Program

Today's Top Wikipedia Edits: Jeff Sessions Previously Urged Sally Yates to Disobey Unlawful Executive Orders

Screen-Shot-2017-01-31-at-2.10.23-PM.png

According to Wikipedia:

  • During former US Attorney General Sally Yates' confirmation hearing, Jeff Sessions (recently nominated by President Trump as Yates' replacement) "urged Yates to disobey unlawful executive orders"
  • Notable current tenants of Trump Tower: Cristiano Ronaldo, Bruce Willis, Juan Beckmann Vidal (owner of tequila brand Jose Cuervo), Gucci, CONCACAF, Qatar Airways
  • "In Japan and Korea, the "O Mark" (marujirushi) is used instead of the checkmark, and the checkmark is commonly used instead of an "X" for wrong"
  • If you acquire the board game Acquire, an "instruction manual is included in all versions"
  • "Less than two years prior to the Miracle of the Gulls in 1848, many Mormon settlers were saved by quail that flew into their camp, on their trek to the Great Salt Lake, and made available as food"

For more Wikipedia edits, tune in to WikiNews Tuesdays at 1pm and Saturdays at noon. Right here on CFUR 88.7 FM.

Source: www.listen.hatnote.com

 

[embed]https://www.mixcloud.com/cfurvolunteer/wikinews-january-31-2017/[/embed]

Today's Top Wikipedia Edits: Alternate Facts Link to Newspeak

Screen-Shot-2017-01-24-at-2.05.29-PM.png

According to Wikipedia:

  • "In the city of Oaxaca on Dec. 23, there is an unusual event called La Noche de los Rabanos. Oversized radishes are carved into elaborate figures. Originally, these were for nativity scenes but today, there is a major competition in which the vegetables are carved into all kinds of figures."
  • Gelignite was invented by Alfred Nobel in 1875, "who also invented dynamite. Unlike dynamite, gelignite does not suffer from the dangerous problem of sweating, the leaking of unstable nitroglycerine from the solid matrix... One of the cheapest explosives, gelignite burns slowly and cannot explode without a detonator, so it can be stored safely."
  • "Alternate facts" links to "Newspeak."
  • "A tame bear, also called a dancing bear, is a wild bear captured when the animal is young, or born and bred in captivity, and used to entertain people in streets or taverns.... They were still present in the streets of Spain in 2007."

 

For more Wikipedia edits, tune in to WikiNews Tuesdays at 1pm and Saturdays at noon. Right here on CFUR 88.7 FM.

 

Source: www.listen.hatnote.com

 

[embed]https://www.mixcloud.com/cfurvolunteer/wikinews-january-24-2017/[/embed]

Today's Top Wikipedia Edits: The 2005 Release of "King Kong" Challenged Vanilla's Dominance Over Banana Cream-filled Twinkies

Screen-Shot-2017-01-17-at-1.54.51-PM.png

According to Wikipedia:

  • Barack Obama pardoned the 1,325th person of his presidency, Chelsea Manning
  • "Kernel Panic" is an action taken by an operating system upon detecting an internal fatal error from which it cannot safely recover"
  • "Realizing that several machines used to make cream-filled strawberry shortcakes sat idle when strawberries were out of season, James Dewar conceived a snack cake filled with banana cream, which he dubbed the Twinkie... During WWII, bananas were rationed and the company was forced to switch to vanilla cream. This change proved popular... [but] vanilla's dominance over banana flavouring would be challenged in 2005 following a month-long promotion of the movie King Kong"
  • "Burger King was a fast food restaurant chain in Edmonton, also known as Burger King Drive-Inn. It was founded by former Imperial Oil executives... It was not related to the worldwide Burger King chain... Its signature item was the mushroom burger... In 1975, the company held a franchise for Kentucky Fried Chicken in Edmonton, with its outlets promoting dual branding. However, as the market became more competitive, the relationship between the two companies deteriorated, with KFC taking legal action to end the partnership... Several Burger King restaurants [have since] joined the Burger Baron chain"

For more Wikipedia edits, tune in to WikiNews Tuesdays at 1pm and Saturdays at noon. Right here on CFUR 88.7 FM.

 

Source: www.listen.hatnote.com

[embed]https://www.mixcloud.com/cfurvolunteer/wikinews-january-17-2017/[/embed]

 

Today's Top Wikipedia Edits: Vampires Get their True Powers on their Sixteenth Birthday

Screen-Shot-2017-01-10-at-2.07.57-PM.png

According to Wikipedia:

  • "Corn Flakes are a popular breakfast cereal made by toasting flakes of corn. The cereal was first created by Dr. John Harvey Kellogg in 1894 as a food that he thought would be healthy for the patients of the Battle Creek Sanitarium in Michigan where he was superintendent. The breakfast cereal proved popular among the patients, and the Kellogg Company was set up to produce corn flakes for a wider public."
  • "E-textiles are fabrics that have been developed with new technologies that provide added value to the wearer.... What makes smart fabrics revolutionary is that they have the ability to do many things that traditional fabrics cannot, including communicate, transform, conduct energy, and even grow."
  • List of Fictional Mustelids: "This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards of completeness. This list is limited solely to notable non-badger and non-raccoon characters that appear in works of fiction and that are in the musteloidea superfamily of mammals. This list includes weasels, ferrets, minks, otters, martens, and skunks."
  • "Vampires get their true powers on their 16th birthday. Powers include: fireballs, fangs, telepathy, etc."

For more Wikipedia edits, tune in to WikiNews Tuesdays at 1pm and Saturdays at noon. Right here on CFUR 88.7 FM.

Source: www.listen.hatenote.com

 

 

[embed]https://www.mixcloud.com/cfurvolunteer/wikinews-january-10-2017/[/embed]