Wikipedia:Main Page history/2011 April 15

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Hurricane Isabel as a Category 5

Hurricane Isabel was the costliest and deadliest hurricane in the 2003 Atlantic hurricane season. The ninth named storm, fifth hurricane, and second major hurricane of the season, Isabel formed from a tropical wave on September 6 in the tropical Atlantic Ocean. It moved northwestward, and within an environment of light wind shear and warm waters it steadily strengthened to reach peak winds of 165 mph (265 km/h) on September 11. After fluctuating in intensity for four days, Isabel gradually weakened and made landfall on the Outer Banks of North Carolina with winds of 105 mph (165 km/h) on September 18. It quickly weakened over land and became extratropical over western Pennsylvania the next day. Moderate to severe damage extended up the Atlantic coastline and as far inland as West Virginia. Roughly six million people were left without electric service in the eastern United States from the strong winds of Isabel. Rainfall from the storm extended from South Carolina to Maine, and westward to Michigan. Throughout the path of Isabel, damage totaled about $3.6 billion (2003 USD, $4.3 billion 2011 USD). 16 deaths in seven U.S. states were directly related to the hurricane, with 35 deaths in six states and one Canadian province indirectly related to the hurricane. (more...)

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From Wikipedia's newest articles:

Ink drawing of a woman with long hair and some animal features

  • ... that Romania's Symbolist movement (iconography pictured) fostered the literary careers of far-right theorist Nae Ionescu, defrocked monk Tudor Arghezi, and Dada co-founder Tristan Tzara?
  • ... that Ruislip Manor was largely undeveloped rural land at the turn of the 20th century until the arrival of the Metropolitan Railway in 1912?
  • ... that during World War II, Germany and Japan wanted to divide all of Asia between each other along a line on the 70th meridian east longitude?
  • ... that although described as one of the finest buildings in Glasgow, The Egyptian Halls may be demolished?
  • ... that former Hillsboro, Oregon, mayor Harry T. Bagley worked to get a conviction overturned from a trial his brother George R. Bagley presided over?
  • ... that Blackbutt, Christmas Bells, and Turpentine grow in the Garawarra State Conservation Area?
  • ... that John Fenn, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, and his colleagues at Monsanto "practically bathed" in PCBs during the early 1940s?
  • In the news

  • BRICS states meet in Sanya, China, for an annual summit that features South Africa for the first time.
  • Former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and his sons are detained for 15 days following the revolution.
  • The Japan Atomic Energy Agency raises the severity of the Fukushima I nuclear accidents to level 7, the highest on the International Nuclear Event Scale.
  • Former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo (pictured) is arrested after a five-month standoff with Alassane Ouattara.
  • At least 12 people are killed and over 200 injured in a bomb attack on the Metro in Minsk, Belarus.
  • France implements a controversial ban on full-length face covering.
  • Iceland rejects a plan to repay the British and Dutch governments over guarantee savings after Icesave's failure.
  • On this day...

    April 15: Father Damien Day in Hawaii; Birthday of the Great Leader in North Korea

    George Frideric Handel

  • 1738Serse, an opera by Baroque composer George Frideric Handel (pictured) loosely based on Xerxes I of Persia, premiered in London.
  • 1755A Dictionary of the English Language by Samuel Johnson was first published, becoming one of the most influential dictionaries in the history of the English language.
  • 1912 – The passenger liner RMS Titanic sank about two hours and forty minutes after colliding with an iceberg, killing over 1,500 people.
  • 1947Jackie Robinson, the first African American to break the baseball color line, played his first game in Major League Baseball.
  • 1955American restaurateur Ray Kroc opened the ninth McDonald's franchise in Des Plaines, Illinois, an occasion considered to be the founding of the present corporation.
  • 1995 – At a GATT ministerial meeting in Marrakech, Morocco, representatives of 124 countries and the European Communities signed an agreement to establish the World Trade Organization.
  • More anniversaries: April 14April 15April 16

    Today's featured picture

    Robber fly eating a beetle

    A robber fly (Pegesimallus species shown), an insectivorous insect, feeding on a beetle. There are about 7,100 species of robber flies, all of which use a proboscis to stab and inject victims with saliva containing neurotoxic and proteolytic enzymes that paralyze and digest the insides; the fly then sucks the liquefied meal through the proboscis.

    Photo: Muhammad Mahdi Karim

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