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The Holden Commodore (VE) is a full-size car that marked the introduction of the fourth generation of the Holden Commodore, a series of automobiles produced by Australian carmaker Holden. Referred to as Holden's "billion dollar baby", the company invested more than AU$1 billion in developing the car before production began on 13 July 2006; it made its public debut three days later. The VE was Holden's first project designed entirely in Australia; previous generations relied on Opel-sourced platforms. The company produced several body styles of the VE: a sedan, a ute, and a station wagon dubbed the Sportwagon. Variants by Holden's performance vehicle partner, Holden Special Vehicles, were released soon after the sedan's debut. Over the VE's production, Holden also introduced a series of changes, identified by the model year. Often ranked as Australia's annual best-selling car during production, the VE was discontinued in May 2013 and succeeded by the VF. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that transgender activist Kiara St. James (pictured) helped to end New York's Walking While Trans law?
- ... that a formerly best-selling title in the Fate franchise remained exclusive to Japan until an English fan translation was released a decade later?
- ... that German-born Katrin Bennhold has been a senior writer for The New York Times in three European capitals?
- ... that the school board of Charlotte, North Carolina, bought a defunct TV station in Florida and moved its equipment to start their own TV station?
- ... that the Torreón del Monje was the headquarters of a pigeon-shooting club?
- ... that Marvin Lowenthal went from being a silk-mill bobbin boy to writing a sixteen-century history of Jews in Germany?
- ... that Kreni-Promeni activists put up a billboard in Belgrade with attached cotton lungs that gradually darkened as they absorbed polluted air?
- ... that Shark Tank was adapted from a Japanese show that aimed to encourage entrepreneurship during a lengthy period of economic stagnation in the Japanese economy?
- ... that John Gauntlett was defeated in an election by his next-door neighbour, Charles Mompesson?
In the news
- Thirteen people are killed in a wildfire in Almería, Spain.
- A series of coordinated attacks across Pakistan's Balochistan province leaves at least forty-two people dead.
- The IOC provisionally lifts its suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee.
- In cricket, the Women's T20 World Cup concludes with Australia defeating England in the final (player of the match Beth Mooney pictured).
On this day
- 1232 – Muhammad ibn Yusuf, who later established the Emirate of Granada, the last Muslim state in Spain, was elected the ruler of Arjona.
- 1916 – Max Reger's Hebbel Requiem was first performed in a memorial concert for the composer, conducted by Philipp Wolfrum.
- 1950 – Uruguay won the decisive match of the fourth FIFA World Cup, defeating Brazil 2–1 at the Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro.
- 1951 – The Catcher in the Rye (cover pictured), an American coming-of-age novel by J. D. Salinger, was published by Little, Brown.
- 2007 – A magnitude-6.6 earthquake struck off the coast of Niigata Prefecture, Japan, causing a leak of radioactive gases from the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant.
- Yasuo Fukuda (b. 1936)
- Sergio Busquets (b. 1988)
- Evelyn Ebsworth (d. 2015)
- Connie Francis (d. 2025)
Today's featured picture
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A snifter is a type of stemware, a short-stemmed glass whose vessel has a wide bottom and a relatively narrow top. It is mostly used to serve aged brown liquors such as bourbon, brandy and whisky. This photograph shows armagnac in a pipe snifter, a variant with a glass tube to allow the liquor to be consumed from the bottom of the vessel. Photograph credit: Didier Descouens
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