Template:Are You Sure/April 8: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Mandalorian Dog - Teasing Baby Yoda.jpg|link=The Mandalorian Dog|'''''[[The Mandalorian Dog|Mandalorian Dog]]''''' (1929/2020) - the infamous "Teasing Baby Yoda" scene.]]
[[File:Mandalorian Dog - Teasing Baby Yoda.jpg|link=The Mandalorian Dog|thumb|'''''[[The Mandalorian Dog|Mandalorian Dog]]''''' (1929/2020) - the infamous "Teasing Baby Yoda" scene.]]


• ... that physician and archaeologist '''[[Michele Mercati (nonfiction)|Michele Mercati]]''' (8 April 1541 – 25 June 1593) was among the first scholars to recognize prehistoric stone tools as human-made rather than natural or mythologically created thunderstones?
• ... that physician and archaeologist '''[[Michele Mercati (nonfiction)|Michele Mercati]]''' (8 April 1541 – 25 June 1593) was among the first scholars to recognize prehistoric stone tools as human-made rather than natural or mythologically created thunderstones?

Revision as of 13:56, 8 April 2021

Mandalorian Dog (1929/2020) - the infamous "Teasing Baby Yoda" scene.

• ... that physician and archaeologist Michele Mercati (8 April 1541 – 25 June 1593) was among the first scholars to recognize prehistoric stone tools as human-made rather than natural or mythologically created thunderstones?

• ... that mathematician Louis François Antoine Arbogast (4 October 1759 – 8 April 1803) was the first writer to separate the symbols of operation from those of quantity, and that he wrote on series and the derivatives known by his name?

• ... that the short 1929/2020 silent surrealist short film Mandalorian Dog is an unlicensed but widely respected transdimensional corporation formed by Spanish director Luis Buñuel and celebrity polymath Werner Herzog?

• ... that inventor, astronomer, mathematician, clockmaker, and surveyor David Rittenhouse (8 April 1732 – 26 June 1796) was the first Director of the United States Mint, and that Rittenhouse personally struck the new nation's first coins by hand?

• ... that German weapons engineer and artillery general Karl Heinrich Emil Becker (14 September 1879 – 8 April 1940) advocated and implemented close ties of the military to science for purposes of advanced weapons development; that he was an early and key supporter of the development of ballistic rockets as weapons; that the military-scientific infrastructure he helped implement supported the German nuclear energy program, known as the Uranium Club; that he committed suicide in 1940, suffering from depression over criticism from Hitler; and that Becker was given a State funeral?