Wikipedia:Recent additions/2014/August
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.
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Did you know...
[edit]Please add the line ==={{subst:CURRENTDAY}} {{subst:CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{subst:CURRENTYEAR}}===
for each new day and the time the set was removed from the DYK template 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 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 31 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the mountain parakeet (pictured) is found in the Andes at altitudes of up to 4,500 metres (14,800 ft)?
- ... that English biochemist Ida Maclean was the first woman on staff at the Manchester University chemistry department, and the first to be admitted to the London Chemical Society?
- ... that the Sargent Bridge is one of the few early 20th-century steel truss bridges remaining in central Nebraska?
- ... that a 1921 paper by Étienne Biéler and James Chadwick was praised as "marking the birth of the strong interactions"?
- ... that during the third kingdom of Ebla, Hadad and Ishtar became the city's most important deities?
- ... that Lydia Yu-Jose, who was conferred the Order of the Rising Sun for her contributions to Japanese studies in the Philippines, began her studies out of boredom with her political science classes?
- ... that a new species of the extinct ant Archimyrmex was described in 2012?
- 00:00, 31 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Canal des Pangalanes (pictured) on the east coast of Madagascar extends for over 645 kilometres (400 mi)*?
- ... that the Oba River is named for the goddess Ọba, one of the wives of Shango, the Yoruba God of Thunder?
- ... that Émilien of Nantes was decapitated by the Saracens?
- ... that Merriam's pocket mouse feeds mainly on seeds and does not need to drink?
- ... that Great Britain is one of the first three nations to qualify athletes for the 2016 Summer Olympics?
- ... that the eponymous character of A Kitty Bobo Show was based on one of the co-creators' experience as a Korean adoptee?
- ... that the Australian hit song "Polyester Girl" is about a man "pledging fidelity to a sex doll"?
30 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 30 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that one of Lena Nyadbi's (pictured) works, Dayiwul Lirlmim, can be seen from the Eiffel Tower?
- ... that Hansjürgen Reinicke was chief of staff to Vice Admiral Otto Ciliax during the Channel Dash?
- ... that the Indianapolis Traction Terminal was reputedly the largest interurban terminal ever built?
- ... that missing woman Holly Bobo is the cousin of country singer Whitney Duncan?
- ... that the Global Citizenship Education approach has been supported by organizations such as UNESCO and Oxfam?
- ... that the gray-collared chipmunk supplements its fruit and seed-based diet with fungi, greenery and insects?
- ... that Charlie Guy, who served in the Ambulance Corps during World War I, sent Cleveland's star halfback to the hospital with a broken shoulder and ribs in the first game of the 1920 NFL season?
- 00:00, 30 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the sinking of the British scout cruiser HMS Pathfinder (pictured) by the German U-boat SM U-21 in 1914 was the first time a warship was sunk by a modern submarine?
- ... that the world's best para-equestrian rider, Lauren Barwick, appeared on the Canadian television series Heartland?
- ... that both of the lead actors in the 2013 film Short Term 12 were cast through Skype?
- ... that Robert Louis Stevenson believed that politics is a profession for which no preparation is necessary?
- ... that the aviator John Robinson was initially a janitor at the first aviation school he attended?
- ... that Pakistan has been trying to put up a fence on its border with Afghanistan since 2005?
- ... that Fabien Cousteau commissioned a "Trojan shark" submarine to film a documentary on great white sharks, and recently spent 31 days living underwater?
29 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 29 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Henry Lansdell (pictured) distributed multi-lingual religious tracts and Bibles in hospitals and prisons in Siberia and central Asia?
- ... that, reaching a height of 325 feet (99 m), Fury 325 will become the world's tallest non-launched roller coaster when it opens in 2015 at the Carowinds amusement park?
- ... that "The Blonde Bear" supervised the ransacking of black households in the 1946 Columbia Race Riot?
- ... that Wei Yilin, a surgeon during the Mongol Yuan dynasty, created a suspension method for reducing dislocated joints?
- ... that local tradition holds that the Ponte Conde de Linhares was built by Jesuits in a single night by the light of a single lamp?
- ... that the journal Genes, Brain and Behavior is trying to raise standards for mouse mutant studies and reduce the unnecessary use of animals in flawed studies?
- ... that the Rolingas are an Argentine urban tribe composed of fans of The Rolling Stones?
- 00:00, 29 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the five-volume book De Materia Medica, written by Dioscorides between 50 and 70 AD (page from 6th-century edition pictured), is the precursor to all modern pharmacopoeias?
- ... that Australian swimmer Mack Horton won five gold medals at the 2013 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships?
- ... that the popular Thai teen drama Hormones: The Series courted controversy for scenes featuring students attempting to have sex in a classroom?
- ... that Seth Green, a farmer's son and pioneer pisciculturist from Carthage, New York, was called the "Father of Fish Culture in North America"?
- ... that the Illinois Central Railroad's Seminole Limited was the first passenger train to provide year-round service between Chicago, Illinois and Jacksonville, Florida?
- ... that Mouvements d'Harmonie for wind nonet was composed by Graham Waterhouse for the 60th birthday of his father, the bassoonist William Waterhouse?
- ... that in 1909 the owner of the Wolverine claimed the Coquille intentionally rammed his boat, but the Steamboat Inspection Service subsequently suspended the captains of both vessels?
28 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 28 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the 18th-century Chinese merchant Puankhequa (pictured) owned a firm in the Thirteen Factories district, trading with Europeans?
- ... that the Kweilin was the first civilian airliner to be attacked by hostile aircraft?
- ... that Olympic footballer Kristian Krefting served as a liaison officer with British forces fighting in the 1940 Norwegian Campaign?
- ... that over 200 fossils of Aphaenogaster mayri were known when the species was described in 1930?
- ... that Ernst Deutsch won the Volpi Cup for best actor at the 1948 Venice Film Festival for his role in The Trial?
- ... that Fore Street was the first place in the City of London to be hit by a German bomb in World War II?
- ... that the flesh and fins of the spotless smooth-hound are much esteemed?
- 00:00, 28 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that a single village churchyard (pictured) contains the graves of George Orwell, Earl Asquith, and David Astor?
- ... that Native American football player Peter Hauser has been credited with throwing the first spiral pass?
- ... that the 1920 German film The Women House of Brescia was rejected by the British Board of Film Classification and banned in Germany?
- ... that 28-year-old Ferhat Akbaş was appointed head coach of the Turkey women's national volleyball team and won the 2014 Women's European Volleyball League?
- ... that the yellow-nosed cotton rat often shares the burrow of the southern pocket gopher?
- ... that Bernard Perlin created some of the best-known World War II propaganda produced by America's Office of War Information?
- ... that a magic trick called the blow book was used in the 16th century to refute the existence of witchcraft?
27 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 27 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that German para-alpine skier Anna-Lena Forster (pictured) won a silver medal at the 2014 Winter Paralympics by being one of the only two athletes to complete a race?
- ... that Mo'ne Davis is the first girl to pitch a shutout in Little League World Series history?
- ... that the sternwheeler Telegraph twice collided with the rival Charm in 1915?
- ... that a migration to Russia in 1752 led by Jovan Šević was described in a novel by Miloš Crnjanski?
- ... that Marshall Field and Levi Leiter, co-founders of Marshall Field & Co., were both once partners with John V. Farwell at John V. Farwell & Co.?
- ... that the U. S. Navy's Bureau of Medicine and Surgery is the last of the original Navy bureaus still in existence?
- ... that Chicken Licken, the "largest non-American-owned fried chicken franchise in the world", uses a secret recipe bought in Texas for $1,000?
- 00:00, 27 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Constitution of Tonga stipulates that the kingdom's flag (pictured) can never be changed?
- ... that Achille Pierre Deffontaines, who died on 26 August 1914, was the youngest general in France when promoted in 1913?
- ... that Hkonmaing I, the saopha of Onbaung–Hsipaw, was the only steadfast ally of King Narapati II of Ava for over twenty years in Ava's wars against its former vassal states?
- ... that stage coaches on the Drain-Coos Bay stage line in Southern Oregon traveled on the beach?
- ... that Michigan State halfback Neno DaPrato was called "the greatest scoring machine of the year" after scoring 130 points, in just six games, during the 1915 season?
- ... that conductor Michael Zearott participated on a 1980s musical tour organized by Francis Ford Coppola?
- ... that the sternwheeler Eva illegally hauled dynamite through Southern Oregon, in boxes labeled as containing bacon?
26 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 26 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that birds found in Indonesia's Gunung Ambang Nature Reserve include the golden-mantled racket-tail (pictured), the chestnut-backed bush warbler, the Matinan blue flycatcher, the dark-eared myza, the scaly-breasted kingfisher, the cerulean cuckooshrike and the Sulawesi masked owl?
- ... that General San Martín's Monument was inaugurated on the 50th anniversary of Neuquén, Argentina?
- ... that Anna Rüling, "the first lesbian activist" and one of the first women to publicly declare her homosexuality, believed that lesbians were more suited to careers than straight women?
- ... that in pursuit of his foreign policy objectives, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi made an official visit to Nepal and was the first foreign leader to address that country's parliament?
- ... that baseball's Jim Manning was one of the organizers of both the Western League and its successor the American League?
- ... that the radical PUNGA party was the sole force in Gabon that called for a "No" vote in the 1958 French constitutional referendum?
- ... that Tony Kaye appeared on the cover of The Yes Album with his foot in plaster, having broken it in a car accident?
- 00:00, 26 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the California Diamond Jubilee half dollar (pictured) depicts a man panning for gold, but itself contains only silver and copper?
- ... that according to the Nihon Shoki, the claimant to the throne in the Prince Hoshikawa Rebellion was burned in the treasury?
- ... that after the ship Favorite was sunk at its moorings in Oregon, it was refloated within days?
- ... that the Argentine telenovela Viudas e hijos del Rock and Roll is Paola Barrientos's first television appearance in a lead role?
- ... that leaders of the pro-Mali Federation Mauritanian National Union were released from jail once the Federation fell apart?
- ... that Legacy Mount Hood Medical Center in Gresham, Oregon, did not get a permanent MRI machine until 2001?
- ... that the film Michael, now in production, is about former gay activist Michael Glatze (played by James Franco), who denounced homosexuality following a health scare and became a Christian pastor?
25 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 25 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that during World War II, an island in southern Oregon's Gerber Reservoir (pictured) was used as a military bombing range?
- ... that while Chinese parents have begun putting their toddlers in diapers instead of open-crotch pants, Western advocates of elimination communication have been moving toward using them?
- ... that Northwest Coast artist Jim Hart is a hereditary chief of the Haida Nation?
- ... that Barbara Rosenblat decided that her Orange Is the New Black character Miss Rosa has a Hispanic accent?
- ... that Fritz Delius played Louis XIV of France in the 1920 German film Am Liebeshof des Sonnenkönigs?
- ... that the Nigerien Action Bloc won the mayoral post of Zinder in 1956?
- ... that Hundeprutterutchebane, Denmark's "Dog Fart Rollercoaster", takes riders past a statue of a defecating dog and "gives new meaning to the phrase 'the wind in my face'"?
- 00:00, 25 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that dissolved lime in the waters of New York's Sucker Brook forms the rare "water biscuits" found on the north shore of Canandaigua Lake's Squaw Island (pictured)?
- ... that Russian para-alpine skier Alexey Bugaev broke his arm at the 2013 IPC World Championships but went on to win two silver medals with his arm in plaster?
- ... that the British television series Inside No. 9 won the Sketch and Comedy prize at the 35th annual Banff World Media Festival Rockie Awards?
- ... that Charles W. Crawford was in charge of wireless telegraphy in Somaliland during actions against the "Mad Mullah"?
- ... that the tower of the Falkner Island Light originally had a spiral wooden staircase leading outside to the lantern room?
- ... that filmmaker Michelle Parkerson has been called "a visionary risk-taker"?
- ... that stories involving Joe Quest are among the many theories about the origin of the term "Charley horse"?
24 August 2014
[edit]- 12:08, 24 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that pride parades in South Africa (pictured) are increasingly used for political advocacy against LGBT hate crimes and to remember their victims?
- ... that the mix of modern elements and traditional gothic norms in "The Harrowing", episode six of Inside No. 9, was used for both comedy and horror?
- ... that Bill Watkins led Detroit to the 1887 World Series and by 1894 had won more pennants than any other manager?
- ... that Andrew Carnegie objected to his grant money being used for amenities such as a dome, public meeting room, and fireplaces in the Guthrie, Oklahoma Carnegie Library?
- ... that sociologist Mihai Ralea was sent to the West by Communist Romania with documents exposing the fascist past of Romanian exiles, only to find himself subject to similar accusations?
- ... that the distribution of Beck's tree frog is limited to altitudes of over 3,000 metres (9,800 ft) in Papua New Guinea?
- ... that Taylor Swift's single "Shake It Off" is dedicated to her haters?
- 00:23, 24 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the southern boobook (pictured) is so named for its two-toned call?
- ... that author George R. R. Martin killed off protagonist Eddard Stark in his 1996 novel A Game of Thrones because he knew readers would not expect it?
- ... that Sir Mark Palmer, a godson of Queen Elizabeth II, started an early male modelling agency before leading a band of New Age travellers?
- ... that the silky pocket mouse sometimes shares a burrow with the banner-tailed kangaroo rat or the Phillips' kangaroo rat?
- ... that Steamer Horning was an All-American football player for Colgate and a two-time All-NFL player for Toledo?
- ... that Norman Morrice was the artistic director of Ballet Rambert and The Royal Ballet, the UK's two major ballet companies?
- ... that during the First World War former postmen serving with the Post Office Rifles delivered German mail using carrots?
23 August 2014
[edit]- 12:38, 23 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that baseball pitcher, dentist, and voice trainer Jumping Jack Jones (pictured) leapt into the air before throwing, making him "the twirling marvel of his time"?
- ... that Cicero's lost Consolatio (45 BC) is widely accepted as the distinct work that transmitted the earlier consolatio literary tradition to the Romans of the late Republic?
- ... that when the recording sessions of Stratum by Drottnar began, guitarist Bengt Olsson left the band, only to rejoin it a few months later?
- ... that Josefina de la Torre, closely associated with the Generation of '27, was a columnist for the film magazine Primer Plano?
- ... that Charles de Visscher, a Belgian judge of the International Court of Justice, was orphaned at age twelve?
- ... that Chris Paul won gold medals with the US basketball team at both the 2008 and 2012 Summer Olympics?
- ... that intimacy between a retired Empress and a monk was one of the causes of the Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion?
- 00:53, 23 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Des pas sur la neige, Ce qu'a vu le vent d'ouest, and La fille aux cheveux de lin by Claude Debussy (pictured) form "the central arch" of the structure of his first book of Préludes?
- ... that 100 years ago today the French 3rd Colonial Division was virtually destroyed at the Battle of Rossignol?
- ... that the Hindu deity Heramba, protector of the weak, is associated with rites for inflicting harm on one's enemies?
- ... that Valentin Wolfenstein owned the first successful photography studio in Los Angeles?
- ... that the noble Roman Altieri family, which ascended the papal throne in 1670 with Clement X, pretended to be descended from an unknown ancient Roman citizen named Lucius Alterius?
- ... that approximately 200 bird species have been observed on or near Lake Chillisquaque in Montour County, Pennsylvania?
- ... that three protesters were killed near a Cape Town school by armed police hidden in a "Trojan Horse"?
- ... that Marina Frolova-Walker has delivered lectures on music at venues ranging from Carnegie Hall to factories in Kazakhstan?
22 August 2014
[edit]- 13:08, 22 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that on its 2012 centenary, the Rio de Janeiro cableway (pictured) was honored with a Google Doodle in Brazil?
- ... that Anabel was the first Brazilian animation series on Nickelodeon Brazil?
- ... that although abortion is generally illegal in Sint Maarten, it is legal and accessible "just a walk away across the border" in Saint Martin?
- ... that because future cancer surgeon Sir Stanford Cade spoke no English on being evacuated to England in the First World War, he wrote his first medical examination in French?
- ... that German actress Olga Limburg starred alongside Heinz Rühmann and appeared in 49 films?
- ... that in the Kibi Clan Rebellion, Japan lost its hold on the Korean peninsula because of a beautiful woman?
- ... that Jimmy the raven could open envelopes and ride a motorcycle, appeared in some 1000 films (including It's a Wonderful Life), and earned a Red Cross gold medal?
- 01:23, 22 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Olympic violet (pictured) is found only on the eastern and northeastern peaks of the Olympic Mountains in Washington state?
- ... that the murder of 14-year-old schoolgirl Leigh Leigh inspired a theatrical play that was later adapted into a feature film?
- ... that despite nationwide speculation, John Hay never acknowledged his authorship of The Bread-Winners, published anonymously in 1883?
- ... that Romanian opera singer and film actress Maria Forescu died in the Buchenwald concentration camp?
- ... that the oldest memorial in All Saints' Church, Runcorn, Cheshire, is dedicated to two women, "both good wives"?
- ... that the last Norse–Gaelic King of Dublin, Ascall mac Ragnaill, was captured and executed in 1171 after failing to reclaim his kingdom from the English?
- ... that in later life, baseball player Dan Casey claimed he was "Casey at the Bat"?
21 August 2014
[edit]- 11:08, 21 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Charles Darwin discovered the Iago sparrow (pictured) on the first stop of the voyage of the Beagle?
- ... that Hugh Lowery taught formation flying in World War I and later played in the National Football League's first season?
- ... that on its 1856 opening, the Illinois Central Railroad's Great Central Station was the largest building in Chicago?
- ... that despite receiving the most votes in the 1959 elections, the Dahomeyan Democratic Union emerged as the smallest of the three parties in the Territorial Assembly?
- ... that the memorial to members of the United Kingdom's Houses of Parliament killed in the First World War was damaged by bombing in the Second World War?
- ... that the residence and place of death of Muhammad Iqbal was converted into a museum by the Pakistani government in 1984?
- ... that Jack Kilmer first acted at age 18, when he starred in Palo Alto with his father Val Kilmer?
20 August 2014
[edit]- 22:53, 20 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the 6th Division Cavalry Regiment's use of tanks during the capture of Tobruk in 1941 was the first time that Australian forces operated tanks (pictured) in action?
- ... that Alice Pollock founded the boutique Quorum and the male modelling agency English Boy, both in London?
- ... that Steve Ormerod chairs Europe's largest wildlife conservation charity?
- ... that the Itcha Range in British Columbia is an inactive shield volcano formed between 3.8 and 0.8 million years ago?
- ... that L.A. Mix scored five more hits after being diagnosed by Stock Aitken Waterman as being "unlikely to have another hit"?
- ... that according to local tradition, the shrine of Muawiya in the town of Basma is named after a soldier in Saladin's army who was slain near the town?
- ... that the stoor worm, a sea monster of Orcadian mythology, could destroy humans with its putrid breath?
- 00:00, 20 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Major General Harold J. Greene (pictured) is the highest-ranking American servicemember killed on foreign soil since the Vietnam War?
- ... that Race is the first feature film about Jesse Owens, who won a record-breaking four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games?
- ... that the Selle Français is a French sport horse, recognized internationally as a top breed for show jumping and three-day eventing?
- ... that the assassination of Augusto Unceta Barrenechea was the Basque separatist group ETA's deadliest attack of 1977, and marked the beginning of a more violent phase in the group's operations?
- ... that Trafalgar High School, established for non-whites in Cape Town, defiantly refused to move after its part of the city was declared "whites only"?
- ... that Howard Gobioff was one of the architects of the Google File System, which allowed for computation speeds never before possible?
- ... that Gordon Ramsay's Bread Street Kitchen cost £3 million to build?
19 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 19 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the director of the film Pacific Rim drew inspiration from the painting The Colossus (pictured), as well as George Bellows's boxing paintings?
- ... that Joe Fitzgerald was the first player in NFL history to return an interception for a touchdown?
- ... that the BBC Singers and Endymion performed Steve Reich's The Desert Music at the 2014 Proms?
- ... that Gerald "Charley" Westbury was one of the first cancer surgeons to develop procedures that would preserve function as well as give good survival rates?
- ... that the 10th Battalion was the first South Australian infantry unit to leave Australia during World War I, heading for the Middle East in October 1914?
- ... that Harrington-Birchett House was a federally protected bird sanctuary from 1940 to 1970?
- ... that the excavations for fossils of Pleistocene fauna in Natural Trap Cave, Wyoming, in 2014 included an experiment in taphonomy?
- 00:00, 19 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Corythosaurus (mounted skeleton pictured) bore a tall, elaborate bony crest atop its skull, which contained elongate nasal passages?
- ... that British archer Sharon Vennard competed at the 2012 Summer Paralympics despite being in constant pain due to osteoarthritis in her spine?
- ... that in a 1966 interview John Lennon remarked that the Beatles were "more popular than Jesus"?
- ... that the Vietnamese Nôm Preservation Foundation in Cary, North Carolina, has been preserving the ancient Chữ Nôm script of Vietnam since 1999?
- ... that pianist Werner Genuit played the complete works for piano by Richard Wagner for the national congress of the Wagner Society?
- ... that Ludian was a courier station on the Ancient tea route?
- ... that the inner part of Stanford University's Main Quad is surrounded by twelve buildings, numbered 1 through 110?
18 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the flag of Tanzania (pictured) amalgamated elements of the flags of Tanganyika and Zanzibar, which united in 1964 to form the republic?
- ... that the extinct ant Aphaenogaster sommerfeldti was first described in 1868?
- ... that Mac Marcoux won gold in the Men's Giant Slalom by over two seconds at the 2014 Winter Paralympic Games?
- ... that although the 12th-century Skara Missal has been referred to as "Sweden's oldest book", its origins remain unclear?
- ... that in 1929, Solomon and Hattie Chandler donated land to the state of Oregon for a park, now called Chandler State Wayside?
- ... that more than eighty species of woodland herbs are found near Spruce Run, including fifteen fern species and twelve sedge species?
- ... that cyclist Floortje Mackaij began her career as a speed skater?
- 00:00, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Anna Schaffelhuber (pictured) won all five gold medals in para-alpine skier sitting events at the 2014 Winter Paralympics?
- ... that the massive blue giant star 68 Cygni is surrounded by a ring-shaped nebula?
- ... that Mr. & Mrs. Waite Phillips lived in the penthouse of the Philcade Building after donating their mansion to the city of Tulsa to become the Philbrook Art Museum?
- ... that fossils of 23 mammal species including mammoth, dire wolf, ground sloth, pre-historic bison, camel, and horse have been found at Fossil Lake in south central Oregon?
- ... that American actress and theater director Jessie Bonstelle gave her first public performance at two years old?
- ... that Oriental Film hired Njoo Cheong Seng and Fifi Young for their name recognition and only produced one further film after the couple left?
- ... that mathematician Elling Holst is particularly remembered for his picture books for children?
17 August 2014
[edit]- 12:00, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the scientific name of the black-backed butcherbird (pictured) translates as "mental noisy bird"?
- ... that English sport shooter Mick Gault jointly holds the record for most medals at the Commonwealth Games, but has never been selected for the Olympic Games?
- ... that the video game Device 6 uses mainly text for its gameplay?
- ... that Liebmann Hersch's article "International Migration of the Jews", first published in 1931, became a classic work on the topic?
- ... that as of January 1940, No. 2 Elementary Flying Training School RAAF lacked hot water, a kitchen, and a telephone system?
- ... that Michael H. Weber and his writing partner have written four films together despite living on opposite sides of the United States?
- ... that Remedios Circle, now considered the center of Manila's nightlife, was originally a cemetery?
- 00:04, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Saint Boniface allegedly used a book to ward off Frisian sword blows at his martyrdom in 754 (pictured)?
- ... that swimmer June Krauser set 154 American records and 73 world records?
- ... that Virgil's Fourth Eclogue was believed by some early Christians to have predicted the birth of Jesus of Nazareth?
- ... that Cahuenga Boulevard in Los Angeles appeared in several Buster Keaton films, such as The Goat (1921) and Three Ages (1923)?
- ... that the 2014 Orkney earthquake was the biggest earthquake in South Africa since 1969?
- ... that halfback Eddie Moegle scored the first touchdown for Detroit in the first season of the NFL?
- ... that cross-country skier Chris Klebl represented the United States at the 2006 and 2010 Winter Paralympics before winning a gold medal for Canada at the 2014 Games?
16 August 2014
[edit]- 10:39, 16 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the floors of the vestibule of the Bryn Mawr College Deanery (pictured) were designed by Henry Chapman Mercer from a 14th-century British design?
- ... that concussions are the fifth-most common type injury in American football, possibly affecting over 100,000 players each year?
- ... that P. T. Daly, secretary of the Dublin Council of Trade Unions, was imprisoned during the Dublin Lock-out and interned during the Easter Rising?
- ... that a torture scene in the Orphan Black episode "Things Which Have Never Yet Been Done" was improvised and shot with a handheld camera due to time constraints during filming?
- ... that mother of four Heather Turland won the marathon at the 1998 Commonwealth Games at age 38, despite having first run the distance only two years earlier?
- ... that the television debate between Alistair Darling and Alex Salmond attracted 36% of viewers in Scotland?
- ... that psychologist Frank Farley once studied men who visit massage parlors?
15 August 2014
[edit]- 22:24, 15 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that after an absence of four years, the Inkpot Madonna (detail pictured), holding a naked Baby Jesus with quill in hand, returns to the Hildesheim Cathedral today?
- ... that David Friesenhausen, an astronomer and rabbi, was one of the first Jews to support the Copernican heliocentrism?
- ... that chili sauce is sometimes used in the preparation of sushi?
- ... that a possibly distinct form of the Egyptian white water-lily exists far away from its Nile Delta habitat in a small Romanian nature reserve?
- ... that at age 10, Darren Espanto was the youngest contestant in the history of The Next Star to be included in the Top 6?
- ... that rodents are characterized by their continuously-growing, razor-sharp incisors?
- ... that baseball catcher Cal Broughton later became a police chief who captured a gang of train robbers after a gun fight in Wisconsin?
- 08:49, 15 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that footballer David Beckham (pictured) was an investor in Gordon Ramsay's Union Street Café but backed out prior to its opening?
- ... that 5,000 Redmi smartphones sold out in eight minutes in a March 2014 online sales offering?
- ... that countertenor David Erler was one of five singers invited by amarcord for the performance of Monteverdi's Vespers as the annual Marienvesper of the Rheingau Musik Festival in Eberbach Abbey?
- ... that the Parksley Spuds were a professional baseball team based in a town with a population of about 600 people?
- ... that the Kinne Cemetery, established around 1713 in Griswold, Connecticut, shows the evolution of funerary art over the course of the centuries?
- ... that Hans Aasnæs was the 1947 individual World Champion in the 100 metre running deer double shot?
- ... that the corpse of Indian spiritual leader Ashutosh has been kept in a freezer by his followers since his clinical death on 29 January 2014?
14 August 2014
[edit]- 20:34, 14 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that a "wonderful fluid" in the sarcophagus of King Tabnit (pictured) kept him unusually well-preserved for over two millennia, but its secret was lost when workmen poured it out?
- ... that Morihei Ueshiba founded the Japanese martial art of aikido?
- ... that the 1940 contest between The Catholic University of America and the Arizona State Teachers College at Tempe ended in the only scoreless tie in Sun Bowl history?
- ... that Gerd Nienstedt performed 14 different roles, including the dragon in Siegfried, during 15 consecutive summers at the Bayreuth Festival?
- ... that after the Ottoman conquest of Epirus, some members of the Zenevisi family converted to Islam and held high positions within the Ottoman military and feudal hierarchy?
- ... that Lionel Fraser worked in naval intelligence, and was the father of Groovy Bob?
- ... that more than 300 complaints were received about British slopestyle snowboarder Aimee Fuller's commentary on her own event at the 2014 Winter Olympics?
- 08:19, 14 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Indian Head cent (obverse pictured) was replaced by the Lincoln cent in 1909?
- ... that the unveiling of Android 4.0 was postponed in remembrance of Steve Jobs?
- ... that Caxiuanã National Forest is the oldest national forest in the Amazon Region of Brazil?
- ... that Erich Wenk sang a "rage aria" in Bach's dramma per musica Preise dein Glücke, gesegnetes Sachsen?
- ... that the music video for "Make U Bounce" features a woman with massive hands causing carnage out of revenge?
- ... that the call of the male river frog can be described as a "deep, low-pitched, rolling snore"?
- ... that when food is scarce, the agile wallaby will feed on seeds it finds in bird droppings?
13 August 2014
[edit]- 20:04, 13 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the buffy hummingbird (pictured) feeds on the flesh and juice of cactus fruits?
- ... that the Končar-class missile boat has two chaff launchers?
- ... that before Lyca Gairanod won The Voice Kids, she helped her mother find recyclable materials to sell to support their family?
- ... that the Congo Crisis began shortly after the end of colonial rule of Belgian Congo in 1960?
- ... that Catholic University's Bill Adamaitis was hailed as the "hero of the Orange Bowl" after both catching and throwing touchdown passes in the 1936 game?
- ... that Lis Rhodes's 1975 work Light Music was called "an iconic work of expanded cinema" by the Tate Modern?
- ... that shares of GameStop fell over five percent after the announcement of EA Access?
- 07:49, 13 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the grizzled tree-kangaroo (pictured) hops from tree to tree?
- ... that in 1944 a precision bombing raid on the Gestapo's Aarhus headquarters destroyed all its files?
- ... that Morocco recently suspended judicial cooperation with France over torture claims against Morocco's intelligence service, the DGST?
- ... that the cargo liner Dominion Monarch carried all her passengers in first-class accommodation?
- ... that an 18th-century German–Serbian dictionary uses a dialect of the Vojvodina Serbs?
- ... that the 1969 album Yellow Submarine was one of the few Beatles releases that did not top the charts in the United Kingdom or the United States, peaking at No. 3 and No. 2 respectively?
- ... that dogs speak with the player and plead to adventure with them in PlayStation Vita Pets?
12 August 2014
[edit]- 19:34, 12 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Jamaican Bobsledder Winston Watts (pictured competing) came out of retirement and raised over US$25,000 in Dogecoin to compete at the 2014 Winter Olympics?
- ... that BL Boötis (or BL Boo) in Boötes is not a binary but a BL Boötis variable?
- ... that British MP Terry Patchett, suffering from cancer, voted on the Scott Report after journeying 400 miles by ambulance to Parliament?
- ... that the papal decretal Libellus responsionum (601 AD) dealt with questions such as marriage between relatives and whether priests might celebrate mass after having sexual dreams?
- ... that composer and entertainer Gitz Rice, serving with the Canadian Armed Forces on the World War I front lines, rescued a piano from shellfire?
- ... that Walt Disney Animation Studios has released 53 animated features to date, from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) to Frozen (2013)?
- ... that Bevan Sharpless' observations of the orbital decay of Phobos led to speculation it was a hollow sphere created by Martians?
- 07:19, 12 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Sri Temasek (pictured) is designated the official residence of the Prime Minister of Singapore, though no Prime Minister has actually lived there?
- ... that during the Spanish–American War, the Bridgeport Harbor Lighthouse was equipped with a battery of ten-inch guns, making it one of the few armed lighthouses in American history?
- ... that Australian farmer Archie Barwick wrote some 400,000 words about his World War I service?
- ... that John Lee Hooker's "Boogie Chillen' " became the first "down-home" electric blues song to reach number one in the R&B records chart?
- ... that walking football has become a fashionable form of exercise for over-50s with mobility difficulties?
- ... that in 1951 the Symphony Six – six Canadian musicians including Dirk Keetbaas, William Kuinka, and Ruth Budd – were denied access to the United States under suspicion of leftist activities?
- ... that the book The Girl With All The Gifts deals with a dystopian future in which most of humanity is wiped out by a fungal infection?
11 August 2014
[edit]- 19:04, 11 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Hawksmoor serves steaks (pictured) from Ginger Pig longhorns?
- ... that the first personality test, the Woodworth Personal Data Sheet, was developed with the intention of screening World War I recruits for shell-shock risk?
- ... that Montowampate was attacked by Tarrantines while visiting Masconomet?
- ... that the first FA Charity Shield match, held in 1908, saw Manchester United draw 1–1 with Queens Park Rangers?
- ... that John Gregorson Campbell was at the same time a church minister and a folklorist?
- ... that the one tropical cyclone to make landfall during the 1930 Atlantic hurricane season killed between 2000 and 8000 people?
- ... that in 1907, the moose Älgen Stolta defeated horses in a harness race?
- 06:49, 11 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the first described fossil of Aphaenogaster mersa (illustrated) had a white mold coating?
- ... that the Degree Angular Scale Interferometer was the first instrument to detect polarization anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background?
- ... that Klesie Kelly, soprano and academic voice teacher in Cologne, recorded love songs for voices and instrumental soloists with tenor Ian Partridge?
- ... that Giacomo Orefice's 1901 opera Chopin, based very loosely on Chopin's life, has been called "a kitsch contribution to the last vestiges of late 19th-century romanticized bohemianism"?
- ... that the reign of Ha' K'in Xook, who ruled the Maya city of Piedras Negras from 767–780 AD, seems to have been relatively free from war?
- ... that former Cardiff MP Ian Grist's signature, I Grist, signifies "Jesus Christ" in Welsh?
- ... that a critic thought that a "pack of satanic Marmadukes" would be scarier than the film Hellhounds?
10 August 2014
[edit]- 01:19, 10 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Parsurameswar Temple (pictured) in Bhubaneswar is believed to be around 1400 years old?
- ... that Megan Fletcher won the 70 kg women's judo at the 2014 Commonwealth Games despite needing to have her face taped up during the semifinal?
- ... that blueside shiners and longear sunfish work together to defend their nests from predators?
- ... that a loose coalition of German nationalist and liberal parties defeated the dominant Christian Social Party in the 1911 election in Cisleithania?
- ... that in the midst of the 1929 financial crisis, the Socialist Workers Party of Romania argued that the time was ripe for revolution?
- ... that Novo Brdo, an important medieval fortified town of Serbian Despotate, was besieged and captured in 1441 by the Ottoman forces commanded by Hadım Şehabeddin, the beylerbey of Rumelia Eyalet?
- ... that occupants of the Navy Annex finally left after the food service was stopped and the ATM removed?
9 August 2014
[edit]- 13:34, 9 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that spectra, London's giant tower of light (pictured), will be turned off on Monday?
- ... that Dominic Monaghan was covered in honey to attract male drones for the production of the Lost episode "House of the Rising Sun"?
- ... that Frank Brill was a pitcher in Major League Baseball and later won the United States' first national bowling championship?
- ... that Texas All-Star Wrestling, the oldest independent promotion in Texas, was honored at the 2013 Texas Wrestling Hall of Fame?
- ... that Caroline Charles designed clothes for Mick Jagger and Ringo Starr, as well as the outfit worn by Emma Thompson when she accepted the Oscar for Howards End?
- ... that the proportion of rowers at the 2011 Boat Race who were British was the highest for a decade?
- ... that according to the Lesbian Film Guide, She Must Be Seeing Things was a "deeply controversial film ... dismissed outright by some as pornography"?
- 01:49, 9 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that protogalaxies (pictured) are thought to have been formed by matter falling onto denser regions of dark matter formed by quantum fluctuations in the early universe?
- ... that Changyuraptor, the largest four-winged dinosaur discovered to date, also had the longest feathers ever recorded in any non-avian dinosaur?
- ... that Brean Down has been designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest due to both its geology and its range of plants?
- ... that the music video accompanying "Ugly Heart" was seen by 2.5 million viewers in less than a week?
- ... that the Family Building Society, opened in July 2014, is the UK's first new building society since 1981?
- ... that Big Brother: Power Trip contestant Pauline Bennett has been featured on four UK top 75 hits?
- ... that "Word Crimes", "Weird Al" Yankovic's grammar-based song parody of Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines", has been likened to a modern-day Schoolhouse Rock!?
8 August 2014
[edit]- 14:04, 8 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Comic Neue is "a slightly less horrible version of Comic Sans" (comparison pictured)?
- ... that only three possible fossils of the extinct ant Aphaenogaster oligocenica have been reported?
- ... that the Cenotaph war memorial in Cape Town has been relocated twice since it was first erected in 1924?
- ... that the Mama Lucy Gang was named after the owner of a restaurant?
- ... that, after plans to make a film with Dardanella fell through, Ali Joego established his own theatre company?
- ... that the success of Mikengreg's Solipskier gave them the means to experiment when making Gasketball?
- ... that I-Kiribati boxer Taoriba Biniati had never fought against a woman or in a ring before taking part at the 2014 Commonwealth Games?
7 August 2014
[edit]- 12:35, 7 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Nila (pictured), leader of the monkey army in a Hindu epic, is said to have urinated on the heads of the demon Ravana and disturbed his sacrifice?
- ... that Tip O'Neill won the triple crown and set at least eight Major League Baseball batting records?
- ... that the 2014 film Chef has been called both Jon Favreau's best and worst film by critics?
- ... that Akira Sasō's manga Kodomo no Kodomo focuses on an eleven-year-old girl who becomes pregnant?
- ... that in 2001 the French Institute of Health and Medical Research awarded its "Grand Prix" for medical research to neurologist Yves Agid?
- ... that the documentary film Tall: The American Skyscraper and Louis Sullivan begins with a horse standing alone in an empty Chicago street?
- ... that Enter the Dominatrix was first announced as Saints Row: The Third downloadable content as an April Fool's joke, but was later incorporated into the sequel and its own downloadable content?
- 00:50, 7 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that over 210,000 tickets were sold in the 1867 lottery in which Chicago's Crosby's Opera House (pictured) was one of the prizes?
- ... that Mexican mixed martial artist Juan "Fénix" Puig practiced kundalini yoga as a boy before taking up mixed martial arts?
- ... that Autumn Sandeen was the first US service member to publicly have her gender identification changed on all her military records?
- ... that in 1861, Britain agreed to protect Bahrain as long as its ruler did not in engage in the "prosecution of war, piracy and slavery at sea"?
- ... that Indian industrialist Shrenik Kasturbhai Lalbhai headed Anandji Kalyanji Trust, which manages 1200 Jain temples?
- ... that the film Sea of Trees, now in production, is about the Japanese "Suicide Forest"?
- ... that Mya choked up during a demo for president Bill Clinton?
6 August 2014
[edit]- 13:05, 6 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that London's Ganton Street features a giant plug and socket (pictured) that lights up at night?
- ... that neptunium is found in at least three allotropes—one orthorhombic, one tetragonal, and one body-centered cubic?
- ... that in celebration of the tercentenary of the birth of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, tenor Markus Schäfer performed in his oratorio Die Auferstehung und Himmelfahrt Jesu at the Rheingau Musik Festival?
- ... that Xenia Field helped to establish the first bail hostel in Britain?
- ... that the Orcadian Sea Mither confines the nuckelavee?
- ... that one reviewer dubbed Loved "great high-brow lunchtime gaming"?
- ... that the walls of St Peter's Church, Parr, in Merseyside, England, contain industrial waste?
- 01:20, 6 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that even land-living species of isopod (woodlouse pictured) incubate their eggs in a brood chamber filled with water?
- ... that one reviewer wrote that the box art for Space Cavern was better than the actual game?
- ... that though he had served as a Conservative MP for 23 years, Cyril Townsend defected to the Liberal Democrats in 2006?
- ... that male Sinaloan mastiff bats possess scent glands on the throat?
- ... that Merrill G. Burlingame, a former professor of history at Montana State University, was known as "Mr. Montana History"?
- ... that the 1990 Boat Race had the heaviest oarsman in the event's history?
- ... that the Vicar of Brighton got shot in the twitten?
5 August 2014
[edit]- 13:35, 5 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Degas said that if "you looked through a keyhole" you might see scenes like his After the Bath, Woman drying herself (pictured)?
- ... that a 1997 book listed Frozen Run as one of the most interesting stream names in Pennsylvania?
- ... that the soprano Ada Cherry Kearton was married to the wildlife photographer Cherry Kearton and recounted their travels in her autobiography On Safari?
- ... that Arnait Video Productions, the Inuit women's filmmaking collective, received nine Genie Awards nominations for their first feature, Before Tomorrow?
- ... that Australian player Albert Trott took eight wickets for 43 runs on his debut, the best bowling analysis by any bowler on Test debut?
- ... that when the Weimar-era German magazine Frauenliebe was relaunched as Garçonne, the French title was thought to be "more modish"?
- ... that a producer of Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! described the "Scooby Gang"'s clothing as "what a hipster dresses like in their world"?
- 01:50, 5 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Moroccan flic-flac spider (pictured) can flip forwards and backwards like a gymnast to escape threats?
- ... that Odense was the birthplace of Hans Christian Andersen?
- ... that when the town of Lakeview, Oregon, was destroyed by fire in 1900, staff of the Lake County Examiner saved enough equipment and material to publish a special edition the next day?
- ... that Irish politician Edward Joshua Cooper's private observatory in County Sligo made the first discovery from Ireland of an asteroid?
- ... that 50% of the seats in the 2014 Tripura local body elections were reserved for women?
- ... that Sophie Taylor broke her own record to win gold in the 100 metre breaststroke at the 2014 Commonwealth Games?
- ... that there ain't no more?
4 August 2014
[edit]- 14:05, 4 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that De Akkermolen (pictured) was used as a gristmill from the early 1600s until it was damaged in 1950?
- ... that Mohammed Dajani Daoudi led the first group of students from Palestine to visit the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in Poland?
- ... that the designer of the company town of Bemis, Tennessee tried to make the community look like it had grown over time?
- ... that Michael Roll completed his college basketball career with the UCLA Bruins holding the school's record for most career games played?
- ... that the Barton Road Swing Bridge opens up to 14 times a day to let traffic through the Manchester Ship Canal?
- ... that one can eat all the hot dogs, nachos, popcorn, peanuts, and soft drinks one wants in the "all-you-can-eat" sections found at many Major League Baseball parks?
- ... that the male polkadot poison frog guards the eggs laid by the female and carries the newly hatched tadpoles to water?
- 02:20, 4 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that baseball players Jack Rowe (pictured) and Hardy Richardson were two of the "Big Four", a group "regarded for many years as the greatest quartette in the history of the national pastime"?
- ... that the theme song "Paano Ang Puso Ko?" in the 1997 film of the same title was adapted from Chuck Willis' "What Am I Living For"?
- ... that Indian poet Chandrakant Topiwala translated Rilke's Duino Elegies into Gujarati?
- ... that the 2001 CECAFA Cup included a football game with the biggest margin of victory in the competition's history?
- ... that Christine Jones helped London police officers to recognise mental health crises as medical emergencies?
- ... that one writer observed references to Final Fantasy, Gitaroo Man and Sonic the Hedgehog in the Steven Universe episode "Steven the Sword Fighter"?
- ... that bear's grease was once thought to be an effective treatment for hair loss?
3 August 2014
[edit]- 14:35, 3 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the high-profile and protracted five-year development of Fez (development team pictured) led to its reputation as an "underdog darling of the indie game scene" and "an indie Duke Nukem Forever"?
- ... that in the Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory, an acid donates a proton while a base accepts one?
- ... that Emmanuel Ifeajuna became the first black African to win at a major international sports competition when he won the high jump at the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games?
- ... that in 1773 newly appointed Governor of the Cape Colony Pieter van Reede van Oudtshoorn died at sea during the voyage to take up his post?
- ... that by the age of 10, child actor Rohan Chand had co-starred with Adam Sandler, Mark Wahlberg, Jason Bateman and Damian Lewis?
- ... that the Bethlehem Hingham Shipyard received the Army-Navy "E" Award for building ninety destroyer escorts in 1943 when the United States Navy had only asked for sixty?
- ... that in The Merchant of Venice, Shakespeare may have committed "a grammatical error of unsurpassable grossness"?
- 02:50, 3 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Richard Risley Carlisle (pictured) is credited with originating the "Risley act" when he juggled his children with his feet?
- ... that the Park an der Ilm, landscaped partly by Goethe, contains a monument to Shakespeare by Lessing?
- ... that in 2010, Lazeric Jones became just the third junior college transfer in 30 years to play college basketball for the UCLA Bruins?
- ... that Sebastián Estevanez and Carina Zampini, the lead actors of the Argentine telenovela Camino al Amor, costarred in the 2012 telenovela Dulce amor?
- ... that John von Neumann's theorem that every closed real matrix group is a Lie group inspired Élie Cartan to prove a generalization, the closed subgroup theorem?
- ... that Melanie Hawtin was Canadian national champion in wheelchair racing, but made the national team in wheelchair basketball in 2014?
- ... that Queen Victoria was abandoned at a children's reformatory, called "the auld bitch" by James Joyce, and now lives in Sydney?
2 August 2014
[edit]- 15:05, 2 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that in Hinduism Devasena represents Heaven while her co-wife Valli (both pictured with their husband) represents the earth?
- ... that in her international debut season, visually impaired cyclist Sophie Thornhill won two gold medals with one guide and another two with a different guide?
- ... that the highest part of Purabá de Santa Bárbara is in the foothills of Barva Volcano?
- ... that the U.S. Naval Medical Research Center operates a clinical laboratory for diagnosing uncommon diseases in active duty military and their families?
- ... that video game director and scenario writer Taro Yoko uses a writing method he calls "backwards scriptwriting", by which he builds the narrative starting with the ending?
- ... that the Nossa Senhora da Graça fought for four days against samurai before being scuttled by its own captain?
- ... that after the 1986 Boat Race, the Cambridge stroke said he was "just stirring the tea while the others did the work"?
1 August 2014
[edit]- 13:06, 1 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Chlemoutsi castle (pictured) from the early 1220s is perhaps the finest example of a fortification of the early period of Frankish rule in Greece?
- ... that posters for a presentation by Secular Pro-Life at the University of Georgia were repeatedly torn down in protest?
- ... that in 1943, Wilhelm Münter Rolfsen led Milorg's refugee escort network in Norway?
- ... that Cheshire's Norcliffe Chapel was founded by a Unitarian, but was a Baptist chapel for its first ten years?
- ... that Bong Revilla's speech Salamat, Kaibigan was met with "amusement, anger and disbelief" among netizens?
- ... that Fittja gård became a popular overnight inn and station for exchange of horses for Swedish kings?
- ... that Infamous Second Son players can either climb high-rise buildings or dash up them using neon superpowers?
- 01:21, 1 August 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the four-faced linga (pictured) may be called a "linga with five faces"?
- ... that Paige was scared of professional wrestling as a child, but went on to win the WWE Divas Championship at age 21?
- ... that the largest lake in Montour County, Pennsylvania is on Middle Branch Chillisquaque Creek?
- ... that according to Georgian annals, Pharnavaz I was the founder of the Kingdom of Iberia?
- ... that as a technical adviser on the 1970 film Performance, David Litvinoff introduced the cast and crew to London's underworld?
- ... that "No Mediocre" was intended as "something to uplift women"?
- ... that Derek Bourgeois, since 2009 Britain's most prolific composer of symphonies, said they came "tumbling out"?