From today's featured article |
 Joe Johnson, winner of the championship
The 1986 World Snooker Championship was a professional snooker tournament that took place between 19 April and 5 May 1986 at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England. It was the sixth and final ranking event of the 1985–86 snooker season and the 1986 edition of the World Snooker Championship, which was first held in 1927. The total prize fund was £350,000, with £70,000 awarded to the winner. The defending champion was Dennis Taylor, who had defeated Steve Davis 18–17 in the 1985 World Snooker Championship final to win his first world title. Taylor lost in the first round of the 1986 event 6–10 to Mike Hallett. Joe Johnson (pictured), the world number 16, defeated Davis 18–12 in the final to win his sole ranking event. Prior to the competition, the bookmakers' odds for a Johnson victory were 150/1. There were a total of 20 century breaks compiled during the tournament, the highest of which was a 134 made by Davis. (Full article...)
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Did you know... |
 Timon - ... that conflicting traditions consider Timon (pictured) to have served as bishop of either Bostra or Corinth, to have died by either fire or crucifixion, and to have died in either Corinth or Philippi?
- ... that the manager of OAP Bratislava was kept a secret from the public because he was Jewish?
- ... that Hannah Spencer qualified as a plasterer in the same month that she became the first Green Party MP to win a UK by-election?
- ... that Pennsylvania's 1776 constitution created the Council of Censors, one of the earliest American institutions expressly charged with enforcing a written constitution against ordinary laws?
- ... that John Walsh invented the high-speed dental drill after conducting hearing tests on returned servicemen?
- ... that The 20/20 Experience World Tour made Justin Timberlake the highest-grossing solo touring artist of 2014?
- ... that the 2018 film Crazy Rich Asians is often considered the best airplane film?
- ... that, at the Galleria in New York City, glass-enclosed balconies could not be used as bedrooms because they would then count toward the building's floor area?
- ... that the newest member of Washington's congressional delegation usually receives a "gimlet-eyed monstrosity"?
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In the news |
 Romuald Wadagni
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On this day... |
April 19: Feast day of Saint Alphege of Canterbury (Catholicism, Anglicanism); Primrose Day in London
 The Doors
- 1506 – In Lisbon, Portugal, a crowd began a massacre of Jews who had been forced to convert to Christianity.
- 1861 – The first bloodshed of the American Civil War took place when Confederate sympathizers in Baltimore, Maryland, attacked members of the Massachusetts militia en route to Washington, D.C.
- 1971 – The Doors (pictured) released L.A. Woman, their final album during their lead vocalist Jim Morrison's lifetime.
- 1984 – "Advance Australia Fair", written by Scottish-born composer Peter Dodds McCormick, officially replaced "God Save the Queen" as Australia's national anthem.
- 2000 – Air Philippines Flight 541 crashed in Samal, Davao del Norte, killing all 131 people on board.
- 2020 – A series of attacks in Nova Scotia, Canada, ended when the perpetrator was killed by police, leaving 22 victims dead.
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