KYNNpedia:Recent additions/2021/April
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30 April 2021
- 12:00, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Inkeri Anttila (pictured), Finland's first female minister of justice, was also the first woman in Finland to complete a doctorate in law?
- ... that women in the Shaheen Bagh protest, who blocked a major road in Delhi for 101 days, included 82-year-old Bilkis?
- ... that ichthyologist C. Richard Robins and his wife Catherine were honoured jointly in the name of the false moray Robinsia catherinae?
- ... that Das Leiden Jesu von seinen Freunden, one of Christoph Graupner's church cantatas, reflects how Jesus suffered from his friends, and ends with a chorale fantasia "full of dissonances"?
- ... that the character Tom Bombadil, omitted by Peter Jackson in his later version, appears in a Russian film of The Lord of the Rings?
- ... that after coming back for a fifth season at Stanford, Anna Wilson won the 2021 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Championship Game with the Cardinal?
- ... that the 2019 children's picture book Birdsong portrays intergenerational relationship using seasonal cycles?
- ... that after Rhoda, Lady Birley, made fish stew with cognac for her roses, her daughter said that they "almost cried out with pleasure"?
- 00:00, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that James H. McGraw Jr., who selected the blue-green facade panels for 330 West 42nd Street (pictured), was said to be "appalled" at the color of the building?
- ... that the basic design for the sitaras that decorate the Kaaba dates back to the 16th century?
- ... that when Edward Mitchell Bannister won a first prize for painting at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial, officials tried to rescind the award upon realizing he was African-American?
- ... that despite losing the 1990 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Tranmere Rovers were temporarily promoted to the Second Division?
- ... that Olena Tokar, a soprano of the Leipzig Opera from Ukraine, recorded Charmes, a collection of art songs by women including Clara Schumann and Vítězslava Kaprálová?
- ... that the 2015 children's picture book Timeline chronologically illustrates major world events, including the Big Bang and the Fukushima nuclear disaster?
- ... that the Vuurbaak van Katwijk aan Zee, built in 1605, is the second-oldest lighthouse in the Netherlands?
- ... that the BBC described Chi Chi DeVayne's lip sync to "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going" as "iconic in Drag Race history"?
29 April 2021
- 12:00, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the early Bronze Age Saint-Bélec slab (pictured) is the oldest map to be found in Europe?
- ... that Truus Smulders-Beliën, the first female mayor in the Netherlands, succeeded her husband after he was executed by Nazi soldiers?
- ... that Japan's 666 Protected Forests include four Forest Biosphere Reserves that are also Natural World Heritage Sites—Shiretoko, Shirakami-Sanchi, Ogasawara Islands, and Yakushima?
- ... that Karlin Lillington, long-time technology writer for Ireland's newspaper of record, The Irish Times, holds a PhD on the poetry of Seamus Heaney?
- ... that many tombstones from the Jewish cemetery of Thessaloniki were used by the city and the Greek Orthodox Church for construction projects?
- ... that Philadelphia Phillies catcher Rafael Marchan had never hit a home run through 850 minor league plate appearances before hitting one in just his second major league game?
- ... that the fish Carapus acus lives in association with a sea cucumber, such as Parastichopus regalis, spending the day inside its host and emerging at night to feed?
- ... that Sister has sparked discussion about gender roles in China?
- 00:00, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that The Dream of Ossian (pictured) by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres was painted in 1813 for Napoleon's bedroom?
- ... that Yugoslav politician Miloš Trifunović was briefly professor of zoology and botany despite graduating from the Faculty of Philosophy of the Belgrade Higher School?
- ... that John Neal's article "The Pound of Flesh" resulted in a substantial donation?
- ... that British nurse Ethel Becher was described as a "modern Florence Nightingale" in 1919 for her services during World War I?
- ... that the history of Vyatka Land was said to be more obscure than that of any other Russian region?
- ... that when Irene del Río was called up to the Spain women's national football team squad, she was the only player who did not compete in the country's top division?
- ... that Jerome Robbins's ballet Other Dances was described as "utterly Slavic" by dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov, partly because it was made for him and fellow Russian Natalia Makarova?
- ... that when Hollyoaks changed Juliet Nightingale's appearance for a storyline involving drugs, actress Niamh Blackshaw was glad to get rid of her character's side ponytail?
28 April 2021
- 12:00, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that German three-time artistic cycling World Championship runner-up Viola Brand (pictured) was invited to The Ellen DeGeneres Show, having previously watched the show to improve her English?
- ... that the Urdu novel Zameen provides a woman-centric account of Pakistan's independence?
- ... that Julie Mennell was a police officer and a forensics specialist before she became vice chancellor of the University of Cumbria?
- ... that Brett Ormerod scored five goals for Blackpool in the 2001 Football League play-offs including one in the 2001 Football League Third Division play-off Final?
- ... that Wilson Tucker was elected to the Mining and Pastoral region of the Western Australian Legislative Council with just 0.18 per cent of the primary vote?
- ... that in "Herr, stärke mich, dein Leiden zu bedenken", Christian Fürchtegott Gellert reflected the theological and emotional impact of the Passion of Jesus, using a familiar Passion hymn tune?
- ... that tea room owner Edith Warner was convinced by Robert Oppenheimer to keep her restaurant open to serve the scientists working on the Manhattan Project, including Niels Bohr and Enrico Fermi?
- ... that the founder of the Australian Flying Arts School took flying lessons so that he could travel throughout the Queensland Outback providing art lessons to its inhabitants?
- 00:00, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that John Hobart, 2nd Earl of Buckinghamshire, is entombed in a pyramid in Norfolk, England (pictured)?
- ... that in hakamat, a genre of the traditional music of Sudan, women exert their influence to resolve conflicts by singing songs of praise or ridicule?
- ... that Virgil Conn was a member of the Oregon Legislature during the 1897 session that failed to organize due to the lack of a quorum?
- ... that the inspiration for the 1998 novel The Vintner's Luck came to author Elizabeth Knox in a fever dream caused by pneumonia?
- ... that Sabina Matos, Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island, did not speak English when she immigrated to the United States at age 20?
- ... that the year after going into administration, Huddersfield Town gained promotion to the Second Division by winning the 2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final?
- ... that the extinct bowfin Amia? hesperia was likely a fish-eating hunter?
- ... that Leontyne Price described her relationship with voice teacher Florence Kimball as "the most important relationship of my life. Like sex it was pure chemistry"?
27 April 2021
- 12:00, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Marcello Petacci (pictured) was riddled with bullets after trying to escape execution by throwing himself into Lake Como?
- ... that choreographer George Balanchine did not tell the dancers in Duo Concertant there would be a blackout in the middle of the ballet until the morning of the premiere?
- ... that when Rosa M. Morris scored 130 percent in her mathematics exams, a special case had to be made at graduation to avoid handicapping other students?
- ... that the first commercially viable CT scanner was invented by Godfrey Hounsfield in 1972?
- ... that Katja Meier, the Saxon state minister of justice, was criticised for the anti-police lyrics of the punk band in which she played as a teenager?
- ... that a new-age music format called "The Breeze" was a ratings failure for Nebraska radio station KLMS, causing a precipitous decline in listenership?
- ... that William A. Radford assisted in producing a 1700-page encyclopedia about cement?
- ... that the roof of the TU Delft Library is used as a sledding hill during the winter?
- 00:00, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that verse 16 from Psalm 115 was quoted by John McConnell (pictured) as an inspiration to create Earth Day?
- ... that Mrs Justice Lieven made an order for a pregnant woman with learning difficulties to have an abortion against her wishes, but it was overturned in the Court of Appeal?
- ... that nonviolence advocate Tim DeChristopher described How to Blow Up a Pipeline by Andreas Malm as "a humble and nuanced case" for sabotaging fossil fuel infrastructure?
- ... that in 1999 Jan Fullerton became the first woman to be appointed Director General of the National Library of Australia?
- ... that viral vector vaccines currently in use include four COVID-19 vaccines and two Ebola vaccines?
- ... that The Much Honoured Catherine Maxwell Stuart, who lives in Scotland's oldest continuously-inhabited stately home, is the first female laird of Traquair?
- ... that Indiana radio station WFML was bought so that the new owner could use the station's transmitter site to expand his hotel?
- ... that Harry Daley, who joined the Metropolitan Police in 1925, was the first openly gay British police officer?
26 April 2021
- 12:00, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the Negress head clock (pictured) can show the time in its eyes?
- ... that United Nations diplomat Enuga Sreenivasulu Reddy's anti-apartheid efforts were driven by a chance encounter with African National Congress activist A. B. Xuma?
- ... that when D'Arcy Carden was cast in the series premiere of The Good Place as Janet, a guide, news outlets were purposely lied to that her character was "a violin salesperson with a checkered past"?
- ... that NASCAR competitor and film stunt performer Matt Jaskol is the first driver to win a race in North America with Red Bull sponsorship?
- ... that the windmill in Werrington was built to grind corn but later converted to grind coal to make briquettes?
- ... that Gabriela Canavilhas was a pianist playing Portuguese compositions before she became Portugal's Minister of Culture?
- ... that in the Eurovision Song Contest the United Kingdom has finished in second place a record fifteen times, with Imaani the last artist to do so when she represented the country at the 1998 contest?
- ... that the Lenox Health Greenwich Village building was approvingly called "the box in which the Guggenheim Museum came"?
- 00:00, 26 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Chadwick Boseman (pictured) was the seventh actor to receive a posthumous Academy Award nomination?
- ... that Queen Letizia of Spain presented the 2020 Rey Jaime I Awards because her husband, the Spanish king, was in COVID-19 quarantine?
- ... that the United States' 21 national preserves are in 11 states and protect vast areas of scenic public land similar to national parks, but where hunting is permitted?
- ... that Stephanie Davis, who has qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics, is a part-time marathon runner who works in finance?
- ... that the Oper am Brühl was the venue for the world premiere of Telemann's Germanicus in 1704, when he was director of the opera house?
- ... that Debra Humphris, the vice chancellor of the University of Brighton, advocated converting 18th-century army barracks into student residences?
- ... that the Hampton Shops Building was advertised as a "Gothic temple of art" shortly after it opened?
- ... that Lilia Tarawa escaped from the Gloriavale Christian Community after believing for years that leaving Gloriavale meant she would go to hell?
25 April 2021
- 12:00, 25 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Carlisle & Finch used carbon-arc technology in both toy trains (example pictured) and military searchlights?
- ... that Francis Hagai instituted communal sharing of sliced banana as a parallel to the sacramental bread of the Eucharist?
- ... that a mathematical conjecture about tiling space by cubes was transformed into a problem in graph theory that became a benchmark for clique-finding algorithms?
- ... that Powell Clayton, the ninth governor of Arkansas, declared martial law in 1868 in response to the rise of the Ku Klux Klan and violence against African Americans and Republicans?
- ... that Robert Adam's plans for Kirkdale Bridge were substantially more elaborate than the structure that Sir Samuel Hannay was eventually willing to pay for on his estate in Dumfries and Galloway?
- ... that Tina LeBlanc spent 17 years as a principal dancer with the San Francisco Ballet despite being rejected by the American Ballet Theatre as a teenager?
- ... that a sculpture of a scale-model taxi balanced on a dog is located outside of Hassenfeld Children's Hospital?
- ... that the canned-water company Liquid Death released two albums with lyrics consisting of hate comments the company received online?
- 00:00, 25 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the only known fossil of Gordodon (pictured) had its skull accidentally sawed in half while it was being excavated?
- ... that in 2021, Lefébre Rademan was unable to play for the South Africa national netball team as she was playing club netball in England?
- ... that the music styles in the discography of Turnover range from pop-punk to dream pop?
- ... that Payal Ghanwani was the first Belizean senator of Indian descent?
- ... that the 1780s clerk's office of the Wilson-Wodrow-Mytinger House is West Virginia's oldest extant public office building, and the c. 1750 kitchen is Romney's oldest building?
- ... that Xiaohong Rose Yang conducted a genome-wide search for copy number variations to identify the first susceptibility gene for familial chordoma?
- ... that San Francisco's "KYOU Radio" was the first terrestrial radio station to broadcast a program format consisting of podcasts?
- ... that the original Flying Fathers ice hockey team consisted of player priests with a horse as a backup goaltender?
24 April 2021
- 12:00, 24 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the overall design of 945 Madison Avenue (pictured) has been likened to an inverted ziggurat?
- ... that Turkish schoolchildren are taught that the Armenian Genocide never happened and instead, Armenians committed genocide against Turks?
- ... that Claude Callegari gained cult-hero status among English football fans for his speeches about Arsenal?
- ... that the Court of Master Sommeliers expelled a board member and suspended the titles of 23 new members over a 2018 cheating scandal on the blind-tasting portion of its examination?
- ... that the Syrian-Lebanese poet Maha Bayrakdar won the Miss Syria beauty pageant in 1967?
- ... that days before the premiere of Balanchine's ballet Movements for Piano and Orchestra, 17-year-old Suzanne Farrell learned a lead role in an apartment, from a colleague who was on bed rest?
- ... that Joye Hummel had never read a comic book before becoming the first woman to write scripts for Wonder Woman?
- ... that North Country Community Hospital sued North Shore Hospital because the names were too similar, and changed its own name to Glen Cove Hospital after it lost?
- 00:00, 24 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that James Edward Rogers helped Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Morris search for a model for Guinevere for the Oxford Union murals (pictured)?
- ... that the Piano Quartet, composed by Robert Schumann in 1842 for piano and strings, was described by his wife Clara as "a beautiful work, so youthful and fresh, as if it were his first"?
- ... that Nellah Massey Bailey became the first woman to be elected statewide in Mississippi in 1947, less than a year after the death of her husband Governor Thomas L. Bailey?
- ... that the assassination of Talat Pasha to avenge the Armenian Genocide resulted in "one of the most spectacular trials of the twentieth century"?
- ... that author Giacomo Sartori has named his day job as a soil scientist as an influence on his work?
- ... that the village of Adatepe in Turkey, formerly inhabited by Greeks, was revived in the 1980s when the traditional stone houses were restored by people seeking to escape city life?
- ... that a dance move originally performed by Big Bang's G-Dragon became a trend in Vietnam due to efforts by Khá Bảnh?
- ... that during the Stratford General Strike of 1933 the Canadian military was brought in, with machine guns, to which the strikers responded with a rally and a parade?
23 April 2021
- 12:00, 23 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Hills Tower (pictured) was built in three stages, around 1527, 1598, and 1721, each time by a different Edward Maxwell?
- ... that W. R. Granger's funeral was reported to be one of the largest ever known in Montreal?
- ... that Russian writer Leonid Andreyev's 1915 play He Who Gets Slapped was his most successful work in the US, spawning a silent film (1924), a novel, and an opera (1956)?
- ... that Eric Anthony Abrahams was the first black TV reporter at the BBC?
- ... that an immunologic adjuvant is a vaccine ingredient that makes the immune response stronger and longer-lasting?
- ... that James R. Mills, a California politician, was also a historian, teacher, published author, a champion for historic building preservation, and an advocate for public transportation?
- ... that Andorra is the only Eurovision Song Contest participating country to have never competed in the grand final in its competitive history?
- ... that Chemeketa Community College president emeritus Gretchen Schuette once rappelled from a roof at an annual State of the College address?
- 00:00, 23 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Auliʻi Cravalho (pictured) was the last person to audition for the role of the eponymous character in Moana and was ultimately cast for the role?
- ... that Julie Pomagalski rose 20 places to first place at the FIS Snowboard World Cup in three years?
- ... that fens are fed by mineral-rich groundwater, while bogs are fed by mineral-poor precipitation?
- ... that the Catholic Church barred Deborah Schembri from practicing law in ecclesiastical court because she led a campaign to legalize divorce in Malta?
- ... that following an engine failure, United Airlines Flight 328 rained debris over Broomfield, Colorado?
- ... that the Dresdner Kapellsolisten, formed in 1994 mostly by instrumentalists of the Staatskapelle Dresden, focus on composers from Dresden including Johann Georg Pisendel?
- ... that Donald Heirman was given the nickname "Mr. EMC Standards" for his work on developing technical standards for electromagnetic compatibility?
- ... that the species name of the frog Boophis haingana is derived from the Malagasy word for 'fast'?
22 April 2021
- 12:00, 22 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Brandon Kintzler (pictured) married his wife at a drive-through chapel in Las Vegas?
- ... that the 2019 children's picture book The Fate of Fausto was inspired by the German legend of Faust, who trades his soul in exchange for unlimited knowledge and worldly pleasures?
- ... that Indigenous Australian elder Ivaritji was the last speaker of the Kaurna language before its revival in the 1990s?
- ... that for three years, an illegal gold-mining settlement on the Amur river went on to host high-class hotels, have public healthcare, and even have a casino?
- ... that Raoul de Gaucourt, who fought at the Battle of Nicopolis in 1396 and the siege of Harfleur in 1415, was described as "a medieval chivalric hero whom the modern world has forgotten"?
- ... that the Community catchphrase "six seasons and a movie" originated in "Paradigms of Human Memory" as a reference to The Cape?
- ... that Kameron Michaels has been described as a "lip sync assassin"?
- ... that prices can be negative?
- 00:00, 22 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the painting Tornado Over Kansas by John Steuart Curry was possibly inspired by photographs of a June 2, 1929, tornado (pictured) in Hardtner, Kansas?
- ... that Mihajlo Petrović was the second combat casualty in the history of military aviation?
- ... that although John Foster long ago described heavy ion fusion as "the conservative approach" to a working fusion reactor, no large-scale system has ever been built?
- ... that William Armstrong, an Irish immigrant to the U.S., was a postmaster, a presidential elector, a Virginia House Delegate, and a U.S. House Representative?
- ... that Walt Whitman's poem "The Sleepers" contains "one of the most powerful and evocative passages about slavery in American literature"?
- ... that Rannveig Þorsteinsdóttir, a newspaper clerk and part-time teacher in the 1920s, became the first woman to practice law in the Supreme Court of Iceland thirty years later?
- ... that both of Scunthorpe United's substitutes failed to score their penalties in the shootout, which saw them lose the 1992 Football League Fourth Division play-off Final?
- ... that Fannie Mahood Heath was nicknamed the "flower lady of North Dakota" for her garden that included over 450 different species of flowers, bushes, and trees?
21 April 2021
- 12:00, 21 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that biologist Joni L. Rutter (pictured) led the development of the All of Us research program to include more than a million participants to advance precision medicine?
- ... that the 1949 film Hardly a Criminal was mostly filmed in Buenos Aires, and that city's critics called it Argentina's "outstanding film of the year"?
- ... that former ballerina Katita Waldo briefly came out of retirement to perform as the stepmother in Christopher Wheeldon's Cinderella?
- ... that radio station WMLB in Cumming, Georgia, earned national acclaim as an Americana music station in the 1990s?
- ... that although he was born in the United Kingdom, Isaac Hope was elected to represent Tobago on the Legislative Council of Trinidad and Tobago?
- ... that Camille Saint-Saëns called his First Violin Sonata his "hippogriff sonata", suggesting that its technical demands could only be met by a legendary creature?
- ... that Shirley Congdon, the vice chancellor of the University of Bradford, was the first in her family to attend university?
- ... that an RMI sounded best with a Hi-Scream Cone?
- 00:00, 21 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the Royal Albert Hall has called the 1891 Vril-Ya Bazaar and Fete (programme cover pictured) the world's first science fiction convention?
- ... that Mary L. Smith became the first female president of Kentucky State University in 1991 despite having been passed over for the same job a year earlier?
- ... that the Bach-Chor Bonn, a choir founded to sing Bach's works, such as the St John Passion in 1950, grew to a concert choir with a broad repertoire and a long tradition of tours in Europe?
- ... that Leonidas Zervas was a Greek organic chemist who discovered the carboxybenzyl protecting group, and also served as Minister of Industry of Greece and President of the Academy of Athens?
- ... that the Women's London Championship was viewed as a response to the introduction of women's franchise cricket in England?
- ... that Cuban ballerinas and sisters Lorena and Lorna Feijóo both moved to the U.S., and once split the roles of Black and White Swans in Swan Lake, which are usually danced by the same person?
- ... that a suspicious neighbor of FuncoLand founder David Pomije called the police to investigate the large number of teenagers and young adults visiting his house?
- ... that in 1805, Jean Maxwell was sentenced to be imprisoned for a year at Kirkcudbright Tolbooth for pretending to be a witch?
20 April 2021
- 12:00, 20 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that stones have been found in the stomachs of some Whitehead's trogons (pictured)?
- ... that in 1972, "Prime Minister" David Sanchez led an occupation of Catalina Island by the Brown Berets meant to draw attention on the continuing struggles of Mexican-Americans in the United States?
- ... that four religious denominations meet in one district of Wrocław?
- ... that Theresa M. Korn turned down a scholarship to the Carnegie Institute of Technology in order to become the institute's first female engineer?
- ... that in 2001, Turkey set up an official government agency co-chaired by the foreign minister to combat "baseless genocide claims"?
- ... that Kristen Stewart played a young woman with Friedreich's ataxia in the 2007 film, The Cake Eaters?
- ... that some English mediaeval commissions of sewers had powers to imprison labourers who refused to work on flood defences?
- ... that after Musical Youth reworked the song "Pass the Kouchie" into "Pass the Dutchie" by replacing cannabis references with food references, the word "dutchie" later became a cannabis reference as well?
- 00:00, 20 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Chava Shapiro (pictured) published the first feminist manifesto in Hebrew, lamenting the absence of women's voices in the language's literature?
- ... that runner-up Ronnie O'Sullivan almost withdrew from the 2021 Tour Championship after sending his cue stick for repair twice before the event?
- ... that Two-Way Mirror, the first full biography of English poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning in 30 years, portrays the poet as a daring Victorian sensation and dismisses her image as an invalid?
- ... that Luigi Fugazy was described as "perhaps the most eminent padrone in the United States"?
- ... that the Saugatuck Chain Ferry is believed to be the last operating hand-cranked chain ferry in the United States?
- ... that the fictional character Howard Bellamy from the British soap opera Doctors was based on a real-life army captain who quit his job to run a doctor's surgery?
- ... that Plunton Castle, although well defended by gun loops, a ditch and a 9-foot (2.7 m) wall, had a very rare security flaw in the arrangement of its ground-floor rooms?
- ... that after he died, American Revolutionary War general and physician William Irvine was buried three different times at three different locations?
19 April 2021
- 12:00, 19 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the Hunterdon Art Museum (pictured), located in a historic stone mill, was described as the "most charming and picturesque" museum in New Jersey?
- ... that Madame Gavaudan, a soprano of the Opéra-Comique in Paris, created the role of Benjamin in Étienne Méhul's Joseph?
- ... that all three albums in the discography of the emo band American Football are eponymous, so the media and Polyvinyl Records refer to them as LP1, LP2, and LP3?
- ... that the cucumber seeds that botanist Elwyn Meader brought back from Korea in 1948 became the basis for all modern cucumber hybrids grown worldwide?
- ... that during the 2020 Zagreb flash flood, residents broke into a dam control building to drain floodwaters from the city?
- ... that Mississippi legislator Thelma Farr Baxter introduced a bill to keep livestock off the roads after her husband was fatally injured in a highway collision with a cow?
- ... that in 1984, a Spanish fishing trawler sank after being fired upon by the Irish patrol vessel Aisling?
- ... that despite his side winning the 1998 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Grimsby's Alan Buckley said "Anybody who says they enjoy play-offs aren't football managers"?
- 00:00, 19 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the almost 50-million-year-old fossil leaves of Comptonia columbiana (example pictured) preserve evidence of moth feeding?
- ... that since Henry E. Parker ran for office in 1974, the Democratic Party has always nominated an African American for Connecticut State Treasurer?
- ... that the Shinan shipwreck, the first major discovery of Korean maritime archaeology, has been described as possibly "the richest ancient shipwreck yet discovered"?
- ... that a head was displayed in the Seagram Building's plaza in 1968?
- ... that Kate Clark wrote the children's book A Southern Cross Fairy Tale, which used Northern Hemisphere Christmas imagery but featured the natural features and animals of New Zealand?
- ... that after Ted Turner asked for viewers' money to keep WRET-TV afloat, he was able to repay thousands of lenders four years later—with interest?
- ... that Ben Connor, who competed in his first marathon in October 2020, has qualified for the marathon race at the delayed 2020 Summer Olympics?
- ... that The Wolf of Wall Street set a Guinness world record for the most instances of swearing in a film, with the word "fuck" said a total of 569 times?
18 April 2021
- 12:00, 18 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that when he was younger, the Duke of Windsor (pictured) wanted to be an "up-to-date" king?
- ... that Aga Mikolaj, a soprano who studied with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, appeared as Mozart's Donna Elvira from San Francisco to Tokyo, and sang the Four Last Songs with "a degree of abandon and rapture"?
- ... that Nadodrze in Poland was used by Steven Spielberg as a filming location for a spy drama set in Berlin?
- ... that Rogers Lehew was influential in starting the Calgary Stampeders tradition of featuring a horse at the sidelines during games at McMahon Stadium?
- ... that in the 1950s, the Soviet Union introduced an open university system to enable working-class students to become useful functionaries of the Communist party?
- ... that historian of the Middle East George Eden Kirk's first book was praised for excelling in objectivity while his last was criticised for bias and bitterness?
- ... that the Stinnes–Legien Agreement was named after a trade union leader and an industrialist?
- ... that the miracles that established Saint Glodesind's claim to sainthood did not begin until 25 years or more after her death, and many of them occurred over 200 years later?
- 00:00, 18 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the historic Statue of Laxmi-Narayan (pictured) was on display in the Dallas Museum of Art for 37 years despite having been stolen?
- ... that ballerina Catherine Hurlin performed in Radio City Christmas Spectacular between the age of eleven and thirteen?
- ... that the space industry of India has supported the launch of more than 100 domestic satellites and more than 300 foreign satellites?
- ... that Senegalese artist and actress Younousse Sèye, who is best known for her mixed-media works incorporating cowrie shells, is considered to be Senegal's first woman painter?
- ... that writer Mark Twain frequently used Cooper station to meet with a friend?
- ... that geneticist Neil Hanchard was a senior author on a publication surveying human genomic diversity in Africa that was described by Nature as "a milestone in genomics research"?
- ... that Wyche Pavilion, a two-story historic building in Greenville, South Carolina, was originally intended to serve as a paint shop for the Greenville Coach Factory?
- ... that Surinamese singer Shahied Wagid Hosain was famous for his Bollywood song covers, more than for his own songs?
17 April 2021
- 12:00, 17 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the Lovecraftian Zalgo text (pictured) is a common aspect of "surreal memes"?
- ... that Carl Au received three musical theatre scholarships, which was deemed "an unprecedented event in show business"?
- ... that Hey Lady! is Jayne Eastwood's first leading role in a 50-year career?
- ... that Colin Powell was regarded as the "architect of Jersey's finance industry"?
- ... that the 1972 manga series The Poe Clan was among the first works of vampire literature to depict vampires as romantic and tragic rather than predatory?
- ... that Turkish anthropologist Ayşe Gül Altınay was sentenced to 25 months in jail due to her support for a peaceful resolution of the Kurdish–Turkish conflict?
- ... that the sea cucumber Holothuria poli may have reached the Red Sea by travelling through the Suez Canal?
- ... that NASA scientist Scott Sandford wrote that apples and oranges can be compared?
- 00:00, 17 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Myth and Religion of the North by Gabriel Turville-Petre (pictured) has been described as the best work on Norse mythology in English?
- ... that former U.S. president Bill Clinton made a guest appearance on a television reunion episode of The West Wing to encourage voter turnout in the 2020 United States elections?
- ... that Fan Hongwei and her husband turned a failing textile factory into the largest fiber producer in China?
- ... that coverage of the 1952 funeral of George VI may have led to the mass purchase of television sets in the United Kingdom?
- ... that after Maria Camilleri co-founded a school for Muslim children in Malta, she became the only Christian headmistress of a Muslim school in the world?
- ... that role-playing-game supplement GURPS Steampunk was the most detailed definition of the steampunk genre when it was published?
- ... that Benjamin Kapelushnik, also known as "Benjamin Kickz", sold sneakers at age 16 to celebrity clients such as DJ Khaled, Drake, Travis Scott, Floyd Mayweather and Kevin Hart?
- ... that the owner of Oregon radio station KLOO offered $10,000 to anyone who could bring an extraterrestrial lifeform to the station's studios?
16 April 2021
- 12:00, 16 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that trees keep the trains (pictured) running at Kominato Station?
- ... that the combined no-hitter at the Los Angeles Angels' memorial game for Tyler Skaggs was the first combined no-hitter in California since the day Skaggs was born?
- ... that a prototype of Octogeddon was submitted to a Ludum Dare contest before being developed into an official video game?
- ... that Julia Letlow won the special election for a seat in the United States House of Representatives after her husband died from COVID-19 before he could be sworn into office?
- ... that the San Diego Trolley passes through the James R. Mills Building?
- ... that Gianluigi Colalucci is credited with restoring the "dazzling splendour" of both the Sistine Chapel ceiling and Michelangelo's The Last Judgment?
- ... that concrete bus shelters in Canberra, Australia, now considered an icon of the city, were initially labelled as "lunatic" by a reporter for The Canberra Times?
- ... that the critically endangered chestnut-capped piha is locally known as the "little herdsman of Antioquia" because its call sounds like the whistles made by horsemen herding cattle?
- 00:00, 16 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that when SS Birma (pictured) responded to the sinking of the Titanic, RMS Carpathia told them to "shut up"?
- ... that Lovie Gore made multiple unsuccessful attempts to delay the desegregation of schools in Mississippi?
- ... that on Holocaust Memorial Day in 2014, Turkish foreign minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu claimed that "there is no trace of genocide in our history" – thus denying the Armenian Genocide?
- ... that Anja Petersen performed the role of the leading woman in the world premiere of Arnulf Herrmann's Der Mieter at the Oper Frankfurt?
- ... that Burnley won the 1994 Football League Second Division play-off Final after two opposition players were sent off?
- ... that Addison Rae's debut single "Obsessed" is about self-love?
- ... that Pikrolimni is the only salt lake in Greece, mentioned by Plato and Pliny, and nowadays known for its therapeutic mud baths?
- ... that the success of the children's poetry book Alligator Pie led to the author, Dennis Lee, being named "Canada's Father Goose"?
15 April 2021
- 12:00, 15 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the towers of Shimao Cross-Strait Plaza (pictured) are inspired by sails and bougainvilleas?
- ... that Halyna Sevruk was expelled from the Union of Artists of Ukraine in 1968 due to a political letter she signed?
- ... that Humphrey Jennings's 1939 film Spare Time showed an American audience how the British working classes spent their free time?
- ... that when Joachim Philip delivered an ultimatum to the British in Grenada during Fédon's rebellion, the militia had to restrain his sister, Susannah, who otherwise would have "torn him to pieces"?
- ... that Jesu, meine Freude (Jesus, my joy), a motet by Bach, has a complex symmetrical structure in which six hymn stanzas alternate with five Bible verses?
- ... that Kendal Green station was named both for dyed cloth and a nearby resident's grandfather?
- ... that an art gallery exhibit featuring My Androgynous Boyfriend took place at the Animate Girls Festival in 2019?
- ... that as part of her influential research on the garden strawberry, Vivian Lee Bowden discovered the unpublished drawings of early French botanist Antoine Nicolas Duchesne?
- 00:00, 15 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that future Atomic Kitten member Jenny Frost (pictured) represented the United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 1999 as part of the group Precious?
- ... that the Fred F. French Building has been described as the "only Mesopotamian skyscraper" in New York City?
- ... that Arthur Schüller founded the discipline of neuroradiology?
- ... that Forest Glen Park was among the earliest residential subdivisions in Montgomery County, Maryland, and was described by its developer as "Washington's most desirable suburb?"
- ... that besides the fruits being edible, the roots and leaves of creeping cucumber have many uses in traditional medicine?
- ... that Darrell Blocker, "The Spy Whisperer", began playing live music in Senegal as part of his espionage duties?
- ... that the Lucifer Dékou-Dékou Biological Reserve, the largest wilderness area of France, is divided in two by land which includes the country's biggest mining project, the Montagne d'Or mine?
- ... that Dottie Ray interviewed 32,397 guests over 55 years on more than 14,000 broadcasts of her daily show on KXIC radio in Iowa City?
14 April 2021
- 12:00, 14 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the 1923 film The Abysmal Brute (advertisement pictured) included comedic episodes that were not in the 1911 story by Jack London on which it was based?
- ... that Barbara Yancy, who succeeded her husband in the Mississippi Senate after his death, later became an advocate for other widowed homemakers?
- ... that the title of Welsh musician The Anchoress's album The Art of Losing was inspired by American poet Elizabeth Bishop's poem "One Art"?
- ... that Marita Napier is the first South African opera singer to have performed lead roles in each of the four "Grand Slam" opera houses?
- ... that the Sunshine Protection Act would make daylight saving time in the United States become permanent?
- ... that the contrast agent iobitridol can be injected into blood vessels, joints, or body cavities such as the uterus?
- ... that former baseball player Tacks Latimer was sentenced to life imprisonment for second-degree murder, but was pardoned for his heroism in stopping a prison break?
- ... that in the music video for "Montero (Call Me by Your Name)", Lil Nas X gives Satan a lap dance?
- 00:00, 14 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that despite looking like the other frogs in its genus, Boophis entingae (pictured) has a very different call?
- ... that a drifting shipwreck stranded several dozen people on Margate Jetty in 1877?
- ... that Frances Theresa Peet Russell may have written the first book to examine satire in Victorian literature?
- ... that in 1846, Emma Willard represented all of human history in a graphic resembling an Ancient Greek temple?
- ... that following his career with the Headhunters, Paul Jackson moved to Japan and established a voluntary concert to familiarize students with African-American history?
- ... that a number of live grenades remain on the moon as part of the Active Seismic Experiment, flown on Apollo 14 and Apollo 16?
- ... that every competitor at the 2021 British Athletics Marathon and 20km Walk Trial received a commemorative bonsai tree?
- ... that ballerina Elena Lobsanova broke the "curse of Marie" at the National Ballet of Canada?
13 April 2021
- 12:00, 13 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that one legend on the origin of the coat of arms of Naples (pictured) claims that it alludes to the colors of the sun and moon cult practiced by the city's pre-Christian inhabitants?
- ... that Tara Downs co-founded the Tomorrow Gallery in a converted paintball studio in Toronto?
- ... that the principles of quantum mechanics have been demonstrated to hold for complex molecules with thousands of atoms?
- ... that MLS Cup 2000 was the first championship game in league history not to feature D.C. United?
- ... that Abdallah Oumbadougou, the "godfather of all the present-day Tuareg musicians in Niger", distributed illegal cassette tapes of banned ishumar music while in exile from 1984 to 1995?
- ... that an owner of Wyoming radio station KATI donated the station to the University of Wyoming, only to be "disappointed" when the university opted not to use his gift?
- ... that after the start of Afghan peace talks in 2019, journalist Farahnaz Forotan travelled the country to collect testimonies from women and prevent the rollback of their freedoms?
- ... that the settling of Martensdale, California, went so badly that the town's namesake spent the rest of his life as a fugitive?
- 00:00, 13 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Zahra Mohamed Ahmad (pictured), who gives legal advice at the Somali Women Development Centre, is said to be a Woman of Courage?
- ... that Idaho television station KCIX-TV went silent awaiting a merger deal that fell apart?
- ... that Tranmere Rovers players were each promised a £10,000 bonus for winning the 1991 Football League Third Division play-off Final?
- ... that according to Nepalese folklore, Pimbahal Pond was built by a demon?
- ... that XYYY syndrome, a chromosome abnormality in which a man has two extra Y chromosomes, has only been recorded twelve times?
- ... that Hitler Nababan was beaten by an angry mob after posting a meme to a WhatsApp group?
- ... that ballerina Unity Phelan danced in the films John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum and I'm Thinking of Ending Things?
- ... that Silver Hill station may have been named for rumors of Captain Kidd's treasure – or just a stand of trees?
12 April 2021
- 12:00, 12 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Elvis Presley's concert Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite (advertisement pictured) took place at midnight in Hawaii to match the prime time of its target audience in Asia and Oceania?
- ... that Charles Scott Napier graduated from the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in 1916, but could not be sent overseas until he turned nineteen in 1918?
- ... that the Turkish government forced the last monks of Vazelon Monastery to leave in 1923, more than one thousand years after the monastery first opened?
- ... that Marion Miley, a 1930s amateur golfer ranked second in the United States, was murdered at the age of 27?
- ... that the tourist submarine Windermere operated for only two seasons on her namesake lake in Cumbria, England?
- ... that Vikram Phadnis designed around 800 costumes for the Bollywood film Salaam-e-Ishq?
- ... that attending the first Women in Print Conference inspired Carol Seajay to create Feminist Bookstore News?
- ... that The Top 100 Drugs can fit in a pocket?
- 00:00, 12 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the "fairy-tale palace" Harry F. Sinclair House (pictured), once home to magnates Isaac D. Fletcher and Harry F. Sinclair, later contained the Ukrainian American Institute?
- ... that Michael Hampe, who directed the Cologne Opera for 20 years, was the stage director for the world premiere of Henze's adaptation of Monteverdi's Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria at the Salzburg Festival?
- ... that the remote Burt Township Schools, covering 258 square miles (670 km2) in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, implemented a novel telephone teaching program that included electronic blackboards in 1984?
- ... that the Final Offensive of 1981 was actually the first offensive of the 12-year-long Salvadoran Civil War (1979–1992)?
- ... that professor Emma Baker trained her pharmacology students to perform mass COVID-19 testing on their fellows so that they could go home for Christmas?
- ... that some of the proposed routes for the current effort to build a Uinta Basin Rail line are based on routes surveyed more than 100 years ago?
- ... that genderless fashion in Japan was inspired by K-pop groups, visual kei, and 1980s–1990s American fashion?
- ... that a math mistake while fencing with longswords gave cognitive scientist Tom Griffiths a broken right wrist?
11 April 2021
- 12:00, 11 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that last summer, Martin Rundkvist discovered 22 gold foil figures (example pictured) while excavating a "Beowulfian" mead hall in Sweden?
- ... that Betty Jane Long was Speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives for less than a day?
- ... that a contributor to Hell Is a Very Small Place, a 2016 book about solitary confinement, was denied access to a copy of the book while in prison?
- ... that Aramburu Island is named after its creator, a Marin County supervisor who ordered it cut off from the mainland because he "did not think any homes should be built" there?
- ... that Kathy Hudson, an expert in science policy and genetic discrimination, helped assemble a team that led to the passage of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act?
- ... that Paul McCartney's psychedelic 1972 Wings Tour Bus ended up in a garden in Tenerife before returning to the UK for restoration?
- ... that hockey player Kevin Hayes came within two hours of needing his leg amputated due to compartment syndrome?
- ... that sniffing for coffee was once a highly paid job?
- 00:00, 11 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that in the 1930s, the Baroque parterre of the Schlosspark (aerial view pictured) in Brühl, part of a World Heritage Site, was restored according to the original 1728 plans?
- ... that Russian-born choreographer George Balanchine made the ballet Stars and Stripes as a tribute to the United States, his adopted country?
- ... that Marion Macfarlane, the first deaconess in the Anglican Church of Australia, later converted to Catholicism and joined the Sisters of the Good Shepherd?
- ... that Games Research Inc licensed Diplomacy, Henry Kissinger's favorite game, in 1960 after the board game's creator unsuccessfully tried to get multiple publishers to accept it?
- ... that Luis Abraham Delgadillo was Nicaragua's director-general of musical culture, a position which was created specifically for him?
- ... that in 1750, Daniel-Marie Chabert de Joncaire de Clausonne built a small canal above Niagara Falls to power a sawmill?
- ... that the North Korean song "Where Are You, Dear General?" plays every morning at 6 a.m. through Pyongyang's loudspeakers?
- ... that the chief engineer of Virginia television station WRFT-TV said that "a 15-watt Christmas bulb and baling wire" kept it on the air?
10 April 2021
- 12:00, 10 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Diane Damiano (pictured), a biomedical scientist and physical therapist, helped create a robotic exoskeleton designed to aid children with cerebral palsy to learn how to walk?
- ... that during a renovation of New York City's 2 Broadway, some funds were embezzled and sent to two crime families?
- ... that Lionel Fleury brought minor ice hockey and a recreational facility to Quebec City during the Great Depression?
- ... that Frank Sinatra was "very, very angry" after being told that he would not be singing "Lonely Town" on film?
- ... that Captain John Fenwick Hutchings was in charge of Operation Pluto, the project to construct submarine oil pipelines under the English Channel during World War II?
- ... that Jessie Carney Smith spent more than twenty years researching the three volumes of Notable Black American Women, which profiled 1,100 figures?
- ... that the latex-like sap of the desert candle has uses in traditional medicine but can cause skin blisters and blindness?
- ... that the music video for Oh Land's "Listen a Little Less" was filmed entirely on a Samsung Galaxy S21 smartphone?
- 00:00, 10 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Guadalupe College president David Abner Jr. (pictured) declined lucrative positions at northern U.S. colleges so that he could continue "conducting a school for the colored youths of the south"?
- ... that Robert Fancourt lost his ship to mutineers in 1797, then ran it aground in 1801?
- ... that some Brexit supporters have called for the UK to transform itself into a deregulated, low-tax "Singapore-on-Thames" to prosper outside of the EU?
- ... that Port Vale F.C. captain Tom Conlon's great-great-grandfather played for the club more than a century ago?
- ... that Pop Smoke references Manu Ginóbili, a former basketball player with the San Antonio Spurs, in the lyrics for "Hello"?
- ... that despite the European Commission organising COVID-19 vaccine supplies for the whole bloc, a shortage of vaccines caused several member states to obtain their own supplies from Russia and China?
- ... that Joseph Taylor Goodsir accused Rudolph Virchow, "the father of modern pathology", of plagiarism?
- ... that Robert Webb planned his first book to be about Top Gear and other topics of lad culture before it became How Not to Be a Boy, a memoir about masculinity?
9 April 2021
- 12:00, 9 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that at one point, the Consulate-General of Japan in Vladivostok was housed in what is now the Vladimir K. Arseniev Museum of Far East History (pictured)?
- ... that Doug Sahm's posthumous album The Return of Wayne Douglas was his first to feature only country music songs?
- ... that the Astor Place station was flooded by a subterranean river after firefighters extinguished a blaze at a building above it?
- ... that 19th-century French economist Jean Gustave Courcelle-Seneuil is considered to be the founder of classical economics and economic liberalism in Chile?
- ... that the late Ottoman Empire has been described as "the laboratory of demographic engineering in Europe"?
- ... that as the only woman in the 1923 Utah State Senate, Antoinette Kinney introduced bills to increase the number of state-sponsored scholarships and to establish public health regulations?
- ... that after Erna Schlüter had appeared as Elektra at the Royal Opera House, the composer, who was in the audience, told her that she was the fulfilment of the character?
- ... that the UK Supreme Court told the Chief Constable that the West Yorkshire Police are not allowed to knock over old ladies?
- 00:00, 9 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Fragonard won the Prix de Rome for painting Jeroboam Sacrificing to Idols (detail pictured) in 1752, when he was 20 years old?
- ... that the pioneering Turkish soprano Mesude Çağlayan was presented a tiny doll of "Madama Butterfly" by the government of Japan for performing the Japanese title role in Puccini's opera?
- ... that Plandemic was criticized for its professional-style production?
- ... that Bob's Your Uncle, a Hong Kong YouTuber, began cooking while he was an international student after he found the food from Chinese restaurants in London unappetising?
- ... that the Thousand Islands Parkway was the final two-lane section of Highway 401?
- ... that the death of Serbian politician Vladimir Cvijan, which occurred in January 2018, was not publicly known until March 2021?
- ... that the French football club GPSO 92 Issy was founded by three Peruvian sisters in 1997?
- ... that Hastings station had neither platforms nor shelter for waiting passengers?
8 April 2021
- 12:00, 8 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Anka Nathanová gave birth to Eva Clarke (both pictured) at the Mauthausen concentration camp shortly before its liberation in 1945?
- ... that computer game studio Legend Entertainment was founded by veterans of the interactive fiction studio Infocom after it shut down in 1989?
- ... that F. Scott Fitzgerald said that his book The Great Gatsby was a failure in comparison to Willa Cather's My Ántonia?
- ... that the Frightened Rabbit album Painting of a Panic Attack was written mostly over email?
- ... that Paul English, co-founder of Kayak, offered to pay for the vaccination of 100,000 people during the cholera outbreak following the 2010 Haiti earthquake if other funding could not be secured?
- ... that the Sursock Purchases represented almost a quarter of all land purchased by Jews in Palestine until 1948?
- ... that ballerina Miranda Weese performed the lead role in a televised performance of Swan Lake under an hour's notice, with a partner she had never rehearsed with?
- ... that while the 2020 Triumph Tiger 900 shares a name with a previous model (the 1998 Tiger 900) and looks similar to its predecessor (the 2010 Tiger 800), it shares its design with neither?
- 00:00, 8 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Martin Creed's installation Work No. 227: The lights going on and off (pictured) has been described as "the first truly great artwork of the twenty-first century"?
- ... that on the first day of the East L.A. walkouts, Vickie Castro's car was used to take down a fence at Roosevelt High School?
- ... that a German theologian wrote "Vertraut den neuen Wegen" to be sung at a wedding in Eisenach shortly before the fall of the Wall?
- ... that Rosemary Crumlin, author of a 60-year history of the Blake Prize for religious art, first attended a Blake exhibition when she was a young novice with the Australian Sisters of Mercy?
- ... that within three years, American subscription television service ON TV went from boasting 725,000 subscribers in eight cities to being out of business?
- ... that English clergyman Wilfrid T. F. Castle wrote the first book-length account of the postal history of Cyprus?
- ... that in the Neon Genesis Evangelion episode "A Transfer", Arthur Schopenhauer's hedgehog's dilemma is mentioned?
- ... that Len Fisher won the 1999 Ig Nobel Prize for physics for his research on the optimal way to dunk a biscuit?
7 April 2021
- 12:00, 7 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that most of the coastal highway Japan National Route 101 (pictured) follows the path of a road originally established by the Tokugawa shogunate?
- ... that Grote Stadskerk, a church located in the historical centre of Paramaribo, is the first and the largest church of the Moravian congregation in Suriname?
- ... that after making videos on TikTok where she lip-synced Donald Trump, Sarah Cooper got a comedy special on Netflix and a TV show on CBS?
- ... that the greeneye spurdog, Sydney skate, grey skate and whitefin swellshark are at risk of extinction by trawling, according to a 2021 report?
- ... that the Nazis at Ravensbrück killed French Resistance fighter Émilie Tillion by gas chamber for having white hair?
- ... that the most senior of the African-American scientists and technicians on the Manhattan Project, William Knox, supervised the otherwise-white staff of the Corrosion Section at Columbia University?
- ... that José de la Cruz Mena, who contracted leprosy at the age of 21 and was blind at 26, was described as "the pre-eminent Nicaraguan composer of his time"?
- ... that in State v. Linkhaw, the North Carolina Supreme Court reversed the conviction of a man who sang so badly in church that a jury had found him guilty of "disturbing a religious congregation"?
- 00:00, 7 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that although used as the weather vane of a church, the Söderala vane (pictured) was probably originally made for a Viking ship?
- ... that Carter Hart is the youngest goaltender in Philadelphia Flyers history to record a shutout, doing so at the age of 21 years and 57 days?
- ... that a song of God's presence, written in 1965 in Dutch by Huub Oosterhuis, became part of the first common German Catholic hymnal, and was retained in the second by popular demand?
- ... that in September 2020, two labor unions both performed strike actions against the University of Illinois Hospital in Chicago?
- ... that irked by the immense gap in gender-focused digital storytelling from both Sudan and South Sudan, Omnia Shawkat co-founded Andariya magazine?
- ... that studies in occupational toxicology often focus on early effects that are more subtle than those in clinical medicine?
- ... that in one of Singapore's largest drainage diversions, a canal had to be redirected into steel pipes while constructing Chinatown MRT station?
- ... that organist Lorin Whitney worked nights at a Lockheed Aircraft plant during World War II, while performing on a coast-to-coast radio program after his shift ended in the morning?
6 April 2021
- 12:00, 6 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that their cookhouse (example pictured) was as important to loggers as their bunkhouse or tool shed?
- ... that the mayor of Málaga, Francisco de la Torre, was the first Spaniard to be awarded the Medal of Pushkin by Vladimir Putin?
- ... that historians do not agree on how Port Way entered the Roman town of Calleva Atrebatum?
- ... that Lyubomir Pipkov is considered one of the founders of Bulgaria's modern professional musical establishment?
- ... that students from four local high schools and Rutgers University each had their chance to run New Jersey television station WRTV for a day?
- ... that Erich Honecker demanded that West Germany violate its own constitution by recognising East German citizenship?
- ... that assisted by computers, Marijn Heule helped devise a proof of Keller's conjecture in dimension seven, a 90-year-old math problem?
- ... that the bicolored sponge goby spends most of its life living inside sponges?
- 00:00, 6 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that photographer Benedict J. Fernandez was invited several times to the home of Martin Luther King Jr. (pictured), where he was able to see him "as a man, a father, a husband"?
- ... that rapper Pop Smoke recorded "Diana" the night before he was murdered?
- ... that after Mary Lou Godbold announced her candidacy for the Mississippi Senate, all of the other candidates withdrew from the race?
- ... that when the tower of Sioux Falls radio station KISD collapsed in 1968, it narrowly missed a train motel run by the station's former owner?
- ... that as a fifteen-year-old student, ballerina Angelica Generosa replaced an injured schoolmate to perform a lead role in Balanchine's Stars and Stripes after two weeks of rehearsals?
- ... that Leonard Bernstein rediscovered his setting of Psalm 148 for voice and piano, dated 1935, in the mid-1980s, and it was first performed in 1993?
- ... that the Thai Supreme Court opinion concerning the murder of Jenjira Ployangunsri is often quoted on Valentine's Day?
- ... that a 1947 song tells you how to cook rabbit at top speed?
5 April 2021
- 12:00, 5 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that a saying in Britain states that one should "never drink in a flat-roofed pub" (example pictured)?
- ... that Eugénie Brazier was the first chef to be awarded six Michelin stars?
- ... that a team including bricklayers, assistant bank managers and insurance clerks defeated Coventry City in the third round of the FA Cup in 1989?
- ... that Ivorian politician Téné Birahima Ouattara, the brother of the country's president, is nicknamed "Photocopy" due to their similar appearance?
- ... that neither of the US-based authors of the 1991 book The Coming War With Japan had ever visited Japan when they wrote it?
- ... that when Canadian preacher Perry F. Rockwood criticized the Presbyterian church in 1947, he was ordered to recant and burn his sermons?
- ... that the 2021 Palestinian film The Present is about a present and the present?
- ... that German minister Wolfgang Clement said that the secret to drinking a glass of beer in 1.5 seconds was to fold back the uvula?
- 00:00, 5 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that British novelist Noreen Riols (pictured) trained agents who supported the French Resistance during World War II?
- ... that the wasp Sceliphron asiaticum provisions its nest with body parts of spiders?
- ... that Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Zach Eflin was once traded twice in the course of 24 hours?
- ... that the February 2021 calving of Iceberg A-74 has provided the opportunity to study seafloor organisms that can survive 30 kilometres (19 mi) from the nearest daylight?
- ... that the Battle of Milliken's Bend brought acceptance of African Americans as soldiers?
- ... that after Do Not Split received an Oscar nomination, the Chinese government reportedly told local media to downplay the awards?
- ... that Louis William Valentine DuBourg established his episcopal see in St. Louis because the Catholics of New Orleans would not accept his authority?
- ... that people in Taiwan changed their legal names to something involving salmon in order to get free sushi?
4 April 2021
- 12:00, 4 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that the rolling ball sculpture Archimedean Excogitation (pictured) has almost 30 moving or sound-producing components?
- ... that Imago Records intended to release Kylie Minogue in the US before closing down in 1995?
- ... that after IFPI Taiwan established the IFPI Taiwan Charts in August 1996, the charts were noted for having their own World Wide Web site?
- ... that the music video for St. Vincent's song "Pay Your Way in Pain" recalls the 1970s downtown New York, taking inspiration from the works of Kate Bush, David Bowie, and Cindy Sherman?
- ... that "Christians, awake, salute the happy morn" is a hymn based on a poem that John Byrom first presented "For Dolly"?
- ... that an article headlined "(Almost) Straight Outta Compton" led to Prince Harry's communications secretary issuing a public statement denouncing "racist" and "sexist" commentary about Meghan, Duchess of Sussex?
- ... that the 2003 spy thriller The Hero: Love Story of a Spy was Priyanka Chopra's first Bollywood film?
- ... that "prophet of doom" Craig Hamilton-Parker claims to have predicted Brexit and Trump?
- 00:00, 4 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that singer-songwriter Lupita Infante (pictured) advocates for women's empowerment through her traditional norteño and ranchera music?
- ... that the dual circulation policy calls for China to prioritize domestic consumption while remaining open to international trade?
- ... that Masako Yashiro was one of the earliest female artists to create Japanese boys' comics?
- ... that the series finale of Schitt's Creek was written in three hours by co-creator Daniel Levy?
- ... that Alice Saxby was nurse in charge of an officer's wing at Botleys during the Second World War and cared for many casualties from the Normandy landings?
- ... that in 2000, the Mayor of New York City Rudy Giuliani threatened to sell JFK and LaGuardia airports to BAA USA owned by a British company?
- ... that Mark Cullen was named as League Two Player of the Month for October 2014 after scoring a perfect hat-trick?
- ... that former Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev starred in a Pizza Hut commercial in 1997?
3 April 2021
- 12:00, 3 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that in his 1898 painting The Annunciation (pictured), Henry Ossawa Tanner uses a column of light to depict the angel Gabriel?
- ... that Jacquie Sturm was the first Māori writer to have her work published in a New Zealand anthology?
- ... that Green Bullfrog featured members of Deep Purple, Procol Harum and Chas & Dave?
- ... that due to her Casualty character Ruby Spark's near-photographic memory, actress Maddy Hill had to learn all the intricate details of the medical terminology used by the character?
- ... that people thought Boxers would gentrify Washington Heights?
- ... that Gardner Dow was the only American college football player to die of sports-related injuries in 1919?
- ... that English musician Jane Weaver's album Flock was inspired by Lebanese torch songs, 1980s Russian Aerobics records, and Australian punk music?
- ... that author Edmund G. Love spent several years homeless, sleeping on the subway and interacting with other homeless people, leading him to write the book Subways Are For Sleeping?
- 00:00, 3 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Harry Styles (pictured), who is known for his flamboyant fashion, was voted the Most Stylish Man of the Year by GQ in 2020?
- ... that only about a quarter of New York City's 472 subway stations had elevators in 2018, among the lowest accessibility rates of the world's major transit systems?
- ... that the TV broadcast of the Taylor Swift concert City of Lover only included half the set list of the original concert?
- ... that Tonia Shand became Australia's first woman high commissioner to Sri Lanka in 1988?
- ... that the coral reefs of Tuvalu include the Funafuti Conservation Area, which encompasses 20 per cent of the reef area of Funafuti atoll?
- ... that Peter Milliman coached Team Russia at the 2014 World Lacrosse Championship despite not knowing until that year that they even had a team?
- ... that, while representing Andorra at the 2010 Winter Olympics, Lluís Marin Tarroch served as the flag bearer and became the first Andorran to compete in snowboarding at the Games?
- ... that Sister Elizabeth Sander, who was imprisoned for carrying "lewd books", escaped twice?
2 April 2021
- 12:00, 2 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Ich will den Kreuzweg gerne gehen, a Passion cantata for solo bass by Telemann composed in Frankfurt, was performed there in Lent during the COVID-19 pandemic (pictured)?
- ... that at the age of 12, the Lakota spiritual leader Arvol Looking Horse became the youngest ever Keeper of the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe and Bundle?
- ... that Gwen Stefani's "Slow Clap" has a country-inspired cover artwork, despite the song itself having a ska sound?
- ... that in 1930, the new infant-care centre of the Mothercraft Training Society was named after Princess Elizabeth of York, now Queen Elizabeth II?
- ... that when journalist Pierre Nadeau reported on the 1973 famine in Ethiopia, his suggestion for viewers to donate to Oxfam led to an inundation of contributions the next day?
- ... that Duncan Jupp scored his first league goal for more than a decade in the 2005 Football League Two play-off Final?
- ... that Lieutenant General Osman Erbaş was one of 11 Turkish military personnel killed in a 4 March 2021 helicopter crash?
- ... that Prides Crossing station had separate benches for Democrats and Republicans?
- 00:00, 2 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Fred H. Brown (pictured) went from a bean eater to a bean counter?
- ... that there are dragons in Buckingham Palace?
- ... that Napoleon Bonaparte once acted as the main character in a soap opera and once fell from a Harley Davidson motorbike?
- ... that there has been a bottomless pit in East Flagstaff, Arizona, for more than 100 years?
- ... that President George H. W. Bush was King of the Pit?
- ... that an Alligator in PVC made Mary Quant look wet?
- ... that Mussolini is not interested in politics?
- ... that Mr. Spock ate my balls?
1 April 2021
- 12:00, 1 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that cosmic horror Cthulhu has run for President of the United States (2016 campaign pictured) in every election since 1996?
- ... that having sex at different times may produce new species?
- ... that Michigan governor William Milliken gave the homily at a funeral for frozen cheese and mushroom pizzas?
- ... that Johnny Dickshot was captain of the All-Ugly team?
- ... that Leonard Bernstein wrote "I hate music"?
- ... that 14 April is Cake and Cunnilingus Day?
- ... that Mr Bean attempted to kill the Queen with a tobacco-loaded gun?
- ... that the United States once sued a golden cock but cried fowl when the cock won?
- ... that in 1941, a Trinidadian king was crowned with the assistance of Adolf Hitler?
- 00:00, 1 April 2021 (UTC)
- ... that Hy Cohen's (pictured) seven-game-long Major League Baseball career ended before his baseball card could be produced?
- ... that Toa Payoh station was the first in Singapore's Mass Rapid Transit system to have its structural works completed?
- ... that the title of the Taylor Swift song "Cornelia Street" refers to a street in New York City on which Swift rented a townhouse?
- ... that the Cerrón Grande Reservoir, also known as Lake Suchitlán, is one of the most contaminated and polluted bodies of fresh water in Central America?
- ... that Brenda Banks was one of the first African-American women to work as a professional animator?
- ... that Vorau Abbey's collegiate church has been described as the "most splendid baroque church in Styria?"
- ... that, such was his popularity with the club's supporters, when footballer Hughie Ferguson was sold by Motherwell F.C., the local steel works closed to allow workers to wave him off?
- ... that the founder of WZIP in Covington, Kentucky, beat out his own brother for the right to build the station?