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From the Encyclopædia Britannica

John Wilkes Booth (Featured Biography)
One of the most popular actors of his day, he achieved infamy as the assassin of Abraham Lincoln.
Sir Bernard Williams (Featured Article)
Thomas Nagel examines the work of one of the most important contemporary philosophers.
Selective Service Acts (Featured Article)
Trace the evolution of the draft as it has been used throughout U.S. history.

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Cannes film festival (In the News)
Movie makers from around the world converge on Cannesto honour achievement and broker distribution deals. American actor Robert De Nirowill chair the film festival's jury.
Mark Twain (Featured Article)
Twain scholar Thomas Quirk profiles America's best-loved humorist and public moralist.
Chinese Pottery (Featured Article)
These clay vessels assumed great artistic and ceremonial importance, and greatly influenced the development of European porcelain.

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Yangon (Featured City)
This city, located in the southern part of Myanmar (Burma) on the east bank of the Yangon, or Hlaing, River, is the country's main centre for trade and served as its capital from 1948 to 2006.
Uruguay (Featured Country)
The second smallest country in South America enjoys a remarkably low population density and large area of cultivable land and shares many cultural and historical similarities with adjacent Brazil and Argentina.
Everglades (Featured Landmark)
The saw-grass marsh region in southern Florida, characterized by the slow movement of water southward toward mangrove swamps at the edge of the Gulf of Mexico, is home to the largest subtropical wilderness left in the United States.

From the Encyclopædia Britannica

International Nurses Day
This annual observance held on May 12 commemorates the birth in 1820 of Florence Nightingale,the foundational philosopher of modern nursing.
Select biographies on women prominent in nursing:
Mary Breckinridge
Edith Cavell
Sue Sophia Dauser
Jane A. Delano
Sister Mary Joseph Dempsey
Clara Maass
Mary Mahoney
Lucy Minnigerode
Mary Seacole
Genomics (Featured Article)
The study of the structure, function, and inheritance of an organism's entire set of genetic material facilitates the study of evolutionary relationships and underlies the discovery of subsets of genes relevant to disease and development.
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (Featured Biography)
The English chemist won the the 1964 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for her elucidation of the structure of penicillin and vitamin B12 and devoted much of the latter part of her life to the cause of scientists in developing countries.
K–T Extinction (Featured Article)
This global extinction event was responsible for eliminating approximately 80 percent of all species of animals at or very close to the boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene periods, about 65.5 million years ago.

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