Wikipedia:Main Page history/2023 October 26b
From today's featured article
The 2022 Tour Championship was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 28 March to 3 April at Venue Cymru in Llandudno, Wales. Organised by the World Snooker Tour, it comprised the top eight players on the money list for ranking events held in the 2021–22 snooker season. It was the fourth edition of the Tour Championship, first held in 2019, and the fifteenth of sixteen ranking events of the 2021–22 snooker season, following the Gibraltar Open and preceding the World Championship. Broadcast by ITV4 in the United Kingdom, the event featured a prize fund of £370,000, of which the winner received £150,000. Neil Robertson (pictured) retained the title he won in 2021, coming from 4–9 behind in the final to defeat John Higgins 10–9. This was Robertson's 23rd win in ranking tournaments. Ronnie O'Sullivan became the first player to make five century breaks in two consecutive matches. (This article is part of a featured topic: Tour Championship (snooker).)
Did you know ...
- ... that John Lennon liked to tell how an older woman lost her temper when she saw his psychedelic Rolls-Royce (pictured)?
- ... that Bill Dunn, an Indigenous Australian pastoralist approaching retirement, sold his station at half-price to the Jigalong community despite receiving full-price offers from non-Indigenous people?
- ... that before the House of Commons of Canada considers a taxation or spending bill, a royal recommendation has to be given by the governor general?
- ... that ancient permafrost can preserve viable microorganisms, some of which contain antibiotic-resistance genes that may be transferred to modern bacteria?
- ... that during the "coffin brig" HMS Rinaldo's first three years of service, she captured five ships and sank another?
- ... that according to Christian tradition, the cloth used to shroud the body of Christ was made of sindon?
- ... that NPR favorably compared a story in Jonathan Escoffery's debut book If I Survive You to Moby-Dick?
- ... that Ellie Dixon's "Big Lizard Energy" imagines herself as a 320-foot (98 m) dinosaur?
In the news
- Hurricane Otis (satellite image shown) makes landfall near Acapulco, Mexico, leaving at least 27 people dead.
- In the United States, 18 people are killed in a mass shooting in Lewiston, Maine.
- The Sakharov Prize is awarded to Mahsa Amini and the Iranian Woman, Life, Freedom movement.
- Daniel Noboa is elected President of Ecuador.
On this day
- 1597 – Japanese invasions of Korea: Thirteen Korean ships commanded by Admiral Yi Sun-sin defeated a far larger Japanese invading fleet at the Battle of Myeongnyang in the Myeongnyang Strait.
- 1813 – War of 1812: British forces and Mohawk allies under Charles de Salaberry repulsed an American attempt to invade Canada.
- 1905 – The Saint Petersburg Soviet held its first meeting, becoming the first elected body in Russia to represent workers.
- 2000 – Following protests against military leader Robert Guéï, Laurent Gbagbo became the president of Ivory Coast.
- 2001 – President George W. Bush signed the Patriot Act into law (pictured), significantly expanding the authority of United States law enforcement agencies.
- John Basset (b. 1518)
- Carlo Collodi (d. 1890)
- Masaharu Iwata (b. 1966)
- Oro (d. 1993)
Today's featured picture
The northern pintail (Anas acuta) is a duck with a wide geographic distribution that breeds in the northern areas of Europe, Asia and North America. It is migratory and winters south of its breeding range to the equator. Unusual for a bird with such a large range, it has no geographical subspecies if the possibly conspecific Eaton's pintail is considered to be a separate species. It is a fairly large duck, with a long pointed tail that gives rise to the species's English and scientific names. The northern pintail's common name describes the male's two long black tail feathers, which in flight look like a single pin or twig. Hens make a coarse quack and the drakes a flute-like whistle. It is a bird of open wetlands, nesting on the ground and often at some distance from water. It feeds by dabbling for plant food and adds small invertebrates to its diet during the nesting season. When not breeding, it is highly gregarious, forming large mixed flocks with other species of duck. This male northern pintail was photographed at the Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge Complex in northern California. Photograph credit: Frank Schulenburg
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