

that Tytus Filipowicz, nominally the first Polish ambassador to Georgia, was captured during the Soviet invasion and ultimately organized the first Polish embassy to the Soviet Union? that secondary students can take Yup'ik studies in the Yupiit School District, which is located in the Bethel Census Area of Alaska?

that the Anglo-Norman Latin text De obsessione Dunelmi is the first-known history of an English earldom? president's administration got the name midnight regulations when a record quantity of new rules was issued during Jimmy Carter's last months in office? that the regulations issued by an outgoing U.S. that golf in Scotland ( example pictured) flourished despite "the fut bal ande the golf" ( football and golf) being "vtterly criyt done" (utterly condemned) by a 1457 Act of the Parliament of Scotland? after he played against the club for a team representing the Royal Berkshire Regiment?

that footballer Johnny Warsap was signed by Gillingham F.C. that the Woodland Public Library is the oldest, and one of the last functioning Carnegie-funded libraries in California? that one of the most gifted portrait painters of the 17th century is known as Cornelis Janssens, although he never used that name to sign his paintings? that Unverricht-Lundborg disease is the most common form of an uncommon group of genetic epilepsy disorders called progressive myoclonic epilepsy? Lalith Jayasinghe was killed while leading a special forces team on a reconnaissance mission behind enemy lines? that the Jews of Massena, New York, were falsely accused of the kidnap and ritual murder of a Christian girl in September 1928 in an incident known as the Massena blood libel? that although construction of two submarines each from the U-48, U-50, and U-52 classes of the Austro-Hungarian Navy began in 1916, none were completed by the end of World War I two years later? that Robert Harrison, publisher of the gossip magazine Confidential ( cover pictured), was once arrested for allegedly taking pornographic photos at a golf course?
