The 139th Boat Race took place on 27 March 1993. Held annually, the Boat Race is a
side-by-side rowing race between crews from the Universities of
Oxford and
Cambridge along the
River Thames. Cambridge, using "
cleaver blades" for the first time in the history of the race, won by three-and-a-half lengths in a victory that was described in The Times as "crushingly conclusive". The winning time of 17 minutes exactly was the fourth fastest time in the event. Cambridge's victory prevented what would have been Oxford's seventeenth win out of the last eighteen races, which would have levelled the overall score for the first time since the
1929 race. Oxford's crew featured two Olympic gold medallists and saw changes in their rowers and cox in the lead-up to the event. The race was umpired by the former Oxford
BlueMark Evans, who controversially instigated changes to the start procedure of the race. In the reserve race, Cambridge's
Goldie defeated Oxford's Isis, while Cambridge won the
Women's Boat Race. (
Full article...)
... that the Old Wall(pictured) in
Sofia,
Bulgaria, popularly called the "Roman Wall", is in fact an
Islamic religious structure from the 16th or 17th century?
American singer and songwriter Lady Gaga has recorded material for four
studio albums and three
extended plays (EP), and has been featured on songs on other artists' respective albums. After signing with Interscope,
Gaga began working on her debut album, The Fame, which was released in 2008. The album has influences of the 1980s
pop music and discusses Gaga's love of fame while also dealing with subjects, such as love, sexuality, money and drugs. Initially intended to be a re-release of her first album, an EP titled The Fame Monster (2009) included eight newly recorded tracks. The EP explores the darker side of
fame, describing the differences between them with the
yin and yang concept. Gaga's second full-length album, Born This Way, was released in 2011. Themes include sexuality, religion, freedom, feminism and individualism. Primarily influenced by
synthpop and
dance-pop, it incorporates musical genres which had not been previously explored by Gaga, such as
electronic rock and
techno. Gaga's third album, Artpop, released in 2013. Described as "a celebration and a poetic musical journey", the album revolves around her personal views of fame, love, sex, feminism, self-empowerment, overcoming addiction, and reactions to media scrutiny. It also contains references to
Greek and
Roman mythology. In 2014, Gaga and
Tony Bennett released a collaborative album titled Cheek to Cheek, which consists of
jazz standards. (Full list...)
One of nine extant copies (all damaged by water and rodents while in storage) of the Waitangi sheet of the Treaty of Waitangi, first signed on 6 February 1840 by representatives of the
British Crown and various
Māori chiefs from the
North Island of
New Zealand. Consequently, Lieutenant Governor
William Hobson declared British sovereignty over New Zealand in May 1840. The
treaty also established a British
Governor of New Zealand; recognised Māori ownership of their lands, forests, and other properties; and gave the Māori the rights of
British subjects. In return the Māori people ceded New Zealand to
Queen Victoria, giving her government the sole right to purchase land. Owing to significant difference in the English and
Māori versions, there was no consensus regarding governance. The courts long ignored the treaty, but in 1975 the
Waitangi Tribunal was established as a permanent commission of inquiry tasked with researching British breaches of it, and suggesting means of redress.
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