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Taylor Swift
Taylor Swift

"How You Get the Girl" is a song by the American singer-songwriterTaylor Swift(pictured) from her fifth studio album,1989 (2014). She wrote it with its producers,Max Martin andShellback. Anelectropop andbubblegum pop song, it is aballad that features acoustic guitarstrums and a heavydisco beat. The lyrics find Swift telling a man how to win his ex-girlfriend back after their breakup. Some critics praised the song ascatchy and highlighted thechorus; less enthusiastic reviews considered the production generic and the lyrics lightweight. The track receivedcertifications in Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Swift included it in the set list ofthe 1989 World Tour (2015), with choreography that evoked the musical filmSingin' in the Rain (1952). She performed it on some dates of theReputation Stadium Tour (2018) andthe Eras Tour (2023–2024). The track was used in aDiet Coke advertisement prior to its release.(This article is part of afeatured topic:1989 (album).)

Did you know ...

Abigail Becker, the Angel of Long Point
Abigail Becker, the Angel of Long Point
  • ... that theAngel of Long Point(pictured) saved seventeen lives across five different incidents?
  • ... that Aboriginal Australians who first saw herds ofwater buffalo interpreted the new animals as a manifestation oftheir dreaming?
  • ... that the departure ofCarl Borgmann from the University of Vermont ended 17 years of scientists serving consecutive terms as president?
  • ... that the walls of the formerLyttelton Gaol are archaeologically significant as one of the first uses ofconcrete in New Zealand?
  • ... thatAileen Davies sang roles on the first two D'Oyly Carte Opera Company recordings using the new electrical-recording technology?
  • ... that the city ofKikwit, estimated to have a population of more than one million, had only four paved roads in 2023?
  • ... thatEd McCann chose a career in civil engineering after being dissuaded from other branches of engineering by their military applications?
  • ... that, after moving to Canada to work as a priest,Naboth Manzongo did not see his wife and children in Zimbabwe for three years due toCOVID-19–related processing delays?
  • ... thatPink Floyd escaped from its enclosure at theSedgwick County Zoo in 2005, but continued to be spotted in Texas as late as 2023?

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October 27

Christ Mocked
Christ Mocked

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Sian Beilock, Dartmouth’s 19th president
Sian Beilock, Dartmouth’s 19th president

Nineteen individuals have held the office of President of Dartmouth College, aprivateIvy Leagueresearch university inHanover, New Hampshire. Established in 1769 byroyal charter, Dartmouth is governed by itsboard of trustees. Under the board’s bylaws, the president serves as the college’s chief executive officer, is a trusteeex officio, and sits on the board’s executive committee with broad authority over academic and administrative affairs. Dartmouth’s status as a private corporation liable to its trustees under its charter was affirmed by the United States Supreme Court inDartmouth College v. Woodward (1819). The line of presidents, often called the "Wheelock succession", runs from founderEleazar Wheelock to the current officeholder,Sian Beilock(pictured), who took office on June 12, 2023, and became the college’s first woman president upon her inauguration in September 2023. (Full list...)

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Theodore Roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt (October 27, 1858 – January 6, 1919) was the 26thpresident of the United States, serving from 1901 to 1909. Roosevelt previously was involved inNew York politics, including serving as the state's33rd governor for two years. He served as the 25thvice president under PresidentWilliam McKinley for six months in 1901, assuming the presidency afterMcKinley's assassination at the age of 42, making him theyoungest person to assume the position. As president, Roosevelt emerged as a leader of theRepublican Party and became a driving force foranti-trust andProgressive Era policies.Polls of historians and political scientists rank him as one of the greatest American presidents. This photograph by thePach Brothers shows Roosevelt in 1904.

Photograph credit:Pach Brothers; restored byAdam Cuerden

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