|latest=
Set to yes to display the most recent items; omit this parameter to display a randomised set of items (with new selections when the page is purged)
|1= Law |2=English law |3= ...
Search patterns for items
|not1=Lawrence|not2=Moxy |not3=??? ...
Search patterns for excluding item
|max=
Maximum number of items to display; default is 6
... that environmental journalist Gloria Dickie wrote her thesis on how cities in Colorado changed garbage laws to prevent bear incursions?
... that before becoming a voice actor, Kenichirou Matsuda attended law school trying to become a civil servant?
... that the classicist Adam Parry said that he had only ever considered three careers: academia, law and
beachcombing?
... that the TikTok success of DellaXOZ's "Ahh!!" prompted a lawyer to contact her?
... that Lie Kiat Teng appealed to the "moral obligation" of doctors to address a healthcare crisis in
South Sulawesi?
... that the Robyn Gigl novel By Way of Sorrow, which features a transgender lawyer as the protagonist, was described as "quietly groundbreaking" by The New York Times?
... that opera composer and librettist Joseph Redding was also a chess expert and lawyer who argued a
landmark decision before the United States Supreme Court?
... that the planned sale of a Texas TV station was the subject of a lawsuit more than seven years after it closed for the last time?
... that in accordance with Hale's law,
sunspot groups have
magnetic fields that align in opposite directions on opposite sides of the Sun's equator?
...that the influential Armenian merchants Petik and Sanos expanded the Armenian
Church of the Forty Martyrs in Aleppo, in spite of Ottoman laws that banned new construction and expansion of churches?
... that
Julian Assange's lawyer argued that the rules set by the
Ecuadorian embassy requiring Assange to take care of his pet cat Michi were "denigrating"?
... that Cora Agnes Benneson, one of the first female lawyers in New England, was rejected by
Harvard Law School because "the equipments were too limited to make suitable provision for receiving women"?
... that at the age of 14, Jenny Suo conducted a science experiment that ultimately led to
GlaxoSmithKline pleading guilty to breaching consumer protection laws?
... that a street in
Bucharest was once named after Ioniță Tunsu, an outlaw who used to visit his girlfriend there?
... that Trần Lập was involved in Vietnam's first internet copyright lawsuit?
... that the Wantage Code, a record of laws promulgated by the English king
Æthelred the Unready and his councillors around 997, may provide the earliest description of a
jury of
presentment?
... that African
porters in
Salvador, Bahia, went on strike after the provincial government passed a law requiring them to wear metal identification tags?
... that in the 1930s Alfred Verdross, an Austrian international lawyer and future judge of the European Court of Human Rights, sympathised with
National Socialism?
... that after
Sea Girt, New Jersey, passed a law that banned live rock and disco music at the Parker House, a state judge overturned the ban as being "silly"?
... that foreign nationals wishing to gain Philippine citizenship need to demonstrate proficiency in English or Spanish as well as a Philippine language?
... that in response to the
death of Tyre Nichols, Justin J. Pearson has pushed for a law banning officers with criminal records from transferring between police departments?
... that a lawyer got his client acquitted of a 1975 kidnapping by accusing the victim of masterminding his own abduction—but in 2020 admitted that he had known it was a lie?
... that after the release of Enola Holmes in 2020,
the original author's estate sued Netflix, claiming that it violated copyright laws because it depicted Sherlock Holmes as having emotions?
... that to comply with a law that restricted liquor sales near churches, the Peninsula New York placed its cocktail lounge up a flight of stairs and down a long hallway?
... that according to
Viktor Kožený's lawyer, Fox Hill Prison in the Bahamas is known for "breaking even the toughest of men"?
... that Chinese physician Gao Ruona's son, son-in-law, and student all served as editors at the
Song government's Bureau for Editing Medical Texts?
... that American legal scholar John Hart Ely penned a law review article castigating the Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade, despite being
pro-choice?
... that the sentencing phase of the Jemma Mitchell case was the second to be filmed in England and Wales since
a change in the law permitted television cameras into court?
... that in the music video for the song "Anti-Hero",
Taylor Swift imagines a scenario in which she is killed by her own daughter-in-law?
... that a 1969 note from New York Times writer Grace Glueck to
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger spurred a class-action lawsuit over gender discrimination?
... that
Delaware weekly newspaper The Faulkland Quiz was founded, edited and published by an 18-year-old?
... that in 2009, residents of Maine voted to repeal a law that would have legalized same-sex marriage?
... that a bystander's video of the arrest of Randal Worcester in
Mulberry, Arkansas, showed one law enforcement officer holding Worcester on the ground while two other officers beat him?
... that due to legal and union restrictions, the production team for the Doctor Who episode "Space Babies" occasionally had to replace real babies with props?
... that as part of illegal wildlife trading, Oophaga solanensis frogs are bought for US$3 in their native Colombia and sold for up to US$1,000 overseas?
... that police officers had to be flown in by helicopter to seize hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of cannabis plants found growing illegally in Jerrawangala National Park?
... that Singaporean broadcaster Lee Fook Hong legally changed his name to Lee Dai Sor (literally 'Lee Big Fool' in
Cantonese) after being accused of tax evasion?
... that the legal battle over awarding channel 9 in Orlando, Florida, the longest case in
FCC history at the time, filled 55 volumes?
... that the pseudonymous manga artist Junichi Yamakawa never disclosed to his editor his legal name, address, or contact information?
... that Leopoldo Salazar Viniegra laid the foundation for the Reglamento Federal de Toxicomanias, which legalized psychoactive substances in Mexico in 1940?
... that British outrage at the sentencing of a white Kenyan settler to just two years' imprisonment for the 1923 killing of a black employee eventually led to the replacement of the colony's legal code?
... that New Zealand activist Pania Newton gave up a legal career to become an activist and spokesperson for the preservation of her ancestral lands at
Ihumātao?
... that
Utah state representative Charles Redd successfully proposed the legalization of horse racing and betting in 1925, only to successfully propose making it illegal again two years later?
... that Ward v. Flood was the legal basis for racially segregated education in California?
... that Russian money, known as qiang tie by locals, was used as legal currency in some regions of China for decades?
... that the BK inequality was used to identify implausibly lucky
Florida Lottery winners, whose involvement in illegal activities was later confirmed by investigations?
... that American legal scholar John Hart Ely penned a law review article castigating the Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade, despite being
pro-choice?
... that 90 percent of Indonesia's village-owned enterprises are not legal entities, hampering their ability to attract investors or open bank accounts?
... that the Israeli song "HaSela haAdom", about illegal trips to
Petra, was banned in Israel?
... that according to one legal scholar, "no intelligent lawyer could well practice without" the books of Joseph Kinnicutt Angell?
... that Brazilian computer science researcher and internet pioneer Tadao Takahashi negotiated with
drug lords to install internet equipment in his country?
... that the release of
Lee Hyori's album It's Hyorish had to be moved forward after several tracks were illegally leaked?
... that in Botswana, writer Unity Dow took legal actions as a
plaintiff,
legal counsellor, and
judge to challenge gender discrimination and protect indigenous rights, before becoming a legislator?
... that a complaint over an allegedly illegal transmitter move led to Texas radio station KFQX-FM being forced off the air for four hours in 1988?
... that Fort Hampton was constructed by the United States Army to warn Americans to leave and keep them from illegally settling in
Chickasaw territory?
... that a recent Jersey court case found that the usage of an ancient Norman Clameur de Haro, which includes a recitation of the Lord's Prayer in French to legally apply an injunction, was used incorrectly?
... that the UFC's
Dana White said that EliteXC: Heat was "fucking illegal" over allegations of fight tampering in the main event involving
Kimbo Slice?
... that the Catholic Church barred Deborah Schembri from practicing law in
ecclesiastical court because she led a campaign to legalize divorce in Malta?
... 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 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 Adolphus D. Griffin published the Portland New Age for Portland's African-American residents during a time in which they were legally excluded from the state?
... that the investigation into the Koh Tao murders and the subsequent trial were widely criticised by human-rights organisations, pathologists and legal experts?
... that Pakistani historian Suhail Zaheer Lari and his wife, architect
Yasmeen Lari, threatened to elope to Scotland to get married because the legal marriageable age there was lower than in England?
... that Jenna Ellis was a stern critic of
Donald Trump before she became his legal adviser?
... that the Gainsborough Studios, a cooperative apartment for artists, was legally classified as a hotel to circumvent zoning restrictions on residential building heights?
|latest=
Set to yes to display the most recent items; omit this parameter to display a randomised set of items (with new selections when the page is purged)
|1= Law |2=English law |3= ...
Search patterns for items
|not1=Lawrence|not2=Moxy |not3=??? ...
Search patterns for excluding item
|max=
Maximum number of items to display; default is 6
... that environmental journalist Gloria Dickie wrote her thesis on how cities in Colorado changed garbage laws to prevent bear incursions?
... that before becoming a voice actor, Kenichirou Matsuda attended law school trying to become a civil servant?
... that the classicist Adam Parry said that he had only ever considered three careers: academia, law and
beachcombing?
... that the TikTok success of DellaXOZ's "Ahh!!" prompted a lawyer to contact her?
... that Lie Kiat Teng appealed to the "moral obligation" of doctors to address a healthcare crisis in
South Sulawesi?
... that the Robyn Gigl novel By Way of Sorrow, which features a transgender lawyer as the protagonist, was described as "quietly groundbreaking" by The New York Times?
... that opera composer and librettist Joseph Redding was also a chess expert and lawyer who argued a
landmark decision before the United States Supreme Court?
... that the planned sale of a Texas TV station was the subject of a lawsuit more than seven years after it closed for the last time?
... that in accordance with Hale's law,
sunspot groups have
magnetic fields that align in opposite directions on opposite sides of the Sun's equator?
...that the influential Armenian merchants Petik and Sanos expanded the Armenian
Church of the Forty Martyrs in Aleppo, in spite of Ottoman laws that banned new construction and expansion of churches?
... that
Julian Assange's lawyer argued that the rules set by the
Ecuadorian embassy requiring Assange to take care of his pet cat Michi were "denigrating"?
... that Cora Agnes Benneson, one of the first female lawyers in New England, was rejected by
Harvard Law School because "the equipments were too limited to make suitable provision for receiving women"?
... that at the age of 14, Jenny Suo conducted a science experiment that ultimately led to
GlaxoSmithKline pleading guilty to breaching consumer protection laws?
... that a street in
Bucharest was once named after Ioniță Tunsu, an outlaw who used to visit his girlfriend there?
... that Trần Lập was involved in Vietnam's first internet copyright lawsuit?
... that the Wantage Code, a record of laws promulgated by the English king
Æthelred the Unready and his councillors around 997, may provide the earliest description of a
jury of
presentment?
... that African
porters in
Salvador, Bahia, went on strike after the provincial government passed a law requiring them to wear metal identification tags?
... that in the 1930s Alfred Verdross, an Austrian international lawyer and future judge of the European Court of Human Rights, sympathised with
National Socialism?
... that after
Sea Girt, New Jersey, passed a law that banned live rock and disco music at the Parker House, a state judge overturned the ban as being "silly"?
... that foreign nationals wishing to gain Philippine citizenship need to demonstrate proficiency in English or Spanish as well as a Philippine language?
... that in response to the
death of Tyre Nichols, Justin J. Pearson has pushed for a law banning officers with criminal records from transferring between police departments?
... that a lawyer got his client acquitted of a 1975 kidnapping by accusing the victim of masterminding his own abduction—but in 2020 admitted that he had known it was a lie?
... that after the release of Enola Holmes in 2020,
the original author's estate sued Netflix, claiming that it violated copyright laws because it depicted Sherlock Holmes as having emotions?
... that to comply with a law that restricted liquor sales near churches, the Peninsula New York placed its cocktail lounge up a flight of stairs and down a long hallway?
... that according to
Viktor Kožený's lawyer, Fox Hill Prison in the Bahamas is known for "breaking even the toughest of men"?
... that Chinese physician Gao Ruona's son, son-in-law, and student all served as editors at the
Song government's Bureau for Editing Medical Texts?
... that American legal scholar John Hart Ely penned a law review article castigating the Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade, despite being
pro-choice?
... that the sentencing phase of the Jemma Mitchell case was the second to be filmed in England and Wales since
a change in the law permitted television cameras into court?
... that in the music video for the song "Anti-Hero",
Taylor Swift imagines a scenario in which she is killed by her own daughter-in-law?
... that a 1969 note from New York Times writer Grace Glueck to
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger spurred a class-action lawsuit over gender discrimination?
... that
Delaware weekly newspaper The Faulkland Quiz was founded, edited and published by an 18-year-old?
... that in 2009, residents of Maine voted to repeal a law that would have legalized same-sex marriage?
... that a bystander's video of the arrest of Randal Worcester in
Mulberry, Arkansas, showed one law enforcement officer holding Worcester on the ground while two other officers beat him?
... that due to legal and union restrictions, the production team for the Doctor Who episode "Space Babies" occasionally had to replace real babies with props?
... that as part of illegal wildlife trading, Oophaga solanensis frogs are bought for US$3 in their native Colombia and sold for up to US$1,000 overseas?
... that police officers had to be flown in by helicopter to seize hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of cannabis plants found growing illegally in Jerrawangala National Park?
... that Singaporean broadcaster Lee Fook Hong legally changed his name to Lee Dai Sor (literally 'Lee Big Fool' in
Cantonese) after being accused of tax evasion?
... that the legal battle over awarding channel 9 in Orlando, Florida, the longest case in
FCC history at the time, filled 55 volumes?
... that the pseudonymous manga artist Junichi Yamakawa never disclosed to his editor his legal name, address, or contact information?
... that Leopoldo Salazar Viniegra laid the foundation for the Reglamento Federal de Toxicomanias, which legalized psychoactive substances in Mexico in 1940?
... that British outrage at the sentencing of a white Kenyan settler to just two years' imprisonment for the 1923 killing of a black employee eventually led to the replacement of the colony's legal code?
... that New Zealand activist Pania Newton gave up a legal career to become an activist and spokesperson for the preservation of her ancestral lands at
Ihumātao?
... that
Utah state representative Charles Redd successfully proposed the legalization of horse racing and betting in 1925, only to successfully propose making it illegal again two years later?
... that Ward v. Flood was the legal basis for racially segregated education in California?
... that Russian money, known as qiang tie by locals, was used as legal currency in some regions of China for decades?
... that the BK inequality was used to identify implausibly lucky
Florida Lottery winners, whose involvement in illegal activities was later confirmed by investigations?
... that American legal scholar John Hart Ely penned a law review article castigating the Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade, despite being
pro-choice?
... that 90 percent of Indonesia's village-owned enterprises are not legal entities, hampering their ability to attract investors or open bank accounts?
... that the Israeli song "HaSela haAdom", about illegal trips to
Petra, was banned in Israel?
... that according to one legal scholar, "no intelligent lawyer could well practice without" the books of Joseph Kinnicutt Angell?
... that Brazilian computer science researcher and internet pioneer Tadao Takahashi negotiated with
drug lords to install internet equipment in his country?
... that the release of
Lee Hyori's album It's Hyorish had to be moved forward after several tracks were illegally leaked?
... that in Botswana, writer Unity Dow took legal actions as a
plaintiff,
legal counsellor, and
judge to challenge gender discrimination and protect indigenous rights, before becoming a legislator?
... that a complaint over an allegedly illegal transmitter move led to Texas radio station KFQX-FM being forced off the air for four hours in 1988?
... that Fort Hampton was constructed by the United States Army to warn Americans to leave and keep them from illegally settling in
Chickasaw territory?
... that a recent Jersey court case found that the usage of an ancient Norman Clameur de Haro, which includes a recitation of the Lord's Prayer in French to legally apply an injunction, was used incorrectly?
... that the UFC's
Dana White said that EliteXC: Heat was "fucking illegal" over allegations of fight tampering in the main event involving
Kimbo Slice?
... that the Catholic Church barred Deborah Schembri from practicing law in
ecclesiastical court because she led a campaign to legalize divorce in Malta?
... 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 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 Adolphus D. Griffin published the Portland New Age for Portland's African-American residents during a time in which they were legally excluded from the state?
... that the investigation into the Koh Tao murders and the subsequent trial were widely criticised by human-rights organisations, pathologists and legal experts?
... that Pakistani historian Suhail Zaheer Lari and his wife, architect
Yasmeen Lari, threatened to elope to Scotland to get married because the legal marriageable age there was lower than in England?
... that Jenna Ellis was a stern critic of
Donald Trump before she became his legal adviser?
... that the Gainsborough Studios, a cooperative apartment for artists, was legally classified as a hotel to circumvent zoning restrictions on residential building heights?