~MarciaH
Wed, Feb 2, 2000 (16:37)
seed
Events which occurred on the date they are posted.
~MarciaH
Wed, Feb 2, 2000 (16:39)
#1
This Day in History for February 2:
** This is Groundhog Day!
It was comedian Bill Murray's least favorite day. For those of you
who have seen the 1993 movie, "Groundhog Day", you'll remember that
Bill Murray had to relive Ground Hog Day over and over again. Well,
not here, bubba!
We have the goods on just what this special day is about. Ground Hog
Day is when a bunch of folks in Punxsutawney, PA get up way before
the crack of dawn, put on tuxedos and fancy gowns, march to the city
park, and pull old Punxsutawney Phil out of his little house in a
tree trunk. Then they observe him as he goes about doing his
groundhog shadow thing. If the woodchuck (aka ground hog) doesn't see
his shadow, it means spring is on its way. If the critter sees his
shadow, it means six more weeks of winter, which upsets the folks
gathered 'round. So they fry him up for breakfast... Surely, you've
heard of 'ground chuck'? (Sorry.)
The tradition of groundhog weather watching dates back to this day in
1887, long before Willard Scott. But not that much longer.
** Events
1863 - Samuel Langhorne Clemens decided to use a pseudonym for the
first time on this very day. Now he is better remembered by the name,
Mark Twain.
1876 - Baseball's National League was born. Eight competing baseball
teams met in New York City's Grand Central Hotel. The first president
of the new league was Morgan Gardner Bulkeley, who later became a
U.S. Senator. The eight original cities with teams were: Boston,
Chicago, Cincinnati, New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Louisville
and Hartford. Two of the original teams are now in the American
League (Boston and New York) while Louisville and Hartford are now
minor-league baseball towns.
1980 - The U.S. Hockey Team won its "Do you believe in miracles?"
gold medal. Final score: U.S. 4, Finland 2. The drama had begun with
the U.S. team's upset win over the powerful Soviet team. When the
U.S. polished off Finland for the gold medal, folks all over the U.S.
decided to start believing, indeed!
1987 - In a poll conducted by "People" magazine, readers selected
Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant as their favorite, all-time acting
greats.
** Birthdays
1947 - Farrah Fawcett-Majors (actress: Charlie's Angels, The Burning
Bed; ex-Mrs. Lee Majors; Playboy pictorial [12/95])
1954 - Christie Brinkley (model: Cover Girl Cosmetics; actress:
National Lampoon's Vacation)
1954 - John (Thomas) Tudor (baseball: pitcher: Boston Red Sox,
Pittsburgh Pirates, SL Cardinals [World Series: 1985, 1987], LA
Dodgers [World Series: 1988])
** Chart Toppers from 1985
I Want to Know What Love Is - Foreigner
Easy Lover - Philip Bailey with Phil Collins
Careless Whisper - Wham! featuring George Michael
A Place to Fall Apart - Merle Haggard with Janie Fricke
** Know a friend who would like this list? Forward a copy to them!
====================================================
~MarciaH
Thu, Feb 3, 2000 (16:28)
#2
Your History for February 3:
* The Day the Music Died
February 3, 1959 was a sad day in rock 'n' roll history: 22-year-old
Buddy Holly, 28-year-old J.P. Richardson (The Big Bopper) and
17-year-old Ritchie Valens died in an airplane crash near Mason City,
Iowa. February 3rd has been remembered as "The Day the Music Died"
since Don McLean made the line popular in his 1972 hit, "American
Pie".
Buddy Holly, born Charles Hardin Holly in Lubbock, Texas, recorded
"That'll Be the Day", "Peggy Sue", "Oh, Boy", "Maybe Baby", and
others, including "It Doesn't Matter Anymore" (recorded just before
his death, a smash in the U.K., non top-10 in the U.S.). Buddy was
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986. A convincing
portrait of the singer was portrayed by Gary Busey in "The Buddy
Holly Story", a made for TV movie.
J.P. (Jiles Perry) Richardson was from Sabine Pass, TX. He held the
record for longest, continuous broadcasting as a DJ at KTRM Radio in
Beaumont, TX in 1956. He was on the air for 122 hours and eight
minutes. In addition to his smash hit, "Chantilly Lace", Richardson
also penned "Running Bear" (a hit for Johnny Preston) plus "White
Lightning" (a hit for country star, George Jones).
Richard Valenzuela lived in Pacoima, CA (near LA) and had a role in
the 1959 film, "Go Johnny Go". Ritchie Valens' two big hits were
"Donna" and "La Bamba" ... the last, the title of a 1987 film
depiction of his life. "La Bamba" also represented the first fusion
of Latin music and American rock.
Of the three young stars who died in that plane crash, the loss of
Buddy Holly reverberated the loudest over the years. But, fans of
1950s rock 'n' roll will agree, all three have been sorely missed.
** Events
1964 - Coach Adolph Rupp of the University of Kentucky got win #700
as the Wildcats defeated Georgia 108-83.
1964 - The British group, The Beatles, received its first gold record
award for the single, "I Want To Hold Your Hand". The group also won
a gold LP award for "Meet The Beatles". The album had been released
in the United States only 14 days earlier. Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!
1984 - A sellout crowd of 18,210 at Madison Square Garden in New York
City saw Carl Lewis best his own world record in the long jump by
9-1/4 inches.
1989 - Former first baseman Bill White was the first African American
to head a major professional sports league in the United States. He
became National League president this day.
** Birthdays
1945 - Bob Griese (football: Miami Dolphins quarterback: Super Bowl
VI, VII, VIII)
1950 - Morgan Fairchild (Patsy McClenny) (actress: Dallas, Flamingo
Road, North and South, Pee Wee's Big Adventure, Writer's Block)
1952 - Fred (Fredric Michael) Lynn (baseball: Boston Red Sox: [Rookie of the
Year: 1975/World Series: 1975/AL Baseball Writers' Award:
1975/all-star: 1975-1980], California Angels [all-star: 1981-1983],
Baltimore Orioles, Detroit Tigers, SD Padres)
** Chart Toppers for 1986
That's What Friends are For - Dionne & Friends
Burning Heart - Survivor
I'm Your Man - Wham!
Just in Case - The Forester Sisters
~MarciaH
Fri, Feb 4, 2000 (21:36)
#3
Know Your History for February 4:
* This is USO Day!
On this day in 1941, the Salvation Army, the YMCA and YWCA, the
National Catholic Community Services, the National Travelers Aid
Association and the National Jewish Welfare Board pooled their
resources, at the request of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, to
form a new organization. The United Service Organizations was created
to provide unduplicated recreational services to members of the U.S.
Armed Forces who were on leave.
USO centers became the GI's home away from home, providing a meeting
place, a quiet place, religious counsel, entertainment and free
coffee and doughnuts. The USO at once became synonymous with the
entertainment of American troops. During World War II, USO Camp Shows
entertained on the home front and overseas. The Korean War, Viet Nam,
peace time stations, Desert Storm, Somalia ... anywhere, anytime
there is an American in the Armed Forces, the USO is there.
The USO's mission has changed since its inception; its objective is
to enhance the quality of life of U.S. Armed Forces personnel and to
create a partnership between the military and civilian communities
worldwide.
This volunteer, civilian organization, although chartered by
Congress, is not part of the U.S. government; yet without it, the men
and women in the U.S. Armed Forces would be isolated from civilian
influences and without a place to call home.
* Events
1913 - Louis Perlman of New York City received a patent for his
famous demountable tire-carrying rims. We call them wheels.
1938 - The play, "Our Town", by Thornton Wilder, opened in New York
City at the Henry Miller Theatre. The play was a Pulitzer
prize-winner for the writer.
1987 - The show-biz world was saddened when Liberace died at his Palm
Springs, CA estate. He was 67. Lee, as he was known, was the master
of Las Vegas. Hundreds of thousands flock to his museum there
(operated by his brother, George) to see Liberace's garish suits,
trademark candelabra, and learn of the myths behind this hugely
successful star of television, stage and concerts the world over.
* Birthdays
1921 - Betty Friedan (Goldstein) (feminist author: The Feminine
Mystique; founder of the National Organization for Women [NOW])
1923 - Conrad Bain (actor: Mork & Mindy, Postcards from the Edge, Bananas)
1945 - David Brenner (comedian, talk-show host: The David Brenner
Show, Nightlife)
1947 - Dan Quayle (44th Vice President of the United States under
President George Bush)
* Chart Toppers - 1987
At This Moment - Billy Vera & The Beaters
Open Your Heart - Madonna
Land of Confusion - Genesis
You Still Move Me - Dan Seals
~MarciaH
Sat, Feb 5, 2000 (11:34)
#4
Know Your History for February 5:
** This is Bobbie Day!
London's finest, known as Bobbies, were named after Robert Peel, who
was born on this day in 1788, in Lancashire, England.
Robert aka Bobbie Peel was an English statesman who first established
the Irish constabulary. The people commonly called this police
organization 'Peelers' after Mr. Peel.
Then, when Robert Peel became Home Secretary of England, he
reorganized the London police. It was 1829 and London's populace had
grown to the point that it needed an organized police force to
question travelers after dark, hold all suspicious persons and quell
any disturbances. (There were already special police to guard docks
and markets and to serve notices and warrants.) Peel organized a paid
and trained force for day and night duty called the Metropolitan
Police of London. Once again, the people nicknamed the police after
Peel.
They have been referred to as Bobbies ever since.
** Events
1953 - Walt Disney's film, "Peter Pan", opened at the Roxy Theatre in
New York City. Although the film is now recognized as a great work,
not all of the critics in 1953 took to the Disney stylization of the
J.M. Barrie play.
1972 - Bob Douglas became the first black man elected to the
Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, MA. Douglas not only coached
the New York Renaissance, an all-black team which won 88 consecutive
games in 1933, he owned the team.
1987 - The Dow Jones industrial average closed above the 2,200-point
mark for the first time. The market closed at 2201.49.
** Birthdays
1900 - Adlai Stevenson (Democratic party candidate for US president
[1952, 1956]; governor of Illinois, UN representative from U.S.
[1961-1965]; passed away July 14, 1965)
1934 - Hank (Henry Louis) Aaron ('Hammerin' Hank': Baseball Hall of
Famer: Milwaukee Braves [all-star: 1955-1965, 1975/World Series:
1957, 1958], Atlanta Braves [all-star: 1965-1974]; home run champ
[755]: eclipsed Babe Ruth's record of 714; baseball executive:
Atlanta Braves)
1942 - Roger Staubach (football: Dallas Cowboys QB: Super Bowl V, VI,
X, XII, XIII; Heisman Trophy Winner: Navy [1963])
** Chart Toppers - 1988
Need You Tonight - INXS
Could've Been - Tiffany
Hazy Shade of Winter - Bangles
Wheels - Restless Heart
~MarciaH
Sun, Feb 6, 2000 (15:46)
#5
Know Your History for February 6:
** This is Win One for the Gipper Day!
The 40th president [1981-1989] of the United States and once governor
of California [1967-1975], Ronald Wilson Reagan, was born on this day
in 1911. Reagan also served six terms as president of the Screen
Actors Guild, leading the union of members in his other career:
acting.
It was acting that brought Ronald Reagan the recognition and
notoriety that led to his most successful career in politics.
However, it has been written that he had only one notable performance
-- in the film, "King's Row" [1941]; although most of us remember his
many performances as the host (and, sometimes, the star) of "General
Electric Theatre" [1954-1962] and "Death Valley Days" [1965-1966];
and role as George Gipp in the 1940 movie, "Knute Rockne,
All-American". Reagan resurrected the line (from the movie), "Win one
for the Gipper," during his presidency as a way to gather support for
his anticommunist, conservative Republican policies.
Comedians used his role in the 1951 movie, "Bedtime for Bonzo", to
gain yucks and guffaws during the Reagan Years (two presidential
terms). The personable, good-natured President was once married to
actress, Jane Wyman ("Falcon Crest"); but former actress, Nancy
Davis, has been his wife for many years. Son, Michael, is a radio
talk-show host. Son, Ron, has appeared frequently on television (even
in his underwear on "Saturday Night Live") and daughter, Patty, is a
writer.
Age has played Ronald Reagan a cruel hand, as he suffers from
Alzheimer's disease. It would be good to "win one for the Gipper" now.
** Events
1943 - Frank Sinatra made his debut as vocalist on radio's "Your Hit
Parade" this night. Frankie had left the Tommy Dorsey Band just four
months prior to beginning the radio program. He was described as,
"...the biggest name in the business."
1971 - NASA Astronaut Alan B. Shepard took a six-iron that he had
stashed away inside his spacecraft and swung at three golf balls on
the surface of the moon. Shepard whiffed the first swing, so, he got
a 'Mulligan' on that one. The others were good, crisp shots that
went, oh, a few hundred yards in the vacuum of space. Due to the
bulkiness of his moonwalk suit, however, he didn't quite get enough
of a swing to launch the golf balls into orbit. But he did take a
couple of divots. Boy, what he might have done with a driver or
three-wood. Fore!
1985 - The noted French mineral water company, Perrier, debuted its
first new product in 123 years. On grocery shelves and in trendy
establishments, one could find water with a twist of lemon, lime or
orange added to the well-established popular product line.
** Birthdays
1895 - Babe (George Herman) Ruth ('The Sultan of Swat', 'The
Bambino': Baseball Hall of Famer: Boston Red Sox pitcher [won 89
games over six seasons/World Series: 1915, 1916, 1918], NY Yankees
outfielder [World Series: 1921-1923, 1926-1928, 1932/60 home runs in
1927/all-star: 1933, 1934], Boston Braves; 714 home runs in 22
seasons; passed away August, 16, 1948)
1911 - Ronald Wilson Reagan (40th U.S. President [1981-1989]; see Win
One for the Gipper Day [above])
1917 - Zsa Zsa (Sari) Gabor (actress: Boy's Night Out, Moulin Rouge,
Ninotchka; Beverly Hills police slapper)
1940 - Tom Brokaw (news anchor: NBC Nightly News, Today; author: The
Greatest Generation)
** Chart Toppers - 1989
When I'm with You - Sheriff
Straight Up - Paula Abdul
When the Children Cry - White Lion
What I'd Say - Earl Thomas Conley
~MarciaH
Mon, Feb 7, 2000 (21:13)
#6
Know Your History for February 7:
** Today is Eubie Day!
Pianist, bandleader and writer of 1,000 songs, James Hubert Blake was
born this day in 1883 in Baltimore, Maryland.
Better known to music aficionados the world over as Eubie, Blake
learned his trade from W. Llewellyn Wilson, piano teacher of New
York's black music teachers and entertainers in the 1920s. By the
time Eubie was sixteen, he was entertaining in cafes in Baltimore and
writing songs like "Charleston". Vaudeville was his stage in 1915
when he teamed with Noble Sissle. They had a hit song, "It's All Your
Fault" and produced the musical, "Shufflin' Along". Its hit songs
were composed by Eubie ("Love Will Find a Way" and "I'm Just Wild
About Harry"). (The latter became the theme song for the 1948 U.S.
presidential election campaign for Harry S Truman.)
Blake also worked on other Broadway shows: "Chocolate Dandies",
"Blackbirds of 1930" (which produced another favorite Eubie hit,
"Memories of You"), "Shuffle Along of 1932", "Atrocities of 1932",
"Swing It", "Tan Manhattan", "Brownskin Models" and "Hit the Stride"
(the last was accomplished in his 72nd year).
WWII troops, ragtime enthusiasts, jazz audiences, concert goers and
TV viewers have all had the pleasure of being entertained by Eubie
Blake. His honors were many, including playing at U.S. President
Jimmy Carter's 1978 jazz party, receiving the Presidential Medal of
Freedom [1981], kudos from ASCAP on his 90th birthday and recording
on his own label almost to his 100th birthday.
Eubie Blake died five days after his 100th year. Fans the world over
will always honor him by listening to his music.
** Events
1882 - The last bareknuckle fight for the heavyweight boxing
championship took place in Mississippi City. John L. Sullivan punched
Paddy Ryan's lights out and sent him to nighty-night land in round
nine. Ouch! Sleep well...
1940 - Movie fans watched the world premiere of the Walt Disney
animation, "Pinocchio", at the Center Theatre in Manhattan. The
showing followed that of "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" as
Disney's second feature-length film. One critic called the show, "The
happiest event since the war." We are still arguing about the meaning
of that statement. Let us know if you can figure it out...
1964 - More than 3,000 fans jammed Kennedy Airport in New York as
Beatlemania invaded the U.S. The Beatles, John Lennon, Paul
McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr arrived for their first
U.S. visit (including an appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show"). The
'Fab Four' controlled the top spot on the pop music charts for the
next 15 weeks and owned the top of the album charts for 10 weeks.
"Meet The Beatles", indeed!
1985 - "Sports Illustrated" released its annual swimsuit edition. It
was the biggest regular edition in the magazine's history, weighing
in at 218 pages. Paulina Porizkova joined Cheryl Tiegs and Christie
Brinkley as the only models to make the cover more than once.
1985 - "New York, New York" became the official anthem of the Big
Apple. The announcement was made by then New York mayor, Ed "How'm I
Doin'?" Koch. Sinatra fans rejoiced at the honor.
** Birthdays
1885 - (Harry) Sinclair Lewis (1st American Nobel prize-winning
author [1930]: Elmer Gantry; refused Pulitzer prize: Arrowsmith
[1926]; Main Street; passed away Jan 10, 1951)
1951 - Benny Ayala (baseball: NY Mets, St. Louis Cardinals, Baltimore
Orioles [World Series:1979, 1983], Cleveland Indians)
1962 - (Troyal) Garth Brooks (Grammy Award-winning singer: In
Another's Eyes [1998 w/Trisha Yearwood]; Friends in Low Places, The
Thunder Rolls; LPs: Ropin' the Wind [first LP in history to debut at
#1 on Billboard's pop and country charts], The Chase, In Pieces,
Fresh Horses, Sevens, Double Live; has sold over 80 million albums --
second only to The Beatles)
** Chart Toppers - 1982
Centerfold - The J. Geils Band
Harden My Heart - Quarterflash
Turn Your Love Around - George Benson
Lonely Nights - Mickey Gilley
~MarciaH
Tue, Feb 8, 2000 (13:42)
#7
Know Your History for February 8:
** This is Boy Scouts Day!
William D. Boyce of Chicago, Illinois incorporated the Boy Scouts of
America on this day in 1910. He didn't, however, conceptualize the
scouting movement -- the Boy Scouts were originated by Englishman,
Sir Robert S.S. Baden-Powell.
It seems that Mr. Boyce was visiting England and one foggy day in
London town, he lost his way. A young boy guided him, but refused any
monetary reward. A surprised Mr. Boyce queried as to why. The boy
replied that he was a Scout and Scouts did not accept a reward for
doing a good turn. This gesture of good will so inspired Boyce that
he searched out Baden-Powell to learn more about the British Scouts.
Upon his return to the United States, he formed the Boy Scouts of
America.
Boyce's Scouts, and all those who followed, included along with their
good deeds, outdoor camping, community service projects and other fun
and educational projects. These are all part of the merit badge
system for boys from eleven to seventeen years of age. Younger boys
start out as Cub Scouts and older young men join the Explorers post.
Salute a Boy Scout today!
** Events
1924 - General John Joseph Carty of the Bell Telephone System spoke
in Chicago, IL. His speech was carried across the nation on the first
coast-to-coast radio hookup. An estimated 50-million people heard the
speech.
1963 - Lamar Hunt, owner of the American Football League franchise in
Dallas, TX, moved the operation to Kansas City. He named the new
team, the Chiefs. Dallas got possession of an NFL franchise known as
the Cowboys.
1985 - "The Dukes of Hazzard" ended its 6-1/2 year run on CBS
television. The series was credited with using more stunt men than
any other TV series in history. The show had used as many as eight
cars per episode when the crash sequences got complicated. Waylon
Jennings did the theme song, "The Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol' Boys)".
1986 - Billy Olson, who actually claimed that he was afraid of
heights, broke an indoor pole vault record for the seventh time in
four months. He vaulted 19 feet, 5-1/2 inches.
** Birthdays
1828 - Jules Verne ('the father of science fiction': writer: 20,000
Leagues Under the Sea, Around the World in Eighty Days)
1925 - Jack Lemmon (John Uhler III) (Academy Award-winning actor: Mr.
Roberts [1955], The Apartment [1960], Save the Tiger [1973]; The Odd
Couple, Grumpy Old Men, Some Like It Hot, The China Syndrome, Airport
'77, The Fortune Cookie, Irma La Douce, Days of Wine and Roses, Bell,
Book and Candle)
1940 - Ted Koppel (journalist; anchor: Nightline)
1941 - Nick Nolte (actor: Down and Out in Beverly Hills, The Deep,
Blue Chips, 48 Hours, The Prince of Tides, Extreme Prejudice)
** Chart Toppers - 1991
The First Time - Surface
Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now) - C & C Music Factory
featuring Freedom Williams
Play that Funky Music - Vanilla Ice
Daddy's Come Around - Paul Overstreet
~MarciaH
Wed, Feb 9, 2000 (20:26)
#8
Your History for February 9:
** This is Weather Bureau Day!
In 1870, the United States Weather Bureau was authorized by Congress.
We think people always just sat around and talked about the weather,
but it took an act of Congress to do something about it! The weather
bureau is officially known as the National Weather Service (NWS) and
is a department of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA).
The National Weather Service protects the life and property of U.S.
citizens by issuing forecasts and warnings for natural disasters such
as hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and severe weather conditions. NWS
communicates this information to the populace through an intricate
and varied network. The NOAA Weather Wire Service or NWWS is the
primary satellite communications system for NWS transmission.
Warnings and other services are delivered in this manner to
newspapers, radio and TV stations and emergency agencies. More than
6400 individual products are transmitted every day.
NWS also generates data to be delivered to the public over a
nationwide network of FM radio transmitter sites. Most of the U.S.
including Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam and American Samoa
can receive these broadcasts. Cable TV weather channels and AM radio
channels also broadcast this information.
** Events
1895 - The first college basketball game was played as Minnesota
State School of Agriculture defeated the Porkers of Hamline College,
9-3. That was basketball at its finest, folks...
1964 - Several days after their arrival in the U.S., the Beatles made
the first of three record-breaking appearances on "The Ed Sullivan
Show". The audience viewing the Fab Four was estimated at 73,700,000
people in TV land. The Beatles sang "She Loves You" and "I Want to
Hold Your Hand". One could barely hear the songs above the screams of
the girls in the audience.
1969 - The Boeing 747 flew its inaugural flight this day. The
milestone ushered in the age of the jumbo jet.
** Birthdays
1914 - Carmen Miranda (de Cunha) ('Brazilian Bombshell': singer: Mama
Eu Quero, The Lady with the Tutti Frutti Hat; dancer, actress:
Copacabana, Springtime in the Rockies, Down Argentine Way; Chiquita
Banana)
1928 - Roger Mudd (newsman: CBS News, NBC News, PBS)
1945 - Mia Farrow (Maria de Lourdes Villers) (actress: Peyton Place,
Hannah and Her Sisters, Rosemary's Baby; ex-Mrs. Frank Sinatra;
ex-Mrs. Woody Allen)
** Chart Toppers - 1984
Karma Chameleon - Culture Club
Joanna - Kool & The Gang
Running with the Night - Lionel Richie
Show Her - Ronnie Milsap
=======================================================
~MarciaH
Thu, Feb 10, 2000 (15:10)
#9
Your History for February 10:
** This is Fit News Day!
How did the newspaper that holds a top-ranking position in journalism
get to such enviable heights? The publishers, editors and writers
obviously believed in its slogan. "All the news that's fit to print"
has appeared on the front page of "The New York Times" since this day
in 1897.
Henry J. Raymond and two associates started "The New York Times" in
1851. It began as a penny paper ... one cent for news vs. the
six-cent political rags of the day. In October of 1896, the paper
held a contest offering readers a one-hundred-dollar prize if they
could come up with a better slogan ... in ten words or less ... than
"All the news that's fit to print." No one did.
And no one has, since. Over one million people read "The New York
Times" every day, making it the seventh most-read paper in the world
and the third in the United States, behind "The Wall Street Journal"
and "USA Today".
** Events
1934 - The first imperforated, ungummed sheets of postage stamps were
issued by the U.S. Postal Service in New York City. Talk about
inconvenience! One had to cut the stamps out of the sheet and then
put some glue on the back to get them to stick on an envelope.
Fortunately, the Postal Service changed this idea after many
complaints. Letters were, literally, gumming up the works...
1956 - Elvis Presley wiggled his way through "Heartbreak Hotel" this
day for RCA Records in Nashville, TN. The record received two gold
records, one for each side. The hit on the other side was "I Was the
One". For those wanting to know even more trivia that will make you a
big hit at cocktail parties, tell your friends that the first known
million-seller was by Ben Selvin back in 1919. It, too, was a two
sided hit, featuring "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" and "Darandella".
Now, you really are up to date!
1985 - One of the Houston Rockets' 'Twin Towers',
seven-foot-four-inch Ralph Sampson (the Rockets star center), scored
24 points to lead the West over the East, 140-129 in the NBA All-Star
Game in Indianapolis, IN. Sampson was named the games' Most Valuable
Player.
** Birthdays
1890 - Boris Pasternak (poet, writer: Doctor Zhivago)
1893 - Jimmy Durante (actor, comedian: "Good night Mrs. Calabash,
wherever you are."; Ziegfeld Follies, The Man Who Came to Dinner, It
Happened in Brooklyn, The Jimmy Durante Show)
1950 - Mark Spitz (swimmer: U.S. Olympic 9-time gold medal winner,
the most gold medals won by an individual [seven in 1972 and 2 in
1968])
** Chart Toppers
I Want to Know What Love Is - Foreigner
Easy Lover - Philip Bailey with Phil Collins
Careless Whisper - Wham! featuring George Michael
Ain't She Somethin' Else - Conway Twitty
~MarciaH
Fri, Feb 11, 2000 (16:46)
#10
History for February 11:
** This is Inventor's Day!
Who could have guessed that when little Thomas Alva Edison entered
the world on this day in 1847 the world would never be the same.
Little Al (his folks called him Alva or Al) was a curious child,
always asking questions. When he didn't get an answer, he'd try to
figure it out for himself by experimenting. His incessant questions
exasperated his school teacher so much that Al's mother had to take
him out of school after only three months. A lack of formal education
didn't stop Thomas Edison. He is now considered the greatest inventor
in history. In 1928, the U.S. Congress awarded a gold medal to Thomas
Edison for "development and application of inventions that have
revolutionized civilization in the last century."
His first invention was an automated telegraph message machine. He
attached a gadget to a clock that would send a signal even if he was
asleep. From then on, Edison invented more than 2000 gadgets, holding
1,093 patents, some which improved the inventions of others, like the
telephone, typewriter, motion pictures, the electric generator and
electric-powered trains. He was very close to inventing the radio; he
predicted the use of atomic energy, and received $40,000 for his
stock-ticker patents. And Al was only going to ask for $5,000, hoping
to get $3,000.
He is also credited with inventions such as the storage battery, a
cement mixer, the dictaphone, a duplicating machine ... even a way to
make synthetic rubber. Edison received so many awards for his
accomplishments that he once joked, "I have to measure them by the
quart."
One of the world's most original inventions, the phonograph, was also
Thomas Edison's favorite. But, the invention that virtually changed
the world forever was his electric incandescent light bulb.
A century later, the genius of Thomas Alva Edison still permeates
every part of our lives. He died October 18, 1931, but if he was
alive today, we are sure he would still remain humble and insist that
his genius was "one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration."
** Events
1752 - Through the efforts of Benjamin Franklin, the Pennsylvania
Hospital opened. It was the very first hospital in America.
1943 - General Dwight David Eisenhower was selected to command the
allied armies in Europe. The General's efforts in World War II made
him so popular that he was elected President of the United States
less than a decade later.
1966 - Willie Mays became the highest-paid baseball player in either
league as he signed a two-year contract with the San Francisco Giants
for a salary of about $130,000 a year.
1987 - North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith got his 600th
career coaching win as the Tar Heels defeated Wake Forest 94-85. At
the time, Smith had 600 wins and 173 losses in his 26-year coaching
career.
1990 - James 'Buster' Douglas knocked out Mike Tyson in the 10th
round to grab the heavyweight boxing crown for himself. Douglas went
into that bout in Tokyo a 35-1 underdog.
** Birthdays
1847 - Thomas Alva Edison (inventor of more than 1000 patented ideas;
see Inventor's Day [above])
1919 - Eddie Robinson (football coach: record for most victories in
overall NCAA competition [388])
1926 - Eva Gabor (actress: Green Acres, Gigi, The Last Time I Saw Paris)
** Chart Toppers
That's What Friends are For - Dionne & Friends
Burning Heart - Survivor
I'm Your Man - Wham!
Hurt - Juice Newton
~MarciaH
Sat, Feb 12, 2000 (17:15)
#11
History for February 12:
** This is Honest Abe Day!
His life was what America was all about. An average boy, born on this
day in 1809 on a farm in a log cabin in Hodgenville, Kentucky, was
able to become the 16th President of the United States.
He studied hard, by the light of a fireplace, to become first, a
lawyer, then a statesman. Abraham Lincoln, one of the most revered
U.S. Presidents, served his country during one of the most turbulent
times in its history. The term of his presidency (1861 - 1865)
encompassed the Civil War between the States. His "Emancipation
Proclamation" made on January 1, 1863 to free slaves; and his
"Gettysburg Address" given on November 19, 1863 at the site of one of
the most famous battlegrounds of the Civil War are still held high as
classic statements of democratic beliefs and goals.
President Lincoln was also responsible for one of the most popular
holidays in the U.S.: Thanksgiving Day. He proclaimed that the last
Thursday of November shall be observed as such. And so it was, and
still is.
Abraham Lincoln lived during tragic times and died a tragic death.
While watching a performance of "Our American Cousin" at Washington's
Ford Theatre, he was shot by John Wilkes Booth and died a few hours
later. Lincoln was the first U.S. President to be assassinated.
'Honest Abe' earned his nickname when he was practicing law in
Illinois. It was his unfailing honesty that made him known throughout
the state. When convinced that his client was right, he could argue
the case strongly. If not convinced, he was hardly powerful in his
client's defense. Lincoln would persuade clients to settle out of
court even though that meant he would receive a lesser fee. And, when
this was not possible, he could argue a case equally as well before a
judge or before an uneducated jury. To Abe Lincoln, being a lawyer or
President meant seeking the truth for client or for country.
** Events
1918 - All theatres in New York City were shut down in an effort to
conserve coal.
1924 - Calvin Coolidge, known by many as the 'Silent President', made
the first presidential political speech on radio. The speech
originated from New York City and was broadcast on five radio
stations. Some five million people tuned in to hear the President
speak.
1973 - The State of Ohio went metric, becoming the first in the U.S.
to post metric distance signs along Interstate 71. These new signs
showed the distance in both miles and kilometers. The metric system,
though standard in many nations around the world, never quite caught
on in the United States, except on major-league baseball stadium
fences -- and on that highway in Ohio.
** Birthdays
1809 - Charles Darwin (naturalist: theory of evolution: On the Origin
of the Species by Means of Natural Selection, Preservation of
Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life, The Descent of Man and
Selection in Relation to Sex)
1809 - Abraham Lincoln (16th U.S. President [1861-1865]: assasinated
April 16, 1865; see Honest Abe Day [above]) 1880 - John L. Lewis
(U.S. labor leader: United Mine Workers of America)
1955 - Arsenio Hall (Emmy Award-winning TV talk-show host: Emmy
Award-winning TV talk-show host: The Arsenio Hall Show Show [1990,
1993]; MTV Video Music Awards [1988-1991], The Late Show, The 1/2
Hour Comedy Hour; actor: Harlem Nights Coming to America, Amazon
Women on the Moon, Martial Law; entertainer: Thicke of the Night,
Motown Revue)
** Chart Toppers - 1987
Open Your Heart - Madonna
Livin' on a Prayer - Bon Jovi
Change of Heart - Cyndi Lauper
Leave Me Lonely - Gary Morris
~MarciaH
Sun, Feb 13, 2000 (18:58)
#12
History for February 13, 2000
** This is American Gothic Day!
The artist who is most remembered for portraying the architecture,
landscape and people of 1930s Midwestern U.S. was born on this day in
1892, in Anamosa, Iowa. Grant Wood studied at the University of Iowa,
taught there and made Iowa the focus of his paintings.
Wood was not only a teacher, but a printer, sculptor, woodworker and
one of America's first 'regionalist' painters. His was a style that
was purely American. He portrayed scenes of Midwestern rural life as
well as simplified, childlike versions of American history. His first
works were unique in that they combined photographic realism with
satire. His painting, "Daughters of the Revolution" was an example of
Wood's beginning style. "Dinner for Threshers", "Young Corn", "Fall
Plowing" and "Stone City" are representative of his Middle Western
realism.
And, there is hardly a soul who hasn't viewed the most famous Grant
Wood, "American Gothic". It has appeared in satirical situations on
television, in magazines and newspapers. Its fame is such that many
who have seen it have never even been in an art museum, yet "American
Gothic" is recognizable just the same. The painting of the
puritanical farmer and his wife, the farmer holding a pitchfork, is
on display at The Art Institute of Chicago.
** Events
1971 - The Osmonds, a family singing group from Ogden, Utah, began a
five-week stay at the top of the pop music charts with the hit, "One
Bad Apple". The song, featuring the voice of little Donny Osmond,
also showcased the talent of Alan, Wayne, Merrill and Jay Osmond. The
brothers were regulars on Andy Williams' TV show from 1962 to 1967.
The group began as a religious and barbershop quartet in 1959.
Together, the Osmonds scored with 10 singles in four years -- four of
them were top ten hits.
1985 - The Dow Jones industrial average closed at a record high of
1297.92 after it topped the 1300 mark earlier in the trading session.
The market went on to post an increase of 21.31 points for the day.
1986 - In a report issued on this day by the Association of Secondary
School Principals, it was revealed that high school salaries for U.S.
principals topped $70,000. The lowest salary reported for a high
school principal was $15,200. The average salary for a high school
principal was $49,670. On average, a principal would hand out more
than 1,342,328,321 hours of detention in his or her career.
** Birthdays
1885 - Bess Truman (Wallace) (wife of 33rd U.S. President Harry S Truman)
1923 - Chuck Yeager (pilot: broke sound barrier; featured in movie:
The Right Stuff)
** Chart Toppers
Could've Been - Tiffany
Seasons Change - Expose
I Want to Be Your Man - Roger
Wheels - Restless Heart
~MarciaH
Mon, Feb 14, 2000 (14:17)
#13
Your History for February 14:
** This is Valentine's Day!
Sometime during the 1st century, the conservative right thought there
should be something else to do on this date than to observe the
ancient pagan holiday of Lupercalia. For those who don't remember --
or can't remember -- Lupercalia was an ancient Roman fertility
festival. Instead of revelry and sacrificing goats and dogs, it was
determined that two Christian martyrs should be celebrated. Both were
named St. Valentine. One of the saints was a priest and doctor who
was beaten and beheaded while on the Flaminian Way, Rome, Italy in
the year 269. A year later, the Bishop of Terni met the same fate in
the same place.
Something got lost in the translation and the two celebrations became
one. St. Valentine's Day, the most widely celebrated unofficial
holiday, is a modern-day fertility rite. (There's even an old legend
that says birds choose their mates on this day.)
This is the day that lovers of all ages give tokens of affection to
each other; with kisses accompanied by flowers, candy or romantic,
candlelit dinners. Thoughts of love are traded between lovers; often
expressed in greeting card form or with sunset, moonlight, a glass of
wine and thou!
Hearts and flowers to you on this Valentine's Day!
** Events
1899 - Voting machines for use in federal elections were approved by
the U.S. Congress on this day.
1966 - Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia 76ers set a National
Basketball Association record as he reached a career high of 20,884
points after seven seasons as a pro basketball player.
1972 - The musical, "Grease", opened at the Eden Theatre in New York
City. The play later moved to the Broadhurst Theatre on Broadway
where it became the longest-running musical ever with 3,388
performances. A hit movie based on the stage play starred John
Travolta and Olivia Newton-John and produced the hit song, "Grease",
by Frankie Valli, "You're the One That I Want" and "Summer Nights" by
Travolta and Newton-John.
** Birthdays
1859 - George Ferris (inventor: Ferris wheel)
1946 - Gregory Hines (dancer, actor: Renaissance Man, Tap, The Cotton
Club, Eubie!)
1960 - Meg Tilly (actress: Journey, Body Snatchers, The Two Jakes,
Agnes of God, Psycho 2, The Big Chill, Winnetka Road)
** Chart Toppers - 1989
Straight Up - Paula Abdul
Wild Thing - Tone Loc
Born to Be My Baby - Bon Jovi
Song of the South - Alabama
~MarciaH
Tue, Feb 15, 2000 (20:59)
#14
History for February 15:
** This is Reaper Day!
What do you do when there are too few hands to harvest the crops and
there are miles and miles of flat, stoneless prairie on which to grow
crops? You build a mechanical reaper. And that's exactly what Cyrus
Hall McCormick did.
McCormick, who was born on this day in 1809 on a farm in Walnut
Grove, Virginia, had watched his father's unsuccessful attempts at
building a reaper. Cyrus was bound and determined to succeed where
his father had failed. So he went about the task of building a
mechanical reaper which he tested in a Virginia wheat field. By his
25th birthday, he had improved the reaper enough to get a patent for
it. Then, at the age of 38, with sixty dollars in his pocket, Cyrus
went to Chicago where he set up a reaper factory.
The time and place were right for reaping ... the rich prairie
wheatlands of the United States were being developed. Little did
Cyrus McCormick know that he was creating the machine that would be
second only to the railroad in the development of the United States,
a symbol of the mechanical revolution in agriculture.
McCormick survived two decades of court battles to gain patent rights
for reaper parts. He purchased other patents and made his company a
leader in reapers. His invention had achieved worldwide notoriety and
he became a millionaire before his fortieth birthday as head of The
McCormick Harvesting Machine Company.
Cyrus Hall McCormick died on May 13, 1884. 18 years later, his
company merged into what we now know as International Harvester
Company. And the world has been reaping the benefits of his wonderful
machine ever since.
** Events
1758 - Mustard, that tangy, yellow stuff made for hot dogs and
hamburgers, was advertised for the first time in America. Who do you
think was responsible for bringing mustard to the U.S.A.? No, not
French's, nor Grey Poupon. It was Benjamin Franklin. We wonder
whether Ben preferred the yellow or the dark mustard -- and what he
would have thought of the many uses of mustard in haute cuisine.
1842 - Adhesive postage stamps were used for the first time by the
City Dispatch Post (Office) in New York City. They probably tasted
just like today's adhesive lick 'em and stick 'em stamps. Maybe
flavored postage stamps will be the next great idea. Remember that
you read about it first right here.
1965 - Canada displayed its new red and white Maple Leaf flag, which
replaced the old Red Ensign standard.
1978 - Boxer Leon Spinks defeated Muhammad Ali to win the universally
recognized heavyweight boxing crown. Spinks won a split decision over
Ali, who had held the title for seven years. The 24-year-old
challenger had only seven professional fights to his credit. The
title bout was held in the Pavilion at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas.
** Birthdays
1803 - John Sutter (early California settler: owned Sutter's Mill
near Sacramento, site of first gold strike in U.S.)
1812 - Charles Tiffany (jeweler who had a lot of breakfasts at his
store; name synonymous with highest quality jewelry)
1954 - Matt Groening (cartoonist: The Simpsons)
** Chart Toppers - 1990
Opposites Attract - Paula Abdul with The Wild Pair
Two to Make It Right - Seduction
Janie's Got a Gun - Aerosmith
Southern Star - Alabama
~MarciaH
Wed, Feb 16, 2000 (13:44)
#15
History for February 16:
** This is Goodson-Todman Day!
"That's three down. We move now to Arlene Francis." On this day in
1950, Arlene Francis, Dorothy Kilgallen, humorist Hal Block, and
Louis Untermeyer joined host John Daly as one of the classics of
early television debuted on CBS. "What's My Line" stayed on the air
for 17 years -- the longest-running game show in the history of
prime-time network television -- and launched one of TV's biggest
production companies: that of Mark Goodson and Bill Todman.
During many years in the television industry, the Goodson-Todman name
became famous for such hit game shows as "I've Got a Secret", "Beat
the Clock", "The Name's the Same", "To Tell the Truth", "The Price is
Right" and "The Match Game". What many people don't know is that Mark
Goodson and Bill Todman also produced a dramatic anthology, "The
Web", which aired on CBS-TV from July 1950 through September 1954 and
then on NBC-TV (for four months) in 1957.
As the announcer for these shows would say, "This program is a Mark
Goodson - Bill Todman Production."
** Events
1963 - The Beatles moved to the top of the British rock charts with
"Please, Please Me" exactly one month after the record was released.
It was the start of the Beatles domination of the British music
charts, as well as the beginning of the British Invasion in America
and elsewhere around the world.
1968 - Elvis Presley received a gold record for his sacred album of
hymns, "How Great Thou Art". Despite his popularity in the pop music
world, Elvis won only 3 Grammy Awards -- one for this album, the
Lifetime Achievement Award in 1970; then for "He Touched Me" in 1972.
He did, however, receive over a dozen Grammy nominations.
** Birthdays
1957 - LeVar Burton (actor: Alex Haley's Roots, Star Trek: Next Generation)
1959 - John McEnroe (tennis' bad boy for his frequent outbursts on
the tennis court: Wimbledon Men's Singles Champion [1981,83, 84];
U.S. Open Men's Singles Champion: [1979, 80, 81, 84])
1961 - Andy Taylor (musician: guitar: group: Duran Duran: Planet
Earth, Hungry like the Wolf, Save a Prayer, Rio, Is There Something I
Should Know, Union of the Snake, Wild Boys)
** Chart Toppers 0 1991
Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now) - C & C Music
Factory featuring Freedom Williams
All the Man that I Need - Whitney Houston
One More Try - Timmy -T-
Brother Jukebox - Mark Chesnutt
=======================================================
~MarciaH
Thu, Feb 17, 2000 (17:42)
#16
History for February 17:
** This is PTA Day!
The National Congress of Mothers was organized on this day in 1897 in
Washington, DC by Alice McLellan Birney and Phoebe Apperson Hearst.
At first, the objectives of the organization were devoted to child
study. The National Congress urged parents to study the school
curriculums that were being used in the schools their children
attended. The Congress also suggested that parents, both mothers and
fathers, should take reading courses that provided information about
children and schooling.
The group later changed its name to the National Congress of Parents
and Teachers or the NPTA with local groups known as the PTA
(Parent-Teacher Associations). The first State Congress of the NPTA
was organized in New York in 1897. And one of the first major
projects the PTA worked on was the extension of kindergartens to the
elementary school grades.
In recent years many local PTA groups emphasized greater involvement
of students and are known as Parent-Teacher-Student Associations or
PTSA.
PTA or PTSA meetings are commonly held monthly at public schools
throughout the U.S. If you're a member, remember that you're supposed
to be promoting the educational, emotional and social welfare of our
children.
** Events
1958 - Former New York Giants football star Frank Gifford signed a
seven-year contract with Warner Brothers in a film deal that didn't
make him the movie star the studio expected. So, Giff went into
broadcasting instead. His first job was as a sportscaster for WCBS-TV
in New York. He then moved to WABC-TV in New York and on to network
television as primary play-by-play announcer and then to color
commentator on ABC's "Monday Night Football". Frank is married to
Kathie Lee Gifford of "Regis and Kathie Lee" morning TV fame.
1985 - Postage stamp prices were hiked to 22 cents for first-class
mail in the U.S.
1985 - Laffit Pincay Jr. rode his 6,000th career winner at Santa
Anita Race Track in Arcadia, CA. He became the third jockey to reach
that coveted mark (behind Willie Shoemaker and Johnny Longden). Talk
about a Winner's Circle of racing legends...
1987 - Don Mattingly won the highest award in the 13-year history of
salary arbitration when a judge ruled that the New York Yankee first
baseman deserved a salary of $1,975,000. Have times ever changed...
** Birthdays
1766 - Thomas Malthus (economist, demographer: The Malthusian Theory:
population growth exceed production growth)
1934 - Willie (Charles) Kirkland (baseball: SF Giants, Cleveland
Indians Baltimore Orioles, Washington Senators)
1936 - Jim Brown (Pro Football Hall of Famer; actor: The Dirty Dozen,
El Condor, Ice Station Zebra, Crack House)
** Chart Toppers
Karma Chameleon - Culture Club
Joanna - Kool & The Gang
Jump - Van Halen
That's the Way Love Goes - Merle Haggard
~MarciaH
Fri, Feb 18, 2000 (15:21)
#17
History for February 18:
** This is Nude Descending a Staircase Day!
No, this isn't about the latest Hugh Hefner "Playboy" centerfold...
We speak of this day in 1913 when the famous French painting, "Nude
Descending a Staircase" by the French artist Marcel Duchamp, was
displayed at an 'Armory Show' (don't ask) in New York City. The work
was labeled as America's first look at modern art. Critics called the
work "scandalous" and "meaningless." Yeah, well, it's a beautiful,
classic work of art no matter if it looks like an android doing "The Twist".
** Events
1841 - The first continuous filibuster in the U.S. Senate began. It
lasted until March 11th. Talk about a big bag of wind...
1908 - U.S. postage stamps were sold for the very first time. They
cost only a penny...
1985 - Diver Greg Louganis was recognized as the top amateur athlete
in the United States, as he received the James E. Sullivan Award of
the Amateur Athletic Union in Indianapolis, IN. Louganis had won
double gold at the 1984 Olympic Games.
1987 - The executives of the Girl Scout movement decided, because the
older girls wanted a change, that it was time to change the color of
the scout uniform from the traditional Girl Scout green to the newer
Girl Scout blue.
** Birthdays
1920 - Jack Palance (Vladimir Palahnuik) (Academy Award-winning
actor: City Slickers [1991]; Requiem for a Heavyweight, Batman,
Cyborg 2, Cops and Robbersons, Bronk, Ripley's Believe It or Not)
1931 - Toni Morrison (Chloe Anthony Wofford) (Nobel Prize [1993] and
Pulitzer Prize-winning author: Beloved [1988]; National Book Critics
Circle Award: Song of Solomon [1977], Jazz, Tar Baby, Sula, The
Bluest Eye)
1933 - Yoko Ono Lennon (singer: Walking on Thin Ice; artist; John
Lennon's widow)
1954 - John Travolta (actor: Welcome Back Kotter, Saturday Night
Fever, Grease, Urban Cowboy, Pulp Fiction, Get Shorty, Broken Arrow)
1957 - Vanna White (Rosich) (TV game show personality: Wheel of Fortune)
1964 - Matt Dillon (actor: My Bodyguard, Drugstore Cowboy, The Outsiders)
** Chart Toppers - 1985
Careless Whisper - Wham! featuring George Michael
Loverboy - Billy Ocean
Method of Modern Love - Daryl Hall John Oates
Make My Life with You - The Oak Ridge Boys
~MarciaH
Sat, Feb 19, 2000 (13:24)
#18
History for February 19:
** This is Bollingen Prize Day!
Thanks to the Bollingen Foundation and Yale University, starving
poets have the opportunity to win thousands of dollars. The first
Bollingen Prize in poetry ($5,000) was awarded to Ezra Pound on this
day in 1949. Mr. Pound was presented with the prize for his poetry
collection, "The Pisan Cantos". Unfortunately, this first award
presentation by the Bollingen Foundation was filled with controversy.
It seems that Ezra Pound, a talented poet, was also a pro-fascist,
and had been charged with treason for broadcasting his political
beliefs while in Italy during WWII. Pound was still given the award.
The Bollingen Prize was presented annually through 1963 when Robert
Frost was the recipient, after which it became a biennial award. The
$5,000 award was upped to $10,000 in 1989 when Edgar Bowers was the
prize winner, and to $25,000 in 1995. The $25,000 award went to poet,
Kenneth Koch.
Keep writing those odes, rhymes and stanzas. You may be the next
winner of the Bollingen Prize in Poetry. And maybe, just maybe, the
award will receive another cost-of-living adjustment.
** Events
1878 - Thomas Alva Edison, famed inventor, patented a music player at
his laboratory in Menlo Park, NJ. (This music device is the one we
know as the phonograph.) Here's the real skinny on the story: Edison
paid his assistant $18 to make the device from a sketch Edison had
drawn. Originally, Edison had set out to invent a telegraph repeater,
but came up with the phonograph or, as he called it, the speaking
machine. When asked why he invented the machine, Edison told
reporters, "How else am I gonna listen to my Dixie Chicks stuff?"
1942 - The New York Yankees announced that they would admit 5,000
uniformed servicemen free to each of their home ball games during the
coming season.
1984 - The XIV Winter Olympic Games ended at Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
The Soviet Union led all countries with 25 medals, the United States
captured nine medals to tie for fifth place. Within the shadow of
what was the Olympic Stadium, hundreds, maybe thousands, of Bosnians
are now buried; the result of the civil war that began in the early
1990s.
1985 - Mickey Mouse was welcomed to China as part of the 30th
anniversary of Disneyland. The touring mouse played 30 cities in 30
days. Tough schedule even for a mouse!
1987 - A controversial anti-smoking ad aired for the first time on
television. It featured actor Yul Brynner in a public service
announcement that was recorded shortly before his October 1985 death
from lung cancer.
** Birthdays
1473 - Nicolaus Copernicus (Mikolaj Kopernick) (Polish astronomer:
the Copernican theory: the sun is the center of our universe)
1924 - Lee Marvin (Academy Award-winning Best Actor: Cat Ballou
[1965]; The Caine Mutiny, The Dirty Dozen, Delta Force, Ship of
Fools; passed away Aug 29, 1987)
1966 - Justine Bateman (actress: A Century of Women, Primary Motive,
The Fatal Image, Family Ties)
** Chart Toppers - 1986
How Will I Know - Whitney Houston
When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Get Going - Billy Ocean
Kyrie - Mr. Mister
Makin' Up for Lost Time (The Dallas Lovers' Song) - Crystal Gayle & Gary Morris
~MarciaH
Sun, Feb 20, 2000 (16:50)
#19
History for February 20:
** Today is Father of Little League Day!
Millions of kids throughout the world have spent their summer days
playing baseball thanks to a man named Carl E. Stotz. Stotz was born
in Williamsport, Pennsylvania on this day in 1910. Twenty-nine years
later, Carl Stotz found a way for little boys to play at the man's
game of baseball. He founded the Little League Baseball Organization,
which consisted of three teams. (Today, each local league may have
from four to ten teams.)
Boys, ages 8 to 12, formed the baseball teams that played on a
diamond two-thirds the size of a regulation diamond; and played for
six innings. Wearing rubber cleats and using bats no longer than 33
inches, boys were able to participate in America's favorite pastime.
Girls have been included in Little League since 1974 and championship
tournaments are played at the end of the regular season of at least
15 games. The tournaments are held to select eight regional winners
from around the world.
In honor of Carl Stotz, each August, the regional winners from the
U.S. compete in the Little League World Series in Williamsport,
Pennsylvania.
** Events
1792 - President George Washington signed the Postal Service Act.
Letters delivered up to 30 miles cost six cents to mail. For letters
up to 150 miles, postage was 12-1/2 cents. And, just like today,
letters over 150 miles were not guaranteed to be delivered at all.
1962 - America's first space hero, John Glenn, made space history.
Glenn orbited the world three times in 4 hours, 55 minutes.
"Godspeed, John Glenn. You're cleared for orbit."
1974 - After a decade of marriage, Cher filed for separation from
husband Sonny Bono. Not long afterwards, she filed for divorce and
the accompanying alimony. This time she sang, "I Got You Babe", for
real ... before becoming a successful solo singer and movie actress
in films such as "Moonstruck" (Best Actress Oscar in 1987).
** Birthdays
1946 - J. (Jerome) Geils (guitarist: group: The J. Geils Band:
Looking for a Love, Give It to Me, Freeze-Frame, Centerfold)
1955 - Kelsey Grammer (Emmy Award-winning actor: Frasier [1994,
1995]; Cheers, Another World)
1963 - Charles Barkley (basketball: Phoenix Suns; shortest player
[6'6"] to lead NBA in rebounds)
1967 - Kurt Cobain (musician, singer: group: Nirvana: LP: Nevermind;
creator of grunge rock; passed away [apparent suicide] April 8, 1994)
1967 - Andrew Shue (actor: Melrose Place)
** Chart Toppers - 1987
Livin' on a Prayer - Bon Jovi
Change of Heart - Cyndi Lauper
Touch Me (I Want Your Body) - Samantha Fox
How Do I Turn You On - Ronnie Milsap
~MarciaH
Mon, Feb 21, 2000 (12:59)
#20
History for February 21:
** Today is Washington Monument Day!
On this day in 1855, the official dedication of the Washington
Monument took place in Washington, D.C., although the monument wasn't
completed for another thirty-three years. In fact, the structure took
a total of forty-eight years to finish.
The stone obelisk honoring the first President of the United States
was designed by Robert Mills who died in this, the year of the
dedication.
A major visitor attraction, one can see the entire city of Washington
D.C., plus parts of the surrounding states of Virginia and Maryland
from the top of the 555-foot monument. If you visit the city when the
cherry trees are in blossom, you will be treated to a spectacular
view from ground level too, as images of the blossoms and monument
shimmer in the rectangular pool facing the Washington Monument. Now,
that's something to reflect on...
** Events
1878 - The first telephone directories issued in the U.S. were
distributed to residents in New Haven, CT. It was easy to "Let Your
Fingers Do the Walking" at that time as only 50 subscribers' names
were listed.
1981 - Dolly Parton reached the top spot on the pop music charts with
"9 to 5", from the movie of the same name, in which Dolly starred
with Lili Tomlin and Jane Fonda. The hit song stayed at #1 for a
week, gave way to Eddie Rabbitt's "I Love a Rainy Night" and bounced
back two weeks later for another week at Number One.
1984 - The Toy Manufacturers of America met in New York City to show
the top toys of the year. They included: Menudo, Michael Jackson
(accessories sold separately), Mr. T. and Judy Garland from "The
Wizard of Oz". Dolls were very big that year...
** Birthdays
1927 - Erma Bombeck (Fiste) (humorist, columnist, writer: The Grass
Is Always Greener over the Septic Tank)
1936 - Barbara Jordon (lawyer, educator, U.S. Congresswoman)
1943 - David Geffen (Tony Award-winning producer: Cats [1983], M
Butterfly [1988]; Miss Saigon, Beetlejuice, Risky Business record
executive: Geffen Records; partner in famous Dreamworks film
production company with Jeffrey Katzenberg, Steven Spielberg)
1946 - Tyne (Ellen) Daly (Tony Award: Gypsy [1990] and Emmy
Award-winning actress: Cagney and Lacey [1982-83, 1983-84, 1984-85,
1987-88]; Christy, On the Town, Your Place or Mine, A Matter of Life
and Death, Speedtrap, Intimate Strangers, The Enforcer, Larry, Angel
Unchained, The Butter and Egg Man, John and Mary, The Virginian;
daughter of actors James Daly and Hope Newell; sister of actor Tim Daly)
** Chart Toppers - 1988
Seasons Change - Expose
What Have I Done to Deserve This? - Pet Shop Boys & Dusty Springfield
Father Figure - George Michael
Twinkle, Twinkle Lucky Star - Merle Haggard
~MarciaH
Tue, Feb 22, 2000 (12:28)
#21
History for February 22:
** This is Gentle Giant Day!
How tall is the tallest man? Most information collected before the
1900s can not be proven. In fact, exaggeration and dishonesty
prevailed. Even medical papers were unreliable. Depending on the
measurements of the time and the translation of such, even Goliath
stood a mere 6 feet, 10 inches.
However, there is irrefutable evidence that Robert Pershing Wadlow,
born on this day in 1918 in Alton, Illinois, still holds the record
for being the tallest recorded man. Oh yes, Robert was quite normal
at birth, weighing in at 8.5 lbs. At the age of two, he had a double
hernia operation and something changed. He started to grow, and grow
and grow. By age 5 he was 5'4" tall and weighed 105 lbs. On his 8th
birthday, Robert weighed in at 169 lbs. and topped the ruler at six
feet. He grew another foot by the time he was thirteen and still
another by his seventeenth year.
On June 27, 1940, Mr. Wadlow was measured by Dr. Cyril MacBryde and
Dr. C. M. Charles, Associate Professor of Anatomy at Washington
University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. They recorded
Wadlow's height at 8' 11.1". A week later, Wadlow was fitted with a
brace on his right leg. The brace fit poorly and inflamed his ankle,
causing cellulitis. Robert Wadlow died from the infection on July 15,
1940. A coffin was made especially for him: 10'9" long, 32" wide, 30"
deep. Had he not died, he would have continued to grow, according to
the doctors.
Wadlow, who faced constant public attention and often, ridicule, was
always kind, patient and friendly, a demeanor that earned him the
nickname 'the gentle giant'. Fortunately he was a gentle giant. If he
wasn't, his harassers would have faced a 439 lb. man who wore shoes,
size 37AA, a size-25 ring on hands that measured 12 3/4" from the
wrist to the tip of the middle finger. His arm span was nine feet,
five and three-quarter inches.
What we want to know is, where did he buy his clothes? And, could he
play basketball?
** Events
1860 - Organized baseball's first game was played in San Francisco,
CA. With all the complaints, one would think that Candlestick Park
was the first stadium in which the game was played but, this is not
true. Candlestick wasn't opened until 1960.
1956 - Elvis Presley entered the music charts for the first time.
"Heartbreak Hotel" began its climb to the number one spot on the pop
listing, reaching the top on April 11, 1956. It stayed at the top for
eight weeks.
1965 - Filming began for the Beatles' second movie, "HELP!", in the Bahamas.
** Birthdays
1732 - George Washington (1st U.S. President [1789-1797]; "I cannot
tell a lie..." ; passed away Dec. 14, 1799)
1932 - Edward Kennedy (U.S. Senator from Massachusetts; brother of
35th U.S. President John F. Kennedy and U.S. Attorney General Robert
Kennedy)
1950 - Julius Erving II (Basketball Hall of Famer: Philadelphia
76ers: Dr. J. the third pro player to score more than 30,000 career
points [after Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar])
1975 - Drew Barrymore (actress: Bad Girls, Irreconcilable
Differences, E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, Altered States, Wayne's
World 2, Batman Forever, Scream, The Wedding Singer; autobiography
[at age 14]: Little Lost Girl; daughter of actor/director John
Barrymore, Jr.; granddaughter of actor John Barrymore, Sr.;
great-niece of actors Ethel Barrymore and Lionel Barrymore)
** Chart Toppers - 1989
Straight Up - Paula Abdul
Wild Thing - Tone Loc
Born to Be My Baby - Bon Jovi
Big Wheels in the Moonlight - Dan Seals
~MarciaH
Wed, Feb 23, 2000 (11:29)
#22
History for February 23:
** This is Stars, Stripes & Marines Forever Day!
It was February 23, 1945 and four days of bitter battle had taken its
toll on the 28th Regiment of the Fifth Marine Division of the U.S.
Marines. Their task had been to neutralize the defenses and scale the
heavily fortified Mount Surabachi. The volcanic peak, at the southern
tip of the Japanese Island of Iwo Jima, was one of the first
objectives of the Marines' invasion of this small, strategic island,
750 miles south of Tokyo.
Although losses were heavy, the Marine platoon succeeded in its
mission and reached the top of Mount Surabachi on this day. Victory
was triumphant -- as the famous photograph (by Joe Rosenthal) of
these Marines raising the American flag portrayed.
The photograph inspired the Marine Corps Memorial, Iwo Jima Statue
which now stands at Arlington National Cemetery, the largest cast
bronze statue in the world. This monument is dedicated to all U.S.
Marines (since 1775) who have given their lives for their country.
As the flag was being raised, Navy Secretary Forrestal was standing
on the beachhead below. When he saw Old Glory waving in the breeze,
he told Lt. General Holland M. Smith, "The raising of that flag on
Surabachi means a Marine Corps for the next 500 years."
** Events
1957 - The United States Supreme Court ruled that professional
football operations of the NFL did fall within coverage of existing
antitrust laws.
1974 - The Symbionese Liberation Army demanded $4 million more for
the release of Patty Hearst. Hearst had been kidnapped on February
4th and her father, publisher Randolph Hearst, had already coughed up
$2 million hoping for her freedom. Randolph said he would consider
this request too.
1985 - Breaking with tradition, the TV show, "Gimme a Break", was
broadcast live before a studio audience. It was the first TV sitcom
to be seen live since television's Golden Age in the 1950s.
** Birthdays
1685 - George Frederick Handel (composer: Messiah)
1939 - Peter Fonda (director, actor: Easy Rider, Futureworld, The
Wild Angel's, Love and a .45; Jane's brother; Henry's son; Bridget's
Dad)
1943 - Fred Biletnikoff (football: Oakland Raiders wide receiver:
Super Bowl II, XI)
1963 - Bobby (Roberto Martin Antonio) Bonilla (baseball: Chicago
White Sox Pittsburgh Pirates [all-star: 1988-1991], NY Mets
[all-star: 1993, 1995/highest salary in baseball: 1994: $6,300,000],
Baltimore Orioles)
** Chart Toppers - 1990
Opposites Attract - Paula Abdul with The Wild Pair
Two to Make It Right - Seduction
Escapade - Janet Jackson
On Second Thought - Eddie Rabbitt
~MarciaH
Thu, Feb 24, 2000 (16:29)
#23
History for February 24:
** Today is Voice of America Day!
It was an historic day in radio broadcasting, as the Voice of America
(VOA) signed on for the first time on this day in 1942. The
worldwide, shortwave radio service, a department of the United States
Government, continues to beam a variety of programming around the
globe under the auspices of the United States Information Agency
(USIA).
The VOA transmits from modern studios in Washington, DC and beams
much of its programming via satellite to transmitters worldwide. In
addition, the VOA maintains huge transmitters in the U.S. and around
the world in order to provide distinctly American information,
culture and entertainment, in dozens of languages, to every corner of
the globe. For years, the tune, "Yankee Doodle", has opened each
sign-on broadcast.
More than 40 years after the VOA was launched, the USIA started Radio
Marti, an immensely powerful radio transmitter tethered from a huge
blimp in the Florida Keys. The controversial station broadcast to
Cuba, irritating Cuban Premier Fidel Castro enough for him to jam the
signals of U.S. broadcasters. The Radio Marti blimp crashed after
deflating while airborne a number of years ago. The station returned
to the air and has been joined by TV Marti as well.
** Events
1866 - The Capitol in Washington, DC displayed an American flag made
entirely of American bunting -- another first.
1940 - Frances Langford recorded one of the classic songs of all time
-- and one that would become a Walt Disney trademark. "When You Wish
Upon a Star" was recorded on Decca Records during a session in Los
Angeles. Many artists have recorded the song, including pop diva
Linda Ronstadt (with the Nelson Riddle Orchestra in the early 1980s).
One can hear the song not only on record, but as the theme in the
opening credits of any Disney movie, video and TV program and those
"I'm going to Disneyland/World!" commercials, too.
1942 - The U.S. Government shut down deliveries of all 12-gauge
shotguns for sporting use. The Feds needed to make more weapons
available for war production.
1985 - Quarterback Doug Flutie played his first game as a pro. Flutie
led the New Jersey Generals against Birmingham, losing 38-28. The
former Boston College standout had a shaky start in his USFL debut,
but still completed 12 of 18 passes in the fourth quarter of the game.
1989 - Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was so irritated by Salman
Rushdie's novel, "The Satanic Verses", that he sentenced the author
to death and slapped a one to three-million-dollar bounty (depending
upon who got him) on his head. Talk about "2 thumbs down..."
** Birthdays
1786 - Wilhelm Grimm (author w/brother Jakob: Grimm's Fairy Tales:
Rumpelstiltskin, Snow-White, The Sleeping Beauty, Tom Thumb)
1922 - Steven Hill (actor: Law & Order, Mission: Impossible, The
Firm, Billy Bathgate, Legal Eagles, Yentl, A Child is Waiting)
1947 - Edward James Olmos (Emmy Award-Winning Best Supporting Actor
in a Drama Series: Miami Vice [1985]; Stand and Deliver, Blade Runner)
** Chart Toppers - 1991
All the Man that I Need - Whitney Houston
One More Try - Timmy -T-
Someday - Mariah Carey
Walk on Faith - Mike Reid
~MarciaH
Fri, Feb 25, 2000 (13:44)
#24
History for February 25:
** This is Mr. Magoo Day!
Mr. Magoo was born on this day in 1913 ... well, not really. It's the
birthday of Mr. Magoo's voice, actor Jim Backus. The actor, who bore
no resemblance to the extremely nearsighted, Rutgers College
pennant-waving, elderly Magoo, brought him to life once John Hubley
created him in 1949. Backus' raspy, Mr. Magoo voice is immediately
recognizable to 'toon aficionados the world over.
Mr. Backus entire persona is also immediately recognizable to
"Gilligan's Island" fans. From 1964 to 1967 (with reruns, it seems
much longer than 4 seasons), he played the role of Thurston Howell
III in CBS-TV's popular "Gilligan's Island" series; and returned for
several sequels, the first, "Rescue from Gilligan's Island" aired in
1978 and was a big hit. (Later versions did not fare as well;
although one can catch them in reruns on late-night TV.)
Jim (James Gilmore) Backus starred in "I Married Joan" from 1952
through 1955; was the first host of "Talent Scouts" in 1962 and
played the role of Dagwood's boss, Mr. Dithers, in the 1968 version
of "Blondie". Jim Backus appeared in many films including: "The Great
Lover" in 1949, "Rebel Without a Cause" in 1955, "It's a Mad, Mad,
Mad, Mad World" in 1963, "Angel's Brigade" in 1979 and "Slapstick of
Another Kind" in 1984.
This is just a sampling of the entertainment brought to us by the man
whose career spanned several decades of radio, film and TV until his
death on July 3, 1989. We miss you, Mr. Quincy Magoo.
** Events
1836 - Samuel Colt was sure as shootin', as he received a patent for
what became his now famous pistol, the Colt 45.
1924 - Ty Cobb, one of the legends of baseball, issued an edict to
his team, the Detroit Tigers, that forbid players to play the game of
golf during training camp. A report in the Detroit Free Press said
that Cobb went so far as to confiscate players' golf clubs! Wow! Talk
about being a little 'teed off', huh?
1964 - Twenty-two-year old Cassius Clay won the world heavyweight
boxing title by defeating Sonny Liston in the seventh round in Miami,
FL. Clay had been an 8-1 underdog. In fact, only 8,297 fans showed up
for the bout.
1986 - "We are the World" captured four Grammy Awards. The song,
featuring more than 40 superstar artists gathered at one time, was
awarded the Top Song, Record of the Year, Best Pop Performance and
Best Short Video Awards.
** Birthdays
1841 - Pierre Renoir (Impressionist artist: Oarsman at Chatou, The Bathers)
1943 - George Harrison (former Beatle, singer: My Sweet Lord, Isn't
It a Pity, What is Life?, All Those Years Ago, Concert for
Bangla-Desh)
1943 - Sally Jessy Raphael (TV talk-show hostess)
1951 - Cesar (Encarnacion) Cedeno (baseball: Houston Astros
[all-star: 1972-1974, 1976], Cincinnati Reds, SL Cardinals [World
Series: 1985], LA Dodgers)
** Chart Toppers - 1984
Jump - Van Halen
99 Luftballons - Nena
Girls Just Want to Have Fun - Cyndi Lauper
Stay Young - Don Williams
~MarciaH
Sat, Feb 26, 2000 (21:56)
#25
History for February 26:
** This is Grand Canyon Day!
The Grand Canyon was established as a National Park on this day in
1919 by an act of the U.S. Congress. The gigantic gorge that cuts
through the high plateaus of the northwest corner of Arizona was
formed by thousands of years of erosion. The raging Colorado River
was the culprit.
Called one of the most spectacular natural wonders of the world, the
Grand Canyon National Park covered 1,218,375 acres ... and still
does. It measures 18 miles across, over two hundred miles long, and
is a mile from its rim to the Colorado River below.
The Grand Canyon, home to American Indian tribes for many hundreds of
years, was first discovered by European explorers on the Coronado
expedition of 1540. An inspiration for artists, musical compositions,
amusement park attractions, novels and more, it remains one of
nature's most magnificent displays, attracting over two million
sightseers a year.
** Events
1916 - Mutual signed Charlie Chaplin to a film contract. Three years
later, the 'old' Charlie Chaplin films were released and were very
successful at the box office.
1930 - Seven years after Garrett A. Morgan invented traffic lights,
New York City decided it might be a good idea to install some of the
newfangled contraptions. The city fathers had been studying traffic
plans in other cities and had rejected the wide use of amber lights
being used to slow motorists down before they came to a red light.
The New York Board ruled that the yellow lights were ineffective. So
on this date, after too many complaints had been received from
drivers complaining about pedestrians straying into their paths, the
first red and green signal lights were placed at Manhattan street
corners.
1993 - Six people were killed and more than a thousand injured in New
York City. A van packed with a 1,210-pound bomb exploded in the
parking garage underneath the World Trade Center. The explosion left
a gigantic crater 200 feet wide and caused over 591 million dollars
in damage. Fourteen of his followers and Dr. Sheik Omar Abdul Rahman
were accused of the bombing. Rahman is now serving a life sentence in
a U.S. prison.
** Birthdays
1802 - Victor Hugo (author: Les Miserables; famous quote: "An
invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has
come.")
1932 - Johnny Cash (guitarist, Grammy award-winning country singer:
Folsom Prison Blues [1968], I Walk the Line, Don't Take Your Guns to
Town, A Boy Named Sue, Ring of Fire; TV show with wife: June Carter)
1953 - Michael Bolton (Grammy Award-winning singer: When a Man Loves
a Woman [1991], How Am I Supposed to Live Without You [1989])
** Chart Toppers - 1985
Careless Whisper - Wham! featuring George Michael
Loverboy - Billy Ocean
Can't Fight This Feeling - REO Speedwagon
Baby's Got Her Blue Jeans On - Mel McDaniel
~MarciaH
Sun, Feb 27, 2000 (20:25)
#26
History for February 27
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1706 - English writer John Evelyn died; he kept a diary throughout most of his
life which is now considered an invaluable record of the period.
1807 - American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow born; he wrote ``The Song
of Hiawatha'' and ``The Wreck of the Hesperus.''
1847 - Dame Ellen Terry, English stage actress, born. She played her first
role at age eight and became the leading Shakespearean actress of the time.
1879 - The discovery of saccharin was reported.
1887 - Alexander Borodin, Russian composer and scientist, died.
1888 - Lotte Lehmann, German soprano born. She sang in ``Der
Rosenkavalier'' after being chosen by Richard Strauss.
1900 - The British Labor Party was founded with Ramsay MacDonald as its
Secretary.
1902 - John Steinbeck, American novelist and Nobel Prize winner, born.
1930 - Joanne Woodward, American film actress and wife of Paul Newman,
born.
1932 - Elizabeth Taylor, film actress, born in London. She made her screen
debut in 1942 at the age of 10 in ``There's One Born Every Minute.''
1933 - The German parliament building, the Reichstag, was destroyed by fire.
Alleging a Communist conspiracy, the Nazis used it as a pretext to crush its
opponents. A Dutchman, Marius van der Lubbe, was executed for starting the
fire.
1951 - The 22nd amendment to the U.S. constitution was finally ratified,
limiting presidential terms of office.
1967 - Pink Floyd records its first single, ``Arnold Layne,'' in London.
1973 - Militant Indians began an occupation of Wounded Knee, South
Dakota, in a siege that lasted until May.
1995 - Mafia superboss Salvatore ``Toto'' Riina and 47 other suspected
members of the crime organization went on trial on charges of complicity in
48 murders in Sicily.
~MarciaH
Sun, Feb 27, 2000 (20:53)
#27
History for February 27:
** This is Marian Anderson Day!
In the 1960s, folk-rock singer Joan Baez was exposed to the
prejudices of the Daughters of the American Revolution when she was
refused permission to use their hall for a concert. Similarly, the
D.A.R. prevented opera singer Marian Anderson from performing at
Washington's Constitution Hall in 1939. The former was based on
political prejudice, the latter on racial prejudice. Negative
reactions to both incidents were directed at the D.A.R. and
ironically, helped to promote the success of the singers. Anderson
did sing in Washington, D.C., on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.
It was Easter Sunday, 1939. 75,000 people showed up to hear her sing.
Thousands more heard her sensational voice on a simultaneous radio
broadcast.
Marian Anderson, who was born in Philadelphia on this day in 1897,
was destined to become one of the world's finest contraltos. She
began her singing career as a member of the Union Baptist Church
choir. However, even a performance with the New York Philharmonic
Orchestra could not dispel the racial hate that would prevent her
from having a successful career in the United States. And so, Marian
Anderson moved to Europe where she was accepted for her color and her
magnificent voice and versatility.
Sixty years after her birth, Marian Anderson became the first
African-American to perform with the New York Metropolitan Opera. She
then became a U.S. delegate to the United Nations. In 1961, she came
full circle. This time, she was invited to sing in Washington, D.C.
-- at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy, and was, several
years later, presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Marian Anderson passed away on April 8, 1993; but the sound of her
voice will live forever.
** Events
1908 - Star #46 was added to the U.S. flag -- for Oklahoma, which had
entered the union on November 16, 1907.
1942 - Notre Dame football coach Frank Leahy announced his intention
to concentrate on the T formation instead of the famous Knute Rockne
'Notre Dame shift' in South Bend, Indiana. Go, Fighting Irish! Rah!
1974 - A new magazine was issued by Time-Life (now Time-Warner). The
magazine was "People". It had an initial run of one million copies
and became the most successful celebrity weekly 'zine ever published.
Weekly circulation of "People" grew to 3,424,858 by 1994. When you
include the people that "People" is passed around to by other people,
that figure is way higher. "People. People who need "People"."
Indeed...
** Birthdays
1917 - John Connally (former governor of Texas: suffered gunshot
wounds during Kennedy assassination in 1963; passed away June 15,
1993)
1932 - Elizabeth Taylor (Academy Award-winning actress: Butterfield 8
[1960], Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? [1966], Jean Hersholt
Humanitarian Award [1992]; Cat On a Hot Tin Roof, National Velvet,
Cleopatra; Perfume spokesperson [Passion])
1980 - Chelsea Clinton (daughter of 42nd U.S. President William
Clinton and 1st Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton)
** Chart Toppers - 1986
How Will I Know - Whitney Houston
Kyrie - Mr. Mister
Sara - Starship
There's No Stopping Your Heart - Marie Osmond
~MarciaH
Mon, Feb 28, 2000 (21:59)
#28
Today in History for February 28
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1784 - John Wesley signed the ``deed of declaration'' formalizing the
establishment of the Wesleyan faith, or Methodism.
1824 - Blondin, pseudonym of Jean-Francois Gravelet, French tightrope
walker who made several crossings of Niagara Falls, born.
1844 - The U.S. navy was demonstrating its new frigate Princeton On the
Potomac River when one of its guns exploded, killing the secretary of state,
navy secretary and other officials.
1854 - U.S. opponents of slavery meeting at Ripon, Wisconsin agreed to form
a new political party; the Republican Party was born later in the year.
1901 - Professor Linus Pauling, U.S. chemist and physicist, born; he won the
Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1954 and the Nobel Peace Prize in 1962.
1909 - British poet and critic Stephen Spender born.
1913 - Vincente Minnelli, U.S. film director, born. He won several Oscars for
his musicals in the 1950s. His marriage to Judy Garland produced a
daughter, Liza Minnelli.
1916 - Henry James, American novelist, died in England.
1933 - A day after the Reichstag burned down, Adolf Hitler persuaded
President Hindenburg to sign a decree suspending guarantees of personal
liberty, freedom of speech and the press and the right of assembly.
1967 - Henry Luce, American publisher, died. He was a co-founder of Time
magazine and also founded Life and Fortune.
1971 - The male voters of Liechtenstein defeated a referendum on giving
women the vote.
1975 - In Britain's worst underground rail crash, 42 people died when a train
crashed at London's Moorgate station.
1991 - After 42 days of the Gulf War, U.S. and allied forces ceased fire and
Iraq told its army to stop fighting.
1993 - The siege at Waco, Texas, began after federal agents tried to serve an
arrest warrant for weapons charges on Branch Davidian sect leader David
Koresh.
1996 - Princess Diana, on what she called the saddest day of her life, agreed
to divorce her estranged husband, Prince Charles.
~MarciaH
Tue, Feb 29, 2000 (11:58)
#29
Today in History for February 29
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1792 - Gioacchino Rossini, Italian composer of ``The Barber of Seville,'' born.
1840 - John Philip Holland, inventor of the modern submarine, born in Ireland.
1868 - Benjamin Disraeli took over as British prime minister from Lord Derby.
1896 - William Wellman, U.S. film director of ``Wings,'' ``Public Enemy ``and
``A Star is Born,'' born.
1896 - Shri Morarji Desai, former Indian prime minister, born. He became
prime minister in 1977 but his government was troubled by internal strife and
Desai resigned in 1979.
1944 - The Germans opened a third major offensive against Anzio
beach-head.
1948 - A Cairo to Haifa train was bombed by the underground Jewish Stern
Gang, killing 35 British troops.
1956 - Pakistan became an Islamic Republic.
1960 - The port of Agadir was destroyed in an earthquake, killing 12,000
people out of a population of 40,000.
1968 - Dr Jocelyn Burnell announced the discovery of the first pulsating radio
source (pulsar).
1984 - Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau resigned as leader of the
Liberal Party.
1988 - Bishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa was arrested for demonstrating
outside Parliament.
1996 - The long siege of Sarajevo was declared formally at an end as
Moslem-Croat police took over a strategically-located suburb.
1996 - In the worst accident in Peru's history, a Faucett airline Boeing 737
crashed in the Andes killing all 117 passengers and six crew. The plane, on a
flight from Lima, crashed at the city of Arequipa, 625 miles south of Lima.
~MarciaH
Tue, Feb 29, 2000 (14:09)
#30
History for February 29:
** This is Leap Year Day!
We all know that Leap Year is the year we add an extra day to the
month of February -- giving February 29 days; but do you know when
this all began and why it is called LEAP year?
This confusing state of calendars began in 45 B.C., when Julius
Caesar added an extra day to the Julian calendar every fourth year
upon the advice of astronomer, Sosigenes. Or it could have been 1582
when Pope Gregory XIII ordered every fourth year to be a leap year
(leap year brought the Gregorian calendar closer to the earth's
orbital period of 365.2422 days) unless it is a century year that
cannot be divisible by 400. Or maybe it was 1698 when the Protestant
rulers of Germany and the Netherlands thought it was time they agreed
with the pope, or 1752 when the English made this calendar move or
1918 when the Russians picked up on the Gregorian calendar. It's your
call.
It is called Leap Year because it is not a COMMON year. A common year
consists of exactly 52 weeks plus one day. That extra day means that
a specific date moves one day (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, etc.)
ahead the following year. For example: if your birthday falls on a
Tuesday in one common year, it will fall on a Wednesday in the next
one. Just when you get it all straight, four years have passed and a
leap year comes along to confuse the issue. A leap year consists of
exactly 52 weeks plus two days. So now, if your birthday fell on a
Wednesday last year, it will fall on a Friday this year (February 29
through February 28 of next year). Got that?
Just be happy you're not listed on our Birthday Board for this leap
year. Those who are must divide their years by four for their
calendar ages unless there's a century year in the way -- one that
cannot be divided by 400, that is.
Leap Years also have a very uncommon tradition attached to them. It
seems that in a Leap Year or Bissextile, a woman could propose
marriage to the man of her choice. At least that's what happened in
Scotland in 1288 when a law was passed making this custom legal. This
traditon spread throughout the rest of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain, as did the law. A woman was expected to enforce and insist
upon acceptance from the gentleman of choice or he would receive a
penalty or fine. A penalty could be that the gentleman had to pay for
a silk or satin dress selected by the scorned woman. And, you know
the old saying, "Hell hath no fury like that of a woman scorned." ...
especially in a Leap Year.
** Events
1704 - The town of Deerfield, MA was raided on this day by French
Canadians and Indians who were trying to retrieve their church bell
that had been shipped from France. The bell was to hang in the
Canadian Indian's village church. Neither the raiders nor the
residents of Deerfield were aware that the bell had been stolen from
the ship. The Deerfield folks had purchased the bell from a
privateer, unaware that it belonged to the Indian congregation.
Although 47 people were killed in the incident, we could say that the
120 captured were saved by the bell.
1860 - The first electric tabulating machine -- the forerunner of the
calculator -- was invented by Herman Hollerith. We think it was
unfortunate that Mr. Hollerith chose to make his invention on Leap
Day, causing the machine to only calculate numbers divisible by four.
1944 - The first woman appointed secretary of a national political
party was named to the Democratic National Committee. Dorothy McElroy
Vredenburgh of Alabama began her new appointment this day.
1980 - Gordie Howe of the Detroit Red Wings became the first player
in NHL history to score 800 career goals (in a 3-0 Wings' win over
the St. Louis Blues). Howe finished his career with 801
regular-season goals. Only Wayne Gretzky has surpassed that mark.
** Birthdays
1840 - John Philip Holland (inventor of first true submarine accepted
by U.S. Navy [spent 57 years working with submersibles]; invented
device to allow sailors to escape from damaged subs; passed away Aug
12, 1914)
1916 - Dinah (Frances Rose) Shore (Emmy Award-winning singer,
entertainer: The Dinah Shore Show [1951], Dinah's Place [1970];
Daytime Emmy: Dinah's Place [1970], Dinah! [1974]; The Dinah Shore
Chevy Show, Oh, God!, Death Car on the Freeway; singer: Yes, My
Darling Daughter, The Breeze and I, Blues in the Night, I'll Walk
Alone, Buttons and Bows; sponsored Dinah Shore Classic pro golf
tournament for over twenty years; passed away Feb 24, 1994)
1972 - Antonio Sabato, Jr. (actor: Earth 2, Beyond the Law, War of
the Robots, Thundersquad)
** Chart Toppers - 1992
To Be with You - Mr. Big
I'm Too Sexy - R*S*F (Right Said Fred)
Remember the Time - Michael Jackson
What's She Doing Now - Garth Brooks
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 2, 2000 (12:57)
#31
History for March 1:
** This is FM Radio Day!
Hey gang, crank up the FM stereo tuner and celebrate the reason why
you listen to that hard rock/alternative music stuff in the first
place. FM Radio began in the U.S. when station W47NV in Nashville, TN
started operations on this day in 1941. W47NV was the first
commercial FM radio station to receive a license, some 20 years after
its AM radio counterpart, KDKA in Pittsburgh. For those of you who
don't remember, FM stands for 'frequency modulation' as opposed to
'amplitude modulation'.
W47NV operated with 20,000 watts on a frequency of 44,700 kilocycles.
FM stations don't do that anymore. They operate in a different
segment of the radio spectrum (88-108 MHz) and at power outputs not
exceeding 100,000 watts, except in rare instances. (There are a few
FM stations in the U.S. with power output up to 300,000 watts and
antennas more than a thousand feet high.)
In the beginning, FM radio was pretty much a graveyard for beautiful
music that numbed us in doctor's offices and in elevators. It became
a primary source for educational programming; featuring classical
music, opera and jazz.
Today, more than 80 percent of radio listening in the United States
is done by way of FM and one can hear just about everything, from
oldies, rock and pop, country and blues to National Public Radio --
not to mention Howard Stern and his ilk. (And if you haven't heard
Howard Stern's ilk, you haven't heard anything.)
That's it. I'm Mr. Wizard. Thank you. And thank you FM!
** Events
1867 - The Cornhusker State, aka the Beef State, aka the Tree Planter
State, aka Nebraska (37th state), entered the United States of
America. Nebraska means 'flat water' in Oto Indian speak. Lincoln is
the official seat of Nebraska government. Nebraska's motto: Equality
before the law. The western meadowlark holds the honor of being the
state bird; while the goldenrod takes its place as the state flower.
Other state symbols include the cottonwood tree (state tree); the
honeybee (state insect); blue agate (state gemstone); whitetail deer
(state mammal); mammoth (state fossil); prairie agate (state rock);
"Beautiful Nebraska" (state song) ... that's original ... and, the
state soil: typic arguistolls, Holrege Series. State soil?
1968 - Elton John's first record, "I've Been Loving You", was
released by Philips Records in England. Philips, not realizing the
potential of the soon-to-be superstar, released him in 1969, just
prior to his teaming with lyricist Bernie Taupin. Elton then signed a
contract with Uni Records and began to turn out what would become a
string of more than 50 hits over the next 25 years.
1969 - Mickey Mantle announced his retirement from baseball on this
day. 'Number 7' was considered to be the final link to the great
Yankee dynasty of the 1950s and 1960s. Mantle's World Series records
include: home runs (18), runs scored (42), RBIs (40), walks (43) and
strikeouts (54). Mickey Mantle died in 1995.
** Birthdays
1926 - Pete (Alvin) Rozelle (football: LA Rams GM, NFL commissioner;
passed away Dec 6, 1996)
1927 - Harry Belafonte (singer: The Banana Boat Song, Jamaica
Farewell, Mary's Boy Child; actor: Island in the Sun, Buck and the
Preacher; UNICEF goodwill ambassador; Shari's father)
1954 - Catherine Bach (actress: The Dukes of Hazzard, African Skies,
Rage and Horror, Street Justice, Driving Force, Cannonball Run 2,
Nicole)
1954 - Ron Howard (Emmy Award-winning producer: From the Earth to the
Moon [1998]; actor: The Andy Griffith Show, Happy Days, American
Graffiti; director: Night Shift, Splash, Cocoon, Backdraft, Apollo 13)
1956 - Timothy Daly (actor: Diner, Wings)
** Chart Toppers - 1988
Father Figure - George Michael
What Have I Done to Deserve This? - Pet Shop Boys & Dusty Springfield
She's like the Wind - Patrick Swayze featuring Wendy Fraser
I Won't Take Less Than Your Love - Tanya Tucker
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 2, 2000 (18:59)
#32
History for March 2:
** This is TIME Day!
Take time to celebrate the fact that on this day in 1923, the first
issue of the weekly periodical "TIME" appeared on newsstands. The
first issue was 32 pages and featured a charcoal sketch of House
Speaker Joseph Gurney 'Uncle Joe' Cannon on the cover. It was the
United States' first modern news magazine.
The worldwide news weekly, founded by Henry Luce and Briton Hadden,
is printed in several languages and is among the most popular
magazines in history with readership topping four million. The
magazine, published by Time Inc., has a corporate staff housed in its
own building: the Time and Life Building in New York City.
** Events
1925 - State and federal highway officials developed a nationwide
route-numbering system and adopted the familiar U.S. shield-shaped
numbered marker. For instance, in the east, there is U.S. 1 that runs
from New England to Florida and in the west, the corresponding
highway, U.S. 101, from Tacoma, WA to San Diego, CA.
1927 - Babe Ruth signed a 3-year contract with the New York Yankees
for a guarantee of $70,000 a year, thus becoming baseball's highest
paid player.
1962 - Wilt 'The Stilt' Chamberlain scored 100 points and broke an
NBA record as the Philadelphia Warriors beat the New York Knicks
169-147. Chamberlain broke NBA marks for the most field goal attempts
(63), most field goals made (36), most free throws made (28), most
points in a half (59), most field goal attempts in a half (37), most
field goals made in a half (22), and most field goal attempts in one
quarter (21). The 316 total points scored tied an NBA record. What's
not known is if Chamberlain set the record for most gallons of sweat
pouring off a man's body during a game.
1974 - Stevie Wonder got five Grammy Awards for his album,
"Innervisions" and his hit songs, "You Are The Sunshine of My Life"
and "Superstition".
1987 - Government officials reported that the median price for a new
home had topped $100,000 for the first time. The new six-figure
price: $110,700, actually, was up from $94,600.
** Birthdays
1793 - Sam Houston (fought for Texas' independence from Mexico;
President of Republic of Texas; U.S. Senator; Texas governor; passed
away in 1863)
1904 - Dr. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel) (Pulitzer Prize-winning
author [1984]: The Cat in the Hat, The Grinch Who Stole Christmas,
Green Eggs and Ham; passed away Sep 24, 1991)
1931 - Mikhail Gorbachev (President of the Soviet Union)
1931 - Tom Wolfe (author: The Bonfire of the Vanities, The Right Stuff)
1944 - Lou Reed (Firbank) (singer, songwriter, guitarist: group:
Velvet Underground; solo: Walk on the Wild Side, Charley's Girl; I
Love You Suzanne; appeared in Paul Simon film: One Trick Pony)
1962 - Jon Bon Jovi (John Bongiovi) (singer, musician, songwriter:
You Give Love a Bad Name, Living on a Prayer)
** Chart Toppers
Straight Up - Paula Abdul
Lost in Your Eyes - Debbie Gibson
The Lover in Me - Sheena Easton
I Sang Dixie - Dwight Yoakam
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 3, 2000 (17:45)
#33
History for March 3:
** Today is Star-Spangled Banner Day!
It was on this day in 1931 that "The Star-Spangled Banner", written
by Francis Scott Key, officially became the national anthem of the
United States. Despite the fact that millions sing (in a manner of
speaking) the anthem before sporting events, civic club meetings and
other public gatherings, it is still ranked as the most difficult
national anthem on earth to sing.
While's Key's lyrics reflected an enduring sentiment of America
during war time of 1812, with its "rockets red glare and bombs
bursting in air" over Fort McHenry at Baltimore, MD; the melody goes
against most everything musical and the words themselves are quite
difficult to remember -- especially those following the first verse.
Originally an English drinking song, "To Anacreon in Heaven", the
melody is next to impossible for most of us to sing. Maybe that's why
it was a drinking song. You either have to be drunk to sing it or if
everyone's drunk, who cares!
Amateur singers embarrass themselves as they attempt to hit the high
notes at the end of the song. They do this in the shower and at
community events; while professional opera singers and pop music
stars go flat ... or forget the words ... in front of national
television audiences. Performers such as Robert Morley, Jimi Hendrix,
Marvin Gaye, Jose Feliciano, Ray Charles and others have had
difficulties in musically translating the nation's anthem.
Almost from the moment the song was adopted officially, there has
been movement to bring about change. Many would like to see "America
the Beautiful" become the U.S. national anthem and every so often,
there is talk of such a change, but to no avail, in this, "the home
of the braaaaaaaaaaaaave."
** Events
1845 - The U.S. Congress passed legislation overriding a President's
veto. It was the first time Congress had done so. President John
Tyler was in office at the time.
1845 - Florida became the 27th state of the United States of America.
The word 'Florida' comes from the Spanish 'feast of flowers'. But we
call it the Sunshine State. The capital of the Sunshine State is ...
no, not Walt Disney World ... Tallahassee. The state flower is the
fragrant orange blossom and the mockingbird is the state bird. Do you
think the mockingbird can mimic Donald Duck? Or maybe it sings the
Florida state song, "Suwannee River". The Florida state motto is: "In
God we trust."
1985 - Kevin McHale of the University of Minnesota set a Boston
Celtics scoring record this night as he poured in 56 points in a
138-129 win over the Detroit Pistons.
** Birthdays
1911 - Jean Harlow (Harlean Carpenter) (actress: Platinum Blonde, Red
Dust, Bombshell, Dinner at Eight, China Seas, Libeled Lady; passed
away June 7, 1937)
1920 - James Doohan (actor: Star Trek TV series, Star Trek: The
Motion Picture, Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan, Star Trek III: The
Search for Spock, Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, Star Trek V: The
Final Frontier, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, Star Trek:
Generations, Loaded Weapon 1, Bug Buster)
1962 - Jackie Joyner-Kersee (Olympic gold medalist & 1st woman to
hold world record in the heptathlon: 7,044 points [1992]; 1st athlete
to win multi-event medals in 3 Olympics [pentathlon, long jump])
1966 - Tone-Loc (rap singer: Wild Thing)
** Chart Toppers - 1982
Centerfold - The J. Geils Band
Open Arms - Journey
Shake It Up - The Cars
Lord, I Hope This Day is Good - Don Williams
~MarciaH
Sat, Mar 4, 2000 (20:13)
#34
Reuters Today in History for March 4
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1394 - Portuguese explorer Prince Henry the Navigator born. He sponsored
expeditions along the African coast which led to the foundation of the
overseas Portuguese empire.
1461 - In the English Wars of the Roses, Edward of York took the English
throne as Edward IV.
1678 - Antonio Vivaldi, Italian composer, born. Best known for ``The Four
Seasons,'' he wrote more than 230 violin concertos and 120 concertos for
other solo instruments.
1681 - King Charles II granted William Penn by charter almost all of what is
now Pennsylvania.
1789 - The first U.S. Congress convened in New York City until September
29. 28 Senators and 65 Representatives sat for the 13 States.
1791 - Vermont became the 14th state of the United States.
1793 - George Washington was inaugurated for a second term as president of
the United States in Philadelphia. He was the only president to be
inaugurated in two cities the first was New York.
1801 - Thomas Jefferson was inaugurated as the third president of the United
States and he became the first to be inaugurated in the new capital of
Washington.
1824 - The Royal National Lifeboat Institution was founded.
1877 - Tchaikovsky's ballet ``Swan Lake'' was first performed at the Bolshoi
Theater in Moscow.
1913 - John Garfield, U.S. film actor, born as Julius Garfinkle. Best known for
his roles in the films ``Juarez'' and ``The Postman Always Rings Twice.''
1933 - Franklin D. Roosevelt was sworn in as 32nd U.S. president.
1970 - The French submarine Eurydice sank off the coast of Toulon. All 57
aboard died.
1971 - Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau secretly married Margaret
Sinclair.
1975 - Film actor Charlie Chaplin was knighted at Buckingham Palace.
~MarciaH
Sat, Mar 4, 2000 (20:19)
#35
History for March 4:
** Today is Mike Day!
This day is celebrated by disc jockeys, TV hosts, movie stars,
department store announcers, rock groups, politicians and many, many
others. For it was on this day in 1877 that Emile Berliner, the man
behind so many inventions, came up with a thing called the
microphone. Good thing, too, because the Bell System, run by
Alexander Graham Bell, was in desperate need of something to save it
from financial ruin -- and to help the progress of the telephone.
So, the Bell Labs came up with a compact way to put Mr. Berliner's
microphone on a wooden box, with a crank, an earpiece, a cradle hook
for the earpiece and some wires, and called it the telephone.
There was no such thing as a telephone dial. One rang up 'Jenny' (the
operator) with three turns on the crank. That got her to put a cord
into the switchboard connecting you directly to the phone you were
calling. Because of the microphone, people could hear you speak.
Neat, huh?
And in 1957, operators in upstate New York (90 miles from Manhattan)
and other somewhat rural areas throughout the U.S. were still saying,
"Number, plee-uz" into their little mouthpiece microphones attached
to headsets.
Even as late as the 1980s, the average Joe would shy away when a
microphone was stuck in his face. Today, with all the amazing
electronic gadgets we have, hardly a soul is afraid of a microphone.
Witness karaoke!
** Events
1791 - Vermont, the 14th state, was admitted to the union on this
day. It sits way up in the northeast corner of the United States,
adjacent to New York, nestled in the Green Mountains. No wonder it's
known as the Green Mountain State! Coincidentally, that's what the
French phrase 'vert mont' means. Montpelier is Vermont's capital
city. "Hail Vermont" is the state song which goes right along with
the state motto: Vermont, Freedom and Unity. The hermit thrush stands
alone as the state bird; and the red clover is the colorful state
flower which attracts the state insect, the honeybee. The Morgan
horse is the state animal, and the state tree ... you guessed it ...
is the one that makes all that famous Vermont maple syrup, the sugar
maple tree. Every now and then some of these state symbols make
sense.
1925 - Calvin Coolidge took the oath of office in Washington DC. The
presidential inauguration was broadcast on radio for the very first
time.
1950 - Walt Disney's "Cinderella" was released. It was the first
full-length, animated, feature film in eight years from the man who
brought us Mickey Mouse.
1985 - "Dr. Spock's Baby and Child Care" was published with Dr.
Michael Rothenberg sharing authorship with Dr. Benjamin Spock, 'The
Baby Doc'. It was the fifth edition of the book to be published.
30,000,000 copies had been printed -- second only to the Bible in the
best seller category.
** Birthdays
1888 - Knute Rockne (College Football Hall of Famer: coach: Notre
Dame [1918-1930]: 122 games: won 195, lost 12, tied 5; killed in
plane crash Mar 31, 1931)
1961 - Ray 'Boom Boom' Mancini (lightweight boxing champion, actor:
The Dirty Dozen: The Fatal Mission, Aces: Iron Eagle III, The Search
for One-eye Jimmy, Body and Soul; film based on his life: Heart of a
Champion: The Ray Mancini Story [1985])
1968 - Patsy Kensit (actress: Tunnel Vision, Fall from Grace, Blame
It on the Bellboy, Chicago Joe and the Showgirl, Lethal Weapon, Monty
Python and the Holy Grail, The Great Gatsby)
1969 - Chastity Bono (singer; daughter of Sonny & Cher)
** Chart Toppers - 1991
All the Man that I Need - Whitney Houston
Someday - Mariah Carey
One More Try - Timmy -T-
Walk on Faith - Mike Reid
~MarciaH
Sun, Mar 5, 2000 (16:08)
#36
History for March 5:
** This is Annie Oakley Day!
Just five feet tall, one wouldn't expect Phoebe Anne Oakley Mozee to
be able to use a rifle, a pistol or a shotgun. Yet, the diminutive
Annie Oakley -- as she was better known -- found out, at the age of
nine, that she was a dead shot. Born in a log cabin in Patterson
Township, Ohio, Annie starred in Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show for
seventeen years equally adept at hitting targets with any of the
three weapons.
On this day in particular, in 1922, Annie broke all existing records
for women's trap shooting. She smashed 98 out of 100 clay targets
thrown at 16 yards while at a match at the Pinehurst Gun Club in
North Carolina. She hit the first fifty, missed the 51st, then the
67th.
This was a record-breaker, true; but Annie Oakley was well-known
throughout the United States and Europe for her expert shooting
ability. In one day, 'Little Sure Shot' took a .22 rifle and hit
4,772 glass balls out of 5,000 tossed in the air. She could hit a
playing card from 90 feet (the thin side facing her), puncturing it
at least five times before it hit the ground. It was this display
that named free tickets with holes punched in them, Annie Oakleys.
In 1935, Phoebe Mozee was immortalized on film in "Annie Get Your
Gun", which was later made into a musical for the stage. In 1985,
another film, "Annie Oakley", was made for TV. It included
silent-film footage of the record-breaking sharp-shooter, taken by
Thomas Edison.
** Events
1623 - The first temperance law in the colonies was enacted -- in Virginia.
1836 - Samuel Colt manufactured the first pistol: a .34-caliber 'Texas' model.
1946 - Winston Churchill delivered his famous Iron Curtain Speech at
Fulton, MO, "From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic,
an iron curtain has descended across the Continent."
1986 - The U.S. dollar made its largest one-day gain against other
world currencies since 1978 as it closed up 2-1/2 points or just over
2.2 percent from the previous day's closing mark.
** Birthdays
1945 - Norm Thompson (football: St. Louis Cardinals)
1946 - Rocky (Robert) Bleier (football: Pittsburgh Steelers running
back: Super Bowl IX, X, XIII, XIV)
1948 - Eddy Grant (singer, songwriter: Living on the Front Line, Do
You Feel My Love, I Don't Wanna Dance, Electric Avenue, Romancing the
Stone; group: Equals: Baby Come Back, Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys;
owned studio: Coach House Studios, another in Barbados)
** Chart Toppers - 1984
Jump - Van Halen
99 Luftballons - Nena
Girls Just Want to Have Fun - Cyndi Lauper
Woke Up in Love - Exile
~MarciaH
Sun, Mar 5, 2000 (16:51)
#37
Today in History for March 5
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1534 - Antonio Allegri da Correggio, Italian Renaissance painter, dies.
1751 - James Madison, fourth president of the United States, born. He
sponsored the first 10 amendments to the U.S. constitution.
1770 - In the ``Boston massacre'' five people are killed when British troops
open fire on a crowd.
1778 - Thomas Arne, English composer of ``Rule, Britannia,'' dies.
1827 - Count Alessandro Giuseppe Volta, Italian inventor of the first electric
battery, dies.
1933 - Election returns in Germany give the Nazis and their allies 52 percent
of Reichstag seats.
1953 - Soviet leader Joseph Stalin (Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili) dies
after three decades in power.
1953 - Sergei Prokofiev, Russian composer, dies. Best known for his
orchestral fairytale ``Peter and the Wolf'' and for his film scores ``Alexander
Nevsky'' and ``Ivan the Terrible.''
1970 - The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty comes into force with 45
countries, including the three main nuclear powers, having signed the
agreement.
1977 - In the United States President Carter answers questions from listeners
over 26 states in the first presidential phone-in.
1984 - William Powell, American film actor dies; best known for his roles in
``The Thin Man,'' ``My Man Godfrey'' and ``Life With Father.''
1984 - Tito Gobbi, Italian operatic baritone, dies; he was famed for his role as
``Scarpia'' in Giacomo Puccini's operatic shocker ``Tosca.''
1989 - Time Inc. and Warner Communications Inc. decide to merge into a
world-leading media and entertainment giant.
1993 - Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson is banned for life after he was ruled to
have failed a second dope test just five years after his exit in disgrace from
the 1988 Seoul Olympics.
1994 - White House lawyer Bernard Nussbaum resigns, becoming the first
casualty of the Whitewater affair that had plagued the Clinton administration.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 6, 2000 (11:39)
#38
History for March 6:
** This is Remember the Alamo Day!
It was on this day in 1836, the last of a thirteen-day siege, that
Mexico's dictator, Santa Anna and his thousand-man army defeated a
little band of Texas volunteers. The last of these 189 brave men (who
included Davy Crockett) died on March 6, holed up in the Alamo.
Their fight for Texas' liberty did not go unnoticed. 46 days later,
with the battle cry, "Remember the Alamo," General Sam Houston and
his Texans captured Santa Anna and finished the job started at the
Alamo. Texas gained its independence.
** Events
1926 - And now, camel news: On this day, in Tunis, Africa, the lead
camel in a race was clocked at an amazing 12 minutes over the 3-1/8
mile course, an average of 3 minutes, 40 seconds a mile. Talk about
gettin' off the hump, huh?
1962 - Frank Sinatra recorded his final session for Capitol Records
in Hollywood. Sinatra had been recording for his own record label,
Reprise, for two years. His final side on Capitol was "I Gotta Right
to Sing the Blues", with Skip Martin's orchestra.
1964 - Tom O'Hara ran the mile in 3 minutes, 56.4 seconds, setting a
world indoor record in Chicago, IL. And he still didn't beat that
speedy dromedary.
1981 - Walter Cronkite, the dean of American television newscasters,
said "And that's the way it is" for the final time, as he closed the
"CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite". An audience estimated at
17,000,000 viewers saw 'the most trusted man in America' sign-off.
Cronkite retired after more than 30 years in broadcasting. He was
replaced by Dan Rather at the anchor desk.
1985 - Yul Brynner played his famous role as the king in "The King
and I" in his 4,500th performance in the musical. The actor, age 64,
opened the successful production on Broadway in 1951.
** Birthdays
1475 - Michelangelo (de Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni) (Renaissance
artist: Sistine Chapel ceiling; sculptor: David; architect: St.
Peter's [Rome]; passed away in 1564)
1619 - Cyrano De Bergerac (French soldier, author: The States and
Empires of the Sun; subject of famous play whose title bears his
name; passed away in 1655)
1806 - Elizabeth Barrett Browning (Moulton) (poet: Sonnets from the
Portuguese - "How do I Love Thee? Let Me Count the Ways."; Robert
Browning's wife; passed away June 29, 1861)
1972 - Shaquille O'Neal (basketball: Orlando Magic: NBA Rookie of the
Year [1993])
** Chart Toppers - 1985
Careless Whisper - Wham! featuring George Michael
Can't Fight This Feeling - REO Speedwagon
California Girls - David Lee Roth
Baby Bye Bye - Gary Morris
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 6, 2000 (13:26)
#39
Today in History for March 6
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1475 - Michelangelo Buonarotti, Italian painter, sculptor and architect, born.
Described as the most brilliant representative of the Italian Renaissance, he
was famed for his work on the Sistine Chapel, his painting of ``The Last
Judgment'' and his statue of ``David.''
1619 - Savinien Cyrano de Bergerac, French satirist and dramatist, born.
1836 - The siege of the Alamo ended when Mexican troops under General
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna captured the mission fort garrisoned by Davey
Crockett and 154 Texans.
1853 - Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi's opera ``La Traviata'' was performed
for the first time, in Venice.
1888 - Louisa May Alcott, U.S. novelist and author of ``Little Women,'' died.
1900 - Gottfried Daimler, motor engineer who improved the engine and made
the first motorcycle, died.
1930 - Prepackaged frozen food produced by the company set up by
Clarence Birdseye went on sale for the first time in Springfield,
Massachussetts. Peas, fish, meat, loganberries and spinach were among the
products available for sale.
1932 - John Philip Sousa, U.S. bandmaster and composer of military
marches, died.
1941 - U.S. sculptor Gutzon Borglum died. He carved the heads of Presidents
Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt on Mount Rushmore,
South Dakota,.
1944 - In World War II, 658 U.S. bombers began a daylight attack on Berlin
from bases in Britain and dropped 2,000 tons of bombs.
1951 - Ivor Novello, Welsh composer and playwright, died.
1967 - Zoltan Kodaly, Hungarian composer of ``Dances of Galanta,'' died.
1973 - Pearl Buck, U.S. author of ``The Good Earth,'' died; she won the Nobel
Prize for Literature in 1938.
1980 - Belgian-born French author Marguerite Yourcenar became the first
woman writer to be elected to the Academie Francaise.
1992 - Michelangelo, one of the most alarming computer viruses to surface,
struck thousands of personal computers around the world.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 6, 2000 (15:13)
#40
Commandancy of the Alamo
Bejar, Fby 24th 1836--
TO THE PEOPLE OF TEXAS & ALL AMERICANS IN
THE WORLD
Fellow Citizens & Compatriots--
I am besieged, by a thousand or more of the
Mexicans under Santa Anna--I have sustained a continual
Bombardment & cannonade for 24 hours & have not lost a
man--The enemy has demanded a surrender at discretion,
otherwise the garrison are to be put to the sword, if the
fort is taken-- I have answered the demand with a cannon
shot, & our flag still waves proudly from the walls-- I
_shall never surrender or retreat. Then_ I call on you
in the name of Liberty, of patriotism & everything dear to
the American character, to come to our aid, with all
dispatch-- The enemy is receiving reinforcements daily
& will no doubt increase to three or four thousand in four
or five days. If this call is neglected, I am determined
to sustain myself as long as possible & die a soldier who
never forgets what is due to his own honor & that of his
country--
_Victory or Death._
_________________
_________________
William Barret Travis
Lt. Col. Comdt.
************************
(The Alamo fell on 6 March 1836.)
~wolf
Tue, Mar 7, 2000 (19:53)
#41
wow marcia, a lot for that day in history!
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 7, 2000 (20:25)
#42
I noted that! Wolfie, thanks for coming in here...it is lonely sometimes...especially with one of the hosts missing and one too busy for another conference...*sigh*
Some days have two bunches of history and today there is apparently none!
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 7, 2000 (22:42)
#43
History for March 7, 2000:
** This is We Are the World Day!
The song "We Are the World", from the album of the same name, was
played on the radio for the first time on this day in 1985.
Forty-five of pop music's top stars gathered together to combine
their talents to record the music of Lionel Richie and Michael
Jackson. Richie and Jackson sang, too, while Quincy Jones did the
producing of the USA for Africa record.
To insure that the all-night recording session went off without a
hitch and that the true cause of the song was etched into the hearts
and minds of the wide array of internationally known talent
performing, Richie placed a hand-written sign outside the studio at
A&M Records in Hollywood which simply said, "Check Your Egos at the
Door."
The proceeds of the multimillion-selling recording went to aid
African famine victims. The project, coordinated by Ken Kragen, was
deemed a huge success.
** Events
1955 - "Peter Pan", with Mary Martin and Cyril Richard, was presented
as a television special for the first time.
1955 - Baseball commissioner Ford Frick indicated that he was in
favor of legalizing the spitball. The commissioner said, "It's a
great pitch." Many, like Gaylord Perry and others would agree, but
the rules never changed to allow the dastardly pitch. Catchers often
said that when catching a spitball, one needed to wear a raincoat for
protection.
1959 - Melvin C. Garlow became the first pilot to fly over a million
miles in jet airplanes.
1987 - World Boxing Council (WBC) heavyweight champ, 'Iron' Mike
Tyson, became the youngest heavyweight titlist ever as he beat James
Smith in a decision during a 12-round bout in Las Vegas.
** Birthdays
1942 - Michael York (actor: Logan's Run, Cabaret, The Heat of the Day)
1946 - Peter Wolf (Blankfield) (singer: group: J. Geils Band:
Centerfold; Lights Out, Freeze-Frame; married Faye Dunaway)
1952 - Lynn Swann (football: Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver: Super
Bowl IX, X, XIII, XIV; TV sportscaster) 1960 - Ivan Lendl (tennis
champion: Australian Open [1989,1983,1990], French Open [1984, 1986,
1987], U.S. Open [1985, 1986, 1987])
** Chart Toppers - 1986
Kyrie - Mr. Mister
Sara - Starship
Living in America - James Brown
You Can Dream of Me - Steve Wariner
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 8, 2000 (12:05)
#44
History for March 8:
** Today is Beulah Day!
Because Louise Beavers, a talented actress, was born on this day in
1902 and not some fifty years later, she was forced to forever play
the role of a maid. Louise, a member of the Black Filmmakers Hall of
Fame, performed in a time when a black woman was stereotyped and
unable to get choice roles.
Even in the part of a maid, she able to show the world that she was
an extremely talented actress. One critic, Jimmie Fiddler, said her
starring role in the film, "Imitation of Life", was the finest
performance of 1935.
Louise Beavers appeared in more than 125 films over a thirty-year
period, including "Tammy and the Bachelor" [1957], "The Jackie
Robinson Story" [1950], "Dixie Jamboree" [1944], "Reap the Wild Wind"
[1942], "General Spanky" [1936] and "Coquette" [1929]. Yet, she is
still best remembered for her role as "Beulah", the maid, in the
television series by the same name. The part was originally played by
Ethel Waters. A major cast change was made in 1952 when actress
Hattie McDaniels of "Gone with the Wind" fame was to replace Waters.
McDaniels became ill and Louise Beavers took over. "Beulah" ended
when Louise no longer wanted to play the part.
** Events
1855 - A train passed over the first railway suspension bridge -- at
Niagara Falls, NY.
1962 - The Beatles performed for the first time on the BBC in Great
Britain. John, Paul, George and ... Pete Best sang "Dream Baby" on
the show, "Teenager's Turn" on 'Auntie Beeb' (as the BBC was known).
1971 - A new undisputed world heavyweight boxing champion was
crowned. 'Smokin' Joe Frazier, of Philadelphia, won a decision over
Muhammad Ali, who had been previously undefeated. For the night's
work, both Frazier and Ali collected the tidy sum of $2,500,000.
1985 - The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) taxed themselves to
discover that 407,700 Americans were millionaires -- more than double
the total of just five years before.
** Birthdays
1841 - Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (jurist: associate justice of U.S.
Supreme Court [1902-1932]; writer: The Common Law; passed away Mar 6,
1935)
1943 - Lynn Redgrave (actress: Georgy Girl, House Calls, Chicken Soup
Centennial, Rehearsal for Murder)
1959 - Aidan Quinn (actor: Legends of the Fall, Avalon, All My Sons,
Desperately Seeking Susan, A Streetcar Named Desire)
** Chart Toppers - 1987
Livin' on a Prayer - Bon Jovi
Jacob's Ladder - Huey Lewis & The News
Somewhere Out There - Linda Ronstadt & James Ingram
Mornin' Ride - Lee Greenwood
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 8, 2000 (17:59)
#45
Today in History for March 8
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1849 - Thomas Ewing of Ohio was appointed by U.S. President Zachary
Taylor as the first Secretary of the Interior Department.
1869 - Hector Berlioz, French composer of the ``Symphonie fantastique'' and
the opera ``Les Troyens,'' died.
1879 - Otto Hahn, German Nobel prize winner for chemistry (1944) and
co-discoverer of nuclear fission, born.
1889 - John Ericsson, Swedish-born U.S. ship designer and inventor of the
first successful screw propeller, died.
1910 - The Royal Aero Club issued the first British pilot's licence to J.T.C.
Moore Brabazon.
1917 - Riots and strikes in St. Petersburg marked the start of the ``February
Revolution'' in Russia.
1917 - Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, German soldier, inventor and pioneer in
airship development, died.
1948 - The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that religious instruction in public
schools violated the constitution.
1950 - The Soviet Union said it was in possession of the atomic bomb.
1958 - The Chinese government imposed martial law on the restive Tibetan
capital of Lhasa.
1961 - Sir Thomas Beecham, English conductor, died. He was founder of
several British orchestras including the London Philharmonic and was best
known for his interpretations of Mozart and Sibelius.
1971 - Harold Lloyd, U.S. silent film star and comedian, died. Best
remembered for the scene in ``Safety Last'' in which he was seen dangling
from a skyscraper with nothing to hold on to but the hand of a clock.
1973 - IRA car bombs exploded outside the Old Bailey courthouse and
Scotland Yard police headquarters in London, killing one and injuring 238.
1983 - British composer William Walton died. His orchestral piece ``Facade''
is regarded as his most popular success.
1999 - New York Yankees baseball legend Joe DiMaggio died aged 84.
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 9, 2000 (12:00)
#46
Today in History for March 9
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1074 - Pope Gregory VII declared all married Roman Catholic priests to be
excommunicated.
1454 - Amerigo Vespucci, Italian explorer who made many voyages to the
New World, born. The name for the continents of America was derived from
his name.
1796 - Napoleon Bonaparte married Josephine de Beauharnais, widow of a
former French officer executed during the revolution.
1831 - The French Foreign Legion was founded by King Louis Philippe with its
headquarters in Algeria.
1864 - In the U.S. Civil War, General Ulysses S. Grant was appointed
commander-in-chief of the Union armies.
1918 - Frank Wedekind, German actor and dramatist, died. His brand of
satire often roused controversy, which led to him being imprisoned for a time.
1941 - In World War Two the Italian offensive in Albania began but became
bogged down after only four days.
1943 - Bobby Fischer, former world chess champion, born. In 1972 he
became the first American to win the world chess championship when he
beat Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union in Reykjavik.
1940 - The late actor Raul Julia born.
1945 - The U.S. 1st Army captured Bonn, Germany.
1964 - French actress Juliette Binoche, who won the Oscar for best
supporting actress for her role in ``The English Patient,'' born.
1992 - Former Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin died. Once a member
of the Irgun Zvai Leumi resistance group and a hard-liner concerning the
Arabs, he won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1978 for his part in the Camp David
settlement with President Anwar Sadat of Egypt.
1994 - Spanish actor Fernando Rey, who starred in the film ``The French
Connection'' and also the films of Luis Bunuel, died aged 76.
1995 - President Bill Clinton approved a visa for Gerry Adams to enter the
United States and raise funds for Sinn Fein.
1996 - George Burns, one of America's best loved and most enduring
entertainers, died less than two months after celebrating his 100th birthday.
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 9, 2000 (12:12)
#47
On this day...
1497 Nicolaus Copernicus first recorded astronomical observation
1745 Bells for first American carillon shipped from England to Boston
1791 George Hayward, US surgeon, first to use ether
1796 Napoleon Bonaparte marries Josephine de Beauharnais
1798 Dr. George Balfour becomes first naval surgeon in the US Navy
1820 James Monroe's daughter Maria marries in the White House
1822 Charles Graham of NY patents artificial teeth
1858 Albert Potts of Philadelphia patents the street mailbox
1861 Confederate currency authorized-$50, $100, $500, $1,000
1862 "Monitor" (Union) & "Merrimack" (Rebel) battle in Hampton Roads
1864 Ulysses S. Grant is appointed commander of Union Army
1873 Royal Canadian Mounted Police founded
1889 Kansas passes first general antitrust law in US
1907 First involuntary sterilization law enacted, Indiana
1916 General Fransisco "Poncho" Villa invades US (17 killed)
1916 Germany declares war against Portugal
1932 Eamon De Valera becomes President of Ireland
1945 Japanese proclaim the independence of Indo-China
1954 Edward R. Murrow criticizes Senator Joseph McCarthy
1961 Sputnik 9 carries Chernushka (dog) into orbit
1966 Andrew Brimmer becomes first black governor of Federal Reserve Board
1989 Eastern Airlines files for bankruptcy
Birthdates which occurred on March 9th:
1454 Amerigo Vespucci, explorer
1564 David Fabricius, Essens Germany, astronomer
1890 Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov, Soviet Foreign Minister
1892 David Garnett, England, novelist/editor (Lady into Fox)
1892 Vita Sackville-West, England, novelist/poet (The Land)
1902 Will Greer, Frankfort Indiana, actor (Grandpa Walton-The Waltons)
1918 Mickey Spillane, mystery writer
1920 Carl Betz, Pittsburgh, actor (Alex Stone-Donna Reed Show)
1926 Irene Papas, Corinth Greece, actress (Moses The Lawgiver)
1927 Jack Jensen, baseball player (AL MVP 1958)
1934 Joyce Van Patten, Queens NY, actress (Good Guys, Don Rickles Show)
1934 Yuri Gagarin, Russia, first man into space (aboard Vostok 1)
1936 Glenda Jackson, England, actress (Hopscotch, Touch of Class)
1936 Marty Ingels, Brooklyn, comedian (I'm Dickens, He's Fenster)
1936 Mickey Gilley, country singer
1938 Charles Siebert, Kenosha Wisconsin, actor (One Day at A Time, Trapper John)
1940 Raul Julia, Puerto Rico, actor (Kiss of the Spider Woman)
1942 Mark Lindsay, Eugene Oregon, singer (Paul Revere & the Raiders)
1943 Bobby Fischer, US, world chess champion (1972-75)
1948 Jeffrey Osborne, singer (On the Wings of Love)
1950 Danny Sullivan, Indy-car racer
1954 Keven Wade, Chappaqua NY, screen writer (Working Girls)
1955 Ornella Muti, Rome Italy, actress (Flash Gordon)
Deaths which occurred on March 9th:
1661 Jules Cardinal Mazarin, Chief Minister of France
1962 Dr. Howard Engstrom, a designer of the Univac computer dies at 59
1969 Richard Crane, actor (Surfside 6), dies at 50
1975 Joseph Dunninger, mentalist (Amazing Dunninger), dies at 82
1982 Alan Badel, actor (Shogun), dies at 58
1983 Faye Emerson, actress (I've Got a Secret), dies of cancer at 65
1986 Ned Calmer, TV host (In the First Person), dies at 78
1992 Menachim Begin, Israeli Prime Minister (1977-1983) dies at 78
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 9, 2000 (19:07)
#48
Born on March 9 under the sign of Pisces:
They include Leland Stanford, railroad builder and founder
of California's Stanford University, in 1824
English novelist and poet Victoria Sackville-West in 1892
Composer Samuel Barber in 1910
Detective novelist Mickey Spillane in 1918 (age 82)
Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space, in 1934
Actors Joyce Van Patten in 1934 (age 66)
Marty Ingles in 1936 (age 64)
Raul Julia in 1940
Trish Van Deere in 1943 (age 57)
Former world chess champion Bobby Fischer in 1943 (age 57)
Actresses Linda Fiorentino ("Men In Black") in 1960 (age 40)
Juliette Binoche ("The English Patient") in 1964 (age 36)
Football player Brian Bosworth in 1965 (age 35)
Actor Emmanuel Lewis in 1971 (age 29)
On This Date in History:
In 1796, French general and future emperor Napoleon Bonaparte
married Josephine de Beauharnais.
In 1864, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant was appointed commander in
chief of Union forces in the Civil War.
In 1967, the daughter of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin,
Svetlana, defected to the United States.
In 1986, the module containing the bodies of the seven
astronauts killed in the January 28th explosion of the
shuttle Challenger was located off Florida.
In 1989, the Senate voted 53-47 against confirming John Tower
as secretary of defense.
Also in 1989, William Bennett was confirmed by the Senate as
the nation's first Cabinet-level drug czar.
In 1990, Haitian dictator Gen. Prosper Avril stepped down
from power under pressure and the military agreed to turn
the nation over to civilian rule.
In 1991, Israeli troops fired on Palestinian protesters in
the occupied Gaza Strip, wounding 55.
In 1992, a federal judge in New York announced a final $1.3
billion agreement to settle the civil suits growing out of
the 1989 collapse of Drexel Burham Lambert Inc., once the
most powerful firm on Wall Street.
In 1993, gunmen linked to the former Contra rebels stormed
the Nicaraguan Embassy in Costa Rica and took the ambassador
and at least 18 others hostage.
Also in 1993, Rodney King testified in the federal trial of
four Los Angeles police officers who were videotaped beating
and kicking him.
In 1996, Los Angeles police Detective Mark Furman began his
testimony at the O.J. Simpson double murder trial.
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 10, 2000 (12:26)
#49
History for March 9:
** Today is New World Day!
A baby born in Florence, Italy on this day in 1451 was destined to
become one of the world's most famous explorers. Amerigo Vespucci was
a merchant and an outfitter of ships, a job that introduced him to
Christopher Columbus.
Their stars would cross again in 1507 when a German map maker honored
Amerigo Vespucci by naming the new continent on his maps, America.
The mapmaker had not heard of Columbus' discovery at the time. So
Columbus got the credit for the discovery; but the discovery bore the
name of Vespucci ... forever.
In reality, Vespucci had participated in two major expeditions
between the years 1499 and 1502, to the coast of South America. There
he discovered the Amazon and Plate Rivers. Vespucci thought he had
discovered a new continent ... or a New World.
** Events
1822 - Charles M. Graham of New York City received a patent for
artificial teeth. So, in honor of the momentous occasion, let's all
try to keep a stiff upper ... plate today!
1985 - The most requested movie in history, "Gone With The Wind",
went on sale in video stores across the U.S. for the first time. The
tape cost buyers $89.95. The film, starring Clark Gable and Vivien
Leigh, cost $4.5 million to produce and has earned over $400 million,
making it one of the biggest money-makers in motion picture history.
"GWTW" is now the cornerstone of the massive MGM film library owned
by Ted Turner.
1986 - Bill Cosby broke Liberace's long-standing record and earned
the biggest box-office gross in the 54-year history of Radio City
Music Hall in New York City.
1987 - Chrysler Corporation offered to buy American Motors
Corporation on this day. The car maker offered up to $1 billion
dollars for the financially troubled AMC. Remember the Gremlin? How
about the Rambler American -- the car with seats that reclined to a
completely horizontal position?
** Birthdays
1451 - Amerigo Vespucci (merchant, explorer; America named for him;
passed away in 1512; see New World Day [above])
1934 - Yuri Gagarin (Russian cosmonaut: the first man to travel in
space; killed plane crash Mar 27, 1968)
1940 - Raul Julia (Raul Rafael Carlos Julia y Arcelay) (actor: The
Addams Family, Kiss of the Spider Woman; four Tony award nominations:
Proteus, Mack the Knife; passed away Oct 24, 1994)
1960 - Linda (Clorinda) Fiorentino (actress: Unforgettable, Bodily
Harm, The Last Seduction, Vision Quest) 1971 - Emmanuel Lewis (actor:
Webster)
** Chart Toppers - 1988
Father Figure - George Michael
Never Gonna Give You Up - Rick Astley
I Get Weak - Belinda Carlisle
Face to Face - Alabama
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 10, 2000 (12:30)
#50
Time capsules
In 515 B.C., the re-building of the great Jewish temple in
Jerusalem was completed.
In 1862, the U.S. Treasury issued the first American paper
money, in denominations from $5 to $1,000.
James Earl Ray pleaded guilty to the murder of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. and was sentenced to 99 years in prison on
this date in 1969. Ray would later recant, claiming he did
not fire the bullet that killed the civil rights leader. Just
before his death, Ray met in prison with members of the King
family, who declared afterwards that they believed he was
innocent.
In 1987, the Vatican condemned human artificial fertilization
or generation of human life outside the womb and said all
reproduction must result from the "act of conjugal love."
In 1991, former POWs held by Iraq returned to the United States
to a hero's welcome.
In 1992, President Bush and Democratic challenger Bill Clinton
got sweeping Southern victories in the Super Tuesday primaries.
Former Sen. Paul Tsongas won in New England.
In 1993, FBI agents arrested a third person, a 25-year-old
Kuwaiti-born chemical engineer, in connection with the World
Trade Center bombing.
Rapidly melting snow and ice jams in 1993 forced rivers out of
their banks and hundreds from their homes in Nebraska in the
worst flooding in 15 years. This was a bad year for flooding in
the nation's midsection. At one point, downtown Fargo, N.D.,
flooded and then burned down after the high water prevented fire
trucks from getting to the fire. There's something ironic about
buildings surrounded by floodwater catching fire but we're sure
the irony was lost on Fargo officials.
And in 1993, an anti-abortion demonstrator fatally shot a doctor
at a Pensacola, Fla., clinic.
In 1994, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevented
reported the number of new AIDS cases in the United States had
more than doubled in 1993.
In 1995, retired Air Force Gen. Michael Carns withdrew from
consideration to head the CIA after an FBI background check
turned up potential violations of labor and immigration law
involving a young family friend Carns had arranged to bring
to the United States from the Philippines.
In 1997, The Citadel announced that 10 male cadets had been
disciplined for mistreating two female cadets; the women later
resigned from the South Carolina military academy.
In 1998, Indonesian President Suharto was re-elected to a
seventh term.
------------------ Birthday's ------------------+
Barry Fitzgerald in 1888
French composer Arthur Honegger in 1892
Jazz cornetist Bix Beiderbecke in 1903
Poet Margaret Fishback in 1904 (age 96)
Playwright David Rabe and actor Chuck Norris, both in 1940
(age 60)
Kim Campbell, the first woman prime minister of Canada, and
journalist Bob Greene, both in 1947 (age 53)
Actresses Sharon Stone in 1958 (age 42) and Jasmine Guy
("A Different World") in 1964 (age 36)
Britain's Prince Edward in 1964 (age 36)
-----------------------------------------------------------
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 10, 2000 (13:58)
#51
On This Day - March 10
On this day...March 10
241 -BC- Battle of Aegusa: Roman fleet sinks 50 Carthagean ships
1791 John Stone, Concord Massachusetts, patents a pile driver
1847 First money minted in Hawaii
1849 Abraham Lincoln applies for a patent; only US president to
do so
1862 US issues $5, $10, $20, $50, $100, $500 & $1000 paper money
1874 Purdue University (Indiana) admits it's first student
1876 First telephone call made (Alexander Graham Bell to Thomas
Watson)
1880 Salvation Army of England sets up US welfare & religious
activity
1888 Heavyweight boxing champ John L. Sullivan draws Charlie
Mitchell in 30 rounds
1893 Ivory Coast becomes a French colony
1896 Charilaos Vasilakos of Greece wins first modern marathon in
3:18
1906 Coal dust explosion kills 1,060 at Courrieres France
1913 William Knox becomes first in American Bowling Congress to
bowl 300
1933 Nevada becomes first US state to regulate narcotics
1939 17 villages damaged by hailstones in Hyderabad India
1940 Germany invades the Benelux countries
1946 Train derailment kills 185 near Aracaju Brazil
1956 Peter Twiss sets new world air record 1,132 mph (1,823 kph)
1963 Pete Rose debuts with hits in his first two at bats in
spring training
1963 Wilt Chamberlain of NBA SF Warriors scores 70 points vs.
Syracuse
1966 Five time Horse of the Year, Kelso, retires
1966 North Vietnamese capture US Green Beret Camp at Ashau Valley
1969 James Earl Ray pleads guilty of killing Martin Luther King,
Jr.
1971 Senate approves amendment decreasing voting age to 18
1975 Dog spectacles patented in England
1980 Willard Scott becomes the weathercaster on the Today Show
1982 Sygyzy: all 9 planets aligned on same side of Sun
1985 Dallas Maverick coach Dick Motta is 4th NBA coach to win 700
games
Birthdates which occurred on March 10th:
1538 Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk; executed by Queen Elizabeth
in 1572
1772 Friedrich von Schlegel Germany, romantic writer/critic
1842 Ina Donna Coolbrith US, poet laureate of California
1845 Alexander III Russian Tsar (1881-94)
1867 Lillian D Wald US, sociologist/organizer (Visiting Nurses)
1880 Michael Jacobs NYC, boxing promoter
1898 Cy Kendall St Louis, actor (Mysteries of Chinatown)
1900 Sherman Billingsley Enid Oklahoma, talk show host (Stork
Club)
1908 Kristian Palusalu Finland, heavyweight wrestler
(Olympic-gold-1936)
1911 Warner Anderson Brooklyn, actor (Doctor, Lineup,
Matthew-Peyton Place)
1914 Chandler Harper golfer (1950 PGA champ)
1916 James Herriot Scotland, writer (All Creatures Great & Small)
1926 Marques Haynes Harlem Globetrotters
1927 Donn Trenner New Haven Connecticut, orchestra leader (ABC's
Nightlife)
1932 Anatoliy Roschin USSR, super heavyweight wrestler
(Olympic-gold-1972)
1937 Tamara Press USSR, shot putter (Olympic-gold-1960, 64)
1938 Ron Mix NFL tackle (San Diego Chargers, Oakland Raiders)
1940 Chuck Norris martial art champ/actor (Missing in Action,
Walker Texas Ranger)
1940 David Rabe playwright (Streamers)
1940 Dean Torrence surf music singer (Jan & Dean-Little Old Lady)
1945 Katherine Houghton actress (Guess Who's Coming to Dinner)
1947 Tom Scholz rock guitarist/keyboardist (Boston)
1948 Austin Carr NBA star (Cleveland Cavaliers)
1958 Sharon Stone Meadsville Pennsylvaniaa, actress
1963 Jasmine Guy Boston, actress (Whitley-Different World)
Deaths which occurred on March 10th:
1913 Harriet Tubman abolitionist, conductor on Underground RR, dies in NY
1973 Sir Richard Sharples governor of Bermuda, is assassinated
1980 Doctor Tarnoff Jean Harris kills Scarsdale diet doctor
1984 June Marlowe actress, dies at 81
1985 Konstanin Cherneko Soviet leader
1986 Ray Milland actor (Lost Weekend-Academy Award 1945), dies at 81
1988 Andy Gibb pop singer
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 10, 2000 (19:49)
#52
History for March 10:
** This is Salvation Army Day!
It had been two years after 'General' William Booth changed the name of the
Christian Mission, the organization he had founded in London in 1865, to the
Salvation Army.
Commissioner George Scott Railton and seven women officers of Booth's army
landed in New York on this day in 1880 to officially put the Salvation Army
to work in the United States.
The Salvation Army's work consisted of providing food, shelter and clothing
to the needy along with the spreading of the Gospel to the spiritually
needy. Fresh-air camps, boys' clubs, family welfare-work programs, aid to
prisoners and their families, and low-cost housing for the poor continue to
be everyday features of the working army of men and women. Wherever disaster
strikes, the Salvation Army is there to help.
The Salvation Army is a worldwide organization, familiar to and accepted
by most as the Christian religious organization that administers aid to all
without question.
** Events
1876 - Alexander Graham Bell sent the first clear telephone message -- into
a nearby room -- to his assistant, Mr. Watson. "Mr. Watson, come here, I
want you," were the first words spoken into the invention that Bell had
created.
1937 - An audience of 21,000 jitterbuggers jammed the Paramount Theatre in
New York City to see a young clarinetist whom they would crown, 'King of
Swing' on this night. The popular musician was Benny Goodman.
1941 - The Brooklyn Dodgers announced that their players would wear batting
helmets during the 1941 baseball season. General Manager Larry McPhail
predicted that all baseball players would soon be wearing the new devices.
He was right.
1965 - Walter Matthau and Art Carney opened in "The Odd Couple", one of Neil
Simon's greatest theatrical triumphs. It would also become a hit on
television, with Tony Randall playing the tidy Felix Ungar and Jack Klugman
as slovenly sportswriter, Oscar Madison. The play opened at the Plymouth
Theatre in New York City.
** Birthdays
1940 - Chuck Norris (Carlos Ray) (karate champion, actor: Code of
Silence, Delta Force, Forced Vengeance, Lone Wolf McQuade, Missing
in Action, Walker: Texas Ranger)
1958 - Sharon Stone (actress: Last Dance, Casino, The Specialist,
Basic Instinct, Total Recall, War & Remembrance series, Above the
Law, Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol, Allan Quartermain and the
Lost City of Gold, King Solomon's Mines, Calendar Girl Murders,
Deadly Blessing, The Bay City Blues)
1964 - Prince Edward (royalty: son of Great Britain's Queen Elizabeth II)
1964 - Jasmine Guy (actress: A Different World, America's Dream, A
Century of Women, Runaway, Harlem Nights, School Daze)
** Chart Toppers - 1981
I Love a Rainy Night - Eddie Rabbitt
9 to 5 - Dolly Parton
Keep on Loving You - REO Speedwagon
Do You Love as Good as You Look - The Bellamy Brothers
~MarciaH
Sat, Mar 11, 2000 (13:54)
#53
On this day...March 11
537 Goths lay siege to Rome
1302 Romeo & Juliet's wedding day, according to Shakespeare
1702 First London daily newspaper
1779 US army Corps of Engineers established
1791 Samuel Mulliken, Philadelphia, is firsst to obtain more than one US patent
1810 Emperor Napoleon married by proxy to Archduchess Marie Louise
1824 US War Dept creates the Bureau of Indian Affairs
1850 Woman's Medical College of Penn (first female medical school)
1851 The opera "Rigoletto" is produced (Venice)
1861 Confederate convention in Montgomery, adopts constitution
1865 General Sherman's Union forces occupies Fayetteville, NC
1867 Great Mauna Loa eruption (Hawaiian volcano)
1867 The opera "Don Carlos" is produced (Paris)
1882 Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association organized in Princeton NJ
1888 Great blizzard of '88 strikes NE US
1892 First public basketball game (Springfield, Mass)
1918 Save the Redwoods League founded
1927 First armored commercial car hold-up in US, Pittsburgh
1927 First Golden Gloves tournament
1935 Bank of Canada opens
1938 German troops enter Austria
1941 FDR signs Lend-Lease Bill
1942 General MacArthur leaves Bataan for Australia
1948 First black in the US Tennis Open (Reginald Weir)
1948 Jewish Agency of Jerusalem bombed
1953 First woman army doctor commissioned (F.M. Adams)
1953 An American B-47 accidentally drops a nuclear bomb on South
Carolina, the bomb doesn't go off due to 6 safety catches
1958 Charles Van Doren finally loses on TV game show "21"
1959 "Raisin in the Sun," first Broadway play by a black woman,opens
1960 Pioneer 5 launched into solar orbit between Earth & Venus
1961 Then NHL record 40 penalties, Black Hawks & Maple Leafs (20 each)
1966 Military coup led by Indonesian General Suharto breaks out
1967 Pink Floyd releases their first song (Arnold Layne)
1968 Anti-Zionist Clandestine Radio Voice of El Assifa starts transmitting
1974 Rhino Store gives people 5 to take home Danny Bonaduce's Album
1977 34 Israelis killed by Palestinians on the Tel Aviv-Haifa highway
1982 Harrison Williams (Sen-D-NJ) resigned rather than face expulsion
1985 Mikhail S. Gorbachev replaces Konstantin Chernenko as Soviet leader
1986 Japanese probe Sakigake flies by Halley's Comet at 6.8 million km
1986 NFL adopts instant replay rule
1987 Wayne Gretzky scores 1,500th NHL point
1991 Janet Jackson signs $40 million 3 album deal with Virgin records
Birthdates which occurred on March 11th:
1544 Torquato Tasso Italy, Renaissance poet (Aminta, Apologia)
1731 Robert Treat Paine judge, signer of Declaration of Independence
1811 Urbain Jean Joseph le Verrier co-discovered Neptune
1860 Thomas Hastings NYC, architect (NY Public Library)
1876 Carl Ruggles Marion MA, composer (Evocations)
1885 Malcolm Campbell first auto racer to travel 5 miles/min. (8 km/min)
1890 Vannevar Bush developed first electronic analogue computer
1897 Henry Dixon Cowell Menlo Park CA, composer (New Musical Resources)
1898 Dorothy Gish stage & silent film actress (Orphans of the Storm)
1899 Frederick IX King of Denmark (1947-72)
1903 Dorothy Schiff publisher (NY Post)
1908 Lawrence Welk Strasburg ND, orchestra leader (Lawrence Welk Show)
1911 Fitzroy Maclean British diplomat
1913 John Weinzweig Toronto Canada, composer (Enchanted Hill)
1914 Ralph Ellison writer (Invisible Man, Shadow & Act)
1916 Sir Harold Wilson (L) British PM (1964-70, 1974-76)
1920 D.J. Enright England, poet/novelist (Some Men are Brothers)
1920 Kenneth Dover chancellor (St. Andrews University)
1923 A. Louise Brough tennis player (4 time Wimbledon champ)
1923 Terry Alexander London, actor (Tony-Behind the Scenes)
1926 Patricia Tindaole England, architect
1926 Ralph Abernathy civil rights leader
1928 Albert Salmi Brooklyn NY, actor (Daniel Boone, 79 Park Avenue)
1930 David Gentleman designer/painter
1931 Peter Walters CEO (Midland Bank)
1931 Rupert Murdoch Australia, publisher (NY Post), owns FOX-TV Network
1932 Nigel Lawson British government official (The Power Game)
1934 Sam Donaldson El Paso TX, ABC White House correspondent
1936 Antonin Scalia Trenton NJ, Supreme Court Justice
1938 Malcolm Keith Speed Biritish high court judge
1942 Peter Eyre actor (Hedda)
1944 Ric Rothwell drummer (Mindbenders-Games of Love)
1945 Timothy Mason consultant (British Arts Council)
1945 Tricia O'Neal Louisiana, actress (Piranha Part II)
1947 Dominique Sanda Paris, actress (Inheritance, Beyond Good & Evil)
1947 Geoffrey Hunt Australia, world-champion squash player
1947 Mark Stein Bayonne NJ, rocker (Vanilla Fudge-You Keep Me Hanging On)
1948 George Kooymans rocker (Golden Earring)
1950 Bobby McFerrin singer (Don't Worry, Be Happy-1989 Grammy)
1952 Douglas Adams England, author (Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy)
1952 Susan Richardson Coatesville PA, actress (Susan-8 is Enough)
1961 Bruce Watson rocker (Big Country-Wonderland)
1961 Mike Percy rocker (Dead or Alive-Spin Me Round)
Deaths which occurred on March 11th:
1845 John Chapman, [Johnny Appleseed] dies in Allen County,Indiana
1874 Charles Sumner, a white civil rights leader, dies at 63
1957 Richard E. Byrd, US, explorer (Antarctica), dies at 68
1975 Sammy Spear, orchestra leader (Dom Deluise Show), dies at 65
1975 Walter Kinsella, actor (Happy-Martin Kane Private Eye), dies at 74
1979 Victor Kilian, actor (Gentleman's Agreement), dies at 88
1987 Woody Hayes, football coach (Ohio State), dies at 74
1992 David Carroll, actor (Grand Hotel), dies of pulmonary embolism at 41
~MarciaH
Sat, Mar 11, 2000 (23:09)
#54
Today in History for March 11
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1544 - Italian poet Torquato Tasso born. Best remembered for his epic poem
``Gerusalemme Liberata,'' an idealized story about the First Crusade.
1702 - The first English daily newspaper to meet with some success, The
Daily Courant, was launched near Fleet Street in London.
1820 - Benjamin West, U.S. painter, died. He was history painter to King
George III of England and a founder member of the Royal Academy.
1851 - The first performance of Giuseppe Verdi's opera ``Rigoletto'' was given
in Venice.
1892 - Raoul Walsh, U.S. film director, born; best known for his American
gangster films, including ``High Sierra,'' ``White Heat'' and ``The Roaring
Twenties.''
1931 - Rupert Murdoch, Australian newspaper and television magnate, born.
1935 - Hermann Goering officially created the German Air Force, the
Luftwaffe.
1941 - The U.S. Congress passed the Lend-Lease Bill, which enabled Britain
to borrow money to buy additional food and arms during World War Two.
1955 - Sir Alexander Fleming, Scottish bacteriologist who discovered
penicillin (1928), died.
1957 - Richard E. Byrd, U.S. naval officer, pioneer aviator and polar explorer,
died.
1960 - At Cape Canaveral, Pioneer V was launched into orbit around the sun.
1970 - Erle Stanley Gardner, U.S. author and lawyer, died. He wrote nearly
100 detective and mystery novels and created the character Perry Mason.
1981 - Chilean President Augusto Pinochet was sworn in for an eight-year
term as president.
1985 - Mikhail Gorbachev became head of the Soviet Union following the
death of Konstantin Chernenko. At 54, he was the youngest member of the
ruling Politburo.
1985 - The Egyptian Al-Fayed brothers won control of the House of Fraser in
London and thus gained control of the department store Harrods.
~MarciaH
Sun, Mar 12, 2000 (11:49)
#55
On this day...
1496 Jews are expelled from Syria
1609 Bermudas becomes an English colony
1664 First naturalization act in American colonies
1664 New Jersey becomes a British colony
1737 Galileo's body moved to Church of Santa Croce in Florence,
Italy
1755 First steam engine in America installed, to pump water from
a mine
1789 US Post Office established
1848 Second republic established in France
1850 First US $20 gold piece issued
1868 Britain annexes Basutoland in Africa
1868 Congress abolishes manufacturer's tax
1877 British annex Walvis Bay in southern Africa
1884 Mississippi establishes first US state college for women
1888 Second day of the Great Blizzard of '88 in NE US (400 die)
1903 AL offically approves NY Highlanders (Yankees)
1904 First main line electric train in UK (Liverpool to
Southport)
1904 Andrew Carnegie establishes Carnegie Hero Fund
1912 Capt Albert Berry performs first parachute jump from an
airplane
1912 Girl Guides (Girl Scouts) founded in Savannah
1913 Foundation stone of the Australian capital in Canberra laid
1917 Russian Dumas sets up Provisional Committee; workers set up
Soviets
1930 Mohandas Gandhi begins 200m (300km) march protesting British
salt tax
1930 Stella Walsh sets record for the 220-yard dash (0:26.1)
1933 FDR conducts his first "fireside chat"
1935 England establishes 30 MPH speed limit for towns & villages
1938 Nazi Germany invades Austria (Anschluss)
1939 Pope Pius XII crowned in Vatican ceremonies
1940 Finland surrenders to Russia during WW II, giving up
territory
1945 NY is first to prohibit discrimination by race & creed in
employment
1945 The British Empire celebrates it's first British Empire Day
1946 Part of Petsamo province ceded by Soviet Union to Finland
1958 British Empire Day is renamed "Commonwealth Day"
1959 House joins Senate approving Hawaii statehood
1964 Malcolm X resigns from Nation of Islam
1966 Jockey Johnny Longden retires after 40 years (6,032 wins)
1967 Austrtia's Reinhold Bachler ski jumps 505 feet
1968 Mauritius gains independence from Britain (National Day)
1969 Paul McCartney marries Linda Louise Eastman in London
1970 US lowers voting age from 21 to 18
Birthdates which occurred on March 12th:
1685 George Berkeley, Ireland, philosopher/bishop of Cloyne
1806 Jane Means Appleton Pierce, first lady
1821 Sir John Abbott, Quebec Canada, (C) third Canadian PM
(1891-92)
1824 Gustave Kirchoff, Prussia, physicist (Gesammelte
Ashandlongen)
1831 Clement Studebaker, automobile pioneer
1835 Simon Newcomb, US, scientist/mathematician/astronomer
1838 William Perkin, inventor (first artificial dye)
1862 Jane Delano, US, nurse/teacher, founded Red Cross
1863 Gabriele D'Annunzio, Italy, writer/military hero (The
Intruder)
1889 Philip Guedalla, historian
1890 Vaslav Nijinsky, Soviet ballet master (NS)
1910 Roger L. Stevens, producer (Giant)
1911 Gustavo Diaz Ordaz, President of Mexico
1912 James McKay, Lord Provost of Edinburgh
1912 Kylie Tennant, novelist
1912 Paul Weston, Springfield MA, orchestra leader (Jim Nabors
Hour)
1917 Tom Normanton, British MP
1918 James Bracken, race horse trainer
1922 Helen Parrish, Columbus Ga, actress (Hour Glass, Show
Business)
1922 Lane Kirkland, union president (AFL-CIO)
1925 William G. Whitehurst, (Rep-R-Va)
1926 David Oliver Williams, trade unionist (COHSE)
1926 George R. Ariyoshi, (Gov-D-Hawaii)
1926 Gudrun Ure actress
1927 Raul Alfonsin, President of Argentina
1928 Edward Albee, playwright (Virgina Woolfe, Zoo Story)
1930 Antony Acland, British ambassador to US
1930 Scoey Mitchill, Newburgh NY, comedian (Barefoot in the Park,
Rhoda)
1932 Andrew Young, (Mayor-D-Atlanta)
1936 Lloyd Dobbins, Newport News VA, newscaster (NBC News
Overnight)
1936 Patrick Procktor painter
1937 Elizabeth Vaughan opera soprano
1939 Barbara Feldon, Pittsburgh, actress (Agent 99-Get Smart)
1940 Al Jarreau, jazz singer
1940 Millie Perkins, actress (Diary of Anne Frank, Table for 5,
Shooting)
1942 Bert Campaneris, baseball player
1942 Paul Kanter, guitarist (Jefferson Starship)
1946 Liza Minnelli, Los Angeles, singer/actress
1948 James Taylor, vocalist
1949 Mary Alice Williams, news reporter (NBC-TV)
1953 Joanna Kerns, actress (Maggie-Growing Pains)
1956 Dale Murphy, Portland, baseball player
1957 Marlon Jackson, singer (Jackson 5)
1957 Steve Harris, rock bassist (Iron Maiden)
1962 Darryl Strawberry Los Angeles, baseball player
Deaths which occurred on March 12th:
1507 Cesare Borgia, Cardinal/soldier/politician
1628 John Bull, organist/composer
1888 Henry Bergh, founder of ASPCA, dies at 76
1914 George Westinghouse, inventor
1924 Hilaire Comte de Chardonnet, inventor (rayon)
1925 Sun Yat-Sen, Chinese revolutionary leader
1932 Ivar Kreuger, industrialist
1955 Charlie Parker, jazz musician, dies at 34 in NYC
1958 Princess Ingeborg, of Sweden, dies at 79
1973 Frankie "Fordham Flash" Frisch, baseball player, dies at 74
1974 Billy Fox, Protestant member of Dublin parliament,
assassinated
1978 Tolchard Evans, composer/conductor
1984 Arnold Riley, playwright/actor
~MarciaH
Sun, Mar 12, 2000 (11:51)
#56
Today in History for March 12
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1832 - Captain Charles Boycott, English land agent, born. After he refused to
lower rents on his estates in Ireland, tenants refused any communication with
him and his name was adopted to describe this form of protest.
1863 - Gabriele D'Annunzio, Italian poet and politician, born.
1890 - Vaslav Nijinsky, legendary leading Russian dancer with Diaghilev's
Russian ballet, born.
1922 - Jack Kerouac, U.S. novelist, born. A member of the ``beat generation,''
he was best known for his novel ``On the Road.''
1925 - Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen died. Known as the father of
modern China, he became its first provisional president for a short time
(1911-1912).
1928 - Edward Albee, U.S. playwright and author of ``Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf,'' born. He won Pulitzer prizes in 1967, 1975 and 1994.
1930 - In India, Mahatma Gandhi began a 300-mile protest journey to defy the
British law establishing a monopoly in producing salt.
1933 - U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt gave the first of his nation-wide
``fireside chats'' on radio.
1940 - Finland signed a peace treaty with the Soviet Union, ending the
14-week war which the Russians won by sheer weight of numbers.
1945 - Anne Frank, the Jewish teen-ager who kept a diary of her wartime
experiences, died in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany. She
was 15.
1946 - Liza Minnelli, singer and film actress daughter of Judy Garland and
Vicente Minnelli, born; famed for her role in the film ``Cabaret.''
1955 - Charlie Parker, influential U.S. jazz saxophonist, died.
1985 - Eugene Ormandy, U.S. conductor, died. He directed the Philadelphia
Orchestra from 1936-1980 and was especially noted for his performances of
Rachmaninoff and Shostakovitch.
1994 - The Church of England broke with 460 years of male dominance when
it ordained its first women priests in Bristol Cathedral.
1999 - U.S.-born violinist and music teacher Sir Yehudi Menuhin died in
Berlin.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 13, 2000 (13:53)
#57
This day - March 13
On This Date in History:
In 1781, the distant planet Uranus was discovered by British
astronomer William Herschel.
In 1868, the U.S. Senate began impeachment proceedings
against President Andrew Johnson on charges of "high crime
and misdemeanors." He was acquitted by one vote.
In 1933, in the depths of the Great Depression, banks
throughout the United States began to re-open after a
weeklong bank holiday declared by President Roosevelt in a
successful effort to stop runs on bank assets.
In 1989, the Food and Drug Administration quarantined all
fruit imported from Chile after traces of cyanide were found
in two Chilean grapes.
In 1990, the Soviet Congress of People's Deputies formally
ended the Communist Party's monopoly rule, establishing a
presidential system and giving Mikhail Gorbachev broad new
powers.
Also in 1990, President Bush lifted a five-year-old trade
embargo against Nicaragua.
In 1992, more than 400 people were killed when a powerful
earthquake hit northeastern Turkey.
In 1993, an "unprecedented" winter storm blasts the eastern
part of the nation from Dixie north to Canada -- crippling
travel, causing power failures, floods and tornadoes, and
killing dozens of people.
In 1994, the president of the independent black homeland of
Bophuthatswana was deposed after repeatedly changing his mind
about allowing his nation to participate in the upcoming
South African elections. South Africa took direct control of
the area.
In 1996, a gun collector opened fire on a kindergarten class
in Dunblane, Scotland -- killing 16 children, their teacher
and then himself.
Also in 1996, Liggett, the fifth-biggest tobacco company,
broke ranks with its rivals and settled a class-action cancer
lawsuit.
In 1996, world leaders -- including President Clinton,
Russia's Boris Yeltsin, King Hussein of Jordan and
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat -- met in Cairo, Egypt,
to reaffirm the Middle East peace process.
In 1997, a Jordanian soldier shot and killed seven Israeli
schoolgirls at the Israeli-Jordanian border.
In 1998, Sgt. Maj. Gene McKinney, the first black ever to
serve as sergeant major of the Army, was acquitted by a
military jury of all sex charges filed against him. He was,
however, convicted of coaching a witness and was reduced one
rank and reprimanded.
In 1999, a fight for the heavyweight boxing championship of
the world -- between American Evander Holyfield and Lennex
Lewis of Britain -- ended in a draw, although most fans and
boxing officials felt Lewis had clearly won.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 13, 2000 (13:57)
#58
On this day...MaRCH 13
483 St Felix III begins his reign as Catholic Pope
607 12th recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet
1519 Cortez lands in Mexico
1639 Cambridge College renamed Harvard for clergyman John Harvard
1677 Massachusetts gains title to Maine for $6,000
1759 27th recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet
1781 Sir William Herschel sees "comet" (really discovered Uranus)
1793 Eli Whitney patents the cotton gin
1852 Uncle Sam cartoon figure debuts in NY Lantern weekly
1861 Jefferson Davis signs bill authorizing use of slaves as soldiers
1868 Senate begins President Andrew Johnson impeachment trial
1869 Arkansas legislature passes anti-Klan law
1884 Standard Time adopted in US
1887 Chester Greenwood of Maine patents earmuffs
1888 Great Blizzard of 1888 rages
1894 J. L. Johnstone of England invents horse racing starting gate
1913 Kansas legislature approves motion-picture censorship
1921 Mongolia declares independence from China
1923 Lee de Forest demonstrates his sound-on-film moving pictures, NYC
1925 Tennessee makes it unlawful to teach evolution
1928 450 die in St. Francisquito Valley Dam burst (California)
1930 Clyde Tombaugh announces discovery of Pluto at Lowell Observatory
1938 Anschlu�-Austria annexed by Nazi Germany
1942 Julia Flikke, Nurse Corps, becomes first woman colonel in US army
1943 Frank Dixon wins Knights of Columbus mile (4:09.6)
1960 NFL's Chicago Cardinals move to St. Louis
1961 Floyd Patterson KOs Ingemar Johannson to retain championship
1961 JFK sets up the Alliance for Progress
1965 Jeff Beck replaces Eric Clapton of the Yardbirds
1969 Apollo 9 returns to Earth
1970 Digital Equipment Corp introduces PDP-11 minicomputer
1970 SF city employees begin four-day strike
1979 Gairy dictatorship in Grenada overthrown by New Jewel Movement
1980 Ford Motor Co found innocent in death of 3 women in a fiery Pinto
1982 Elaine Zayak lands 6 triple jumps to win world skating championship
1985 Funeral services held for Konstantin Chernenko (Moscow)
1987 John Gotti is acquitted of racketeering
1989 27th shuttle, Discovery 8, launched, first woman to do the countdown
1989 FDA orders recall of all Chilean fruit in US
1991 Exxon pays $1-billion dollars in fines & cleanup of Alaskan oil spill
1992 570 die in a Turkish earthquake
1992 FCC rules companies can own 30 AM & 30 FM stations (formerly 12)
Birthdates which occurred on March 13th:
1733 Joseph Priestly, England, clergyman/scientist, discovered oxygen
1798 Abigail Powers Fillmore, first lady
1855 Percival Lowell, predicted discovery of Pluto
1860 Hugo Wolf, Austria, composer
1872 Oswald Garrison Villard, American journalist
1901 Paul Fix, Dobbs Ferry NY, actor (Rifleman)
1907 Frank Wilcox, DeSoto Missouri, actor (John-Beverly Hillbillies)
1908 Paul Stewart, NYC, actor (Top Secret USA, Deadline)
1908 Walter Annenberg, Milwaukee, publisher (Triangle-TV Guide)
1910 Sammy Kaye, Rocky River Ohio, orchestra leader (Sammy Kaye Show)
1911 L. Ron Hubbard, science fiction writer/scientologist (Dianetics)
1913 William J. Casey, CIA director (1981-87)
1914 Sammy Kaye, bandleader (Swing & Sway with Sammy Kaye)
1917 Ina Ray Hutton, Chicago, orchestra leader (Ina Ray Hutton Show)
1917 Tessie O'Shea, England, actress (Entertainers)
1918 George McAfee, NFL halfback (Chicago Bears)
1929 Peter Breck, Rochester NY, actor (Black Saddle, Big Valley, Benji)
1929 Walter Medio, race horse trainer
1939 Neil Sedaka, Brooklyn, singer/songwriter
1947 Tomas Hinojosa, jockey
1950 Robert S Woods, actor (Bo-One Life to Live, Waltons)
1951 Fred Berry, St. Louis, actor (Rerun-What's Happening)
1953 Andy Bean, Lafayette Georgia, PGA golfer
1953 Deborah Raffin, Los Angeles, actress (Ransom, Demon, 40 Carats)
1954 Robin Duke, Toronto Canada, comedienne (SCTV, SNL)
1956 Dana Delany, NY, actress (Colleen McMurphy-China Beach)
1960 Adam Clayton, Oxfordshire, rock bassist (U2)
1968 Christopher Collett, NYC, actor (Manhattan Project)
1971 Tracy Wells, actress (Heather-Mr Belvedere)
Deaths which occurred on March 13th:
1881 Tsar Alexander II, of Russia, assassinated
1901 Benjamin Harrison, 23rd US President, dies in Indianapolis
1906 Susan B. Anthony, American suffragist
1938 Clarence S. Darrow, Scopes Monkey Trial attorney, dies in Chicago
1964 Kitty Genovese, stabbed to death in Queens; 40 neighbors looked on
1973 Stacy Harris, actor, dies at 54
1974 Howard St. John, actor (Investigator, Dr Lewis-Hank), dies at 68
1974 Janos Prohaska, actor (Andy Williams Show), dies at 52
1987 Bernhard Grzimek, zoologist (West Germany), dies at 78
1987 Gerald Moore, England, pianist (Am I Too Loud), dies at 87
1990 Bruno Bettelhelm, psychoanalyst, commits suicide at 86
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 13, 2000 (15:59)
#59
History for March 13
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1781 - The German-born English astronomer Sir William Herschel discovered
the planet Georgium Sidus, later known as Uranus.
1860 - Hugo Wolf, Austrian composer, born. Best known for his books of
songs, notably ``Spanish Song Book'' and ``Goethe Song Book.''
1865 - During the U.S. Civil War, the Confederate Congress under President
Jefferson Davis signed a bill allowing slaves to join the army in exchange for
freedom.
1894 - The world's first theatrical striptease act took place at the Divan
Fayouau Music Hall in Paris, consisting of a girl stripping to go to bed.
1901 - Benjamin Harrison, 23rd president of the United States, died; he was
the only president to succeed and be succeeded by the same man Grover
Cleveland.
1906 - Susan Anthony, pioneer and leader of the women's suffrage movement
in the U.S., died. In 1888 she organized the International Council of Women.
1928 - The St. Francis dam 40 miles north of Los Angeles burst and flooded
the valley; at least 450 people were drowned.
1943 - Stephen Vincent Benet, U.S. poet and novelist, died. Best known for
``John Brown's Body,'' a long narrative poem on the U.S. Civil War.
1961 - Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, then 79, married his model Jacqueline
Rocque, 37, in Nice, France.
1972 - Clifford Irving admitted to a New York court that he had fabricated his
autobiography of Howard Hughes, thus defrauding his publisher McGraw Hill.
1990 - The Soviet parliament voted to end the political monolopy of the
Communist Party after 72 years.
1992 - Pravda, founded in 1912 by Lenin and the official newspaper of the
Soviet Communist Party, ceased publication due to lack of funds.
1995 - Odette Hallowes, one of Britain's war heroines, died. She became the
first woman to be awarded the George Cross for gallantry for her work in
occupied France in World War Two.
1996 - A gunman shot dead 16 children and a teacher at a school in
Dunblane, Scotland. He then shot himself.
1996 - Krzysztof Kieslowski, Polish film director, died. Famed for his
``Decalogue'' - ten films on the Ten Commandments - and his ``Three Colours''
series of films.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 13, 2000 (16:14)
#60
Know Your History for March 13:
** This is Uncle Sam Day!
Hey! Let's take the day off! It's Uncle Sam Day! On this day back in 1852, the New York "Lantern" newspaper published an Uncle Sam cartoon for the first time. The drawing was the work of Frank Henry Bellew. Through the years, the caricature changed with Uncle Sam becoming symbolic of the U.S. being just like a favorite uncle. A prime example of this symbolism were U.S. Army posters that portrayed Uncle Sam pointing and saying, "I want you!" As a result, many of us joined his ranks.
Uncle Sam always wore a nifty suit of red, white and blue, a hat with stars and stripes down the trousers of both of his long legs. The origins of how he became known as Uncle Sam are varied, but include a dock worker wondering what the words "From U.S." meant on shipping crates. Reportedly, he was told jokingly, "Oh, this is from your Uncle Sam."
** Events
1877 - Chester Greenwood of Farmington, ME patented the earmuff. Of course, being in very Northern Maine, he picked the right place to patent such much-needed outdoor gear, as it is extremely cold in upstate Maine for, oh, about 10 months a year. So cold, that some wear earmuffs indoors. We do here, as well, just to keep the office roar down to a minimum. Thank you Mr. Greenwood!
1930 - It was announced that the planet Pluto had been discovered by astronomers who had been looking for another planet in the solar system.
** Birthdays
1733 - Joseph Priestley (chemist: discovered oxygen)
1957 - Glenne Headly (actress: Mr. Holland's Opus, Grand Isle, Mortal Thoughts, Dick Tracy, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, The Purple Rose of Cairo)
1960 - Adam Clayton (musician: group: U2: Sunday Bloody Sunday, With You or Without You)
** Chart Toppers - 1984
Jump - Van Halen
Girls Just Want to Have Fun - Cyndi Lauper
Somebody's Watching Me - Rockwell
Going, Going, Gone - Lee Greenwood
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 14, 2000 (12:32)
#61
On This Day March 14...
1629 Royal charter granted Massachusetts Bay Colony
1644 England grants patent for Providence Plantations (now Rhode Island)
1812 Congress authorizes war bonds to finance War of 1812
1826 General Congress of South American States assembles at Panama
1885 The opera "The Mikado" is produced (London)
1900 US currency goes on gold standard
1903 First national bird reservation established in Sebastian, FL
1918 First concrete ship to cross the Atlantic (Faith) is launched, SF
1923 President Harding became first US President to file an income tax report
1931 First theater built for rear movie projection (NYC)
1936 Federal Register, first magazine of the US gov't., publishes first issue
1939 Nazis dissolve republic of Czechoslovakia
1950 FBI's "10 Most Wanted Fugitives" program begins
1951 During Korean War, UN forces recapture Seoul
1954 NBA Baltimore Bullets end a 32 game road losing streak
1960 14 die in a train crash in Bakersfield California
1960 Wilt Chamberlain (Philadelphia) sets NBA playoff record of 53 points
1963 SF Guy Rodgers ties NBA record with 28 assists
1964 Dallas jury finds Jack Ruby guilty of Lee Harvey Oswald murder
1965 Israeli cabinet approves diplomatic relations with West Germany
1967 First NFL-AFL common draft, Baltimore Colts pick Bubba Smith
1967 JFK's body moved from temporary grave to a permanent memorial
1971 Barbra Striesand appears on "The Burt Bacharach Special" on CBS TV
1978 NFL permanently adds 7th official (side judge)
1983 OPEC cut oil prices for first time in 23 years
1987 Katarina Witt wins her 3rd world figure skating championship
1990 Mikhail S. Gorbachev becomes president of the Soviet Congress
1992 Farm Aid V
1992 Soviet newspaper "Pravda" suspends publication
Birthdates which occurred on March 14th:
1816 Montgomery D. Corse, Virginia, Brig Gen (Confederacy)
1821 Jens Worsaae, Denmark, archeologist
1833 Lucy Hobbs Taylor, first US woman dentist
1837 Charles Ammi Cutter, librarian, originated Cutter system
1854 Paul Ehrlich, Germany, bacteriologist (Nobel-1908)
1854 Thomas Riley Marshall, 28th Vice President (1913-21)
1911 Pete Piute [Morris Kaufman], NYC, comedian (Village Barn)
1912 Les Brown, Reinerton PA, orchestra leader
1918 Dennis Patrick, Philadelphia, actor (Dear Dead Delilah, Dallas, Rituals)
1919 Max Shulman, novelist (Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, Tender Trap)
1920 Hank Ketcham, cartoonist (Dennis the Menace)
1922 Colin Fletcher, author (Walking Through Time)
1925 John Wain, England, novelist/poet (Hurry on Down)
1928 Frank Borman, Gary IN, astronaut (Gemini 7, Apollo 8), Eastern
Airline president
1929 Thomas Bell, Jr., race horse trainer
1933 Michael Caine, UK, actor (Blame it on Rio)
1933 Quincy Jones, Chicago, composer/singer
1934 Eugene A. Cernan ,Chicago, astronaut (Gemini 9, Apollo 10 & 17)
1939 Bertrand Blier, France, novelist/director (Going Places)
1940 Rita Tushingham, Liverpool, England, actress (Green Eyes)
1943 Jim Pons, bassist (Turtles-Happy Together)
1945 Walter Parazaider, rocker (Chicago)
1946 Steve Kanaly, Burbank CA, actor (Fleshburn, Ray Krebbs-Dallas)
1947 Billy Crystal, Long Beach NY, comedian
1952 David Byrne, guitarist/vocalist (Talking Heads-Burning Down the
House)
1954 Adrian Zmed, Chicago, actor (TJ Hooker, Dance Fever)
1954 David La Croix, race horse trainer
1955 Boon Gould, rock guitarist (Level 42)
1961 Gary Del'Abati producer (Howard Stern Show)
1964 Richard Migliore, jockey
1967 Melissa Brennan Reeves, Eatontown, NJ (Jennifer-Days of our Lives)
1983 Jordan Taylor Hanson, Tulsa OK, singer-Hanson
Deaths which occurred on March 14th:
1883 Karl Marx, author of "The Communist Manifesto"
1925 Walter Camp, father of American football, dies at 65
1975 Susan Hayward, dies at 56
1983 Maurice Ronet, actor, dies at 55
1986 Edith Atwater, actress (Phyllis-Love on a Rooftop), dies at 74
1992 Steven Brian Pennell, first executed in Delaware in 45 years, at 34
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 14, 2000 (14:45)
#62
Today in History for March 14
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1804 - Johann Strauss the elder, Austrian composer, born; he is best known
for his ``Radetzky March.''
1835 - Giovanni Virginio Schiaparelli, Italian astronomer, born. He discovered
the ``canals'' of Mars and the asteroid Hesperia.
1879 - Albert Einstein, German-born scientist and physicist, born. One of the
world's greatest physicists, he published his special theory of relativity in
1905 and his general theory of relativity in 1916.
1883 - Karl Marx, German philosopher and economist, died in London. With
Friedrich Engels, he published the Communist Manifesto.
1885 - ``The Mikado,'' the comic operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan, premiered at
the Savoy Theater, London.
1900 - The United States adopted the gold standard.
1932 - George Eastman, American photographic pioneer who founded the
Kodak company, committed suicide.
1933 - Michael Caine, English film actor, born.
1945 - The heaviest bomb of World War Two, the 22,000-pound ``Grand
Slam,'' was dropped by the RAF's Dambuster Squadron in Germany on the
Bielefeld railway viaduct.
1954 - The Vietnamese took the Gabrielle strongpoint against the French in
the battle of Dien Bien Phu.
1964 - Jack Ruby was found guilty of the murder of Lee Harvey Oswald,
alleged assassin of President John F. Kennedy.
1975 - Susan Hayward, U.S. actress, died. She won Best Actress Oscar for
her role in the film ``I Want to Live!'' in 1958.
1976 - Busby Berkeley, U.S. director and choreographer, died. Best known
for his lavish mass choreography in the films ``42nd Street,'' ``Gold Diggers of
1933'' and ``Roman Scandals.''
1995 - Norman Thagard, the first American astronaut to fly in a Russian
rocket, blasted off from the windswept plains of Kazakhstan.
1997 - Academy Award-winning director Fred Zinnemann, whose classic films
included ``High Noon,'' ``From Here to Eternity'' and ``A Man for All Seasons,''
died. He was 89.
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 14, 2000 (17:52)
#63
Know Your History for March 14:
** This is Gold Record Day!
On this day in 1958, the Recording Industry Association of America
(RIAA) certified the first gold record. It was Perry Como's "Catch A
Falling Star" on RCA Victor Records. The tune became the first to win
million-seller certification, though other songs dating as far back
as the 1920s may have sold a million records or more. Due to lack of
a certification organization like the RIAA, they weren't awarded the
golden platter.
The next three gold records that were certified after Perry Como's
million seller were the 45 rpm recordings of "He's Got the Whole
World in His Hands" by Laurie London, "Patricia", an instrumental by
the 'Mambo King', Perez Prado and "Hard Headed Woman" by Elvis
Presley. The first gold-album certification went to the soundtrack of
the motion picture, "Oklahoma!", featuring Gordon MacRae.
Is there really a gold record inside the wooden frame presented to
winners? Those who know say, "No." Its a gold-leaf veneer of maybe 18
kt. gold and/or it is a record painted gold. Yes, the song earning
the award is supposed to be the one making up the gold record, but
this is not always the case, according to several artists who have
tried to play theirs.
** Events
1794 - Eli Whitney patented his cotton gin, making it possible to
clean 50 pounds of cotton a day, compared to a pound a day before
Whitney's invention.
1923 - U.S. President Warren G. Harding became the first Chief
Executive to pay taxes and account for his income. Harding's tax bill
amounted to nearly $18,000.
1985 - Bill Cosby captured four People's Choice Awards for "The Cosby
Show". The awards were earned from results of a nationwide Gallup
Poll. Barbara Mandrell stunned the audience by announcing that she
was pregnant while accepting her second award on the show. She talked
about "the child here tonight in my tummy." Bob Hope won the award as
All-Time Entertainer beating Clint Eastwood and Frank Sinatra for the
honor. Mr. Hope, however, did not announce that he was pregnant.
** Birthdays
1833 - Lucy Taylor (1st woman in U.S. to receive a degree in dentistry [1866])
1854 - Paul Ehrlich (1908 Nobel prize for medicine; founded
chemotherapy discovered Salvarsan - a remedy for syphilis, developed
antitoxin for diphtheria)
1928 - Frank Borman (Apollo astronaut, former president of former
Eastern Airlines)
1934 - Eugene (Andrew) Cernan (astronaut: pilot: Gemini 9 [June,
1966]; crew member: Apollo 17 [Dec, 1972] moon landing, spent three
days exploring lunar surface [w/astronaut Harrison Schmitt], Cernan
quote before departing for Earth, "As we leave the moon at
Taurus-Littrow, we leave as we came and, God willing, as we shall
return, with peace and hope for all mankind. God speed the crew of
Apollo 17.")
** Chart Toppers - 1985
Can't Fight This Feeling - REO Speedwagon
The Heat is On - Glenn Frey
Material Girl - Madonna
My Only Love - The Statler Brothers
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 15, 2000 (11:25)
#64
Today in History for March 15
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
44 B.C. - Conspirators led by Brutus and Cassius assassinated Gaius Julius
Caesar, Roman Emperor.
1767 - Andrew Jackson, U.S. general and seventh president of the United
States, born. He was the first president born in South Carolina and the first to
travel on a train.
1781 - During the American Revolution, Cornwallis, with 1,900 British
soldiers, defeated an American force of 4,400 in the Battle of Guilford
Courthouse in Connecticut.
1883 - In London, Irish-American terrorists attempted to blow up the offices of
The Times newspaper.
1892 - The first escalator, the Reno Inclined Elevator, was patented by Jesse
W. Reno of New York.
1898 - Sir Henry Bessemer, British inventor and engineer, died. He invented
an economical process for converting cast iron into steel.
1909 - The American Harry G. Selfridge opened his department store in
London.
1916 - U.S. President Woodrow Wilson sent 12,000 troops under General
Pershing over the border to Mexico in a failed mission to pursue the bandit
Pancho Villa.
1937 - The first central blood bank to preserve blood for transfusion by
refrigeration, was set up at Cook County Hospital in Chicago.
1939 - The German army crossed the Czech frontier and Adolf Hitler
proclaimed the protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.
1964 - Elizabeth Taylor married Richard Burton in Montreal.
1975 - Aristotle Onassis, Greek shipping magnate, died. In 1968 he had
married Jacqueline Kennedy, widow of U.S. President John F. Kennedy.
1979 - Pope John Paul II published his first encyclical ``Redemptor Hominis''
in which he warned of the growing gap between rich and poor.
1983 - Dame Rebecca West (Cicily Isabel Fairfield), English author, died.
Best known for her novels and her study of Yugoslavia ``Black Lamb and
Grey Falcon.''
1990 - Mikhail Gorbachev was elected the first executive president of the
Soviet Union. On the same day the Soviet parliament ruled that Lithuania's
declaration of independence was invalid and that Soviet law was still in force
in the Baltic republic.
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 15, 2000 (13:24)
#65
March 15th Music History
Today's birthdays include:
Producer Arif Mardin, who was born in 1932 (age 68)
Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh in 1940 (age 60)
Mike Love of the Beach Boys in 1941 (age 59)
Sly Stone, whose real name is Sylvester Stewart, and David
Costell of Gary Lewis and the Playboys, both in 1944 (age 56)
War guitarist Howard Scott in 1946 (age 54)
Guitarist Ry Cooder in 1947 (age 53)
Dee Snider of Twisted Sister in 1955 (age 45)
Steve Coy of Dead or Alive, and Terence Trent D'Arby, both in 1962 (age 38)
Rockwell, whose real name is Kenneth Gordy, son of Motown's
Berry Gordy, in 1964 (age 36)
------------------------------------------------------------
In 1956, Colonel Tom Parker became Elvis Presley's personal
manager.
In 1957, Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers arrived in Britain
for a tour.
In 1972, a Los Angeles radio station played the Donny Osmond
song "Puppy Love" for 90 minutes non-stop.
In 1975, Marc Bolan's group T-Rex disbanded.
In 1980, the Clash film "Rude Boys" opened in London.
Also in 1980, Phil Lynott's third volume of poetry -- "A
Collected Work of Phil Lynott" -- was published.
In 1984, Liverpool, England, named the surviving Beatles
"freemen" -- the city's highest honor.
-----------------------------------------------------------
In 1987, Barbara Mandrell was named All-Around Female
Entertainer by the People's Choice Awards.
In 1994, Whitney Houston and Toni Braxton each took home two
awards from the eighth annual Soul Train Music Awards.
In 1995, Paul McCartney announced that the surviving Beatles
had recorded some new songs, which would be released at
year's end, along with the TV documentary "The Beatles
Anthology."
Also in 1995, Mick Jagger and "Forrest Gump" producer Steve
Tisch announced they'd formed a film production company, to
be known as Lip Service.
In 1995, Madonna told a Los Angeles radio station that she'll
star in the title role of the movie version of "Evita."
In 1999, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney, Curtis
Mayfield, the Staple Singers, the late Dusty Springfield and
the late Del Shannon were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in a ceremony in New York City.
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 15, 2000 (13:44)
#66
Almanac for Wednesday, March 15,
the 75th day of 2000 with 291
to follow. The moon is waxing, moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus. The evening stars
are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Born on this date under the sign of Pisces:
They include Andrew Jackson, seventh president of the United States, in 1767
German immunologist Emil von Behring in 1854
Hollywood movie mogul Lew Wasserman in 1913 (age 87)
Trumpet playing bandleader Harry James in 1916
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg in 1933 (age 67)
Actor Judd Hirsch in 1935 (age 65)
Model Fabio, born Fabio Lanzori, in 1961 (age 39)
On This Date in History:
In 44 B.C., Julius Caesar was assassinated by Brutus and
other Roman nobles in Rome.
In 1493, Christopher Columbus returned to Spain after his
first voyage to the New World.
In 1916, General John "Black Jack" Pershing marched into
Mexico to capture revolutionary leader Pancho Villa, who
had staged several cross-border raids. The two-year expedition
was unsuccessful.
In 1984, the acquittal of a Miami police officer on charges
of negligently killing a ghetto youth sparked a rampage by
angry blacks in Miami. 550 people were arrested.
In 1985, two decades of military rule in Brazil ended with
the installation of a civilian government.
In 1990, the Israeli Knesset brought down Yitzhak Shamir's
government on a no-confidence motion after the Likud Party
leader refuses to accept a U.S. peace proposal.
In 1991, Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic declared
Serbia's secession from the Yugoslav federation.
In 1993, the New York Post filed for bankruptcy protection
hours after the newspaper's new buyer fired 72 employees,
throwing the future of the 192-year-old tabloid into doubt.
In 1994, despite being the subject of a criminal
investigation into his financial affairs, Rep. Dan
Rostenkowski, D-Ill., chairman of the powerful House Ways
and Means Committee, won a hard-fought battle for
renomination. He'd lose the November general election.
In 1997, the rebellion in Zaire continued as Kisangani, the
African nation's third-largest city, fell to rebel forces.
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 15, 2000 (19:22)
#67
Know Your History for March 15:
** This is #1 Album Day!
"Billboard" magazine debuted a new feature. It was the record chart
of top albums. What album was the first to top this new chart? For
those who thought it was something by Lauryn Hill, move two steps
back, please. For those who thought it was a wax cylinder from Thomas
Edison and the Record Rappers, jump back another three spaces. If,
however, you said that the first album to reach #1 on this day in
1945 was "The King Cole Trio", you are absolutely correct!
Of course, the albums mentioned on the "Billboard" list were, for
several years, 78 rpm disks, not the 33-1/3 albums we came to know.
"Billboard" and other trade magazines continue to list the week's top
albums. "Billboard" lists the Top 200 in order, from #1 on down. Some
even have 'bullets' to reflect the week's top movement in sales and
radio airplay.
** Events
44BC - The ancient Roman calendar referred to the 15th of March, May,
July or October as the Ide or Ides of the month. The fifteenth day of
every other month was the Ide. We only remember March as the month
that has Ides because it was on this day that Roman Emperor Julius
Caesar was assassinated. It was one William Shakespeare who helped to
promote the Ides of March. He sure knew how to run a PR campaign.
1913 - U.S. President Woodrow Wilson held the first open presidential
news conference just 11 days after his inauguration.
1937 - The first blood bank was established -- in Chicago, IL at the
Cook County Hospital. Have some cookies and maybe an orange to
celebrate...
1968 - "LIFE" magazine called Jimi Hendrix, "the most spectacular
guitarist in the world."
** Birthdays
1767 - Andrew Jackson (7th U.S. President [1829-1837]; married to
Rachel Robards; nickname: Old Hickory [passed away June 8, 1845])
1932 - Alan Bean (astronaut: lunar module pilot: Apollo 12 [man's
second lunar landing], forth man to set foot on the moon [Nov 19,
1969]; commander of Skylab 3 mission [U.S.' first space station:
1973])
1935 - Judd Hirsch (Emmy Award-winning actor: Taxi [1980-81,1982-83];
Ordinary People, The Good-bye People, Running on Empty) 1935 - Jimmy
(Lee) Swaggert (evangelist)
1940 - Phil Lesh (Chapman) (musician: bass: group: Grateful Dead: St.
Stephen, China Cat Sunflower, Dark Star, Uncle John's Band, New
Speedway Boogie, Truckin', Box of Rain, Alabama Gateway; composer:
electronic music)
1961 - Fabio (Lanzoni) (model: covers of romance novels; writer: Pirate)
1962 - Terence Trent D'Arby (singer, songwriter: Wishing Well, LP:
Introducing the Hard Line)
** Chart Toppers - 1986
Sara - Starship
These Dreams - Heart
Secret Lovers - Atlantic Starr
I Could Get Used to You - Exile
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 16, 2000 (14:38)
#68
TODAY'S ALMANAC - Thursday, March 16, 2000
"The History, Days and Events that
Shape Your Life"
------------------------------------------------------------
*----------- A Thought for the Day ------------*
Emile Auguste Chartier said,
"Nothing is more dangerous than an idea,
when it's the only one we have."
*----------------------------------------------*
Today is Thursday, March 16, the 76th day of 2000 with 290
to follow. The moon is waxing, moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus. The evening stars
are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
------------------------------------------------------------
Born on this date under the sign of Pisces:
They include James Madison, fourth president of the United States, in 1751
German physicist Georg Ohm, a pioneer in the study of electricity, in 1787
Former first lady Pat Nixon in 1912
Entertainer Jerry Lewis in 1926 (age 74)
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., in 1927 (age 73)
Filmmaker Bernardo Bertolucci in 1941 (age 59)
Actor Erik Estrada in 1949 (age 51)
Actress Kate Nelligan in 1951 (age 49)
------------------------------------------------------------
On This Date in History:
In 1802, Congress authorized the establishment of the U.S.
Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.
In 1926, Robert Goddard launched the world's first liquid-
fuel rocket.
In 1966, American astronauts Neil Armstrong and David Scott
docked their Gemini-8 space vehicle with an Agena craft, a
first in orbital history.
In 1968, some 300 Vietnam villagers died at the hands of
American troops in what came to be known as the My Lai
massacre.
In 1978, the Senate approved the first of two Panama Canal
pacts. The treaty guaranteed neutrality of the canal after
Panama assumes control at the end of 1999.
In 1991, Baghdad claimed its troops had crushed an uprising
in southern Iraq that began in the wake of the Gulf War.
In 1992, a state court in Los Angeles awarded humorist Art
Buchwald and producer Alain Bernheim $900,000 from Paramount
Studios for Buchwald's idea for the movie "Coming to America,"
which was a hit for comedian Eddie Murphy.
In 1993, authorities met "face-to-face" for the first time
with representatives from the Branch Davidian compound near
Waco, Texas, in an effort to peacefully end the 17-day siege.
In 1994, the International Atomic Energy Agency said North
Korea barred its inspectors from checking one of the
Communist nation's seven nuclear sites.
Also in 1994, Tonya Harding pleaded guilty to helping to
cover up the plot against fellow skater Nancy Kerrigan.
In 1998, in a 14-page statement, the Vatican apologized for
not doing more to prevent the murders of millions of Jews at
the hands of the Nazis.
In 1999, millionaire magazine publisher Steve Forbes
announced his second bid for the Republican presidential
nomination.
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 16, 2000 (19:57)
#69
Know Your History for March 16:
** This is Le Roi du Crazy Day!
Who could have known that Joseph Levitch, the baby boy born on this
day in 1926 in Newark, New Jersey, would someday wear the crown of
the 'King of Crazy'! Maybe his father had a clue when he introduced
his five year old on stage at Brown's Hotel in Loch Sheldrake, NY.
Little Joey sang, "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime". Today, that
theatre bears the name of this actor, singer, dancer, musician,
comedian, producer, professor, and humanitarian. Maybe you've been to
the Jerry Lewis Theatre in the borscht belt in upstate New York.
Certainly, you've seen Jerry Lewis perform.
Maybe your first experience was seeing him in his role as the goofy
partner of the suave, romantic Dean Martin. From 1946, when the two
performed together for the first time in Atlantic City's 500 Club,
till a decade later when the partners split; we were entertained with
club appearances and no less than a dozen movies. The first, "My
Friend Irma", premiered at New York's Paramount Theatre. The opening
stage act starred Martin and Lewis in person.
Jerry Lewis' mugging skills became the central force behind many of
the movies the two made. Films like "That's My Boy" and "The Caddy"
catapulted him into stardom. From 1951 through 1959, Jerry's name
appeared in the top ten of box-office stars (6 years with his partner
and 3 solo). In fact, in 1959, Paramount signed him to a
fourteen-film contract for ten million dollars -- probably the most
expensive contract signed with a performer at the time. He was back
in the top ten from 1961 through 1964 and had received acclaim as
Best Director for "The Nutty Professor" from the French.
Comedian, film star and director was never enough for the zany,
talented Lewis. He had a top-ten hit in 1956, "Rock-A-Bye Your Baby
with a Dixie Melody"; his own TV variety show from 1965 to 1974 and
he continued to make movies, work the club circuit, and teach film at
USC. His devotion to supporting the Muscular Dystrophy Association is
known world wide. There are few who have never seen the annual Labor
Day Telethon for MDA hosted by the untiring Jerry Lewis. Undaunted by
protesters he continues the quest to raise money to help those
stricken with neuromuscular diseases.
And, undaunted by the fact that his talents have never been truly
recognized by his fellow Americans, Jerry Lewis continues to
entertain us. A cult hero to the French, he remains 'Le Roi du Crazy'.
** Events
1850 - The novel, "The Scarlet Letter", by Nathaniel Hawthorne, was
published for the first time. Attention: Any sweater with a big
letter "A" on it should not be worn today! So, please, put the letter
sweaters away for a day, ok? Thank you. In case you forgot, other
novels by Mr. Hawthorne included "The House of Seven Gables", "The
Marble Faun", "Twice-Told Tales", "Tanglewood Tales" and "The Wonder
Book".
1964 - Paul Hornung, 'The Golden Boy', and Alex Karras, the guy who
punched out a horse in the movie, "Blazing Saddles", were reinstated
to the NFL after an 11-month suspension for betting on football games.
1985 - "People" magazine listed the top 57 money-making show-biz
stars. At the pinnacle was Paul McCartney, former Beatle and leader
of the group, Wings, whose music empire was said to be worth $500
million. Bob Hope made the list with a worth of about $200 million.
1987 - "Bostonia" magazine printed an English translation of Albert
Einstein's last high school report card. The brain behind the theory
of relativity did relatively well with an 'A' in math, of course, but
a 'D' in French.
** Birthdays
1751 - James Madison (4th U.S. President [1809-1817]; married to
Dorothea 'Dolly' Todd; nickname: Father of the Constitution; passed
away June 28, 1836)
1906 - Henny (Henry) Youngman (comedian: "Take my wife ... please.",
Joe & Dad, The Henny and Rocky Show; actor: Amazon Women on the Moon,
National Lampoon Goes to the Movies, The Unkissed Bride, Goodfellas
[cameo]; passed away Feb 24, 1998)
1954 - Nancy Wilson (musician: guitar, singer: group: Heart: Crazy on
You, Magic Man, Barracuda, Straight On; actress: Fast Times at
Ridgemont High, The Wild Life)
1955 - Isabelle Huppert (actress: Le Ceremonie, The Separation,
Violette, Story of Women, Entre Nous)
** Chart Toppers - 1987
Jacob's Ladder - Huey Lewis & The News
Somewhere Out There - Linda Ronstadt & James Ingram
Let's Wait Awhile - Janet Jackson
Baby's Got a New Baby - S-K-O
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 17, 2000 (14:05)
#70
MUSIC HISTORY & TRIVIA - Friday, March 17, 2000
"A look at what happened in years
past on this day in music"
Today's birthdays include:
Nat "King" Cole, who was born in 1919; John Sebastian, who
was with the Lovin' Spoonful before going solo, and Them
drummer Patrick McCauley, both in 1944 (age 56)
War drummer Harold Brown in 1946 (age 54)
Thin Lizzy's Scott Gorham in 1951 (age 49)
Singer Susie Allanson in 1952 (age 48)
Level 42 keyboardist/singer Mike Lindup in 1959 (age 41)
------------------------------------------------------------
In 1962, Alexis Korner's Blues Inc. debuted at the Ealing
Club in London. with future Rolling Stone Charlie Watts on
drums. Within weeks, Mick Jagger and Jack Bruce would join
the group -- Jagger as a vocalist and Bruce on bass.
In 1968, the Bee Gees made its U.S. television debut --
performing "To Love Somebody" and "Words" on "The Ed
Sullivan Show."
In 1973, Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" album first
entered the Billboard Top-200 album chart -- and has hardly
left it since.
In 1978, "American Hot Wax" -- the biopic about disc jockey
Alan Freed -- premiered.
In 1982, Samuel George Jr., lead singer of the Capitols, was
stabbed to death at the age of 39. The Capitols -- a Detroit
trio -- had a top-10 hit in 1966 with the song "Cool Jerk."
In 1987, Boy George met Princess Diana at a London disco.
Also in 1987, fire damaged the San Diego, Calif., home of
Jim Croce's widow, Ingrid.
------------------------------------------------------------
In 1990, Prince began filming "Graffiti Bridge," the follow-
up to his movie "Purple Rain."
Also in 1990, former Blind Faith bassist Ric Grech died at
the age of 44.
In 1994, Michael Jackson's mother testified before a Los
Angeles grand jury investigating whether to bring criminal
charges of child molestation against her pop star son. No
charges were ever filed.
In 1996, a British newspaper (the London Sun) reported that
Michael Jackson had purchased a French castle near EuroDisney
outside Paris.
In 1997, filming began on the first motion picture ever shot
inside Graceland. It starred Harvey Keitel as a man who
claims to be Elvis Presley and Bridget Fonda as a Marilyn
Monroe impersonator.
In 1998, "Van Halen 3" -- featuring new vocalist Gary Cherone
-- was released.
Also in 1998, Ice Cube kicked off a promotional tour to push
the film "The Player's Club" as well as the soundtrack CD.
In 1998, rapper C-Bo -- a.k.a. Shawn Thomas -- was sentenced
to two more months in jail in Sacramento, Calif., after
testing positive for marijuana. That was a violation of his
probation.
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 17, 2000 (14:20)
#71
TODAY'S ALMANAC - Friday, March 17, 2000
"The History, Days and Events that
Shape Your Life"
Today is Friday, March 17, the 77th day of 2000 with 289 to
follow. This is St. Patrick's Day. The moon is waxing, moving
toward its full phase. The morning stars are Mercury and
Venus. The evening stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
------------------------------------------------------------
Born on this date under the sign of Pisces:
They include German engineer Gottleib Daimler, inventor of
the gasoline-burning internal combustion engine, in 1834
Children's author and illustrator Kate Greenaway in 1846
Golfer Bobby Jones in 1902
Actress Mercedes McCambridge in 1918 (age 82)
Jazz legend Nat "King" Cole in 1919
Ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev in 1938
Actors Patrick Duffy in 1949 (age 51)
Kurt Russell in 1951 (age 49)
Leslie-Anne Down in 1954 (age 46)
Gary Sinise in 1955 (age 45)
Rob Lowe in 1964 (age 36)
Vicki Lewis ("NewsRadio") in 1966 (age 34)
------------------------------------------------------------
On This Date in History:
In 1776, the Continental Army under Gen. George Washington
forced British troops to evacuate Boston.
In 1945, the battle against Japanese forces for the Pacific
island of Iwo Jima ended in victory for the United States.
In 1958, the U.S. Navy launched the satellite Vanguard-1
into orbit around the earth.
In 1978, the tanker Amoco Cadiz ran aground on the coast
of Brittany in France, eventually spilling some 220,000
tons of crude.
In 1991, Iran and Saudi Arabia resumed diplomatic relations
broken in 1988.
In 1992, 10 people were killed and at least 126 injured in
a bomb blast that destroyed the Israeli Embassy in Buenos
Aires, Argentina.
In 1993, an Amtrak passenger train hit a gasoline tanker in
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., killing the tanker driver and five
other people.
Also in 1993, actress Helen Hayes died at age 92.
In 1994, former President Reagan said Oliver North, who was
running for a U.S. Senate seat from Virginia, lied when he
said Reagan "knew everything" about the Iran-Contra
operation.
In 1995, President Clinton met with Gerry Adams, leader of
Sinn Fein, the political arm of the Irish Republican Army,
at the White House.
In 1997, Anthony Lake, President Clinton's nominee as
director of the CIA, withdrew his name from consideration
following questions about his management ability while head
of the National Security Council.
In 1999, the International Olympic Committee voted to expel
six members in connection with the bribery scandal related
to the effort by Salt Lake City, Utah, to win the 2002
Winter Olympic Games. Five other IOC members had already
resigned.
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 17, 2000 (14:24)
#72
Know Your History for March 17:
** This is Wearin' O' the Green Day!
In 432 A.D., Bishop Patrick left his home in England and returned to
the country where he had once been enslaved. His purpose was to
introduce Christianity to the Irish people. Many legends were told
about Patrick, including the most famous, that he had charmed all the
snakes into the sea, ridding Ireland of them. He was so loved that he
was made the Patron Saint of all of Ireland. St. Patrick's Day has
been celebrated in Ireland on his feast day, March 17th, since the
year 461. Today, Saint Patrick's Day is still a legal, national
holiday in Ireland and Northern Ireland.
Irish people have traveled to all parts of the world bringing their
holiday with them. In 1762, those who came to New York formed the
first of New York City's St. Patrick's Day parades; an annual event
ever since. This year, 125,000 marchers walk the two-mile green
stripe down NYC's famed Fifth Avenue, with another 2,000,000 watching
them, the largest St. Patrick's Day parade anywhere.
Most of those New Yorkers will be wearing the three-leafed shamrock.
It is said that St. Patrick used the green-leafed clover to
illustrate the Trinity.
We'll be wearing green or we'll be be pinched for sure, whether we're
Irish or not ... even though we don't know how the pinch became part
of the day's traditions. Maybe it's those leprechauns who started the
pinching.
When and how corned beef, boiled cabbage and potatoes became part of
this day's celebration are also a mystery. We can kinda figure this
one out for ourselves; but green beer and green bagels are another
story.
** Events
1941 - The National Gallery of Art was officially opened by U.S.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt in Washington, D.C.
1967 - Snoopy and Charlie Brown, of the comic strip "Peanuts", made
the cover of "LIFE" magazine.
1969 - Golda Meir was sworn in as the fourth premier of Israel.
1985 - William Schroeder set a record for heart transplant patients
as he reached his 113th day of life with the artificial organ.
** Birthdays
1777 - Roger Taney (Chief Justice of the U.S.: his decision that
Congress had no power to abolish slavery in territories helped bring
on the Civil War [Dred Scott case])
1938 - Rudolf Nureyev (Russian ballet dancer: defected to U.S.
[1961]; danced with Dame Margot Fonteyn, the Martha Graham Dance
Company; was artistic director of the Paris Opera Ballet)
1964 - Rob Lowe (actor: St. Elmo's Fire, About Last Night)
** Chart Toppers - 1988
Never Gonna Give You Up - Rick Astley
I Get Weak - Belinda Carlisle
Man in the Mirror - Michael Jackson
Too Gone Too Long - Randy Travis
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 17, 2000 (19:40)
#73
ST PATRICK
March 17th is celebrated as Saint Patrick's Day, a holiday honoring the missionary
credited with converting the Irish to Christianity. There is no small amount of
controversy surrounding Saint Patrick's actual identity; some historical sources
maintain that he was not actually Irish, suggesting that he was indeed born around
373 A.D. in either Scotland or in Britain. Born Maewyn Succat, the missionary took
on the name of Patricius later in life, upon entering the priesthood.
At the age of 16, it is reported that Patricius--or Patrick--was kidnapped by seafaring
slave traders, who in turn sold him into bondage in Ireland. Held there for over six
years, the young man worked as a shepherd. Allegedly, it is during this pastoral
time that he began to experience various epiphanies. As a result, he guarded these
visions as closely as his flocks, cultivating a devout Christian faith in those Irish
fields. Indeed, it is this faith that allowed Patrick to escape his trials of bondage; as
the story goes, it was an unseen voice that led the shepherd-saint out of Ireland.
It was not until almost fifty years later that Patrick returned to the country, arriving
on the Gaelic shores as a 60 year-old missionary. It's said that Patrick was
renowned for his charismatic personality, enabling him to win over many converts
from among the Irish masses. He used the three-leafed clover, or shamrock, to
explain the concept of the Trinity to his new converts.
Among the many miracles that have been attributed to St. Patrick, it has been said
that Saint Patrick drove all the snakes out of Ireland and into the ocean. This story
probably has more basis in allegorical import than historical fact, as the serpent was
a revered pagan symbol; in either event, this tale highlights Patrick's role in driving
proto-Christian paganism from the shores of Ireland.
~MarciaH
Sat, Mar 18, 2000 (12:10)
#74
Today in History for March 18
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1662 - The first buses, eight-seater vehicles known as ``carrosses a cinq
solz,'' ran in Paris.
1745 - Sir Robert Walpole, British Whig statesman and the nation's first and
longest-serving prime minister, died. He held the post from 1721 to 1742.
1776 - Britain repealed the Stamp Act, a taxation measure despised in its
American colonies, but too late to stop the U.S. declaraion of independence.
1768 - Laurence Sterne, Irish-born clergyman and novelist, author of ``The Life
and Opinions of Tristram Shandy,'' died.
1842 - Stephane Mallarme, French Symbolist poet, born. His ``L'Apres-midi
d'un Faune'' inspired composer Claude Debussy to write an orchestral prelude
of the same name.
1844 - Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Russian composer and conductor, born. As
a teacher, his pupils included Stravinsky and Prokofiev.
1858 - Rudolf Diesel, German engineer and inventor of the engine that bears
his name, born.
1869 - Arthur Neville Chamberlain, British Conservative prime minister, born.
His 1937-40 premiership was marked by a policy of appeasement toward
Adolf Hitler.
1893 - Wilfred Owen, English poet, born. His poems about the First World
War expressed his anger at the futility of war.
1905 - Robert Donat, English film actor who won an Oscar for ``Goodbye Mr
Chips,'' born.
1922 - A court in British India sentenced Mahatma Gandhi to six years
imprisonment for his civil disobedience campaign.
1932 - John Updike, American novelist, poet and critic, born.
1940 - Hitler and Mussolini met at the Brenner pass in the Alps. They agreed
that Italy should enter World War II within months alongside Nazi Germany.
1949 - The text of the North Atlantic Treaty was published.
1965 - Soviet cosmonaut Aleksei Leonov made the first space walk.
~MarciaH
Sun, Mar 19, 2000 (14:02)
#75
Today in History for March 19
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1593 - Georges de La Tour, French painter, born. Noted for painting
candlelight scenes such as ``The Mocking of Job.''
1813 - David Livingstone, Scottish explorer and missionary in Africa who
discovered the Victoria Falls in 1855, born. After being feared dead on his
next trip he was found alive by journalist Henry Stanley with the words ``Dr.
Livingstone, I presume?''
1821 - Sir Richard Burton, English explorer, born. He penetrated the holy
cities of Mecca and Medina disguised as a pilgrim. He also translated the
``Arabian Nights.''
1848 - Wyatt Earp, American law officer who took part in involved in several
gunfights including one at the O.K. Corral, born.
1861 - The Maori insurrection in New Zealand ended in surrender.
1872 - Sergei Diaghilev, Russian ballet impresario, born.
1906 - Adolf Eichmann, Nazi colonel who played a major part in the
extermination of Jews in World War Two, born. In 1960 Israeli agents seized
him from Argentina and he was later tried and executed.
1920 - The United States refused to sign the Versailles Treaty and join the
League of Nations, for fear of being drawn into a war if another member
country was invaded.
1928 - Patrick McGoohan, U.S. actor best known for the cult TV series ``The
Prisoner,'' born.
1932 - Australia's Sydney Harbour Bridge was officially opened.
1933 - Philip Roth, American author, born. Noted for his novels about Jewish
middle-class life.
1936 - Ursula Andress, actress who made her name in the 1962 James Bond
movie ``Dr. No,'' born in Switzerland.
1950 - Edgar Rice Burroughs, American novelist, died. Famed for the
``Tarzan'' stories.
1970 - The heads of the West and East German governments, Willy Brandt
and Willi Stoph, met at Erfurt. It was the first east-west meeting since
Germany was divided.
1997 - Willem de Kooning, a founder of the Abstract Expressionist school
that transformed American art in the 1940s, died.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 20, 2000 (12:55)
#76
Today in History for March 20
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
43 B.C. - Ovid (Publius Ovidius Naso), Roman poet, born. He was exiled from
Rome in 9 A.D.
1727 - Sir Isaac Newton, British scientist and mathematician, died. He was
noted for his theories and discoveries especially that of gravity.
1780 - The firm of James Watt & Co. was formed for the manufacture of the
first duplicating machines, invented by Watt to cope with the large amount of
copying involved in his steam engine business.
1815 - Napoleon arrived back in Paris from Elba to reclaim power at the start
of ``The Hundred Days'' before defeat at Waterloo.
1828 - Henrik Ibsen, Norwegian poet and playwright, born. His realistic social
dramas, including ``A Doll's House'' and ``Hedda Gabler,'' influenced many
writers.
1852 - Harriet Beecher Stowe's anti-slavery novel ``Uncle Tom's Cabin'' was
first published in book form.
1890 - Beniamino Gigli, Italian operatic tenor, born; with a repertory of over 60
roles, he retired in 1955 after over 40 years singing.
1890 - Lauritz Melchior, Danish operatic tenor, born. Probably the greatest
Wagnerian tenor of all time, he sang Wagner's ``Tristan und Isolde'' over 200
times.
1908 - Sir Michael Redgrave, English actor, born. Best known for his roles in
``The Captive Heart'' and ``The Browning Version.''
1917 - Dame Vera Lynn, English singer and sweetheart of British forces
during World War Two, born.
1934 - The first experiments with the forerunner of radar were carried out at
Kiel Harbour, Germany, by Dr. Rudolph Kuenhold.
1945 - Lord Alfred Bruce Douglas, editor and poet, died. His close
association with Oscar Wilde eventually led to Wilde's trial and imprisonment
for homosexual practices.
1948 - Eugene Ormandy conducted the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra on
CBS TV in the first symphony concert to be televised in the United States.
1964 - Brendan Behan, Irish writer and playwright, died. A member of the IRA,
he was imprisoned twice.
1976 - After an eight-week trial, Patricia Hearst was found guilty of armed
robbery in April 1974 in the United States.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 20, 2000 (12:59)
#77
Time Capsule for March 20
In 1976, San Francisco newspaper heiress Patty Hearst was
convicted of bank robbery.
In 1977, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and her son, Sanjay,
lost their parliamentary races in India's general elections.
The Congress party also was defeated and the state of emergency
in India was lifted.
In 1986, the House rejected a $100 million aid package for
the Nicaraguan Contras, a major Reagan policy setback.
Also in 1986, the Dow Jones industrial average closed above
1800 for the first time.
In 1987, the federal government approved the sale of AZT, a
treatment but not a cure for AIDS.
------------------------------------------------------------
In 1991, Baghdad was warned to abide by the cease-fire after
U.S. fighter jets shot down an Iraqi jet fighter in the first
major air action since the end of the Persian Gulf War.
In 1992, gay rights groups angered over the treatment of
bisexual characters in the film "Basic Instinct" protested
outside movie theaters.
In 1994, the strongest of the aftershocks to the Northridge
earthquake in January hit Southern California, measuring 5.3
on the Richter scale.
In 1995, 12 people were killed and more than 5,000 made ill by
a nerve gas attack on the Tokyo subway system. Members of a
religious sect were blamed.
Also in 1995, conservative commentator Pat Buchanan launched
his second bid for the presidency.
In 1996, Lyle and Erik Menendez were convicted of murdering
their wealthy parents in Los Angeles.
Also in 1996, the world learned of "mad cow" disease from a
British government report questioning the safety of British beef.
In 1997, the Liggett Group, the 5th-largest U.S. tobacco company,
agreed to admit that smoking was addictive and caused health
problems, and that the tobacco industry had sought for years to
sell its products to children as young as 14.
------------------------------------------------------------
+------------------ Birthday's ------------------+
Roman poet Ovid in 43 B.C.
Adventurer and writer Edward Judson, originator of the dime novel, in 1820
Norwegian dramatist Henrik Ibsen in 1828; psychologist B.F. Skinner in 1904
Actor-bandleader Ozzie Nelson in 1907
Former New York Mayor Abe Beame in 1906 (age 94)
British actor Sir Michael Redgrave in 1908
Producer/director Carl Reiner in 1922 (age 78)
Fred Rogers ("Mister Rogers") in 1928 (age 72)
Actor Hal Linden ("Barney Miller") in 1931 (age 69)
Singer-songwriter Jerry Reed in 1937 (age 63)
Former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney in 1939 (age 61)
Former hockey player Bobby Orr in 1948 (age 52)
Actor William Hurt in 1950 (age 50)
Filmmaker Spike Lee and actress Theresa Russell, both in 1957 (age 43)
Actress Holly Hunter in 1958 (age 42)
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 20, 2000 (13:37)
#78
History for March 20, 2000:
** This is Uncle Tom's Cabin Day!
It was on this day in 1852 that Harriet Beecher Stowe's classic book
was published. "Uncle Tom's Cabin", subtitled "Life Among the Lowly"
became an instant success, selling 300,000 copies in its first year.
It has since been translated into twenty languages and performed as a
play the world over.
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" was even spotlighted in the Broadway musical and
film, "The King and I". Maybe you remember the haunting chant from
the show, "Run Eliza, Run!" Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel remains a
must-read for school children -- and a reminder to all of us of an
ugly time in the history of the United States.
The antislavery novel and the adapted plays all feature the elderly,
kind slave, Uncle Tom; the slave child, Topsy; Little Eva, the
daughter of Tom's owner; Eliza, a young mulatto woman and the cruel,
northern-born overseer who beat Tom to death, Simon LeGree.
The book brought much sympathy from around the world toward the
American "peculiar institution" of slavery. In fact, Abraham Lincoln
told Harriet Beecher Stowe she was "the little woman who wrote the
book that started this great war," referring of course, to the Civil
War.
'Til this day, we refer to an employer or any other with
slave-driving tendencies as a 'Simon LeGree'.
** Events
1865 - A plan by John Wilkes Booth to abduct President Abraham
Lincoln was foiled when Lincoln changed plans and failed to appear at
the Soldier's Home near Washington, DC. Booth would later assassinate
the President while Lincoln was attending a performance at Ford's
Theatre in the nation's capital.
1897 - The first intercollegiate basketball game to use five players
per team was held. Yale beat Pennsylvania by a score of 32-10 in New
Haven, CT.
1969 - Beatle John Lennon married Yoko Ono at the Rock of Gibraltar
on this day. Lennon called the location, "quiet, friendly and
British." He was the second Beatle to marry in eight days. Paul
McCartney and Linda Eastman were wed a week earlier.
1985 - Libby Riddles won the $50,000 top prize in the 1,135-mile
Anchorage-to-Nome dog race. The Iditarod was called Alaska's ultimate
endurance test and this was the first time a woman had won. Libby
completed the course in 18 days, twenty minutes and seventeen
seconds. Another woman, Susan Butcher, won the next three Iditarod
trail-sled dog races. The first race was run in 1973. The annual race
commemorates the emergency during a 1925 diphtheria epidemic when
medical supplies had to be rushed to Nome by dog sled.
**
1828 - Henrik Ibsen (Norwegian playwright: Hedda Gabler, Peer Gynt,
The Wild Duck, The Pillars of Society, An Enemy of the People)
1950 - William Hurt (actor: Broadcast News, The Accidental Tourist,
Altered States, The Big Chill, Trial by Jury, Children of a Lesser
God)
1957 - Spike Lee (director: She's Gotta Have It, Do the Right Thing,
Mo' Better Blues, Jungle Fever, Malcolm X, Crooklyn, Clockers)
1957 - Spike Lee (director: She's Gotta Have It, Do the Right Thing,
Mo' Better Blues, Jungle Fever, Malcolm X, Crooklyn, Clockers)
** Chart Toppers - 1991
Someday - Mariah Carey
One More Try - Timmy -T-
Show Me the Way - Styx
I'd Love You All Over Again - Alan Jackson
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 20, 2000 (20:19)
#79
Benedict Arnold Cannon Found on Auction Site
BURLINGTON, Vt. (Reuters) - A cannon believed to be from a Revolutionary
War boat commanded by American traitor Benedict Arnold and plucked 70
years ago from the shores of Lake Champlain turned up on the shores of
online auctioneer eBay Inc., Vermont's U.S. Attorney said on Friday.
The bronze ``swivel gun,'' which was recently handed over to the U.S. Naval
Historical Center in Washington, was fetching bids above $2,000 on eBay a
few weeks ago when Vermont historians heard about the auction and
contacted Vermont U.S. Attorney Charles Tetzlaff.
Law enforcement and eBay officials tracked down the seller a retired U.S. Air
Force general -- who said he bought the historic hardware for $500 two years
ago at a Virginia antiques show. The seller ``did the right thing'' by giving the
cannon, which the U.S. government contends is its property, over to
authorities, Tetzlaff said.
The seller had been told that the cannon was removed from the shores of
Lake Champlain with a truck and chain in the 1930's when it was in the way
of a planned boat pier.
Based on that information and a preliminary examination, experts believe the
cannon might have come from an area of the lake known as Arnold's Bay, in
Panton, Vermont, where Arnold destroyed four ships on Oct. 13, 1776, after
the Battle of Valcour Island, Tetzlaff said.
Markings on the armament indicate it was cast by the same Philadelphia firm
that made the Liberty Bell.
Before committing treason and joining the British, Arnold commanded the
American naval fleet on Lake Champlain, a strategic waterway between the
American colonies and British Canada.
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 21, 2000 (13:05)
#80
Today in History for March 21
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1556 - The Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, was burned at the
stake as a heretic.
1685 - Johann Sebastian Bach, composer and best known of the large
German family of musicians, born. Noted for his ``Brandenburg Concertos''
and the 48 preludes and fugues known as ``The Well-Tempered Clavier.''
1804 - The French civil code, the Code Napoleon, was first promulgated.
1839 - Modest Mussorgsky, Russian composer notably of ``Boris Godunov''
and ``Pictures at an Exhibition,'' born.
1869 - Florenz Ziegfeld, U.S. theatrical producer noted for creating the
``Follies'' stage revue, born.
1871 - Otto von Bismarck opened the first Reichstag, or Parliament, in the
newly created German Reich.
1917 - Czar Nicholas II and his family were arrested by the revolutionary
forces in Russia.
1918 - The Second Battle of the Somme, the last German offensive in World
War One, began.
1945 - British warplanes destroyed Gestapo headquarters in Copenhagen,
killing over 70 Nazis. The raid also killed civilians, including 86 schoolchildren,
in Denmark's worst civilian disaster of the war.
1960 - South African police opened fire on a peaceful demonstration in
Sharpeville in the Transvaal, killing 69 unarmed black protesters and
wounding more than 180.
1963 - Alcatraz Prison in San Francisco Bay, a harsh maximum-security jail
which once housed gangster Al Capone, closed when the last 27 prisoners
were transferred.
1965 - Martin Luther King led the start of a 4,000-strong civil rights march
from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama.
1985 - Sir Michael Redgrave, British actor and film star, died.
1989 - Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke wept on television as he
admitted to having an extra-marital affair.
1998 - Galina Ulanova, the leading ballerina at the Bolshoi Theater for nearly
two decades after World War II, died aged 88.
1999 - British comedian Ernie Wise, who made his name in a legendary
double act with the late Eric Morecambe, died. He was 73.
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 21, 2000 (13:08)
#81
History for March 21, 2000:
** This is God Bless America Day!
"God Bless America", written by Irving Berlin back in 1918 as a
tribute by a successful immigrant to his adopted country, was
recorded by Kate Smith for Victor Records on this day in 1939.
Ms. Smith first introduced the song on Armistice Day, November 11,
1938, at the New York World's Fair. It was a fitting tribute to its
composer, who gave all royalties from the very popular and emotional
song to the Boy Scouts. The song became Kate Smith's second signature
after "When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain"; and the second
national anthem of the United States of America.
On several occasions, it has even been suggested that the U.S.
Congress enact a bill changing the national anthem to "God Bless
America".
** Events
1826 - The Rensselaer School in Troy, New York was incorporated. The
school known today as Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, became the
first engineering college in the United States. Remember this when
crossing over a bridge today...
1946 - The Los Angeles Rams signed Kenny Washington, the first black
player to join a National Football League team since 1933.
** Birthdays
1685 - Johann Sebastian Bach (composer: Gottes Zeit, Toccata and
Fugue in d minor, Little Organ Book, Mass in B Minor, Magnificat)
1944 - Manny (Manuel De Jesus Magan) Sanguillen (baseball: catcher:
Pittsburgh Pirates [World Series: 1971, 1979/all-star: 1971, 1972,
1975], Oakland Athletics)
1958 - Gary Oldman (actor: The Scarlet Letter, True Romance, Bram
Stoker's Dracula, Sid and Nancy, JFK)
1962 - Matthew Broderick (actor: War Games, The Freshman, Family
Business, Ladyhawke, Ferris Bueller's Day Off)
1966 - Cynthia Geary (actress: Northern Exposure, 8 Seconds)
2228 - James T. Kirk (captain of the Starship Enterprise NCC1701)
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 21, 2000 (13:25)
#82
"The History, Days and Events that Shape Your Life"
*----------- A Thought for the Day ------------*
It was Winston Churchill who said, "Nothing in life
is so exhilberating as to be shot at without result."
*----------------------------------------------*
Today is Tuesday, March 21, the 81st day of 2000 with 285 to
follow. The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus. The evening stars
are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
------------------------------------------------------------
Born on this date under the sign of Aries:
They include composer Johann Sebastian Bach in 1685
Mexican revolutionary and president Benito Juarez in 1806
Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky in 1839
Theatrical impresario Florenz Ziegfeld in 1869
English theatrical director Peter Brook in 1925 (age 75)
Actors James Coco in 1930
Al Freeman Jr. in 1934 (age 66)
Timothy Dalton in 1946 (age 54)
Gary Oldman in 1958 (age 42)
Matthew Broderick in 1962 (age 38)
Talk show host Rosie O'Donnell in 1962 (age 38)
------------------------------------------------------------
On This Date in History:
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson of Virginia became the first U.S.
secretary of state. He later was the third president of the
United States.
In 1918, American and German soldiers fought the key World
War I battle of the Somme.
In 1945, 7,000 Allied planes dropped more than 12,000 tons
of explosives on Germany during a single World War II daytime
bombing raid.
In 1962, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev pledged that Russia
would cooperate with the United States in peaceful
exploration of space. The joint American-Soviet Soyuz space
mission was conducted in July 1975.
In 1984, the U.S. aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk collided with
a nuclear-powered Soviet submarine in the Sea of Japan.
In 1991, L. William Seidman, chairman of the FDIC and
Resolution Trust Corp., said his agency needed $70 billion
to protect deposits from bank collapses.
In 1993, Russia plunged into its deepest political crisis
since the August 1991 coup attempt following President
Yeltsin's declaration of special rule by decree.
Also in 1993, seven more adults left the besieged Branch
Davidian compound as federal authorities continued
negotiations with cult leader David Koresh to end the
standoff.
In 1993, Nicaraguan rebels ended their 13-day seizure of
the Nicaraguan Embassy, freeing the last 11 hostages under
a deal that gave them asylum in the Dominican Republic.
In 1994, North Korea threatened to pull out of the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty if the United States reverses its
decision to hold military exercises with South Korea.
In 1996, European nations began banning British beef.
In 1997, a Palestinian bomber and three women died in an
explosion in Tel Aviv, Israel.
In 1999, balloonists Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones landed
near Cairo, Egypt, after becoming the first to circle the
globe by balloon.
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 21, 2000 (14:33)
#83
TIME CAPSULES - Tuesday, March 21, 2000
"Significant Events on This Day in History"
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson of Virginia became the first U.S.
secretary of state. He later was the third president of the
United States.
The key World War I Battle of Somme began on this date in 1918
when the Germans launched an artillery barrage against British
and French troops. The battle lasted until April 4 and ended
what had effectively been a stalemate. The Allies lost 230,000
men and the Germans almost as many.
The Cold War wasn't so cold on this date in 1962, when Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev pledged that Russia would cooperate
with the United States in peaceful exploration of space. A joint
American-Soviet Soyuz space mission was conducted 13 years later,
in July 1975.
In 1984, the U.S. aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk collided with a
nuclear-powered Soviet submarine in the Sea of Japan.
------------------------------------------------------------
In 1991, L. William Seidman, chairman of the FDIC and Resolution
Trust Corp., said his agency needed $70 billion to protect
deposits from bank collapses.
In 1993, Russia plunged into its deepest political crisis since
the August 1991 coup attempt following President Yeltsin's
declaration of special rule by decree.
Also in 1993, seven more adults left the besieged Branch
Davidian compound as federal authorities continued negotiations
with cult leader David Koresh to end the standoff.
And in 1993, Nicaraguan rebels ended their 13-day seizure of
the Nicaraguan Embassy, freeing the last 11 hostages under a
deal that gave them asylum in the Dominican Republic.
In 1994, North Korea threatened to pull out of the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty if the United States reverses its
decision to hold military exercises with South Korea.
In 1996, European nations began banning British beef.
In 1997, a Palestinian bomber and three women died in an
explosion in Tel Aviv, Israel.
Around the world in 19 days. Swiss psychiatrist Bertrand Piccard
and British co-pilot Brian Jones landed near Cairo, Egypt, on
this date in 1999, completing the first around-the-world balloon
flight. They flew -- or maybe we should say floated -- more than
29,000 miles after launching their quest from the Swiss Alps
March 1.
+------------------ Birthday's ------------------+
Composer Johann Sebastian Bach in 1685
Mexican revolutionary and president Benito Juarez in 1806
Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky in 1839
Theatrical impresario Florenz Ziegfeld in 1869
English theatrical director Peter Brook in 1925 (age 75)
Actors James Coco in 1930, Al Freeman Jr. in 1934 (age 66),
Timothy Dalton in 1946 (age 54), Gary Oldman in 1958 (age 42),
and Matthew Broderick in 1962 (age 38)
Talk show host Rosie O'Donnell in 1962 (age 38)
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 22, 2000 (13:17)
#84
"Significant Events on This Day in History"
In 1791, Congress enacted legislation forbidding slave trading
with foreign nations.
A hydroelectric milestone took place on this date in 1941: the
Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River began producing electric
power for the Pacific Northwest.
The Beatles released the band's first album in Britain, "Please
Please Me," on this date in 1963.
In 1987, Chad troops drove Libyan forces from a key airstrip in
northern Chad, apparently ending Moammar Gadhafi's seven-year
occupation. The Libyans abandoned $500 million worth of Soviet-
made tanks and airplanes.
----------------------------------------------------------
In 1992, 27 people were killed when a US Air plane bound for
Cleveland skidded off a runway at New York's LaGuardia Airport
during a snowstorm and landed in the bay.
In 1993, a U.S. nuclear submarine collided with a Russian
nuclear sub in a Russian training area in the Barents Sea.
There were no casualties.
Here's a name from the past -- Brian "Kato" Kaelin. It was on
this date in 1995 that the world's most famous houseguest,
who'd been staying at O.J. Simpson's estate the night Simpson's
ex-wife and friend were murdered, testified at the former
athlete's double murder trial in Los Angeles.
In 1997, Comet Hale-Bopp made its closest approach to Earth --
about 122 million miles.
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 22, 2000 (14:33)
#85
Today in History for March 22
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1599 - Sir Anthony Van Dyke born. After Rubens he was probably the most
prominent Flemish artist of the Baroque period.
1622 - In the James River area of Virginia, nearly 350 settlers were
massacred by Indians.
1687 - Jean-Baptiste-Lully, French composer, died. He gallicised his name
from Giovanni Battista Lulli when he became a French citizen.
1832 - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German poet and author of ``Faust,''
died. ``Faust'' was begun in 1775, but the first part was not published until
1808, and the second in 1832.
1842 - Carl August Nicolas Rosa, German violinist and composer, born. In
1873 he founded the Carl Rosa Opera Company.
1895 - Auguste and Louis Lumiere gave the first demonstration of motion
pictures using celluloid film in Paris.
1896 - Thomas Hughes, English reformer, jurist and author of ``Tom Brown's
School Days,'' died.
1910 - English novelist Nicholas Monsarrat, author of ``The Cruel Sea,'' born.
1917 - The United States became the first country to recognize the
provisional government of Russia following the collapse of the monarchy.
1919 - The first international airline service was instituted between Paris and
Brussels on a weekly schedule.
1923 - French actor and mime artist Marcel Marceau was born. Best known
for his white-faced character ``Bip,'' based on Pip, a character from Charles
Dickens' ``Great Expectations.''
1930 - Stephen Joseph Sondheim, U.S. composer and lyricist, born. His
musical credits include ``West Side Story,'' ``Gypsy,'' ``A Little Night Music,''
``Sweeney Todd'' and ``Follies.''
1935 - The first high-definition television service was officially inaugurated by
the director-general of German broadcasting in Berlin.
1943 - Recording artist Keith Relf of The Yardbirds born.
1948 - Andrew Lloyd Webber, British composer, born. His musicals include
``Jesus Christ Superstar,'' ``Evita,'' ``Cats'' and ``Phantom of the Opera.''
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 23, 2000 (15:25)
#86
Time Capsule - March 23, 2000
On this date in 1942, in the early days of World War II,
Japanese-Americans were forcibly moved from their homes along
the Pacific Coast to inland internment camps. The U.S.
government feared an attack from Japan and was worried
Japanese-Americans would aid the enemy. It was a low point in
U.S. history.
In 1966, Pope Paul VI met Britain's archbishop of Canterbury
at the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, the first meeting between
the heads of the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches in 400
years.
In 1985, the United States completed the secret air evacuation
of 800 Ethiopian Jews to Israel.
In 1993, President Clinton held his first full-blown White
House news conference on his 62nd day in office.
In 1994, the nominee of the ruling party in Mexico was shot to
death just after delivering a campaign speech in Tijuana. A
suspect believed to be the gunman was arrested immediately.
In 1996, Taiwan elected Lee Teng-hui in the island nation's
first direct presidential election.
In 1998, Russian President Boris Yeltsin fired his entire
cabinet.
"Titanic" won 11 Academy Awards on this date in 1998, tying
the record total won by "Ben-Hur" back in 1959.
In 1999, the vice president of Peru was assassinated.
+------------------ Birthday's ------------------+
Culinary expert Fannie Farmer in 1857
Psychoanalyst Erich Fromm in 1900
Actress Joan Crawford in 1908
Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa in 1910
Rocket scientist Wernher von Braun in 1912
Former Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson Jr., in 1938 (age 62)
Comedian Louie Anderson and singer Chaka Khan, both in 1953
(age 47)
Actresses Amanda Plummer in 1957 (age 43) and Keri Russell
("Felicity") in 1976 (age 24).
-----------------------------------------------------------
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 23, 2000 (15:42)
#87
TODAY'S ALMANAC - Thursday, March 23, 2000
Today is Thursday, March 23, the 83rd day of 2000 with 283
to follow. The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus. The evening stars
are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Born on this date under the sign of Aries:
They include culinary expert Fannie Farmer in 1857
Psychoanalyst Erich Fromm in 1900
Actress Joan Crawford in 1908
Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa in 1910
Rocket scientist Wernher von Braun in 1912
Former Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson Jr., in 1938 (age 62)
Comedian Louie Anderson and singer Chaka Khan, both in 1953 (age 47)
Actresses Amanda Plummer in 1957 (age 43)
Keri Russell ("Felicity") in 1976 (age 24)
On This Date in History:
In 1765, the British Parliament passed the Stamp Act for
taxing the American colonies, an action that became a major
grievance for rebellious colonials.
In 1942, Japanese-Americans were forcibly moved from their
homes along the Pacific Coast to inland internment camps.
In 1966, Pope Paul VI met Britain's archbishop of Canterbury
at the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, the first meeting
between the heads of the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches
in 400 years.
In 1983, the world's first recipient of a permanent
artificial heart, Barney Clark of Seattle, died in a Salt
Lake City hospital.
In 1985, the United States completed the secret air evacuation
of 800 Ethiopian Jews to Israel.
In 1993, President Clinton held his first full-blown White
House news conference on his 62nd day in office.
In 1994, the nominee of the ruling party in Mexico was shot
to death just after delivering a campaign speech in Tijuana.
A suspect believed to be the gunman was arrested immediately.
In 1996, Taiwan elected Lee Teng-hui in the island nation's
first direct presidential election.
In 1998, Russian President Boris Yeltsin fired his entire
cabinet.
Also in 1998, "Titanic" won 11 Academy Awards, tying the
record total won by "Ben-Hur" in 1959.
In 1999, the vice president of Peru was assassinated.
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 23, 2000 (18:03)
#88
Those Were the Days: March 23
This is Monkey Day!
An evolution law, enacted this day in the great State of Tennessee in
the year 1925, made it a crime for a teacher in any state-supported
public school or college to teach any theory that contradicted the
Bible's account of man's creation. Tennessee's Governor Austin Peay
said, "The very integrity of the Bible in its statement of man's
divine creation is denied by any theory that man descended or has
ascended from any lower order of animals." Opponents planned to
challenge the law, denouncing it as a violation of the constitutional
principle of separation of church and state.
Within two months, a Dayton, Tennessee high school science teacher,
John T. Scopes was indicted, and later convicted, in the famous
'Monkey Trial' for teaching his students the theory of evolution;
that man descended from a lower order of animals ... or monkeys.
Scopes was fined $100. Defense Attorney Clarence Darrow stated that
this was "the first case of its kind since we stopped trying people
for witchcraft."
Remember this the next time you think about swinging from a tree ...
especially while eating a banana and singing, "Yaba daba daba."
** Events
1965 - Astronaut John Young became the first man to eat a corned beef
sandwich in outer space. When it comes to events of progress, we will
certainly add this to the record book, now won't we? ...along with
that golf club stunt of Alan Shepard's from the surface of the moon
years later. Young smuggled the sandwich on board in order to
supplement the astronauts' meals of dehydrated foods, including
powdered fruit juice (Tang).
1972 - New York Yankees baseball officials announced plans to keep
the Yankees in the nation's largest city. Plans were also revealed
concerning a major renovation of Yankee Stadium. While work was
underway at 'The House that Ruth Built', the Bronx Bombers shared
tenancy with the cross-town New York Mets in Flushing, New York at
Shea Stadium. New Yorkers also got one other bonus from the announced
plans: George Steinbrenner.
1985 - Singer Billy Joel married supermodel Christie Brinkley in
private ceremonies held in New York City.
1985 - "We Are the World", by USA for Africa, a group of 46 pop
stars, entered the music charts for the first time at number 21.
** Birthdays
1951 - Ron Jaworski (football: Philadelphia Eagles quarterback: Super Bowl XV)
1953 - Chaka Khan (Yvette Marie Stevens) (singer: Tell Me Something
Good [with Rufus], You Got the Love; solo: I Feel for You)
1954 - Moses Malone (basketball: Buffalo Braves, Houston Rockets
[single-game playoff record for most offensive rebounds [15: April
21, 1977 vs. Washington], Philadelphia 76ers, Washington Bullets,
Atlanta Hawks, Milwaukee Bucks, Washington Bullets, Atlanta Hawks,
San Antonio Spurs; NBA MVP: 1979, 1982, 1983; records: most
consecutive games without a disqualification [1,212], most free
throws made [8,531], most offensive rebounds [6,731])
1966 - Marti Pellow (Mark McLoughlin) (singer: group: Wet, Wet, Wet)
1990 Princess Eugenie (British royalty: daughter of Prince Andrew and
the Duchess of York)
** Chart Toppers - 1986
These Dreams - Heart
Secret Lovers - Atlantic Starr
Rock Me Amadeus - Falco
What's a Memory like You (Doing in a Love like This) - John Schneider
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 24, 2000 (12:50)
#89
Time Capsule March 24, 2000
In 1934, the United States granted the Philippine Islands
independence, effective July 4th, 1946.
In 1965, white civil rights worker Viola Liuzzo of Detroit was
shot and killed on a road near Selma, Ala.
In 1975, the beaver became the official symbol of Canada.
In 1976, Argentine President Isabel Peron, widow of strongman
ruler Juan Peron, was arrested in a military coup.
In 1991, 12 people were killed and 29 wounded when South African
police fired on ANC supporters at a rally in a black township in
Daveytown after ordering the crowd to disperse.
In 1992, Jerry Brown pulled an upset win over Bill Clinton in
Connecticut, causing serious damage to the Arkansas governor's
quest for the Democratic presidential nomination.
In 1993, the suspected ringleader of the World Trade Center
bombing that killed six people and injured more than 1,000 was
arrested in Egypt and extradited to New York.
In 1995, in a vote nearly along party lines, the House approved
a bill that would overhaul welfare.
In 1996, McDonalds stopped selling British beef in its British
outlets.
In 1998, four girls and a teacher at Westside Middle School
in Jonesboro, Ark., were killed by bullets fired from a nearby
woods. Police arrested two boys, ages 11 and 13, in connection
with the slayings.
In 1999, NATO launched attacks on targets in Yugoslavia after
the Serbs refused to sign a peace agreement worked out for the
future of the rebellious province of Kosovo. The air war lasted
almost three months, until Serb forces withdrew from Kosovo.
~MarciaH
Fri, Mar 24, 2000 (16:15)
#90
TODAY'S ALMANAC - Friday, March 24, 2000
*----------- A Thought for the Day ------------*
Samuel Butler wrote,
"A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg."
*----------------------------------------------*
Today is Friday, March 24, the 84th day of 2000 with 282 to
follow. The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus. The evening stars
are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
------------------------------------------------------------
Born on this date under the sign of Aries:
They include financier Andrew Mellon in 1855
Magician and escape artist Harry Houdini in 1874
Silent film actor Fatty Arbuckle in 1887
Pioneer film animator Ub Iwerks, whose artistry helped Walt
Disney to realize his vision, in 1901
Republican presidential candidate Thomas Dewey in 1902
Poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti in 1919 (age 81)
Actors Norman Fell in 1925 and Steve McQueen in 1930
Roger Bannister, the first person to run the mile in less than four minutes, in 1929 (age 71)
Dress designer Bob Mackie in 1940 (age 60)
Actresses Donna Pescow in 1954 (age 46) and Laura Flynn Boyle in 1970 (age 30)
~MarciaH
Sat, Mar 25, 2000 (16:23)
#91
Today in History for March 25
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1409 - The Council of Pisa, formed to try to solve the schism in the Catholic
church between the two popes Gregory and Benedict, held its first meeting at
Pisa.
1807 - The slave trade in England was abolished.
1867 - Arturo Toscanini, Italian conductor and musical director, born. Famed
for his temper in rehearsals, he was director of La Scala and the Metropolitan
opera houses. He also conducted the NBC symphony orchestra.
1871 - Gutzon Borglum, U.S. sculptor famed for his presidential sculptures on
Mount Rushmore, born.
1881 - Bela Bartok, Hungarian composer and pianist, born. His knowledge of
western musical techniques allied to the inspiration he derived from Hungarian
peasant songs enabled him to become a unique musical force.
1900 - In the United States the first Socialist Party was formed when the
Socialist Labor Party merged with the Social-Democratic Party. Their first
convention was held in Indianapolis in 1904.
1911 - 146 mostly young Jewish and Italian immigrant women died when New
York's worst industrial fire swept through a factory owned by the Triangle
Shirtwaist Co.
1914 - Frederic Mistral, French poet and winner of the 1904 Nobel Prize for
Literature, died. He helped in the 19th century revival of Provencal language
and worked for some 20 years on a Provencal-French dictionary.
1918 - Claude Debussy, French composer, died. His music, described as
``musical Impressionism,'' explored original avenues of expression.
1942 - Singer Aretha Franklin, the ``Queen of Soul,'' born.
1947 - Elton John, English singer, songwriter and pianist, born.
1949 - Laurence Olivier's ``Hamlet'' won five Oscars and was the first British
film to win an Academy award.
1995 - Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson was freed from an
Indiana prison three years after his conviction for rape.
1996 - Abel Goodman, the world's first patient to receive a permanent electric
heart, died in Britain. He received the implant at the John Radcliffe Hospital in
Oxford in the first operation of its kind.
1999 - Forty people were killed in a fire which trapped at least 30 vehicles in
the tunnel under Mont Blanc, western Europe's highest mountain.
~MarciaH
Sun, Mar 26, 2000 (14:16)
#92
Today in History for March 26
LONDON (Reuters) - Here are some notable events from this date in history:
1726 - Sir John Vanbrugh, English playwright and architect of Blenheim
Palace, died.
1780 - The British Gazette and Sunday Monitor, the first Sunday newspaper
in Britain, was published.
1827 - Ludwig van Beethoven, German composer, died in Vienna. One of the
great composers in the history of Western music, he composed many of his
finest works after he had become totally deaf.
1828 - Austrian composer Franz Schubert gave his only public concert, in
Vienna.
1871 - The Paris Commune, an insurrection of Paris against the French
government, was formally set up.
1892 - Walt Whitman, U.S. poet and essayist, died. He became a
revolutionary figure in American literature after the publication of his ``Leaves
of Grass.''
1898 - The world's first game reserve, the Sabi Game reserve, was designated
in South Africa.
1911 - Tennessee Williams, American playwright and novelist, born. He won
two Pulitzer prizes for ``A Streetcar Named Desire'' and ``Cat on a Hot Tin
Roof.''
1923 - Sarah Bernhardt, French actress, died. The greatest ``tragedienne'' of
her day, she had her leg amputated in 1915 but continued her acting career.
1925 - Pierre Boulez, French conductor and composer, born. His later work,
notably ``Le Marteau sans maitre,'' gained him a worldwide reputation.
1944 - Motown star Diana Ross born.
1945 - The Japanese attempted to reinforce a garrison at Kiska in the
Aleutians but were intercepted by a U.S. naval force at the battle of
Komandorski Islands.
1959 - Raymond Chandler, U.S. crime writer, died. Creator of the private
detective character Philip Marlowe in his novels including, ``The Big Sleep''
and ``Farewell My Lovely.''
1973 - English playwright Noel Coward died; he produced several films based
on his own scripts, including ``In Which We Serve'' and ``Brief Encounter.''
1983 - Anthony Blunt, former surveyor of Queen Elisabeth's art collection,
died. He achieved notoriety as a Russian agent and the ``fourth man'' who
engineered the escape of the spies Burgess and Maclean.
1999 - Assisted-suicide advocate Dr. Jack Kevorkian was convicted in the
United States of second-degree murder for fatally injecting a terminally ill
man.
~MarciaH
Mon, Mar 27, 2000 (14:52)
#93
Time Capsule for March 27, 2000
In 1958, Nikita Khrushchev replaced Nikolai Bulganin as premier
of the Soviet Union.
In 1964, a powerful earthquake in Alaska killed 117 people.
In 1990, Soviet soldiers dragged Lithuanian army deserters from
a hospital in Vilnius and took over the headquarters of
Lithuania's independent Communist Party in an effort to reassert
Moscow's control over the dissident Baltic republic.
In 1992, an appeals court in West Palm Beach, Fla., refused to
declare dead a baby girl born without a brain, despite her
parents' anguished plea to allow her vital organs to be donated
to help save other infants.
In 1995, "Forrest Gump" won six Academy Awards, including best
picture and best actor for Tom Hanks.
In 1996, an Israeli court convicted Yigal Amir of assassinating
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and sentenced him to life in prison.
In 1998, Russia got a new premier when President Boris Yeltsin
nominated Sergei Kiriyenko, 35, to replace fired Premier Viktor
Chernomyrdin.
+------------------ Birthday's ------------------+
Printmaker Nathaniel Currier, of Currier and Ives, in 1813
German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen, discoverer of X-rays, in 1845
Photographer Edward Steichen in 1879
Architect Mies van der Rohe in 1886
Actress Gloria Swanson in 1899
Jazz singer Sarah Vaughan in 1924
Actor Michael York in 1942 (age 58)
Filmmaker Quentin Tarantino in 1963 (age 37)
Singer Mariah Carey in 1970 (age 30)
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 28, 2000 (15:16)
#94
Time Capsules - March 28, 2000
Go kiss your Maytag. It was on this date in 1797 that Nathaniel
Briggs was awarded a patent for the first washing machine.
Otherwise, we'd be down at the local stream, beating our undies
clean on rocks.
In 1939, Madrid surrendered to the nationalist forces of
Generalissimo Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War.
Mention the phrase "Three Mile Island" and nearly everyone
knows what you're talking about. It was early in the morning
on this date in 1979 that a series of failures in the cooling
system at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant south of
Harrisburg, Penn., caused a near-meltdown. It was the worst
accident ever at an American civilian nuclear facility, and
led to the extensive re-evaluation of the safety of existing
nuclear power generating operations.
And it was on this date in 1982 that rocker David Crosby was
arrested in Texas on various drug and weapons possession charges.
When asked why he was carrying a concealed .45, Crosby replied:
"John Lennon."
In 1991, just days before the 10th anniversary of the attempt
on his life, former President Reagan endorsed a seven-day
waiting period for handgun purchases, reversing his earlier
opposition.
In 1993, Russian President Boris Yeltsin survived an impeachment
vote by the Congress of People's Deputies.
Also in 1993, French voters rejected the ruling Socialists and
gave the conservative alliance a crushing majority in
legislative elections.
In 1994, pre-election clashes between Zulu nationalists, the
ANC and police claimed 53 lives in Johannesburg, South Africa.
In 1996, Congress approved the presidential line-item veto.
In 1997, an Italian warship collided with an Albanian ship
crowded with refugees, causing an undetermined number of deaths.
In 1999, Purdue University won its first women's basketball
championship, defeating Duke University, 62-45. Its coach was
the first black woman to coach the women's championship team.
+------------------ Birthday's ------------------+
Russian author Maxim Gorky in 1868
Brewers Frederick Pabst in 1836 and August Anheuser Busch
Jr.in 1899
Edmund Muskie, the 1968 Democratic vice-presidential candidate,in 1914
Child star Freddie Bartholomew in 1924
Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter administration national security adviser, in 1928 (age 72)
Actors Dirk Bogarde in 1921, Conchata Ferrell in 1943 (age 57),
Ken Howard in 1944 (age 56) and Dianne Wiest in 1948 (age 52)
Country singer Reba McEntire in 1954 (age 46)
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 28, 2000 (15:53)
#95
The Day in Music History - March 28, 2000
In 1958, W.C. Handy died at the age of 84.
In 1964, Britain's first "pirate" rock radio station, Radio
Caroline, began broadcasting from a barge anchored off shore
to circumvent British broadcast laws.
In 1969, Ringo Starr announced in London that there'd be no
further public appearances by the Beatles. John Lennon
disputed that, but it turned out Starr was right.
In 1974, Arthur "Big Boy" Cruddup -- who wrote "That's All
Right Mama" -- died at the age of 69.
In 1979, Eric Clapton married Patti Boyd, George Harrison's
ex-wife and the inspiration for Clapton's song "Layla."
In 1982, David Crosby was arrested on various drug and
weapons possession charges. When asked why he was carrying
a concealed .45, Crosby replied -- "John Lennon."
In 1984, drummer Mick Fleetwood filed for bankruptcy.
Also in 1984, Culture Club arrived in Montreal, Canada, for
the group's North American tour. The band was greeted at the
airport by about 2,500 screaming fans.
In 1985, a wax effigy of Michael Jackson was unveiled at
Madame Tussaud's in London.
In 1987, the Doobie Brothers moved a benefit concert from
Phoenix to Las Vegas to protest Arizona Gov. Evan Mecham's
decision to rescind the state holiday honoring the Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr.
In 1991, rock 'n' roll broadcast pioneer Dick Clark was
honored on the Hollywood Rock Walk.
In 1993, Willie Nelson performed a benefit concert in
Hillsboro, Texas, to raise money to restore the Hill County
Courthouse that'd been destroyed by fire. Nelson spent his
childhood in the area.
In 1994, more New York dates were added to Barbra Streisand's
upcoming tour. All of the shows sold out within minutes.
Also in 1994, police announced a total of 91 arrests at a
weekend series of Grateful Dead concerts on Long Island, N.Y.
Again in 1994, 25 unruly fans were arrested outside a Pearl
Jam concert in Miami.
In 1999, Freaky Tah -- a.k.a. Raymond Rogers -- of the
gangsta rap group The Lost Boyz was shot to death by masked
gunmen outside a New York City hotel. He was 28. Two men
later were arrested in connection with the murder.
~MarciaH
Tue, Mar 28, 2000 (20:04)
#96
The Day in Music History - MArch 29, 2000
In 1960, Tootsie's Orchid Lounge opened in Nashville.
In 1973, following its single "The Cover of the Rolling Stone,"
Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show actually made the cover of that
particular magazine.
In 1975, all six Led Zeppelin albums released up to this time
were on the U.S. album charts during the same week.
In 1980, the BeeGees were sued in Chicago by an amateur
songwriter who claimed they plagiarized one of his tunes for
their 1978 hit "How Deep Is Your Love?" The BeeGees won on
appeal.
In 1985, Thompson Twin Tom Bailey was found collapsed on the
floor of his hotel room, suffering from exhaustion.
In 1987, Prince won eight "Razzies" for worst achievement in
movie making at the annual spoof of the Academy Awards.
In 1993, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear 2 Live Crew's
appeal of a ruling that said the rap group broke federal
copyright laws when it did a parody of Roy Orbison's "Oh
Pretty Woman." The high court would reverse the decision.
Also in 1993, a judge in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., overturned
the October 1990 conviction of a record store owner charged
with obscenity for selling 2 Live Crew's "As Nasty As They
Wanna Be" album.
In 1996, Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee and his wife,
"Baywatch" star Pamela Anderson Lee, sued Penthouse for
$10 million in a failed bid to force the magazine not to
market a stolen home video showing the couple "doing it."
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 29, 2000 (12:25)
#97
March 29, 2000 Know Your History for March 29:
** Today is Doctor, Doctor Day!
From this day on, surgery would no longer painful -- at least, while
it was being performed. Dr. Crawford W. Long performed the first
operation while his patient was anesthetized by ether on this day in
1842.
Crawford had been observing several party-goers under the influence
of nitrous oxide and sulfuric ether. Those folks were feeling no
pain. And Crawford's patient literally felt no pain as the good
doctor removed a tumor from the man's neck using the party concoction.
This event has been celebrated as Doctors' Day since this day in
1933. Doctors throughout the United States celebrate in Dr. Crawford
W. Long's honor and, in honor of ether as an anesthetic.
** Events
1858 - Hyman L. Lipman of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania patented the
writing device we call the pencil. Yes, it did have an attached
eraser as well. Why, then, we wondered, wasn't it called the Lipman?
"Teacher, I'm sorry, but I seem to have forgotten my Lipman this
morning." Or -- "May I please go and sharpen my Lipman?" See? It
works.
1867 - Alaska was purchased from Russia for two-cents an acre! Now
that's called getting your two-cents worth...
1948 - Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin ordered all road and rail access
to Berlin, Germany blocked. This was just the beginning of what would
become a complete blockade of the German city three months later ...
on June 24.
1981 - U.S. President Ronald Reagan was shot in the chest by a
would-be assassin as the President walked to his limousine in
Washington DC. Press Secretary James Brady and two police officers
were also wounded in the attack. John W. Hinkley, Jr. was convicted
of the crime.
** Birthdays
1746 - Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes (artist: The Caprices, The
Family of Charles IV, Majas, The 2nd of May, The 3rd of May)
1853 - Vincent van Gogh (post-impressionist artist: The Potato
Eaters, Sunflowers, The Night Cafe)
1945 - Eric Clapton (rock guitarist: group: Yardbirds: For Your Love;
song writer: Layla, score for The Hit; Grammy Award-winning singer:
Bad Love [1990], LPs: Tears from Heaven and Unplugged [1993], I Shot
the Sheriff, Lay Down Sally, Promises, I Can't Stand It, Wonderful
Tonight) 1950 - LaRue Martin (basketball: Loyola Univ., Portland Trail Blazers)
1957 - Paul Reiser (actor: Diner, Mad About You, Aliens, Beverly Hills Cop)
1964 - Tracy Chapman (folk singer-songwriter: Fast Car)
** Chart Toppers - 1945
One More Night - Phil Collins
Lovergirl - Teena Marie
We are the World - USA for Africa
Seven Spanish Angels - Ray Charles with Willie Nelson
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 29, 2000 (13:16)
#98
Time Capsule for March 29, 2000
In 1812, the first wedding was performed in the White House.
Mrs. Lucy Payne Washington, sister-in-law of President James
Madison, married Supreme Court Justice Thomas Dodd.
William Calley was convicted on this date in 1971 for his part
in the murders of 22 Vietnamese civilians in what became known
as the "My Lai" massacre, the killings of unarmed villagers by
U.S soldiers in Vietnam. It was the most publicized atrocity of
the Vietnam War. Calley was sentenced to life in prison, although
he has since been released.
Also in 1971, cult leader Charles Manson and three followers
were sentenced to death in the Tate-Labianca slayings in Los
Angeles.
In 1991, six-time Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti quit,
paving the way for the country's 50th government since World
War II.
In 1992, Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton
admitted he tried marijuana once or twice in England, but
didn't like it.
In 1993, "Unforgiven," Clint Eastwood's gritty western, won
the best picture and best director Oscars, but no single film
scored a sweep of the 65th annual Academy Awards.
In 1994, the Bosnian Serbs stepped up their bombardment of
Gorazde, 35 miles southeast of Sarajevo and one of the
U.N-designated "safe areas."
Also in 1994, Jimmy Johnson, coach of the Super Bowl champion
Dallas Cowboys, resigned, in part because of a disagreement over
who deserved credit for the Cowboys' success: Johnson or team
owner Jerry Jones.
In 1995, the House rejected legislation that would've limited
how long members of Congress could serve.
In 1996, the House Ethics Committee said Speaker Newt Gingrich
violated House rules by having close dealings with a wealthy GOP
giver who had business interests affected by congressional
legislation. It was the third time in two months the panel had
notified Gingrich that he'd broken the rules.
In 1997, Israeli troops killed a Palestinian in a confrontation
triggered by preparations to build another Jewish settlement in
Arab East Jerusalem.
In 1999, the Connecticut Huskies won their first NCAA men's
basketball championship, beating the Duke Blue Devils, 77-74.
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 30, 2000 (13:13)
#99
March 30, 2000
In 1923, the Cunard liner "Laconia" arrived in New York City,
becoming the first passenger ship to circumnavigate the world,
a cruise of 130 days.
An attempt on the life of President Reagan took place on this
date in 1981. The president was shot and seriously wounded by
John Hinckley Jr. outside a Washington hotel. White House news
secretary James Brady, a Secret Service agent and a Washington
policeman also were wounded - Brady was left paralyzed and in
a wheelchair by the incident. Hinckley, who was arrested at the
scene, was later found NOT guilty by reason of insanity and
remains institutionalized in a Washington, D.C., hospital.
In 1990, Idaho Gov. Cecil Andrus vetoed a restrictive abortion
bill, ending the anti-abortion forces' goal of giving Supreme
Court a chance to overturn Roe vs. Wade.
In 1992, "The Silence of the Lambs" swept the 64th annual
Academy Awards, including best picture, best director, best
actor for Anthony Hopkins and best actress for Jodie Foster.
In 1993, a two-state custody battle over a 2-year-old girl
took a dramatic turn when the Michigan Court of Appeals
ordered the child who'd been living with her custodial parents
in Michigan since shortly after birth returned to her
biological parents in Iowa.
Also in 1993, after 43 years, the unthinkable happened on the
comic pages -- Charlie Brown was a hero when he hit a homerun
and his baseball team won for the first time.
In 1995, the compromise "don't ask, don't tell, don't pursue"
policy allowing homosexuals to serve in the military under
certain conditions was struck down by a federal judge in New
York as unconstitutional.
In 1997, House Speaker Newt Gingrich said he warned Chinese
leaders that the United States would intervene militarily if
China attacked Taiwan.
In 1998, Armenian Premier Robert Kocharian was elected
president in a run-off election in the former Soviet republic.
Also in 1998, the University of Kentucky Wildcats won the NCAA
basketball title for the second time in three years and the
seventh time overall.
In 1999, a jury in Multnomah Co., Ore., awarded $81 million
dollars in damages to the family of a smoker who had died from
lung cancer. The plaintiff in the case, tobacco manufacturer
Philip Morris, promised to appeal. A state judge later reduced
the punitive portion of the judgment to $32 million.
+------------------ Birthday's ------------------+
Spanish painter Francisco Jose de Goya in 1746
English author Anna Sewell ("Black Beauty") in 1820
English social reformer Charles Booth in 1840
Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh in 1853
Irish dramatist Sean O'Casey in 1880
Former CIA Director Richard Helms and singer Frankie Laine,
both in 1913 (age 87)
TV host Peter Marshall in 1927 (age 73)
Actors Richard Dysart in 1929 (age 71), John Astin in 1930
(age 70) and Warren Beatty in 1937 (age 63)
British blues/rock guitarist Eric Clapton in 1945 (age 55)
Actor Paul Reiser in 1957 (age 43)
Canadian pop singer Celine Dion in 1968 (age 32)
~MarciaH
Thu, Mar 30, 2000 (13:20)
#100
Music History March 30, 2000
In 1963, the Chiffons topped the Billboard Hot-100 singles
chart with "He's So Fine."
In 1966, 85 unruly fans were arrested after a Rolling Stones
concert in Paris.
In 1967, the Beatles photographed what became the unusual
front cover of the "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band"
album.
In 1976, punk music was launched in London when the Sex
Pistols performed at the 100 Club.
In 1978, Paul Simenon and Nicky Headon of The Clash were
arrested for shooting pigeons.
In 1984, Greg Lake left Asia -- to be replaced by John Wetton,
whom Lake had earlier replaced.
In 1987, Herbie Hancock won the best original score Oscar for
"Round Midnight." "Take My Breath Away" from "Top Gun" won
for best original song.
Also in 1987, Duane Allen of the Oak Ridge Boys said William
Lee Golden had been kicked out of the group because he "hated"
the other members. Golden would later return to the fold.
In 1987, Blue Note musicians -- including Dexter Gordon, Bobby
McFerrin, McCoy Tyner and Freddie Hubbard -- wrote an open
letter against home taping. The letter was included in the
label's new releases.
In 1994, Madonna made a foulmouthed appearance on David
Letterman's "Late Show" --causing CBS censors to bleep her
numerous times.