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Combined display of all available logs of FactsPrimer. You can narrow down the view by selecting a log type, the username (case-sensitive), or the affected page (also case-sensitive).
(newest | oldest) View (newer 50 | older 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- 15:04, 15 July 2024 Admin talk contribs created page Bonzo's Montreux (Created page with "'''"Bonzo's Montreux"''' is a 1982 instrumental song by English rock band Led Zeppelin. The song was composed by John Bonham, and recorded at Mountain Studios, Montreux, Switzerland on 12 September 1976, and mixed at Sol Studio, Cookham, Berkshire, in January 1982. It appeared as the seventh track on Led Zeppelin's 1982 album ''Coda'', released on 19 November 1982. "Bonzo's Montreux" is a percussion instrumental which served as a showcase for drummer John Bonham's talent...")
- 00:49, 15 July 2024 Admin talk contribs created page Charlotte Martin (Created page with "'''Charlotte Martin''' (born 19 September 1948) is a French-born model who gained prominence in the 1960s and 1970s. Born in Paris, France, she is best known for her work in the fashion industry during the height of the Swinging Sixties and for her relationship with artists including Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page. Martin's striking beauty and involvement with high-profile musicians made her a notable figure in the fashion and rock music scenes. ==Early Life and Back...")
- 19:19, 14 July 2024 Admin talk contribs created page William Bedle (Created page with "'''William Bedle''' (born 4 March 1680—died 3 June 1768), also known as "Old Bedle," was an English cricketer known for his contributions to the game during the early 18th century. Bedle is often remembered as one of the sport's early practitioners, playing a significant role in cricket's development in England. Although records from his era are sparse, Bedle's name has been preserved through various historical references, highlighting his prominence in the sport durin...")
- 18:23, 14 July 2024 Admin talk contribs created page Boogie with Stu (Created page with "'''"Boogie with Stu"''' is a song by English rock band Led Zeppelin from their 1975 studio double album ''Physical Graffiti''. The track is notable for its blend of rock and roll with boogie-woogie piano, and its informal, jam-session feel. ==Origins and Composition== "Boogie with Stu" originated during the recording sessions for Led Zeppelin's fourth album, commonly known as ''Led Zeppelin IV'', in 1971. The song was developed from an impromptu jam that took place at H...")
- 18:01, 26 September 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Walkabout (Created page with "'''Walkabout''' is a person's willingness to journey without a specific agenda or destination, comparable to '''wanderlust'''.")
- 19:03, 11 September 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Uluru (Redirected page to Ayers Rock) Tag: New redirect
- 19:02, 11 September 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Ayers Rock (Created page with "'''Ayers Rock''', also called '''Uluru''', is an inselberg in the central Australian desert, rising about 350 m above its surrounding land. Ayers Rock is about 3 km long, up to 2 km wide and about 9 km in circumference at the base. The summit is at an absolute altitude of 863 m. It rises 348 m above the dune landscape of Central Australia. Ayers Rock is located in Ayers Rock National Park near the resort town of Yulara, about 340 km as the crow flies southwest of Alice...")
- 16:14, 27 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Robodebt (Redirected page to Online Compliance Intervention) Tag: New redirect
- 14:59, 21 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page United States (Created page with "The '''United States of America''' (abbreviated '''USA'''), also called the '''United States''' (abbreviated '''US''') or colloquially simply America, is a democratic, federally structured republic in North America. It consists of 50 states, the capital Washington, DC, which has its own federal district, as well as five major union dependent territories and nine island territories. The 48 contiguous states, known as the Lower 48, together with Alaska, from which they are...")
- 00:08, 15 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Northern Ireland (Created page with "'''Northern Ireland''' (Irish ''Tuaisceart Éireann'') is a part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It consists of six of the nine counties of the historic Irish province of Ulster in the north of the island of Ireland.")
- 00:05, 15 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Scotland (Created page with "'''Scotland''' ([ˈskɔtlənd], Scottish Gaelic ''Alba'' [ˈal̪ˠapə], Latin ''Caledonia'') is a largely autonomous part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Scotland consists of the northern third of the largest European island Great Britain and several archipelagos and has around 5.5 million inhabitants. The Scottish capital has been Edinburgh since 1437 (previously Perth).")
- 23:47, 14 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Wales (Created page with "'''Wales''' [ˈweɪlz] (Welsh ''Cymru'' [ˈkəm.rɨ], Latin ''Cambria'') is a part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It is in the west of the island of Great Britain, bordering England and the Celtic and Irish Seas. The capital of Wales is Cardiff (Welsh ''Caerdydd''). The country is counted among the six Celtic nations.")
- 15:42, 11 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Higher Education Contribution Scheme (Created page with "'''Higher Education Contribution Scheme''', commonly referred to as '''HECS''', was an Australian tertiary education fee introduced by the Hawke Labor government in January 1989, under the then Minister for Education, John Dawkins. During the mid-1980s, the Australian tertiary education landscape was fundamentally restructured in order to give broader sections of the population access to higher education. This was also part of a broader push by Treasurer Paul Keating, t...")
- 14:47, 3 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page England (Created page with "'''England''' is the largest and most densely populated part of the United Kingdom in North West Europe. England comprises most of the southern portion of the island of Great Britain, bordering Scotland to the north and Wales and the Irish Sea to the west. The country borders the North Sea to the east, the English Channel to the south and the Atlantic Ocean to the south-west. London is the capital of England and the entire United Kingdom. It is also the third-large...")
- 14:37, 3 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Michael Crichton (Created page with "'''John Michael Crichton''' [ ˈkɹaɪtn̩ ] (23 October 1942 in Chicago, Illinois – 4 November 2008 in Los Angeles) was an American writer, screenwriter, director, doctor and film producer. His 1990 novel ''Jurassic Park'' is particularly well known.")
- 16:52, 2 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page United Kingdom (Created page with "The '''United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland''', abbreviated to '''the United Kingdom''' (International abbreviation: UK), is one of the British Isles off the northwest coast of continental Europe and is the largest island nation in Europe. The United Kingdom is a union of four parts: England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Traditionally, it is also referred to simply as Great Britain. England represents the largest part of the country, while Great...")
- 02:03, 1 August 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Jacinta Price (Created page with "'''Jacinta Yangapi Nampijinpa Price''' (born 12 May 1981, Darwin, Northern Territory) is an Australian politician and Senator for the Northern Territory. Elected at the 2022 Federal election, she is a member of the Country Liberal Party, and sits with the National Party room.")
- 18:30, 30 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Thomas Midgley (Created page with "'''Thomas Midgley, Jr.''' (18 May 1889 in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania – 2 November 1944 in Worthington, Ohio) was an American mechanical engineer, chemist, and inventor. He discovered and developed the anti-knock properties of tetraethyl lead added to gasoline and for having invented dichlorodifluoromethane, the prototype of chlorofluorocarbons. Midgley obtained more than 100 patents in his career.")
- 15:59, 30 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Monkeypox (Created page with "'''Monkeypox''' is a disease caused by the monkeypox virus (officially ''Monkeypox virus'', MPXV, obsolete ''Orthopoxvirus simiae''). Natural hosts of this virus are various rodents, including monkeys as false hosts. The disease can also be transmitted to humans (zoonosis) and triggers a feverish, smallpox-like disease, which is usually much milder than smallpox. However, more severe disease progressions can also occur. A vaccination is available and reduces the risk of...")
- 20:11, 29 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Cashless Welfare Card (Created page with "'''Cashless Welfare Card''' also known as the '''Cashless Debit Card''' is an Australian debit card, trialled by the Commonwealth Government from July 2008 onwards, which quarantines part of a person's income from certain welfare support payments. The card was announced on 9 May 2008, and introduced in remote Aboriginal communities by Labor Minister for Community Service Jenny Macklin, in an effort to curb welfare money being spent on alcohol, drugs, pornography, and gam...")
- 19:46, 29 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Jobseeker Diary (Created page with "'''Jobseeker Diary''' (JSD) was an Australian diary issued to those looking for employment while in receipt of the Commonwealth government's Centrelink benefit Newstart. Issued in a stapled booklet form from July 1995, it followed on from the Keating Labor government's 1994 ''Working Nation'' package of welfare and labour reforms, which included a requirement to undertake detailed, monitored job searches which could not previously be provided on existing jobseeker fortni...")
- 11:07, 29 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Woman (Created page with "'''Woman''' is a female adult. Female children and adolescents are referred to as girls. In society, the designation lady is still common.")
- 10:49, 29 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Recession (Created page with "'''Recession''' refers to the contractive economic phase in which a downturn in the economy is recorded. According to the most common definition, a recession occurs when the economy does not grow compared to the previous quarters for two consecutive quarters or when there is a decline (declining gross domestic product). According to this definition, Japan has so far managed the longest phase without a recession (132 quarters) of all OECD countries. The longest running st...")
- 04:04, 28 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Michael Shellenberger (Created page with "'''Michael D. Shellenberger''' (born 16 June 1971) is an American activist, author, and commentator on environmental policy. He is co-founder of the Breakthrough Institute and founder of Environmental Progress. ''Time'' magazine selected Shellenberger as one of its 'Heroes of the Environment' in 2008, in addition to receiving the Green Book Award that year. Shellenberger co-wrote ''The Death of Environmentalism'' (2004) and ''Break Through'' (2007) with Ted Nordhaus.")
- 03:57, 28 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Alex Epstein (Created page with "'''Alexander Joseph Epstein''' (born 1 August 1980) is an American writer, founder and president of the Center for Industrial Progress. He wrote ''The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels'', published in 2014, which argues for the continuing use of coal and gas.")
- 03:52, 28 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Bjørn Lomborg (Created page with "'''Bjørn Lomborg''' (born 6 January 1965 in Frederiksberg) is a Danish author and founder of the think tank Copenhagen Consensus Center. Lomborg is a prolific writer, offering commentaries and opinion articles in scientific journals and newspaper columns. He was or is also associated with many conservative and libertarian think tanks such as the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the Hoover Institution, the Heartland Institute, the Environmental Assessment Institute, the...")
- 00:59, 27 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Daisy Cousens (Created page with "'''Daisy Victoria Light Cousens''' (born 1988, Australia) is an Australian actress, blogger, political and cultural commentator. Cousens runs her own YouTube channel, is a regular columnist for ''The Courier-Mail'', and panellist on Sky News Australia.")
- 00:44, 27 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Calvin Robinson (Created page with "'''Calvin John Robinson''' is a British conservative political commentator and senior fellow at think tank Policy Exchange. Robinson is a regular contributor to ''The Daily Telegraph'' and ''The Daily Mail''. As a commentator, Robinson has contributed to GB News, talkRADIO, and Sky News Australia.")
- 01:35, 25 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Darren Grimes (Created page with "'''Darren Grimes''' (born 22 July 1993, Consett, County Durham, England) is a British political commentator and activist. Grimes has worked on several campaigns of influence in favour of Brexit, including by creating a campaign party: BeLeave.")
- 00:10, 25 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Chris Kenny (Created page with "'''Chris Kenny''' (born 1962, Adelaide, South Australia) is an Australian journalist and media presenter. A columnist for ''The Australian'' newspaper, Kenny hosts his own news and current affairs programme, ''The Kenny Report'', on Sky News Australia")
- 17:13, 24 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Sophie Corcoran (Created page with "'''Sophie Corcoran''' is a British broadcaster, freelance journalist, and media commentator. She has made regular appearances on GB News, TalkTV, and Sky News Australia. Corcoran is a member of the Conservative Party, and previously stood as a candidate in the 2021 Thurrock Council election.")
- 17:00, 24 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Caleb Bond (Created page with "'''Caleb Bond''' is an Australian journalist and media commentator. Previously employed in Adelaide with ''The Advertiser'' newspaper, Bond now resides in Melbourne and publishes with the ''Herald Sun''. He has made regular appearances on Australian radio and is a regular panellist and fill-in host with Sky News Australia.")
- 12:25, 24 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Kevin Donnelly (Created page with "'''Kevin John Donnelly''' AM (born 7 January 1952, Melbourne, Victoria) is an Australian author, commentator, and educator. Donnelly is a Senior Fellow at the Australian Catholic University and founder of the education think tank the Education Standards Institute (ESI).")
- 11:34, 24 July 2022 Admin talk contribs created page Kathy Gyngell (Created page with "'''Kathy Gyngell''' is a British author, broadcaster, and co-editor of the news and opinion website ''The Conservative Woman''.")