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[Taylor Swift performing "How You Get the Girl"](/wiki/File:Taylor%5FSwift%5F7%5F%2818912291189%29.jpg "Taylor Swift performing "How You Get the Girl"")

Taylor Swift performing "How You Get the Girl"

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Samantha Harvey in 2019

Samantha Harvey

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November 18

Aftermath of the Aggie Bonfire collapse

Aftermath of the Aggie Bonfire collapse

Nobel Prize medal

Nobel Prize medal

Twenty-eight Swiss nationals have been honored with the Nobel Prize (medal pictured). Additionally, two laureates acquired Swiss citizenship through naturalization after the award: Wolfgang Pauli and Jack Steinberger. The Nobel Prize is a set of annual international awards bestowed on "those who conferred the greatest benefit on humankind" in the fields of Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, Peace, and Economic Sciences. The first Nobel Prize for Peace, awarded in 1901, went to the Swiss humanitarian Henry Dunant. The more recent Swiss laureates are Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz, who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2019. Of the twenty-eight Swiss laureates, nine were awarded the Nobel Prize for medicine, seven for chemistry, seven for physics, three for peace, and two for literature. (Full list...)

Apennine Colossus The Apennine Colossus is a stone statue, approximately 11 metres (36 feet) tall, in the estate of Villa Demidoff (originally Villa di Pratolino) in Vaglia in Tuscany, Italy. A personification of the Apennine Mountains, the colossal figure was created by Giambologna, a Flemish-born Italian sculptor, in the late 1580s. The statue has the appearance of an elderly man crouched at the shore of a lake, squeezing the head of a sea monster through whose open mouth water originally emanated into the pond in front of the statue. The colossus is depicted naked, with stalactites in the thick beard and long hair to show the metamorphosis of man and mountain, blending his body with the surrounding nature. It is made of stone and plaster and the interior houses a series of chambers and caves on three levels. Initially, the back of the statue was protected by a structure resembling a cave, which was demolished around 1690 by the sculptor Giovanni Battista Foggini, who built a statue of a dragon to adorn the back of the colossus. The Italian sculptor Rinaldo Barbetti renovated the statue in 1876. Sculpture credit: Giambologna; photographed by Rhododendrites

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