Wikipedia:Recent additions/2011/May#19 May 2011
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=31 May 2011=
- 16:00, 31 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Edward Chiera considered the setting of the Debate between sheep and grain (example of sheep pictured) to be the Babylonian Garden of Eden?
- ... that just three days after announcing he would retire in August, John Lipsky became Acting Managing Director of the IMF when Dominique Strauss-Kahn resigned?
- ... that the majority trained with Artisans d'Angkor in Siem Reap are uneducated young Cambodians from rural areas?
- ... that abortion provider Susan Wicklund has been obliged to wear disguises to get past protesters in airports and at her workplace?
- ... that Efthimios Mitropoulos is the seventh and current Secretary-General of the International Maritime Organization?
- ... that American children's author Agnes Hewes, a three-time winner of the Newbery Honor, was born in Tripoli, Lebanon, to medical missionary parents?
- ... that the Isabella Psalter (named for Isabella of France) and the Queen Mary Psalter (for Mary I of England) are 14th-century devotional books that also contain bestiaries?
- 08:00, 31 May 2011 (UTC)
File:Titanic Engineers' Memorial, Southampton.jpg who perished in the disaster|alt=RMS Titanic Engineers Memorial, Southampton]]
- ... that the Titanic Engineers' Memorial (pictured) in Southampton was unveiled in front of a crowd of 100,000, who gathered in Andrews Park on {{nowrap|15 April}} 1914, two years after the disaster?
- ... that Robert W. Chandler bought the Bend Bulletin newspaper from Robert W. Sawyer in 1953 with only a US$6,000 down payment?
- ... that the Dering Roll begins with the coats of arms of two illegitimate sons of King John of England?
- ... that Bible translations into Polish date from the {{nowrap|13th century}}?
- ... that Erskine Thomason struck out one batter in his Major League Baseball career, which consisted of pitching one inning in 1974?
- ... that as a result of the 2011 British privacy injunctions controversy, Ryan Giggs attempted to take legal action against Twitter?
- ... that the American Express Gold card dress worn at the 67th Academy Awards by costume designer Lizzy Gardiner was made from 254 expired American Express cards?
- 00:00, 31 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that there was a segregated Filipino Infantry Regiment (insignia pictured) in the United States Army during World War II?
- ... that children's author Jeanette Eaton, a four-time winner of the Newbery Honor, was a feminist who also wrote for a socialist magazine and felt that women were inhibited by reading women's magazines?
- ... that Bharattherium may have been among the first grazing mammals?
- ... that the Confederate States Navy casemate ironclad CSS Missouri was the last Confederate ironclad to surrender during the American Civil War?
- ... that Jean-Pierre Latz, like several other very prominent ébénistes in 18th-century Paris, was born in Germany?
- ... that on {{nowrap|June 2}}, 1933, Clarence Pickrel, a pitcher for Major League Baseball's Philadelphia Phillies, allowed the New York Giants to score four runs without recording a single out?
- ... that the comforts of the Association Residence Nursing Home, now the largest youth hostel in North America, have caused many people to wish they were old women?
=30 May 2011=
- 16:00, 30 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the Smålandsstövare (pictured) originates from dogs brought home by soldiers in the 16th century wars of the Swedish Empire?
- ... that Kenkoy was a Philippine comics character whose name became synonymous with the words joker, jester, or a hilarious person?
- ... that botanist Alfred Byrd Graf{{`s}} richly illustrated books included some of the more than 100 plant species he had discovered on his worldwide journeys, including the first known white African Violet?
- ... that Kalamata olives are protected under the European Protected Geographical Status scheme?
- ... that in the early stages of World War II the steamer Refah from neutral Turkey was torpedoed by an unidentified submarine in the eastern Mediterranean killing 168 of the 200 people aboard?
- ... that three Welsh boxers have won the British super-featherweight title, Neil Haddock, Robert Dickie and Floyd Havard?
- ... that when the steam ferry Issaquah was first launched in Lake Washington in 1914, it got stuck in mud?
- 08:00, 30 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that under the supervision of archaeologists, the graduates of Cambodia's Artisans d'Angkor have been able to reproduce some portions of Kbal Spean{{`s}} (pictured) missing bas-relief carvings?
- ... that Stanford University's president wrote in 1907 that the career of Michigan center George W. Gregory illustrated "the evils of football"?
- ... that Benjamin Vulliamy, who designed the clock that defined time at the Prime Meridian, also designed clocks with porcelain cases?
- ... that Greek has been taught at Sierra Leone Grammar School since 1845?
- ... that Liang Huazhi led the Patriotic Sacrifice League in Shanxi to fight against the Japanese invasion of China?
- ... that Temple basketball player Ramone Moore improved his three point percentage from 12.5 percent as a sophomore to 38.3 percent as a junior?
- ... that Edward VII and his lover reportedly once got stuck in a too-narrow bathtub at the Hôtel Ritz Paris, which led to the tubs being enlarged?
- 00:00, 30 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that a fossil of the extinct sea scorpion Eurypterus (restoration pictured) was once thought to be a catfish?
- ... that Peter Jackson's 1994 film Heavenly Creatures is based on the Parker–Hulme murder case involving two New Zealand girls who went to school at what became the Cranmer Centre?
- ... that Aníbal Pérez, a former First Vice President of the Chamber of Deputies of Chile, was also President of the O'Higgins football club?
- ... that 184 38th Street in the Lawrenceville neighborhood of Pittsburgh is the oldest known log house to be used as a residence in any major American city?
- ... that Salter's duck is a wave-powered generator that uses gyroscopes to convert up to 90% of wave power into electricity?
- ... that Clarence Clemons reached the studio at midnight to record the saxophone part on Lady Gaga's song "Hair" and finished by {{nowrap|3:00 am}}?
- ... that on {{nowrap|May 18}}, 2011, the United States Government posted a blog and a couple of tweets to raise public awareness about incoming zombie apocalypse, natural disasters and pandemics?
=29 May 2011=
- 16:00, 29 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that San Pellegrino in Vaticano (pictured) is one of the oldest churches in the Vatican City?
- ... that baseball player Lou Raymond{{`s}} career with the Philadelphia Phillies consisted of one game, during which he earned a single hit in two at-bats?
- ... that Bach began his cantata, Wahrlich, wahrlich, ich sage euch, BWV 86, with a quotation from the Farewell discourse, sung by the bass as the Vox Christi?
- ... that in the 2011 Manhattan terrorism plot, two Arab-Americans allegedly planned to attack a synagogue, and one of the suspects expressed interest in blowing up the Empire State Building?
- ... that a planet was discovered around the star MOA-2009-BLG-387L after it eclipsed a background star, refracting the star's light in a process called gravitational microlensing?
- ... that Georg Dörffel was a ground attack pilot but was killed in combat against four-engined bombers?
- ... that a football team's travelling army of supporters is often referred to as its 12th man?
- 08:00, 29 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the US$30 million development of Citygarden (pictured), an urban park and sculpture garden in St. Louis, Missouri, was funded solely by a local nonprofit organization?
- ... that Sofitel New York Hotel won the 2000 Emporis Skyscraper Award?
- ... that retired American baseball player Hank Aaron holds ten Atlanta Braves team records?
- ... that the mineral kurnakovite was named after the Russian chemist Nikolai Semenovich Kurnakov?
- ... that former Temple assistant basketball coach Matt Langel once drove almost ten hours to recruit a player?
- ... that General Franco signed over the output of six mines to help pay for German involvement in the Spanish Civil War?
- ... that Colorado's governor-elect William Lee Knous formally opened Aspen's Ski Lift No. 1 in 1947 by breaking a bottle of champagne over one of its chairs?
- 00:00, 29 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that sand may form 50% of the stomach contents of a Screaming Hairy Armadillo (pictured)?
- ... that photographer Reid Blackburn, who was killed in the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, was supposed to remain on the mountain only until the day before the eruption?
- ... that the Grands Projets of François Mitterrand were commissioned in celebration of the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution?
- ... that after World War II, 252 men of the 13th (Lancashire) Parachute Battalion were charged with mutiny?
- ... that the bison bone bed at First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park in Montana is {{convert|13|ft|m}} deep?
- ... that former Columbia Lions men's basketball coach Gordon Ridings "never saw a harder worker" than John Azary?
- ... that vermouth was originally consumed as a medicinal drink, but is now popular as a cocktail ingredient?
=28 May 2011=
- 16:00, 28 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that although Laotian women (pictured) are constitutionally equal to Laotian men, due to inequalities in education only 63% are literate, compared with 83% of Laotian men?
- ... that the Argentine The Cámpora political youth organization is named after Héctor José Cámpora?
- ... that a phantom goal awarded against Small Heath F.C. in the 1894–95 season led the Football League to instruct referees to inspect the goalnets before each match?
- ... that Juan Acevedo Pavez was elected regidor of San Bernardo, Chile, in 1950 and simultaneously he held office as mayor of the same commune from 1952 until 1953?
- ... that the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority of Ghana established online registration to increase efficiency and abolish the activities of middlemen?
- ... that the orbit of WASP-43{{`s}} one planet, which has the smallest orbit known amongst planets of its kind, has been attributed to the star's unusually low mass?
- ... that Norwegian newspaper editor Einar Hoffstad went from classical liberalism to collectivism and Fascism in the late 1930s?
- 08:00, 28 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the Columbia Club (pictured) has hosted every Republican president while in office or campaigning since Benjamin Harrison in 1888?
- ... that children's author Genevieve Foster was a four-time winner of the Newbery Honor?
- ... that the Argentinian anarchist movement was the strongest anarchist movement in South America?
- ... that the 2010 assessment of the collection and trade of amphibians in Cambodia was a joint initiative of the Angkor Centre for Conservation of Biodiversity and Fauna and Flora International?
- ... that, due to the California gold rush, the Seated Liberty dollar became scarce in American commerce in the early 1850s, only to cause complaints due to a surplus of the coins by the end of the decade?
- ... that Mayor Henry L. Bridges of Minden, Louisiana, succeeded a future governor in 1928 and defeated a subsequent lieutenant governor in 1930?
- ... that a talking crow was buried near the temple of the Roman deity Rediculus?
- 00:00, 28 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that French actress Isabelle Huppert (pictured) is the most recent recipient of the British Film Institute Fellowship award?
- ... that the ancient Roman Amphitheatre of Serdica in central Sofia, Bulgaria, was accidentally discovered during construction works in the 2000s?
- ... that José Zabala-Santos is one of the pioneers of Philippine comics?
- ... that former Leinster Rugby and Scotland coach Matt Williams is a technical adviser to Irish rugby sevens team Shamrock Warriors RFC?
- ... that Abdullah Rimawi, one of the founders of the Ba'ath Party in Jordan, became its secretary-general in 1952?
- ... that the creeping snowberry is assisted by solitary bees, bumblebees, bee-flies, hoverflies, chipmunks and deer mice in reproduction in its native environment?
- ... that Fujiwara Shunzei once commented that "it is shocking for anyone to write poetry without knowing Genji{{-"}}?
=27 May 2011=
- 16:00, 27 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that there was only one survivor of the explosion which obliterated {{HMS|Princess Irene}} (pictured) and killed 352 people?
- ... that Bayside Church held its 2011 Easter services at the Power Balance Pavilion (formerly Arco Arena), attracting nearly 17,000 people?
- ... that the Fasci Italiani all'Estero, the fascist movement for Italian expatriates, which was led by Giuseppe Bastianini, claimed to have groups in over 40 countries in 1925?
- ... that the late 7th-century Kentish law code, the Law of Hlothhere and Eadric, has no provisions regarding the church?
- ... that Geograpsus severnsi is the first crab species known to have become extinct?
- ... that Indonesian biographer Alberthiene Endah has called writing biographies similar to dating the subject?
- ... that the Cambriae Typus map shows a sea monster in the Irish Sea?
- 08:00, 27 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that some species of giant stink bugs (example pictured) are edible?
- ... that the 1854 funeral procession for London Ferrill, preacher of First African Baptist Church in Lexington, Kentucky, numbered 5,000, second only to that for the statesman Henry Clay?
- ... that bride-buying, although illegal, still takes place in some countries?
- ... that as a senior in 1972–73, St. John's University basketball standout Billy Schaeffer averaged a school record 24.7 points per game en route to winning the Haggerty Award?
- ... that 10% of skiers were expected to suffer an injury in the era of cable ski bindings, earning them the nickname "bear traps"?
- ... that Modernisme architect Joan Martorell headed the committee that in 1883 selected Antoni Gaudí to complete the still-unfinished Sagrada Família?
- ... that according to the Parks and Recreation episode "Road Trip", the character played by actress Rashida Jones looks very good dressed like a prostitute?
- 00:00, 27 May 2011 (UTC)
File:PottoCincyZoo.jpg (Perodicticus potto, pictured) is quite similar to the false potto and may represent the same species.]]
- ... that the false potto may be a true potto (pictured)?
- ... that Ethiopia, Great Britain, Ireland, Israel, Jamaica, Japan, Rhodesia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, and the United States were among the 28 nations that competed in the 1968 Summer Paralympics?
- ... that adivasi activist Kartam Joga has been accused of joining the deadliest Naxalite attack in India's history?
- ... that Rhodes Twenty Four and Rhodes W1 are both London-based Michelin star restaurants of chef Gary Rhodes?
- ... that the extinct giant ant genus Formicium is known only from forewings found in Dorset, England and Tennessee, US?
- ... that mezzo-soprano opera singer Olivia Ward won season 11 of US television show The Biggest Loser?
- ... that Kegasus, the centaur mascot of the infield party at the 2011 Preakness Stakes, has a nipple ring, body hair and a beer gut?
=26 May 2011=
- 16:00, 26 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the approximately 1,400 caves of China's Longmen Grottoes contain about 100,000 statues, some of which are only {{convert|1|inch}} high, while the largest Buddha statue (pictured) is {{convert|57|ft}} in height?
- ... that Arthur Bedford commanded HMS Kent in the 1914 Battle of the Falkland Islands and sank the German cruiser Nürnberg?
- ... that the 2011 indie film Return, directed by Liza Johnson and starring Linda Cardellini, was the only U.S. film selected for this year's 25-film Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight?
- ... that Welsh footballer Dickie Morris became the first Plymouth Argyle player to be capped at senior international level in {{Nowrap|April 1908}}?
- ... that although the Brazilian rodent Drymoreomys has traits that suggest it lives in trees, it is usually captured on the ground?
- ... that 84-year-old Gus Douglass, who was first elected as West Virginia Agriculture Commissioner in 1964, is the longest-serving state agriculture commissioner in United States history?
- ... that residents of a street in the British city of Preston went without council services for six weeks as part of a BBC documentary?
- 08:00, 26 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Swiss painter Anton Graff made portraits of almost 1,000 contemporaries, including Frederick the Great (pictured), Goethe, Schiller, and Herder?
- ... that the Ironwood Pig Sanctuary contains over 400 pigs and three pig graveyards?
- ... that a paper by the academic Rod Thornton was censored for criticising the UK's arrest of a student who downloaded a copy of an Al-Qaeda training manual from a US government web site?
- ... that the bodyguard to the Pet Shop Boys was a leader of Arsenal FC's hooligan firm during the 1980s?
- ... that all graduates from Ghanaian tertiary institutions must complete a one year national service programme after their schooling?
- ... that having "killed" her alter ego Sasha Fierce in 2010, Beyoncé Knowles planned to create her own mix of music genres with her fourth studio album, 4?
- ... that the top prize on Al Murray's Compete for the Meat is a frozen chicken?
- 00:00, 26 May 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission is named for the only Holocaust survivor (pictured) ever to serve in the United States Congress?
- ... that 19th-century shipwright Thomas Morton invented the widely used patent slip because he couldn't afford a dry dock?
- ... that the first settlers of Tell Halula brought fully domesticated forms of wheat, barley and flax from somewhere else, circa {{nowrap|7750 BC}}?
- ... that father and son Augustyn and Roman Träger were Polish intelligence agents who provided the Allies with crucial information about German testing of the V-1 and V-2 rockets during World War II?
- ... that Parks and Recreation star Amy Poehler wrote the script for the episode "The Fight", the filming for which she called "the most fun I've ever had"?
- ... that Tom Sullivan is only the second head coach in UMBC Retrievers men's basketball history to amass 100 career wins?
- ... that "unruly" diplomat Henry Labouchère was the first person to publish Truth in Britain?