesque?
- ...that 18th century French salons were often led by those who were creating the Encyclopédie?
- ...that there are several different kinds of baseball gloves, including catcher's mitts, pitcher's gloves, first basemen's gloves and infield and outfield gloves?
- ...that Deepdene is believed to be the world's largest irradiated diamond?
- ...that the Elton John-Bernie Taupin song "Candle in the Wind" is the bestselling single of all time?
- ...that some Trotskyists described the Soviet system under Josef Stalin as one of bureaucratic collectivism?
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= 21 July 2004 =
- ...that the 1903 Tour de France often required riders to cycle through the night?
- ...that scientist Arvid Carlsson won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work leading to the treatment of Parkinson's Disease?
- ...that the 1984 Summit tunnel fire in England may have been the biggest underground fire in transportation history?
- ...that within Superman's Fortress of Solitude there is an apartment set aside for Supergirl?
- ...that the Germanenorden had an early influence on mysticism in Nazi Germany?
= 20 July 2004 =
- ...that items which were "Banned in Boston" (i.e. censored) came to be seen as more sexy and attractive elsewhere?
- ...that there are at least four methods of plastic welding?
- ...that sex determination in sports is no longer practiced at the Olympic Games?
- ...that the Supreme Court of Pakistan meets in Islamabad?
- ...that the Venetian polychoral style arose because of the unique architectural and acoustical characteristics of San Marco di Venezia, aka St. Mark's Cathedral, in Venice, Italy?
- ...that Thomas Macaulay referred to Charles Dickens' novel Hard Times as "sullen Socialism"?
- ...that holidays celebrated in Greece include Το Όχι, literally day of the "no", which honors Greece's refusal to surrender to the Axis Powers in 1940?
- ...that Louis Mountbatten invented Mountbatten pink, a camouflage paint used during World War II?
- ...that a Greek hero cult usually focused on a great man of history (e.g. Oedipus) or the founder of a city (e.g. Battus of Cyrene)?
- ...that The Sun Sessions album included all of the Elvis Presley tracks recorded by Sam Phillips?
- ...that Chicago Freight Subway was abandoned in 1959 and the tunnels flooded catastrophically in 1992?
- ...that the people of Thailand use the Thai six-hour clock in addition to the usual 24-hour clock?
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= 18 July 2004 =
- ...that Long Ashton Research Station closed in 2003 having served agriculture and horticulture for exactly 100 years?
- ...that actress Hunter Tylo sued producer Aaron Spelling and won after she was fired from Melrose Place?
- ...that the village name Ynysybwl, in South Wales, UK, is pronounced "Un-is-u-bull"?
- ...that the supercontinent Pannotia only lasted about sixty million years before disintegrating into four continents?
= 17 July 2004 =
- ...that when Lauri Lehtinen narrowly won his gold medal at the 1932 Summer Olympics, he was booed?
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= 15 July 2004 =
- ...that nine Irishmen died in the 1981 Irish Hunger Strike?
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- ...that the Coconut Crab is the world's largest terrestrial arthropod?
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- ...that every film which actor John Cazale starred in received an Academy Award nomination for best picture?
- ...that Lion Beer was Asia's first brand of beer?
- ...that Joseph Guillemot, winner of the 5000 m at the 1920 Olympics, was a pack-a-day smoker?
- ...that the Welsh language has three kinds of initial consonant mutation?
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= 14 July 2004 =
- ...that the phantom island of Brazil supposedly emerged from the mists only once every seven years?
= 12 July 2004 =
- ...that the State Historical Museum in Moscow, Russia has 1.7 million coins in its collection?
- ...that the case Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Company established the precedents for UK contract law?
- ...that Cockaigne was a legendary peasant utopia of medieval Europe?
- ...that the execution of Flor Contemplacion strained relations between Singapore and the Philippines?
= 11 July 2004 =
- ...that Daniel Ernst Jablonski in the 1690s tried to bring about a union between Lutheran and Calvinist Protestants?
- ...that a madrigale spirituale is a madrigal with a spiritual rather than secular topic?
- ...that a Baja Bug is a Volkswagen Beetle that has been modified to operate on sand dunes?
- ...that there are fewer than 2000 Indian Rhinoceroses left in the wild?
- ...that the T-Mobile Team is currently racing in the 2004 Tour de France?
= 10 July 2004 =
- ...that podestà was a powerful position in medieval north Italian cities?
- ...that Mike Woodin was the Principal Speaker of the Green Party of England and Wales for 6 years and a city councillor for Oxford for 10 years?
- ...that the bulb of the Wavy-leafed Soap Plant can be used to wash your hair, to stun fish, to cure rheumatism and to make brushes?
- ...that the Mexican War of Independence (1820–1821) resulted in an unlikely alliance between liberales and conservadores?
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= 9 July 2004 =
- ...that Primary Care Trusts are statutory bodies responsible for delivering improvements to their local area in the United Kingdom National Health Service?
= 8 July 2004 =
- ...that the tenth emergency special session of the United Nations General Assembly has been resumed more times than any other?
- ...that bone age is usually determined by examining x-rays of the long bones?
= 6 July 2004 =
- ...that the Brimstone missile, an anti-tank guided missile, is carried by three Royal Air Force aeroplane types?
= 5 July 2004 =
- ...that Men's Olympic Football Tournament 2004 will feature U-23 (under 23-year-old) national teams?
- ...that the Battle of Tarawa was the first time in World War II that the US faced serious opposition to an amphibious landing?
- ...that the Siege of Malta cost 1,493 civilian lives?
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= 4 July 2004 =
- ...that Shuri Castle is a UNESCO World Heritage Site?
- ...Edmund Beckett, the designer of Big Ben, said, "I am the only architect with whom I have never quarrelled."
- ...that the Great Salad Oil Swindle was an infamous attempt at cornering the market?
- ...that Asclepiodotus was King of the Britons, until he died in a battle fighting Coel?
= 3 July 2004 =
- ...that the political party at European level is a type of organization in the European Union eligible to receive funding from the Union, and is recognized in the Maastricht Treaty and the draft European Constitution?
- ...that the Frankfurt kitchen was the first built-in kitchen, and was designed with space efficiency in mind?
- ...that the Pergamon Museum in Berlin hosts a reconstruction of a 113 meter long sculptural frieze?
- ...that dramatic structure has been diagrammed by both Aristotle and Gustav Freytag?
= 1 July 2004 =
- ...there are two known Polyomaviruses which infect humans?
- ...that Ruffini's rule allows the rapid division of any polynomial by a binomial of the form x - r ?