User:Itai
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- | This user is a translator from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
- | This user is a translator and proofreader from Hebrew to English on Wikipedia:Translation. |
Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/January 12
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[edit](No longer Away.)
My Wikipedia time is limited at the moment, but I'm still around.
- ... that Adrien Nunez (pictured), despite limited playing time, was more highly paid than a projected NBA draft lottery pick while in college?
- ... that specimens of Aquilegia daingolica were collected in 1906 and 1909, but it was first described as a new species in 2013?
- ... that Yanou Collart helped Rock Hudson get medical treatment when Nancy Reagan would not?
- ... that when Alexander McQueen, following years of criticism for over-reliance on runway spectacles, presented The Man Who Knew Too Much, it was criticised for its lack of theatrics?
- ... that Lars Chemnitz was one of the first recipients of Nersornaat, the highest honor in Greenland?
- ... that the principal songwriter of a song on Always Happy to Explode asked listeners to "love it for me, for I cannot"?
- ... that Daniel Hermann wrote poems on the inclusion of a lizard and a frog in a piece of amber, the eagle in the coat of arms of Poland, and a child suffering from Fraser syndrome?
- ... that the harsh treatment of Allied prisoners of war in Japan is well known in the West but mostly ignored or glossed over in Japan itself?
- ... that a cable TV channel in the UK was still broadcasting primarily in black and white as late as 1979?
John Henry Turpin (1876–1962) was a sailor in the United States Navy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was one of the first African-American chief petty officers in the U.S. Navy, becoming a chief gunner's mate on the cruiser Marblehead in 1917. He was transferred to the Fleet Reserve in 1919 and retired in 1925. He is also notable for surviving the catastrophic explosions of two U.S. Navy ships: USS Maine in 1898, and USS Bennington in 1905.Photograph credit: unknown photographer; restored by Adam Cuerden
24 December 2024 |
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