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USS Marmora

USS Marmora was a stern­wheel steamer serving in the Union Navy from 1862 to 1865 in the American Civil War. Built in 1862 as a civilian vessel, she was bought for military service in September, and converted into a tinclad warship. Commissioned on October 21, she served on the Yazoo River and was on the Yazoo during the Battle of Chickasaw Bayou in December. She was assigned in 1863 to a fleet operating against Fort Hindman, but was absent when the fort surrendered on January 11. From February to April, she participated in the Yazoo Pass expedition, and in June burned two Arkansas settlements. In August, she saw action on the White River when the Little Rock campaign was beginning, and patrolled on the Mississippi River late that year. She fought in the Battle of Yazoo City on March 5. She was declared surplus in May 1865 and put in reserve status at Mound City, Illinois. She was decommissioned in July, and sold at auction on August 17, after which nothing is known. (Full article...)

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Assembly of gauthierite crystals on a matrix
Assembly of gauthierite crystals on a matrix
  • ... that the mineral gauthierite (pictured) has only been found in one location, and only on very few specimens?
  • ... that Chinese intellectual Tan Teck Soon, who was the son of a Christian missionary, became a supporter of Buddhist revivalist Anagarika Dharmapala in his later years?
  • ... that CSS Beaufort fought USS Albatross in the first ship-versus-ship action of the American Civil War?
  • ... that Thelma Bates's colleagues tried to discourage her from establishing the first palliative care team at a British hospital, saying it would ruin her career?
  • ... that equipment from a bankrupt North Carolina TV station was dismantled, loaded on three rental trucks, and reassembled to start a station in Virginia?
  • ... that Singaporean performance artist Josef Ng was fined S$1,000 for partially exposing his buttocks and snipping his pubic hair during a public performance?
  • ... that one critic described the lower portion of One Worldwide Plaza's facade as resembling "stone wallpaper"?
  • ... that the Ängelholm UFO memorial reflects the account of Swedish entrepreneur Gösta Carlsson, who attributed his success in life to encountering a UFO in 1946?

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The aircraft involved in the crash
The aircraft involved in the crash

On this day

August 28

Ryugyong Hotel
Ryugyong Hotel
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Annika Sörenstam
Annika Sörenstam

The first U.S. Women's Open champion was crowned in 1946. Since 1953, the U.S. Women's Open is sanctioned by the United States Golf Association (USGA), the governing body for golf in the United States, and is one of the five women's major championships. Since 1992, the champion has received the Harton S. Semple trophy, named for a former USGA Committeeman and the USGA president from 1973 to 1974. Betsy Rawls and Mickey Wright jointly hold the record for the most victories, with four each. The most consecutive wins at the event is two, achieved by Wright, Susie Berning, Hollis Stacy, Annika Sörenstam (pictured), Donna Caponi, Betsy King and Karrie Webb. The lowest winning score for 72 holes in relation to par is 16-under, achieved by Juli Inkster in 1999. The lowest aggregate winning score for 72 holes is 271, achieved by Minjee Lee in 2022. (Full list...)

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Treptowers

The Treptowers is a complex of buildings with a distinctive high-rise in the district of Alt-Treptow in Berlin, Germany, on the river Spree. Constructed on the site of a former AEG electrical-appliance factory, the complex consists of four buildings and was the result of an architectural competition held in 1993 and won by the architect Gerhard Spangenberg. It was completed in 1998, with a final construction cost of 190 million marks. The 30-metre-tall (98 ft) sculpture Molecule Men by Jonathan Borofsky was installed in 1999 and sits in front of the complex in the Spree, seen on the right of this photograph of the Treptowers in 2017.

Photograph credit: Ansgar Koreng

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