Portal : United States/Did you know/archive/2010/July
... that the Rivadavia -class battleships (pictured) were the subject of a fierce competition between France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States?
... that US Army soldiers march to the top of Hill 303 in Korea every year to place flowers commemorating the victims of the Hill 303 massacre of the Korean War (memorial pictured) ?
... that a door-to-door salesman sold a US$ 1,700 Kirby vacuum cleaner to a woman with Alzheimer's who already owned one and lived alone in a mobile home ?
... that during the Vietnam War 's Battles of Prek Klok I and II , 13 times more Viet Cong were killed than American troops?
... that Ann Waldron initially wrote children's books, then turned to biographies of authors from the Southern United States , and at age 78 began writing murder mysteries set at Princeton University ?
... that a cave in Okinawa is called the Cave of the Negroes because three apparently African American US Marines were killed by villagers and their bodies dumped in the cave?
... that although formally established by U.S. President Bill Clinton , the President’s Management Council has existed in various forms since the Reagan administration ?
... that Military Road in Arlington County, Virginia , was built by U.S. Army troops in just three days?
... that the buffalo jump at Madison Buffalo Jump State Park in Montana was used for approximately 2000 years by various Native American tribes ?
... that the United States men's volleyball team won the gold medal at the 1984 Olympics , after not competing at the three previous Games?
... that U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam Graham Martin held George W. Webber implicitly responsible for a mortar attack that killed 32 South Vietnamese children?
... that, in 2010, American professional wrestler Scott C. Despres twice defeated Antonio Thomas in the space of a month?
... that in 2000, porters at Sotheby's auction disposed of a box in a crushing machine, accidentally destroying a painting worth about US$ 157,000 inside?
... that the U.S. Justice Department tried to cite the merger of Detroit-based chains Cunningham Drug and Kinsel Drug as a violation of the Clayton Antitrust Act ?
... that the Ribbon Creek incident at U.S. Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island resulted in the relief "without prejudice" of Major General Joseph C. Burger ?
... that the Oak Circle Historic District was the first historic district to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Wilmette, Illinois ?
... that Private James Pym won the Medal of Honor for carrying water to wounded soldiers while under heavy fire during the Battle of Little Bighorn ?
... that Chet D. Traylor , a former Louisiana Supreme Court justice, has entered the 2010 Republican primary to challenge U.S. Senator David Vitter ?
... that in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co. , the U.S. Supreme Court recognized the right to boycott peacefully?
... that Egon Schiele 's 1912 Portrait of Wally (pictured) was seized by the United States Customs Service which alleged that the painting was Nazi plunder ?
... that the weeping willow planted by John Parke Custis on his Abingdon plantation is known as the progenitor of all weeping willows in the United States ?
... that the Louisiana Reconstruction politician Marshall H. Twitchell survived six bullets in an 1876 assassination attempt but lost the use of both arms?
... that, two years after winning the Medal of Honor for gallantry in the American Indian Wars , George W. Thompson deserted the U.S. Army ?
... that Frankliniella tritici , known as Eastern flower thrips , is an insect that damages crops in the United States of America, including strawberries , grapes , beans and asparagus ?
... that the former Smith Tavern in Armonk, New York , has been a militia headquarters, stagecoach stop, post office, parsonage , farmhouse and museum in over 200 years of existence?
... that the prisoner rehabilitation Second Chance Program , based on works of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard , was criticized during the 2010 United States Senate elections in Nevada ?
... that a telescope , high school , bridge , and locks and dam are among the places named for United States Senator Robert Byrd in the U.S. state of West Virginia ?
... that although Chris Young was voted Tu'i Manu'a Elisala by several chiefs in American Samoa , Governor Edward Stanley Kellogg denied him the title, claiming it was incompatible with the United States Constitution ?
... that Thomas H. Forsyth was denied the Medal of Honor by the United States Department of War but later received it after a petition nearly 20 years later?
... that the Kentucky attorney and politician Fuller Harding died in 2010 in the same house in which he was born in 1915?
... that John James was awarded the Medal of Honor for "gallantry in action" after defending the Lyman Train from Indian attacks for three days?
... that Brigadier General James Jackson was awarded the Medal of Honor twenty years after his actions in the pursuit of Chief Joseph following the Battle of the Clearwater in 1877?
... that Franklin Mountains State Park in El Paso , Texas , is the site of the only tin mine ever operated in the United States?
... that Bill Dague was the first consensus All-American football player from the United States Naval Academy ?
... that the clientele of Diego's Hair Salon has included politicians, diplomats, and two U.S. Supreme Court Justices ?
... that, in 2004, Portland City Grill became Oregon 's first restaurant to make Restaurants & Institutions magazine's list of the "top 100 highest-grossing independent restaurants" in the United States ?
... that some of the suspects in an alleged network of Russian spies planted in the United States were paired as couples and had children together to help maintain their covert status?
... that the Arkansas Democratic politician Hayes McClerkin in 1970 challenged Governor Winthrop Rockefeller 's "list" of militants disrupting college and university campuses?